The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (387 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
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3
In Buddhism, ‘being’, every kind of manifestation in the three domains of appearance (triloka: see
LOKA
). It is also the tenth link in chain of conditioned-arising (
paticca-samup-p
da
).
4
For Jains, bh
va, with
dravya
, enters deeply into the dynamic of lay and ascetic life. In the quest to disentangle
j
va
from
karma
, bh
va represents the spiritual elements whose priority must be secured over against the physical constituents of material appearance (dravya).
Bhavacakra
(Skt., the ‘wheel of existence’). Buddhist, and especially Tibetan, painting which portrays the relentless process of recurrent birth, death, and rebirth,
sa
s
ra
, as a wheel. Pictures on the wheel convey the conditions of sa
s
ra together with the moral and mental factors which cause the individual to remain within sa
s
ra. The wheel is shown clasped by the hands and feet and being devoured by a demon monster,
M
ra
, symbolizing the all-pervasive nature of death and impermanence.
According to the
Divy
vad
na
, the Buddha himself instituted the drawing of the bhavacakra as a pedagogic device for the instruction of the non-literate in Buddhist truths. The earliest known example of the bhavacakra is a fresco (c.6th cent. CE) of
Aja
.

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