this post was submitted on 03 Oct 2025
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Traditional Art

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~1590 Opaque watercolor and gold on paper

The Kathasaritsagara (Ocean of the Streams of Stories) is a vast anthology of hundreds of folk stories and fairy tales compiled in Sanskrit by the Kashmiri poet Somadeva in 1063–1081. Derived from earlier literary sources, the embellished tales were told by Somadeva for the diversion of Suryamati (or Suryavati), the queen of King Ananta of Kashmir (r. 1028–1063). The text was translated into Persian by Mustafa Khaliqdad ‘Abbasi for the Mughal Emperor Akbar (r. 1556–1605), but only about a dozen illustrated leaves are extant. The known leaves are cropped and have the Persian text on the reverse.

This folio illustrates the story of the celestial nymph Somaprabha from Chapter 17 of the text. Born on earth because of a curse, Somaprabha is married to the merchant Guhachandra of Pataliputra (modern Patna in Bihar) on the condition that they refrain from sleeping together. Each night, however, Somaprabha mysteriously leaves the house to return at dawn. With the help of a charm given to him by a Brahman, Guhachandra gains the help of Agni, the God of Fire. That night, Agni and Guhachandra take the form of bees and follow Somaprabha. In the forest they discover her listening to heavenly music with another beautiful nymph. Agni advises Guhachandra to dally with a courtesan, which makes Somaprabha jealous and arouses her passion.

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[–] Maeve@kbin.earth 1 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Conversations like these are the real treasures. And I love your sn, it's clever.

Tell me more about the link between Hegel and mythos, please? I'm hijacking your thread, sorry; if you're inclined to share, perhaps a new thread?

I didn't miss Timur, I just don't know anything about it. Perhaps one day you'll write about it in these spaces.

[–] SnokenKeekaGuard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Buddhism highlights that everything is impermanent, unsatisfactory, and lacking inherent substance. Yet, rather than rejecting the world, it turns back to the ordinary samsaric world as precisely the place where the emptiness of nirvana can be realized and where compassion can be practiced. Similarly, in Hegel’s philosophy, negation does not end in mere destruction. The dialectical dissolution of old metaphysical concepts produces a positive outcome: it opens a new method of understanding reality.

Both Hegel and certain Buddhist schools see individual minds as expressions of something greater.

Geist unfolds dialectically through history; Buddhist consciousness unfolds through conditioning.

In both systems, the individual mind is not ultimate; it participates in a larger process or reality.

The more I try to express it, the less convinced I am of my own argument lol.

[–] Maeve@kbin.earth 2 points 3 months ago

I think you did quite well, thank you.

And that's probably why taoism and mysticism in general says "who knows doesn't talk; who talks doesn't know."