Arihant is a soul who has conquered inner passions such as attachment, anger, pride and greed. Having destroyed four inimicalkarmas, they realize pure self. Arihants are also called kevalins as they possess kevala jnana. An arihant is also called a jina. At the end of their life, arihantsdestroy remaining karmas and attain moksha and become siddhas. Arihantas have a body while siddhas are bodiless pure spirit. The Ṇamōkāra mantra, the fundamental prayer dedicated to Pañca-Parameṣṭhi, begins with Ṇamō arihantāṇaṁ, "obeisance to the arihants". Kevalins - omniscient beings - are said to be of two kinds
Tirthankara kevalī: 24 human spiritual guides who after attaining omniscience teach the path to salvation.
Sāmānya kevalī: Kevalins who are concerned with their own liberation.
According to Jains, every soul has the potential to become an arihant. A soul which destroys all kashayas or inner enemies like anger, ego, deception, and greed, responsible for the perpetuation of ignorance, becomes an arihant.
Philosophy
According to Jain texts, omniscience is attained on the destruction of four types of karmas– deluding, the knowledge-obscuring, the perception-obscuring and the obstructive karmas, in the order mentioned. The arihants are said to be free from the following eighteen imperfections:
In Jainism, omniscience is said to be the infinite, all-embracingknowledge that reflects, as it were in a mirror, all substances and their infinite modes, extending through the past, the present and the future. According to Jain texts, omniscience is the natural attribute of the pure souls. The self-attaining omniscience becomes a kevalin. The four infinitudes are:
Those arihants who re-establish the Jain faith are called tirthankaras. Tirthankaras revitalize the sangha, the fourfold order consisting of male saints, female saints, male householders and female householders. The first tirthankara of the current time cycle was Ṛṣabhanātha, and the twenty-fourth and last Tirthankara was Mahavira, who lived from 599 BCE to 527 BCE. where omniscient Arihantas preach Jain texts mention forty-six attributes of arihants or tirthankaras. These attributes comprise four infinitudes, thirty-four miraculous happenings, and eight splendours. The eight splendours are:
At the time of nirvana, the arihant sheds off the remaining four aghati karmas:
Nama karma
Gotra karma,
Vedniya karma,
Ayushya karma.
These four karmas do not affect the true nature of the soul and are therefore called aghati karmas.
Worship
In the Ṇamōkāra mantra, Namo Arihantanam, Namo Siddhanam, Jains worship the arihants first and then to the siddhas, even though the latter are perfected souls who have destroyed all karmas but arihants are considered to be at a higher spiritual stage than siddhas. Since siddhas have attained ultimate liberation, they probably are not directly accessible but may be through the wisdom they passed on. However arihants are accessible for spiritual guidance of human society until their nirvana. The Dravyasaṃgraha, a major Jain text, states: