the three spheres [of self-contradiction]; three spheres [i.e., agent, action, and object]; ""The three spheres!"" Comment: A logical term used when the opponent has been boxed in. The three are to have asserted either explicitly or implicitly (1) the entailment/pervasion (khyab pa khas blangs pa red), (2) the reason (rtags khas blangs pa red), and (3) the opposite of the predicate of the consequence (gsal ba'i zlogs phyogs khas blangs pa red). Spoken or shouted in debate by the challenger to indicate that the opponent cannot deny the reason or the pervasion, yet cannot accept the ""thesis"" of the consequence.
1) threefold. 2) the three spheres [of a an act]. [subject, agent, action, object of the action]. Syn {bya byed las gsum} 3) the three Wheels [of the Dharma]. 4) three weapons [bow & arrow, knife and spear, or bow, arrow, & sword]. 5) [in logic] the three factors. {rtags bsal khyab gsum} 6) the three wheels [of action of body, speech and mind]. 7) three main objects of a man's activity. 1] {don} man's practical activity having material aims. ii] {'dod pa} man's sensual and especially sexual delights. iii] {chos} religion, religious duties. 8) man, cattle, wealth. three focal points; three spheres; threefold sphere
three spheres. The three 'spheres' or concepts of subject, object and action
<term> three aspects of the action, three spheres, triple sphere