The Srimad Bhagavad Gita is a spiritual dialogue between Lord Krishna and Arjuna a dialogue of and on dharma. It comes in the middle portion of the great epic, the Mahabharatha written by the sage. Vyasa. Lord Krishna was the avator or the incarnation of the Supreme Being into the form of a human being whereas Arjuna typifies the ordinary man, faced with one of the most difficult problems which any one could conceive-the killing of his own kinsmen. The whole dialogue is placed in the middle of the battlefield of Kurukshetra amidst the din and clamour of a fratricidal war. Arjuna?s problem was a particular one related to his particular need. Lord Krishna?s answer is the whole of the Bhagavad Gita, and cuts at the root of the human problems-which is one of ignorance. Ignorance of the nature of our own selves, ignorance of the nature of the Supreme Being and ignorance of the nature of the universe which we inhabit. This is the Srimad Bhagavad Gita.
Note by Translator Introduction Gita Dhyanam I. Arjuna Vishada Yoga II. Sankhya yoga III. Karma Yoga IV. Jnana Karma Sannyasa Yoga V. Karma Sannyasa Yoga VI. Atma Samyaam Yoga VII. Jnana Vijnana Yoga VIII. Akshara Brahma Yoga IX. Raja Vidya Raja Guhya Yoga X. Vibhuti Yoga XI. Vishvaroopa Darshana Yoga XII. Bhakthi Yoga XIII. Kshetra Kshetrajna Vibhaga Yoga XIV. Gunatraya Vibhaga Yoga XV. Purushottam Yoga XVI. Daivasura Sampad Vibhaga Yoga XVII. Shraddhatraya Vibhaga Yoga XVIII. Moksha Sannyasa Yoga XIX. Glossary
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