- Saṅkhāra (Pali; सङ्खार; Sanskrit: संस्कार or saṃskāra) is a term
figuring prominently in Buddhism. The word
means 'formations' or 'that
which has been...
- all 'conditioned things' (
samkhāra – that is, all
things produced by karma) are 'unsatisfactory and impermanent' (sabbe
samkhāra dukkhā . . . aniccā) all...
-
throne Hrih
Discriminating Jñana
Karma Family Amoghasiddhi Green, Wind
Volition (
samkhara)
Pride Fearlessness Mudra Garuda throne Ah
Perfect practice Jñana...
- skandha, and nama with the
other four skandhas. Yet, as
Gombrich notes,
samkhara, vijnana, and
vedana also
appear as
separate links in the
twelvefold list...
- tree is
again used to
symbolize the "emptiness of all formations" (sabbe
saṃkhārā suññāti, Vsm XXI,53): Just as a reed has no core, is coreless, without...
-
Bedeutungsentwicklung des
Terminus Samkhara im frühen
Buddhismus (Meaning and
development of the
meaning of the term
Samkhara in
early Buddhism). From 1960...
-
according to the
teaching of the Buddha, that all
conditioned things (
samkhara) are
impermanent (anicca) and
imperfect and
unsatisfactory (dukkha), and...
-
Gakidling (Kholatar) Riti (Reti)
Galegchhu (Galeychu)
Shingkharthang (
Samkhara)
Chhoetenkhar ཆོས་རྟེན་མཁར་
Pemagang (Pakhey)
Chhoetenkhar (Sukumbasi)...