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This glossary is in process (and may always be in process). The purpose of the glossary is to supply tools for further investigation to serious students and researchers, not to give a final and definitive description. We also hope it will be useful to the less motivated student and curiosity seeker.

Many (most?) entries do not yet have glosses, but will shortly. An ellipsis (...) indicates that either an existing gloss will be expanded or that a gloss will be supplied — and at this point most entries have ellipses. An active link from inside of a gloss will take you to the referenced location. If that location is in the glossary, it will contain a gloss. Ultimately, all terms in the lexicon will be glossed, but this process will be on-going. A set of links to letters of the alphabet will be added in the future, but time hasn't been kind lately.

If you're looking for a Buddhist term or master that doesn't appear here, or if you have constructive or destructive criticisms or changes, please notify us at
nalanda@earthlink.net. In the "Subject" field enter "ODN Lexicon". Inquiries will be gladly answered.

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This page was last updated on August 2, 1998.

Abhidharma

Abhidharma (Sanskrit): Abhi=manifest, realised, or experienced; dharma=phenomenon, knowledge, truth, or reality. The early philosophical application of the word "Abhidharma" was used to specify phenomenological states of direct perception experienced by enlightened beings. Over time, the term (and the scope of study related to it) has acquired meanings relating to epistemology, phenomenology, psychology, and cosmology.

Abhidharma focuses on the training of discriminating knowledge, and is one of the "Three Baskets" (Sanskrit Tripitaka, Sutra, Vinaya, and Abhidharma. In other words, the Abhidharma teachings are derived from the teachings of the Buddha.

A primary aim of Abhidharma analysis is to overcome the Four Errors. Abhidharma analysis proceeds by examining dharmas: the Five Knowables and the Seventy-Five Dharmas, also known as the Five Skandhas.

Other forms of Abhidharma analysis employ the Eighteen Dhatus, the Twelve Ayatanas, the Twenty-Two Indriyas and/or the Twelve Links of Interdependent Origination. [glosses and entries for these to come]
Generally, there are two categories of Abhidharma: the so-called Hinayana and the Mahayana.

"Hinayana" Abhidharma (specifically the Vaibashika school, the only branch of which surviving today is the Theravada school) takes its modern form primarily from the Abhidharmakosha of Vasubandhu (Fourth Century, younger brother of Asanga) [bibliographical entry to come]. The work is held in high regard by all schools, and continues to be considered authoritative.

The Mahayana Abhidharma in its modern form can be traced to the Abhidarmasamuccaya of Vasubandu's older brother Asanga.

For discussions of Abhidharma or treatment of Abhidharma analysis, see Gateway to Knowledge and Wheel of Analytical Meditation (both by Mipham), Ways of Enlightment, Glimpses of Abhidharma, Mind in Buddhist Philosophy ...

Afflictive Emotions

See Kleshas.

Animal Realm

The Animal Realm...

Aryadeva

Aryadeva... See also Aryadeva in Bibliography.

Asanga

Asanga.... See Asanga in Bibliography.

Avalokiteshvara

Avalokiteshvara (Tibetan Chenrezig) is the Bodhisattva of compassion. His mantra is OM MANI PEME HUNG. ... To see an image of Avalokiteshvara, go to...

Bhumi

The Bhumi are the ten levels of Bodhisattva progress toward enlightenment...

Bodhicharyavatara of
Shantideva


The Bodhicharyavatara is one of the most important works in the Buddhist cannon. Its primary subject is the conduct of the Bodhisattva. See Shantideva in the Bibliography for available translations, commentaries, and manuscripts...

Bodhicitta

As Refuge is the foundation of Buddhism, the Bodhicitta Vow is the cornerstone of Mahayana Buddhism...

Bodhisattva

The Bodhisattva is the ...

Buddha Nature

See Tathatagarba.

Buddhist India

A great Buddhist civilization flourished in India...

Candrakirti

Candrakirti... See Candrakirti in the Bibliography.

Catuhsataka of
Aryadeva


The Catuhsataka is one of the most important works in the Buddhist cannon. See Candrakirti in the Bibliography for available translations, commentaries, and manuscripts.

Chagdud Gompa

Chagdud Gompa is the Organization founded by Chagdud Rinpoche...

Chagdud Rinpoche

Chagdud Rinpoche...

Chöd

A yogic practice of cutting attachment with its foundations in the Prajnaparamita. Practiced primarily by the Nyingma and Kagyu schools...

Cittamatra

See Yogacara herein.

Commentary

The commentary is an important component of the Buddhis tradition in India and Tibet, largely because root texts are often composed in aphoristic verse (resembling, in some aspects, a cross between Lucretius and Wittgenstein). Often, a master would compose a commentary about his or her own text in order to elucidate complex points...

Compassion

Compassion (.. Sanskrit, .. Tibetan) is a very important component of Mahayana Buddhism — and should be understood from the Buddhist perspective, which varies somewhat from the multi-connotational English word...

Conduct

Conduct (.. Sanskrit, .. Tibetan) is a technical term regarding the behavior of monks, nuns, lay practitioners, and Vajrayana practitioners. See Dudjom Rinpoche in Bibliography.

Dakini

Dakini (Tibetan Khandro. Follow this link for a definition of Dakini elsewhere on this site.

Dalai Lama

Dalai Lama is a Mongolian term that was picked up by the Brittish during their colonization of China. In Tibet, the Dalai Lama is referred to as Gyalpa Rinpoche or Kundun. The Dalai Lama is the spiritual and temporal leader of the Tibetan people...

His Holiness
Dalai Lama XIV


His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama is one of the great leaders of the world as well as one of the great spiritual practitioners of the world...

Danakosha Lake

Guru Rinpoche took miraculous birth from a lotus pistil in Dahakosha Lake...

Definitive Ultimate Truth

Definitive Ultimate Truth (.. Sanskrit, .. Tibetan)...

King Trisong Deutsen

The Dharma King Trisong...

Deva

The Deva, or god, realm is one of the six realms of samsara...

Dharma

When Buddhists speak of the Dharma, they usually mean the Buddha Dharma, which includes the Bhuddist Scriptures, the Buddhist Path, and Buddhist Conduct. However, the word dharma is a common Sanskrit word which has ten traditional meanings: 1) that which is knowable, 2) the Buddhist Path, 3) nirvana, 4) mental objects, 5) merit, 6) lifespan, 7) Buddhist Scriptures, 8) material objects, 9) rules of conduct, and 10) doxology.

Generally speaking, when "dharma" is capitalised ("Dharma") it refers to the Buddha Dharma. When it is lower-case ("dharma") and/or plural, it refers to one of the other aspects of the word, which can usually be derived from context.

His Holiness Dilgo Khyentse

H.H. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche was the second Supreme Head of the Nyingma School in exile from Tibet. He made great efforts to encourage the spread of the Dharma to the west. He was a great master and the holder of the Khyentse lineage... See Dilgo Khyentse in the Bibliography.

His Holiness
Dudjom Rinpoche


His Holines Dudjom Rinpoche was the first Supreme Head of the Nyingma School in exile from Tibet. His first activities upon arriving in India from Tibet (with the Chinese army in pursuit) was to ensure the survival of as many Tibetan refugees as possible... In this dangerous and uncertain environment, he also sought to preserve as much of the Tibetan Buddhist teachings as possible. Among the many activities he engaged in to achieve this aim was the writing of a history of the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism... See Dudjom Rinpoche in the Bibliography.

Dzogpa Chenpo

Often referred to as "Dzogchen", Dzogpa Chenpo refers to the higest of the three Inner Tantras practiced by the Nyingma school, Atiyoga Tantra...

Dzogchen Monastery

Dzogchen Monastery is located...

Eight Manifestations of
Guru Rinpoche


The Eight Manifestations of Guru Rinpoche are...

Eight Worldly Concerns

The Eight worldly concerns are profit/loss, pleasure/pain, praise/blame, and fame/obscurity...

Eighty-Four Tantric
Mahasiddhas


The 84 Tantric Mahasiddhas were...

Eighty-Four Thousand Afflictions...

The 84,000 Afflictions (kleshas)...

Eighty-Four Thousand Collections of
Teachings


The 84,000 Collections of Teachings are...

Emanation

The concept of emanation is very important in Tibetan Buddhism, ...

Emptiness

Emptiness is a crucial concept in all of Buddhism. Different schools look at emptiness from different aspects. Khenpo's commentary on Mipham Rinpoche's "Precious Lamp of Certain Knowledge" available on this site is intimately concerned with the concept of emptiness.

Enlightenment

What constitutes enlightenment in Buddhism is dealt with at length in Khenpo's commentary on Mipham Rinpoche's "Precious Lamp of Certain Knowledge" available on this site is intimately concerned with the concept of emptiness.

Excellent Pair

Candrakirti and Dharmakirti.

Father or Mother

All beings have at one point been your father or mother...

Final Nirvana

See Parinirvana.

Five Enlightened or
Buddha Families


Sanskrit Pancakula, Tibetan Gyalpa Rigna: sometimes translated as "Dhyani Buddhas", though this was the invention of a western scholar; if one prefers a Sanskrit term to the English translation, "Pancakula" would be better.

These five families (literally "lineages") are very important in the Nyingma and Kagyu schools, and play a central role in the Bardo teachings and practices composed by Guru Rinpoche and revealed by Karma Lingpa. On a simplistic level, each of these Families is associated with a) a Buddha (male aspect of Buddhahood); b) a Consort (feminine aspect of Buddhood); c) a cardinal direction; d) a primary color; and e) a mental obscuration, conflicting emotion, or "poison" (Sanskrit klesha, Tibetan dug which is transformed into f) a wisdom, or pristine cognition (Sanskrit jnana, Tibetan Yeshe. These are not to be looked at as separate from one's own mind. Depending upon the tradition from which the teaching or practice derives, the color and/or positions of the Buddha and Vajra Families are reversed from what is presented here. The arrangement below follows Karma Lingpa's text and is the predominant arrangement employed in the Nyingma school.

The Buddha/Consort union (Yabyum) is symbolic of the union of compassion and emptiness: primordial wisdom, and should not be conceived of as a carnal activity.

The practices of the "Hundred Peaceful and Wrathful Deities" associated with this Terma require empowerment, so the texts and practices will not be referenced here. However, teachings about the Bardos are available in: The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying (an excellent introductory text), The Bardo Guidebook, The Mirror of Mindfulness, Natural Liberation: Padmasambhava's Teachings on the Six Bardos (a recent book by Gyatrul Rinpoche), and discoveries of teachings by Guru Rinpoche (Padmasambhava) by Karma Lingpa.

1. Tathagata or Buddha Family (Sanskrit Tathagatakula, Tibetan Deshin Shegpa Rigs):
a) Buddha: Vairocana
b) Consort: Akashadhatvisvari
c) Direction: Center
d) Color: Blue
e) Obscuration: Ignorance/delusion (Sanskrit moha, Tibetan gti mug)
f) Wisdom: Wisdom of the Expanse of Reality (Sanskrit Dharmadhatujnana, Tibetan chos dbyings ye shes)

2. Vajra or Indestructible Family (Sanskrit Vajrakula, Tibetan Dorje Rig):
a) Buddha: Vajrasattva
b) Consort: Buddhalocana
c) Direction: East (front)
d) Color: White
e) Obscuration: Anger/hatred (Sanskrit dvesa, Tibetan zhe sdang)
f) Wisdom: Mirror-Like Wisdom (Sanskrit Adarshajnana, Tibetan Melong Yeshe)

3. Ratna or Jewel Family (Sanskrit Ratnakula, Tibetan Rinchen Rig):
a) Buddha: Ratnasambhava
b) Consort: Mamaki
c) Direction: South (right)
d) Color: Gold (yellow)
e) Obscuration: Pride (Sanskrit mana, Tibetan nga rgyal)
f) Wisdom: Wisdom of Equanimity or Sameness (Sanskrit Samatajnana, Tibetan mNyam nyid Yeshe)

4. Lotus Family (Sanskrit Padmakula, Tibetan Padma Rig):
a) Buddha: Amitabha
b) Consort: Pandaravasini
c) Direction: West (behind)
d) Color: Red
e) Obscuration: Desire/Attachment (Sanskrit raga, Tibetan 'dod chags)
f) Wisdom: All-Discerning Wisdom (Sanskrit Pratyaveksanajnana, Tibetan So sor rtog pa'i Yeshe)

5. Karma or Activity Family (Sanskrit Karmakula, Tibetan Lakyi Rig):
a) Buddha: Amoghasiddhi
b) Consort: Samaya Tara (Green Tara)
c) Direction: North (left)
d) Color: Green
e) Obscuration: Envy (Sanskrit irsya, Tibetan phra dog)
f) Wisdom: All-Accomplishing Wisdom (Sanskrit Krtyanusthanajnana, Tibetan Bya ba grub pa'i Yeshe )


The Five Knowables

The Five knowables are the four conditioned knowables of form, mind, mental events, and non-associated objects plus the non-conditioned knowable.

Five Paths of
The Mahayana


The five paths of the Mahayana are the Path of Accumulation, the Path of Application, the Path of Seeing, the Path of Meditation, and the Path of No More Learning...

Five Skandhas

The Five Skandhas are Form, Feeling, Perception, Volition, and Consciousness. See Abhidharma.

The Four Errors

The four errors are:
1. We mistake that which is impermanent for something permanent.
2. We pursue the sources of suffering, believing them to be sources of happiness.
3. We believe that the impure is pure.
4. We believe that which is not self to be self.

These errors are overcome by Vipassana (analytical meditation) Also see Abhidharma.

Four Major Schools of
Indian Buddhism


The Vaibashika (Theravadin), Sautantrika, Yogacara or Cittamatra, and Madhyamika (Middle Way) schools...

Four Major Schools of
Tibetan Buddhism
In chronological order of formation, the Nyingma, Sakya, Kagyu, and Gelugpa schools. See entry for each school.

Four Noble Truths

The Truth of Suffering, the Truth of the Origin of Suffering, the Truth of The Cessation of Suffering, the Truth of the Path Leading to the Cessation of Suffering.

These truths are the foundation of all Buddhism. To gain any real understanding of Buddhism, it is necessary to be intimate with the teachings on the Four Noble Truths. See H.H. Dalai Lama book and/or videotape/audiotape, The Four Noble Truths in the Bibliography...

Galaxy of Heartdrops

This collection of prayers is available from Chagdud Gonpa's Tibetan Treasures Catalog.

Gandarva

The Gandarvas...

Gelugpa

The Gelugpa School is the chronologically fourth school of Tibetan Buddhism ...

Guru Rinpoche

Guru Rinpoche... See Guru Rinpoche page on this site and Guru Rinpoche in Bibliography, as well as the Eight Manifestations of Guru Rinpoche above (not yet glossed)...

Gyatrul Rinpoche

A great master in both the Palyul and Dudjom lineages of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism... See also Gyatrul Rinpoche in Bibliography.

Khenpo
Gyurmed Trinley Rinpoche


Our teacher. See the Osel Dorje Nyingpo homepage and the teachings on this site.

Hinayana

Litterally, Lesser Vehicle. Originally employed by the Mahayana to make the point that the Bodhisattva vehicle of compassion is the Greater Vehicle. Not used by Khenpo in any derogatory way. See Vaibashika, Four Main Schools of Indian Buddhism, Theravada, and Pali Canon... [none yet fully glossed]

Human Realm

One of the Six Destinies in Samsara...

Precious
Human Birth


The highest birth possible in samsara...

Jelsa Shinventiy

Established Sri Singha College (Tibetan Shedra) at Dzogchen Monastery, where Mipham Rinpoche was trained...

Kagyu

The chronologically third school of Tibetan Buddhism to appear. Tilopa, Naropa, Marpa the Translator, Gampopa, Milarepa...

Kangyur

Words of the Buddha in the Tibetan Buddhis canon, which includes Sutras, Tantras, Vinaya, and Abhidharma translated into the Tibetan language. The divisions of the Kanguyr are: Vinaya, Prajnaparamita Sutras, Avatamsaka Sutras, Ratnakuta Sutras, General Sutra Section (including Abhidharma), Tantras, Ancient Tantras, Kalachakra, and Dharani.

Karma

The law of cause and effect...

Karmapa

Leader of the Karma Kagyu School of Tibetan Buddhism...

His Holiness the Karmapa

The current Karmapa...

Kham

Region of Eastern Tibet from which Khenpo comes...

Khenpo

An advanced degree of study in the Nyingma school. Also, simply abbot or preceptor...

Kings and Rulers

In keeping with the times and places, the spread of Buddhism in Asia was effected by Kings and Rulers...

Lama

Sanskrit "Guru", teacher...

Lonchen Rabjam (Lonchenpa)

Lonchenpa was the greatest scholar of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, who mastered, organized, wrote about, and taught the entirety of the Nyingma Buddhist path, with special emphasis on Dzogpa Chenpo or Ati Yoga Tantra... See Longchen Rabjam in Bibliography.

Madhyamakalankar
akarika (Umagen)


Tibetan Umagen: Major work by Khenpo Shantarakshita (Khenpo Bodhisattva — not to be confused with the author of books and head of the Friends of the Western Buddhist Order)...

Madyamika

The Middle Way School: Mahayana school which follows Nagarjuna, Aryadeva and others... See Peter Della Santina in Bibliography.

Madyamikavattara

Major work by Candrakirti. See Candrakirti in Bibliography.

Mahayana

Greater Vehicle....

Mandala Offering

Foundational Vajrayana activity on a par with Refuge in all Buddhism and the Bodhisattva Vow in Mahayana. Khenpo's commentary on a specific mandala offering is available on this site...

Manjushri

The great Bodhisattva of Wisdom...

Middle Way Philosophy

See Madyamika herein.

Mind Only School

See Yogacara herein.

Jamgon Mipham Rinpoche

Jamgon Mipham (Jamyang Namgyal Gyatso), 1846-1912, was one of the greatest scholars in the history of Tibet. A master of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, he was accomplished in all forms of endeavor... Portions of Khenpo Gyurmed Rinpoche's commentary on Mipham Rinpoche's "Precious Lamp of Certain Knowledge" (Neshe Rinpoche Dronme) appear on this site, and the entire teaching will be added over time. See Mipham Rinpoche in the Bibliography.

Naga

Water spirits...

Nagarjuna

Founder of the Mahayana School... See Nagarjuna in the Bibliography.

Nagarjuna's Six
Major Commentaries


The six works of Nagarjuna considered to be fundamental to the Madyamika School of Buddhism... See Nagarjuna in the Bibliography.

Nalanda

Great Mahayana University in Buddhist India and Mahanaya monastery in present day India. Our motivation for using the name "Nalanda" for our site name was to promote the name of Nalanda as a fountainhead of Buddhist philosophy and practice...

Ngondro

Literally, "preliminary". In this sense, it refers to taking Refuge and generating the Bodhisattva attitude and taking the Bodhisattva vows. More specifically, Ngondro refers to sets of foundational formal practice cycles in the Nyingma and Kagyu schools...

Nirmanakaya

The Manifestation Body of the Buddha...

Nirvana

Nirvana is a complex concept with differing interpretations among the schools...

Terton Namkai Norbu

Considered by many to be the greatest living Terton, Namkai Norbu Rinpoche....

Thinley Norbu Rinpoche

Thinley Norbu Rinpoche, son of His Holiness Dudjom Rinpoche and holder of the Dudjom Lineage.... See Thinley Norbu in the Bibliography

Nyingma Lama

Frequently Nyingma Lamas are not monks, but householders...

Nyingma

The chronologically first of the four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism...

Nyoshul Khenpo

A great living Dzogchen master... See Nyoshul Khenpo Rinpoche in the Bibliography.

Osel Dorje Nyingpo

The Indestructible Nucleus of Inner Radiance. See Osel Dorje Nyingpo on this site. Also the organization directed by Khenpo Gyurmed Trinley Rinpoche for whom and for which this site has been created.

Pali Canon

The earliest Buddhist school formed in reliance on the Pali Sutras, the words of Buddha. See Theravada...

Palyul Monastery

Seat of the Palyul lineage of Nyingma Tibetan Buddhism...

parinirvana

The final nirvana of Buddha, after which he takes no further rebirths...

His Holiness
Penor Rinpoche


His Holiness Penor Rinpoche is the Supreme Head of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, the third head of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism in exile... See the wonderful WWW site dedicated to His Holiness at www.palyul.org

Prajnaparamita

The Perfection of Wisdom teachings and Sutras...

Prajnaparamita Literature

The Prajnaparamita literature is a vast subject, containing Sutras and Commentaries...

Rajagrha

Near Vulture Peak...

Refuge

Taking Refuge is the cornerstone of all Buddhist practices...

Request to Turn
The Wheel of Dharma


The wheel of Dharma is symbolic of ....

Sakya

The Sakya School of Tibetan Buddhism is chronologically the second school of Tibetan Buddhism...

Samsara

The phenomenal world made up of the Six Realms or Six Destinies: The hell realms, the preta or hungry ghost realm, the animal realm, the human realm, the Asura or jealous god realm, and the Deva or god realm...

Saraha

Saraha was....

Sautantrika School

The Sautantrika school...

Seven Branch Offering

The Seven Branch Offering.... Khenpo Gyurmed Trinley Rinpoche's commentary on a particular Seven Branch Offering is available on this site.

Seven Miraculous Events of
Shantideva


Shantideva is known to have performed seven miraculous deeds...

Seven Questions of
Mipham Rinpoche


The Seven Questions Mipham Rinpoche poses in "The Precious Lamp of Certain Knowledge" are... [they can be found in The Second Division of "The Precious Lamp of Certain Knowledge" but will be listed and briefly discussed here in the near future.]

The Seventy-Five Dharmas

According to the Sarvastivadins, The Seventy-Five Dharmas are composed of 11 dharmas of Form, 1 dharma of Mind, 46 dharmas of mental events, 14 non-associated dharmas, and 3 non-conditioned dharmas. The Vaibhashikas noted 82 dharmas...

Shabkar

Shabkar was a great Dzogchen master of the Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism... See Shabkar in the Bibliography.

Shakyamuni Buddha

Shakyamuni Buddha...

Shantarakshita

Shantarakshita was a leading Indian Buddhist master who was among the first to bring Buddhism to Tibet. For a discussion of his Apoha theory, Dreyfus in the Bibliography. For information regarding translations and texts, see Shantarakshita in the Bibliography.

Shantideva

Shantideva is one of the most influential Indian masters on the Buddhism of Tibet... See Shantideva in the Bibliography.

Shechen Monastery

Shechen Monastery...

Six Ornaments of
The Human Realm


The Six Ornaments of the Human Realm...

Six Paramitas

The six paramitas are generosity, ethical discipline, patience, joyous effort, meditative concentration, and wisdom...

Six Realms of Samsara

The six realms of Samsara are Deva, Asura, Human, Animal, Preta, and Hell....

Skandha

See Five Skandas

Sri Singha

Sri Singha was...

Sri Singha College

Sri Singha College at Dzogchen monastery was ... Mipham was trained there...

Sutra

Sutra is one of the Tripitka: Sutra, Vinaya, and Abhidharma... [an extensive listing of Sutras will be added to the Bibliography]

Tanjur

The Tanjur is the collection of the commentaries of the great Indian masters, and a selection of Tibetan Masters, which make up that portion of the Tibetan canon. The sections of the Tanjur are Eulogies, Tantra, Prajnaparamita, Madhyamika, Sutra, Yogacara, Abhidharma, Vinaya, Jataka Tales (stories of the previous lives of the Buddha), Letters and Accounts, Logic, Language, Medicine, Art, Conduct, and Miscellaneous. See Kanjur for the actual Sutras and Tantras of the Tibetan Canon.

Tantra

Tantra (Sanskrit; Tibetan Gyud): Continuum. According to Jigmed Tenpa'i Nyima, in the Gyud Chima (the Chima Tantra), it is said:

     Tantra means continuum of
     The cause (basis), skillful means (path),
          and result.

     The Practice of Dzogchen, pg 10

Tara

Tara is among the most important Bodhisattvas in the Buddhist world. In China, she is Kuan Yin and in Japan Kuanon. Green Tara (Samayatara; Jetsun Drolma) is the main form of Tara in Tibet as she was in India. Khenpo's commentary on The Profound Essence Mind Terma of Tara is available on this site. [Tara will be discussed in this glossary at length in the future]

Tathagatagarba

Buddha Nature...

Terma

Terma...

Terton

One who discovers Terma...

Theravada

The Theravada...

Three Kayas

Nirmanakaya, Sambogakaya, and Dharmakaya...

Tripitaka

Vinaya, Abidharma, Sutra ... The Pali Tripitaka... The Mahayana Tripitaka...

Tsok (Tsog)

A discussion of Tsok is available on this site.

Twelve Great Deeds of
Shakyamuni Buddha


The Twelve Great Deeds of Shakyamuni Buddha were 1. His decision to be born in the human realm; 2. his Decent from the Tushita heaven; 3. his entrance into the womb; 4. his physical birth; 5. his mastery of the worldly arts; 6. his life of pleasure; 7. his departure from home; 8. his Ascetic life; 9. his conquest of Mara; 10. his enlightenment; 11. his teaching; 12. his passing into nirvana. See also: Shakyamuni Buddha, Lalitavishtara Sutra...

Twenty-Five Intimate Students of
Guru Rinpoche


The 25 Intimate Students of Guru Rinpoche were...

Vaibashika School

The Vaibashika school....

Vaisali

Vaisali is...

Vajrayana

Vajrayana, Secret Mantrayana, Tantra...

Varanasi

Varanasi...

Verse in Buddhism

Verse is an important vehicle...

View, Meditation,
and Conduct


View, Meditation, and Conduct...

Vinaya

The Vinaya is a division of the Buddhist Tripitaka: Sutra, Vinaya, and Abhidharma.

Vipassana

The fundamental Buddhist meditation that enables one to achieve liberation from samsara. A solid foundation in Shamata meditation is necessary for effective Vipassana, but Shamata, while producing states of the god realms in its highest accomplishment, will not free beings from samsara...

Virtuous in the Beginning,
Middle, and End


Virtuous in the Beginning, Middle, and End...

Vulture Peak

Vulture Peak...

Waning of Budhism
in India


Indian history...

Wheel of Dharma

The Wheel of Dharma...

Yogacara

Yogacara, Cittamatra, Mind Only...