Moksha and mukti - liberation from samsara and suffering

“Moksha” is considered as an elevated, transcendental state of consciousness in which matter, time, space and karma, as well as other elements of empirical reality, are considered as maya. Moksha, however, is not a posthumous reward for pious deeds - liberation is achieved during earthly life by overcoming egoism, or false ego (Akhankara) and revealing the true, deep essence of the individual as a pure spirit or soul.

By the followers of advaita, moksha is understood as an individual's realization of his identity with Brahman, which is bliss (ananda). For them, moksha is the highest perfection on the path of yoga and is characterized by a lack of desires - the conditioned consciousness of “nama-rupa” (“names and forms”) has already dissolved and the eternal nature of the jiva, free from identification with the forms of this material world of maya, has manifested itself. Liberation is achieved through the cessation of all desires - a condition that is also known as nirvana, although the Buddhist interpretation of liberation is somewhat different from that given by the followers of advaita-vedanta.

As for moksha (liberation), many understand it exclusively through the state in which they are at the moment. Liberation means the emergence of a greater level of freedom than in the state that is present in a non-free person. Those. departure and liberation implies overcoming various space-time frames, which is also accompanied by the possibility of the presence of consciousness in any time and space. As well as an increase in the ability to act or exist as you please your higher nature of the soul.

No one can fully speak correctly about Moksha until he has acquired it.

Mukti - “liberation; the rescue". Liberation from the cycle of reincarnation, samsara, the cycle of birth and death, which occurs after karma is completely exhausted, and the realization (comprehension) of the true "I" - Atman, Paramatman - achieved "liberation; the rescue". Liberation from the cycle of reincarnation, samsara, the cycle of birth and death, occurring after karma is completely exhausted, and the realization (comprehension) of the true "I".