"Rinne" is a Japanese word that can have various meanings depending on the context. It can refer to a Buddhist concept of the cycle of birth, death, and rebirth. It can also mean "samsara" or the perpetual cycle of existence. Additionally, "rinne" can refer to the concept of "reincarnation" or the transmigration of the soul.
I would hazard a guess and say Maya, who is the spirit of illusion that tries to keep us trapped in samsara. Though, as I write this Samsara would be a pretty strange selection also.
The cycle of rebirth is referred to as samsara like the constant ebb and flow of the oceanic tide. ^ the answer above is too vague. Samsara is the cycle of life, death, and rebirth/reincarnation, and it is a Hindu concept as well as a Buddhist concept. Hindus and Buddhists believe that the soul wears the physical body like an article of clothing, and that there is no such thing as death. When the physical body "dies," the spirit leaves and moves onto the next physical body, reborn, dies, is reborn, and so on. It is an endless cycle, and the only way to escape the cycle (mokhsha) is to achieve nirvana (according to Buddhist philosophy), which is the absence of suffering. To do so, one must purge oneself of desires, for desires are what spawn suffering, and when one achieves this, the cycle is broken.
The concept does not apply in Buddhism.
Concept of God
sila
Galate Samsara was created in 1977.
There isn't a picture for Samsara
Daigan Matsunaga has written: 'The Buddhist concept of hell'
Nagarathil Samsara Vishayam was created in 1991.
Samsara Sangeetham was created on 1989-07-18.
In Buddhist cosmology there is the world of rebirth we inhabit called samsara, made of up different realms of existence from heavenly realms, the human realm, the animal realm, and the hellish realms. Once a being has become free from the cycle of birth and death in samsara they inhabit a state of being called Nirvana where they are free from any form of suffering for eternity, what exactly happens to a being after achieving Nirvana cannot be understood by anyone still caught in the realm of samsara.