-
which is
defined as Disintegrate, or
Division or Fission. Therefore,
Pudgalas are best
defined as all
things that are
continuously changing by the process...
- The Pudgalavādins ****erted that
while there is no ātman,
there exists a
pudgala (person) or
sattva (being)
which is
neither a
conditioned dharma nor an...
- is no
enduring self, but
there is
avacya (inexpressible)
personality (
pudgala)
which migrates from one life to another. The
majority of
Buddhist traditions...
- substances:
sentient beings or
souls (jīva), non-sentient
substance or
matter (
pudgala), the
principle of
motion (dharma), the
principle of rest (adharma), space...
- (purayanti
galanti cha) is
called Pudgala or matter. All
matter in the
universe is
called Pudgala.
Pudgala has form and shape.
Pudgala can be
experienced by touching...
-
rebirth consciousness. Theravāda
rejects the
Pudgalavada doctrine of the
pudgala ("person" or "personal entity") as
being more than a
conceptual designation...
- (jñāna): from
understanding the
absence of self in
persons and
phenomena (
pudgala-dharma-nairātmya);
Greatness of
energy (vīrya): from
devotion to many hundreds...
-
namely sentient beings or
souls (jīva), non-sentient
substance or
matter (
pudgala),
principle of
motion (dharma), the
principle of rest (adharma), and the...
-
second stop Examples:
vimukti → vimutti,
dugdha → duddha, utpāda → uppāda,
pudgala → puggala, udghoṣa → ugghosa,
adbhuta → abbhuta, śabda →
sadda In a sequence...
-
philosophical traditions each
posited that
matter was made of
atoms (paramanu,
pudgala) that were "eternal, indestructible,
without parts, and innumerable" and...