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'''Arya''' (Skt. ''ārya''; Tib. [[འཕགས་པ་]], ''pakpa''; [[Wyl.]] '' 'phags pa'') literally means 'noble' or 'sublime'. The Tibetan word for Arya (''pakpa'') means 'elevated' or 'exalted', | '''Arya''' (Skt. ''ārya''; Tib. [[འཕགས་པ་]], ''pakpa''; [[Wyl.]] '' 'phags pa'') literally means 'noble' or 'sublime'. The Tibetan word for Arya (''pakpa'') means 'elevated' or 'exalted', and refers to the exalted state, surpassing that of an ordinary, samsaric being, which is attained when reaching the [[path of seeing]], whether as a [[shravaka]], [[pratyekabuddha]] or [[bodhisattva]]. | ||
==Subdivisions== | ==Subdivisions== |
Revision as of 08:41, 18 July 2011
Arya (Skt. ārya; Tib. འཕགས་པ་, pakpa; Wyl. 'phags pa) literally means 'noble' or 'sublime'. The Tibetan word for Arya (pakpa) means 'elevated' or 'exalted', and refers to the exalted state, surpassing that of an ordinary, samsaric being, which is attained when reaching the path of seeing, whether as a shravaka, pratyekabuddha or bodhisattva.
Subdivisions
There are four classes of noble beings:
Alternative Translations
- Spiritually advanced being (LCN)