Difference between revisions of "Yumo Mikyo Dorje"
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− | [[Yumo Mikyo Dorje]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan| | + | [[Yumo Mikyo Dorje]] ([[Tibetan]]: {{BigTibetan|[[ཡུ་མོ་མི་བསྐྱོད་རྡོ་རྗེ]]་}}, [[Wylie]]: [[Yu-mo Mi-bskyod Rdo-rje]]) was a [[student]] of the [[Kashmiri]] [[scholar]] [[Somanatha]], and an 11th century [[Kalachakra master]]. |
− | He was an 11th century [[Tibetan]] [[master]] (b. 1027), a [[Kalachakra]] [[yogin]] and [[disciple]] of the [[Kashmiri]] [[scholar]] [[Somanatha]]. He formulated his [[understanding]] of [[ultimate reality]] much along the same lines as the [[Jonang]] [[master]] [[Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen]] was to do much later, without however coining the same explicit {{Wiki|terminology}}. Therefore Yumowa is often regarded as the originator of the Jonangpa's [[Shentong]] [[view]] and the founder of their school, which he clearly was not. | + | [[Yumo Mikyo Dorje]] is regarded as one of the earliest [[Tibetan]] articulators of a [[shentong]] ([[zhentong]]) [[view]] of [[shunyata]] — an [[understanding]] of the [[absolute]] radiant [[nature of reality]]. |
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+ | Emphasized within the [[Kalachakra Tantra]] and the [[Gautama Buddha|Buddha's]] teachings on [[Buddha nature]] in the so-called [[Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma|The Third Turning of Wheel]], this [[view]] later became emblematic of the [[Jonang]] [[tradition]] of [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. | ||
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+ | He was an 11th century [[Tibetan]] [[master]] (b. 1027), a [[Kalachakra]] [[yogin]] and [[disciple]] of the [[Kashmiri]] [[scholar]] [[Somanatha]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | He formulated his [[understanding]] of [[ultimate reality]] much along the same lines as the [[Jonang]] [[master]] [[Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen]] was to do much later, without however coining the same explicit {{Wiki|terminology}}. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Therefore [[Yumowa]] is often regarded as the originator of the [[Jonangpa's]] [[Shentong]] [[view]] and the founder of their school, which he clearly was not. | ||
From Yumowa [[Mikyo Dorje]] onwards, the [[Dro lineage]] of the [[Kalachakra]] passed on through the lineage-holders [[Dharmeshvara]], [[Namkha Odzer]], [[Machig Tulku Jobum]], [[Drubtob Sechen]], [[Choje Jamyang Sarma]] and [[Choku Odzer]]. | From Yumowa [[Mikyo Dorje]] onwards, the [[Dro lineage]] of the [[Kalachakra]] passed on through the lineage-holders [[Dharmeshvara]], [[Namkha Odzer]], [[Machig Tulku Jobum]], [[Drubtob Sechen]], [[Choje Jamyang Sarma]] and [[Choku Odzer]]. | ||
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[[Choku Odzer]] in turn became the [[teacher]] of [[Kunpang Thukje Tsondru]] who became the actual founding father of the [[Jonangpa]] school. | [[Choku Odzer]] in turn became the [[teacher]] of [[Kunpang Thukje Tsondru]] who became the actual founding father of the [[Jonangpa]] school. | ||
− | Author of the "Four Clear Lamps" ( | + | Author of the "[[Four Clear Lamps]]" ([[gsal sgron skor bzhi]]) - Short texts on [[zung 'jug, phyag rgya chen po, 'od gsal]] and [[stong nyid]]. |
{{W}} | {{W}} |
Latest revision as of 07:39, 21 October 2015
Yumo Mikyo Dorje (Tibetan: ཡུ་མོ་མི་བསྐྱོད་རྡོ་རྗེ་, Wylie: Yu-mo Mi-bskyod Rdo-rje) was a student of the Kashmiri scholar Somanatha, and an 11th century Kalachakra master.
Yumo Mikyo Dorje is regarded as one of the earliest Tibetan articulators of a shentong (zhentong) view of shunyata — an understanding of the absolute radiant nature of reality.
Emphasized within the Kalachakra Tantra and the Buddha's teachings on Buddha nature in the so-called The Third Turning of Wheel, this view later became emblematic of the Jonang tradition of Tibetan Buddhism.
He was an 11th century Tibetan master (b. 1027), a Kalachakra yogin and disciple of the Kashmiri scholar Somanatha.
He formulated his understanding of ultimate reality much along the same lines as the Jonang master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen was to do much later, without however coining the same explicit terminology.
Therefore Yumowa is often regarded as the originator of the Jonangpa's Shentong view and the founder of their school, which he clearly was not.
From Yumowa Mikyo Dorje onwards, the Dro lineage of the Kalachakra passed on through the lineage-holders Dharmeshvara, Namkha Odzer, Machig Tulku Jobum, Drubtob Sechen, Choje Jamyang Sarma and Choku Odzer.
Choku Odzer in turn became the teacher of Kunpang Thukje Tsondru who became the actual founding father of the Jonangpa school.
Author of the "Four Clear Lamps" (gsal sgron skor bzhi) - Short texts on zung 'jug, phyag rgya chen po, 'od gsal and stong nyid.