From a philosophical standpoint, how does the text describe the nature of death for a great Yogi like Sai Baba?

📖 Chapter 43

From a philosophical view, Chapter 43 presents death as a mere separation of the body and senses, a modification of the soul's life. For a great Yogi like Sai Baba, death is like dust. The text posits that for one who has already turned their body to ashes through the fire of Yoga while living, the fear of physical death is nonexistent. Death for saints is described as a defect of vision for the observer, similar to an eclipse obscuring the sun. Sai Samarth could die at will, and his passing was a conscious merging into the unmanifest. For such beings, the body is just an adjunct, and they are not truly affected by its states, including death.


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