Difference between revisions of "Talk:chos nyid"

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(New page: <noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[ ]]</span></noinclude><br> <noinclude>[[ ]]</noinclude><br> ===Short History=== *<br> ===<span class=TibUni16>སྐུ་ཕྲེང༌། </span>- Suc...)
(New page: == Discussion == This word is used in two contexts: the relative and the ultimate. In relative terms, a dharma's dharma nature is its characteristics: the relative dharma nature of fire i...)
 
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<noinclude><span class=TibUni16>[[ ]]</span></noinclude><br>
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== Discussion ==
<noinclude>[[ ]]</noinclude><br>
 
  
===Short History===
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This word is used in two contexts: the relative and the ultimate. In relative terms, a dharma's dharma nature is its characteristics: the relative dharma nature of fire is that it is hot and that it burns, for example. In ultimate terms, dharma nature is the emptiness of phenomena: the ultimate dharma nature of fire is its emptiness of any true existence where there is nothing that is hot nor anything that is burning. It is this latter, ultimate sense that is most frequently used.
*<br>
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===<span class=TibUni16>སྐུ་ཕྲེང༌། </span>- Successive Incarnations of Lho Bongtrul Rinpoche===
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Although the Sanskrit word ''[[dharmata]]'' is frequently used in English texts, the translation dharma nature seems more informative to English speakers. It is important to use a compound on the word dharma to point out the relations between dharma, dharma base, dharma nature, and dharma expanse (''[[chos]], [[chos can]], [[chos nyid]]'' and ''[[chos kyi dbyings]]''). [[DKC]]
*1st [[Lho Bongtrul Tsele Lhundrub]]
 
*2nd [[Lho Bongtrul Drubchen Tendzin Zangpo]]
 
*3rd [[Lho Bongtrul Tendzin Jangchub Zangpo]]
 
*4th [[Lho Bongtrul Orgyen Nuden Dorje]]
 
*5th [[Lho Bongtrul Tendzin Gyalbu Nyugu]]
 
*6th [[Lho Bongtrul Tendzin Drodul]]
 
*7th [[Lho Bongtrul Tendzin Nyima]]<br>
 
===Main Monasteries===
 
*[[Lho Lungkar Monastery]]<br>
 
===Main Lineages===
 
*[[Drikung Yangzab]]
 
*[[Kagyu]]
 
*[[Nyingma]]
 
*[[Drikung Kagyu]]<br>
 
===Alternate Names & Spellings===
 
*[[Lho Jedrung Rinpoche]]<br>
 
===Internal Links===
 
*<br>
 
===External Links===
 
*[http://www.dharma-media.org/wogmin/bongtul.html Intro. to the Incarnations of] <br>
 
[[Category:Tibetan Buddhist Teachers]][[Category:Buddhist Masters]]
 
[[Category:Kagyu Masters]][[Category:Drikung Kagyu]][[Category:Terma]]
 

Latest revision as of 19:06, 16 August 2008

Discussion[edit]

This word is used in two contexts: the relative and the ultimate. In relative terms, a dharma's dharma nature is its characteristics: the relative dharma nature of fire is that it is hot and that it burns, for example. In ultimate terms, dharma nature is the emptiness of phenomena: the ultimate dharma nature of fire is its emptiness of any true existence where there is nothing that is hot nor anything that is burning. It is this latter, ultimate sense that is most frequently used.

Although the Sanskrit word dharmata is frequently used in English texts, the translation dharma nature seems more informative to English speakers. It is important to use a compound on the word dharma to point out the relations between dharma, dharma base, dharma nature, and dharma expanse (chos, chos can, chos nyid and chos kyi dbyings). DKC