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  2. Animals in Buddhism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animals_in_Buddhism

    Animals have always been regarded in Buddhist thought as sentient beings. [1] The doctrine of rebirth held that any human could be reborn as animal, and any animal could be reborn as a human. An animal might be a reborn dead relative, and anybody who looked far enough back through their series of lives might come to believe every animal to be a ...

  3. The Buddha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Buddha

    Siddhartha Gautama, [ e ] most commonly referred to as the Buddha ('the awakened one'), [ 4 ][ f ][ g ] was a wandering ascetic and religious teacher who lived in South Asia (the Himalayan foothils of present-day Nepal and the eastern Ganges plain of northern India), during the 6th or 5th century BCE [ 5 ][ 6 ][ 7 ][ c ] and founded Buddhism.

  4. Enlightenment in Buddhism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlightenment_in_Buddhism

    Buddhism. The English term enlightenment is the Western translation of various Buddhist terms, most notably bodhi and vimutti. The abstract noun bodhi (/ ˈboʊdi /; Sanskrit: बोधि; Pali: bodhi) means the knowledge or wisdom, or awakened intellect, of a Buddha. [web 1] The verbal root budh- means "to awaken", and its literal meaning is ...

  5. The Eight Great Events in the Life of Buddha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Eight_Great_Events_in...

    A grouping of four events, the Birth, Enlightenment, First Sermon and Death was the most prominent, consisting of very important life-events. [6] Larger groups, such as the 43 on the 20th-century Ivory carved tusk depicting Buddha life stories in New Delhi, tend to have more from the Buddha's early life.

  6. Four sights - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_sights

    Four sights. Siddharta sees the dead man, China, 15th-century printed and hand-coloured edition of Baocheng's biography. The four sights are four events described in the legendary account of Gautama Buddha 's life which led to his realization of the impermanence and the ultimate dissatisfaction of conditioned existence.

  7. Buddha-nature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddha-nature

    The twelfth chapter of the Lotus Sutra details that the potential to become enlightened is universal among all people, even the historical Devadatta has the potential to become a buddha. [43] East Asian commentaries saw these teachings as indicating that the Lotus sutra was also drawing on the concept of the universality of buddha-nature. [ 44 ]

  8. Buddhahood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buddhahood

    A Buddha must live in the palace and enjoy his life with his wife. A Buddha must make a great departure from his palace and become a renunciant . A Buddha must practice asceticism. A Buddha must sit under a buddha tree (like the bodhi tree) on a bodhimanda (place of awakening) A Buddha must defeat the demonic forces of Mara.

  9. Human beings in Buddhism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_beings_in_Buddhism

    Buddhism. Humans in Buddhism (Sanskrit: मनुष्य, IAST: manuṣya, Pali manussa) are the subjects of an extensive commentarial literature that examines the nature and qualities of a human life from the point of view of humans' ability to achieve enlightenment. In Buddhism, humans are just one type of sentient being, that is a being ...