Fetters

  • 51Tony Solaita — Tolia Tony Solaita (January 15, 1947 February 10, 1990) was a Major League Baseball player for the New York Yankees, Kansas City Royals, California Angels, Toronto Blue Jays, and Montreal Expos from 1968 to 1979. He also played for a minor league …

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  • 52Four stages of enlightenment — The four stages of enlightenment in Buddhism are the four degrees of approach to full enlightenment as an Arahant which a person can attain in this life. The four stages are Sotapanna, Sakadagami, Anagami and Arahant.The teaching of the four… …

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  • 53Satipatthana Sutta — Part of a series on Buddhism Outline · Portal History Timeline · Councils …

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  • 54Sotāpanna — In Buddhism, a sotapanna (Pali, Sanskrit: srotapanna ) (or sotapatti ), a stream enterer or stream winner, is a person, who has eradicated the first three fetters of the mind, that prevent freedom. Sotapanna literally means one who enters (… …

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  • 55Sakadagami — Part of a series on Buddhism Outline · Portal History Timeline · Councils …

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  • 561973 Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape — The 1973 Mountjoy Prison helicopter escape occurred on October 31, 1973, when three Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) members escaped from Mountjoy Prison in Dublin, Republic of Ireland after a hijacked helicopter landed in the prison s… …

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  • 57Luminous mind — Part of a series on Buddhism Outline · Portal History Timeline · Councils …

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  • 58Great Depression — This article is about the severe worldwide economic downturn in the 1930s. For other uses, see The Great Depression (disambiguation) …

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  • 59fetter — fetterer, n. fetterless, adj. /fet euhr/, n. 1. a chain or shackle placed on the feet. 2. Usually, fetters. anything that confines or restrains: Boredom puts fetters upon the imagination. v.t. 3. to put fetters upon. 4. to confine; restrain. [bef …

    Universalium

  • 60William Lloyd Garrison: The Dangers of Slavery (1829) — ▪ Primary Source       Antislavery movements had existed in the United States since the Revolution. They had even received occasional support in the South, on moral grounds; but the invention of the cotton gin in 1793 made slavery a seeming… …

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