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Difference between revisions of "Dharma"
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:#''ācāra'', literally "practice," but refers to the norms and standards established by educated people who know and live by the first two sources of dharma | :#''ācāra'', literally "practice," but refers to the norms and standards established by educated people who know and live by the first two sources of dharma | ||
*[[Buddha-dharma]] or Dharma vinaya | *[[Buddha-dharma]] or Dharma vinaya | ||
+ | :*Basic teachings of the Buddha | ||
+ | :*Sutras | ||
+ | ::*Theravada | ||
+ | ::*Mahayana | ||
*[[Jain dharma]] | *[[Jain dharma]] | ||
*Sikh dharma | *Sikh dharma |
Revision as of 23:18, 17 October 2013
Dharma is used here, consistent with Buddha-dharma but somewhat more broadly, to mean teachings
- Hindu dharma
-
- śruti, literally translates as "what is heard," but refers to the Vedas or Vedic literature which are the liturgical and praise hymns of the earliest Hindu tradition
- smṛti, literally "what is remembered," but refers to the Dharmaśāstra texts as well as other Sanskrit texts such as the Purāņas and the Epics (Mahābhārata and Rāmāyaņa)
- ācāra, literally "practice," but refers to the norms and standards established by educated people who know and live by the first two sources of dharma
- Buddha-dharma or Dharma vinaya
-
- Basic teachings of the Buddha
- Sutras
-
- Theravada
- Mahayana
- Jain dharma
- Sikh dharma