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Les Maîtres du temps (lit. The Masters of Time, a.k.a. Time Masters; Herrscher der Zeit in German; Az idő urai in Hungarian) is a 1982 independent animated science fiction film directed by René Laloux and designed by Mœbius.
The Time Masters, a science fiction novel by Wilson Tucker; Time Masters, a 1995 novel by Gary Blackwood; Les Maîtres du temps, a Franco-Hungarian animated science fiction film; Time Masters, a DC comic book series starring Rip Hunter; Time Masters, an organization appearing in Legends of Tomorrow; Time Masters, a 1996–98 Australian kids ...
Mindstream (Pali: citta-santāna, Sanskrit: citta-saṃtāna; Ch: xin xiangxu 心相續) in Buddhist philosophy is the moment-to-moment continuum of sense impressions and mental phenomena , [1] which is also described as continuing from one life to another. [2] [3]
Further Information was reviewed in the online second version of Pyramid which said "Some individuals are selected to become spanners, time travelers who strive to protect the timeline from the Narcissists. The Narcissists are an opposing breed of travelers who lack a spanner's cautious nature and who don't care that their oft-paradoxical ...
Time Masters is an Australian children's game show hosted by Tony Johnston from 1996 to 1998 on the Seven Network. [4] Running for three seasons, Tony would meet the two school teams consisting of two players each. The teams then participated in three rounds of games, competing for points.
Hypertime, described in The Kingdom #2 as "the vast interconnected web of parallel time-lines which comprise all reality", was an attempt by Waid to resolve the various tangled continuity issues that were supposed to have been solved by Crisis on Infinite Earths. Keith Dallas and Jason Sacks wrote: "Through Hypertime, Waid sought to resolve the ...
Where the celestial masters had added the pure gods of the Tao to the popular pantheon, Shàngqīng enlarged this to include an entirely new layer of existence between the original, creative force of the Tao, represented by the deity "yuan shi tian wang" (heavenly king of primordial beginning), and created world as we know it.
In Tibetan Buddhism, there is said to be no strict separation between samsara and nirvana, rather they exist in a continuum. Indeed, "continuum" is the main meaning of the term "tantra" (Tib. rgyud). [10] It is this continuum that connects samsara and nirvana that forms the theoretical foundation for Vajrayana practice.