Four admirations: Difference between revisions
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The '''four admirations''' (Tib. མོས་པ་རྣམ་བཞི་, [[Wyl.]] ''mos pa rnam bzhi'') — four manners in which one can be admired by beings. It is often mentioned in [[Four activities|magnetizing]] practices like [[Kurukulla]]. | The '''four admirations''' (Tib. མོས་པ་རྣམ་བཞི་, ''möpa nam shyi'', [[Wyl.]] ''mos pa rnam bzhi'') — four manners in which one can be admired by beings. It is often mentioned in [[Four activities|magnetizing]] practices like [[Kurukulla]]. | ||
They are: | They are: |
Latest revision as of 17:53, 26 January 2018
The four admirations (Tib. མོས་པ་རྣམ་བཞི་, möpa nam shyi, Wyl. mos pa rnam bzhi) — four manners in which one can be admired by beings. It is often mentioned in magnetizing practices like Kurukulla.
They are:
- the admiration of being treated with kindness since one is seen as a father or mother
- the admiration of being respected since one is seen as a teacher
- the admiration of being renowned since one is seen as a king
- the admiration of being loved since one is seen as a friend
The Dungkar Great Tibetan Dictionary gives a similar enumeration
- being admired as a father or mother
- being admired as teacher
- being admired as a king or leader
- being admired as a lord[1]
Notes
- ↑ Wyl. pha ma lta bur mos pa/rje la mos pa/rgyal po'am gtso bor mos pa/slob dpon lta bur mos pad