Sudarshana
सुदर्शन
sudarśana
Definition
'Auspicious vision' — Vishnu's discus weapon. Personified as a deity. Sudarshana Yantra and Sudarshana Homa are protective rites.
हिन्दी अर्थ
सुदर्शन; विष्णु का चक्र।
Sources Cited
- · Pancharatra Samhitas
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सुदर्शन
sudarśana
'Auspicious vision' — Vishnu's discus weapon. Personified as a deity. Sudarshana Yantra and Sudarshana Homa are protective rites.
सुदर्शन; विष्णु का चक्र।
Hindu thought is built from a vocabulary of carefully-distinguished terms. Words like sudarshana are not loose translations — each has a precise scriptural genealogy, a specific role in ritual or philosophy, and often a counterpart that completes its meaning. Many of the major Hindu darśanas (Sāṅkhya, Yoga, Vedānta, Mīmāṃsā, Nyāya, Vaiśeṣika) refined their vocabulary over centuries; the same Sanskrit term can carry different shades in different schools.
Sudarshana sits within a cluster of related concepts — chakra, vishnu, ayudha. Reading these together gives you the actual texture of the idea, rather than treating it as an isolated definition. Each Sanskrit term in this glossary is cross-linked to the others it presupposes.
Where useful we cite the primary scriptural source — the Upaniṣad, sūtra, or smṛti passage where the term is given its classical sense — alongside trusted modern dictionaries (Monier-Williams, V.S. Apte, Sanskrit Heritage). For practical questions about usage in pūjā or daily life, ask a paṇḍita in your tradition.
Energy wheel; the seven major energy centres along the sushumna — Muladhara, Svadhisthana, Manipura, Anahata, Vishuddha, Ajna, Sahasrara. Each has its bija, presiding deity, lotus petals, and element.
'The pervader'; supreme being for Vaishnavas; the preserver of the trimurti. Resides in Vaikuntha on Ananta-Shesha; consort Lakshmi. Holds shankha-chakra-gada-padma. Descends as the avataras to restore dharma.
Divine weapon held by a deity, identifying its iconography. Vishnu's chakra-shankha-gada-padma, Shiva's trishul-damaru, Durga's many weapons. Ayudha-puja honours all tools on Vijayadashami.
Divine weapon held by a deity, identifying its iconography. Vishnu's chakra-shankha-gada-padma, Shiva's trishul-damaru, Durga's many weapons. Ayudha-puja honours all tools on Vijayadashami.
Hourglass-shaped drum held by Shiva, especially as Nataraja. Its sound generates the Sanskrit phonemes (the maheshvara-sutras revealed to Panini). Symbol of nada-brahman (sound-Brahman).
Wheel of dharma; symbol used in Hinduism (Sudarshana Chakra of Vishnu) and Buddhism (Buddha's first sermon turned the dharmacakra). On the Indian flag.
Eagle / kite; vahana of Vishnu, son of Vinata, mortal enemy of nagas. Garuda Purana is named after him. National emblem of Indonesia.
Swan / wild goose; vahana of Brahma and Saraswati. Symbol of discrimination (legendary ability to separate milk from water = sat from asat). Also: symbol of the Atman ('aham sah' = I am That).
The aniconic symbol of Shiva — the formless made form. Twelve great Jyotirlingas across India. Varieties: Bana-linga, Sphatika-linga, Parad (mercury)-linga.
Peacock; vahana of Kartikeya (Murugan). Also adorns Krishna's crown (peacock feather). Symbol of beauty and victory over snakes (kundalini mastery).
Mouse / rat; vahana of Ganesha. Symbolizes the conquering of small obstacles and material desires.
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