Abhidharma: Difference between revisions
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{{GlossaryEntry | {{GlossaryEntry | ||
|Glossary-Term= | |Glossary-Term=abhidharma | ||
|Glossary-Tibetan=ཆོས་མངོན་པ། | |Glossary-Tibetan=ཆོས་མངོན་པ། | ||
|Glossary-Wylie=chos mngon pa | |Glossary-Wylie=chos mngon pa |
Revision as of 08:04, 1 October 2020
Key Term | abhidharma |
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In Tibetan Script | ཆོས་མངོན་པ། |
Wylie Tibetan Transliteration | chos mngon pa |
Devanagari Sanskrit Script | अभिधर्म |
Romanized Sanskrit | abhidharma |
Tibetan Phonetic Rendering | Chö ngonpa |
Chinese Script | 阿毗达磨 |
Chinese Pinyin | āpídámó |
English Standard | abhidharma |
Jeffrey Hopkin's English Term | manifest knowledge |
Term Type | Noun |
Source Language | Sanskrit |
Basic Meaning | Abhidharma generally refers to the corpus of Buddhist texts which deals with the typological phenomenological, metaphysical and epistemological presentation of Buddhist concepts and teachings. The Abhidharma teachings present a meta-knowledge of Buddhist sūtras through analytical and systemic schemas and is said to focus on developing wisdom among the three principles of training. It is presented alongside sūtra and vinaya as one of the three baskets of the teachings of the Buddha. |
Has the Sense of | The terms has the sense of making knowledge and meaning manifest through a intelligent analysis and systematic presentation. |
Related Terms | sūtra;vinaya |
Definitions |