Home

Videhamukta

Videhamukta, or videha-mukta, is a term in Hindu philosophy describing a soul that has achieved liberation from the cycle of birth and death and has shed the body. The word comes from Sanskrit vi- (without) deha (body) and mukta (liberated). In classical discussions, a videha-mukta is someone who remains liberated after the body is discarded, residing in a state of pure consciousness beyond physical form.

In Advaita Vedanta, moksha denotes realization of the oneness of the Atman with Brahman. A key distinction

Scriptural and philosophical discussions of videha-mukti appear across Vedantic and devotional literature. It is often presented

See also: Moksha, Jivanmukti, Atman, Brahman, Advaita Vedanta.

is
that
jivanmukti
refers
to
liberation
while
one
is
still
embodied,
whereas
videhamukti
refers
to
liberation
at
the
time
of
death
or
after
death,
when
the
individual
body
is
dropped.
Variations
exist
in
traditional
texts
about
whether
a
videha-mukta
retains
any
personal
memory,
experiences,
or
a
subtler
form,
but
the
core
claim
is
the
permanent
release
from
samsara
and
identification
with
the
Absolute.
as
the
highest
form
of
moksha,
signaling
complete
freedom
from
karma
and
individual
limitation.
Different
schools
and
commentators
describe
the
state
with
varying
nuance,
but
the
common
thread
is
the
soul’s
permanent
union
with
or
realization
of
Brahman
beyond
material
existence.