| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] nations 1 natural 3 naturally 1 nature 31 near 1 nearer 1 necessarily 6 | Frequency [« »] 32 world 31 dhamma 31 find 31 nature 31 therefore 31 very 31 wisdom | VV.AA. (R. Bogoda, Susan Elbaum Jootla, & M.O'C. Walshe) The Buddhist Layman IntraText - Concordances nature |
Essay
1 1| objective understanding of the nature of things as it truly is ( 2 1| good or bad become second nature. They more or less shape 3 1| blindness to the real nature of life; and where there 4 1| progressive refinement of man's nature, as shown by his actions, 5 1| only alternative. The true nature of man is that he is not 6 1| to know himself, his true nature in all aspects, as a first 7 1| preservation of the race. Nature, to make sure of its objective, 8 1| any work of an exacting nature. If a Buddhist layman, while 9 1| them the realism of human nature and the idealism of youth 10 1| lower elements of human nature, and that the increasing 11 2| the impermanent (anicca) nature of the body which causes 12 2| relating to the ultimate nature of our mind-and-body (nãma-rûpa) 13 2| continual flux that is the nature of the body keeps them in 14 2| as they are in their true nature by penetrating through the 15 2| anicca, dukkha and anattã nature of all phenomena, mental 16 2| seeing anattã, the egoless nature of external phenomena if 17 2| the anattã - egolessness nature of the mind. Only gradually 18 2| of life in their ultimate nature, we cannot expect to progress 19 2| Mindfulness of the true nature of the external experiences 20 3| normal conscious control. Its nature is in fact blind ignorance 21 3| unhealthy roots of human nature are greed, hatred and ignorance, 22 3| we ever come to grasp the nature of this peculiar monster 23 3| we can begin to grasp the nature of Reality, which is transcendental, 24 3| we must first grasp the nature of the mundane, the phenomenal 25 3| world which, by the very nature of things, cannot be. But 26 3| something wholly other. Its true nature is hidden from us by the 27 3| being aware of one's own nature and observing one's own 28 4| but whatever its precise nature or mode of manifesting it 29 4| looking outside, and indeed nature has equipped us with some 30 4| in large measure to the nature and values of the society 31 4| increased insight into our own nature and the way things really