Namaste Avinash,
thank you for the post.
Avinash said:
Namaskar,
That's true, but the word Dharma is not always used as meaning a limited teaching of some particular religious or spiritual system. In Ananda Marga, manava dharma or human dharma is seen as the inherent or innate characteristic quality or purpose of what makes someone a human being, i.e. the practice of spirituality through morality and spiritual practices.
If you use Dharma in this way then the use of the word in combination with a certain system of teaching cannot be accepted as representing the true spirit of Dharma because human spirituality is considered here as being universal.
this is certainly true.. however, when the term is being generally used, it is typcially in refernece to a specific system of practice, i.e SantanaDharma, BuddhaDharma, ManavaDharma et al.
it is difficult to have a productive discussion if the terms that are being used are used in an unfamiliar manner.. especially if they are foreign words that require some translation to get the meaning of.
for a straight, definitional meaning, i am rather partial to this one:
dharma–derived from the Sanskrit root
dhr meaning to hold up, to carry, to bear, to sustain. The word
dharma refers to that which upholds or sustains the universe. Human society, for example, is sustained and upheld by the
dharma performed by its members. For example, parents protecting and maintaining children, children being obedient to parents, the king protecting the citizens, are acts of
dharma that uphold and sustain society. In this context
dharma has the meaning of duty.
Dharma also employs the meaning of law, religion, virtue, and ethics. These things uphold and sustain the proper functioning of human society. In philosophy
dharma refers to the defining quality of an object. For instance, liquidity is one of the essential
dharmas of water; coldness is a
dharma of ice. In this case we can think that the existence of an object is sustained or defined by its essential attributes,
dharmas.
http://www.sanskrit.org/Sanskrit/sanskritterms.htm