The wheel of life : Buddhist perspectives on cause & effect / Tenzin Gyatso, The Fourteenth Dalai Lama ; Translated and edited by Jeffrey Hopkins ; foreword by Richard Gere.

By: Hayes, Steven C [author. ]Material type: TextTextPublisher: Somerville, MA : Wisdom Publications, [2015]Copyright date: ©2015Description: vii, 148 pages : illustrations ; 23 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781614293279Subject(s): Causation (Buddhism) | Karma | Religious life -- Buddhism | Buddhism -- DoctrinesLOC classification: BQ7935.B774 | M4 2015 Summary: Using the traditional Buddhist allegorical image of the Wheel of Life and the teaching of the twelve links of dependent origination, the Dalai Lama deftly illustrates how our existence, though fleeting and often full of woes, brims with the potential for peace and happiness. We can realize that potential by cultivating a wise appreciation of the interdependency of actions and experience, and by living a kind and compassionate life. A life thus lived, the Dalai Lama teaches, becomes thoroughly meaningful for both oneself and for others. This book was originally published under the title The Meaning of Life.
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BQ5395 .H65 2012 淡定的智慧 : BQ6083 .X45 2010 For all living beings : BQ6354.T34 K36 2004 台灣廟宇圖鑑 / BQ7935.B774 M4 2015 The wheel of life : Buddhist perspectives on cause & effect / BQ9265.6 .K6512 2011 超脫煩惱的練習 / BQ9265.6 .M37 2016 你所煩惱的事,有九成都不會發生 : BQ9266 .M17 2014 一日一禪語, 日日是好日 :

Includes bibliographical references (pages 137-141) and index (pages 143-148).

Using the traditional Buddhist allegorical image of the Wheel of Life and the teaching of the twelve links of dependent origination, the Dalai Lama deftly illustrates how our existence, though fleeting and often full of woes, brims with the potential for peace and happiness. We can realize that potential by cultivating a wise appreciation of the interdependency of actions and experience, and by living a kind and compassionate life. A life thus lived, the Dalai Lama teaches, becomes thoroughly meaningful for both oneself and for others. This book was originally published under the title The Meaning of Life.

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