Property:Glossary-Definition

From Buddha-Nature
Showing 20 pages using this property.
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Hīnayāna - The mainstream teachings and the early schools of Buddhism which primarily taught individual liberation through practice-focused renunciation and monasticism, considered lesser than the later movement of the Greater Vehicle (Mahāyāna), which professed enlightenment for all sentient beings and promoted compassion. Skt. हीनयान Tib. ཐེག་དམན། Ch. 小乘  +
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IA - Indian Antiquary  +
IAIC - International Academy of Indian Culture  +
IATS - International Association for Tibetan Studies  +
IBK - Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies  +
icchantika - Literally, "those with great desire," icchantikas could be rendered as hedonists or addicts. However, the term is generally used to refer to those who, due to their insatiable desire, are incapable of enlightenment. Skt. इच्छन्तिक Tib. འདོད་ཆེན་,འདོད་ཆེན་པོ་ Ch. 一闡提  +
IGI - The Imperial Gazetteer of India  +
IHQ - Indian Historical Quarterly  +
ISCRL - Indian Studies in Honor of Charles R. Lanman  +
IsMEO - Istituto Italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente  +
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JA - Journal Asiatique  +
JAAR - Journal of the American Academy of Religion  +
JAOS - Journal of the American Oriental Society  +
JASB - Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal  +
JBTS - Journal of the Buddhist Text Society of India  +
JIABS - Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies  +
JIBS - Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies  +
JIP - Journal of Indian Philosophy  +
JNA - Jñānaśrīmitranibandhāvalī  +
Jonang - The Jonang tradition was established by Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen, a thirteenth-century Sakya monk famous for his Zhentong teachings. The Jonang teachings and monasteries were suppressed in Tibet in the seventeenth century but survived in Amdo. Tib. ཇོ་ནང་  +