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Created page with "{{navmenu}} <h1 class="customtitle">{{FULLPAGENAME}}</h1> <blockquote class="definition">'''La''' is a Buddhist concept syncretic with Spiritual Ego or Resident Monadic Consciousness</blockquote> ==Syncretic Terms== Spiri..."
 
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==Related Terms==
==Related Terms==


{{#ask:[[Is a related term::Nam Shé]]}}
{{#ask:[[Is a related term::La]]}}


==Notes==
==Notes==
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[[category:terms]][[Is a term::Buddism]][[Is a syncretic term::Spiritual Ego| ]][[Is a related term::Nam Shé| ]][[Is a syncretic term::Resident Monadic Consciousness| ]]
[[category:terms]][[Is a term::Buddism| ]][[Is a syncretic term::Spiritual Ego| ]][[Is a related term::Nam Shé| ]][[Is a syncretic term::Resident Monadic Consciousness| ]]

Revision as of 00:42, 29 February 2020

La

La is a Buddhist concept syncretic with Spiritual Ego or Resident Monadic Consciousness

Syncretic Terms

Spiritual Ego > Ajayu, Angel, Atman, Augoeides, Big Self, Blazing Star, Brahman, Bright Light, Buddha Nature, CEFA, Deep Self, Divine Ego, E, Father in Heaven, Genuine Self, God Self, Great Self, Guardian Angel, Higher Genius, Higher Self, Highest Self, Holy Spirit, Immortal Spirit, Inner Healing Intelligence, Inner Radar, Inner Self, Inner-Self, Intensification of Consciousness, Intrinsic Consciousness, Kra, La, Monad, Monadic Consciousness, Monadic Intensification, Nagi, Neshamah, Ohr, Original Face, Paramatman, Real Ego, Real Self, Sakshi Chaitanya, Saug, Self, Soul, Spirit, Super Ego, Supreme Self, The Four Unthinkables, The Knower... further results

Related Terms

Nam Shé, Nu Shug

Notes

"In describing their experiences, the pau sometimes miss the terminological precision of the rinpoché, because they have not had a Buddhist education nor are they literate. Their knowledge comes from tutelage, not from books. For example, they often use the terms la and nam shé interchangeably. In so doing, the pau convey the notion that the la, like the nam shé, is consciousness, which is similar to the belief of other Tibetan shamans. Based on his interviews in Tibet and with shamans in exile, Bellezza (2005, 7) writes that the shamans believe that their “consciousness principle” is the la. Pau Nyima says, “The la is the spirit inside the person” (Sifers 2005, 114). Therefore, the la has an ontology or beingness and is not merely the impersonal psychological function or principle of consciousness, but the spirit of consciousness. The la also has the attributes of sem [sems] (mind and thinking) and rig pa (reasoning and intelligence). The la soul, it seems, is that spirit that constitutes a person, a conscious thinking being.[1]

Citation and Legal

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Footnotes

  1. Peters, Larry. Tibetan Shamanism: Ecstasy and Healing. California: North Atlantic Books, 2016.