Search by property
This page provides a simple browsing interface for finding entities described by a property and a named value. Other available search interfaces include the page property search, and the ask query builder.
List of results
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (Cyclic existence.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Gathering of Brilliant Moons/Glossary + (Cyclic existence.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Blazing Splendor/Glossary + (Dabzang Rinpoche's monastery in Nangchen, founded by the first Dabzang Rinpoche.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Profound Inner Principles/Glossary + (Dak Rampa (170) identifies this channel as one that is explained in the medical texts. See Parfionovitch, Dorje, and Meyer 1992, paintings 9, 12, and 47, and 189, 195, and 265.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Profound Inner Principles/Glossary + (Dak Rampa (403) states: ""Endowed with the … Dak Rampa (403) states: ""Endowed with the most sublime of manifestations" is explained in two ways. In the Pāramitāyāna it means to be endowed with the most sublime of the manifestations of method: generosity and the other [pāramitās]. The Kālachakra Tantra and other texts teach that it means that all the manifestations of knowable objects are clarity." The seventh Karmapa, Chödrak Gyatso, explains that "emptiness endowed with the most sublime of manifestations" is synonymous with "sugatagarbha." "Endowed with the most sublime of manifestations" means that sugatagarbha actually possesses the sixty-four excellent qualities of separation and maturation. "Emptiness" means that those qualities do not exist as something identifiable or as characteristics. Annotations (61.4) says: "Emptiness [is] endowed with the most sublime of manifestations, that is, all knowable objects. Alternatively, "endowed with manifestations" refers to aspects of method, such as generosity."to aspects of method, such as generosity.")
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Blazing Splendor/Glossary + (Dakla Gampo; eight-peaked mountain in the region in Southern Central Tibet.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (Dance masks of a doctrine protector and his lady commissioned by Zur Zangpopel)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Au Cœur de la compassion/Glossary + (Dans la cosmologie bouddhiste, les mondes … Dans la cosmologie bouddhiste, les mondes sont soumis à un processus alternatif de formation et de dissolution. La période qui s’écoule entre le début d’un monde et la formation du monde suivant, après la dissolution du premier, est appelée ''mahakalpa'' ou «grande ère cosmique»; celle-ci est formée de quatre phases qui correspondent à la formation, à la durée et à la dissolution d’un monde, suivies d’une étape intermédiaire de vide. Chacune de ces quatre phases se compose de vingt «ères cosmiques intermédiaires». de vingt «ères cosmiques intermédiaires».)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Au Cœur de la compassion/Glossary + (Dans le bouddhisme, l’ignorance n’est pas … Dans le bouddhisme, l’ignorance n’est pas tant une absence de savoir qu’une méprise: une compréhension erronée, ou l’incapacité de reconnaître la nature véritable et ultime de l’individu et des phénomènes auxquels est attribuée à tort une existence réelle. L’ignorance présente quatre aspects: 1. l’ignorance fondamentale (tib. ''ma rig pa''), qui est la non-reconnaissance de la conscience primordiale et de la vacuité des phénomènes; 2. un état mental obscurci (tib. ''gti mug''), qui consiste essentiellement en un manque de discernement quant à ce qu’il convient de faire et d’éviter pour se libérer du samsara; 3. le doute (tib. ''the tshom''), notamment sur la causalité karmique et l’existence des vies passées et futures; 4. les vues erronées (tib. ''lta ba nyon mong can''), qui consistent à croire que les agrégats forment le soi individuel, et que les phénomènes existent en soi et par soi.les phénomènes existent en soi et par soi.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Au Cœur de la compassion/Glossary + (Dans le cadre de la pratique et de la médi … Dans le cadre de la pratique et de la méditation bouddhistes, est appelé «démon» tout ce qui fait obstacle à l’Éveil. Les textes font souvent état de quatre démons: les agrégats d’appropriation, les émotions perturbatrices, le maî tre de la mort, et certains dieux du monde du Désir, lesquels sont souvent perçus comme des personnifications de la distraction.e des personnifications de la distraction.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Blazing Splendor/Glossary + (Darma Wangchuk's disciple; early master in the Barom Kagyu lineage.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Wondrous Dance of Illusion/Glossary + (Daughter of King Trisong Detsen. First recipient of the Khandro Nyingtik treasure cycle, revealed by her later incarnation Pema Ledreltsel (1231?–1307?).)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (Dawn, morning, afternoon, and evening.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (Death ('chi-ba), the intermediate state before birth (skye-ba bar-ma) and the THREE PHASES OF LIFE. 278-9)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Death.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Deceptiveness, illusion.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Blazing Splendor/Glossary + (Dechen Chödrön; Chokgyur Lingpa's consort and Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche's great-grandmother. Her name means Dharma Lamp of Great Bliss.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Decided, decisive, definite.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defensive conceit, a mode of māna. It is characterized thus: If others excel<br>one greatly, in respect of clan and lineage, etc., and one claims that one<br>is only a little inferior; the mental elevation so produced is named<br> (Cf. Avatāra).)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defiled ignorance. This is ignorance connected with defilement.<br> It is overcome in the arhat and the pratyeka-buddha as well as the<br> samyak-sambuddha.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defiled. This includes both what is akuśala and what is nivṛtāyākṛta.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defilement seed.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defilement-hindmnce. —►āvaraṇa)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Defilement.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Distinguishing the Views/Glossary + (Definition of emptiness according to other (non Gzhan stong) Tibetan schools. The short form of this term is rang stong (self-emptiness).)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Gathering of Brilliant Moons/Glossary + (Definitive truth or meaning.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Definitive.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Düdjom Lingpa's Visions of the Great Perfection: Heart of the Great Perfection/Glossary + (Degenerate lifespans, mental afflictions, sentient beings, times, and views.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Crystal Mirror of Philosophical Systems/Glossary + (Deities in the Nyingma tradition of eight transmitted precepts: Manjuśri/Yamāntaka, Hayagrīva, Heruka, Vajṛāmrta, and Vajrakila.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Crystal Mirror of Philosophical Systems/Glossary + (Deities of the desire, form, and formless worlds.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (Deity riding a white yak, oath-bound by Padmasambhava. Also refers to a mountain in the Yarlung Valley of central Tibet, where the first king of Tibet is said to have descended from the sky.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Feast of the Nectar of the Supreme Vehicle/Glossary + (Deliberate mental activity directed onto a particular object or topic. In this translation we have used “to keep in mind” to convey its verbal form.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (Delight (''dga-'ba''), supreme delight ('' … Delight (''dga-'ba''), supreme delight (''dga'-mchog''), absence of delight (''dga-'bral'') and co-emergent delight (''lhan-cig skyes-pa'i dga'-ba''), each of which has four aspects through its conjunction with the same four, making sixteen in all. Cf. Longcenpa, ''Dispelling Darkness in the Ten Directions'', pp. 386-96 (GGFTC, pp. 900-14). 125ons'', pp. 386-96 (GGFTC, pp. 900-14). 125)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Delight in the cultivation of abandonment (of defilements).)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (Delusion (''gti-mug'', Skt. ''moha''), des … Delusion (''gti-mug'', Skt. ''moha''), desire ('' 'dod-chags'', Skt. ''rāga''), hatred (''zhes dang'', Skt. ''dveṣa''), pride (''nga-rgyal'', Skt. ''abhimāna''), envy (''phrag-dog'', Skt. ''īrsyā'') and the ignorance (Skt. ''avidyā'') on which basis there is subjective grasping of bewildering thoughts (''ma-rig-pa zhes-pa-ni gzhi 'khrul-rtog-gi cha 'dzin-pa''). 12, 55zhi 'khrul-rtog-gi cha 'dzin-pa''). 12, 55)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Crystal Mirror of Philosophical Systems/Glossary + (Delusion obstacles and obstacles to omniscience.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Düdjom Lingpa's Visions of the Great Perfection: Heart of the Great Perfection/Glossary + (Delusion, hatred, pride, attachment, and envy)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Delusion.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Delusion. One of the three akuśala-mūla-s.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (Demi-god, one of the six classes of beings … Demi-god, one of the six classes of beings in samsara. The asuras are usually considered to be similar to the gods with whom they are sometimes classified. Their dominant emotional characteristic is envy, and they are constantly at war with the gods, of whom they are jealous.r with the gods, of whom they are jealous.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Profound Inner Principles/Glossary + (Demigods, nāgas, hungry ghosts, and the ei … Demigods, nāgas, hungry ghosts, and the eight hells. Another list is the hot hells, cold hells, nāga state, demigod state, humans, and those of the six classes of desirous gods. GTCD. Alternatively they are the states of the six classes of desirous gods; hell beings; hungry ghosts; animals; humans; and gods and demigods (counted as one). Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche 2004, 229. one). Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche 2004, 229.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Lady of the Lotus-Born/Glossary + (Demigods, one of six classes of beings in samsara.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (Demon or demonic influence that creates ob … Demon or demonic influence that creates obstacles for practice and enlightenment. Mythologically said to be a powerful god, who dwells in the highest abode in the realm of desire; the master of illusion, who attempted to prevent the Buddha from attaining enlightenment at Bodhgaya. For the Dharma practitioner, Mara symbolizes one's own ego-clinging and preoccupation with the eight worldly concerns. Generally, there are four maras or obstructions to practice of the Dharma: those of defilements, death, the aggregates, and the godly mara of seduction. Sometimes the four maras are mentioned by name: Klesha, Lord of Death, Skandha, and Godly Son.ha, Lord of Death, Skandha, and Godly Son.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Dōgen's Pure Standards for the Zen Community/Glossary + (Demonic inclination, literally "the demons' faction"; those who are possessed by the demons of ego and so are blind to reality. 194n. 89)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Dependent on, derived.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Feast of the Nectar of the Supreme Vehicle/Glossary + (Depending on context, the extreme of saṃsāra and the extreme of nirvāṇa; the extremes of existence and nonexistence; the extremes of pleasurable indulgence and excessive austerity.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Deportment.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Depraved opinionatedness.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Mahāmudrā and Related Instructions/Glossary + (Derived from gandha "incense," it means a shrine building that is used primarily for offerings rather than assemblies, such as the Mahābodhi temple in Bodhgaya)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Sarvastivada Abhidharma/Glossary + (Derived from preparatory effort.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Hevajra Tantra I/Glossary + (Derived from the root dhyai, 'to think or ponder', it is the general word for 'meditation'. Compare the special sense of bhāvanā, q.v. The Tibetan translation bsam-gtan means literally 'mind-composure'.<br>)