Image search results - "chinese," |

01buddha-portrait01.jpgChinese Buddha Statue4258 viewsImage of Modern Chinese Buddha Statue
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02buddha-profile01.jpgChinese Buddha Statue (Detail)3354 viewsImage of Modern Chinese Buddha Statue - Profile
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03buddha-head.jpgHead of Lord Buddha4378 viewsImage of Modern Chinese Buddha Statue
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04buddha-landscape.jpgHead of Lord Buddha (Detail)3457 viewsPortrait of Modern Chinese Buddha Statue in Profile
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05guanyin1.jpgPortrait of Quan Yin3119 viewsPortrait of Quan Yin (Godess of Mercy)
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06guanyin2.jpgProfile of Quan Yin2807 viewsPortrait of Quan Yin (Godess of Mercy) in Profile
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Avalokiteshvara001.jpgAvalokiteshvara Bodhisattva2396 viewsThe Bodhisattva of Great Compassion
The Sanskrit name "Avalokiteshvara" means "the lord who looks upon the world with compassion".
Translated into Chinese, the name is "Kuan Shih Yin"or Quan Yin.
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First_Discourse-Comparison_of_Versions.pdfThe Buddha's First Discourse: a Comparision of Versions2735 viewsThis is a study of the Dhammacakka-Pavattana-Sutta, officially considered the first discourse of the Buddha. The tradition acknowledges that he spoke about his teaching before the occasion of the delivery of this discourse. This study was undertaken during my Buddhist studies, which was one major of my Batchelor of Arts at the University of Queensland, completed in 2004. The study compares 17 possible versions of this discourse from four languages: Pali, Chinese, Tibetan and Sanskrit. Some interesting differences are discovered and an attempt is made to explain them. An expected core of all the discourses stands out, which shows why all major schools of Buddhism accept the Four Noble Truths as the essential teaching of the Buddha.
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QuanYin001.jpgQuan Yin012339 viewsKnown as the goddess of Mercy. Translated into Chinese, the name is "Kuan Shih Yin"or Quan Yin
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QuanYin002.jpgQuan Yin022034 viewsKnown as the goddess of Mercy. Translated into Chinese, the name is "Kuan Shih Yin"or Quan Yin
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