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Experiencing the World's Religions, 2/e
Michael Molloy

Buddhism

Glossary

Amitabha Buddha    The Buddha of the Western Paradise, a bliss-body Buddha in Mahayana.
anatta    "No self"; the doctrine that there is no soul of permanent essence in people and things.
anichcha    This term means impermanence, constant change.
arhat    In Theravada, a person who has practiced monastic disciplines and reached nirvana, the ideal.
Bodhi    This term means enlightenment.
bodhisattva    "Enlightenment being"; in Mahayana, a person of deep compassion, especially on who does not enter nirvana, but is constantly reborn to help others; a heavenly being of compassion.
Dharma    The totality of Buddhist teaching.
dhyana    "Meditation"; focusing of the mind; sometimes, stages of trance.
dukkha    This term means sorrow, misery, suffering.
Guanyin    A popular bodhisattva of compassion in Mahayana.
karuna    Compassion, empathy.
koan    In Zen Buddhism, a question that cannot be answered logically; a technique used to test consciousness and bring awakening.
lama    A Tibetan Buddhist teacher, often a monk.
Maitreya    A Buddha (or bodhisattva) expected to appear on earth in the future.
mandala    A circular design containing deities, geometrical forms, symbols and so on that represent totality, the self, or the universe.
mudra    A symbolic hand gesture.
nirvana    The release from suffering and rebirth that brings inner peace.
samadhi    A state of deep awareness, the result of intensive meditation.
samasara    Constant rebirth and the attendant suffering; the everyday world of change.
Sangha    The community of monks and nuns; lowercased, this term refers to and individual monastic community.
satori    In Zen, the enlightened awarness.
shunyata    The Mahayana notion of emptiness, meaning that the universe is empty of permanent reality.
stupa    A shrine, usually in the shape of a dome, used to mark Buddhist relics of sacred sites.
sutra    A sacred text, especially one said to record the words of the Buddha.
tathata    "Thatness," or "thusness," "suchness"; the uniqueness of each changing moment of reality.
trikaya    The three "bodies" of the Buddha-the cosmic Buddha nature, the celestial Buddhas, and the historical Buddhas.
Tripitaka    The three "baskets,"or collections, of Buddhist texts.
vajra    The "diamond" scepter used in Tibetan and other types of Buddhist ritual, symbolizing compassion.