Primary elements: Difference between revisions
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The '''primary elements''' (Tib. འབྱུང་བ་ཆེན་པོ་, Wyl. '' 'byung ba chen po'') are the basic constituents of the world. | The '''primary elements''' (Tib. འབྱུང་བ་ཆེན་པོ་, ''jungwa chenpo'', [[Wyl.]] '' 'byung ba chen po'') are the basic constituents of the world. | ||
''Jungwa'' in Tibetan means to give rise, or source. They are given this name because they give rise to all that manifests—the material universe as well its inhabitants. They are called “great” (chenpo) because everything depends on them and they are present everywhere. | ''Jungwa'' in Tibetan means to give rise, or source. They are given this name because they give rise to all that manifests—the material universe as well its inhabitants. They are called “great” (''chenpo'') because everything depends on them and they are present everywhere. | ||
The teachings mention | The teachings mention: | ||
*the [[four primary elements]] | *the [[four primary elements]] | ||
*the [[Five elements|five primary elements]] | *the [[Five elements|five primary elements]] |
Latest revision as of 16:31, 20 August 2017
The primary elements (Tib. འབྱུང་བ་ཆེན་པོ་, jungwa chenpo, Wyl. 'byung ba chen po) are the basic constituents of the world.
Jungwa in Tibetan means to give rise, or source. They are given this name because they give rise to all that manifests—the material universe as well its inhabitants. They are called “great” (chenpo) because everything depends on them and they are present everywhere.
The teachings mention: