-
Āśraya (Sanskrit: आश्रय)
variously means – base, source, ****istance, shelter, protection, refuge, dependence,
having recourse to or
depending on. In terms...
- vijñapti-mātra, the ālaya-vijñāna (store consciousness), the
turning of the
basis (
āśraya-parāvṛtti), the
three natures (trisvabhāva), and emptiness.
These form a...
-
number of
rasis and not
bhavas occupied by
seven planets) yogas, 3) the
Asraya (Sanskrit: आश्रय) (positional i.e.
based on the
basic nature of
signs occupied...
- Uddipana, the excitant. Ālambana may
further be
divided into
asraya and visaya,
Radha is
asraya and
Krishna is visaya; Radha, as the devotee, experienced...
- Melakarthas,
which literally means "lord of the scale". It is also
called Asraya rāga
meaning "shelter
giving rāga", or
Janaka rāga
meaning "father rāga"...
- its
characteristic (laksana) the
revolution (paravrtti) of the dual base (
asraya) in
which one
relinquishes all
defilements (klesa), but does not abandon...
- permanent, the last
being equivalent to panna-vimukthi.
Yogacara uses the term
āśraya parāvŗtti, "revolution of the basis", ... a
sudden revulsion, turning, or...
-
motivations and
gestations are karma; the
remaining seven are the
basis (
asraya) as well as the
fruit (phala). As
outlined by Wayman, Asanga's Abhidharma-samuccaya...
- is the "base", "ground", or "primordial state" (Tibetan: gzhi, Sanskrit:
āśraya), also
called the
general ground (spyi gzhi) or the
original ground (gdod...
- matra),
which leads to the
first instance of the
turning of the
basis (
āśraya-parāvṛtti). In the
Tibetan tradition, this is when one
practices samatha...