rnam shes: Difference between revisions

From Rangjung Yeshe Wiki - Dharma Dictionary
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by one other user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
<noinclude>{{DRAFTTermAdmin}}{{DRAFTTerm}}</noinclude>
<wytotib>{{PAGENAME}}</wytotib><br>
Consciousness [RY]
Consciousness [RY]



Latest revision as of 15:22, 20 September 2021

This is the RYI Dictionary content as presented on the site http://rywiki.tsadra.org/, which is being changed fundamentally and will become hard to use within the GoldenDict application. If you are using GoldenDict, please either download and import the rydic2003 file from DigitalTibetan (WayBack Machine version as the site was shut down in November 2021).

Or go directly to http://rywiki.tsadra.org/ for more upcoming features.

Action needed!
This page is a draft of a new term page. Check for content and click approve to create the same page in the main namespace if it does not already exist.
Status Conflict Actions
DRAFT rnam shes already exists! EditDelete

Submitted page content


Welcome to a test page for the Lotsawa Workbench

This page is still in development. More changes coming soon!

If you'd like to review other pages that use this same new template, see these:

Lotsawa Workbench The Lotsawa Workbench is an initiative of the Tsadra Foundation research department. Currently, this is just a test and we welcome any comments and suggestions. We hope to invite collaboration from users and stakeholders from Dharma groups as well as academia. Please contact us if you are interested in developing this project with us: research AT tsadra DOT org.

Discussions Start discussion topic
རྣམ་ཤེས་
rnam shes


Tsadra Research Library Glossaries

    {{#arraymap:Buddhapālita's Commentary on Nāgārjuna's Middle Way;Les Systèmes Philosophiques Bouddhistes (Charrier 2020);Foundations of Buddhist Study and Practice;Indo-Tibetan Classical Learning and Buddhist Phenomenology;Jewels from the Treasury;A Treasure Trove of Scriptural Transmission;Jamgön Mipam: His Life and Teachings;Study and Practice of Meditation;Yeshe Lama (2008, Snow Lion);Frameworks of Buddhist Philosophy;Deity Mantra and Wisdom;The Mind and Its Functions;Wisdom Nectar;Luminous Mind;A Dose of Emptiness (1992);Mind in Tibetan Buddhism |; |@@@ |
  1. {{#arraymap: {{#arraymap:Error: no local variable "gloss-translator" has been set.;Error: no local variable "gloss-author" has been set. |;|@@@ |@@@ |;}} |; |@@@ |@@@ |,  }}. Error: no local variable "gloss-page" has been set. (Error: no local variable "gloss-pubdate" has been set.)
       |  Sanskrit: {{#arraymap: Error: no local variable "gloss-sanskrit" has been set.

    |, |@@@ |@@@ |,  }}   |  English: {{#arraymap: Error: no local variable "gloss-english" has been set. |, |@@@ |@@@ |,  }}   |  French: {{#arraymap: Error: no local variable "gloss-french" has been set. |, |@@@ |@@@ |, 

    }}   |  Definition: Error: no local variable "gloss-def" has been set.
  2. |

    }}

Click here (or the Glossaries tab) to see more results  


84000 Glossary

  1. lam gyi rnam pa shes pa
    Understanding of the aspects of the path
  2. lam gyi rnam pa shes pa nyid
    Understanding of the aspects of the path
  3. rnam shes
    Consciousness
  4. rnam shes mtha' yas skye mched
    Sphere of the infinity of consciousness
  5. rnam shes mtha' yas skye mched bsgrubs te gnas pa
    One achieves and abides in the sense field of infinite consciousness, thinking, ‘Consciousness is infinite’
  6. rnam shes mtha' yas skye mched kyi snyoms 'jug
    Meditative absorption of the sense field of infinite consciousness
  7. rnam shes mtha' yas skye mched la gnas pa
    Abides in the sense field of infinite consciousness


English Glossaries

Rangjung Yeshe Dictionary Rangjung Yeshe Tibetan-English Dharma Dictionary 3.0 <br> by Erik Pema Kunsang (2003)

No direct match.

797 total match(es)
Hopkins Glossary 2015 The Uma Institute for Tibetan Studies Tibetan-Sanskrit-English Dictionary (Version: June 2015) <br> Jeffrey Hopkins, Editor. <br> Paul Hackett, Contributor and Technical Editor. <br> Contributors: Nathaniel Garson, William Magee, Andres Montano, John Powers, Craig Preston, Joe Wilson, Jongbok Yi <br> A PDF version of this dictionary is available for download at: www.uma-tibet.org

[diverse-know]; consciousness; main consciousness; [ordinary] consciousness(N); knower; cognition

consciousness

consciousness; cognition

1404 total match(es)
Hopkins Definitions 2015 The Uma Institute for Tibetan Studies Tibetan-Sanskrit-English Dictionary (Version: June 2015) <br> Jeffrey Hopkins, Editor. <br> Paul Hackett, Contributor and Technical Editor. <br> Contributors: Nathaniel Garson, William Magee, Andres Montano, John Powers, Craig Preston, Joe Wilson, Jongbok Yi <br> A PDF version of this dictionary is available for download at: www.uma-tibet.org

No direct match.

29 total match(es)
Hopkins Divisions 2015 The Uma Institute for Tibetan Studies Tibetan-Sanskrit-English Dictionary (Version: June 2015) <br> Jeffrey Hopkins, Editor. <br> Paul Hackett, Contributor and Technical Editor. <br> Contributors: Nathaniel Garson, William Magee, Andres Montano, John Powers, Craig Preston, Joe Wilson, Jongbok Yi <br> A PDF version of this dictionary is available for download at: www.uma-tibet.org

No direct match.

22 total match(es)
Hopkins Others' English 2015 The Uma Institute for Tibetan Studies Tibetan-Sanskrit-English Dictionary (Version: June 2015) <br> Jeffrey Hopkins, Editor. <br> Paul Hackett, Contributor and Technical Editor. <br> Contributors: Nathaniel Garson, William Magee, Andres Montano, John Powers, Craig Preston, Joe Wilson, Jongbok Yi <br> A PDF version of this dictionary is available for download at: www.uma-tibet.org

{C}be aware of; cognized; known; discerned

424 total match(es)
Hopkins Synonyms 1992 note No direct match. 0 total match(es)
Tsepak Rigdzin note No direct match. 6 total match(es)
Richard Barron's glossary Richard Barron's glossary. <br> © Copyright 2002 by Turquoise Dragon Media Services. <br> Source: Rangjung Yeshe Tibetan-English Dharma Dictionary 3.0 (2003)

rnam par shes pa; rnam par shes pa (ordinary) consciousness (one of twelve links of interdependent connection)

244 total match(es)


Tibetan-Tibetan dictionary

བོད་རྒྱ་ཚིག་མཛོད་ཆེན་མོ། Bod rgya tshig mdzod chen mo <br> 1985, Mi dmangs dpe skrun khang, Beijing.
རྣམ་ཤེས་
rnam shes
རྣམ་པར་ཤེས་པའི་བསྡུས་ཚིག

Click here (or the Tibetan tab) to see more Tibetan language resources  


Tibetan-Sanskrit dictionary

Negi (Tibetan-Sanskrit) Tibetan-Sanskrit dictionary <br> J.S. Negi <br> Dictionary Unit, Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies, Sarnath (January 1993)
rnam shes = rnam par shes pa/

Click here (or the Sanskrit tab) to see more Sanskrit language resources  


(Related) Verb Forms

No matches in the Verbinator dictionary.

རྣམ་ཤེས
Consciousness [RY]

rnam par shes pa (ordinary) consciousness (one of twelve links of interdependent connection) [RB]

[primary] consciousness [principle], discriminative cognition [IW]

conciousness [principle], primary conciousness, discriminative cognition [mind is purely that which perceives it doesn't require brainwork, it is simple perception, just on the level of the nervous system this instinctive function is called 'mind' in sanskrit 'citta' means 'heart,' 'essence' that basic essence of mind which contains the faculty of perception this kind of perception called mind [reacting to opposites and so on] is very direct, simple and subtle at the same time conciosness on the other hand, is articulated and intelligent, it contains 'mind' feelings and thought patterns] [IW]

[primary] conciousness [principle], discriminative cognition [a point which needs to be made clear is the distinction between 'mind' and 'conciousness' In the buddhist tradition mind is purely that which perceives it doesn't require brainwork, it is simple perception, just on the level of the nervous system this instinctive function is called 'mind' in sanskrit 'citta' means 'heart,' 'essence' that basic essence of mind which contains the faculty of perception this kind of perception called mind [reacting to opposites and so on] is very direct, simple and subtle at the same time conciosness on the other hand, is articulated and intelligent, it contains 'mind' feelings and thought patterns] [IW]

consciousness, vijnana; rten 'brel yan lag gsum pa ni/ kun gzhi'i rnam shes kyi steng du las kyi bag chags yongs su bzhag pas rnam shes de nyid yongs su 'gyur ba'i cha yin la/ de la'ang rgyu dus kyi rnam shes dang/ 'bras bu'i dus kyi rnam shes gnyis su yod do the cognitions; consciousness, consciousness principle, primary consciousness, discriminative cognition, [a point which needs to be made clear is the distinction between 'mind' and 'consciousness.' In the Buddhist tradition mind is purely that which perceives. It doesn't require brainwork, it is simple perception, just on the level of the nervous system. This instinctive function is called 'mind.' In Sanskrit 'chitta' means 'heart,' 'essence' that basic essence of mind which contains the faculty of perception. This kind of perception called mind [reacting to opposites and so on] is very direct, simple and subtle at the same time. Consciousness on the other hand, is articulated and intelligent, it contains 'mind' feelings and thought patterns.]; mode of awareness perception; skye gnas su 'khrid par byed pa'i rgyu [RY]

vijnana, consciousness, perceptive function, distinct judgments of perception, perceiver, cognitive event, noetic capacity, modes of awareness, sensory perception, conscious activity, to perceive by observable qualities, consciousness principle, knowledge of emergent character of mentality, SA thams cad mkhyen, 1 of 5 phung po, soul of departed, consciousness, 9 kinds (kun gzhi, len pa'i rnam shes, nyon yid, mig, rna, sna, lce, lus, yid), mental consciousness [JV]

Consciousness (rnam shes): Buddhism distinguishes various levels of consciousness: gross, subtle and extremely subtle. The first one correspond to the activity of the brain. The second one is what we intuitively call "consciousness", which is among other things the faculty of consciousness to know itself, investigate its own nature and exert free will. The third and most essential one is called the "fundamental luminosity of mind". [MR]