| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
The Four Noble Truths thesecretsofyoga.com | Four Holy Truths: Noble Truths - Cattari arya satyani - Chatvari - ariya... nalanda-university.com | The Truth and Nothing But the Truth about Obesity | Carole Blog newhopebariatricskc.com | Four Prong Forceps,Bone Holding Four Prong Forceps,Patella Bone Holding... indianorthopaedic.com |
The Four Noble Truths (or The Four Truths of the Noble Ones[1]) (Sanskrit: catvāri āryasatyāni;Wylie: 'phags pa'i bden pa bzhi; Pali: cattāri ariyasaccāni) is one of the most fundamental Buddhist teachings. In broad terms, these truths relate to suffering (or dukkha), its nature, its origin, its cessation and the path leading to its cessation. They are among the truths Sidhartha Gautama is said to have realized during his experience of enlightenment.[2] The Four Noble Truths appear many times, throughout the most ancient Buddhist texts, the Pali Canon. The early teaching and the traditional understanding in Theravada is that the Four Noble Truths are an advanced teaching for those who are ready for them. Mahayana Buddhism regards them as a preliminary teaching for people not ready for its own teachings.[3] The Four Noble Truths are little known in the Far East.[citation needed] Some may see "truths" as a mistranslation (one author cites "realities" as a possibly better choice: these are things, not statements, in the original grammar[4]). However, the original Tibetan Lotsawas (Sanskrit: locchāwa; Tibetan: lo ts'a ba), who studied Sanskrit grammar thoroughly, did translate the term from Sanskrit into Tibetan as "bden pa" which has the full meaning of "truth".
[edit] BackgroundWhy the Buddha is said to have taught in this way is illuminated by the social context of the time in which he lived. The Buddha was a Śramaṇa – a wandering ascetic whose "aim was to discover the truth and attain happiness."[5] He is said to have achieved this aim while under a bodhi tree near the River Neranjana; the Four Noble Truths are a formulation of his understanding of the nature of "suffering",[6] the fundamental cause of all suffering, the escape from suffering, and what effort a person can go to so that they themselves can "attain happiness."[5] These truths are not expressed as a hypothesis or tentative idea; rather, the Buddha says:
The Buddha says that he taught them...
This teaching was the basis of the Buddha's first discourse after his enlightenment.[9] In early Buddhism this is the most advanced teaching in the Buddha's Gradual Training. [edit] Pali and Chinese canon text
[edit] Mahayana understanding of the Four Noble TruthsCertain major Mahayana sutras, including the Mahaparinirvana Sutra and the Angulimaliya Sutra, present variant versions of the Four Noble Truths. These views are specific to certain Mahayana schools, most notably the Tathagatagarbha and Jonangpa traditions. Other Buddhist traditions such as Madhyamaka and Zen would deny the ideas that the Buddha and his Dharma are eternal and that one's inner Buddha nature is not empty. [edit] See also[edit] Notes
[edit] References
By Sonia [edit] External links
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |