enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Buddhist ethics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_ethics

    The foundation of Buddhist ethics for laypeople is The Five Precepts which are common to all Buddhist schools. The precepts or "five moral virtues" ( pañca-silani ) are not commands but a set of voluntary commitments or guidelines, [ 23 ] to help one live a life in which one is happy, without worries, and able to meditate well.

  3. Brahmavihara - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmavihara

    The brahmavihārā (sublime attitudes, lit. "abodes of Brahma") is a series of four Buddhist virtues and the meditation practices made to cultivate them. They are also known as the four immeasurables (Pāli: appamaññā) [1] or four infinite minds (Chinese: 四無量心). [2]

  4. Five precepts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_precepts

    When Buddhism spread to different places and people, the role of the precepts began to vary. In countries in which Buddhism was adopted as the main religion without much competition from other religious disciplines, such as Thailand, the relation between the initiation of a layperson and the five precepts has been virtually non-existent.

  5. Four Dharma Seals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Dharma_Seals

    Four Dharma Seals are the four characteristics which reflect some Buddhist teaching . [1] [2] It is said that if a teaching contains the Four Dharma Seals then it can be considered Buddha Dharma. [3] This is despite the fact that some believe that the Dharma Seals were all introduced after Gautama Buddha died. [4]

  6. Dīghajāṇu Sutta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dīghajāṇu_Sutta

    For Theravadin scholars, this discourse of the Pāli Canon is one of several considered key to understanding Buddhist lay ethics. [2] In this discourse, the Buddha instructs a householder named Dīghajāṇu Vyagghapajja , [ 3 ] a Koliyan householder, on eight personality traits or conditions that lead to happiness and well-being in this and ...

  7. Eight precepts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_precepts

    In Buddhism, the Eight Precepts (Sanskrit: aṣṭāṇga-śīla or aṣṭā-sīla, Pali: aṭṭhaṅga-sīla or aṭṭha-sīla) is a list of moral precepts that are observed by Nuns, or Upāsakas and Upasikās (lay Buddhists) on Uposatha (observance days) and special occasions.

  8. Buddhist philosophy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_philosophy

    Buddhist ethics have been termed eudaimonic (with their goal being well-being) and also compared to virtue ethics (this approach began with Damien Keown). [62] Keown writes that Buddhist Nirvana is analogous to the Aristotelian Eudaimonia , and that Buddhist moral acts and virtues derive their value from how they lead us to or act as an aspect ...

  9. Buddhist ethics (discipline) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhist_Ethics_(discipline)

    Buddhist ethics emerged as an academic discipline in 1992, with the publication of Damien Keown's book The Nature of Buddhist Ethics. His subsequent co-founding of the Journal of Buddhist Ethics in 1994 further solidified the birth of a new field in the discipline of Buddhist studies. Prior to Keown's book, only a handful of books and articles ...