- Duḥkha (/ˈduːkə/)(Sanskrit; Pali:
dukkha), 'unease', "standing unstable,"
commonly translated as "suffering", "pain", or "unhappiness", is an important...
- trilakṣaṇa) of all
existence and beings,
namely anicca (impermanence),
dukkha (commonly
translated as "suffering", "unsatisfactory", "unease"), and anattā...
-
truths or
realities for the "spiritually
worthy ones". The
truths are:
dukkha ("not
being at ease", "suffering", from dush-stha, "standing unstable,")...
- Four
Noble Truths,
wherein taṇhā
arises with, or
exists together with,
dukkha (dissatisfaction, "standing unstable") and the
cycle of
repeated birth,...
-
first of the
three marks of
existence (trilakshana), the
other two
being dukkha (suffering, pain, unsatisfactoriness) and
anatta (non-self, non-soul, no...
-
Buddhist tradition, the
Buddha taught that
attachment or
clinging causes dukkha (often
translated as "suffering" or "unease"), but that
there is a path...
- the
centrality of
dukkha was
developed in
later years in both
Vedic and the
offshoot Buddhist traditions. The
elimination of
dukkha is the
raison d'être...
- desire. It is the
third of the Four
Noble Truths,
stating that
suffering (
dukkha)
ceases when
craving and
desire are renounced.
According to
Thubten Chodron...
-
repeated birth,
mundane existence and
dying again.
Samsara is
considered to be
dukkha, suffering, and in
general unsatisfactory and painful,
perpetuated by desire...
-
rebirth (saṃsāra).
Nirvana is part of the
Third Truth on "cessation of
dukkha" in the Four
Noble Truths doctrine of Buddhism. It is the goal of the Noble...