arakzya
arakṣya (written also arakṣa, ārakṣa, °ṣya in mss. ), nt. (= Pali arakkheyya or ār°), point that does not need to be guarded ; the Tathāgata has three or four, in Pali and BHS ; viz. , his conduct is completely and automatically pure, so that he does not need to be on guard; in body, speech, and mind (kāya, vāc, manas); when the fourth is added it is manner of livelihood (ājīva). True reading a-rakṣya; Tib. bsruṅ pa med pa ( Mvy 191 ; note on Bbh 375.6 ), and so Chin. acc. to Lévi, Sūtrāl. Transl. p. 303 note . Three (as in Pali DN iii.217.8 ff. ): Sūtrāl. xx.53 ; Bbh ( mss. sometimes corrupt) 89.6 ; 230.13 ( ed. ārakṣyāṇi, ms. ārakṣāṇi); 375.6 ; 403.23 ; no number, 408.4 ; four (as in Pali AN iv.82.15 ff. ) Mvy 191—195 ; in 195 read ājīva for jīva; in 191 Mironov ārakṣāṇi, but Kyoto ed. correctly arakṣyāṇi without v.l.