Four kayas: Difference between revisions
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The '''four [[kaya]]s''' (Skt. ''catuḥkāya''; Tib. སྐུ་བཞི་, ''ku shyi''; [[Wyl.]] ''sku bzhi'') are the | The '''four [[kaya]]s''' (Skt. ''catuḥkāya''; Tib. སྐུ་བཞི་, ''ku shyi''; [[Wyl.]] ''sku bzhi'') are the | ||
# [[dharmakaya]] (Wyl. ''chos kyi sku''), | # [[dharmakaya]] ([[Wyl.]] ''chos kyi sku''), | ||
# [[sambhogakaya]] (Wyl. ''longs spyod rdzogs pa’i sku''), | # [[sambhogakaya]] ([[Wyl.]] ''longs spyod rdzogs pa’i sku''), | ||
# [[nirmanakaya]] (Wyl. ''sprul pa’i sku''), and | # [[nirmanakaya]] ([[Wyl.]] ''sprul pa’i sku''), and | ||
# [[svabhavikakaya]] (Wyl. ''ngo bo nyid kyi sku''). | # [[svabhavikakaya]] ([[Wyl.]] ''ngo bo nyid kyi sku''). | ||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== |
Revision as of 03:12, 8 July 2017
The four kayas (Skt. catuḥkāya; Tib. སྐུ་བཞི་, ku shyi; Wyl. sku bzhi) are the
- dharmakaya (Wyl. chos kyi sku),
- sambhogakaya (Wyl. longs spyod rdzogs pa’i sku),
- nirmanakaya (Wyl. sprul pa’i sku), and
- svabhavikakaya (Wyl. ngo bo nyid kyi sku).
Further Reading
- Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche, Enlightened Courage—An Explanation of Atisha's Seven Point Mind Training, Padmakara Translation Group (Snow Lion Publications, 2006), pages 51-52.