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Saṅkhāra (Pali; संखार; Sanskrit: संस्कार or saṃskāra) is a term
figuring prominently in Buddhism. The word
means 'formations' or 'that
which has been put...
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three marks are:
sabbe saṅkhārā aniccā – all
saṅkhāras (conditioned things) are
impermanent sabbe saṅkhārā dukkhā – all
saṅkhāras are unsatisfactory, imperfect...
- formations," "will," and many
other concepts; in Pāli it is
referred to as
saṅkhāra.
According to
various schools of
Indian philosophy,
every action, intent...
- non-soul, no essence). It
appears in Pali
texts as, "sabbe
sankhara anicca,
sabbe sankhara dukkha,
sabbe dhamma anatta",
which Szczurek translates as...
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emotion of fear). "mental formations" (Skt. संस्कार (saṃskāra), Pāli सङ्खार (
saṅkhāra), Tib. འདུ་བྱེད། ('du.b****); Ch. 行 (xíng)): "constructing activities",...
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Panangkaran to
Buddhism also
corresponds to the Raja
Sankhara inscription,
which tells of a king
named Sankhara (identified as Panangkaran)
converting to Buddhism...
- the
causes and
conditions that
produced the
pleasant experiences cease.
Sankhara-dukkha, the
unsatisfactoriness of
changing and
impermanent "things" – the...
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wants (yampicchaṃ na
labhati tampi)
Dukkha of
conditioned formations (
saṅkhāra-dukkha) Five
aggregates of
clinging (pañcupādānakkhandha)
material form...
- (Ultratip) – "RR 9.1" (feat. Niska) 3 25 75 "Four" 26 17* (Ultratip) – "
Sankhara #4 (Chic)" (with Bolémvn) 39 – – "Mortel" 15 – "Ca ira
mieux demain"...
- "perception" (sanna), and "volitional formations" or "fabrications" (
sankhara). In SN 22.79, the
Buddha distinguishes consciousness in the following...