önceki yaşamın kaderi belirlediği inancı

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التركية - الإنجليزية
karma
Destiny, fate
One's acts considered as fixing one's lot in the future existence
Sanskrit term referring to actions and their effects Through the force of intention we perform actions with our body, speech, and mind, and all of these actions produce effects The effect of virtuous actions is happiness and the effect of negative actions is suffering See Joyful Path of Good Fortune
In Hinduism, the total compilation of all a person's past lives and actions that result in the present condition of that person
Volition, volitional or intentional activity Karma is always followed by its fruit, Vipaka Karma and Vipaka are oftentimes referred to as the law of causality, a cardinal concern in the Teaching of the Buddha
The total effect of a persons actions and conduct during the successive phases of his existence, regarded as determining his next incarnation
Cause and Effect From an absolute standpoint, karma is the circumstance of the moment Relatively, it is the endless chain of cause and effect that defines the future events of an individuals life
Theos
{i} idea that an individual's actions determine his fate in each successive existence (Buddhism, Hinduism)
The law of moral cause and effect; also a person's moral merit/demerit according to one's actions and (moreso) the inner intentions or motives which accompany them in terms of their conformity/non-conformity with dharma One's karma is said to entail one's rebirth in order for that karma to be realized or fulfilled, and to determine the circumstances of that subsequent life Attainment of moksha is thought to eliminate the production of karma (in the second sense) altogether, and to bring to an end the cycle of rebirth (samsara)
(Hinduism and Buddhism) the effects of a person's actions that determine his destiny in his next incarnation
"act, deed: In Buddhist teachings, karma is the law of cause and effect: an act, whether of body, speech or mind, and its effects, either positive, or negative, leaving an imprint in one's consciousness, which automatically brings about more actions The law of karma compels the consciousness that is affected by it to be reborn into samsara, lifetime after lifetime
directly related to 'cause and effect' and the universal law of 'you reap what you sow' From Hinduism and Buddhism, karma refers to 'deed' which has consequences The good and the bad mental and physical deeds you perform in a lifetime will return to you in the same life or in a future life for continuous spiritual refinement
Sanskrit word meaning "action " The life tendency or destiny that each individual creates through thoughts, words and deeds One's actions in the past have shaped one's reality at present, and actions in the present determine one's future This is the law of cause and effect at work Ref 3
The doctrine of fate as the inflexible result of cause and effect; the theory of inevitable consequence
Action Also refers to the law of action and reaction, and sometimes to the reaction or fruit of one's action One of the four main paths of Yoga
In religions such as Hinduism and Buddhism, karma is the belief that your actions in this life affect all your future lives. In Indian philosophy, the influence of an individual's past actions on his future lives or reincarnations. It is based on the conviction that the present life is only one in a chain of lives (see samsara). The accumulated moral energy of a person's life determines his or her character, class status, and disposition in the next life. The process is automatic, and no interference by the gods is possible. In the course of a chain of lives, people can perfect themselves and reach the level of Brahma, or they can degrade themselves to the extent that they return to life as animals. The concept of karma, basic to Hinduism, was also incorporated into Buddhism and Jainism
The reward or punishment of any action of man is given by Gods order according to merit, God may give it or withhold it
1 Sufficient access to perform an operation, such as committing changes to a CVS module ("Please grant Yo Mega karma to the foo-bar CVS module ") 2 Respect and merit in the community ("Al Faa has good karma because of the careful and tactful way he makes his points and the quality of his technical contributions ") 3 Any combination of senses 1 and two; they are indirectly related
(Tib lay) Literally "action " The unerring law of cause and effect, eg Positive actions bring happiness and negative actions bring suffering The actions of each sentient being are the causes that create the conditions for rebirth and the circumstances in that lifetime Karma
önceki yaşamın kaderi belirlediği inancı
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