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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
  1. 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
  2. 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)
  3. 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
  • Basic teachings of the Buddha
  • Sutras
  • Theravada
  • Mahayana