Conditioned: Difference between revisions
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==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
<small><references/></small> | <small><references/></small> | ||
==Further Reading== | |||
*S. Goodman, ''"The Conditioned and Unconditioned" Chapter of Mi-pham rgya mtsho's mkhas-pa'i tshul-la 'jug-pa'i sgo'', M.A Thesis, University of Saskatchewan, 1979 | |||
==Internal Links== | ==Internal Links== | ||
*[[Unconditioned]] | *[[Unconditioned]] | ||
*[[Formations]] | |||
*[[Six types of cause]] | |||
* | *[[Four types of condition]] | ||
[[Category:Philosophical Tenets]] | [[Category:Philosophical Tenets]] |
Latest revision as of 12:43, 29 April 2021
Conditioned (Skt. saṁskṛta; Tib. འདུས་བྱས་, düché, Wyl. 'dus byas) means created through causes and conditions.
Definition
In the Entrance to the Way of the Wise, Mipham Rinpoche says:
- A conditioned thing is a thing which is created through causes and conditions. Its nature has arising, remaining and ceasing. Its basis of definition is all phenomena subsumed by the five aggregates. [1]
Alternative Translations
- Compounded
- Composite
Notes
- ↑ Tibetan: འདུས་བྱས་ནི་རྒྱུ་དང་རྐྱེན་ལས་སྐྱེས་པའི་ཆོས་གང་ཞིག རང་གི་ངོ་བོ་ལ་སྐྱེ་གནས་འགག་པ་གསུམ་ཡོད་པ་སྟེ་མཚན་གཞི་ཕུང་པོ་ལྔས་བསྡུས་པའི་ཆོས་ཐམས་ཅད་དོ།
Further Reading
- S. Goodman, "The Conditioned and Unconditioned" Chapter of Mi-pham rgya mtsho's mkhas-pa'i tshul-la 'jug-pa'i sgo, M.A Thesis, University of Saskatchewan, 1979