Sassatavada: Difference between revisions

48 bytes added ,  15 June 2021
Adding local short description: "View rejected by Buddhism", overriding Wikidata description "view, rejected by the Buddha in the nikayas, that the individual has an unchanging self" (Shortdesc helper)
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->Daask
(Adding local short description: "View rejected by Buddhism", overriding Wikidata description "view, rejected by the Buddha in the nikayas, that the individual has an unchanging self" (Shortdesc helper))
 
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{{Short description|View rejected by Buddhism}}
'''Sassatavada''' ([[Pali]]) also '''śāśvata-dṛṣṭi''' ([[Sanskrit]]), usually translated "eternalism" is a kind of thinking rejected by the Buddha in the [[nikayas]] (and [[Āgama (Buddhism)|agamas]]). One example of it is the belief that the individual has an unchanging [[Atman (Hinduism)|self]]. Views of this kind were held at the Buddha's time by a variety of groups.
'''Sassatavada''' ([[Pali]]) also '''śāśvata-dṛṣṭi''' ([[Sanskrit]]), usually translated "eternalism" is a kind of thinking rejected by the Buddha in the [[nikayas]] (and [[Āgama (Buddhism)|agamas]]). One example of it is the belief that the individual has an unchanging [[Atman (Hinduism)|self]]. Views of this kind were held at the Buddha's time by a variety of groups.


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