Three gunas: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
(5 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Three gunas''' ([[Wyl.]] ''yon tan gsum'') — mentioned in the [[Samkhya]] philosophy:
'''Three gunas''' (Tib. [[ཡོན་ཏན་གསུམ་]], [[Wyl.]] ''yon tan gsum'') — mentioned in the [[Samkhya]] philosophy:


#rajas (Wyl. ''rdul'')
#rajas (Tib. [[རྡུལ་]], Wyl. ''rdul'')
#tamas (Wyl. ''mun pa'')
#tamas (Tib. [[མུན་པ་]], Wyl. ''mun pa'')
#sattva (Wyl. ''snying stobs'')
#sattva (Tib. [[སྙིང་སྟོབས་]], Wyl. ''snying stobs'')


==Translations==
==Translations==
Line 12: Line 12:
*[[Jeffrey Hopkins]] translates them more literally as motility or activity (''rajas''), darkness (''tamas'') and  lightness (''sattva'').
*[[Jeffrey Hopkins]] translates them more literally as motility or activity (''rajas''), darkness (''tamas'') and  lightness (''sattva'').


[[Category:Samkhya]]
[[Category:Three Gunas]]
[[Category:Philosophical Tenets]]
[[Category:Non-Buddhist Schools]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Enumerations]]
[[Category:Philosophical Tenets]]
[[Category:03-Three]]

Revision as of 08:59, 22 August 2017

Three gunas (Tib. ཡོན་ཏན་གསུམ་, Wyl. yon tan gsum) — mentioned in the Samkhya philosophy:

  1. rajas (Tib. རྡུལ་, Wyl. rdul)
  2. tamas (Tib. མུན་པ་, Wyl. mun pa)
  3. sattva (Tib. སྙིང་སྟོབས་, Wyl. snying stobs)

Translations

  • S. Dasgupta, in his A History of Indian Philosophy, translates sattva as “intelligence stuff”, rajas as “energy-stuff” and tamas as “mass-stuff.”
  • In their translation of the Bodhicharyavatara, the Padmakara Translation Group call sattva “pleasure”, rajas “pain” and tamas “neutrality”.
  • Jeffrey Hopkins translates them more literally as motility or activity (rajas), darkness (tamas) and lightness (sattva).