Very little is known of the life of Nimbarka (Nimbaditya or Niyamananda), but he is held in reverence as one of the greatest saints of India, and the monastery he is said to have founded is still a celebrated place of pilgrimage. Nimbarka philosophy remains unique in that it never attacked other schools of philosophy. Here are the important teachings of Nimbarkacharya. Infinite is God and infinite are the ways to apprehend and comprehend him – and such was the opinion of Nimbarka also as he approached the fundamental problems of God, the universe, and the human soul. According to the philosophy of Nimbarka Bhedabheda, or dualism in nondualism, Brahman has two aspects, the absolute and the relative, or, in other words, the impersonal and the personal. In his personal aspect, Brahman possesses attributes, and from him as person has issued the universe of name and form. But Brahman has not exhausted himself in the creation of the universe, for he [it] is also transcendental and im