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Yav (Jav), Prav and Nav (Navi) are three worlds described in the ''Book of Veles''. References to them became popular among Ukrainians and Russian neopagans. All three combine into Triglav that governs the Universe. Yav is the material world in which we are right now. Gods, however, are equally part of Yav. Yav is contained within Nav. Nav (Navi) is the immaterial world, the world of the dead. Stars, which are the souls of the dead, as well as Svarga and Irij, are parts of Nav. Prav is the law of Svarog that governs both Yav and Nav. Modern parallels to this concept are laws of physics, but there is one big difference. The law that says that a stone falls when dropped is not only a mere observable fact: it is rightful, good and just that stones fall to the ground when dropped. A somewhat similar belief today is anthropic principle, but it only states that laws of physics are useful. This concept is similar to Dharma in Hinduism and Buddhism. In many Slavic languages, "pravo" or "prawo" means "law", "rule", one's right to something, and the right side. In the Russian language there are very similar words such as ''()ernoe'' meaning probably (when something is uncertain), ''()lenie'' or ''yavlenie'' meaning representation (a real depiction of something), ''()lenie'' or ''()o'' meaning rule or ''right''. YAV does not have any concrete meaning in Rigveda. The word "yav"/"jav" may be related to Polish ''jawa'', meaning the reality (not a dream, e.g. ''jawa lub sen'' - reality or a dream). ==See also== * Triglav * Volhv Veleslav 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Jav, Prav and Nav」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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