Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge: Difference between revisions
Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge
m (1 revision imported) |
No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Person | {{Person | ||
|pagename=Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge | |pagename=Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge | ||
|HasDrlPage= | |HasDrlPage=Yes | ||
|HasLibPage= | |HasLibPage=Yes | ||
|HasRtzPage=No | |HasRtzPage=No | ||
|HasDnzPage=No | |HasDnzPage=No | ||
|HasBnwPage=Yes | |HasBnwPage=Yes | ||
|PersonType= | |PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors | ||
|MainNameWylie=go rams pa bsod nams seng+ge | |MainNameWylie=go rams pa bsod nams seng+ge | ||
|MainNameTib=གོ་རམས་པ་བསོད་ནམས་སེངྒེ་ | |MainNameTib=གོ་རམས་པ་བསོད་ནམས་སེངྒེ་ |
Revision as of 10:06, 3 April 2018
PersonType | Category:Classical Tibetan Authors |
---|---|
MainNameTib | གོ་རམས་པ་བསོད་ནམས་སེངྒེ་ |
MainNameWylie | go rams pa bsod nams seng+ge |
AltNamesTib | གོ་བོ་རབ་འབྱམས་པ་བསོད་ནམས་སེངྒེ་ · ངོར་མཁན་ཆེན་༠༦་ |
AltNamesWylie | go bo rab 'byams pa bsod nams seng+ge · ngor mkhan chen 06 |
AltNamesOther | Ngor Khenchen, 6th |
YearBirth | 1429 |
YearDeath | 1489 |
BornIn | go bo (khams) |
TibDateGender | Female |
TibDateElement | Earth |
TibDateAnimal | Bird |
TibDateRabjung | 7 |
ReligiousAffiliation | sa skya |
StudentOf | Dkon mchog rgyal mtshan · rong ston shes bya kun rig · Ngorchen Kunga Zangpo |
BDRC | https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P1042 |
Treasury of Lives | https://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Gorampa-Sonam-Sengge/1985 |
Himalayan Art Resources | https://www.himalayanart.org/search/set.cfm?setID=2081 |
IsInGyatsa | No |
PosEmptyLuminNotes | "In the later Sakya School, it is the works of Gorampa Sönam Sengé (1429–1489) that are usually taken to be authoritative.[112] According to him, the tathāgata heart refers to the nondual unity of mind’s lucidity and emptiness or awareness and emptiness free from all reference points. It is not mere emptiness because sheer emptiness cannot be the basis of both saṃsāra and nirvāṇa. However, it is not mere lucidity either because this lucidity is a conditioned entity and the tathāgata heart is unconditioned." Karl Brunnhölzl, When the Clouds Part, p. 76. |
Other wikis |
If the page does not yet exist on the remote wiki, you can paste the tag |