enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Five faults and eight antidotes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_faults_and_eight...

    Kenchen Thrangu Rinpoche states: "In stupor the mind is cloudy and dull. In its obvious form there is a loss of clarity of mind. In its subtle form there is some clarity, but it is very weak." [9] Laxity may be coarse (audārika, rags-pa) or subtle (sūksma, phra-mo). Lethargy (styāna, rmugs-pa) is often also present, but is said to be less ...

  3. Four Noble Truths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Noble_Truths

    [70] They function as "a convenient conceptual framework for making sense of Buddhist thought." [70] [note 4] According to K. R. Norman, probably the best translation is "the truth[s] of the noble one (the Buddha)". [1] It is a statement of how things are seen by a Buddha, how things really are when seen correctly. It is the truthful way of seeing.

  4. Six Paths - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Six_Paths

    Typically, we as human beings only perceive the animals around us. The first Buddhist texts mention only five paths without distinguishing between the paths of deva and asura. [4] Moreover not all texts acknowledge the world of asura. [5] In Japan, the monk Genshin even inexplicably places the path of humans below that of the asuras. [6]

  5. Upādāna - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upādāna

    The mind like fire, seeks out more fuel to sustain it, in the case of the mind this is sense experience, hence the emphasis the Buddha places on "guarding the gates of the senses". By not being caught up in the senses ( appamāda ) we can be liberated from greed, hatred and delusion.

  6. Dhammapada (Easwaran translation) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dhammapada_(Easwaran...

    [9]: 80 Subsections present the Buddha's views on "Personality" [20] as a blend of five skandhas; "The World" as "shaped by our mind, for we become what we think" [9]: 86 (verse 1.1); "Karma, Death and Birth," arguing that "placing physical phenomena and mind in the same field... leads to a view of the world that is elegant in its simplicity ...

  7. Buddhist philosophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_philosophy

    Many Śramaṇa ascetics of the Buddha's time placed much emphasis on a denial of the body, using practices such as fasting, to liberate the mind from the body. Gautama Buddha, however, realized that the mind was embodied and causally dependent on the body, and therefore that a malnourished body did not allow the mind to be trained and ...

  8. Duḥkha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duḥkha

    The concept of sorrow and suffering, and self-knowledge as a means to overcome it, appears extensively with other terms in the pre-Buddhist Upanishads. [34] The term Duhkha also appears in many other middle and later post-Buddhist Upanishads such as the verse 6.20 of Shvetashvatara Upanishad , [ 35 ] as well as in the Bhagavad Gita , all in the ...

  9. Five hindrances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_hindrances

    The Buddha gives the following analogies in the Samaññaphala Sutta (DN 2, "The Fruits of the Contemplative Life"): [W]hen these five hindrances are not abandoned in himself, the monk regards it as a debt, a sickness, a prison, slavery, a road through desolate country.

  1. Related searches buddhist thoughts on suffering and loss of human mind youtube channel 6

    total cessation of suffering buddhismfour noble truths of suffering