Śruti
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If you are looking for the singer, see Shruti Haasan.
For other uses, see śruti (disambiguation).
Śruti (Devanagari श्रुित, "what is heard") is a canon of Hindu sacred texts. They do not date to a particular period, but rather stretch across the entire history of Hinduism, beginning with the some of the earliest known Hindu texts, spanning into the modern period with the Upanishads. Śruti has no author; rather, it is divine recording of the "cosmic sounds of truth", heard by rishis (saints or sages). The main classification of shruti literature is along the lines of the four Vedas:
Each of these mantra collections was increased by commentaries in various scholastic branches (shakhas), the Brahmanas, and later by mystical treatises known as Aranyakas and Upanishads. All these likewise belong to the set of works labeled as śruti. In addition, the Mahabharata (an Itihasa, or History, also part of the "friendly scripture" class) is considered by some to be śruti and is sometimes called the 'fifth' Veda. Sometimes the Bhagavad Gita, a chapter within the Mahabharata, is separately considered as worthy of the śruti status. Max Muller in an 1865 lecture stated
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See alsoExternal linkses:Sruti fr:Shruti hi:श्रुति id:Śruti nl:Shruti nn:Sjruti pt:Shruti sv:Shruti |


