)
s
tra
utterances; and for this reason the Prajñaptiv
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da is sometimes held to be a proto-Mah
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y
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nist school.
Prajñ
vimukta
(arhat who has attained supreme wisdom):
Prak
ti
(Skt., ‘making first’). In Sanskrit literature, primordial material nature. In mythology prak
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ti is personified as a goddess of cosmic creative energy,
akti
, the female counterpart of every god. In
Ved
nta
, prak
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ti is synonymous with cosmic manifestation, hence as appearance,
m
y
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. In
S
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khya
-yoga prak
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ti plays an important role as the ultimate material reality juxtaposed with
puru
a
, the ultimate spiritual reality. Here prak
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ti is the matrix of the universe, the material cause of all manifest matter and energy. As such, prak
![](/files/02/59/75/f025975/public/00023.jpg)
ti is composed of three balanced
gu
as
(Skt., ‘strands’) or constituent modes which, in disequilibrium, combine to generate all other material principles (
tattvas
).