- འཕགས་པ།
- འཕགས།
- ’phags pa
- ’phags
- ārya
- Term
The Sanskrit ārya has the general meaning of a noble person, one of a higher class or caste. In Buddhist literature, depending on the context, it often means specifically one who has gained the realization of the path and is superior for that reason. In particular, it applies to stream enterers, once-returners, non-returners, and worthy ones (arhats) and is also used as an epithet of bodhisattvas. In the five-path system, it refers to someone who has achieved at least the path of seeing (darśanamārga).
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Someone who has entered the “path of seeing,” i.e., who has a direct and stable realization of selflessness, ceases to be an “ordinary person” and becomes a noble one.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
The Sanskrit ārya generally has the common meaning of a noble person, one of a higher class or caste. In Dharma terms it means one who has gained the realization of the path and is superior for that reason.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
This term in particular applies to stream enterers, once-returners, non-returners, and worthy ones.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
A term for realized beings in Buddhism. Also translated here as “ārya.”
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
The Sanskrit ārya generally has the common meaning of a noble person, one of a higher class or caste. In Dharma terms it means one who has gained the realization of the path and is superior for that reason.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Someone who has entered the “path of seeing,” i.e., who has a direct and stable realization of selflessness, and therefore ceases to be an “ordinary person” and becomes a “noble one.”
- noble (one)
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
An honorific term used to refer to anything of exalted status. Thus, it can refer to a noble person, one of a higher class or caste. In the context of Buddhism, it refers to one who has gained realization on the path of seeing and thus understands selflessness.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Honorific term for someone who has gained the realization of the path of seeing.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Someone who has entered the “path of seeing,” i.e., who has a direct and stable realization of selflessness, ceases to be an “ordinary person,” and has entered the path that culminates in becoming an arhat.
- noble one
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Also known as a “noble being,” “exalted being,” “a superior”; one who has attained the third path, i.e., the path of seeing upon which one becomes a real saṅgha refuge.
- ārya
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
- ārya
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Generally has the common meaning of a noble male, one of a higher class or caste. In Dharma terms it means a male who has gained the realization of the path and is superior for that reason.
- ārya
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
Generally has the common meaning of a noble person, one of a higher class or caste. In Dharma terms it means one who has gained the realization of the path and is superior for that reason.
- ārya
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
A term for realized beings in Buddhism. Also translated here as “noble one.”
- ārya
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
See “noble being.”
- noble being
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
- noble being
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
A person who has directly realized the noble truths.
- noble being
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
See “noble one.”
- noble
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
A term of exaltation. See also “noble being.”
- noble
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
When referring to a person, it is someone who has entered the “path of seeing”—someone who has a direct and stable realization of the four truths of the noble ones and who thus ceases to be an “ordinary person,” becoming a “noble one.”
- noble
- འཕགས་པ།
- ’phags pa
- ārya
A term of exaltation. See also “noble being.”