हमें वेदों से जो भाषा, मिथक, धर्म और दर्शन मिलते हैं, वे अतीत का वातायन खोलते हैं, उसे वर्षों में मापने का साहस कोई नहीं कर सकता। इतना ही नहीं, उनमें सा… - Friedrich Max Müller

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हमें वेदों से जो भाषा, मिथक, धर्म और दर्शन मिलते हैं, वे अतीत का वातायन खोलते हैं, उसे वर्षों में मापने का साहस कोई नहीं कर सकता। इतना ही नहीं, उनमें सादे, स्वाभाविक, भोला चिन्तन और कई विचार हैं जो हमें आधुनिक लगते

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About Friedrich Max Müller

Friedrich Max Müller (6 December 1823 – 28 October 1900), more commonly known as Max Müller (or Mueller), was a German philologist and Orientalist, who was a major pioneer of the discipline of comparative religion.

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Also Known As

Native Name: Max Müller
Alternative Names: Rt. Hon. Friedrich Max Muller F. Max Müller Professor Friedrich Max-Muller F. M. M. Friedrich Maximilian Müller Max Muller
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Additional quotes by Friedrich Max Müller

How can a missionary in such circumstances meet the surprise and questions of his pupils, unless he may point to that seed (Referring to the seed planted by Jesus and his Apostles) and tell them what Christianity was meant to be? unless he may show that, like all other religions, Christianity too, has had its history; that the Christianity of the nineteenth century is not the Christianity of the middle ages, and that the Christianity of the middle ages was not that of the early Councils; that the Christianity of the early Councils was not that of the Apostles, and that what has been said by Christ, that alone was well said?

Whether listening to the shrieks of the Shaman sorcerers of Tatary, or to the odes of Pindar, or to the sacred songs of Paul Gerhard: whether looking at the pagodas of China, or the Parthenon of Athens, or the cathedral of Cologne: whether reading the sacred books of the Buddhists, of the Jews, or of those who worship God in spirit and in truth, we ought to be able to say, like the Emperor Maximilian, 'Homo sum, humani nihil a me alienum puto,' or, translating his words somewhat freely, 'I am a man, nothing pertaining to man I deem foreign to myself.'

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Muller may have well felt the need to stress that "an ethnologist who speaks of an Aryan race, Aryan eyes and hair, and Aryan blood is as great a sinner as a linguist who speaks of a dolicocephalic dictionary or a brachycephalic grammar"; after all, it was he who had been a principal cause in such misconceptions through his earlier remarks on the common blood that the "English soldier" shared with the "dark Bengali".

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