Punya (Hinduism)

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Punya (Sanskrit: पुण्य, romanized: puṇya, lit.'virtue'), also rendered punyam (Sanskrit: पुण्यम्, romanized: puṇyam)[1] is a concept in Hinduism with various definitions. It generally refers to virtue or merit, and the activities that allow one to acquire this attribute, in order to achieve liberation from samsara, the cycle of birth and death in the material world.[2]

Punya is referred to as good karma or a virtue that contributes benefits in this and the next birth and can be acquired by appropriate means and also accumulated. In Vedanta terms punya is the invisible wealth, a part of dharma, the first of four human goals; the other three goals being artha, kama, and moksha. Punya and pāpa are the seeds of future pleasure and pain, the former, which sows merits, exhausts itself only through pleasure and the latter, which sows demerits, exhausts itself only through pain; but jivan mukti ends all karmic debts consisting of and signified by these two dynamics.[3]

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