Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Bhavacakra" ¶ 102
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

core and question
" Subsequently, Admiral Rickover was asked to testify before Congress in the general context of answering the question as to why naval nuclear propulsion had succeeded in achieving a record of zero reactor-accidents ( as defined by the uncontrolled release of fission products to the environment resulting from damage to a reactor core ) as opposed to the dramatic one that had just taken place at Three Mile Island.
The question of the true identify for the modern state was core.
However, the question remains why birds despite having very high core body temperatures have internal testes and did not evolve external testes.
Australian biologist Jeremy Griffith has written a number of books on the subject of the human condition including Free: The End of the Human Condition ( 1988 ); Beyond the Human Condition ( 1991 ); A Species In Denial ( 2003 ); and Freedom ( 2011 ); and defines the human condition as " the agonising, underlying, core, real question in all of human life, of are humans good or are we possibly the terrible mistake that all the evidence seems to unequivocally indicate we might be?
Watch Tower publications also say that unfulfilled expectations are partly due to eagerness for God's Kingdom and that they do not call their core beliefs into question.
They question the structure of society and the fairness of institutional systems at their very core, pushing for more understanding of root causes.
This contrast, according to Esther Pasztory, an archaeologist who has long studied Teotihuacan, extends beyond the goddesses in question to the core of the Teotihuacan and Aztec cultures themselves:
There is tension among judges about the extent to which the core implied term of mutual trust and confidence can be ' contracted out of ', with the House of Lords having held that the parties are " free " to do so, while others approach the question as a matter of construction of the agreement which is within exclusive judicial competence to define.
Its core provision was to allow the Deputy Prime Minister to make orders for referendums in each of the Regions of England on the question of whether they wish to have an elected regional assembly.
" And my point is not to argue that there is or is not a crisis, but that journalists need to begin not by questioning around the edges but by going to the core question.
In German, the word " Gretchenfrage " ( literally " Gretchen question ") refers to a question aiming at the core of the issue, often forcing the answering person to make a confession or a difficult decision.
However, there is a radical difference between nondual awareness ( of ) the dualistic consciousness that is the core of saṃsāra and the nondual awareness in question fully revealing its own nature in nirvāṇa ( the former involving reflexivity implies the subject-object duality and apperception, the second being nondually aware itself and its true condition ).
It is possible to omit sitting for an examination in a common core subject, if the subject in question has been chosen as an optional subject.
The expression that has historically been thwarted, which is primarily at the core in the play, is the question of black manhood.
During the party's short existence its internal politics was dominated by the struggle between the left-wing, led by Chiang Weishui ( 蔣渭水 ), and the right-wing, represented by Peng Huaying ( 彭華英 ), to define the party's core values, particularly its position on " the class question ".
This question had first attracted him to the utilitarians, and he found at the core of their answer a fundamental contradiction.
The eleven years between Toulouse and Tours without question gave him time to fully secure power, inspire the loyalty of his troops, and, most importantly, drill the core of veterans who stood so stoutly in 732.
An intriguing and fundamental question is what kind of game has a nonempty core.
C ° ntinuum states that the core question of the game is " If you could learn to span time at will.
# The court also affirmed the district court's finding that creative works, such as the songs in question, are " closer to the core " of intended copyright protection " than non-creative works, thus favoring the plaintiffs on the second factor.
The original core question of minimum ecosystem reserve size has initiated an incredible variety of research that continues to grow and diversify.
Microsoft's acquisition of GeCAD RAV, a core technology of OneCare, and their subsequent discontinuation of that product, deprived the GNU / Linux platform ( and others ) of one of its leading virus scanning tools for e-mail servers, bringing Microsoft's ultimate intentions into question.

core and Buddhist
Philosophers such as Cheng Yi and Zhu Xi reinvigorated Confucianism with new commentary, infused with Buddhist ideals, and emphasized a new organization of classic texts that brought out the core doctrine of Neo-Confucianism.
While Vajrayana Buddhism is a part of Tibetan Buddhism in that it forms a core part of every major Tibetan Buddhist school, it is not identical with it.
In Tibet, Sky burials return the remains to the cycle of life and acknowledge the body as " food ," a core tenet of some Buddhist practices.
Terms like anatman ( not-self ) and shunyata ( voidness ) are at the core of all Buddhist traditions.
The teachings of the Sūtra Piṭaka are usually considered to be one of the earliest teachings on Buddhism and a core text of the Early Buddhist Schools in China.
Though he credits a deep spiritual core for his work, Stookey " dispelled reports that he was born a Buddhist, saying his mother was a Roman Catholic and his dad was an ex-Mormon " and recalling the family's " eclectic attendance at church.
In the early modern age, the city area developed as a local market town with a big Buddhist temple at its core.
Linehan and others combined a commitment to the core conditions of acceptance and change through the Hegelian principle of dialectical progress ( in which thesis + antithesis → synthesis ) and assembled an array of skills for emotional self-regulation drawn from Western psychological traditions, such as cognitive behavioral therapy and an interpersonal variant, " assertiveness training ", and Eastern meditative traditions, such as Buddhist mindfulness meditation.
The Shingon Buddhist monk, Dohan, regarded the two great Buddhas, Amida and Vairocana, as one and the same Dharmakaya Buddha and as the true nature at the core of all beings and phenomena.
* Atta ( Buddhism ), Pali for " self " or " soul ", central to the core Buddhist concept of Anatta, no-self
This mandala, along with the Womb Realm, form the core of Japanese esoteric, or Shingon Buddhist, rituals, including the initiation or abhisheka ritual.
This mandala, along with the Diamond Realm, form the core of Japanese esoteric, or Shingon Buddhist, rituals, including the initiation or abhiseka ritual.
As Arnold J. Toynbee shared his agreement of the core in Buddhist philosophy that Ikeda has spread for the sake of humanistic value and peaceful world,
" Ngakpa Chögyam, a Tibetan Buddhist teacher from Wales, offers a perspective on nonduality that includes all of life as a direct expression of the nondual core of truth.
Acceptance is fundamental to the core dogma of most Abrahamic religions, the word " Islam " can be translated as " acceptance ", " surrender " or " voluntary submission " and Christianity is based upon the " acceptance " of Jesus of Nazareth as the " Christ " and could be compared to some Eastern religious concepts such as Buddhist mindfulness.
Historical analysis to sift out an ancient core narrative winnows the archaic folkloric leitmotifs from features that show distinct and historically identifiable Buddhist influences.
Kundalini yoga practices formed the core of the teachings of a number of these Mahasiddhas and are strongly represented in both Tibetan Buddhist practices and contemporary kundalini yoga practices.
Suzuki also taught zazen or sitting meditation which soon attracted American students and " beatniks ", who formed a core of students who in 1962 would create the San Francisco Zen Center and its eventual network of highly influential Zen centers across the country, including the Tassajara Zen Mountain Center, the first Buddhist monastery in the Western world.
This dichotomy can be seen in at least one of two ways ; as an opening of the psychoanalytic model to existential and spiritual phenomenology ( see Epstein's " Thoughts Without a Thinker " for a recent exposition of the idea that psychoanalysis and Buddhist thought can be productively synchronized ), or as an unacknowledged radical interrogation of core psychoanalytic assumptions ( See DuQuesne's " Killing Freud " for a thorough discussion of this trend in analytic writing ).
The Shingon Buddhist monk, Dohan, regarded the two great Buddhas, Amida and Vairocana, as one and the same Dharmakaya Buddha and as the true nature at the core of all beings and phenomena.
While such characterizations are certainly valid for some types of Buddhist meditation, they are profoundly misleading for the practices of meditative quiescence ( samatha ) and contemplative insight ( vipasyana ), which are the two core modes of Buddhist meditative training.
In the 1990s, after characterizing the Yoga practices of Asahara Shoko of Aum Shinrikyo as expressing the inner core of early Buddhist asceticism, Yoshimoto was criticized along with Nakazawa Shin ' ichi as a defender of Aum following the Sarin gas attack on the Tokyo subway.

1.568 seconds.