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  1. may also include natural calamities and accidents causing mass or large scale suffering and destruction. Such retribution, ... Another scholar (Pappu 1987: 293-312) defines Collective karma as 'non-individualistic' and, therefore, including, 'transfer of merit', 'divine grace' and 'group karma'. Again, according to Pappu (1987: 293-94),

  2. Well, the society around you has memory, those situations happen. The world has memory, those situations happen. And whatever actions that are being done around you will impact you. Collective karma may create certain external consequences, but how you experience life is still determined by you right now. Right now, there is pollution in New ...

  3. The Kalachakra teaching explains the relation between collective karma and the fact that rocky planets in our universe are subject to instability and earthquakes. But what would be an example of the collective karma that would result in a group of people experiencing a specific earthquake together?

  4. 12 de ene. de 2020 · ¿Cada incidente significativo de la vida se debe al karma o a algo circunstancial? Sadhguru: Hay un karma individual y también hay un karma colectivo. Como familia, como comunidad, como nación, como humanidad, compartimos memoria kármica entre nosotros.

  5. 4 de dic. de 2019 · El Karma colectivo es entendido como un viaje en grupo. Y se resolverá en grupo, porque fue también engendrado en grupo. Las decisiones que se toman en grupo pueden terminar por afectarnos más de lo que nos imaginamos. La coemergencia Kármica. Hay muchos ejemplos reales de Karmas colectivos.

  6. 23 de mar. de 2020 · While the theory of karma teaches us that the environmental conditions happening now are somehow a result of our own actions, it also teaches that we can do something about them. We have the power to reshape the future—our own future as well as the future of humanity.

  7. Theorizing collective karma places us within a web of mutuality—the irreducibly interconnected, “in-it-together-ness”—that is our social life. Aside from clarifying what collective karma means, this analysis helps illuminate a Buddhist view of social change more broadly.