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Nirodha sacca : ウィキペディア英語版 | Nirodha sacca ''Note: this article is stub.'' Nirodha sacca (Pali, also ''nirodha saccã''; Sanskrit: nirodha satya) — is the third of the four noble truths within Buddhist tradition. ''Nirodha'' means "cessation" or "extinction", and ''sacca'' means "truth" or "reality". Thus, ''nirodha sacca'' is typically translated as the "truth of cessation" or "truth of the cessation of suffering." It refers specifically to the cessation of dukkha (suffering) and its causes; the experience of this cessation is referred to as nirvana. ''Nirodha sacca'' refers to "the cessation of all the unsatisfactory experiences and their causes in such a way that they can no longer occur again. It’s the removal, the final absence, the cessation of those things, their non-arising."〔Thubten Chodron. (''Articles & Transcripts of Teachings on Lamrim: The Gradual Path to Enlightenment'' ). Dharma Friendship Foundation. (The Twelve Links, part 2 of 5)〕 According to the Buddhist point of view, once we have developed a genuine understanding of the causes of suffering, such as craving (tanha) and ignorance (avijja), then we can completely eradicate these causes and thus be free from suffering.〔Ringu Tulku (2005), p. 32.〕 ==Within the discources==
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