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Passages similar to: Vimalakirti Nirdesa Sutra — Chapter 7: Looking at Living Beings
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Buddhist
Vimalakirti Nirdesa Sutra
Chapter 7: Looking at Living Beings (14)
Manjusri asked: “What should he wipe out in order to liberate living beings?” Vimalakirti replied: “When liberating living beings, a Bodhisattva should first wipe out their klesa (troubles and causes of troubles)?”
Buddhist
Chapter XXV: The Bhikshu (Mendicant) (369)
O Bhikshu, empty this boat! if emptied, it will go quickly; having cut off passion and hatred thou wilt go to Nirvâna.
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Hindu
Karma Yoga (3.41)
O Arjuna! Therefore, having controlled the senses in the beginning, kill surely this kama, the sinful destroyer of knowledge and Self-realisation.
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Buddhist
Chapter 3 (1)
Every species of life, whether hatched in the egg, formed in the womb, evolved from spawn, produced by metamorphosis, with or without form or intellig...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXV: The Bhikshu (Mendicant) (374)
As soon as he has considered the origin and destruction of the elements (khandha) of the body, he finds happiness and joy which belong to those who...
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Hindu
Jnana Yoga (4.37)
O Arjuna! Just as blazing fire reduces wood to ashes, even so, the fire of, Knowledge destroys all actions.
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Neoplatonic
PYTHAGORIC ETHICAL SENTENCES FROM STOBÆUS, Which are omitted in the Opuscula Mythologica, &c. of Gale. (11)
Despise all those things, which when liberated from the body you will not want; and exercising yourself in those things of which when liberated from...
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Western Esoteric
Secret Teachings of All Ages
Conclusion (6)
Thus it is demonstrated that to capture a man it is not sufficient to enslave his body--it is necessary to enlist his reason; that to free a man it...
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Hindu
Brahmana 5 (3.5.1)
Now Kahola Kaushltakeya questioned him. * Yajna- valkya/ said he, ' explain to me him who is just the Brahma present and not beyond our ken, him who...
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Hindu
Guṇa Traya Vibhāga Yoga (14.17)
From sattva springs knowledge, and from rajas, greed; from tamas spring inadvertence, delusion, and ignorance.
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Tibetan Buddhist
The Tibetan Book of the Dead
Book I: The Fifth Day (8.1)
It is impossible that one should not be liberated thereby. Yet, though thus set face to face, sentient beings, unable through long association with...
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Buddhist
Chapter XV: Happiness (203)
Hunger is the worst of diseases, the body the greatest of pains; if one knows this truly, that is Nirvâna, the highest happiness.
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Hindu
First Mundaka, Second Khanda (12)
Let a Brâhmana, after he has examined all these worlds which are gained by works, acquire freedom from all desires. Nothing that is eternal (not...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXVI: The Brâhmana (Arhat) (407)
Him I call indeed a Brâhmana from whom anger and hatred, pride and envy have dropt like a mustard seed from the point of a needle.
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Hindu
Arjuna Viṣhāda Yoga (1.43)
By these evil deeds of the destroyers of families, which result in the mixing of castes, the eternal dharmas of caste and family are uprooted. We...
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Greek
Book X (609)
Certainly not. If, then, we find any nature which having this inherent corruption cannot be dissolved or destroyed, we may be certain that of such a n...
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Buddhist
Chapter XXIII: The Elephant (323)
For with these animals does no man reach the untrodden country (Nirvâna), where a tamed man goes on a tamed animal, viz. on his own well-tamed self.
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Hindu
Sankhya Yoga (2.28)
All beings are unmanifest in their beginning, O Bhārata, manifest in their middle state, and unmanifest again in their end. Why, then, lament for...
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Hindu
Karma Sanyāsa Yoga (5.3)
O Arjuna! He who neither hates nor desires should be known as of eternal renunciation; He who is not subject to the pairs of opposites is easily set...
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Gnostic
The Root of Evil (The Root of Evil)
Let each of us also dig down after the root of evil within us and pull it out of our hearts from the root. It will be uprooted if we recognize it....
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Hindu
Karma Yoga (3.39)
O Arjuna! Knowledge of the Self is covered by this everlasting foe of the wise in the form of desire, insatiable like fire.
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