Treasury of Philosophical Tenets: Difference between revisions
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'''Treasury of Philosophical Tenets''' (Tib. drubta dzö; [[Wyl.]] grub mtha' mdzod) - | '''Treasury of Philosophical Tenets''' (Tib. drubta dzö; [[Wyl.]] ''grub mtha' mdzod'') - one of the [[Seven Treasuries]] of [[Longchenpa]]. | ||
==Outline== | ==Outline== | ||
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#An account of the secret mantrayana as the Fruition, including the special characteristics of [[Vajrayana]]. | #An account of the secret mantrayana as the Fruition, including the special characteristics of [[Vajrayana]]. | ||
#An account of How the Vajrayana Teachings Came About, including the New Tantra ([[Sarma]]) definitions, and classifications. | #An account of How the Vajrayana Teachings Came About, including the New Tantra ([[Sarma]]) definitions, and classifications. | ||
#An account of The Ancient Tradition ([[Nyingma]]) definitions and classifications, divided into three general tantras (kriya, upa, yoga), and three inner tantras ([[mahayoga]], [[anuyoga]], [[atiyoga]]). | #An account of The Ancient Tradition ([[Nyingma]]) definitions and classifications, divided into three general tantras ([[kriya tantra|kriya]], [[charya tantra|upa]], [[yoga tantra|yoga]]), and three inner tantras ([[mahayoga]], [[anuyoga]], [[atiyoga]]). | ||
#An account of the Esoteric Approach, being the Vajra Essence of Luminosity, including a general discussion of: How the ground of Being naturally abides; the way in which sentient beings go astray, the way in which sentient beings can practise, and then finally achieve the fruition of freedom. | #An account of the Esoteric Approach, being the Vajra Essence of Luminosity, including a general discussion of: How the ground of Being naturally abides; the way in which sentient beings go astray, the way in which sentient beings can practise, and then finally achieve the fruition of freedom. | ||
Revision as of 16:48, 27 June 2008
Treasury of Philosophical Tenets (Tib. drubta dzö; Wyl. grub mtha' mdzod) - one of the Seven Treasuries of Longchenpa.
Outline
This treasure, in 8 chapters, is divided into common and esoteric uncommon sections:
- How the Buddha came into this world (based on hinayana, mahayana, and tantric accounts); the twelve acts of the Buddha; the "turning the wheel of the Dharma".
- The Teachings; Shakyamuni's teachings, and the commentarial traditions.
- Philosophical Tenets, based upon these teachings, including: outsiders (non Buddhists) and insiders (Buddhists). The Buddhist views include: Vaibhashika, Sautrantika, Yogachara, and Madhyamika.
- The Way to progress on the Path (lam bgrod tshul), including the approach of the Shravaka, Pratyekabuddha, and Bodhisattva, and an account of the five paths.
- An account of the secret mantrayana as the Fruition, including the special characteristics of Vajrayana.
- An account of How the Vajrayana Teachings Came About, including the New Tantra (Sarma) definitions, and classifications.
- An account of The Ancient Tradition (Nyingma) definitions and classifications, divided into three general tantras (kriya, upa, yoga), and three inner tantras (mahayoga, anuyoga, atiyoga).
- An account of the Esoteric Approach, being the Vajra Essence of Luminosity, including a general discussion of: How the ground of Being naturally abides; the way in which sentient beings go astray, the way in which sentient beings can practise, and then finally achieve the fruition of freedom.
Translations and Commentaries
- Longchen Rabjam, Precious Treasury of Philosophical Systems, translated by Richard Barron, Padma Publishing, 2007