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Yogita Ingle 4 years, 10 months ago
The teaching of the Buddha:
(i) The world is transient (anicca) and constantly changing.
(ii) It is also soulless (anatta) as there is nothing permanent or eternal in it.
(iii) Within this transient world, sorrow (dukkha) is intrinsic to human existence.
(iv) It is by following the path of moderation between severe penance and self-indulgence that human beings can rise above these worldly troubles. In the earliest forms of Buddhism, whether or not god existed was irrelevant.
(v) The Buddha regarded the social world as the creation of humans rather than of divine origin.
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Rowlatt Acts, (February 1919), legislation passed by the Imperial Legislative Council, the legislature of British India. The acts allowed certain political cases to be tried without juries and permitted internment of suspects without trial.
OR
Rowlatt Act 1919 authorised the Government:
To arrest and imprison any person without trial in a court of law.
To demand security from any person, impose restriction on residence, curb freedom of activities, to search house and arrest any person, at any place.
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