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"Pearl of Wisdom", season 3, episode 7 of The Librarians (Australia, 2010) "The Pearl of Wisdom", film by Hugues Gentillon (Poland, 2015) "Pearls of Wisdom – Bill Pearl: A Bodybuilding Legend" (DVD), a biographical documentary about Bill Pearl
Dara are several different homonymous names with different etymological origins.. In Hebrew, Dara means "compassion" or "pearl of wisdom". [citation needed]In Bulgaria, North Macedonia and Serbia, Dara means "gift", or "to give a gift", its meaning directly derives from dar "gift".
Thus though one and the same thing may be called both the holy thing and a pearl, yet it is called holy because it is not to be corrupted; and called a pearl because it is not to be contemned. [ 15 ] Pseudo-Chrysostom : Otherwise; That which is holy denotes baptism, the grace of Christ's body, and the like; but the mysteries of the truth are ...
In Tibetan Buddhist tradition the Chintamani is sometimes depicted as a luminous pearl and is in the possession of several of different forms of the Buddha. [ 3 ] In Japan, where the Hindu goddess Lakshmi is known as Kisshōten in Shinto , she is commonly depicted with a Cintāmaṇi in her hand.
The Two Pearls of Wisdom (also known as Eon, Eon: Dragoneye Reborn, or Eon: Rise of the Dragoneye) is a 2008 fantasy novel by Alison Goodman. It follows the story of Eon, who has potential to become a Dragoneye, being able to control wind, water and land.
Thubten Chodron (德林 — De Lin), born Cheryl Greene, is an American Tibetan Buddhist nun, author, teacher, and the founder and abbess of Sravasti Abbey, the only Tibetan Buddhist training monastery for Western nuns and monks in the United States. [2]
The Berlin Wisdom Paradigm is an expertise model of life wisdom. [48] [49] The Balance Theory of Wisdom [49] The Self-transcendence Wisdom Theory [49] The Three-dimensional Wisdom Theory [49] The H.E.R.O.(E.) Model of Wisdom [49] The Process View of Wisdom [49] The Integrating Virtue and Wit Theory of Wisdom [49]
Many teachings in early Buddhism mention faith as the first step, wisdom as the last. [83] On the last stage of the Buddhist path, the attainment of arahant, the practitioner has completely replaced faith by wisdom: the arahant no longer relies on faith at all, [84] although at this stage sometimes a form of realized faith is described. [85]