enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Eight Consciousnesses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_Consciousnesses

    The Eight Consciousnesses (Skt. aṣṭa vijñānakāyāḥ [1]) is a classification developed in the tradition of the Yogācāra school of Mahayana Buddhism.They enumerate the five sense consciousnesses, supplemented by the mental consciousness (manovijñāna), the defiled mental consciousness (kliṣṭamanovijñāna [2]), and finally the fundamental store-house consciousness ...

  3. Noble Eightfold Path - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noble_Eightfold_Path

    [8] In early Buddhism, these practices started with understanding that the body-mind works in a corrupted way (right view), followed by entering the Buddhist path of self-observance, self-restraint, and cultivating kindness and compassion; and culminating in dhyana or samadhi, which reinforces these practices for the development of the body ...

  4. Yogachara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yogachara

    Yogachara(Sanskrit: योगाचार, IAST: Yogācāra) is an influential tradition of Buddhist philosophyand psychology emphasizing the study of cognition, perception, and consciousnessthrough the interior lens of meditation, as well as philosophical reasoning (hetuvidyā). [1][2]Yogachara was one of the two most influential traditions of ...

  5. The Nine Consciousness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Nine_Consciousness

    The Nine Consciousness is a concept in Buddhism, specifically in Nichiren Buddhism, [1] that theorizes there are nine levels that comprise a person's experience of life. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] It fundamentally draws on how people's physical bodies react to the external world, then considers the inner workings of the mind which result in a person's actions.

  6. Buddhist paths to liberation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_paths_to_liberation

    The Buddhist path (marga) to liberation, also referred to as awakening, is described in a wide variety of ways. [1] The classical one is the Noble Eightfold Path, which is only one of several summaries presented in the Sutta Pitaka. A number of other paths to liberation exist within various Buddhist traditions and theology.

  7. Theravada Abhidhamma - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theravāda_Abhidhamma

    Contents. Abhidhamma tradition. This article is about the Abhidhamma philosophical tradition within Theravāda Buddhism. For the Abhidhamma in the Pali Canon, see Abhidhamma Piṭaka. For other uses, see Abhidharma. The Abhidhamma tradition refers to a scholastic systematization of the Theravāda school's understanding of the highest Buddhist ...

  8. Four stages of awakening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_stages_of_awakening

    These four stages are Sotāpanna (stream-enterer), Sakadāgāmi (once-returner), Anāgāmi (non-returner), and Arahant (conqueror). The oldest Buddhist texts portray the Buddha as referring to people who are at one of these four stages as noble people (ariya-puggala) and the community of such persons as the noble sangha (ariya-sangha). [ 1 ][ 2 ...

  9. Vasubandhu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vasubandhu

    t. e. Vasubandhu (traditional Chinese: 世親 ; ; pinyin: Shìqīn; Tibetan: དབྱིག་གཉེན་ Wylie: dbyig gnyen; fl. 4th to 5th century CE) was an influential Indian Buddhist monk and scholar. [ 1 ] He was a philosopher who wrote commentary on the Abhidharma, from the perspectives of the Sarvastivada and Sautrāntika schools.