Glossary
- arhatA person who has achieved enlightenment following the Buddha’s teaching.
- BuddhaThe founder of Buddhism, Siddhartha Gautama, after his enlightenment. It is a title that means the enlightened or awakened one.
- Dhamma (Dharma)Dhamma is a Buddhist doctrine about the nature of existence and includes the teachings of the Buddha.
- DoctrineA set of beliefs or teachings held by religion or within a particular subject.
- dukkhaSuffering; illness; dissatisfaction; imperfection. An unavoidable fact of existence according to the First Noble Truth.
- enlightenmentThe realization of the truth about life. In Buddhism, it releases a person from the cycle of rebirth.
- five Khandas (or skandhas)The five components or aggregates that make an individual self - body, perception, conception, volition, and consciousness.
- intrinsicA natural part that belongs within someone or something.
- karma (Kamma)Actions, and the consequences of actions. An important concept in Buddhism, Hinduism, and Sikhism.
- Mahayana sutrasSacred Buddhist scriptures.
- meditationThinking quietly as a spiritual or religious exercise. Connection of the mind and soul with the Divine using breathing and other techniques. In Buddhism, using one of a set of techniques or exercises for calming the mind, developing positive emotions, and understanding the way things are.
- mettaThe Buddhist term for loving-kindness. A pure love that is neither grasping nor possessive.
- Nibbana (also spelled nirvana)The state when Buddhists have achieved understanding and have broken free from the cycle of samsara. Can be called Nirvana.
- Noble Eightfold PathThe teachings of the Buddha that can lead to the end of suffering: 1 - Right Views; 2 - Right Thinking; 3 - Right Speech; 4 - Right Action; 5 - Right Livelihood; 6 - Right Effort; 7 - Right Mindfulness; 8 - Right Meditation.
- Pali canonThe collection of scriptures preserved in the Theravada Buddhist tradition.
- Paticcasamupada (Pratityasamutpada)The concept of dependent arising. The belief that everything in existence is because other things are. The idea that everything is interconnected and that everyone affects everyone else.
- principle of conditionalityAll things are inter-related, nothing is independent. Also known as paticcasamupada, dependent origination or dependent arising
- samsaraIn Hinduism, Buddhism, and Sikhism, this is the cycle of life, death, and rebirth.
- SanghaThe Buddhist community of practitioners usually used to mean the community of monks.
- sentientA term used to refer to creatures that are conscious and able to experience pleasure and pain.
- Three Marks of ExistenceIn Buddhism, these are impermanence (anicca), dissatisfaction or suffering (dukkha), and non-self (anatta). They are characteristics shared by all humans.
- Three RefugesThe three most important features of the Buddhist life recited as an expression of belief and commitment: I take refuge in the Buddha, I take refuge in the Sangha, I take refuge in the dhamma (teaching).