Aeon: Difference between revisions

From Rangjung Yeshe Wiki - Dharma Dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
immutable/ unshakeable/ unmoving [RB]  
([[bskal pa]], Skt. [[Kalpa]]).


Akshobhya [one of the five Dhyani-buddhas, his [[sambhogkaya]] form is [[Vajrasattva]] [IW]  
Aeon ([[bskal pa]])
*A period of cosmic or cyclical time (Skt. [[kalpa]]) comprising fourteen secondary cycles (Skt. [[manvantara]]), each of which lasts 306,720,000 years. Each secondary cycle is said to contain seventy-one “great ages” (Skt. [[mahāyuga]]), and each of these is further subdivided into four ages (Skt. [[caturyuga]]) which are of decreasing duration, and known respectively as the Perfect Age ([[Krtayuga]]), the Third Age ([[Tretāyuga]]), the Second Age ([[Dvāparayuga]]), and the Black or Degenerate Age ([[Kaliyuga]]). Since these four ages represent a gradual decline in meritorious activities, special meditative practices and spiritual antidotes are associated with each in turn. Specifically, the Perfect Age is most suited to the practice of the Kriyātantra; the Third Age to that of the Caryātantra; the Second Age to that of the Yogatantra; and the Black or Degenerate Age to that of the Unsurpassed Yogatantra. For a general discussion of Buddhist cosmology, see R. Kloetzli, Buddhist Cosmology, and A.L. Basham, The Wonder That Was India, pp. 320-1. For the relationship between the four ages and spiritual practice, see NSTB, p. 268. [[GD]] (from the Glossary to [[Tibetan Elemental Divination Paintings]])


1) Akshobhya; 2) unmoved, unshaken) [IW]  
*1) World-age, period, cosmic cycle. 2) Cosmic period. 3) There are small aeons, intermediate aeons and big aeons. An intermediate aeon consists of two small aeons, and a big aeon consists of 80 intermediate aeons. 4) Aeon of Strife ([[rtsod dus]]) [RY]<br>


unmoved, most steady, unshaken, urine, large number [JV]  
*Aeon,– [[bskal pa]], Skt. [[kalpa]], world age, cosmic cycle. A [[great kalpa]] corresponds to a cycle of formation and destruction of a universe, and is divided into [[eighty intermediate kalpas]]. An [[intermediate kalpa]] is composed of one [[small kalpa]] during which lifespan etc. increases and one small kalpa during which it decreases. [AJP] from The Great Image ISBN 1-59030-069-6


one of the five Buddhas, his [[sambhogakaya]] form is [[Vajrasattva]] [RY]  
[[Category: Key Terms]]


[[Category: Key Terms]]
[[Category:Astrology and Divination]]

Latest revision as of 12:42, 4 October 2006

(bskal pa, Skt. Kalpa).

Aeon (bskal pa)

  • A period of cosmic or cyclical time (Skt. kalpa) comprising fourteen secondary cycles (Skt. manvantara), each of which lasts 306,720,000 years. Each secondary cycle is said to contain seventy-one “great ages” (Skt. mahāyuga), and each of these is further subdivided into four ages (Skt. caturyuga) which are of decreasing duration, and known respectively as the Perfect Age (Krtayuga), the Third Age (Tretāyuga), the Second Age (Dvāparayuga), and the Black or Degenerate Age (Kaliyuga). Since these four ages represent a gradual decline in meritorious activities, special meditative practices and spiritual antidotes are associated with each in turn. Specifically, the Perfect Age is most suited to the practice of the Kriyātantra; the Third Age to that of the Caryātantra; the Second Age to that of the Yogatantra; and the Black or Degenerate Age to that of the Unsurpassed Yogatantra. For a general discussion of Buddhist cosmology, see R. Kloetzli, Buddhist Cosmology, and A.L. Basham, The Wonder That Was India, pp. 320-1. For the relationship between the four ages and spiritual practice, see NSTB, p. 268. GD (from the Glossary to Tibetan Elemental Divination Paintings)
  • 1) World-age, period, cosmic cycle. 2) Cosmic period. 3) There are small aeons, intermediate aeons and big aeons. An intermediate aeon consists of two small aeons, and a big aeon consists of 80 intermediate aeons. 4) Aeon of Strife (rtsod dus) [RY]