Incalculable kalpa: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
mNo edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
'''Incalculable kalpa''' (Skt. '' | '''Incalculable kalpa''' (Skt. ''asaṃkhyeya-kalpa''; [[Wyl.]] ''bskal pa grangs med pa'') is the longest [[great kalpa]]. Despite its name, it corresponds to a precise length of time: in the [[Abhidharma counting system]], ’incalculable’ (Skt. ''asaṃkhyeya''; Wyl. ''grangs med pa'') refers to the largest number, ten to the power sixty. | ||
In the [[Mahayana]] tradition, it takes a [[bodhisattva]] three incalculable kalpas, from the moment he sets out on the path to [[enlightenment]] by first giving rise to [[bodhichitta]] until finally reaching [[awakening]]. | In the [[Mahayana]] tradition, it takes a [[bodhisattva]] three incalculable kalpas, from the moment he sets out on the path to [[enlightenment]] by first giving rise to [[bodhichitta]] until finally reaching [[awakening]]. |
Revision as of 16:51, 23 March 2016
Incalculable kalpa (Skt. asaṃkhyeya-kalpa; Wyl. bskal pa grangs med pa) is the longest great kalpa. Despite its name, it corresponds to a precise length of time: in the Abhidharma counting system, ’incalculable’ (Skt. asaṃkhyeya; Wyl. grangs med pa) refers to the largest number, ten to the power sixty.
In the Mahayana tradition, it takes a bodhisattva three incalculable kalpas, from the moment he sets out on the path to enlightenment by first giving rise to bodhichitta until finally reaching awakening.
In the Pali tradition the four intermediary kalpas that make a great kalpa are also called incalculable kalpas.