3. The Upanishad and the Hindu shared worldview

Source 1

Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, IV, 4,6

The Upanishads are the latest texts of the corpus of the Vedas Corpus, the textual foundations of the Hindus religiosity. The Upanishads (composed around 500 BCE) contain the earliest emergence of some of the central religious concepts of Hinduism. These are excerpts from the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad and Chandogya Upanishad which deals with the pivotal concepts of Atman, Brahman and the Samsara, the cycle of rebirth.

That Atman (the "Self") is indeed Brahman; it is also identified with the intellect, the mind, and the vital breath, with the eyes and ears, with earth, water, air, and space, with fire and with what is other than fire, with desire and with absence of desire, with anger and with absence of anger, with righteousness and unrighteousness, with all—it is identified, as is well known, with this (i.e. what is perceived) and with that (i.e. what is inferred). According as it acts and according as it behaves, so it becomes: by doing good it becomes good, and by doing evil it becomes evil. It becomes virtuous through virtuous action, and evil through evil action.
Others, however, say that the self is identified with desire alone. As is its desire, so is its resolution; and as is its resolution, so is its deed; and whatever deed it does, that it reaps.
Regarding this there is the following verse:
Because of attachment, the transmigrating Atman, together with its karman, attains that result to which its mind clings. Having exhausted [in the other world] the results of whatever karman it did in this life, it returns from that world to this world for [fresh] karman.
Thus does the man who desires transmigrate . But as to the man who does not desire—who is without desire, who is freed from desire, whose desire is satisfied, whose only object of desire is the Atman—his organs do not depart. Being Brahman, he merges in Brahman.
Regarding this there is the following verse:
When all the desires that dwell in his heart are got rid of, then does the mortal man become immortal and attain Brahman in this very body

Brhadaranyaka Upanishad, IV, 4,6, trans. ingl by Swāmi Nikhilānanda,
http://www.universaltheosophy.com/sacred-texts/brihadaranyaka-upanishad/ (26/09/2014)

Source 2

Chandogya Upanishad, V, 10, 7 & 9

The Upanishads are the latest texts of the corpus of the Vedas Corpus, the textual foundations of the Hindus religiosity. The Upanishads (composed around 500 BCE) contain the earliest emergence of some of the central religious concepts of Hinduism. These are excerpts from the Brhadaranyaka Upanishad and Chandogya Upanishad which deals with the pivotal concepts of Atman, Brahman and the Samsara, the cycle of rebirth.

Those whose conduct here [on earth] has been good will quickly attain some good birth—birth as a brahmin, birth as a warrior, or birth as a merchants. But those whose conduct here has been evil will quickly attain some evil birth—birth as a dog, birth as a pig, or birth as an untouchables
[...]
A man who steals the gold of a brahmin, he (i.e. a brahmin) who drinks liquor, he who dishonours his teacher’s bed, and he who kills a brahmin—these four fall, as also a fifth who associates with them.’”

Chandogya Upanishad, V, 10, 7 & 9 trans. ingl by Swāmi Nikhilānanda,
http://www.universaltheosophy.com/sacred-texts/chandogya-upanishad/ (26/09/2014)

Source 3

Sadhu

In Hinduism, a Sadhu "good man, holy man" is a religious ascetic or holy person. The Sadhu is solely dedicated to achieving Mokṣha (liberation), through meditation and ascetic pracitces. They carry on the tradition, born between the eighth and third centuries BCE, of the so called Shramana (rinunciants).

Sadhu

Courtesy of Prof. James Lochtefeld