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Pralaya

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File:The fish avatara of Vishnu saves Manu during the great deluge.jpg
Matsya protecting the Manu and the seven sages at the time of the last pralaya

Pralaya (Sanskrit: प्रलय, lit.'destruction'), in Hindu cosmology, is an aeonic term for dissolution. It follows two other stages: Srishti (Sanskrit: सृष्टि, romanizedsṛṣṭi, lit.'creation') and Sthiti (Sanskrit: स्थिति, lit.'maintenance').

A Pralaya specifies different periods of time during which a non-activity situation persists, as per different formats or contexts. The word Mahapralaya stands for "Great Dissolution". During each pralaya, the lower ten realms (loka) are destroyed,[1] while the higher four realms, including Satya-loka, Tapa-loka, Jana-loka, and Mahar-loka, are preserved. During each Mahapralaya, all 14 realms are destroyed.

In the Samkhya philosophy, one of the six schools of classical Indian philosophy, pralaya means "non-existence", a state of matter achieved when the three gunas (principles of matter) are in perfect balance. The word pralaya comes from Sanskrit meaning "dissolution" or by extension "reabsorption, destruction, annihilation or death".

The word pralaya appears in the Cyclops chapter of James Joyce's epic novel Ulysses.[citation needed]

The Swedish metal band, Dissection, references "Mahapralaya" in their song, "Maha Kali".[citation needed]

The Polish black metal band, Plaga, references "Mahapralaya" in their song, "Śmierć cieplna wszechświata".[citation needed]

In Fate Grand Order, Arjuna Alter's Noble Phantasm is Mahapralaya.

See also

References

  1. ^ B. K. Chaturvedi (2004). Shiv Purana. Diamond Pocket Books. p. 124. ISBN 8171827217.