- གྲངས་མེད་པ།
- གྲངས་མེད།
- བསྐལ་པ་གྲངས་མེད་པ།
- grangs med pa
- grangs med
- bskal pa grangs med pa
- asaṃkhyeya
- asaṃkhyeyakalpa
- Term
- asaṃkhyeya
- གྲངས་མེད་པ།
- grangs med pa
- asaṃkhyeya
Asaṃkhyeya and other specific, extremely large numbers that have separate values and are not actually synonymous with “infinite” are left untranslated in contexts where the difference between them is a salient factor. On the number asaṃkhyeya (“incalculable”), see also Abhidharmakośa 3.93.
- asaṃkhyeya
- གྲངས་མེད་པ།
- grangs med pa
- 無量無數
A distinct number: 1 to the power of 60, according to the Abhidharmakośa. See also asaṃkhyeya eon.
- asaṃkhyeya
- གྲངས་མེད་པ།
- grangs med pa
- asaṃkhyeya
Asaṃkhyeya and other specific, extremely large numbers that have separate values and are not actually synonymous with “infinite” are left untranslated in contexts where the difference between them is a salient factor. On the number asaṃkhyeya (“incalculable”), see also Abhidharmakośa 3.93.
- innumerable
- གྲངས་མེད།
- grangs med
- asaṃkhyeya
A distinct number. 1 to the power of 60, according to the Abhidharmakośa.
The name of a certain kind of kalpa, literally meaning “incalculable.” The number of years in this kalpa differs in various sūtras that give a number. Also, twenty intermediate kalpas are said to be one asaṃkhyeya (incalculable) kalpa, and four incalculable kalpas are one great kalpa. In that case, those four incalculable kalpas represent the eons of the creation, presence, destruction, and absence of a world. Buddhas are often described as appearing in a second incalculable kalpa.