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  Subjects -> SPORTS AND GAMES (Total: 199 journals)
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International Journal of Kinesiology and Sports Science
Number of Followers: 18  

  This is an Open Access Journal Open Access journal
ISSN (Print) 2202-946X
Published by Australian International Academic Centre Homepage  [8 journals]
  • List of Contributors

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      Abstract: Contributors
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:56:32 +000
       
  • The Formation of the Buddha's Former Life Stories in the Bhai'ajyavastu of
           the M'lasarv'stiv'da Vinaya

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:56:10 +000
       
  • The ''kyas as Gautamas

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:54:01 +000
       
  • A Hoard of Inscribed Gandharan Metalware

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:52:27 +000
       
  • The Mortality of the Dalai Lama and its Scriptural Sources

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:51:38 +000
       
  • The 2012 Discovery of Buddhist Sculptures from Bei Wuzhang

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:50:21 +000
       
  • 'This Being, that Becomes'

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:48:33 +000
       
  • Tsongkhapa as a mah'siddha

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:47:01 +000
       
  • Meditation between Open Skies and Deep Ravines

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:44:15 +000
       
  • Up'd'na and Svabh'va

    • Authors: poj@peeters-leuven.be
      Abstract: This paper explores the relation between two key concepts in Madhyamaka philosophy: <i>up'd'na</i> and <i>svabh'va</i>. This relation has been, as it were, neglected in the literature. This paper aims to address the neglect by offering a systematic and novel study on the relationship between <i>up'd'na</i> and <i>svabh'va</i> in Madhyamaka philosophy and to revisit their respective meanings accordingly. It argues that <i>svabh'va</i> is the cognitive result that arises from <i>up'd'na</i>. It shows that, as the mental operation of appropriation, <i>up'd'na</i> is the source of the gap between the way phenomena appear and the way they are. The lack of correspondence between how we experience phenomena, and how they are, leads to the experience of suffering. By explicating the mutual dependence between <i>up'd'na</i> and <i>svabh'va</i>, this paper explains why the cessation of <i>up'd'na</i> amounts to the cessation of substantial cognition, and, accordingly, to the realization of emptiness, in other words to freedom from suffering.
      PubDate: Fri, 26 May 2023 09:35:21 +000
       
 
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