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Two truths doctrine
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=====Yogācāra===== The [[Yogacara|Yogācāra]] school of Buddhist philosophy distinguishes the [[Yogacara#The Three Natures|Three Natures]] and the ''[[Trikāya]]''. The Three Natures are:<ref>{{cite book |title=Buddhist Epistemology |author=S.R. Bhatt & Anu Meherotra |pages=7 |year=1967}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=''What is Living and What is Dead in Indian Philosophy'' 5th edition |author=Debiprasad Chattopadhyaya |pages=107 |year=2001}}</ref> *''Paramarthika'' (transcendental reality), also referred to as ''Parinispanna'' in Yogācāra literature: ''The level of a storehouse of consciousness that is responsible for the appearance of the world of external objects. It is the only ultimate reality.'' *''Paratantrika'' (dependent or empirical reality): ''The level of the empirical world experienced in ordinary life''. For example, the snake-seen-in-the-snake. *''Parikalpita'' (imaginary). For example, the snake-seen-in-a-dream.
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