གནས། | Glossary of Terms
-
གནས་པ།
- གནས།
- gnas
- gnas pa
- sthāna
- pratiṣṭhāna
- layana
- niśraya
- Term
- possible
- གནས།
- gnas
- sthāna
This terms refers to all that is reasonable and can be expected to occur. Among the ten powers of a Buddha, the first is knowing what is tenable and untenable (Skt. sthānāsthāna, Tib. gnas dang gnas ma yin), i.e., the natural laws that govern the world in which we live.
- possible
- གནས།
- gnas
- sthāna
That which is tenable or can reasonably be expected to occur. Knowing what is possible and what is impossible (Tib. gnas dang gnas ma yin, Skt. sthānāsthāna) is counted among the ten powers of a buddha (Tib. stobs bcu, Skt. daśabala).
- foundation
- གནས།
- gnas
- pratiṣṭhāna
- refuge
- གནས།
- gnas
- niśraya
In “The Chapter on Going Forth,” Kalyāṇamitra reads this as an abbreviation of “refuge instructor” (Tib. gnas kyi slob dpon). A “refuge” or “refuge monk” is one who has passed ten years as a monk and possesses five qualities and is thus fit to guide new monks, grant ordination, and instruction. In “The Chapter on Going Forth,” the Buddha says a monk who has been ordained five years may be considered “independent” enough to travel independently between monsoons. Though the text does not address the issue, a monk of five years ordination would not, in ordinary circumstances, acts as a refuge instructor.
- resting place
- གནས།
- gnas
- layana
- standing place
- གནས།
- gnas
- sthāna
- tenable
- གནས།
- gnas
- sthāna
This terms refers to all that is reasonable and can be expected to occur. Among the ten powers of a buddha, the first is knowing what is tenable and untenable (Skt. sthānāsthāna, Tib. gnas dang gnas ma yin), i.e. the natural laws that govern the world in which we live.
- underlying condition
- གནས་པ།
- gnas pa
- sthāna
See Edgerton 1953, p. 579.