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List of results
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Treasury of Precious Qualities: Book One (2001)/Glossary + (The hells, the realms of pretas and animals.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The hermitage near Kathmandu where Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche resides.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Wondrous Dance of Illusion/Glossary + (The hermitage of Lungtok Tenpey Nyima, between Jönpalung and Yel-le Gar.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (The hermitage of caves above Samye where Padmasambhava and many other great masters spent years in retreat.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The heruka of the Tathagata Body family or the tantric teachings connected to this deity, which are among the Eight Sadhana Teachings. Also known as Yamantaka, the wrathful form of Manjushri, representing wisdom that subdues death.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (The heruka of the Vajra family; alternatively, the tantric teachings connected to that wrathful deity. Also, one of the Eight Sadhana Teachings of the Nyingma school.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The heruka of the padma family or the tantric teachings connected to this deity, which are among the Eight Sadhana Teachings.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Distinguishing the Views/Glossary + (The higher of the two lower (Hinayāna) schools, whose name derives from the fact that its adherents follow the Hināyana sutras.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The highest buddha realm.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Life of Gampopa/Glossary + (The highest god realms, where beings have cut off attachment to both the Desire and Form Realm objects, but are still fixated on the bliss of meditation. They have no bodies, since they have transcended form.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind/Glossary + (The highest level in the formless realm and thus the summit of all possible states in the dimension of samsaric existence.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Introduction to the Middle Way/Glossary + (The highest level in the formless realm and thus the summit of all possible states in the dimension of samsaric existence.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Treasury of Precious Qualities: Book One (2001)/Glossary + (The highest level in the formless realm and thus the summit of all possible states in the dimension of wordly experience.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2003)/Glossary + (The highest of all the pure lands.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2013)/Glossary + (The highest of all the pure lands.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Life of Gampopa/Glossary + (The highest of the four classes of tantra, according to the New Translation schools.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The highest of the four formless realms. Also known as dwelling on the idea "neither absence nor presence of perception. ")
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Rain of Wisdom/Glossary + (The highest of the rūpadhātu deva realms, but usually used to mean the highest buddha realm.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Profound Inner Principles/Glossary + (The highest of the six levels of desire realm gods.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Rain of Wisdom/Glossary + (The highest of the six tantric yānas of the Nyingma school of Tibet (Old Translation schooṇ The six are kriyā, upa (caryā), yoga, mahāyoga, anu, and ati. Ati teachings are the final statement of the fruition path of vajrayāna.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Zurchungpa's Testament/Glossary + (The highest of the three inner yogas, the summit of the nine vehicles according to the classification of the Nyingmapa School)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Lady of the Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The highest philosophical view of Mahayana Buddhism, propounded by Nagarjuna in the second century CE.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Feast of the Nectar of the Supreme Vehicle/Glossary + (The highest possible state of worldly realization, the fourth stage of the path of joining that immediately precedes the direct realization of emptiness on the path of seeing.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (The highest teaching of the Nyingma. See Ati.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The hinayana vows of individual liberation, the mahayana trainings of a bodhisattva, and the vajrayana samayas of a vidyadhara.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The historical Buddha.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (The human beings of the FOUR CONTINENTS and the SIX SPECIES OF KĀMA DIVINITIES. 14, 60)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Mirror of Mindfulness (1989)/Glossary + (The human recipient of the maha ati teachings. ''See'' Garab Dorje.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2003)/Glossary + (The ideal of the Mahāyāna Buddhist practitioner, beings who, having given rise to bodhicitta, dedicate themselves to developing wisdom and compassion for the benefit of others in this and all future lives through taking the bodhisattva's vow.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2013)/Glossary + (The ideal of the Mahāyāna Buddhist practitioner, beings who, having given rise to bodhicitta, dedicate themselves to developing wisdom and compassion for the benefit of others in this and all future lives through taking the bodhisattva's vow.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Treasury of Precious Qualities: Book One (2001)/Glossary + (The ideal physical posture for meditation: … The ideal physical posture for meditation: legs crossed in the vajra posture, back straight, hands in the gesture of meditation, eyes gazing along the line of the nose, chin slightly tucked in, shoulders well apart and even, and the tip of the tongue touching the palate.the tip of the tongue touching the palate.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (The ignorance of belief in individual selfhood (''bdag-nyid gcig-pu'i ma-rig-pa''), the co-emergent ignorance (''lhan-cig skyes-pa'i ma-rig-pa'') and the ignorance of the imaginary (''kun-tu brtags-pa'i ma-rig-pa''). 12, 54)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Düdjom Lingpa's Visions of the Great Perfection: Heart of the Great Perfection/Glossary + (The illuminating nature of pristine awareness.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Deity Mantra and Wisdom/Glossary + (The illusory body is referred to as such b … The illusory body is referred to as such because although there are not various forms in reality, various forms appear. And though they appear, they do not truly exist. [TD 602] As a specific completion stage practice, there are three types of illusory body: the impure illusory body, the pure illusory body, and the hidden meaning - the illusory body of the energetic-mind. [DR 444] According to Jamgön Kongtrül, the most extensive treatment of this practice is found in the ''Guhyasamāja Tantra''. [TK 4, 29] in the ''Guhyasamāja Tantra''. [TK 4, 29])
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (The imaginary (''kun-brtags'', Skt. ''pari … The imaginary (''kun-brtags'', Skt. ''parikalpita''), the dependent (''gzhan-dbang'', Skt. ''paratantra'') and the absolute (''yongs-grub'', Skt. ''panniṣpanna''). See, e.g., [[D.T. Suzuki]], Studies in the [[Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra]], (pp. 154-63). 24-6, 28, 154, 160-1, 170-2, 182-3, 216). 24-6, 28, 154, 160-1, 170-2, 182-3, 216)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Drinking the Mountain Stream (2004)/Glossary + (The imagined self or identity of persons (personal ego) and things (phenomenal ego), which are inherently lacking any independent identity.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Feast of the Nectar of the Supreme Vehicle/Glossary + (The immense mountain, wider at the top than at the bottom, that forms the center of the universe around which the four continents of the world are disposed, according to ancient Indian cosmology.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Profound Inner Principles/Glossary + (The implements used to present the offering substances in burnt-offering rituals.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (The impurity of life-span, i.e. beings are … The impurity of life-span, i.e. beings are short-lived (''tshe'i snyigs-ma'', Skt. ''ayuḥkaṣāya''), the impurity of View (''lta-ba'i snyigs-ma'', Skt. ''dṛṣṭikaṣāya''), the impurity of conflicting emotions (''nyon-mongs-kyi snyigs-ma'', Skt. ''kleśakaṣāya''), the impurity of sentient beings (''sems-can-gyi snyigs-ma'', Skt. ''sattvakaśāya'') and the impurity of our present age (''dus-kyi snyigs-ma'', Skt. ''kalpakaṣāya''); Mvt. (2335-40). 212Skt. ''kalpakaṣāya''); Mvt. (2335-40). 212)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The incarnation of Semlhag Chen, a god who … The incarnation of Semlhag Chen, a god who earlier had been empowered by the buddhas. Immaculately conceived, his mother was a nun, the daughter of King Uparaja (Dhahenatalo or Indrabhuti) of Uddiyana. Garab Dorje received all the tantras, scriptures, and oral instructions of Dzogchen from Vajrasattva and Vajrapani in person and became the first human vidyadhara in the Dzogchen lineage. Having reached the state of complete enlightenment through the effortless Great Perfection, Garab Dorje transmitted the teachings to his retinue of exceptional beings. Manjushrimitra is regarded as his chief disciple. Padmasambhava is also known to have received the transmission of the Dzogchen tantras directly from Garab Dorje's wisdom form.s directly from Garab Dorje's wisdom form.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/A Feast of the Nectar of the Supreme Vehicle/Glossary + (The incorrect mental processes that lead to the imputations of subject and object and of intrinsic existence.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism/Glossary + (The indestructible reality of the buddha-b … The indestructible reality of the buddha-body, speech and mind, which each comprise two of the SIX PURE ESSENCES - the body being identified with earth and water, speech with fire and air, and mind with space and pristine cognition. Also known as the THREE SECRETS. 264, 594, 830, 853n as the THREE SECRETS. 264, 594, 830, 853)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2003)/Glossary + (The indigenous shamanistic religion of Tibet, preceding the arrival of Buddhism. Bön has continued to thrive and integrate various Buddhist ideas while retaining its own separate identity.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Machik's Complete Explanation (2013)/Glossary + (The indigenous shamanistic religion of Tibet, preceding the arrival of Buddhism. Bön has continued to thrive and integrate various Buddhist ideas while retaining its own separate identity.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Enlightened Beings/Glossary + (The indirect or "interpretable" meaning. An important term in Buddhist hermeneutics employed to characterize primarily the sūtras, which reveal their true meaning only after further elaboration and explication.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Blazing Splendor/Glossary + (The indispensable keys for unlocking the m … The indispensable keys for unlocking the meaning of the tantras. The four modes are the literal, general, hidden, and the ultimate. The six limits are the views of the expedient and definitive meaning, the implied and the not implied, the literal and the not literal. implied, the literal and the not literal.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The individual continuity of cognition in an individual sentient being.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Dōgen's Pure Standards for the Zen Community/Glossary + (The infirmary hall, literally, the "hall for prolonging longevity." While sick in the enjudō, monks do not participate in any other temple activity. 199n. 128)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/Dōgen's Pure Standards for the Zen Community/Glossary + (The infirmary manager. 102n. 11)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Lotus-Born/Glossary + (The innate nature of phenomena and mind.)
- Tsadra Library Glossary Search/All Gloss Entries/The Great Image/Glossary + (The innate nature of phenomena and mind; emptiness.)