kāma-loka

kāma-loka

      in Buddhism, the world of feeling. See arūpa-loka.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • Kama — Kāma (Skt., Pali; Devanagari: काम) is pleasure, sensual gratification, sexual fulfillment, pleasure of the senses, desire, eros, the aesthetic enjoyment of life in Sanskrit. In Hinduism, kāma is regarded as one of the four goals of life… …   Wikipedia

  • kāma-dhātu —       in Buddhism, the realm of feeling. See arūpa loka. * * * …   Universalium

  • arupa-loka — In Buddhism, the world of immaterial form, the highest of the three spheres of existence in which rebirth takes place. The others are the fine material world (rupa loka) and the world of feeling (kama loka). In the arupa loka, existence depends… …   Universalium

  • rupa-loka — In Buddhism, any of the 16 planes of existence into which those beings who have renounced sense desires are reborn. It is intermediate between the kama loka, where material beings are born, and the arupa loka, where only the mind exists. Its… …   Universalium

  • arupa-loka — En el budismo, el mundo de la forma inmaterial, la más elevada de las tres esferas de existencia en la que tiene lugar el renacimiento. Las otras son el mundo de la materia fina (rupa loka) y el el mundo de las sensaciones y sentimientos (kama… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • rupa-loka — En el budismo, cualquiera de los 16 planos de existencia en que renacen aquellos seres que han renunciado a los deseos de los sentidos. Es un estado intermedio entre el kama loka, donde nacen los seres materiales, y el arupa loka, donde sólo… …   Enciclopedia Universal

  • loká-kāma — लोककाम …   Indonesian dictionary

  • Buddhism — Buddhist, n., adj. Buddhistic, Buddhistical, adj. Buddhistically, adv. /booh diz euhm, bood iz /, n. a religion, originated in India by Buddha (Gautama) and later spreading to China, Burma, Japan, Tibet, and parts of southeast Asia, holding that… …   Universalium

  • Buddhist Creation Legend —    According to Buddhist myth our universe is divided into three regions: Kama Loka, the world of desire; Rupa Loka, the world of form; and Arupa Loka, the world of the spirit. In Tibetan Buddhism there is yet another region above the Arupa Loka …   Who’s Who in non-classical mythology

  • Trailokya — (Skt., also triloka or trilokya ; Pali: tiloka ; Tibetan: khams gsum (Wylie)) has been translated as three worlds, [Monier Williams (1899), p. 460, col. 1, entry for [Tri ] loka (retrieved at http://www.sanskrit lexicon.uni… …   Wikipedia

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