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ARTICLES RELATED TO Fundamental darkness |  |  |  | Fundamental darkness:
Buddhism
Enlightenment Dictionary on Fundamental darkness
Fundamental darkness (Jpn.: gampon-no-mumyo) Also, fundamental ignorance or primal ignorance. The most deeply rooted illusion inherent in life, said to give rise to all other illusions. Darkness in this sense means inability to see or recognize the truth, particularly, the true nature of one's life. The term fundamental darkness is contrasted with the fundamental nature of enlightenment, which is the Buddha nature inherent in life. According to the Shrimala Sutra, fundamental darkness is the most difficult illusion to surmount and can be eradicated only by the wisdom of the Buddha. T'ien-t'ai (538-597) interprets darkness as illusion that prevents one from realizing the truth of the Middle Way, and divides such illusion into forty-two types, the last of which is fundamental darkness. This illusion is only extirpated when one attains the stage of perfect enlightenment, the last of the fifty-two stages of bodhisattva practice. Nichiren (1222-1282) interprets fundamental darkness as ignorance of the ultimate Law, or ignorance of the fact that one's life is essentially a manifestation of that Law, which he identifies as Nam-myoho-renge-kyo. In The Treatment of Illness, Nichiren states: "The heart of the Lotus school is the doctrine of three thousand realms in a single moment of life, which reveals that both good and evil are inherent even in those at the highest stage of perfect enlightenment. The fundamental nature of enlightenment manifests itself as Brahma and Shakra, whereas the fundamental darkness manifests itself as the devil king of the sixth heaven". Nichiren thus regards fundamental darkness as latent even in the enlightened life of the Buddha, and the devil king of the sixth heaven as a manifestation or personification of life's fundamental darkness. The Record of the Orally Transmitted Teachings reads, "Belief is a sharp sword that cuts off fundamental darkness or ignorance."
(See
also: Fundamental darkness ,
Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment Dictionary)
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Buddhism
Enlightenment Dictionary on World of Buddhahood
World of Buddhahood (Jpn.: bukkai) Also, realm of Buddhas. The highest of the Ten Worlds. When viewed as a state of life, the world of Buddhahood is a condition of absolute happiness, attained upon gaining the wisdom to realize the ultimate reality of one's own life and the compassion to direct one's activities constantly toward benevolent goals. A person in this state has access to boundless wisdom and compassion, as well as the courage and power to overcome any obstacle. In Mahayana Buddhism, acquiring this state of life is the goal of Buddhist practice. In teachings based on the Lotus Sutra, in particular, the realm of Buddha-hood is not viewed as a realm apart from the nine worlds, or from the desires and sufferings of life in the real world. In this sense, it is different from the Hinayana view of nirvana, which is a complete annihilation of desire and suffering that can only be achieved fully upon annihilation of the physical body. Rather, in the world of Buddhahood, one is able to keep constantly in check life's innate "fundamental darkness," the source of destructive impulses and delusion, and function based on an inexhaustible supply of supreme wisdom. In The Object of Devotion for Observing the Mind, Nichiren states: "That ordinary people born in the latter age can believe in the Lotus Sutra is due to the fact that the world of Buddhahood is present in the human world".
(See
also: World of Buddhahood ,
Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment, Buddhism Enlightenment Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Dualism
Dualism In theology, the doctrine that there are two independent and opposing deific powers conjointly ruling the universe as, for instance, in the Zoroastrian system when it teaches that Ormazd and Ahriman, the good and evil deities, divide between them the supremacy. It is opposed to monotheism, but not necessarily to polytheism. In philosophy, the doctrine that there are two fundamental principles underlying all manifestation, such as spirit and matter, force and matter, mind and matter and in a more extended sense good and evil, high and low, black and white; in fact the doctrine has its origin in the so-called pairs of opposites in nature. Here, it is opposed to monism but not necessarily to pluralism. These oppositions of ideas in both theology and philosophy are often quite unnecessary, and rise from the tendency of the mind to keep conceptions in rigidly thought-tight compartments, without that intermingling of principle to principle, based on a fundamental unity, which is demonstrated to be true by all we know of even physical nature. Theosophy teaches that unity and duality, with their development as plurality in manifestation, subsist throughout the universe, every duality being comprised in a unity existing on a higher plane of being than its dual manifestation -- and the duality reproducing itself in the webwork of pluralities composing the manifested universe. This is on the principle of the Pythagorean Monad producing the Duad, which produces the Triad, the last again reproducing itself in incomputable hierarchical numbers. Thus, light and dark are the dual manifestations of that which is called at once absolute light and darkness; spirit and matter are the dual manifestations of the one life; the most fundamental duality being the alternation between manvantara and pralaya, which are aspects of the ever-productive ineffable source. Monistic and dualistic philosophies merely accentuate each its own side of the question, and in reality each view more or less implies the other. The Zoroastrian doctrine, for example, in its esoteric side recognized that dualism applies only to the planes of manifestation which flow forth from it.
(See also: Dualism , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Spiritual
- Theosophy
Dictionary on Antichrist
Antichrist (from Greek anti against + christos anointed) An adversary of Christ. The Epistles of John refers to the belief in the coming of an antichrist, and also use the word to signify any of the deniers of Christ who existed in those times. This refers to the belief among Jews and Jewish Christians that the second coming of the Messiah would be preceded by a reign of wickedness under Antichrist, as found in Paul's Epistles and in Revelation. Moslem literature tells of the false messiah (mesihu 'd-dajjal) who will overrun the earth, ruling for 40 days and leaving only Mecca and Medina unharmed. Such beliefs are ancient and universal: the nether pole of manifestation which, though a necessary factor in cosmogenesis and anthropogenesis, has been converted by doctrinal theology into an evil demon, such as Satan, Devil, Lucifer, Angra-Mainyu, and Prometheus. A more mystical significance is founded in the fact that when a buddha or avatara appears or whenever an effort is made to aid mankind along spiritual lines, the powers of darkness automatically react along their own lines. This corresponding tendency to evil is the fundamental significance of Antichrist -- Christos being the name of the high initiate in whom was imbodied a ray of the Logos.
(See also: Antichrist , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary, Occultism, Occultism Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Right-hand Path
Right-hand Path From time immemorial, in all countries and among all races, there have been recognized two antagonistic schools of occult training, known as the path of light and the path of darkness. They represent two fundamental courses in nature, and are more commonly called the right-hand path and the left-hand path, as in Greek, Latin, English, and many other languages the word for right-hand also means propitious or skilled, or right as opposed to wrong. Hence in symbology it implies goodness, rightness, light: solar as opposed to lunar, spiritual as opposed to material, etc. The right-hand path is sometimes known as amrita-yana (the immortal vehicle or path of immortality) or as dakshina-marga (right path), and those who practice the rules of conduct and manner of life enjoined upon those who follow the right-hand path are known as dakshinacharins and their course of life is known as dakshinachara. It is a path leading to an ever wider consciousness, and those whose feet are firmly planted thereon are known as Masters of Wisdom and Compassion. See also LEFT-HAND PATH
(See also: Right-hand Path , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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Spiritual - Theosophy
Dictionary on
Space
Space Usually the universe as perceived by our physical senses. It is disputed whether space exists apart from objects or is a property of objects, and also whether it is objective or subjective. Such difficulties arise from our attempt to abstract extension from the reality of which it is an aspect, just as we attempt to abstract matter and energy. The physical basis of our universe appears under these three aspects, and the attempt to conceive each of the three as separate existences and to construct the universe out of them is to court contradiction and to proceed in the inverse order. In most arguments about the nature of space, space is unconsciously assumed at the outset of the inquiry, so that the reasoning becomes viciously circular. Is space the ultimate residue left after we have removed everything conceivable? In that case how can we define it in terms of anything which is supposed to be derived from it? We must either leave it undefined, as a primary postulate, or else define it in terms of something which lies beyond the physical plane altogether. Again, the question whether the dimensions belong to space or to material objects arises from a false separation between these two, so that we speak of objects being in space, just as we speak of life as being in matter. We think of space as an absence of matter, as we think of darkness as an absence of light, and silence as absence of sound; and having thus created vacuums we proceed to fill them. In the view of occultism it would be nearer the truth to say that light is the absence of darkness, sound the absence of silence, and matter a form of the presence of space; and this is true in the sense that those things which appear to us most real are derived from those which seem to us most unreal, because not immediately physically perceivable. In theosophy, space is the infinite, eternal background of Being, Being itself, the ever-lasting substratum of, as well as the presence of, the universe; its apparent vacuity is due only to its lack of physical qualities to which our senses respond, and also to its perfect unity and uniformity. Space is living, incomprehensibly conscious, and hence a divinity; it is the only real world, while our manifested world born from and in it is a mayavi (illusory) one. Theosophy, regarding the physical universe as merely one of many planes of kosmos, applies the term space to a much larger range. Yet it has the same characteristic meaning in all its applications: it figures, for instance, as one aspect of the trinity of space, energy, matter which is equivalent to the primordial unity. The fundamental hypostases are all derivative from ever-enduring, frontierless space, and Be-ness is symbolized by space, which no mind can either exclude nor conceive, and motion. In this conception are combined abstract space, motion, and duration. Space is symbolized by the circle; a central point denotes spiritual monadic activity arising within abstract space. It is equivalent to akasa or aether, water or the waters; Chaos as the spatial deeps. Sometimes space in its manifestation is represented as a serpent with seven heads or as the great sea or deep. Occasionally called aupapaduka (parentless), because it is primary and the source of all, it is spoken of both as mulaprakriti and as parabrahman. In its manifested aspect it is bright space, son of dark space, the former being the ray dropped into cosmic depths. Parent space is the eternal ever-present cause of all -- the incomprehensible divinity, whose invisible robes are the mystic root of all matter and of the universe. Space is called Mother before its cosmic activity, and Father-Mother at the first stage of reawakening of manifestation. In this connection a very clear distinction is drawn between abstract space, the limitless, frontierless, beginningless, and endless encompasser, container of all the various manifested spaces, which as individuals appear from and in its fathomless womb; and these latter spaces which are its offspring and which are collectively and individually the spatial ranges comprised within the boundaries of any manifested universe, such as a galaxy or solar system. Thus, we have the boundless spatial All or abstract space, and the innumerable universe or limited spaces arising within it. The former is absolute infinity and eternity; the later are the innumerable, relative spaces or universe scattered over the fields of the Boundless, called the spawn of the Great Mother. Physical space is said to have six directions, the four cardinal points plus the zenith and nadir; or eight directions given by the axes joining the opposite corners of a cube. The six and the eight combine in the cube and octahedron. Nothing in the definition of geometrical space excludes the possibility of other spatial constructions, coexistent with our space and interblended with it and with each other. This helps in understanding such matters as chains of globes -- which, when we attempt to represent them by drawn diagrams, seem so confusing and contradictory -- and the manner in which other planes of consciousness and of objectivity may be related to the physical.
(See also: Space , Mysticism, Mysticism Dictionary)
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: : Buddhism Sitemap I - F
This is a sitemap for Buddhism -
F . Click on a link and you will
find multiple definitions and articles related to the word.
Fact in Buddhism, Faith in Buddhism, Fifty-two stages of bodhisattva practice, Five Bhikshus, Five Corruptions, Five Desires, Five Eyes, Five Fundamental Conditions of Passions and Delusions, Five Natures, Five Offenses, Five Precepts, Five Sensual Pleasures, Five Sins, Five Skandhas, Five Turbidities, Flower Ornament, Flower Store World, Foundation of mindfulness, Four Aspects of Buddha Dharma, Four Elements, Four Fruits of the Arhat, Four Great Bodhisattva, Four Great Vows, Four Noble Truths, Four Pure Lands, Four ranks of sages, Four Reliance, Four Signs, Four stages of enlightenment, Four stages of Hinayana enlightenment, Four Universal Vows, Four Unlimited Mind, Four Virtues, Four Vows, Four Ways, Four Wisdom, Fourfold Assembly, Frame of reference, Fundamental darkness, Fundamental nature of enlightenment, Fushiryo
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Read more here: » Buddhism Sitemap I - F |
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New Age
Spiritual Dictionary on Yin
yin "Shady side of the mountain", earth's receptive or yielding principle and one of the two fundamental energies of the universe; the relative tendency of centrifugal, expansion, growth, diffusion, cold, darkness, and other qualities whose energy tends to go up and outward
(See
also: Yin ,
Body
Mind and Soul)
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Theosophy
Occultism Mysticism Dictionary on Svabhava
A
Theosophical definition of Svabhava :
Svabhava (Sanskrit) A compound word derived from the verb-root bhu, meaning "to become" - not so much "to be" in the passive sense, but rather "to become," to "grow into" something. The quasi-pronominal prefix sva, means "self"; hence the noun means "self-becoming," "self-generation," "self-growing" into something. Yet the essential or fundamental or integral Self, although following continuously its own lofty line of evolution, cannot be said to suffer the changes or phases that its vehicles undergo. Like the monads, like the One, thus the Self fundamental - which, after all, is virtually the same as the one monadic essence - sends down a ray from itself into every organic entity, much as the sun sends a ray from itself into the surrounding "darkness" of the solar universe. Svabhava has two general philosophical meanings: first, self-begetting, self-generation, self-becoming, the general idea being that there is no merely mechanical or soulless activity of nature in bringing us into being, for we brought ourselves forth, in and through and by nature, of which we are a part of the conscious forces, and therefore are our own children. The second meaning is that each and every entity that exists is the result of what he actually is spiritually in his own higher nature: he brings forth that which he is in himself interiorly, nothing else. A particular race, for instance, remains and is that race as long as the particular race-svabhava remains in the racial seed and manifests thus. Likewise is the case the same with a man, a tree, a star, a god - what not! What makes a rose bring forth a rose always and not thistles or daisies or pansies? The answer is very simple; very profound, however. It is because of its svabhava, the essential nature in and of the seed. Its svabhava can bring forth only that which itself is, its essential characteristic, its own inner nature. Svabhava, in short, may be called the essential individuality of any monad, expressing its own characteristics, qualities, and type, by self-urged evolution. The seed can produce nothing but what it itself is, what is in it; and this is the heart and essence of the doctrine of svabhava. The philosophical, scientific, and religious reach of this doctrine is simply immense; and it is of the first importance. Consequently, each individual svabhava brings forth and expresses as its own particular vehicles its various svarupas, signifying characteristic bodies or images or forms. The svabhava of a dog, for instance, brings forth the dog body. The svabhava of a rose brings forth the rose flower; the svabhava of a man brings forth man's shape or image; and the svabhava of a divinity or god brings forth its own svarupa or characteristic vehicle.
See
also: Svabhava ,
Mysticism,
Body Mind and Soul
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so many gods and goddesses?Hinduism
and Polytheism
According to the tenets of Hinduism, God is one as well as many. He
is to be found every where and in every thing. He is there in the sky, in the
rivers, in the plants and trees and even in a particle of dust. He is an
enigma, because He is in many things at a time and is many things at a time. He
is visible as well as invisible. He is here and He is there. He is above and He
is below. He is with forms and also without form. He speaks and He speaks not.
He is the self and also the not'self. To say that this is God and this is not
is perhaps much more sacrilegious, if there is anything like sacrilegious in
the world of God, than seeing God in images and idols and worshipping Him.
Read more here: » Hinduism and Polytheism: Why do Hindus worship
so many gods and goddesses? |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: Tension of
Opposites Central to ExistenceJainism: Tension of Opposites
Central to Existence
According to Acharya Mahaprajna, opposition is
a fundamental rule for existence. "There is no type of existence in which
opposites do not co-exist. In a sense, existence may also be defined as the
coming together of opposites. It is the principle of the quest for unity
between two apparently different characteristics of a substance. It tries to
point out that the characteristics which differences have, also have an
identicality. Reconciliation, which is a principle of anekant
, comes about only with the recognition of the identity principle.''
Read more here: » Tension of Opposites: Tension of
Opposites Central to Existence |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: Tolerance the Key To Lasting Peace
The gory massacre at Godhra and the subsequent retaliatory slaughter throughout Gujarat underlines how easily communal passions can be aroused among otherwise normal people. A major cause for such behaviour is a mindset, found both among Muslims and Hindus, that believes that tolerance is a sign of weakness. Convinced about the infallibility of their own faith, they are totally intolerant to the views of others. Bolstered by the exhortations of their religious and political leaders, they feel no compunctions in smashing all that stands in their way including the laws of the land.
(See also: Peace on Earth, Peace of Mind, Love and
Happiness, Life and Beyond, Body Mind and Soul)
Read more here: » Peace on Earth: Tolerance the Key To Lasting Peace |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: Hinduism Mythology and SymbolsThere are great
truths behind the ancient mythology of Hinduism. You cannot ignore a thing
simply because it has a garb of mythology. Do not argue. Shut up your mouth.
Keep your intellect at a respectable distance when you study mythology.
Intellect is a hindrance. It will delude you. Give up arrogance and vanity.
Cultivate love for imagery. Sit like a child and open your heart freely. You will
comprehend the great truths revealed by mythology. You will penetrate into the
hearts of the Rishis and sages who wrote the mythology. You will really enjoy
mythology now..
Excerpt from
All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda
Read more here: » Hindu
Mythology: Hinduism Mythology and Symbols |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: The Law Of KarmaKarma means not
only action, but also the result of an action. The consequence of an action is
really not a separate thing. It is a part of the action, and cannot be divided
from it. Breathing, thinking, talking, seeing, hearing, eating, etc., are
Karmas. Thinking is mental Karma. Karma is the sum total of our acts both in
the present life and in the preceding births.
Any deed, any
thought that causes an effect, is called a Karma. The Law of Karma means the
law of causation. Wherever there is a cause, there an effect must be produced.
A seed is a cause for the tree which is the effect. The tree produces seeds and
becomes the cause for the seeds.
Excerpt from
All About Hinduism by Sri Swami Sivananda
Read more here: » Karma: The Law Of Karma |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: On Love, Separation, and
SacrificeLove is the primary, fundamental building
block that everything is made of, and love is self-aware; it recognizes itself
in everything, and loves itself in everything. In its primal, unified,
unlimited, infinite state, it knows nothing other than unity, perfection,
completion, wholeness.
Read more here: » Personal Growth: On Love, Separation, and
Sacrifice |
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 |  |  | Fundamental darkness: Agni and the Fire of
Self-InquiryAgni and
the Fire of Self-Inquiry
Self-inquiry
(Atma-vichara), such as taught by Bhagavan Ramana Maharshi, is regarded as the
simplest and most direct path to Self-realization. However, Self-inquiry is
also very subtle and can be hard to accomplish even after years of dedicated
practice. It depends upon a great power of concentration and acuity of mind
along with an intense longing for liberation. One might say metaphorically that
Self-inquiry requires a certain flame. It requires that we ourselves become a
flame and that our lives become an offering to it. Without such an inner fire,
Self-realization may elude us whatever else we may attempt. Therefore, it is
important to look at Self-inquiry not simply as a mental practice but as an energetic
movement of consciousness like the rising up of a great fire.
Read more here: » Agni: Agni and the Fire of
Self-Inquiry |
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