In Buddhism, dharma (dhamma in pāli) has a specific meaning: the teaching of the Buddha. The Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path, the suttas — all of this is "the dharma."

The Four Noble Truths
Dukkha — suffering exists Samudaya — suffering has a cause (attachment) Nirodha — it is possible to cease suffering Magga — there is a path (Noble Eightfold Path)
Dharma in Buddhism vs. Vedānta
In Buddhism, dharma is the teaching that leads to the cessation of suffering (nirvāṇa). In Vedānta, dharma is the universal order that governs everything — including ethics, duty, and natural law.

The traditions share many practices (meditation, ethics, renunciation) but differ in the view of the self: Buddhism denies a permanent ātman (anattā). Vedānta affirms that ātman is the fundamental reality.
What Both Agree On
Suffering has an identifiable cause Ignorance is the root of the problem Ethical practice is essential Meditation is a fundamental tool Liberation is possible in this life
For the Seeker
If Buddhist dharma attracts you, explore with honesty. If Vedānta resonates, start here. The important thing is to take the search seriously — whatever the tradition.
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