SACRED PLACES IN BUDDHISM OR THE PLACE OF THE SACRED IN BUDDHISM

Authors

  • Antoaneta Nikolova South-West University (Blagoevgrad)
    Bulgaria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24310/Raphisa.2017.v1i2.4335

Keywords:

Buddhism, sacred-profane, non-duality.

Abstract

The paper aims to examine the meaning of sacredness in such a religion as Buddhism where there is no idea of God or any supernatural being. Instead, there are elaborated inner practices for achieving enlightenment. The paper consists of two parts. The first one analyses the place of the sacred in Buddhism considering the two important concepts of samsara and nirvana. The second part discusses sacred places in Buddhism comparing two different space structures: stupa as representative for a vertical structure and mandala for a horizontal one. On the base of juxtaposing these seemingly opposite concepts and structures the paper reveals that in terms of Buddhism the real sacredness is non-sacredness: a term that transcends the opposition sacred-profane and expresses the specific Buddhist vision of non-duality.

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Author Biography

  • Antoaneta Nikolova, South-West University (Blagoevgrad)
    South-West University (Blagoevgrad)

References

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Published

2018-03-08

Dimensions

PlumX

Citations

How to Cite

Nikolova, A. (2018). SACRED PLACES IN BUDDHISM OR THE PLACE OF THE SACRED IN BUDDHISM. Review of Anthropology and Philosophy of the Sacrum, 1(2). https://doi.org/10.24310/Raphisa.2017.v1i2.4335