- The
bhavachakra (Sanskrit: भवचक्र; Pāli: bhavacakka; Tibetan: སྲིད་པའི་འཁོར་ལོ, Wylie: srid pa'i 'khor lo) or
wheel of life is a
visual teaching aid and...
- The
three poisons are
symbolically shown at the
center of the
Buddhist Bhavachakra artwork, with the rooster, snake, and pig,
representing greed, ill-will...
- realms" (Sanskrit: tridhatu) and the "wheel of becoming" (Sanskrit:
bhavachakra). Others, who
regard the
Buddha as
simply an
enlightened human being...
-
works with
chakras and the six
dimensions or
classes of
beings in the
Bhavachakra. In
Buddhist cosmology, Kama-Loka, Rupa-Loka, Arupa-Loka are the realms...
-
Dvesha is
symbolically present as the
snake in the
center of
Tibetan bhavachakra drawings.
Dvesha (Pali: dosa) is
identified in the
following contexts...
- "four" guests: the
Three Jewels, dakinis,
dharmapalas and
beings of the
bhavachakra, the ever-present
lokapala and the pretas. The rite may be protracted...
- The
Bhavachakra, an
illustration of the
cycle of rebirth, with the
three poisons at the hub of the wheel....
-
revered as a
guardian of
spiritual practice. In the po****r
mandala of the
Bhavachakra, all of the
realms of life are
depicted between the jaws or in the arms...
-
Bhavachakra describing the
cycle of saṃsāra:
illustrated in the
wheel are six
realms of
existence in
which a
sentient being can reincarnate, according...
- life. It is
symbolically present as the pig in the
center of
Tibetan bhavachakra drawings. Moha
refers to
desire and
attachment to the
world or worldly...