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Originally Posted by Silverbackman
Moksha is a more broader term that means both of these definations of Nirvana, so is there really much difference? What do you think?
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In Hinduism, the terms
moksha,
nirvana and
mukti (liberation) are used as synonyms to describe release or freedom from the cycles of birth and death (samsara).
Moksha is a process and not a state of being. In the Hindu definition,
moksha is not something to be experienced or realized, but rather attained upon God-realization (I suspect this where the difference lies between the Hindu and Buddhist definitions of
nirvana).
In many schools of thought, one continues to exist after
moksha in the causal plane of existence free of karma and maya, until final oneness (technically termed
vishvagrasa) is attained. However, some people may also use the term
moksha to mean the final oneness between Brahman and Atman. As an aside, in monistic schools of Hinduism, the state of oneness is called a merger (complete oneness); whereas the non-monistic schools call it a union (Atman is eternally distinct).