འཚོ་བ་པ། | Glossary of Terms
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ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བ་པ།
- ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བ།
- ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བའི་རིགས།
- ཚོ་བ་ཅན།
- འཚོ་བ་པ།
- ’tsho ba pa
- tsho ba can
- kun tu ’tsho ba
- kun tu ’tsho ba’i rigs
- kun tu ’tsho ba pa
- ājīvika
- ājīvaka
- Term
- Ājīvika
- ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བའི་རིགས།
- kun tu ’tsho ba’i rigs
- ājīvika
A tīrthika order.
- Ājīvika
- ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བ་པ།
- kun tu ’tsho ba pa
- ājīvika
A follower of a non-Buddhist mendicant movement founded by Makkhali Gosāla (fifth century ʙᴄᴇ). The Ājīvikas adhered to a fatalist worldview according to which all beings eventually reach spiritual accomplishment by fate, rather than their own actions.
- ājīvika
- འཚོ་བ་པ།
- ’tsho ba pa
- ājīvika
A religious tradition begun by a contemporary of Śākyamuni, Makkhali Gosāla (c. 500 ʙᴄᴇ). Though prominent for some centuries, it died out during the first millennium ᴄᴇ. None of their own literature survives. They have been criticized as believing that everything is predetermined and therefore the individual is helpless to control outcomes. However, they apparently believed that an individual could actively progress to liberation through the practice of an ascetic spiritual path that prevented the development of more karma and the predetermined fate that it creates.
- ājīvika
- ཚོ་བ་ཅན།
- tsho ba can
- ājīvika
A follower of a heterodox mendicant movement that emerged about the time of the Buddha around a pupil of Mahāvīra named Gośāla and survived until the 13th century; its followers adhered to a type of determinism and practiced strict asceticism.
- ājīvika
- འཚོ་བ་པ།
- ’tsho ba pa
- ājīvika
A follower of a non-Buddhist mendicant movement founded by Makkhali Gosāla (fifth century ʙᴄᴇ). The Ājīvikas adhered to a fatalist world-view according to which all beings eventually reach spiritual accomplishment by fate, rather than their own actions.
- Ājīvaka
- ཀུན་ཏུ་འཚོ་བ།
- kun tu ’tsho ba
- ājīvaka
A religious mendicant of the Indian sect founded by Gosāla Maṅkhaliputra.