Four Noble Truths (redirect from Samudaya sacca)
characteristic of transient existence; nothing is forever, this is painful; samudaya (origin, arising, combination; 'cause'): together with this transient world...
158 KB (19,408 words) - 10:33, 27 September 2024
ritual speech Samudaya sacca, the Four Noble Truths of Buddhism This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sacca. If an internal...
1 KB (174 words) - 22:30, 29 April 2023
first line as pointing to suffering (dukkha), the second to its cause (samudaya) and the third to its cessation (nirodha). In Tibetan: ཆོས་གང་རྒྱུ་བྱུང་དེ་དག་གི།...
13 KB (1,224 words) - 17:15, 30 August 2023
painful) is an innate characteristic of existence with each rebirth; samudaya (origin, cause) of this dukkha is the "craving, desire or attachment";...
104 KB (13,474 words) - 06:43, 28 August 2024
Outline of Buddhism (section 2. The Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering (Dukkha samudaya ariya sacca))
• samskāra) consciousness (viññāṇa • vijñāna) Craving (taṇhā • tṛṣṇā) (samudaya) — to be abandoned (pahātabba) Craving for sensual pleasures (kāma taṇhā)...
116 KB (10,896 words) - 07:33, 11 June 2024
Existential despair Four Noble Truths Nirodha Noble Eightfold Path Pathos Samudaya The Sickness Unto Death Suffering Sukha Taṇhā Translations of duhkha: *...
34 KB (3,363 words) - 16:13, 27 September 2024
kǔdì; Jp: kutai; Vi: khổ đế; Mn: зовлон, zovlon) Truth of the origin (samudaya) of dukkha (Sanskrit: samudayāryasatya; Bur: သမုဒယ thamodaya; Thai: สมุทัย;...
100 KB (940 words) - 01:29, 9 September 2024
two kinds of origin, momentary origin (khanika-samudaya) and origin through conditions (paccaya-samudaya). A bhikkhu who sees one sees the other." According...
61 KB (7,435 words) - 13:18, 3 September 2024
the first sermon given by the Buddha: "whatever has the nature to arise (samudaya dhamma) also has the nature to pass away (nirodha dhamma)." The early Buddhist...
180 KB (20,203 words) - 21:29, 21 September 2024
cycle (samsara, lit. 'wandering') of grasping at things, ideas and habits Samudaya (origin, arising, combination; "cause"): dukkha is caused by taṇhā ("craving"...
245 KB (27,315 words) - 20:25, 5 October 2024
predicament, is impermanent, imperfect, unsatisfactory, full of conflict; Samudaya, the fact that this state of affairs is due to our egoistic selfishness...
10 KB (1,062 words) - 06:58, 8 July 2024
roots (greed, nongreed, etc.) are thus "the origin of suffering" (dukkha-samudaya); the non-arising of the roots is the cessation of this suffering (dukkha-nirodha);...
36 KB (3,884 words) - 19:55, 16 August 2024
sorrow (duhkha) is pervasive in life as we know it, 2) Sorrow has a cause (samudaya), 3) sorrow can be removed (nirodha), and there is a path (marga) beyond...
17 KB (1,921 words) - 20:06, 23 May 2023