buddhism beliefs

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    • Ascetic
      Living a simple and strict lifestyle with few pleasures or possessions
    • Buddhahood
      When someone achieves enlightenment and becomes a Buddha
    • Buddha-nature
      The idea that everyone has the essence of a Buddha inside them
    • Buddhism
      A religion founded around 2,500 years ago by Siddhartha Gautama
    • Dependent Arising
      The idea that all things arise in dependence upon conditions
    • Enlightenment
      The gaining of true knowledge about God, self or the nature of reality, usually through meditation and self-discipline; gaining freedom from the cycle of rebirth
    • Meditation
      A practice of calming and focusing the mind, and reflecting deeply on specific teachings to penetrate their true meaning
    • Pure Land Buddhism
      Mahayana form of Buddhism based on belief in Amitabha Buddha
    • Tibetan Wheel of Life
      An image that symbolises samsara, often found in Tibetan monasteries and temples
    • Threefold Way
      The Eightfold Path grouped into the three sections of ethics (sila), meditation (samadhi) and wisdom (panna)
    • Three Marks of Existence
      Three characteristics that are fundamental to all things: suffering (dukkha), impermanence (anicca), no fixed self / soul (anatta)
    • Three Poisons
      Greed, hatred and ignorance; the main causes of suffering
    • Three Refuges / Jewels / Treasures
      The three key sources of Buddhist teachings in which Buddhists find protection and inspiration. They are: the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha. Also known as the Triple Gem
    • Three Watches of the Night
      The three realisations that the Buddha made to achieve enlightenment: knowledge of all his previous lives, understanding of samsara, understanding of why suffering happens and how to overcome it
    • Four Noble Truths
      The four truths that the Buddha taught about suffering
    • Four Sights
      Old age, illness, death and a holy man; these four sights led the Buddha to leave his life of luxury in the palace
    • Five Aggregates
      The five aspects that make a person – which are: form, sensation, perception, mental formations (or thoughts / impulses) and consciousness
    • Five Ascetics
      The Buddha's first five students; five monks who followed ascetic practices
    • Eightfold Path
      Eight aspects that Buddhists practise and live by in order to achieve enlightenment. Also known as the Middle Way. Can be summed up as the right… understanding, intention, speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, concentration
    • Amitabha Buddha
      The Buddha worshipped by Pure Land Buddhists
    • Anatta
      The idea that people do not have a permanent, fixed, self or soul
    • Anicca
      Impermanence; the idea that everything changes
    • Arhat
      'Perfected person' – for Theravada Buddhists, someone who has become enlightened. (And therefore escaped samsara.)
    • Bodhisattva
      For Mahayana Buddhists, someone who has become enlightened but chooses to remain in the cycle of samsara to help others to achieve enlightenment as well
    • Buddha
      'The enlightened one' – the title given to someone who has achieved enlightenment; usually used to refer to Siddhartha Gautama
    • Dhamma
      The Buddha's teachings. (Also known as Dharma.)
    • Dukkha
      Translated as suffering, a dissatisfactory state of all things; the first Noble Truth
    • Dukkha-dukkhata
      Ordinary pain or suffering – e.g. breaking a leg, being separated from someone you love, being upset at not achieving as goal
    • Samkhara-dukkha
      Suffering caused by the idea of attachment to other people, objects, activities, etc: when people crave and try to hold on to the things they are attached to, they suffer
    • Viparinama-dukkha
      The sorrow and unhappiness that a person feels as a result of a change (small changes, gradual changes or larger changes) or losing something good (e.g. moving, getting older, etc)
    • Jataka
      The Jataka tales are popular stories about the lives of the Buddha
    • Kamma
      A person's actions; the idea that skilful actions result in happiness and unskilful ones, in suffering. (Also known as karma.)
    • Mega
      The fourth Noble Truth: the way to stop suffering is the Eightfold Path
    • Mahayana
      'The great vehicle'; an umbrella term to describe later Buddhist traditions, including Pure Land Buddhism, Tibetan Buddhism and Zen Buddhism. (Mostly practised in China, Korea and Japan.)
    • Mara
      A demon that represents spiritual obstacles, especially temptation
    • Nibbana (Nirvana)

      A state of complete enlightenment, happiness and peace, where all greed, hatred and delusion are ended. Extinguishment, an escape from samsara
    • Nidanas
      Twelve factors that illustrate the process of birth, death and rebirth
    • Nirodha
      The third Noble Truth: suffering can be stopped
    • Panna
      Wisdom - section of the Threefold Way that deals with Buddhist approaches to understanding the nature of reality
    • Pali
      The language of the earliest Buddhist scriptures – known as the 'three baskets' (Tripitaka, or Pali Canon), covering the life and teachings of the Buddha and Buddhist philosophy
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