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'''Khenjuk''' (Tib). ''The Entrance to the Way of the Wise'' or ''Introduction to Scholarship'' refers to two texts, one composed in the thirteenth century by [[Sakya Pandita]] and the other written at the turn of the twentieth century by Jamgön Mipham Rinpoche. | '''Khenjuk''' (Tib). ''The Entrance to the Way of the Wise'' or ''Introduction to Scholarship'' refers to two texts, one composed in the thirteenth century by [[Sakya Pandita]] and the other written at the turn of the twentieth century by Jamgön [[Mipham Rinpoche]]. | ||
[[Mipham Rinpoche]]'s famous treatise | |||
Sapan's text | *[[Mipham Rinpoche]]'s famous treatise, which is often one of the first texts to be taught in a [[shedra]], teaches the vast, the [[ten topics of knowledge]], the profound, the [[four seals]], and the means of maintaining the profound and vast teachings, the [[four correct discriminations]]. | ||
*[[Sapan]]'s text explains in three sections how to enter into the [[three activities of a pandita]], i.e., composition, teaching and [[debate]]. | |||
[[Category: Texts]] | [[Category: Texts]] |
Revision as of 04:08, 18 February 2007
Khenjuk (Tib). The Entrance to the Way of the Wise or Introduction to Scholarship refers to two texts, one composed in the thirteenth century by Sakya Pandita and the other written at the turn of the twentieth century by Jamgön Mipham Rinpoche.
- Mipham Rinpoche's famous treatise, which is often one of the first texts to be taught in a shedra, teaches the vast, the ten topics of knowledge, the profound, the four seals, and the means of maintaining the profound and vast teachings, the four correct discriminations.
- Sapan's text explains in three sections how to enter into the three activities of a pandita, i.e., composition, teaching and debate.