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Difference between revisions of "Dharmacakra Mudrā"

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[[File:DharmachakraMudra.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:DharmachakraMudra.JPG|thumb|250px|]]
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
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[[Wheel-Turning Gesture]]
 
[[Wheel-Turning Gesture]]
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     [[Sjoquist]] p. 33 [[Dharmacakra Mudrā]]  
 
     [[Sjoquist]] p. 33 [[Dharmacakra Mudrā]]  
 
     [[zhuǎnfǎlún yìn]] [[转法轮印 轉法輪印]] or [[shuōfǎ yìn]] [[说法印 說法印]]  
 
     [[zhuǎnfǎlún yìn]] [[转法轮印 轉法輪印]] or [[shuōfǎ yìn]] [[说法印 說法印]]  
 
     This gesture refers to [[turning the wheel of the law]] or of [[teaching about the law]].  
 
     This gesture refers to [[turning the wheel of the law]] or of [[teaching about the law]].  
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It is through turning this great [[wheel]] by means of their teachings, that the [[buddhas]] guide the [[world]] through the [[six realms of existence]] also represented by [[a wheel]].
 
It is through turning this great [[wheel]] by means of their teachings, that the [[buddhas]] guide the [[world]] through the [[six realms of existence]] also represented by [[a wheel]].
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[http://anthro.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/chin/shoouyinn/MudrasDescribed.html anthro.ucsd.edu]
 
[http://anthro.ucsd.edu/~dkjordan/chin/shoouyinn/MudrasDescribed.html anthro.ucsd.edu]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
 
[[Category:Buddhist Terms]]
 
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[[Category:Buddhism]]
 
[[Category:Dharmachakra Mudra]]
 
[[Category:Dharmachakra Mudra]]

Latest revision as of 21:22, 30 November 2023

DharmachakraMudra.JPG






Wheel-Turning Gesture



    Sjoquist p. 33 Dharmacakra Mudrā
    zhuǎnfǎlún yìn 转法轮印 轉法輪印 or shuōfǎ yìn 说法印 說法印
    This gesture refers to turning the wheel of the law or of teaching about the law.


It is through turning this great wheel by means of their teachings, that the buddhas guide the world through the six realms of existence also represented by a wheel.

    Wheel imagery to describe reincarnation is pervasive in Buddhist art.

When artists portray the Buddha’s first sermon after his enlightenment, (described in chapter 17 of the on-line biography of the Buddha [Link]), they tend to show him making this gesture.

The same wheel imagery is seen in the tenth court of hell, described on this web site.

Source

anthro.ucsd.edu