Samsara: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Wheel of life.jpg|frame|'''The Wheel of Life''' (Tib. ''sipé khorlo'')]]'''Samsara''' (Skt. ''saṃsāra''; Tib. ''khorwa''; [[Wyl.]] ''‘khor ba'') the cycle of conditioned existence, birth and death, which is characterized by [[suffering]] and in which one is continually reborn until attaining [[nirvana]].
[[Image:Wheel of life.jpg|frame|[[Wheel of Life]]]]
'''Samsara''' (Skt. ''saṃsāra''; Tib. [[འཁོར་བ་]], ''khorwa'', [[Wyl.]] ''‘khor ba'') is the cycle of conditioned existence, birth and death, which is characterized by [[suffering]] and in which one is continually reborn until attaining [[nirvana]].
 
==Translation==
Luis Gomez has written:
 
:...one should note that ''saṃsāra'' is not "cyclic" existence. The term means either wandering about or moving on without interruption, like a river current.<ref>Luis O. Gómez, 'The Way of the Translators: Three Recent Translations of Sântideva's Bodhicaryâvatâra'. ''Buddhist Literature I'' (1999) p.314.</ref>
 
==Alternative Translations==
*The round (Matthew Kapstein)
 
==Notes==
<small><references/></small>


==Internal links==
==Internal links==
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*[[Six classes of beings]]
*[[Six classes of beings]]
*[[Three realms]]
*[[Three realms]]


[[Category:Key Terms]]
[[Category:Key Terms]]
[[Category:Sanskrit Terms]]
[[Category:Three Realms of Samsara]]

Latest revision as of 18:52, 30 August 2017

Wheel of Life

Samsara (Skt. saṃsāra; Tib. འཁོར་བ་, khorwa, Wyl. ‘khor ba) is the cycle of conditioned existence, birth and death, which is characterized by suffering and in which one is continually reborn until attaining nirvana.

Translation

Luis Gomez has written:

...one should note that saṃsāra is not "cyclic" existence. The term means either wandering about or moving on without interruption, like a river current.[1]

Alternative Translations

  • The round (Matthew Kapstein)

Notes

  1. Luis O. Gómez, 'The Way of the Translators: Three Recent Translations of Sântideva's Bodhicaryâvatâra'. Buddhist Literature I (1999) p.314.

Internal links