Property:Gloss-def

From Buddha-Nature

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A path to enlightenment that emphasizes the renunciation of samsara in the quest for personal liberation. This tradition does not accept the Great Vehicle scriptures (i.e., the middle and last wheels of Dharma) as the word of the Buddha.  +
The fundamental qualities of a buddha and the genuine meaning of emptiness, which is the unity of awareness and emptiness.  +
An undistorted perspective of reality, which is the content of a sublime being s wisdom in postmeditation.  +
According to Mipam, the Middle Way claim that nothing ultimately exists.  +
School of interpretation of the Middle Way that uses language in accordance with the uncategorized ultimate—reality free from constructs as experienced in a sublime beings meditative equipoise. In this school, the two truths are not held as separate when ascertaining the nature of reality.  +
Literally, "the mind of awakening"; the wish to become a buddha for the benefit of others.  +
The "old school" of translations of Buddhist texts into Tibet that traces its heritage to the eighth century, as opposed to the new schools (Sarma) that developed from the eleventh century onward.  +
A school of the Middle Way that adopts a Middle Way view of ultimate truth and asserts the conventional truth as the Mind-Only School does.  +
School of interpretation of the Middle Way that emphasizes the categorized ultimate; divides the two truths; and asserts that while nothing ultimately exists, things exist relatively.  +
Awareness s intrinsic feature of being aware of its own knowing (self-aware) as it knows an object.  +
The complete absence of obscuration and the complete actualization of wisdom.  +
Something that comes to be dependent on, or in relation to, something else.  +
1308-1364, Systematizer of the Great Perfection who was Mipam s most important Tibetan influence.  +
(1) The genuine meaning is the inconceivable nature of reality; (1) the limited, or provisional, meaning is the lack of inherent existence in anything. first wheel of Dharma: One of three sets of sutras that contain teachings on the four noble truths and emphasize the teachings of impermanence, suffering, and no-self.  +
(Tib. ''tsong kha pa bio bzang grags pa'', 1357-1419): Forefather of the Geluk school who is renowned for his distinctive interpretation of the Consequence School.  +
A limited perspective based within ignorance that is maintained by ordinary beings in the world.  +
The way things appear, as opposed to the ultimate truth, which is the way things are. Often used interchangeably with relative truth.  +