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The Buddha
The Buddha

... However, this subject is impermanent. Therefore, rather than having a static or permanent self, the human subject is constantly changing and developing. This is why we must not be attached to those things that comprise our sense of self (atman). The Buddha makes no mention of a soul or a self in the ...
dawahbuddhists - Muslim Population
dawahbuddhists - Muslim Population

... glorious at the goal. He will proclaim a religious life, wholly perfect and pure such as I now proclaim. His disciples will number many thousands while mine number many hundreds.' Ananda said, 'How shall we know him?' The Blessed one replied, 'He will be known as Maitreya'." (i) The Sanskrit word ‘M ...
harris.txt          ...
harris.txt ...

... positions 3 and 4 - my heart telling me that 3 makes sense with my mind more in tune with position 4. Category 1 material mainly relates to dialogue with other religions and aims to paint Buddhism in a favourable light. I shall have nothing further to say on this. I hope to show that work belonging ...
Four Noble Truths - anotheroxfordsittinggroup.org
Four Noble Truths - anotheroxfordsittinggroup.org

... means to study the four noble truths and put them into practice.[107][note 43] The Kathāvatthu records debate by the Theravādins with the Andhakas (who may have been Mahāsāṃghikas) regarding whether or not old age and death are the result (vipāka) of karma.[108] The Theravāda maintained that they ar ...
The masters go West: A story of Buddhism`s adaptation to new
The masters go West: A story of Buddhism`s adaptation to new

... diet was emphasised. Retreats and seminars were organised along Western norms with inclusive fees for accomodation, teaching, and meditation sessions, all laid out in a programme and a timetable. One of the most successful masters in this tranformation of Tibetan Buddhism for a Western audience was ...
Bhāvaviveka`s Syllogism as an Initial Step to Enlightenment
Bhāvaviveka`s Syllogism as an Initial Step to Enlightenment

... Sanskrit. In considering of the possibility that translation might be influenced by the translator’s preconceptions, it is important to resolve the issues of translation between Sanskrit and other languages such as Chinese, Tibetan, and even English before depicting as closely as possible a picture ...
Buddhism
Buddhism

... Buddhist cosmology you find references to beings that belong to the six realms of samsaric existence (Asian Philosophies, p.169). Within Mahayana cosmology you will also find references to beings who have an existence outside of samsaric existence (though they can manifest themselves within the real ...
Approaching The Great Perfection
Approaching The Great Perfection

... enlightened mind in all sentient beings, and proposes that the realization of this immanence is itself the method by which all aspects of enlightenment are attained simultaneously. The second emphasizes the distinction between the ordinary state of sentient beings, samsara, and its enlightened corre ...
Royal Attributes of the Nirmānakaya Śākyamuni
Royal Attributes of the Nirmānakaya Śākyamuni

... Among them the Licchavīs, Mallas, Videhas and Śākyas were noted for their well-organised system of government, with the ...
A sketch of the Buddha and the Dhamma - Beck-Shop
A sketch of the Buddha and the Dhamma - Beck-Shop

... seek a solution to the suffering and dissatisfaction that are part of the human condition. Jataka: The Pali term for ‘‘birth’’ and ‘‘pre-birth stories’’ that describe the former lives of the Buddha, Siddhattha Gautama. These tales contain more than 500 birth stories arranged in twenty-two books. Eac ...
Back to Exhibition Index Palden Lhamo (dpal ldan lha mo) in her
Back to Exhibition Index Palden Lhamo (dpal ldan lha mo) in her

... Like all emanations of this goddess, Palden Lhamo (T. dpal ldan lha mo) is represented in an angry (Skt. krodha) form in this 18th century, Central Tibetan example from the SAMA Rezk Collection. Her single face is framed by wild orange-brown, or reddish hair, above which an array of nine peacock fea ...
Arahant Mahinda- Redactor of Buddhapūjāva in Sinhala Buddhism
Arahant Mahinda- Redactor of Buddhapūjāva in Sinhala Buddhism

... considerably by cultural elements of then India. There is internal evidence in the oldest pali texts for that Hindu religious ideals had made a strong impact on Buddhism which resulted in Buddhism incorporating rites and ceremonies into Buddhist practice. The particular Buddhism introduced by arahan ...
regulations for the degree of
regulations for the degree of

... Buddhism for students with no or little background in Buddhist Studies. At the end of the course, students are expected to have acquired sufficient fundamental knowledge on the Mahāyāna tradition, to be able to better understand and appreciate the other more specialized courses on the various specif ...
Joyful Path of Good Fortune
Joyful Path of Good Fortune

... Although there are countless living beings, humans and non-humans, all are included within three kinds: those who seek mainly worldly happiness, those who seek mainly the attainment of liberation from samsara and those who seek mainly the attainment of full enlightenment. In the scripture known as t ...
Buddhism - Trinity Evangelical Free Church, Teaneck, NJ
Buddhism - Trinity Evangelical Free Church, Teaneck, NJ

... Burma, Cambodia and Laos. This branch of Buddhism is called Theravada or “The Way of the Elders” because it has tried to stay true to the oldest traditions of Buddhism. Those who follow this branch of Buddhism focus on the Buddha’s example as a monk. Many of these Buddhists live in monasteries and s ...
Predictions of Women to Buddhahood in Middle-Period Literature Journal of Buddhist Ethics
Predictions of Women to Buddhahood in Middle-Period Literature Journal of Buddhist Ethics

... that the beggar woman falls at the Buddha’s feet requesting to go forth, and the Buddha makes her a bhikṣuṇī, with no change of sex required. 19 This occurrence is remarkable in that it stands in contrast to the case of the princess who becomes a man before going forth.20 This difference can be expl ...
Buddhist Studies at SCZC
Buddhist Studies at SCZC

... deeply understand the profound and subtle teachings of the Mahayana, the Great Vehicle of Bodhisattvas, including the views of Mind-Only and the Middle Way of emptiness, which form the basis for the Zen tradition. Though intellectual study of the words of the ancient realized ones is certainly not t ...
Story of the Nun Bhaddā Kuṇḍalakesā
Story of the Nun Bhaddā Kuṇḍalakesā

... poetry by women, of a great epic dedicated to her and of popular songs and movies that are still played in the twenty-first century.1 The nun Bhaddā was a direct disciple of the Buddha and came to be known for her quick wit, the type of ordination she received, her prowess as debater, and the speed ...
the practice of the debate of the tibetan buddhism as a space
the practice of the debate of the tibetan buddhism as a space

... The monk practising the debate is immersed, in his everyday life of Buddhist and as a tibetan, in a cultural universe filled with songs, music and dances crowned, in a singular relationship to gods whom he knows how he has invented to help him to represent itself and to live the logic of the contrad ...
34_8.
34_8.

... truth about it. Starting from its nomenclature, the native of Tibet called their country Bod () Most probably, this name has been derived from Mongolian word Thubet. But one most convincing according to me and I suppose the scholar community have the word of affirmation in this regard is that the ...
Prajna, translator, Tang dynasty
Prajna, translator, Tang dynasty

... dhārani can protect the nation and avoid calamites. It is also a skillful means for saving living beings. Other than that, there seems to be no other esoteric elements inside the sutra. Besides the fact that in the biography of Prajnā, Zanning mentioned that there may be some magical elements in the ...
The Lotus Sutra - Cirencester College
The Lotus Sutra - Cirencester College

... “Some of the most important principles of Buddhism are only touched upon in passing, as though the reader or hearer is expected to be acquainted with them already, while many of the more revolutionary doctrines are not presented in any orderly fashion or supported by careful or detailed arguments bu ...
Monks, Nuns and Lay People-Bhikshus, Bhikshunis, and Upasakas
Monks, Nuns and Lay People-Bhikshus, Bhikshunis, and Upasakas

... The community of people who practice Buddhism, or ‘Sangha’, can be divided into two main groups: the ‘monastic’ Sangha, monks and nuns who live in monasteries and nunneries, and the ‘lay’ Sangha, Buddhists who live the ordinary family life of a householder. There has always been a strong relationshi ...
The timing of Yogācāra resurgence in the Ming dynasty (1368
The timing of Yogācāra resurgence in the Ming dynasty (1368

... Those who directed their search for the principle in objects and phenomena are misled” 聖人之道, 吾性自足, 向之求理於事物者誤 也.19 Wang thought that a deductive and introspective “extension of knowledge” could avoid the pitfalls of becoming inevitably “fragmentary and aimless” as was the case in Zhu’s externally-dir ...
A brief introduction to Buddhism and the Sakya tradition
A brief introduction to Buddhism and the Sakya tradition

... peaceful life oftentimes remains nothing but a dream throughout most of our busy existence? We can accept the status quo or we can take a closer look and question our approach to life. It is up to us. Buddhism, in all its diversity, offers exactly that: methods for close examination and for “rewirin ...
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Abhisamayalankara

The Abhisamayālaṅkāra ""Ornament of/for Realization[s]"", abbreviated AA, is one of five Sanskrit-language Mahayana sutras which Maitreya—a bodhisattva or human teacher (the point is somewhat controversial) is said to have revealed to Asanga in Northwest India in the 4th century. Some scholars (Erich Frauwallner, Giuseppe Tucci, Hakiju Ui) refer to the text's author as Maitreya-nātha (""Lord Maitreya"") in order to avoid either affirming the claim of supernatural revelation, or identifying the author as Asanga himself.The AA is never mentioned by Xuanzang, who spent several years at Nalanda in India during the early 7th century, and became a savant in the Maitreya-Asanga tradition. One possible explanation is that the text is late and attributed to Maitreya-Asanga for purposes of legitimacy. The question then hinges on the dating of the earliest extant AA commentaries, those of Arya Vimuktisena (usually given as 6th century, following possibly unreliable information from Taranatha) and Haribhadra (late 8th century).The AA contains eight chapters and 273 verses. Its pithy contents summarize—in the form of eight categories and seventy topics—the Prajñāpāramitā sūtras which the Madhyamaka philosophical school regards as presenting the ultimate truth. Gareth Sparham and John Makransky believe the text to be commenting on the version in 25,000 lines, although it does not explicitly say so. Haribhadra, whose commentary is based on the 8,000-line PP Sūtra, held that the AA is commenting on all PP versions at once (i.e. the 100,000-line, 25,000-line, and 8,000-line versions), and this interpretation has generally prevailed within the commentarial tradition. Several scholars liken the AA to a ""table of contents"" for the PP. Edward Conze admits that the correspondence between these numbered topics, and the contents of the PP is ""not always easy to see...""; and that the fit is accomplished ""not without some violence"" to the text. The AA is widely held to reflect the hidden meaning (sbed don) of the PP, with the implication being that its details are not found there explicitly. (Sparham traces this tradition to Haribhadra's student Dharmamitra.) One noteworthy effect is to recast PP texts as path literature. Philosophical differences may also be identified. Conze and Makransky see the AA as an attempt to reinterpret the PP, associated with Mādhyamaka tenets, in the direction of Yogacara.The AA is studied by all lineages of Tibetan Buddhism, and is one of five principal works studied in the geshe curriculum of the major Gelug monasteries. Alexander Berzin has suggested that the text's prominence in the Tibetan tradition, but not elsewhere, may be due to the existence of the aforementioned commentary by Haribhadra, who was the disciple of Śāntarakṣita, an influential early Indian missionary to Tibet. Je Tsongkhapa's writings name the AA as the root text of the lamrim tradition founded by Atiśa.Georges Dreyfus reports, ""Ge-luk monastic universities... take the Ornament as the central text for the study of the path; they treat it as a kind of Buddhist encyclopedia, read in the light of commentaries by Dzong-ka-ba, Gyel-tsap, and the authors of manuals [monastic textbooks]. Sometimes these commentaries spin out elaborate digressions from a single word of the Ornament."" Dreyfus adds that non-Gelug schools give less emphasis to the AA, but study a somewhat larger number of works (including the other texts of the Maitreya-Asanga corpus) in correspondingly less detail.
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