Difference between revisions of "Pariniṣpannasvabhāva"
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(Created page with "{{GlossaryEntry |Glossary-Term=pariniṣpannasvabhāva |Glossary-Tibetan=ཡོངས་སུ་གྲུབ་པའི་རང་བཞིན་ |Glossary-Wylie=yongs su g...") |
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|Glossary-SourceLanguage=Sanskrit | |Glossary-SourceLanguage=Sanskrit | ||
|Glossary-Definition=The third of the three natures, according to the Cittamātra school. It is the perfect nature which represents the most authentic understanding of phenomena. | |Glossary-Definition=The third of the three natures, according to the Cittamātra school. It is the perfect nature which represents the most authentic understanding of phenomena. | ||
+ | |Glossary-Senses=ultimate truth | ||
}} | }} |
Revision as of 12:23, 11 May 2018
Key Term | pariniṣpannasvabhāva |
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In Tibetan Script | ཡོངས་སུ་གྲུབ་པའི་རང་བཞིན་ |
Wylie Tibetan Transliteration | yongs su grub pa'i rang bzhin |
Devanagari Sanskrit Script | परिनिष्पन्नस्वभाव |
Romanized Sanskrit | pariniṣpannasvabhāva |
Karl Brunnhölzl's English Term | perfect nature |
Jeffrey Hopkin's English Term | thoroughly established nature |
Term Type | Noun |
Source Language | Sanskrit |
Basic Meaning | The third of the three natures, according to the Cittamātra school. It is the perfect nature which represents the most authentic understanding of phenomena. |
Has the Sense of | ultimate truth |
Definitions |