Property:Gloss-def

From Buddha-Nature

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One of the different types of conduct used as an enhancement practice.  +
The first four of the five paths on which concepts of progress, training, and learning still remain.  +
The all-ground consciousness, mind-consciousness, defiled mind-consciousness, and the five sense-consciousnesses.  +
The abbot of Ka-Nying Shedrup Ling Monastery and the oldest son of Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche. Author of Union of Mahamudra and Dzogchen and Jewel of the Heart (Rangjung Yeshe Publications, 1986 and 1987).  +
Thirty-three resulting from anger, forty from desire, and seven from delusion. First, the thirty-three thought states resulting from anger, according to the Spyod bsDus composed by Aryadeva: detachment, medium detachment, intense detachment, inner mental going and coming, sadness, medium sadness, intense sadness, quietude, conceptualization, fear, medium fear, intense fear, craving, medium craving, intense craving, grasping, non virtue, mental pain due to hunger or thirst, sensation, medium sensation, intense sensation, cognizing, cognizance, perception-basis, discrimination, conscience, compassion, love, medium love, intense love, apprehensiveness, attraction, and jealousy. Second, the forty thought states of desire, according to the sPyod bsDus: attachment, thorough lust, delight, medium delight, intense delight, rejoicing, strong joy, amazement, agitation, satisfaction, embracing, kissing, clasping, supporting, exertion, pride, engagement, infatuation, strength, joy, joining in bliss, medium joining in bliss, intense joining in bliss, grace- fulness, strong flirtation, hostility, virtue, lucidity, truth, nontruth, ascertainment, grasping, generosity, encouragement, bravery, shamelessness, perkiness, viciousness, unrulyness, and strong deceitfulness. The seven thought states of delusion, according to the sPyod bsDus: medium desire, forgetfulness, confusion, speechlessness, weariness, laziness, and doubt.  +
An inherently existent and independent entity of the individual self or of phenomena.  +
A great female Indian master and a teacher of Khyungpo Naljor.  +
The wisdom which is the unity of bliss and emptiness of the third empowerment and which is used to introduce the true wisdom of the fourth empowerment.  +
The samsaric realms of desire, form, and formlessness. See also Desire realm; Four Formless Realms; Realm of form.  +
The abode of an unenlightened being who has practiced the four absorptions- the four unenlightened meditative states of dwelling on the thoughts: infinite space, infinite consciousness, nothing whatsoever, and neither presence nor absence [of conception].  +
First step of three: understanding, experience, and realization.  +
One of the "three realms," the seventeen samsaric heavenly abodes consisting of the threefold four dhyana realms and the five pure abodes. The beings there have bodies of light, long lives, and no painful sensations.  +
The three aspects of the sugatagarbha according to the dzogchen system.  +
The second stage in the practice of mahamudra.  +
The fourth of the four aspects of ascertainment on the path of joining. The highest spiritual attainment within samsaric existence.  +
Compared to vajrayana, the lower are the vehicles of shravakas, pratyekabuddhas, and bodhisattvas.  +
The shurangama samadhi described in the Shurangama Sutra.  +