Course: Jnana Yoga (Knowledge)Advanced Online Training: Yoga of Knowledge (Jnana, brain to conceive, Philosophy) - Bhagavad GitaThe main objective of the course taught by the Gita Institute is to know the foundations and importance of Jnana Yoga, the Yoga of Knowledge defined in the Bhagavad Gita, the path of the highest philosophy, the most difficult and the culmination of the other three paths: Karma Yoga, Dhyana Yoga and Bhakti Yoga. “Brain to conceive. Unity in diversity (All is one)”
Curso Jnana Yoga (Bhagavad Gita Curso Jnana-ioga. Course Subjects: Jnana Yoga 1- Introduction to Jnana Yoga and Vedanta by Swami Vivekananda 2- Chapter 13- The Yoga of the Distinction between the Field and the Knower of the Field 3- Chapter 14- The Yoga of the Differentiation of the three Gunas 4- Chapter 15- The Yoga of Supreme Being (Purushottama) 5- Chapter 16- The Yoga of the Divine Inheritance and Demoniacal 6- Chapter 17- The Yoga of the Threefold Faith 7- Chapter 18- The Yoga of Liberation by Renunciation (Moksha Sannyasa) All the subjects that contain the 6 final chapters of the
Bhagavad Gita (Yoga Philosophy)
of this course are structured as follows: (Final of the Bhagavad Gita) 8- Jnana Yoga (Unity in diversity) by Swami Vivekananda
Swami Vivekananda: «The Jnani Yogi has to undergo the hardest of all renunciations, for he has to realize from the beginning that all this solid-looking nature is an illusion. You have to understand that everything that is any kind of manifestation of power in nature belongs to the soul, and not to nature.. Jnana Yoga is great; It is high philosophy; and almost every human being thinks, curiously, that he can surely do everything that philosophy demands of him; but it is really very difficult to truly live the life of philosophy. The path of knowledge seems to offer justification for what the bad man does, as much as it offers incentives for what the good man does. This is the great danger in Jnana Yoga.. Contemplating the One Being in all beings is Jnana, wisdom. When the Jnani Yogi attains wisdom, he is endowed with devotion and engages in selfless activity.» Sri Ramakrishna Paramahamsa: Swami Vidya Prakashananda: «Some think that Jnana Yoga is superior to Karma Yoga. In the Bhagavad Gita, the Lord put an end to all these foolish notions by emphasizing the importance of each type of yoga according to the natural tendencies of the seeker. Karma Yoga is necessary to purify the heart and through such purity man attains self-realization, which is the fruit of Jnana. “There is also no essential difference between Jnana and Bhakti» Swami Vivekananda met Sri Sri Ramakrishna in 1881, and asked him: «Master, have you seen God?» Sri Ramakrishna's response was: The final exam is based on in-depth research work on Jnana Yoga, especially valuing that its results can benefit the yogic community and/or humanity. Qualification: The student-seeker who passes the exercises and obtains a favorable report from his teacher will receive the diploma: “Advanced Course of Jnana Yoga (Bhagavad Gita).” In the previous chapters and in Chapter 11 - The Yoga of the Universal Form of the Lord, Sri Krishna exposed to Arjuna the great revelation of the Divine and in Chapter of devotion to the Lord. In chapters XIII, As we will see these last chapters of the Bhagavad Gita, they are greatly influenced by the Sankhya doctrine.
IIn the final chapter of the Bhagavad Gita (XVIII- The Yoga of Liberation Through Renunciation / Moksha Sannyasa Yoga), Sri Krishna concludes his masterful teachings by reviewing the key ideas presented above. (c) Gita Institute |