Twofold purity: Difference between revisions
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'''Twofold purity''' (Tib. [[དག་པ་གཉིས་ལྡན་]], [[Wyl.]] ''dag pa gnyis ldan'') — | '''Twofold purity''' (Tib. [[དག་པ་གཉིས་ལྡན་]], ''dakpa nyiden''; [[Wyl.]] ''dag pa gnyis ldan'') — | ||
#Firstly, purity in the sense that it is always pure by its very nature (Tib. [[ངོ་བོ་ཡེ་དག་]], ''ngowo yé dak''; Wyl. ''ngo bo ye dag''), and secondly, purity in the sense that all the [[adventitious stains]] have been purified (Tib. [[གློ་བུར་བྲལ་དག་]], ''lobur dral dak''; Wyl. ''glo bur bral dag''). | #Firstly, purity in the sense that it is always pure by its very nature (Tib. [[ངོ་བོ་ཡེ་དག་]], ''ngowo yé dak''; Wyl. ''ngo bo ye dag''), and secondly, purity in the sense that all the [[adventitious stains]] have been purified (Tib. [[གློ་བུར་བྲལ་དག་]], ''lobur dral dak''; Wyl. ''glo bur bral dag''). | ||
#Alternatively, the phrase twofold purity can refer to purity of the [[two obscurations|two kinds of obscuration]], emotional and cognitive. | #Alternatively, the phrase twofold purity can refer to purity of the [[two obscurations|two kinds of obscuration]], emotional and cognitive. |
Revision as of 10:18, 28 January 2018
Twofold purity (Tib. དག་པ་གཉིས་ལྡན་, dakpa nyiden; Wyl. dag pa gnyis ldan) —
- Firstly, purity in the sense that it is always pure by its very nature (Tib. ངོ་བོ་ཡེ་དག་, ngowo yé dak; Wyl. ngo bo ye dag), and secondly, purity in the sense that all the adventitious stains have been purified (Tib. གློ་བུར་བྲལ་དག་, lobur dral dak; Wyl. glo bur bral dag).
- Alternatively, the phrase twofold purity can refer to purity of the two kinds of obscuration, emotional and cognitive.