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Kaitabh, a figure of Hindu mythology, is associated with Hindu religious cosmology. He along with his companion, Madhu, originated from one of the ears of God Vishnu, while he was in deep sleep of Yoganidra. From his navel a lotus has sprouted out on which Brahma was sitting and contemplating to create the cosmos and the universe. The term Hindu mythology refers collectively to a large body of Indian literature (essentially, the mythology of Hinduism) that detail the lives and times of legendary personalities, deities and divine incarnations on earth interspersed with often large sections of philosophical and ethical discourse. ...
Religious cosmologies are ways of explaining the history and evolution of the universe based, at least in part, on the acceptance of principles that cannot or need not be justified on the basis of accepted scientific arguments (See also: physical cosmology). ...
For other uses of the name Vishnu, see Vishnu (disambiguation). ...
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The deepest visible-light image of the cosmos. ...
Kaitabh and Madhu, considered as demons, designed to annihilate Brahma. However, Brahma spotted them, and invoked the goddess Mahamaya. At this point Vishnu awoke, and the two conspiring demons were killed. Another legend states that Vishnu in his manifestation as Mayagriva killed Kaitabh and Madhu, and retrieved the Vedas, which they had stolen, and deposited deep inside the waters of the primeval ocean. The demon Satan In folklore, mythology, and religion, a demon is a supernatural being that is generally described as an evil spirit, but is also depicted to be good in some instances. ...
Maya, in Hinduism, is many things. ...
The Vedas (Sanskrit:- वà¥à¤¦), collectively refers to a corpus of ancient Indo Aryan religious literature that are considered by adherents of Hinduism to be revealed knowledge. ...
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