This page provides an overview of Jain beliefs about the soul.
Last updated 2009-09-10
This page provides an overview of Jain beliefs about the soul.
Jain ideas about the soul differ from those of many other religions.
The Jain word that comes closest to soul is jiva, which means a conscious, living being. For Jains body and soul are different things: the body is just an inanimate container - the conscious being is the jiva.
After each bodily death, the jiva is reborn into a different body to live another life, until it achieves liberation. When a jiva is embodied (i.e. in a body), it exists throughout that body and isn't found in any particular bit of it.
Jains believe:
Each jiva is an individual quite independent of other jivas. This is different from one of the Hindu Vedanta schools of belief where each soul is part of a single ultimate reality.
Jains believe that there are an infinite number of souls in the universe - every living thing, no matter how primitive, is a jiva - and at any given time many of these jivas are not embodied.
For Jains, each jiva has been associated with matter, and involved in the cycle of birth and death since the beginning of time. They did not in some way fall from perfection to become involved in this cycle.
Some jivas, through their own efforts, have become liberated and escaped from the cycle.
Some jivas have achieved liberation from the cycle of samsara or reincarnation and are not reborn. They are called siddhas.
Liberated jivas don't have physical bodies; they possess infinite knowledge, infinite vision, infinite power, and infinite bliss - in effect they have become perfect beings.
This makes liberated jivas the beings most like gods in Jain belief, but they are very different from the conventional idea of gods:
So when Jains worship 'gods' they do so to set before themselves the example of perfection that they want to follow in their own lives.
Every jiva has the possibility of achieving liberation, and thus of becoming a god, and each soul is involved in a process of evolving towards that state.
Jains include many things as jivas that non-Jains regard as either inanimate or plants. They classify these as immobile beings, with only one sense - the sense of touch:
These are very simple organisms that are thought to have two senses - touch and taste. This category includes things like worms and termites.
These have the senses of touch, taste and smell. This category includes insects like ants, beetles and moths.
These have the senses of touch, taste, smell and sight. This category includes wasps, locusts and scorpions.
These have the senses of touch, taste, smell, sight and hearing. There are four classes of these beings:
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