ཆོས

JH-ENG

phenomenon; religion; property; quality; doctrine; qualificand; practice; way; attribute; phenomena; topic. ... smos: statement of doctrine

JH-OE

teaching; reality; true nature of things;

JH-SKT, YOGA

dharmatA. dharma

JH-SKT

{MSA,MV}*; {TN,MSA}*; {MSA}dharama. ... smos: {MSA}* ... sUcana

OT

[825] 1. འཆོས་པི་སྐུལ་ཚིག

2. ... 1) shes bya'am dngos po/ ... 2) lugs srol/ ... yul chos bzang po rnams sngar rgyun rang sor 'jags pa/ ... 3) (d+harma) rang gi ngo bo 'dzin pa'i don no/ d+harma zhes don bcu la 'jug ste/ 'dus byas dang 'dus ma byas kyi chos zhes pa lta bu shes bya la 'jug pa dang/ lam bden gyi chos zhes pa lta bu lam dang/ 'gog bden gyi chos zhes pa lta bu myang 'das dang/ chos kyi skye mched ces pa lta bu yid kyi yul dang/ btsun mo'i 'khor dang gzhon nu rnams dang lhan cig tu chos spyod ces pa lta bu bsod nams dang/ byis pa ni mthong ba'i chos la gces par 'dzin pa zhes pa lta bu tshe dang/ chos 'dul ba zhes pa lta bu gsung rab dang/ lus 'di rga ba'i chos yin no zhes pa lta bu 'byung 'gyur dang/ dge sbyong gi chos bzhi zhes pa lta bu nges pa dang/ lha chos dang mi chos zhes pa lta bu lugs la 'jug pa bcas bcu yod par rnam bshad rig pa las gsungs shing/ da lta yongs grags su lugs dang gsung rab dang/ shes bya bcas gsum la 'jug pa gtso che ba'o/ ...

JH-DEFT

མཚན་ཉིད རང་གི་ངོ་བོ་འཛིན་པ

JH-DEFE

Definition: bearing its own entity

JH-ST

གཞི་གྲུབ/ ཤེས་བྱ / ཡོད་པ / གཞལ་བྱ/ ཡུལ / རྣམ་མཁྱེན་གྱི་གཞལ་བྱ / ལྐོག་གྱུར/

JH-EXT

1. མཐོང་ཆོས་ལ; 

2.ཆོས་ཐམས་ཅད་བདག་མེད་པ; 

3. ཆོས་ཉིད་ཆོསཐམས་ཅདདངཆོས་ཅནདུའབྲེལ་བ

JH-EXE

1. in this life; 

2. all phenomena are selfless{T1 8.17}; 

3. the relationship of reality with all phemonena as a quality of those qualificands{DASI 600.3}

DM

dharma. In ཀློང་ཆེན་པ, almost always means small 'd' dharma, not the teachings of the Buddha (Dharma), but the constituents of apparent existence, 'knowables.' Stein, Tibetica Antiqua I 167-9.

JV

dharma, elements of existence (general non-critical term), factors of reality, knowable factors, phenomena, mental objects, phenomenal existents, events and meanings, what is experienced, spiritual teachings, truth, message, teaching, doctrine, law, aspects of experience (the range of yid's activity), meaning, qualities, meaning of life, make, build, gnaw off, law, order, sustenance, manifestation, presentation, prepare, make ready, SA 'cha' ba, 'cho ba, 'chos pa, draw up, religious doctrine, religion, particular doctrine, tenet, precept, system of morality, ethics, manner, method, custom, usage, thing, substance, property, 1 of gnas pa dgu, grammatical predicate, topics

IW

1) 'Chos pa!; 

2) knowable, thing; 

2) tradition; 

3) Dharma [rang gi ngo bo 'dzin pa'i don, dharma w 19 meanings, like conditioned and unconditioned dharmas shes bya, like dharmas of the truth of the path lam, like the dharmas of the truth of cessation nirvana, like chos kyi skye mched mind objects, like btsun mo'i 'khor dang gzhon nu rnams dang lhan cig tu chos spyod ces pa lta bu merit, like byis pa ni mthong ba'i chos la gces par 'dzin pa time, like chos 'dul ba the teachings, like lus 'di rga ba'i chos yin no 'byung 'gyur, like dge sbyong gi chos bzhi nges pa, like lha chos dang mi chos lugs la 'jug pa as taught in rnam bshad rig pa, and well known: lugs dang gsung rab dang, shes bya dharma, phenomenon, thing, existent, truly real predicate, event, entity, element of existence, ultimate constituent of existence) [the] Dharma, religion, quality, attribute, property, characteristic, ability, a teaching, [the genuine awareness of] the doctrine, scripture, [sacred] text, right, virtue, duty, moral law, truth, order, law, practice, mental object, way of belief, topic, point, principle, meaning, value, content imp of {'chos} make! create! correct! repair! reform! treat!, and {'cha'} ; 

5) of 16 aspects of the four holy truths 1 of the {phyag rgya bzhi}, = four mudras]

RB

བསྒྲུབ་བྱའི་ཆོསconclusion [to be proven in logic]. phenomenon; factor/ element; property/ quality/ attribute/ aspect; spiritual teaching/ Buddhadharma/ dharma/ teaching of the Buddha; idea (mental phenomenon/ event); (spiritual) situation/ circumstances; isc. principle/ tenet

RY

predicate of a subject ཆོས་ཅན [in logic]; property [as in བློ་ཆོས mental property and {don chos} real property] [ggd]. Dharma, phenomena, property [thd]. phenomena, ( སྣང་བ). Anything that can be experienced, thought of, or known. 

1) Dharma, reality 

2) dharmas, phenomena 

3) Dharma, the teaching of the Buddha; 

1) dharma, phenomenon, thing, existent, [a truly real predicate, event, entity, element or ultimate constituent of existence]. 

2) Dharma, [the Precious Dharma with eight qualities]. Religion. 

3) the Dharma, the Teachings, the Doctrine. 

4) quality, attribute, property, characteristic, ability. 

5) a teaching, doctrine, text, scripture, sacred text. 

6) right, virtue, duty, moral law, tenet, precept. 

7) truth, order, law. 

8) practice, dharma -, religious. 

9) mental object, dharma. 1

0) religion, religious system, way of belief. 

11) topic, point, principle. 

12) meaning, value, sense, meaning, worth; content. 

13) ex. +{'chad}, +{shod}, +{smra}, to preach, give religious teaching, +{nyan}, to hear, listen to religious teaching, +{byed}, to practice religion, live a religious life, +{zhu}, to receive religious instruction, t seek, ask for religious teaching. imp. of {'chos}, and {'cha'}, 

14) mind objects, 5 of 16 aspects of the 4 holy truths. one of the ཕྱག་རྒྱ་བཞི, four mudras; phenomenon; factor/ element; property/ quality/ attribute; spiritual teaching/ Buddhadharma/ dharma; don chos go bar byed pa'i gzhi} imp. of འཆོས་པ ; events; can that which has [certain] qualities or attributes, subject [in logic context]. phenomenon, phenomena, Dharma, teachings



See:

འཇིག་རྟེན་ལེགས་པར་བྱེད་པའི་ཆོས


RyWiki


dharma, elements of existence (general non-critical term), factors of reality, knowable factors, phenomena, mental objects, phenomenal existents, events and meanings, what is experienced, spiritual teachings, truth, message, teaching, doctrine, law, aspects of experience (the range of yid's activity), meaning, qualities, meaning of life, make, build, gnaw off, law, order, sustenance, manifestation, presentation, prepare, make ready, SA 'cha' ba, 'cho ba, 'chos pa, draw up, religious doctrine, religion, particular doctrine, tenet, precept, system of morality, ethics, manner, method, custom, usage, thing, substance, property, 1 of gnas pa dgu, grammatical predicate, topics [JV]

1) 'Chos pa!; 2) knowable, thing; 2) tradition; 3) Dharma [rang gi ngo bo 'dzin pa'i don, dharma w 19 meanings, like conditioned and unconditioned dharmas shes bya, like dharmas of the truth of the path lam, like the dharmas of the truth of cessation nirvana, like chos kyi skye mched mind objects, like btsun mo'i 'khor dang gzhon nu rnams dang lhan cig tu chos spyod ces pa lta bu merit, like byis pa ni mthong ba'i chos la gces par 'dzin pa time, like chos 'dul ba the teachings, like lus 'di rga ba'i chos yin no 'byung 'gyur, like dge sbyong gi chos bzhi nges pa, like lha chos dang mi chos lugs la 'jug pa as taught in rnam bshad rig pa, and well known: lugs dang gsung rab dang, shes bya dharma, phenomenon, thing, existent, truly real predicate, event, entity, element of existence, ultimate constituent of existence) [the] Dharma, religion, quality, attribute, property, characteristic, ability, a teaching, [the genuine awareness of] the doctrine, scripture, [sacred] text, right, virtue, duty, moral law, truth, order, law, practice, mental object, way of belief, topic, point, principle, meaning, value, content imp of 'chos make! create! correct! repair! reform! treat!, and 'cha' ; 5) of 16 aspects of the four holy truths 1 of the phyag rgya bzhi, = four mudras] [IW]

Dharma, phenomena, property [thd]

1) 'Chos pa!; 2) knowable, thing; 2) tradition; 3) Dharma [IW]

1) Dharma, reality 2) dharmas, phenomena 3) Dharma, the teaching of the Buddha; 1) dharma, phenomenon, thing, existent, [a truly real predicate, event, entity, element or ultimate constituent of existence]. 2) Dharma, [the Precious Dharma with eight qualities]. Religion. 3) the Dharma, the Teachings, the Doctrine. 4) quality, attribute, property, characteristic, ability. 5) a teaching, doctrine, text, scripture, sacred text. 6) right, virtue, duty, moral law, tenet, precept. 7) truth, order, law. 8) practice, dharma -, religious. 9) mental object, dharma. 10) religion, religious system, way of belief. 11) topic, point, principle. 12) meaning, value, sense, meaning, worth; content. 13) ex. +'chad, +shod, +smra, to preach, give religious teaching, +nyan, to hear, listen to religious teaching, +byed, to practice religion, live a religious life, +zhu, to receive religious instruction, t seek, ask for religious teaching. imp. of 'chos, and 'cha', 14) mind objects, 5 of 16 aspects of the 4 holy truths. one of the phyag rgya bzhi, four mudras; phenomenon; factor/ element; property/ quality/ attribute; spiritual teaching/ Buddhadharma/ dharma; don chos go bar byed pa'i gzhi]] imp. of 'chos pa; events; can that which has [certain] qualities or attributes, subject [in logic context]. phenomenon, phenomena, Dharma, teachings [RY]

phenomenon; factor/ element; property/ quality/ attribute/ aspect; spiritual teaching/ Buddhadharma/ dharma/ teaching of the Buddha; idea (mental phenomenon/ event); (spiritual) situation/ circumstances; isc. principle/ tenet [RB]

predicate of a subject chos can [in logic]; property [as in blo chos mental property and don chos real property] [ggd] [RY]

bsgrub bya'i chos conclusion [to be proven in logic] [RB]

phenomena, (snang ba). Anything that can be experienced, thought of, or known [RY]

Dharma (chos): this Sanskrit term is the normal word used to indicate the Doctrine of the Buddha. The Dharma of transmission refers to the corpus of verbal teachings, whether oral or written. The Dharma of realization refers to the spiritual qualities resulting from practising these teachings. [MR]

Discussion

dharma. Characterized as that which holds its own essence. The Sanskrit word dharma derives from the root dhar- meaning to hold; hence the common explanation of its etymology: "Because it holds its characteristics, it is called dharma."

Although in English usage, the word dharma generally refers to Buddhist or Hindu religion, the word has a much broader range of meanings in Buddhist philosophy. At its most basic level, it means phenomenon: anything that can be known with any of the six consciousnesses. In this meaning, it is equivalent to knowable, proven basis, and existent.

Dharma also refers to the Buddha dharma, both the path and cessation. In this context, it is often called the True Dharma of the Dharma Jewel.

Dharma also is commonly used to mean a property of a phenomenon. The phenomenon whose property it is, is called a dharma base or chos can. This is how the word is used in logic, where it is a shorthand for the phrase "dharma to prove," or bsgrub bya'i chos--another way to describe the predicate of a syllogism. Although this is the most common instance of such usage, the word dharma--and the related terms dharma base and dharma nature (dharmata)--are used in other contexts as well.

The Indian tradition distinguishes ten meanings of the word dharma. As explained in the Great Tibetan-Chinese Dictionary, 1) Knowables, as in compound and non-compound dharmas; 2) the path, as in the dharma of the truth of path; 3) nirvana, as in the dharma of the truth of cessation; 4) the object of the mind consciousness as in the sense base of dharmas; 5) merit, as in acting on dharmas together with a retinue of queens and youths; 6) life, as in childish beings cherishing the visible dharmas; 7) the scriptures, as in the dharma-vinaya; 8) the source-derived, as in ‘the body is an aging dharma;’ 9) realization, as in the four spiritual dharmas; and 10) tradition, as in divine dharma and human dharma. As the Great Dictionary notes, not all of these usages are common in Tibetan.

In translating the word dharma or chos, it seems reasonable to use the Sanskrit word dharma in all its usages, with phenomenon as an acceptable synonym when it means the knowable. However, care should be taken to use the word dharma in instances where the relationship between dharma, dharma base, dharma nature, and dharma expanse needs to be clearly maintained. In addition, the word phenomenon may have specific implications in Western philosophy which the word dharma does not have; using dharma avoids potential confusion in this arena.

Dharma is often translated as "law," particularly in texts from the East Asian traditions, but it seems unclear how that translation relates to the descriptions of the word dharma preserved in the Tibetan tradition. DKC


Dharma (chos). 'Dharma' (generally, and with a capitalized 'D') is the Buddha's teachings; 'dharma' (with a small 'd') refers to all phenomena including mental objects. With the small 'd' this refers to particulars of both these form and formless universes. Although technically this is supposed to be the case, many times the context is intermingled between the two. To be aware of the context you're referring to and/or relating to is of utmost importance. RWB


Dharma - The teaching of the Buddha; also a term for truth or reality, or the elements of experience. [Tarthang]

Dharma (chos) the Teaching of the Buddha; the truth, the true law; individual things, elements, or phenomena are all referred to as dharmas. RY

Dharma (chos). 1. dharmas are elementary constituent events into which the world is broken down, what we see as the Person of Self being no more than a collection of dharmas, without ultimate reality. In the higher schools of Buddhist philosophy it is shown that dharmas themselves have no ultimate existence: their Suchness, or true nature, is to be Empty (or pure) of true existence. 2. The Dharma that is one of the Three Jewels of Refuge (Buddha, Dharma and Sangha) is the realizations and abandonments in the mind of a buddha. 3. 'The Dharma' frequently means the Doctrine of the Buddha, Truth, what is right. RY

Dharma (chos). 'Dharma' is the Buddha's teachings; 'dharma' means phenomena or mental objects. RY

Dharma (chos). See also 84,000 Dharma sections, Dharma of Statement and Realization, Dharma Wheels; 84,000 entrances; banquet of; doors; ripening and liberating; establishing in Tibet; qualities; guardians; in relation to the Three Jewels; in relation to the Three Roots; of lesser vehicles; three classes of protectors.; refuge precepts; sixty aspects of sound; two aspects and six qualities of RY

Dharma (chos). The Buddha's teachings. Sometimes 'dharma' can mean phenomena or mental objects, as well as attributes or qualities. RY

Dharma {chos}. This term can mean many different things. Here it indicates the teachings of the Buddha. RY