Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q622629> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 87 of
87
with 100 triples per page.
- Q622629 subject Q7163660.
- Q622629 subject Q7164953.
- Q622629 subject Q7469554.
- Q622629 subject Q8395435.
- Q622629 subject Q8593500.
- Q622629 subject Q8852059.
- Q622629 subject Q8853201.
- Q622629 abstract "Svabhava (Sanskrit: स्वभाव; IAST: svabhāva) Pāli: sabhāva; Chinese: 自性 zìxìng; Tibetan: རང་བཞིན, Wylie: rang-bzhin) literally means "own-being" or "own-becoming". It is the intrinsic nature, essential nature or essence of living beings.The concept and term svabhāva are frequently encountered in Hindu and Buddhist traditions such as Advaita Vedānta (e.g. in the Avadhūta Gītā), Mahāyāna Buddhism (e.g. in the Ratnagotravibhāga), Vaishnavism (e.g., the writings of Rāmānuja) and Dzogchen (e.g. in the seventeen tantras).In the nondual Advaita Vedānta yoga text, Avadhūta Gītā, Brahman (in the Upanishadic denotation) is the sabhāva. In the Mahāyāna Buddhadharma tradition(s) it is one of a suite of terms employed to denote the Buddha-nature, such as "gotra".".
- Q622629 wikiPageExternalLink pali.
- Q622629 wikiPageExternalLink wh_412_413.html..
- Q622629 wikiPageExternalLink www.nirvanasutra.net.
- Q622629 wikiPageExternalLink Mahaparinirvana_Sutra_Yamamoto_Page_2007.pdf.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q11059.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1191427.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1224655.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q132265.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1332544.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q134293.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q13630572.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1370415.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1551387.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q169335.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1700962.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1708503.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q171195.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q1741798.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q189564.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q194486.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2000996.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2007062.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q215685.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q22073765.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2348383.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2502188.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2505322.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q2986204.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q34178.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q3630813.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q36727.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q375539.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q399922.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q4309853.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q45584.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q46802.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q4752048.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q48362.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q488506.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q497089.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q4984258.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q5054212.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q516265.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q522046.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q531299.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q546054.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q597768.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q612405.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q622047.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q640962.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q6863985.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7133779.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7163660.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7164953.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7171619.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7295850.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7303998.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7323978.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7380288.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7457643.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7469554.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q746990.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q751147.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7751683.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q7850.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q790053.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q8046149.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q815628.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q8395435.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q844421.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q849734.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q8593500.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q871396.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q8852059.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q8853201.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q889832.
- Q622629 wikiPageWikiLink Q966962.
- Q622629 comment "Svabhava (Sanskrit: स्वभाव; IAST: svabhāva) Pāli: sabhāva; Chinese: 自性 zìxìng; Tibetan: རང་བཞིན, Wylie: rang-bzhin) literally means "own-being" or "own-becoming". It is the intrinsic nature, essential nature or essence of living beings.The concept and term svabhāva are frequently encountered in Hindu and Buddhist traditions such as Advaita Vedānta (e.g. in the Avadhūta Gītā), Mahāyāna Buddhism (e.g. in the Ratnagotravibhāga), Vaishnavism (e.g., the writings of Rāmānuja) and Dzogchen (e.g.".
- Q622629 label "Svabhava".