- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
- Term
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
These three aspects, literally “circles” or “provinces,” are the doer, the action, and the object of the action.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
The triad of a subject, the doer; an object (direct or indirect) to which something is done; and the action of doing it. When a bodhisatva acts, none of these three aspects of the action are to be apprehended or conceptualized.
These three aspects, literally “circles” or “provinces,” are the doer, the action, and the object of the action. Their purity is variously described as being free of self-interest or free of conceptualization.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
Agent, act, and object.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
The subject, the object, and the act of perception, which together constitute the pattern of duality.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
Subject, object, and the various physical and cognitive actions that proliferate based on that duality.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
Object, agent, and action.
- three spheres
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
These three aspects, literally “circles” or “provinces,” are the doer, the action, and the object of the action.
- three aspects of the action
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
These three aspects, literally “circles” or “provinces,” are the doer, the action, and the object of the action. Their purity is variously described as being free of self-interest or free of conceptualization.
- triple sphere
- འཁོར་གསུམ།
- ’khor gsum
- trimaṇḍala
A shorthand term for the triad of act, object, and agent that characterizes dualistic mind.