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{{Blog | {{Blog | ||
|blogTimestamp=20201111122440 | |blogTimestamp=20201111122440 | ||
|blogDate=November 2020, Week 2 | |||
|blogTitle=Topic of the Week: What is ''dharma''? | |blogTitle=Topic of the Week: What is ''dharma''? | ||
|blogImage=IMG 7709.JPG | |blogImage=IMG 7709.JPG |
Revision as of 11:34, 19 November 2020
Topic of the Week: What is dharma?
300px|thumb| Dharma is perhaps one of the most popular Indic Sanskrit terms that is used widely in religious philosophy and practice. There is no single word in the English language that renders dharma and its numerous meanings. It refers to existence and phenomena in its broadest sense, but in specific contexts it also designates objects of mental faculty, the law of nature, truth, virtue, duty, spiritual path, religion, and religious doctrine. In his work entitled Vyākhyāyukti, or Principles of Exegesis, Vasubandhu states that the term dharma can mean ten different things in the Buddhist context alone.
In its most common usage in Buddhism, dharma refers to the second object of refuge, the teachings of the Buddha. Again, Vasubandhu in his magnum opus, Abhidharmakośa, or the Treasury of Abhidharma, explains that the dharma of the Buddha is twofold: the doctrinal scriptures and experiential understanding. The Ratnagotravibhāga presents a more abstruse and sophisticated Mahāyāna definition of dharma in the context of its explanation of the Three Jewels. The Dharma Jewel is said to be inconceivable, nondual, nonconceptual reality, which is pure, luminous, and remedial in nature. It comprises the third and fourth truths out of the four noble truths: the truth of cessation, which is free from attachment, and the truth of the path to cessation, which helps bring about the freedom from attachment. Learn more about this Mahāyāna definition of dharma by reading Verse I.10.
Weekly quote
Buddha-nature is taught to be the immutable reality that is unborn and unceasing like space.~ Asaṅga