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Glossary›Karma

Glossary

Karma

The universal law of cause and effect in Hindu, Buddhist, Jain, and Sikh traditions, where intentional actions shape present and future experiences.

What is Karma?

Karma is the principle that every intentional action—physical, verbal, or mental—generates consequences that shape an individual’s present circumstances and future experiences. Rooted in Indian philosophy, karma operates as a moral law of cause and effect: wholesome actions produce beneficial results, unwholesome actions produce suffering, and neutral actions produce neutral outcomes. Unlike the popular Western interpretation of karma as cosmic justice or fate, the classical understanding emphasizes personal agency and the causal relationship between intention (Sanskrit: cetana) and outcome.

In Hindu philosophy, karma determines the conditions of rebirth within samsara, the cycle of death and rebirth. The Bhagavad Gita distinguishes between sanchita karma (accumulated from past lives), prarabdha karma (currently manifesting), and kriyamana karma (being created in the present). Buddhism adopted and refined the concept, with the Buddha teaching that karma is volitional action—what matters is not the act itself but the mental intention behind it. Jainism developed perhaps the most materialist interpretation, viewing karma as subtle particles that adhere to the soul (jiva) through action and must be burned away through ascetic practice.

Origins & Lineage

The earliest references to karma appear in the Vedic Brahmanas (circa 900–700 BCE), where the term initially referred to ritual action and sacrifice. The Brihadaranyaka Upanishad (circa 700 BCE) contains one of the first explicit formulations of karma as moral causation: “According to one’s actions (karma), according to one’s conduct, so one becomes.” The Chandogya Upanishad directly links karma to rebirth, stating that those of good conduct attain a good birth, while those of evil conduct attain an evil birth.

The Buddha (circa 563–483 BCE) transformed karma from a Brahmanical doctrine tied to ritual purity into a psychological and ethical teaching. In the Anguttara Nikaya, he defined karma as intention (cetana): “It is intention, monks, that I call karma. Having intended, one acts through body, speech, or mind.” This internalization shifted focus from ritual correctness to mental cultivation. The Dhammapada opens with the statement that mind precedes all phenomena, emphasizing that mental states determine karmic consequences.

Jain philosophers systematized karma into eight categories—knowledge-obscuring, perception-obscuring, feeling-producing, deluding, lifespan-determining, body-determining, status-determining, and obstructive—each requiring specific practices for elimination. Hindu philosopher Adi Shankara (circa 788–820 CE) later reconciled karma with Advaita Vedanta non-dualism, arguing that karma operates within the realm of illusion (maya) but has no ultimate reality.

How It’s Practiced

Karma is not practiced as a standalone technique but rather understood as the framework within which spiritual practice unfolds. In Hindu karma yoga, outlined in the Bhagavad Gita, practitioners perform actions without attachment to results, offering all deeds to the divine. This path emphasizes right action (dharma) over spiritual bypassing or withdrawal from the world.

Buddhist practice addresses karma through the Noble Eightfold Path, particularly Right Action, Right Speech, and Right Livelihood. Practitioners cultivate awareness of intention before acting, examining whether actions arise from greed, hatred, and delusion (unwholesome roots) or generosity, loving-kindness, and wisdom (wholesome roots). Formal practices like sila (ethical conduct) and metta (loving-kindness meditation) are understood as creating beneficial karma while purifying the mind.

Jain practitioners engage in extreme ascetic practices—fasting, meditation, and the avoidance of harm to all beings—to prevent new karmic accumulation and burn existing karmic matter. The practice of samayika (equanimity meditation) aims to stop the influx of karma through complete cessation of passionate activity.

Tibetan Buddhism developed elaborate visualization and purification practices, including the recitation of the hundred-syllable Vajrasatva mantra and ngöndro (preliminary practices), specifically designed to purify negative karma accumulated across lifetimes.

Karma Today

Contemporary seekers encounter karma primarily through Buddhist meditation centers, where teachers like Joseph Goldstein explain karma as “the lawfulness of things” rather than punishment or reward. Insight meditation retreats often include teachings on karma and rebirth, though Western teachers sometimes present karma functionally—observable within a single lifetime—to avoid metaphysical speculation.

Yoga studios typically introduce karma through karma yoga classes emphasizing selfless service, though the philosophical depth is often simplified. Hindu temples conduct pujas and rituals understood to generate positive karma, while also emphasizing donation (dana) and service (seva) as karmic purification.

The concept has entered mainstream culture, often distorted into a quasi-magical notion of instant retribution (“karma’s a bitch”) or cosmic justice. This popular usage bears little resemblance to the sophisticated causal analyses found in classical texts. Academic study of karma continues in religious studies and Buddhist philosophy programs, with scholars like Damien Keown and Richard Gombrich examining karma’s evolution across traditions.

Common Misconceptions

Karma is frequently misunderstood as deterministic fate, eliminating free will. Classical teachings emphasize the opposite: present choices create future conditions, and wisdom allows one to respond skillfully rather than react mechanically. The Buddha explicitly rejected fatalism (pubbekatahetuvada), arguing that if all experience were predetermined by past actions, there would be no basis for ethics or spiritual practice.

Karma is not cosmic punishment administered by a deity or universe. There is no judge or external arbiter; karma operates as natural law, comparable to gravity. The consequences arise from the nature of the action itself, not divine judgment.

The Western phrase “instant karma” misrepresents classical teaching. Karmic results may manifest immediately, after a delay, or in future lifetimes, depending on conditions. The Milindapanha uses the metaphor of different seeds: some sprout quickly, others require specific seasons.

Karma does not excuse social injustice or victim-blaming. While individual karma explains personal experience within traditional cosmology, it should never be weaponized to rationalize oppression or dismiss systemic inequality. The Buddha taught compassion toward all beings regardless of their circumstances.

How to Begin

For those seeking to understand karma beyond pop-culture distortions, begin with primary sources. Eknath Easwaran’s translation of the Bhagavad Gita provides accessible commentary on karma yoga. For Buddhist perspectives, read “In the Buddha’s Words” by Bhikkhu Bodhi, particularly the chapter on karma and its fruits, which compiles core suttas with explanatory notes.

Engage with teachers who can explain karma’s nuances. Joseph Goldstein’s “The Experience of Insight” contextualizes karma within meditation practice, while Traleg Kyabgon’s “Karma: What It Is, What It Isn’t, Why It Matters” addresses common confusions from a Tibetan Buddhist perspective.

Begin practical application through mindfulness of intention. Before speaking or acting, pause to examine the mental state motivating the action. Notice whether greed, aversion, or delusion are present, or whether generosity, kindness, and clarity predominate. This simple practice builds the self-awareness necessary for understanding karma firsthand.

Consider attending a meditation retreat at an insight meditation center, where karma is taught not as belief but as observable pattern. The direct experience of how mental states condition subsequent experience provides empirical grounding for what might otherwise remain abstract philosophy.

Related terms

four noble truthspratityasamutpadabhakti meditationmetta meditationself realizationtibetan buddhism
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