Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Treatise on the Mind Aspiring for Enlightenment"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:Sb73.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Sb73.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
<poem>
 
<poem>
'''Treatise on the [[Mind]] Aspiring for [[Enlightenment]]''', The
+
[[Treatise on the Mind Aspiring for Enlightenment]], The
[菩提心論] (Chin P’u-t’i-hsin-lun; Jpn Bodai-shin-ron )
+
[[菩提心論]] (Chin [[P’u-t’i-hsin-lun]]; Jpn [[Bodai-shin-ron]] )
  
     A work attributed to [[Nagarjuna]] (c. 150-250) and translated into {{Wiki|Chinese}} in the eighth century by [[Pu-k'ung]] (Skt [[Amoghavajra]]). Another account attributes the work itself to [[Pu-k'ung]]. No [[Sanskrit]] version is extant. The Treatise on the [[Mind]] Aspiring for [[Enlightenment]] teaches the important [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|concept}} of [[aspiration]] for [[enlightenment]] and encourages the development of a [[mind]] that seeks [[Buddhahood]]. It defines three aspects of a [[mind]] that aspires for [[enlightenment]], from the standpoint of [[Esoteric]] [[Buddhism]]:  
+
     A work attributed to [[Nagarjuna]] (c. 150-250) and translated into {{Wiki|Chinese}} in the eighth century by [[Pu-k'ung]] (Skt [[Amoghavajra]]). Another account [[attributes]] the work itself to [[Pu-k'ung]]. No [[Sanskrit]] version is extant. The [[Treatise on the Mind Aspiring for Enlightenment]] teaches the important [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|concept}} of [[aspiration]] for [[enlightenment]] and encourages the development of a [[mind]] that seeks [[Buddhahood]]. It defines three aspects of a [[mind]] that aspires for [[enlightenment]], from the standpoint of [[Esoteric]] [[Buddhism]]:  
  
   (1) great [[compassion]] to save all [[living beings]],  
+
   (1) [[great compassion]] to save all [[living beings]],  
   (2) great [[wisdom]] to know what [[sutra]] is [[supreme]], and  
+
   (2) [[great wisdom]] to know what [[sutra]] is [[supreme]], and  
 
   (3) [[meditation]].  
 
   (3) [[meditation]].  
  
The work also explains various kinds of [[contemplation]] put forth in [[Esoteric]] [[Buddhism]]. [[Kobo]], the founder of the {{Wiki|Japanese}} [[True Word]] ([[Shingon]]) school, valued this work, and it was widely studied in his school.
+
The work also explains various kinds of [[contemplation]] put forth in [[Esoteric Buddhism]]. [[Kobo]], the founder of the {{Wiki|Japanese}} [[True Word]] [[Shingon school]], valued this work, and it was widely studied in his school.
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}

Revision as of 04:28, 11 February 2014

Sb73.jpg

Treatise on the Mind Aspiring for Enlightenment, The
菩提心論 (Chin P’u-t’i-hsin-lun; Jpn Bodai-shin-ron )

    A work attributed to Nagarjuna (c. 150-250) and translated into Chinese in the eighth century by Pu-k'ung (Skt Amoghavajra). Another account attributes the work itself to Pu-k'ung. No Sanskrit version is extant. The Treatise on the Mind Aspiring for Enlightenment teaches the important Buddhist concept of aspiration for enlightenment and encourages the development of a mind that seeks Buddhahood. It defines three aspects of a mind that aspires for enlightenment, from the standpoint of Esoteric Buddhism:

  (1) great compassion to save all living beings,
  (2) great wisdom to know what sutra is supreme, and
  (3) meditation.

The work also explains various kinds of contemplation put forth in Esoteric Buddhism. Kobo, the founder of the Japanese True Word Shingon school, valued this work, and it was widely studied in his school.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org