From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Samskrta)
Translations of
Sankhata
Englishconditioned, fabricated, compounded
Sanskritसंस्कृत (Saṃskṛta)
Chinese有為
( Pinyin: yǒu wéi)
Japanese有為
( Rōmaji: ui)
Korean유위
( RR: yuwi)
Tibetanའདུས་བྱས
('dus byas)
Glossary of Buddhism

Saṅkhata (Sanskrit: Saṃskṛta संस्कृत) refers to any phenomena conditioned by other phenomena [1] produced through causes. [2] Sankhata is contrasted with Asankhata, [1] which means Unconditioned (that which is of its own without any dependence on conditioned phenomena) referring to Nibbana.

It also denotes mental creations in the Pali language. As explained by the dependent origination concept (see: Twelve Nidanas), sankhatas condition the consciousness ( vijnana) and are conditioned by ignorance ( avidyā). Sankhatas are part of the name and form (see: Namarupa) and so are one of the five aggregates (see: skandhas).[ citation needed]

Creations list

Sankhatas can be either pernicious, neutral or positive - associated with similar consciousness.[ citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mahathera, Nyanatiloka (1980). Buddhist Dictionary: Manual of Buddhist Terms and Doctrines (4th ed.). Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN  9552400198.
  2. ^ Buswell, Robert E.; Lopez, Donald Sewell (2014). The Princeton dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton (N.J.): Princeton University Press. ISBN  978-0-691-15786-3.


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Samskrta)
Translations of
Sankhata
Englishconditioned, fabricated, compounded
Sanskritसंस्कृत (Saṃskṛta)
Chinese有為
( Pinyin: yǒu wéi)
Japanese有為
( Rōmaji: ui)
Korean유위
( RR: yuwi)
Tibetanའདུས་བྱས
('dus byas)
Glossary of Buddhism

Saṅkhata (Sanskrit: Saṃskṛta संस्कृत) refers to any phenomena conditioned by other phenomena [1] produced through causes. [2] Sankhata is contrasted with Asankhata, [1] which means Unconditioned (that which is of its own without any dependence on conditioned phenomena) referring to Nibbana.

It also denotes mental creations in the Pali language. As explained by the dependent origination concept (see: Twelve Nidanas), sankhatas condition the consciousness ( vijnana) and are conditioned by ignorance ( avidyā). Sankhatas are part of the name and form (see: Namarupa) and so are one of the five aggregates (see: skandhas).[ citation needed]

Creations list

Sankhatas can be either pernicious, neutral or positive - associated with similar consciousness.[ citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Mahathera, Nyanatiloka (1980). Buddhist Dictionary: Manual of Buddhist Terms and Doctrines (4th ed.). Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN  9552400198.
  2. ^ Buswell, Robert E.; Lopez, Donald Sewell (2014). The Princeton dictionary of Buddhism. Princeton (N.J.): Princeton University Press. ISBN  978-0-691-15786-3.



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