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From what I've seen, Hinduism isn't a religion like most of the other modern ones with many "rules" that you have to follow, it's more of a "pick-your-own-rules" way of doing it. (See: Is there an Orthodox Hinduism?)

Additionally, it changes much as time passes1

The question is, are there any invariant "core" tenets/rules to Hinduism; i.e. rules that have not changed since Vedic times and are still a part of the religion.

Some candidates:

  • The no-conversions rule (one must be born a Hindu). This seems to be changing now.
  • Restrictions against beef

1. So do other religions, really.

Manishearth
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    The freedom to seek your truth or God or form is the invariant. This freedom was not denied to Arjuna by Krishna. – User 1565623 Jun 19 '14 at 09:07
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    " Hinduism isn't a religion like most of the other modern ones with many "rules" that you have to follow, it's more of a "pick-your-own-rules" way of doing it" - Incorrect. " it changes much as time passes" - Also incorrect. Good Q though. –  Dec 29 '16 at 03:22
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    no-conversion rule is myth. I have added "many details" about devalasmriti scripture in my answer at https://hinduism.stackexchange.com/a/26319/13287 . see "argument 3" in my answer . You may check "argument 1" also – zaxebo1 Apr 04 '18 at 13:37

1 Answers1

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Some core invariants IMHO,

  1. Belief in Veda/Shruti (this is summarily rejected by Cārvāka and other materialistic and atheistic school of Hinduism).
  2. Belief in Re-incarnation
  3. Belief in Atman
  4. Belief in One universal Brahman which pervades all beings, animate as well as inanimate.
  5. Belief in Karma and the role it play
Pandya
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Vineet Menon
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    Not just first, but all of the first three are rejected by materialistic school of Hinduism. I'm not sure about 4 and 5. – user13107 Oct 12 '17 at 05:42
  • Nastika schools aren't really "Hinduism" though. Also, I believe point 5 is cultural rather than religious (that is, it is taken as given and Astika philosophies are a response to this presumption), but perhaps I am wrong – Rubellite Yakṣī Apr 30 '18 at 23:56