Difference between revisions of "(Skt: nirvana, or moksha; Tib: nyang-dä, or thar-pa)"
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(Created page with "{{DisplayImages|68}} liberation (Skt: nirvana, or moksha; Tib: nyang-dä, or thar-pa) The state of complete freedom from samsara; the goal of a prac...") |
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[[liberation]] (Skt: [[nirvana]], or [[moksha]]; Tib: [[nyang-dä]], or [[thar-pa]]) | [[liberation]] (Skt: [[nirvana]], or [[moksha]]; Tib: [[nyang-dä]], or [[thar-pa]]) | ||
− | The [[state of complete freedom from samsara]]; the goal of a practitioner seeking his or her own [[escape from suffering]] (see also Hinayana). "[[Lower nirvana]]" is used to refer to this [[state of self-liberation]], while "[[higher nirvana]]" refers to the [[supreme attainment]] of the [[full enlightenment of buddhahood]]. [[Natural nirvana]] (Tib: [[rang-zhin nyang-dä]]) is the [[fundamentally pure nature of reality]], where all things and events are devoid of any inherent, intrinsic or [[independent reality]]. | + | The [[state of complete freedom from samsara]]; the goal of a [[practitioner]] seeking his or her [[own]] [[escape from suffering]] (see also [[Hinayana]]). |
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+ | "[[Lower nirvana]]" is used to refer to this [[state of self-liberation]], while "[[higher nirvana]]" refers to the [[supreme attainment]] | ||
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+ | of the [[full enlightenment of buddhahood]]. [[Natural nirvana]] (Tib: [[rang-zhin nyang-dä]]) is the [[fundamentally pure nature of reality]], where all things and events are devoid of any [[inherent]], intrinsic or [[independent reality]]. | ||
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Latest revision as of 14:06, 11 December 2023
liberation (Skt: nirvana, or moksha; Tib: nyang-dä, or thar-pa)
The state of complete freedom from samsara; the goal of a practitioner seeking his or her own escape from suffering (see also Hinayana).
"Lower nirvana" is used to refer to this state of self-liberation, while "higher nirvana" refers to the supreme attainment
of the full enlightenment of buddhahood. Natural nirvana (Tib: rang-zhin nyang-dä) is the fundamentally pure nature of reality, where all things and events are devoid of any inherent, intrinsic or independent reality.