| Buddhi Yoga (Samskrit : बुद्धियोगम्) refers to the Yoga of Understanding, as explained by Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. This Buddhi Yoga is seen to be manifested in an ancient game of snakes and ladders, known today by several other names like Gyan Chaupar and Mokshapattam. | | Buddhi Yoga (Samskrit : बुद्धियोगम्) refers to the Yoga of Understanding, as explained by Sri Krishna in the Bhagavad Gita. This Buddhi Yoga is seen to be manifested in an ancient game of snakes and ladders, known today by several other names like Gyan Chaupar and Mokshapattam. |
| Tantra, in the Indian context means a system, a technique, an instrument, a practice. The practices are detailed in our scriptures called Agamas (आगम)(m). In the Tantra (तान्त्र)(adj) philosophy, our thoughts, matter, everything we perceive through our five senses, our nervous system with it’s electrical pulses (नाडी)(f) are all a part of the dance of the cosmic energies, the Shiva and the Shakti<ref>What is Tantra? ([http://www.devamurti.co.uk/about/what-is-tantra/ Devamurti] )</ref>. | | Tantra, in the Indian context means a system, a technique, an instrument, a practice. The practices are detailed in our scriptures called Agamas (आगम)(m). In the Tantra (तान्त्र)(adj) philosophy, our thoughts, matter, everything we perceive through our five senses, our nervous system with it’s electrical pulses (नाडी)(f) are all a part of the dance of the cosmic energies, the Shiva and the Shakti<ref>What is Tantra? ([http://www.devamurti.co.uk/about/what-is-tantra/ Devamurti] )</ref>. |