Mahayana: Difference between revisions

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'''Mahayana''' (Skt. ''mahāyāna''; Tib. [[ཐེག་ཆེན་]] ''tekpa chenpo''; [[Wyl.]] ''theg pa chen po'') — the great or universal vehicle. The essence of the mahayana is the aspiration to attain [[buddhahood]] as the only means to help all beings find liberation from [[suffering]]. This aspiration is called [[bodhichitta]], the ‘heart of enlightened mind’, and is realized on both an absolute and relative level.
'''Mahayana''' (Skt. ''mahāyāna''; Tib. [[ཐེག་པ་ཆེན་པོ་]] ''tekpa chenpo''; [[Wyl.]] ''theg pa chen po'') — the great or universal vehicle. The essence of the mahayana is the aspiration to attain [[buddhahood]] as the only means to help all beings find liberation from [[suffering]]. This aspiration is called [[bodhichitta]], the ‘heart of enlightened mind’, and is realized on both an absolute and relative level.


==Teachings==
==Teachings==

Revision as of 18:56, 18 January 2017

Mahayana (Skt. mahāyāna; Tib. ཐེག་པ་ཆེན་པོ་ tekpa chenpo; Wyl. theg pa chen po) — the great or universal vehicle. The essence of the mahayana is the aspiration to attain buddhahood as the only means to help all beings find liberation from suffering. This aspiration is called bodhichitta, the ‘heart of enlightened mind’, and is realized on both an absolute and relative level.

Teachings

Central to the Mahayana is the teaching on emptiness or shunyata as set forth in the Prajnaparamita sutras and elaborated upon in the writings of Nagarjuna and his followers.

Literature

Mahayana sutras include large texts such as the Avatamsaka Sutra or the Lotus Sutra, and the important collection of Prajnaparamita sutras. The most important Mahayana treatises are those composed by Nagarjuna and Asanga.

Subschools

The two major branches of philosophy within the Mahayana are the Middle Way (Skt. Madhyamika) and the Mind Only (Skt. Cittamatra).

Alternative Translations

  • Great vehicle
  • Universal vehicle (Robert Thurman)