Nihilism: Difference between revisions
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'''Nihilism''' (Skt. ''uccheda dṛṣṭi''; [[Wyl.]] ''chad lta'' or Skt. ''ucchedānta''; Wyl. ''chad mtha<nowiki>'</nowiki>'') is the belief in non-existence, which is one of the [[two extremes]] into which most philosophical schools fall. The term is applied to the view that things lack ultimate existence, and also to the denial of the law of cause and effect or past and future lives. | '''Nihilism''' (Skt. ''uccheda dṛṣṭi''; Tib. ཆད་ལྟ་, [[Wyl.]] ''chad lta'' or Skt. ''ucchedānta''; Tib. ཆད་མཐའ, Wyl. ''chad mtha<nowiki>'</nowiki>'') is the belief in non-existence, which is one of the [[two extremes]] into which most philosophical schools fall. The term is applied to the view that things lack ultimate existence, and also to the denial of the law of cause and effect or past and future lives. | ||
==Alternative Translations== | ==Alternative Translations== |
Latest revision as of 17:49, 12 June 2018
Nihilism (Skt. uccheda dṛṣṭi; Tib. ཆད་ལྟ་, Wyl. chad lta or Skt. ucchedānta; Tib. ཆད་མཐའ, Wyl. chad mtha') is the belief in non-existence, which is one of the two extremes into which most philosophical schools fall. The term is applied to the view that things lack ultimate existence, and also to the denial of the law of cause and effect or past and future lives.
Alternative Translations
- Annihilation (Dharmachakra Translation Committee)