sunyata
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See also: Śūnyatā
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Sanskrit शून्यता (śūnyatā), from शून्य (śūnya, “zero, nothing”) + ता (-tā, “generalizing suffix”). Cognate with Pali suññatā.
Noun
[edit]sunyata (countable and uncountable, plural sunyatas)
- (Buddhism) Emptiness, the absence of an intrinsic essence or nature which is stable and separable from other things.
- 1993, Sunyata, Emptiness and Self-emptying, Kenosis by Ven. Dr. Rewata Dhamma published in Buddhist - Christian Dialogue London, 27th March
- However since emptiness empties itself and so cannot itself be an object of attachment, dynamic 'sunyata' empties itself out as just the things themselves.
- 1993, Sunyata, Emptiness and Self-emptying, Kenosis by Ven. Dr. Rewata Dhamma published in Buddhist - Christian Dialogue London, 27th March
- (psychology) Emptiness, in terms of a meditative state; an Eastern concept of a high meditative state of calm and freedom from distraction.
- 1975, Herbert V. Guenther, Chögyam Trungpa, The Dawn of Tantra, 2001, Shambhala Publications, pages not numbered,
- Shunyata can be explained in a very simple way. […] In the shunyata experience, the attention is on the field rather than on its contents.
- 1986, White Lotus Sutra - Unchecked by Sangharakshita; STUDY LEADERS SEMINAR 1986 Padmaloka.
- all dharmas were reducible to sunyata. So in a sense you have got a sort of merging of the particular in the universal.
- 1996, Steve Odin, The social self in Zen and American pragmatism, page 112:
- In his treatment of Zen Buddhism, Abe emphasizes that the true self of Zen Buddhism is dynamic śūnyatā: "That is to say, true Sunyata is nothing but the true self and the true self is nothing but true Sunyata"
- 1975, Herbert V. Guenther, Chögyam Trungpa, The Dawn of Tantra, 2001, Shambhala Publications, pages not numbered,
Translations
[edit]state of mind
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