Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
phantoms 2
phase 3
phases 4
phenomena 27
phenomenal 22
phien 3
philosopher 3
Frequency    [«  »]
28 understand
28 wang
27 little
27 phenomena
27 rank
27 reason
27 religious
Kaiten Nukariya
Religion of the Samurai

IntraText - Concordances

phenomena

   Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 3, 5 | white-in short, all the phenomena in the universe are the 2 1, 4, 6 | below. There are none of the phenomena of the four seasons. Tranquil 3 1, 4, 7 | dream of the vulgar; if all phenomena be flowing and changing, 4 1, 4, 13 | explicitly: "What creates the phenomena is Mind; what transcends 5 1, 4, 13 | what transcends all the phenomena is Buddha."2~ 6 1, 6, 11 | known,' and assumes all phenomena to be ideas as illustrated 7 1, 6, 13 | certain religionists, all the phenomena of the universe are to succumb 8 1, 6, 13 | say, is only the case with phenomena or appearances, but not 9 1, 6, 14 | world, is appearances or phenomena, but not reality itself. 10 1, 6, 14 | or to the purblind. The phenomena] universe is what appears 11 1, 6, 16 | both physical and mental phenomena, and asserts the existence 12 1, 6, 16 | relation between reality and phenomena. The first is 'Relativity 13 1, 6, 16 | manifests itself as relative phenomena. The third is 'Relativity 14 1, 6, 16 | all in all, and relative phenomena come out of it as its secondary 15 1, 6, 16 | Relativity,' which means relative~phenomena always play an important 16 1, 6, 16 | world; it is through these phenomena that Absolute Reality comes 17 1, 6, 16 | or essential to relative phenomena, nor relative phenomena 18 1, 6, 16 | phenomena, nor relative phenomena subordinate or secondary 19 1, 6, 16 | intuition, while relative phenomena are the same life outwardly 20 1, 6, 17 | B. P. Bowne1 says: They (phenomena) are not phantoms or illusions, 21 1, 6, 17 | antithesis," he continues,2 "of phenomena and noumena rests on the 22 1, 6, 17 | something that rests behind phenomena which we ought to perceive 23 1, 6, 17 | cannot, because the masking phenomena thrusts itself between the 24 1, 7, 10 | physiological and psychological phenomena had as such no ultimate 25 1, 8, 2 | law-givers of the natural phenomena; that we are the makers 26 Appen, 2 (2)| people know not even the phenomena actually occurring before 27 Appen, 4 | Tathagata-garbha the mental phenomena that are subject to growth


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License