- a
worldly life of
constant change, that is rebirth, growth,
decay and
redeath. Saṃsāra is
understood as
opposite of moksha, also
known as mukti, nirvāṇa...
-
PUNARMRTYU (lit. '
redeath')." The term
Agatigati or
Agati gati (plus a few
other terms) is
generally translated as 'rebirth,
redeath'; see any Pali-English...
- and the
ending of the
cycles of
sufferings ****ociated with
rebirths and
redeaths. Many
later Buddhist texts describe nirvana as
identical with
anatta with...
-
Buddhist cosmology, is
always changing, inconstant,
undergoes rebirth and
redeath (Samsara).
Anicca is
intimately ****ociated with the
doctrine of anatta...
-
figure of Phanes—
worshippers parti****te in his birth, death, rebirth,
redeath. — Kate Alsobrook, The
Beginning of Time:
Hindu Greco-Roman Theogonies...
- ****ert that
there is a
cycle of
transmigration consisting of
rebirth and
redeath as the
fundamental nature of existence.
Before the time of the Buddha,...
- that
until they
realize nirvana,
beings are
bound to
undergo rebirth and
redeath due to
their having acted out of
ignorance and desire,
thereby producing...
-
causal nature of one's own karma. The
endless cycle of birth, rebirth, and
redeath, is samsara." See, e.g.,
Patrick Olivelle (1996), Upaniṣads (Oxford: Oxford...
- and self-knowledge so as to end Saṃsāra—the
endless cycle of
rebirth and
redeath. The aim of
spiritual quest in the
Upanishadic traditions is find the true...
-
medieval texts, as Saṃsāra, or the
endless cycle of life, death,
rebirth and
redeath, such as
section 6:31 of the
Mahabharata and
verse 9.21 of the Bhagavad...