Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones: Difference between revisions
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[[Image:Buddha and 6 Ornaments 2 Supreme.jpg|frame|Buddha with the Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones]] | [[Image:Buddha and 6 Ornaments 2 Supreme.jpg|frame|Buddha with the Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones]] | ||
'''[[Six Ornaments]] and [[Two Supreme Ones]]''' ([[Wyl.]] ''rgyan drug mchog gnyis'') — great Indian commentators on the [[Buddha]]’s teachings. | '''[[Six Ornaments]] and [[Two Supreme Ones]]''' (Tib. རྒྱན་དྲུག་མཆོག་གཉིས་, ''gyen druk chok nyi'', [[Wyl.]] ''rgyan drug mchog gnyis'') — great Indian commentators on the [[Buddha]]’s teachings. | ||
==Six Ornaments== | ==Six Ornaments== | ||
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[[Category:Historical Masters]] | [[Category:Historical Masters]] | ||
[[Category:Enumerations]] | [[Category:Enumerations]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:08-Eight]] |
Latest revision as of 19:02, 27 January 2018
Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones (Tib. རྒྱན་དྲུག་མཆོག་གཉིས་, gyen druk chok nyi, Wyl. rgyan drug mchog gnyis) — great Indian commentators on the Buddha’s teachings.
Six Ornaments
Two Supreme Ones
1. According to one way of counting the Six Ornaments and Two Supreme Ones, this refers to
- Gunaprabha and
- Shakyaprabha.
2. According to another tradition, this refers to
- Nagarjuna, the founder of the tradition of Profound View and
- Asanga, the founder of the tradition of Vast Conduct.