Value | Position | |
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Position | 22 | 22 |
Accepted meanings | 719 | 22 |
Obtained votes | 10 | 20 |
Votes by meaning | 0.01 | 5213 |
Inquiries | 5430 | 56 |
Queries by meaning | 8 | 5213 |
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"Statistics updated on 5/20/2024 6:52:10 AM"
2 . RAE: "It is defined as holding horse or mule beasts by the ears to begin to tame them". 3 . Synonymous with doubting, hesitating. 4 . Quickly listen to something, especially a musical composition. 5 . It is said of a person who transmits to someone information that is not publicly known but that is of interest. 6 . Pulling a person's ears. 7 . Keeping an eye on a suspect to inform the police.
People who do not feel identified with the male or female gender and who construct their identity outside the binary logic of the cisnormative system according to which biological sex and gender identity coincide. The concept of gender identity was born to appeal to this global perception that an individual has of himself, placing special emphasis on his or her gender which, as we know, may or may not coincide with his or her biological sex.
Some ancient Sanskrit writings portray Raja yoga as the ultimate goal of yoga, rather than being a set of physical and mental actions and practices. This means that Raja is sometimes interpreted as the condition of harmony and self-discipline that accompanies the practice of yoga and meditation.
It is said of the subdiscipline whose object of knowledge is the inquiry about whether there are some characteristics that are shared by all human beings and that are "essential" to all humanity, focusing on topics such as dualism or the unity of the human being, transcendence and immanence, if it is true that freedom and the relationship of the human being with other beings is possible, inert and alive, among others.
A philosophical current that, very briefly, starts from the basis that, by considering existence as infinite, it contains in itself all possible existential possibilities, beyond what the human mind can reach; This infinity therefore surpasses space and time, which it regards as mere human conventions for understanding reality and which are part of infinity, where logically there is also a non-time and non-space.
This type of yoga comprises the term "Karma" as that action that arises from a selfless attitude, given over to the service of others, without self-interest or focus on the outcome of that action, acting simply out of love or compassion. Like any spiritual path, the goal is to transcend the ego or lower self, and it is through action that we can free ourselves from the bonds of desires and selfish motivations, acting in solidarity and generosity, surrendering all action to the benefit of others or to the Universe or to God.
This is the name given to the intersection between veganism and naturalism. Jamie Woodhouse is the one who has used this term to interpret and redefine something very similar to veganism. It is a philosophy that uses evidence and reason to determine what to believe, but it also has compassion for every sentient being. It is similar to certain theses of Buddhism and especially Jainism.