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A Buddhist term that refers to the emptiness of everything in the world.
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This cannot be explained in words.
But. Whoever achieves great things must first have great ambitions.
So. I will exercise my vision in my daily life.
Improve your self-awareness and self-cultivation in learning.
So. They were originally just like ordinary people.
But because the goal is not the same as the effort.
It has widened the distance from ordinary people.
In fact. You can do better, too.
It's all about your goals and efforts.
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The Four Elements: The four elements that make up the world: earth, water, fire, and wind.
The correct interpretation of the "four emptiness" should be: in Buddhist terms, "emptiness" means "emptiness". The Dharma says:
1. Everything in the world is "dependent voidness", and its existence must depend on many conditions. Dependent things cannot exist apart from them, and this is called "non-self-nature", that is, "emptiness." 2. The effect of dependent voidness is not empty, and the continuity is not empty.
The following is an excerpt from the explanation of the "Four Great Voids" in the Great Dictionary of Buddhism: "Buddhism asserts that all things in the world and the human body are composed of the four great harmony of earth, water, fire, and wind, and that all of them are delusional. It is also generally described by the world as seeing through fame and fortune and world affairs, also known as the four major emptiness.
It should be noted that this explanation uses a lot of Buddhist terms, and it is somewhat difficult for the average reader to understand the words that "contain all kinds of words and encompass a thousand meanings", and if the meaning is interpreted according to the text, new misunderstandings may arise.
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The Big Four: Earth, Water, Fire, and Fire.
Wind Void: Dependent Voidness.
This emptiness is not nothing.
It means that sex is empty.
It refers to the existence of no true self.
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Emotions.
Crazy clutch. Put it all down.
All in all, there is no joy or sorrow, indifferent to everything, and there is no self ==+
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Refers to selflessness.
There is no self-nature. There is no self-existent wind, fire, water and earth.
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There are two interpretations of the "four emptiness". The first explanation: the "Four Greats" refer to earth, water, fire, and wind.
Ancient India believed that they were the four material elements that make up the universe. The Hinayana Sarvastivada believes that these four material elements have their own substances, and that they have the properties of firmness, wetness, warmth, and movement. The Mahayana Void sect believes that they are all empty, and since the material elements that make up the universe are empty, then everything in the world that is composed of them is naturally illusory.
As it is said in the Prajna Sutra: "Color is emptiness, emptiness is color, color is not different from emptiness, emptiness is not different from color." Meaning:
The material world is emptiness, and emptiness is the material world.
The second explanation comes from the "Four Great Wheel Tribulations" theory in the "Yuanjue Sutra". The Great Wheel Tribulation refers to the "Earth Tribulation" (** and other disasters), the "Golden Tribulation" (the disaster of swords), the "Wind Tribulation" (the disaster of wind and fire, also called the "Fire Tribulation"), and the "Water Tribulation" (rain and waterlogging). The Mahayana Void Sect believes that if these four great calamities are seen through and regarded as empty and nothing, they will not be disasters.
After Mahayana Buddhism was introduced into China, the theory of emptiness had a certain impact on the ideology of Chinese, and the Buddhist term "the four major emptiness" became an idiom used to describe everything as empty.
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The four are empty——
Professionally, "the four are empty" is the Buddhist language, the four refer to the four elements of earth, water, fire, wind, the four are empty is mainly to tell us that everything is nothing, should not be greedy, extravagant.
For the people in the market, you can say that it is to let you not covet wine, sex, wealth, and gas, and live a plain life.
Bajie is the character in "Journey to the West", and I want to know the specific myself to read it.
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Wine, sex, wealth, and gas are all empty.
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Seven emotions: joy, anger, sorrow, sorrow, fear. The eight precepts are abstaining from sex, greed, hatred, and obsession, and there are three that I don't remember.
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"Seven emotions and six desires" others have said, and they are also very specific! The eight precepts refer to the eight precepts in the Buddha's house. Quit drinking, quitting smoking, and quitting sex are things that people often talk about!
There are also four precepts: abstain from killing, abstain from stealing, abstain from sitting on a high bed, and abstain from eating at any time When I first saw the "Eight Precepts", I thought you were asking who the Eight Precepts were? Dizzy!!
However, Zhu Bajie in "Journey to the West" is still the image representative of Bajie! Don't you think?
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