Trisvabhāva: Difference between revisions

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{{GlossaryEntry
{{GlossaryEntry
|Glossary-Term=trisvabhāva
|Glossary-Term=trisvabhāva
|Glossary-HoverChoices=three natures; trisvabhāva
|Glossary-Tibetan=རང་བཞིན་གསུམ་
|Glossary-Tibetan=རང་བཞིན་གསུམ་
|Glossary-Wylie=rang bzhin gsum
|Glossary-Wylie=rang bzhin gsum
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|Glossary-Sanskrit=trisvabhāva
|Glossary-Sanskrit=trisvabhāva
|Glossary-English=three natures
|Glossary-English=three natures
|Glossary-EnglishKB=three natures
|Glossary-PartOfSpeech=Noun
|Glossary-PartOfSpeech=Noun
|Glossary-SourceLanguage=Sanskrit
|Glossary-SourceLanguage=Sanskrit

Revision as of 10:32, 4 December 2019

Key Term trisvabhāva
Hover Popup Choices three natures; trisvabhāva
In Tibetan Script རང་བཞིན་གསུམ་
Wylie Tibetan Transliteration rang bzhin gsum
Devanagari Sanskrit Script त्रिस्वभाव
Romanized Sanskrit trisvabhāva
English Standard three natures
Karl Brunnhölzl's English Term three natures
Term Type Noun
Source Language Sanskrit
Basic Meaning According to the Yogācāra school, all phenomena can be divided into three natures or characteristics: the imaginary, dependent, and perfect.
Related Terms parikalpitasvabhāva;paratantrasvabhāva;pariniṣpannasvabhāva
Definitions
Tshig mdzod Chen mo shes bya sems tsam pa'i lugs la thams cad mtshan nyid gsum du bsdus pa ste/ kun tu brtags pa'i mtshan nyid dang/ gzhan gyi dbang gi mtshan nyid/ yongs su grub pa'i mtshan nyid bcas so/
Synonyms trilakṣana