Sometime around the 9th or 8th century B.C.E., in the plains and forests of what is now northern India, a spiritual tradition began crystallizing around ideas that would prove remarkably durable: that every living being carries an immortal soul, that suffering is caused by ignorance, and that liberation is available to anyone willing to do the inner work. This tradition would come to be called Jainism — and its influence on philosophy, nonviolence, and ethics would reach far beyond the subcontinent.
What the evidence shows
- Jain origins: The tradition recognizes 24 enlightened teachers called tirthankaras, or “ford builders,” of whom Parshvanatha — traditionally dated to around 877–777 B.C.E. — is the 23rd and the earliest figure with significant historical grounding.
- Parshvanatha’s teachings: The 23rd tirthankara is credited with establishing a fourfold ethical code that Mahavira, the 24th and final tirthankara (c. 599–527 B.C.E.), would later systematize into the Five Vows that define Jain practice today.
- Contested beginnings: Jains themselves hold that the religion’s precepts are eternal and were never invented by any mortal — only received by successive enlightened sages — making “founding” an imprecise concept that does not map cleanly onto the tradition’s own self-understanding.
A tradition older than its most famous teacher
Most people who encounter Jainism for the first time learn that its founder was Mahavira, the ascetic sage who lived in the 6th and 5th centuries B.C.E. That framing is understandable but incomplete.
Mahavira — born Vardhamana, later called “Great Hero” — is the 24th and final tirthankara in the Jain tradition. The 23rd, Parshvanatha, is traditionally dated to around 877–777 B.C.E. and is regarded by many scholars as a genuinely historical figure whose teachings formed the foundation Mahavira would build on. Parshvanatha’s community of followers was already active when Mahavira was born, and Mahavira’s own parents are said to have been followers of Parshvanatha’s lineage.
This matters because it shifts the story. Jainism did not spring fully formed from one person’s enlightenment. It developed across generations, through a process of transmission, refinement, and communal practice.
What Jainism actually teaches
At the center of Jain philosophy is the concept of the jiva — the soul or life force — which animates every living being, from humans to insects to plants. This soul is eternal, inherently pure, and capable of omniscience. But it accumulates karmic matter through actions, words, and thoughts, which binds it to the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth known as samsara.
Unlike in Hinduism or Buddhism, where karma is understood as a psychological or moral force, Jain philosophy treats karma as a literal, physical substance — almost like dust that settles on the soul and weighs it down. Liberation requires not just right action but the shedding of this accumulated matter through rigorous ethical discipline and spiritual awakening.
The Five Vows at the heart of Jain practice — nonviolence (ahimsa), truthfulness, non-stealing, celibacy or sexual restraint, and non-possessiveness — apply not just to actions but to thoughts. It is not enough to refrain from harming; one must not even harbor a harmful intention. This internal discipline was radical in its time and remains demanding today.
Of these five, ahimsa — nonviolence toward all living beings — became perhaps the most influential idea Jainism contributed to the broader world. It shaped ethical thought across the Indian subcontinent and, millennia later, was a cornerstone of Mahatma Gandhi’s philosophy of nonviolent resistance.
A reform movement in a reforming age
Jainism did not emerge in a vacuum. The 9th through 5th centuries B.C.E. were a period of profound religious and philosophical ferment across the Indian subcontinent. What scholars sometimes call the Axial Age saw simultaneous bursts of ethical and philosophical innovation across multiple civilizations — Confucius in China, the Hebrew prophets in the Levant, the pre-Socratic philosophers in Greece, the Buddha in South Asia, and Jain tirthankaras in northern India.
In India specifically, the period produced a range of responses to Brahmanical Hinduism, which some thinkers felt had become inaccessible to ordinary people — its sacred texts in Sanskrit, its rituals controlled by a priestly class. Jainism, along with Buddhism and several other philosophical schools, emerged partly as a democratizing impulse: spiritual liberation available through individual effort, not hereditary privilege or priestly mediation.
Jainism is nontheistic. It does not posit a creator god and does not seek divine intervention. Higher beings exist in the Jain cosmology, but they cannot free anyone from karmic bondage. That work belongs entirely to the individual. This was a striking departure from the religious assumptions of the era.
Lasting impact
The downstream effects of Jain thought are woven through Indian culture in ways that often go unacknowledged. The principle of ahimsa influenced vegetarianism across the subcontinent and shaped the ethical frameworks of multiple traditions. Jain scholars made significant contributions to Indian mathematics, logic, and philosophy, including early articulations of perspectivism — the idea that truth can be seen from multiple valid viewpoints, a concept called anekantavada.
Jain merchants, particularly in western India, built extensive trade networks and became patrons of art, architecture, and learning. Jain temple complexes, such as those at Dilwara in Rajasthan and Ranakpur, represent some of the most intricate stone carving in human history.
The tradition survived enormous pressure: the rise and fall of empires, persecution under various rulers, and missionary efforts in the colonial period. Today, an estimated four to five million Jains live primarily in India, with diaspora communities across the world. For a tradition that claims no founding moment and no single founder, it has proved extraordinarily persistent.
Blindspots and limits
The historical record for Jainism’s early development is thin and heavily dependent on texts composed centuries after the events they describe. Parshvanatha’s historicity, while accepted by many scholars, is not universally confirmed, and the traditional dates for both Parshvanatha and Mahavira remain subjects of academic debate. The question of whether Jainism developed independently of Hinduism or emerged from within its reform milieu is genuinely contested — Jains reject the latter framing, while many scholars and Hindu traditions maintain it. The full contributions of women ascetics and lay practitioners to early Jain communities are also underrepresented in the surviving record, which was largely composed and preserved by male monastic communities.
Read more
For more on this story, see: World History Encyclopedia — Jainism
For more from Good News for Humankind, see:
- Indigenous land rights and 160 million hectares recognized at COP30
- Global suicide rate has fallen by 40% since 1995
- The Good News for Humankind archive on the ancient world
About this article
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