Francais | English | Espanõl

Rta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about a concept in Hinduism. For other uses, see RTA.
Part of a series on
Hinduism
Image:Aum.svg
History · Deities
Denominations · Mythology
Beliefs & practices
Reincarnation · Moksha
Karma · Puja · Maya
Samsara · Dharma
Vedanta ·
Yoga · Ayurveda
Yuga · Vegetarianism
Bhakti
Scriptures
Upanishads · Vedas
Brahmana · Bhagavad Gita
Ramayana · Mahabharata
Purana · Aranyaka
Related topics
Dharmic Religions ·
Hinduism by country
Leaders · Devasthana
Caste system · Mantra
Glossary · Hindu festivals
Vigraha
Portal: Hinduism

Image:HinduSwastika.svg

This box: view  talk  edit</div>

In Vedic Sanskrit, Rta (ṛtá) literally means the "order or course of things", cognate to Avestan aša.

In the Vedas, rta lays the philosophical foundation for the Hindu conception of dharma. In current usage, the use of the term rta is eschewed for the more developed and now standard dharma. Rta became deified as the father of justice and righteousness, unyielding but eminently fair. It grew, as Radhakrishnan states, "from physical divine" in its purvey. Rta was morality, the equitable law of the universe.

The Vedic deity most closely associated with rta is Varuna.

[edit] See also

lt:Rita

pl:Rta

Personal tools