Intermediate

Hinduism: Key Beliefs

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·AQA GCSE Religious Studies·AQA 8062·10 min
3.1.4.1 Beliefs and teachings

Brahman: The Ultimate Reality

Brahman is the Hindu concept of ultimate reality — the one divine consciousness that underlies all existence.

Hindus understand Brahman in two complementary ways:

ConceptSanskrit termMeaning
Brahman without form or qualitiesNirguna brahmanUltimate reality as pure, formless divine consciousness — beyond description or human conception
Brahman with form and qualitiesSaguna brahmanGod manifested in personal form, with qualities that humans can relate to and worship

These are not two different gods, but two ways of approaching the same ultimate reality. Some Hindus — particularly in the Advaita (non-dual) tradition — emphasise nirguna brahman, seeing the universe as an expression of one formless divine consciousness. Others in devotional traditions relate to God in personal form.

The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad 391 identifies three features of the divine: Brahman exists everywhere as the non-personal ground of all being; Brahman dwells within the heart of every living being; and Brahman exists beyond the universe as a personal, loving God with whom devotees can have a relationship. These three aspects coexist — Brahman is simultaneously transcendent (beyond the universe) and immanent (present within it).

Hindu scriptures also describe spiritual worlds: realms beyond the material universe where liberated souls or devotees may reside in closeness to God.

The Tri-murti and Divine Manifestations

Brahman manifests in the material world through a range of divine forms. The most significant grouping is the Tri-murti — three aspects of the divine, each associated with a cosmic function:

DeityRoleKey association
BrahmaCreatorCreates the universe at the start of each cosmic cycle
VishnuPreserverSustains and protects creation; source of avatars
ShivaDestroyer/TransformerDissolves creation at the end of a cycle, enabling renewal

Beyond the Tri-murti, Hinduism recognises a wide range of male and female deities, each embodying particular qualities of the divine:

  • Ganesha — elephant-headed god; remover of obstacles; widely venerated at the start of any endeavour
  • Lakshmi — goddess of wealth, prosperity, and good fortune; consort of Vishnu
  • Hanuman — devotee of Rama; symbol of strength, devotion, and selfless service
  • Saraswati — goddess of knowledge, learning, and the arts

Vishnu is believed to descend to earth in human or animal form when dharma (righteousness) is under threat. These descents are called avatara (literally 'descent'). The two most celebrated avatars are Krishna — associated with love, devotion, and the Bhagavad Gita — and Rama — the ideal king, whose story is told in the Ramayana.

Matter, Illusion, and Cosmology

Alongside the divine, Hinduism teaches a sophisticated understanding of the material world.

Prakriti is matter — the material substance from which the physical universe and human minds and bodies are formed. Prakriti is composed of three qualities called the tri-guna:

GunaQualityEffect
SattvaPurity, clarityPromotes wisdom and spiritual awareness
RajasPassion, activityDrives action, desire, and restlessness
TamasInertia, darknessLeads to ignorance, laziness, and confusion

All material things, including human personalities, are mixtures of these three qualities.

Maya refers to the power of illusion — the force that causes souls to mistake the temporary material world for ultimate reality, forgetting their true divine nature. Liberation requires seeing through maya.

Hindu cosmology is vast and cyclical. The Rig Veda (10.129.6-7) reflects on the unknowable origins of creation, suggesting even the gods may not know how existence arose. The universe moves through a cycle of four ages (yugas) of decreasing righteousness — from the golden Satya Yuga to the present Kali Yuga — before a new cycle begins. This cosmology encompasses many worlds and their diverse inhabitants.

Atman: The Individual Self

Atman is the individual, eternal inner self — the true identity of every living being, distinct from the material mind and body.

While the body ages and dies and the mind changes, the atman is unchanging and eternal. The body is compared to a garment: the self wears different bodies across multiple lifetimes, but the self itself is never born and never dies.

(Extra context — The names of the three Hindu philosophical schools and their founders — Advaita/Shankaracharya, Vishishtadvaita/Ramanuja, Dvaita/Madhva — are not required by the AQA 8062 spec. The paragraph below illustrates the range of Hindu thought but does not need to be memorised for the exam.)

A central question in Hindu philosophy concerns the relationship between atman and brahman. In the Advaita (non-dual) tradition of Adi Shankaracharya, atman and brahman are ultimately identical — the individual self and the universal divine consciousness are one. In the Vishishtadvaita tradition of Ramanuja, the atman is real and distinct but inseparably connected to brahman, as a wave is part of the ocean. In the Dvaita tradition of Madhva, atman and brahman are permanently distinct — the soul is forever dependent on God.

For exam purposes, the key point is that atman is the eternal inner self, distinct from the material body and mind — the part of a human being that undergoes reincarnation and ultimately seeks liberation.

The Bhagavad Gita (2.20) states: "The soul is neither born nor does it die at any time. It has not come into being, does not come into being, and will not come into being. It is unborn, eternal, ever-existing and primeval."

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Samsara, Karma, and Moksha

Samsara is the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. The atman passes from one body to the next — not only human bodies but potentially any living form — driven by karma.

Karma is the law of moral action and reaction: every action, thought, and intention generates consequences that shape future experience. Good actions — motivated by duty, devotion, and compassion — accumulate positive karma; selfish or harmful actions accumulate negative karma. Karma is not punishment but a natural moral law, similar to the principle of cause and effect.

ConceptMeaning
SamsaraThe cycle of birth, death, and rebirth
KarmaThe law of action and its consequences — actions shape future lives
MokshaLiberation from samsara — the ultimate goal of human existence

Moksha — liberation — means breaking free from the cycle of rebirth. How moksha is achieved varies by tradition: through knowledge (jnana), devotion (bhakti), action (karma yoga), or meditation (dhyana). Different schools describe the liberated state differently — as merging with brahman, as dwelling eternally with God, or as realising one's unity with ultimate reality.

Hinduism also recognises the role of free will: souls are not merely puppets of karma but have the capacity to make choices, cultivate virtues, and pursue liberation. Suffering is understood partly as the result of ignorance (avidya) — mistaking the temporary for permanent. Knowledge and spiritual practice dispel ignorance.

Personal Virtues and the Four Aims of Life

Hinduism sets out a framework for how a person should live. The personal virtues that Hindu teaching commends include:

  • Ahimsa — non-violence, not causing harm to any living being
  • Respect — for elders, teachers, the divine, and all creation
  • Empathy — compassion for the suffering of others
  • Mind and sense control — mastery over desires and impulses
  • Humility — absence of pride or arrogance
  • Love — genuine care and devotion, especially toward God and others

These virtues express dharma in daily life.

The four aims of human life (purusharthas) give a framework for what Hindus should seek:

AimSanskritMeaning
Righteousness / dutyDharmaLiving according to moral and religious duty; acting rightly in one's role
Wealth / prosperityArthaLegitimate pursuit of material well-being and success
Pleasure / loveKamaEnjoyment of life's pleasures and emotional fulfilment
LiberationMokshaFreedom from samsara — the highest and ultimate aim

The first three aims are valid and positive when pursued within dharma; moksha is the overarching goal that gives the others meaning.

Dharma operates at multiple levels. Sanatana dharma — 'eternal duty' or 'eternal righteousness' — refers to the universal moral and spiritual laws that govern all existence, sometimes used as a name for Hinduism itself. Varnashrama dharma refers to the duties specific to a person's social class (varna) and stage of life (ashrama) — recognising that different people at different life stages have different responsibilities.

Common Exam Mistakes

1. Treating nirguna and saguna brahman as two different gods

They are two ways of understanding the same ultimate reality. Nirguna brahman is formless divine consciousness; saguna brahman is that same reality approached through personal form and qualities. The distinction is in the mode of understanding, not in the reality itself.

2. Confusing atman with brahman

Atman is the individual eternal self. Brahman is ultimate reality — the universal divine consciousness. The relationship between them is debated within Hinduism (from identity to permanent distinction), but they are not the same term and must not be used interchangeably in an exam answer.

3. Describing karma only as punishment

Karma is the law of action and reaction, not a divine punishment system. Positive actions generate positive karma. It operates automatically, like cause and effect — there is no judge delivering sentences.

4. Listing moksha as one of the four aims without explaining it

For the 12-mark question, simply naming moksha as 'liberation' is insufficient. Explain that it means liberation from the cycle of samsara — the ultimate goal that gives all other aims their context. Different Hindu traditions describe how it is achieved and what it looks like.

5. Ignoring the three features of the divine from the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad

This is a named source in the spec. Be ready to describe all three: Brahman as present everywhere (non-personal), within the heart, and beyond as personal loving God.

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