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Difference between revisions of "Treatise on the Treasure Vehicle of Buddhahood"

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Treatise on the Treasure Vehicle of [[Buddhahood]], The
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Treatise on the [[Treasure]] [[Vehicle]] of [[Buddhahood]], The
[究竟一乗宝性論] (Skt Ratnagotravibhaga-mahayanottaratantra-shastra; Chin [[Chiu]]-ching-i-ch’eng-pao-hsing-lun; Jpn Kukyo-ichijo-hosho-ron )
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[[[究竟一乗宝性論]]] (Skt [[Ratnagotravibhaga-mahayanottaratantra-shastra]]; Chin [[Chiu]]-ching-i-ch’eng-pao-hsing-lun; Jpn [[Kukyo-ichijo-hosho-ron]] )
  
     A work by Saramati, a [[Mahayana]] scholar of [[India]], translated into Chinese in the sixth century by Ratnamati. It asserts that all beings possess the "matrix of the Thus Come One" (Skt [[Tathagata]]-garbha, also called the matrix of the [[Tathagata]]) or the [[Buddha nature]], and that even icchantikas, persons of incorrigible disbelief, can attain [[Buddhahood]] eventually. This treatise is generally [[Thought]] to have been written sometime around the end of the fourth or the beginning of the fifth century. Tibetan tradition attributes the verses of this work to [[Maitreya]] and commentaries on them to [[Asanga]]. [[Maitreya]] and [[Asanga]] were also [[Mahayana]] scholars.
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     A work by [[Saramati]], a [[Mahayana]] [[scholar]] of [[India]], translated into {{Wiki|Chinese}} in the sixth century by [[Ratnamati]]. It asserts that all [[beings]] possess the "matrix of the [[Thus]] Come One" (Skt [[Tathagata]]-garbha, also called the matrix of the [[Tathagata]]) or the [[Buddha nature]], and that even icchantikas, persons of incorrigible disbelief, can attain [[Buddhahood]] eventually. This treatise is generally [[Thought]] to have been written sometime around the end of the fourth or the beginning of the fifth century. [[Tibetan tradition]] attributes the verses of this work to [[Maitreya]] and commentaries on them to [[Asanga]]. [[Maitreya]] and [[Asanga]] were also [[Mahayana]] [[scholars]].
 
</poem>
 
</poem>
 
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Revision as of 21:39, 2 September 2013

Kshitigarbha.38.jpg

Treatise on the Treasure Vehicle of Buddhahood, The
[[[究竟一乗宝性論]]] (Skt Ratnagotravibhaga-mahayanottaratantra-shastra; Chin Chiu-ching-i-ch’eng-pao-hsing-lun; Jpn Kukyo-ichijo-hosho-ron )

    A work by Saramati, a Mahayana scholar of India, translated into Chinese in the sixth century by Ratnamati. It asserts that all beings possess the "matrix of the Thus Come One" (Skt Tathagata-garbha, also called the matrix of the Tathagata) or the Buddha nature, and that even icchantikas, persons of incorrigible disbelief, can attain Buddhahood eventually. This treatise is generally Thought to have been written sometime around the end of the fourth or the beginning of the fifth century. Tibetan tradition attributes the verses of this work to Maitreya and commentaries on them to Asanga. Maitreya and Asanga were also Mahayana scholars.

Source

www.sgilibrary.org