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Duḥkha (/ˈduːkə/)(Sanskrit: दुःख; Pali: dukkha), "suffering", "pain," "unease," "unsatisfactory," is an
important concept in Buddhism,
Jainism and Hinduism...
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impermanent (anitya) All
contaminated phenomena are
without satisfaction (
duḥkha) All
phenomena are
without self (anātman)
Nirvana is peaceful/peace (śānta/śānti)...
- "homesickness for a
place you have
never seen".
Acedia Angst Comp****ion
fatigue Duḥkha Gnosticism Koyaanisqatsi Lacrimae rerum Mal du siècle Mean
world syndrome...
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Bhaya and Māyā was the
destroyer of
living creatures, or Mṛtyu (death); and
Duḥkha (pain) was the
offspring of
Naraka and Vedanā. The
children of Mṛtyu were...
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Dalai Lama,
Thubten Chodron,
Approaching the
Buddhist Path, p.279 note 2: "
Duhkha (P. dukkha) is
often translated as "suffering," but this
translation is...
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emphasize the
concept of Karuna. The
verse maitrī-karuṇā-muditopekṣaṇāṃ sukha-
duḥkha-puṇyāpuṇya-viṣayāṇāṃ bhāvanātaś citta-prasādanam
advocates for the cultivation...
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signifies the following:
Sukha or sukh,
happiness in Sanskrit, the
opposite of
duḥkha (sadness) Sükh, the axe of
Mongolian revolutionary Damdin Sükhbaatar Sukh...
- he is
described as a
doctor who
cures suffering (Pali/Sanskrit: dukkha/
duḥkha)
using the
medicine of his teachings. The
image of Bhaiṣajyaguru is usually...
- (Sanskrit: anitya): That all
things that come to have an end;
Dukkha (Sanskrit:
duḥkha): That
nothing which comes to be is
ultimately satisfying; Anattā (Sanskrit:...
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process of a
sentient being's
rebirth in saṃsāra, and the
resultant duḥkha (suffering, pain, unsatisfactoriness), and they
provide an
analysis of rebirth...