fbpx
Wikipedia

Abhisamayalankara

The Abhisamayālaṅkāra "Ornament of/for Realization[s]", abbreviated AA, is one of five Sanskrit-language Mahayana śastras which, according to Tibetan tradition, Maitreya revealed to Asaṅga in northwest India circa the 4th century AD. (Chinese tradition recognizes a different list of Maitreya texts which does not include the AA.) Those who doubt the claim of supernatural revelation disagree (or are unsure) whether the text was composed by Asaṅga himself, or by someone else, perhaps a human teacher of his.

Tibetan illustration of Asaṅga receiving the AA from Maitreya in the Tuṣita heaven.

The AA is never mentioned by Xuanzang, who spent several years at Nalanda in India during the early 7th century, and became a savant in the Maitreya-Asaṅga tradition. One possible explanation is that the text is late and attributed to Maitreya-Asaṅga for purposes of legitimacy. The question then hinges on the dating of the earliest extant AA commentaries, those of Arya Vimuktisena (usually given as 6th century, following possibly unreliable information from Taranatha)[1] and Haribhadra (late 8th century).

The AA contains eight chapters and 273 verses. Its pithy contents summarize—in the form of eight categories and seventy topics—the Prajñāpāramitā sūtras which the Madhyamaka philosophical school regards as presenting the ultimate truth. Gareth Sparham and John Makransky believe the text to be commenting on the version in 25,000 lines, although it does not explicitly say so. Haribhadra, whose commentary is based on the 8,000-line PP Sūtra, held that the AA is commenting on all PP versions at once (i.e. the 100,000-line, 25,000-line, and 8,000-line versions),[2] and this interpretation has generally prevailed within the commentarial tradition.

Several scholars liken the AA to a "table of contents" for the PP.[3] Edward Conze admits that the correspondence between these numbered topics, and the contents of the PP is "not always easy to see...";[4] and that the fit is accomplished "not without some violence" to the text.[5] The AA is widely held to reflect the hidden meaning (sbas don) of the PP, with the implication being that its details are not found there explicitly. (Sparham traces this tradition to Haribhadra's student Dharmamitra.) [6] One noteworthy effect is to recast PP texts as path literature. Philosophical differences may also be identified. Conze and Makransky see the AA as an attempt to reinterpret the PP, associated with Mādhyamaka tenets, in the direction of Yogacara.[7]

The AA is studied by all lineages of Tibetan Buddhism, and is one of five principal works studied in the geshe curriculum of the major Gelug monasteries. Alexander Berzin has suggested that the text's prominence in the Tibetan tradition, but not elsewhere, may be due to the existence of the aforementioned commentary by Haribhadra, who was the disciple of Śāntarakṣita, an influential early Indian missionary to Tibet.[8] Je Tsongkhapa's writings name the AA as the root text of the lamrim tradition founded by Atiśa.

Georges Dreyfus reports that "Gelug monastic universities... take the Ornament as the central text for the study of the path; they treat it as a kind of Buddhist encyclopedia, read in the light of commentaries by Je Dzong-ka-ba, Gyel-tsap Je, and the authors of manuals [monastic textbooks]. Sometimes these commentaries spin out elaborate digressions from a single word of the Ornament."[9] Dreyfus adds that non-Gelug schools give less emphasis to the AA, but study a somewhat larger number of works (including the other texts of the Maitreya-Asanga corpus) in correspondingly less detail.

Title of the work edit

 
13th century Tibetan PP manuscript with images of Shakyamuni Buddha and the goddess Prajñāpāramita. Photo: Walters Art Museum (2001)

The text's full title is:

  • Sanskrit: Abhisamayālaṅkāranāmaprajñāpāramitopadeśaśāstra
  • Tibetan: Shes rap kyi pha rol tu phyin pa'i man ngag gi bstan bcos mngon par rtogs pa'i rgyan ces bya ba

Which means:

  • abhisamaya (mngon par rtogs pa) - "Realization(s)"
  • alaṅkāra (rgyan) -- "Ornament" (Berzin prefers "Filigree")
  • nāma (zhes bya ba) -- "called"
  • prajñāpāramitā (shes rap kyi pha rol tu phyin ba) - "Perfection of Wisdom"
  • upadeśa (man ngag) -- "Instructions" (literally, "an up-close look")
  • śāstra (bstan bcos)-- "Treatise"

Thus, a "Treatise [of] Instructions [on the] Perfection of Wisdom, called [the] Ornament [of / for] Realization[s]."

Sparham explains:

"The word abhisamaya is made up of the prefix abhi ("toward, over"), the prefix sam ("together with"), and the root i, a verb of motion with the secondary meaning "to understand." Generally speaking, abhisamaya means a coming together, a "re-union," particularly of a knower with something to be known, hence a "clear realization." In a title abhisamaya may just mean "chapter," hence the title Abhisamayālaṅkāra means Ornament for the Clear Realizations or Ornament for the Chapters. [10]

Conze adds some details about the term's origins:

In the Pali scriptures the term is used to designate the stage when we comprehend the four holy truths. In the Abhidharmakośa (VI 122) it is interpreted as the correct (sam = samyak) knowledge (aya) which is turned toward (abhi) Nirvāṅa. In the Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra itself it is invariably coupled with prāpti, "attainment," and in one place...it is a synonymn for sāksātkriya (realization).[11]

As to whether we are speaking of one realization, or of eight, Sparham offers the following explanation by rGyal tshab rJe, a 14th-15th century Tibetan commentator:

An admirer views a naturally beautiful woman adorned with golden ornaments reflected in a mirror. The Perfection of Wisdom Sūtras are the naturally beautiful woman. The systematization of the contents of the Sūtras into eight subjects and seventy topics are the golden ornaments, and the Ornament the mirror through which they view her.[12]

Elaborating on the metaphor, Geshe Jampa Gyatso distinguishes between a "natural ornament" (the beautiful woman, the Perfection of Wisdom), "beautifying ornament" (her jewelry, the eight categories and seventy topics), "clarifying ornament" (the mirror, the AA), and "joyful ornament" (the joy of the beholder or AA devotee).[13]

Philosophical perspective edit

The PP Sūtras form the basis for the Mādhyamika ("Middle Way") school of Indian Buddhist philosophy, which Tibetan consensus acknowledges as the "highest" (truest, best) tenet system. Other writings by Maitreya and Asaga, however, form the basis for the rival Yogācāra ("Yoga Adepts") or Cittamātra ("Mind Only" or "Consciousness Only") school. It is therefore perhaps understandable that the AA, as Sparham writes, "straddles the ground between Indian Middle Way and Mind Only..."[2] Conze concurs, ascribing to the AA "an intermediate position between Mādhyamikas and Yogācārins..."[14]

Conze discovers in the AA "some affinities with other Yogācārin works" and suggests a number of precise correspondences. At the same time, he notes, "Two of the specific doctrines of the Yogācārins, i.e. the 'storeconsciousness' and the three kinds of own-being (svabhāva) are quite ignored."[15] Eugène Obermiller on the other hand writes that "The main philosophical view expressed in the Abhisamayalaṅkāra is that of strictest Monism and of the Non-substantiality and Relativity (śūnyatā) of all separate elements of existence, i.e. the standpoint of the Mādhyamikas." Obermiller sees the AA as the product of interaction between Mahāyāna Buddhism and the Hindu Vedānta philosophy.[16]

Gelugpa writers, following Bu ston, affirm Maitreya's text to represent the Prāsaṅgika viewpoint, but consider Haribhadra and later commentators to have taught something called "Yogācāra Svātantrika Madhyamaka."[17] The category is often criticized as artificial, even by the standards of Tibetan doxography. Nyingma and Sakya writers agree that the AA contains Madhyamaka teachings, without necessarily endorsing the subdivisions proposed by Gelugpas.

In an aside, Ian Charles Harris finds it "curious" that

"...Maitreya is generally considered to be the mythical instructor of Asaga, and therefore for those who see Māhāyana Buddhism in terms of schools [as Harris does not], to be the founder of the Yogācāra-Vijñānanavāda. One wonders why someone seeking to establish a rival school to Nāgārjuna should wish to write a treatise on the Prajñāpāramitā if, as many authors believe, it is amenable only to an interpretation from the standpoint of the Prāsaṅgika-Madhyamaka."[18]

Harris goes on to note the "strange fact" that Tsongkhapa would be a self-avowed Prasangika, despite his system's assignment of "all the great Madhyamaka authorities on the Prajñāpāramitā" to Yogācāra Svātantrika Madhyamaka.[19]

According to Makransky, the AA was designed to impose a Yogācāra framework and vocabulary onto the PP. AA commentator Arya Vimuktisena preserves this Yogācāra reading; however, Makransky sees Haribhadra's reading as an attempt to "Mādhyamika-ize" the AA. Later Tibetan commentators broadly follow Haribhadra.[20]

The Eight Categories and Seventy Topics edit

The AA is divided into eight categories, which correspond to the eight chapters of the work, and (with one technical exception in chapter eight) [21] to the eight "realizations" said to be necessary for full enlightenment. (Conze remarks that these eight are "not attested elsewhere.") [22]

This division into eight appears thus at the beginning of the AA itself:

[The Buddhas] proclaim the Perfection of Wisdom [Sūtra] by way of eight subjects. These eight are the knowledge of all aspects, knowledge of paths, and all knowledge. Then there is the awakening to all aspects, when culmination is attained, serial, awakening in an instant, and the Truth Body. [AA verses 1.4 and 1.5, Sparham translation][23]

These eight categories naturally fall into three groups, as shown below. The seventy topics (here enumerated but not shown) are their subdivisions. Obermiller traces this list to a manual attributed to 'Jam dbyangs Bzhad pa, who also created the various definitions and category-boundaries familiar to Tibetan debaters.[24] The text may be subdivided further still, into 1,200 items.

Unless otherwise indicated, the English terms below follow Sparham's translation (which revises Conze's).

The Three Knowledges edit

The first three categories represent the objects or goals of practice, whose attainment leads to peace for the four classes of Buddhist practitioner. Obermiller calls them "the 3 Kinds of Omniscience," while Toh prefers "the Three Exalted Knowers" and Berzin, "the Three Sets of Realized Awareness."

1. Knowledge of all aspects
(Sarvākārajñatā, rnam pa tham cad mkhyen pa).............................10 topics
(Wisdom attained by Buddhas; inclusive of categories two and three below)
2. Knowledge of paths
(Mārgākārajñatā, lam shes pa)....................................................11 topics
(Wisdom attained by bodhisattvas; inclusive of category three below)
3. All-knowledge
(Sarvajñatā, gzhi shes pa)...........................................................9 topics
(Wisdom attained by sravakas and pratyekabuddhas, i.e., Hinayana practitioners)

Berzin explains these categories as

"...groupings of realizations gained by the three sets of aryas ('phags-pa, highly realized beings), those who have gained nonconceptual cognition of the sixteen aspects of the four noble truths. The three are organized into basis, pathway, and resultant stages and thus, in a complex manner, are cumulative. They are studied, however, in reverse order to their attainment, in order to inspire interest in developing them."[25]

Sravakas and Pratyekabuddhas, in order to discern the truths of anitya (impermanence), anatman (selflessness), and dukha (suffering), must acquire knowledge of the fundamental constituents of reality (vastu)--namely the skandhas, ayatanas, and dhatus which are the subjects of Abhidharma. This is the "all-knowledge" of chapter three. A bodhisattva, in order to benefit all sentient beings, must additionally cognize the various possible paths by which others may progress, so that he may, for example, teach in different ways in accordance with their various situations and capacities. This is the "knowledge of paths" of chapter two. According to the Mahayana understanding, only a fully enlightened Buddha has eliminated obstacles to omniscience (jneyavaranaheya) as well as obstacles to liberation (kleshavaranaheya). "Knowledge of all aspects" in the first chapter refers to this ultimate state. The AA begins with this as the most impressive of the three, and the ultimate goal of the Mahayana practitioner.

The Four Practices edit

Categories four through seven (in this order) represent progressive stages of spiritual practice en route to enlightenment. Conze calls them four "understandings"; Obermiller, "practical methods"; Toh, "applications"; and Berzin (who notes the close connection to "yoga," ngal sbyor), "applied realizations."

4. Full awakening to all aspects
(Sarvākārābhisambodha, rnam rzdogs sbyor ba)..........................11 topics
5. Culmination clear realization
(Murdhābhisamaya, rtse mor phyin pa'i sbyor ba)..........................8 topics
6. Serial clear realization
(Anupurvābhisamaya, mthar gyis pa'i sbyor ba)............................13 topics
7. Clear realization in a single instant
(Ekaksanābhisamaya, skad cig ma'i sbyor ba)..............................4 topics

Referring to the above, Dreyfus explains that

"...the Ornament presents the four practices or realizations [chapters 4-7], emphasizing particularly 'the practice of all the aspects' (rnam rzdogs sbyor ba), which is treated in the fourth chapter. In fact, that practice is the central topic of the text and may have been an actual practice in which all the aspects of the three wisdoms [chapters 1-3] are brought together... But--and this point is crucial--no teacher I have ever met seems to have practiced this meditation, or even to have been clear on how to do so... Clearly the work's central themes are not practiced in the Tibetan scholastic traditions."[26]

Tibetan tradition lays special emphasis on chapter four, perhaps because it is the longest and most complex, and therefore best suited to commentary and debate. This fourth chapter enumerates, and extensively describes, (in Obermiller's words) "173 forms of the Bodhisattva's yoga as realizing respectively the 173 aspects (of the 3 forms of Omniscience)."[27]

The Resultant Truth Body edit

The last Category concerns the result of spiritual practice:

8. The Resultant Truth Body
(Dharmakāyābhisambodha, chos sku)........................................4 topics
--------------
70 topics

By this is meant the Dharmakāya, one of several glorified spiritual bodies (Makransky prefers "embodiments") which a Buddha is said to possess. A commentarial tradition beginning with Arya Vimuktisena interprets the AA as teaching the existence of three such bodies (the trikaya doctrine); a rival tradition follows Haribhadra in identifying four such bodies, with the fourth, disputed kāya being the Svabhāvikakāya (Tib. ngo bo nyid kyi sku) or "Nature / Essence Body". (Other writers interpret this last term as a synonym for Dharmakaya, or else as symbolizing the unity of the three.) Makransky, whose Buddhism Embodied focuses on this eighth chapter of the AA, writes that

"Haribhadra had read AA 8 as a systematic treatise whose purpose was to present a logically coherent model of Buddhahood. His perspective owed much to Buddhist logic and Abhidharma traditions that had sought such systematic coherence. Ratnākarāśānti, basing himself instead on the perspective on nondual yogic traditions, specifically understood the terms svābhāvikakāya and dharmakāya in AA 8 (and throughout Mahāyana literature) to refer to a Buddha's own perspective on the nature of his attainment, not to a human perspective on it. [...] Tsong kha pa, influenced by the logico-epistemological approach expressed in Haribhadra's work, supported his interpretation of AA 8. Go ram pa, drawing from a perspective framed by nondual yogic praxis, supported Ratnākorāśānti's call to return to Arya Vimuktisena's previous interpretation. Tsong kha pa and Go ram pa's interpretations are closely related to their differing perspectives on a Buddha's awareness, which was an explicit topic of discussion in Candrakirti's Mādhyamikāvatāra, upon which they both commented."[28]

For Makransky, the controversy reflects a fundamental tension between immanent and transcendent aspects of Buddhism, which is also reflected in debate over the Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma, or gradual vs. sudden enlightenment (as at Samye). In his view, all these controversies stem from a fundamental difficulty in reconciling the transcendent nature of Buddhahood with the immanent nature of bodhicitta.

Ancillary Topics edit

Obermiller, describing the curriculum of Drepung's (’Bras spungs) Go mang college, reports that the monks studied the AA in a four-year sequence (after certain preliminary subjects); and that each class also studied a prescribed "secondary subject" (zur-bkol) for that year:

First class: Introduction to the AA as well as the special topic, the "Twenty Sangha."
Second class: Finished through the seventh topic of the first AA chapter; the supplementary topic was dependent origination (pratītyasamutpāda)
Third class: Finished the first AA chapter and continued; also studied the Yogacara theory of the storehouse consciousness (ālāyavijñāna), and the difference between definitive and interpretable scripture as taught by Mādhyamaka and Yogācāra.
Fourth class: Focused on the fourth chapter of the AA ("which is regarded as the most difficult"), supplemented with "the teaching about the four degrees of trance in the sphere of Etherial Bodies...and the four degrees of mystic absorption in the Immaterial Sphere." The fourth-year students would conclude with a celebratory feast.

Obermiller adds that "All these studies are conducted in the form of lectures which are accompanied by controversies between the different groups of students according to the method of 'sequence and reason' (thal-phyir)."[29]

Twenty Sangha edit

The subject of "Twenty Sangha" (vimsatiprabhedasamgha, dge 'dun nyi shu) aims at schematizing the various spiritual levels through which one might pass on the way to enlightenment. Here "Sangha" refers not so much to actual monks and nuns (the term's most common meaning), but to an idealized, gradated schema of all the types of accomplished Buddhist. The AA explains that it is the latter sense of "Sangha" which constitutes the object of Buddhist Refuge, and in an especially cryptic verse, offers the following subdivision into twenty types:

There are Twenty [categories]: those with dull and sharp faculties, those who have attained faith and vision, those who are born from family to family, those born with one interval, those who are born in the intermediate state, those who are born, with effort and effortlessly, those who go to Akanistha, three who leap, those who go to the upper limit of the world, those who destroy attachment to the form [realm], those who pacify visual phenomena, the bodily witness, and the rhinoceros. [AA verses 1.23-24, James Apple translation][30]

What does this mean? "Akanistha" is the name of the highest Buddha-field in the Form Realm, inhabited by pious gods and tenth-ground bodhisattvas. The solitary nature of the rhinoceros made that animal a traditional symbol for pratyekabuddhas ("solitary Buddhas"). Beyond that, the list is quite difficult to decipher.

The basic project seems to have been inspired by an earlier typology of four (Stream-Enterer, Once-Returner, Non-Returner, Arhat), which may be expanded to eight by distinguishing between approachers to (zhugs pa), or abiders at ('bras gnas), each level. Unfortunately the list of twenty does not correspond very well with this earlier one. Furthermore, Tibetan exegetical tradition estimates the actual number of types of Sangha (including combinations and subdivisions) to approach the tens of thousands.[31] Such difficulties seem to account for much of the subject's popularity in debate.(See Apple's monograph on the subject.)

Definitive and Interpretable Scriptures edit

Tibetan tradition accepts the common Mahayana view that Sakyamuni Buddha (the historical Buddha) taught various kinds of teachings that do not seem to agree—hence the various discrepancies between nikaya Buddhism and the Mahayana scriptures—and following the Sandhinirmocana Sutra, hold that the Buddha taught three grand cycles called "Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma." According to the sutra, the first of these consists of Hinayana teachings; the second, of Mahdyamaka teachings; and the third, of Yogacara teachings. The sutra seems to assume the third cycle to consist of the "highest" teachings. However, Tibetan tradition generally sides with Madhyamaka, and therefore must read the sutra in this light.

The issue becomes more pressing since Tibetan Buddhist doctrine in fact combines elements from all three cycles, and is therefore faced with the task of defending its authorities while simultaneously minimizing contradictions between them.

Form and Formless Realm Absorptions (Trances) edit

Commentarial literature edit

In India edit

The oldest extant commentary is that of Ārya Vimuktisena (Grol sde), called Illuminating the Twenty Thousand: A Commentary on the Ornament (Pañcavimsatisāhasrikāprajñāparamitopadesasāstrabhisamāyalakāravrtti, nyi khri snang ba). Written in a different style from its successors, it makes frequent reference to Vasubandhu's Abhidharmakośaśāstra.

Even more influential have been the commentaries of Haribadra (Seng ge Bzang Po), especially his Blossomed Meaning (Sphuṭārthā, 'grel pa don gsal) and Light for the Ornament. (Abhisamāyalakāralokāprajñāpāramitāvyākhyā, rgyan snang). Haribhadra also edited an abridgment of this work, called the "Short Commentary" (Sphuṭārtha, 'grel pa don gsal/'grel chung).

Altogether, 21 ancient Indian AA commentaries are said to have been translated into Tibetan, although it is possible to doubt the existence of some of the titles listed. For example, an ambiguous reference at the beginning of Haribhadra's prefatory homage is sometimes interpreted to mean that Asanga wrote an AA commentary. If so, the work is no longer extant. Haribhadra also mentions an AA commentary by Vasubandhu entitled Padhati ("The Well-Trodden Path"), and one by Bhadanta Vimuktisena ("the Intelligent" Vimuktisena—not to be confused with Ārya, "the Noble" Vimuktisena) called Excellent Explanation of the Twenty Thousand (Abhisamayālaṅkāra-vārttika, tshig le'ur byas pa'i rnam par 'drel pa). However, the commentaries by Ārya Vimuktisena and Haribhadra are most fundamental to the subsequent commentarial tradition. Sparham writes that

...practically speaking, the Light [Haribhadra's commentary] is the more readable explanation. It has fewer words to explain [since it is based on the 8,000-line PP rather than the 25,000-line version]. Ārya may well be the more profound thinker, but Hari's is the better book. This perhaps explains why Hari, not Ārya, became the most influential Indian figure in the study of the Perfection of Wisdom in Tibet, even though Ārya is more admired. It also perhaps explains why Hari's own abridgement of his Light is the basis of nearly every Tibetan Perfection of Wisdom commentary.[32]

Makransky, on the other hand, feels that Arya Vimuktasena's commentary better captures the AA's Yogācāra assumptions.

In Tibet edit

The AA was extremely influential in Tibet, resulting in the production of numerous commentaries. The first were those of "Ngok Lotsawa" or "Ngok the Translator" (Rngog Lo tsa ba Bal ldan Shes rab, 1059–1109): Mngon rtogs rgyan gyi don bsdus pa (a summary), Shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa'i man ngag mngon par rtogs pa'i rgyan gi tik chung (a "small" commentary), and an 8000-line Prajnaparamita summary called Yum brgyad stong pa'i 'grel pa'i don bsdus (possibly a sub-commentary to Haribhadra's Short Commentary).

Well known Nyingma commentaries on the AA include the sher phyin mngon rtogs rgyan gyi spyi don by Dza Patrul Rinpoche, Orgyen Jikmé Chökyi Wangpo which forms the whole of the sixth volume of his Collected Works; and The Words of the Invincible Maitreya, (ma pham zhal lung) by Pöpa Tulku Dongak Tenpé Nyima.

Sakya commentators on the AA include 'Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge (four commentaries), Sakya Chokden, Shes ba Kun rig (seven commentaries and treatises),[33] and G.Yag ston (Sangs gyas dpal, g.yag phrug pa, 1350–1414). The latter's work is King of Wish-Fulfilling Jewels (Mngon rtogs rgyan 'grel pa rin chen bsam 'phel dbang rgyal), in eight volumes.

Kagyu commentaries on the AA include Padma Karpo's "The Words of Jetsun Maitreya"; the "Short and Clear" commentary mngon rtogs rgyan gyi ‘grel pa nyung ngu rnam gsal[34] by Shamar Konchok Yenlag; "Introducing the Lamp of the Three Worlds: A commentary on the Ornament of Realization" (mngon rtogs rgyan rtsa ‘grel gyi sbyor tika ‘jig rten gsum sgron la ‘jugs pa)[35] by Karma Thinleypa

Tsongkhapa's teacher Don grub Rin chen encouraged him to study the five texts of Maitreya, especially the AA.[36] One of Tsongkhapa's major works, Golden Garland (gSer-phreng), is an AA commentary. His disciple Gyaltsab (rGyal tshab Dar ma Rin chen) also wrote an AA subcommentary, called Ornament of the Essence (mngon rtongs rgyan gyi grel pa dor gsal rnam bshad snying po'i rgyan).

In East Asia edit

The AA seems not to have been translated into Chinese until the 1930s. At this time the Chinese monk Fazun (法尊), an associate of Taixu (太虛), produced a translation entitled 現觀莊嚴論, for use by the Sino-Tibetan Buddhist Institute (漢藏教理院) in Sichuan. The institute's leaders sought to harmonize the Buddhisms of China and Tibet, and improve relations between the Khampas and Han Chinese immigrants to Eastern Tibet. Fazun had studied in the geshe program of the Drepung ('Bras spungs) college (grwa tshang) of Loseling (Blo gsal gling), near Lhasa, and possibly even obtained the degree.[37] The institute failed to survive the Chinese Civil War.

In the West edit

The AA seems not to have attracted the attention of Western scholars until the 1930s, when Eugène Obermiller and Theodore Stcherbatsky produced an edition of the Sanskrit / Tibetan text. Obermiller, a specialist in Yogacara and Tathagatagarbha literature, also wrote a lengthy article on the AA ("The Doctrine of PP...") and was in the process of composing Analysis of the AA when he died. While Obermiller approached the AA from the perspective of "Monism," which he associated with Vedanta, his studies in the Buryat Mongolian monastery of Dgah ldan dar rgyas gling (Chilutai) exposed him to a more traditional hermeneutic framework. Along with a translation of the AA (or the three-fifths of it which he finished), he also provided a summary of Haribhadra's commentary for each section.

Edward Conze, who was active from the 1950s to the 1970s, devoted his career to PP translations and commentaries, his AA translation being an early example. An especially significant work was his translation of the PP Sutra in 25,000-lines, which he organized according to the AA topics. This required a certain amount of creative editing on his part—for example, his translation does not strictly follow the 25,000-line AA, but incorporates text from other PP Sutras. Like Obermiller, Conze's writings betray a certain German idealistic influence, hence his references to "Union with the Absolute."

During the 2000s, several Western scholars with experience as Buddhist monks living among the Tibetan exile community in Dharamsala, who had participated in traditional geshe studies, published articles and books related to the AA. Their ranks included Gareth Sparham (who translated the AA anew, along with the commentaries of Arya Vimuktisena, Haribhadra, and Tsongkhapa) and Geshe Georges Dreyfus (whose writings describe the contemporary social context of AA study). In addition, studies and translations by Karl Brunnhölzl and the Padmakara Translation Group have focused on non-Gelug readings of this text, which the earlier literature had neglected. The AA has also received attention from several Western dharma centers (notably those associated with the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition, whose FPMT Masters Program devotes several years to its study), with the result that the AA has now been transmitted to the West not only as a text, but as a living spiritual tradition.

Bibliography edit

Amano, Hirofusa. "A Fragment from the Abhisamayālaṅkāra-namaprajñaparamitopadesa-sastravṛtti, alias 'Sphuṭartha' of Haribhadra. Annual Report of the Tôhoku Research Institute of Buddhist Culture, vol. 3 (1961), pp. 1-25 (in Japanese).

Amano, Hirofusa. A Study on the Abhisamaya-Alaṅkara-Karika-Sastra-Vṛtti. Tokyo, 1975.

Amano, Hirofusa. "On the Composite Purpose of the Abhisamayālaṅkāra-karika-sastra: Haribhadra's Way of Explaining. Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies, vol. 17, no. 2 (1969), pp. 59-69 (in Japanese).

Amano, Hirofusa. Sanskrit Manuscript of the Abhisamayalaṅkara-vṛtti (in six parts). Bulletin of the Hijiyama Women's Junior College, vol. 7 (1983), pp. 1-15; Bulletin of the Faculty of Education of Shimane University, vol. 19 (1985), pp. 124-138; vol. 20 (1986), pp. 67-86; vol. 21 (1987), pp. 39-51; vol. 22 (1988), pp. 10-25; vol. 23 (1989), pp. 1-7.

Apple, James B. Stairway to Nirvana: A Study of the Twenty-Samghas base on the works of Tsong Kha Pa. SUNY Press, 2008.

Apple, James B. "Twenty Varieties of the Samgha: A Typology of Noble Beings (Arya) in Indo-Tibetan Scholasticism" (in two parts, Parts I[permanent dead link] and Part II[permanent dead link]). Journal of Indian Philosophy 31 (2003), 503–592; and 32 (2004), 211–279. These are chapters of Apple's doctoral dissertation for the University of Wisconsin (Madison), which later evolved into the monograph Stairway to Nirvana (see above).

Brunnhölzl, Karl (translator). Gone Beyond: The Prajnaparamita Sutras, The Ornament of Clear Realization, and Its Commentaries in the Tibetan Kagyu Tradition (in two volumes). Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2011 and 2012.

Conze, Edward. The Prajñāpāramitā Literature. Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers, 2000 (1978). See pp. 101–120.

Conze, Edward (translator and editor). The Large Sutra on Perfect Wisdom: With the Divisions of the Abhisamayālankāra. Univ. of California Press: 1985.

Conze, Edward (translator). Introduction and Translation from Original Text, With Sanskrit-Tibetan Index. Serie Orienta: Rome, [n.d.; actually 1954].

Dreyfus, Georges. The Sound of Two Hands Clapping: The Education of a Tibetan Buddhist Monk. University of California Press: 2003. Ch. 8 (pp. 174–182 of this edition) discusses the role of the Abhisamayalankara in the Tibetan monastic curriculum.

Dreyfus, Georges. "Tibetan scholastic education and the role of soteriology." In Paul Williams (ed.), Buddhism: Critical Concepts in Religious Studies, vol. VI, pp. 32–57. Originally published in the Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies vol. 20, no. 1 (1997), pp. 31–62. This is an early (and extended) version of material later incorporated into The Sound of Two Hands Clapping. Dreyfus's discussion of the Abisamayalankara begins on pp. 46, and continues to the end of the article.

Jackson, David P. (ed.), Rong-ston on the Prajñāpāramitā Philosophy of the Abhisamayālaṃkāra: His Sub-commentary on Haribhadra's "Sphuṭārthā: A Facsimile Reproduction of the Earliest Known Blockprint Edition, from an Exemplar Preserved in the Tibet House, New Delhi. Nagata Bunshodo: Kyoto, 1988.

Makransky, John J. Buddhism Embodied: Sources of Controversy in India and Tibet. SUNY Press, 1997. Focuses on the eighth chapter of the AA. Instead of three or four "bodies" (kāya), Makransky prefers to speak of "embodiments."

Obermiller, E[ugène]. Analysis of the Abhisamayalamkara. Asian Humanities Press: 2003. Original publication London: Luzac & Co., 1936.

Obermiller, E. The Doctrine of Prajñā-Pāramitā as Exposed in the Abhisamayalamkara of Maitreya. Canon Publications: 1984. Originally published in Acta Orientalia 11 (1932–33), pp. 1–133, 334-354.

Obermiller, E. & T[heodore] I. Shcherbatskoi. Abhisamahalankara-Prajnaparamita-Upadesa-Sastra: The Work of Bodhisattva Maitreya. Sri Satguru Publications, 1992.

Sparham, Gareth (translator). Abhisamayalamkara with Vrtti and Aloka (in four volumes). Jain Publishing Company, 2006 (vol. 1) and 2008 (vol. 2).

Sparham, Gareth (editor). Golden Garland of Eloquence, vols. 1 and 2. Jain Publishing Company. 2008. Translation of an AA commentary by Tsongkhapa.

Toh Sze Gee (translator). The Explanation Ornament of the Essence along with (i) the Root Text of the Treatise of Quintessential Instructions of the Perfection of Wisdom: Ornament for Clear Realization and (ii) the Commentary Clear Meaning, by Gyaltsab Darma Rinchen. FPMT Masters Program Translation, 2009. Available from FPMT Education Services.

References edit

  1. ^ See ch. 9 of Makransky.
  2. ^ a b Sparham, AA vol. 1, p. xiv; Makransky, p. 129.
  3. ^ Among them are Edward Conze (The PP Literature, p. 104) and James Apple (Stairway to Nirvana, p. 49.)
  4. ^ From his Preface to the Large Sutrap. x
  5. ^ From his AA translation, p. 10.
  6. ^ Sparham, AA vol. 1, p. xx.
  7. ^ Conze, The PP Literature, p. 104; Makransky, p. 10.
  8. ^ In his "Overview..." (cited below), second sentence.
  9. ^ Dreyfus, Georges B.J. (2003) The Sound of Two Hands Clapping: The Education of a Tibetan Buddhist Monk, pp. 175-176. University of California Press.
  10. ^ Sparham, AA vol 1, pp. xiii-xiv
  11. ^ Conze, The PP Literature, pp. 104-105.
  12. ^ Sparham, AA vol 1. p. xiii.
  13. ^ From pp. 3-4 of an oral commentary given in Pomaia, Italy, 1998. Transcript reprinted by the Istituto Lama Tsong Khapa, Pomaia, 2008.
  14. ^ Conze, The PP Literature, p. 101.
  15. ^ Conze, The PP Literature, pp. 102-103.
  16. ^ p.Obermiller, Analysis of the AA, ii-iii. (This is also a main point of his article "The Doctrine of PP...")
  17. ^ See Alexander Berzin's "The Five Pathway Minds (The Five Paths): Advanced Presentation," par. 3.
  18. ^ The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism (Leiden: Brill, 1991), p. 72.
  19. ^ The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism (Leiden: Brill, 1991), p. 73
  20. ^ Makransky, p. 10.
  21. ^ According to Geshe Jampa Gyatso, the eighth category is the "resultant truth body" whereas the eighth clear realization is the "resultant exalted wisdom truth body." This reflects a Gelug understanding. From p. 1 of a 1998 oral commentary printed in 2008 and privately circulated by the Istituto Lama Tsong Khapa in Pomaia, Italy.
  22. ^ The Prajnaparamita Literature, p. 105.
  23. ^ Sparham, AA. vol. 1, p. xviii.
  24. ^ Obermiller, Analysis of the AA, p. v.
  25. ^ Berzin, "Overview...," subheading entitled "The Three Sets of Realized Awareness."
  26. ^ ...Two Hands Clapping, p. 176.
  27. ^ Obermiller, Analysis of the AA, p. 6.
  28. ^ Makransky, pp. 15, 18.
  29. ^ Obermiller, Analysis of the AA, p. v-vii.
  30. ^ Apple, "Twenty Varieties of the Sangha" pt. 1, p. 514.
  31. ^ Apple, Stairway to Nirvana, p. 9.
  32. ^ Sparham, AA vol. 1, p. xxvi.
  33. ^ See David Jackson, Kyoto: 1988
  34. ^ zhwa dmar dkon mchog yan lag. mngon rtogs rgyan gyi ‘grel pa nyung ngu rnam gsal. Sarnath: Vajra Vidhya Institute Library. p. 360. ISBN 81-89017-08-X.
  35. ^ karma phrin-las. mngon rtogs rgyan rtsa ‘grel gyi sbyor tika ‘jig rten gsum sgron la ‘jugs pa. Sarnath: Vajra Vidhya Institute Library. p. 390. ISBN 81-89017-04-7.
  36. ^ Apple, Stairway to Nirvana, p. 39.
  37. ^ Chibs.edu.tw October 15, 2006, at the Wayback Machine For background on this school, see Gray Tuttle, Tibetan Buddhists in the Making of Modern China (Columbia UP, 2005).

Sources edit

External links edit

  • Berzin, Alexander. "The Five Paths" February 2002, revised April 2006.
  • Berzin, Alexander. "The Five Pathway Minds (The Five Paths): Advanced Presentation." March 2004, revised April 2006.
  • Berzin, Alexander. "Overview of the Eight Sets of Realizations in Abhisamayamankara". February 2002, revised July 2006.
  • Rigpa Shedra (wiki). "Abhisamayalankara."
  • Shenga, Khenchen. "Prologue to the Abhisamayalankara."
  • Tsöndrü, Khenpo. "The Seventy Points: The Words of Jikmé Chökyi Wangpo: A Commentary Presenting the Subject Matter of the Great Treatise, the Abhisamayalankara."
  • Tsulga, Geshe. Oral Commentaries on the Ornament of Clear Realizations and its Seventy Topics, given to the Kurukulla Center. (Scroll about halfway down the page for audio files.)

In Chinese edit

  • 現觀莊嚴論

羅時憲, (Concise Translation and Course Notes on the Abhisamayalankara). Hong Kong: Dharmalakshana Buddhist Institute (佛教法相學會), 2005. Includes traditional[permanent dead link] and simplified character versions (free) as well as audio lectures in the form of MP3 files.

abhisamayalankara, this, article, lead, section, long, please, read, length, guidelines, help, move, details, into, article, body, june, 2021, abhisamayālaṅkāra, ornament, realization, abbreviated, five, sanskrit, language, mahayana, śastras, which, according,. This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body June 2021 The Abhisamayalaṅkara Ornament of for Realization s abbreviated AA is one of five Sanskrit language Mahayana sastras which according to Tibetan tradition Maitreya revealed to Asaṅga in northwest India circa the 4th century AD Chinese tradition recognizes a different list of Maitreya texts which does not include the AA Those who doubt the claim of supernatural revelation disagree or are unsure whether the text was composed by Asaṅga himself or by someone else perhaps a human teacher of his Tibetan illustration of Asaṅga receiving the AA from Maitreya in the Tuṣita heaven The AA is never mentioned by Xuanzang who spent several years at Nalanda in India during the early 7th century and became a savant in the Maitreya Asaṅga tradition One possible explanation is that the text is late and attributed to Maitreya Asaṅga for purposes of legitimacy The question then hinges on the dating of the earliest extant AA commentaries those of Arya Vimuktisena usually given as 6th century following possibly unreliable information from Taranatha 1 and Haribhadra late 8th century The AA contains eight chapters and 273 verses Its pithy contents summarize in the form of eight categories and seventy topics the Prajnaparamita sutras which the Madhyamaka philosophical school regards as presenting the ultimate truth Gareth Sparham and John Makransky believe the text to be commenting on the version in 25 000 lines although it does not explicitly say so Haribhadra whose commentary is based on the 8 000 line PP Sutra held that the AA is commenting on all PP versions at once i e the 100 000 line 25 000 line and 8 000 line versions 2 and this interpretation has generally prevailed within the commentarial tradition Several scholars liken the AA to a table of contents for the PP 3 Edward Conze admits that the correspondence between these numbered topics and the contents of the PP is not always easy to see 4 and that the fit is accomplished not without some violence to the text 5 The AA is widely held to reflect the hidden meaning sbas don of the PP with the implication being that its details are not found there explicitly Sparham traces this tradition to Haribhadra s student Dharmamitra 6 One noteworthy effect is to recast PP texts as path literature Philosophical differences may also be identified Conze and Makransky see the AA as an attempt to reinterpret the PP associated with Madhyamaka tenets in the direction of Yogacara 7 The AA is studied by all lineages of Tibetan Buddhism and is one of five principal works studied in the geshe curriculum of the major Gelug monasteries Alexander Berzin has suggested that the text s prominence in the Tibetan tradition but not elsewhere may be due to the existence of the aforementioned commentary by Haribhadra who was the disciple of Santarakṣita an influential early Indian missionary to Tibet 8 Je Tsongkhapa s writings name the AA as the root text of the lamrim tradition founded by Atisa Georges Dreyfus reports that Gelug monastic universities take the Ornament as the central text for the study of the path they treat it as a kind of Buddhist encyclopedia read in the light of commentaries by Je Dzong ka ba Gyel tsap Je and the authors of manuals monastic textbooks Sometimes these commentaries spin out elaborate digressions from a single word of the Ornament 9 Dreyfus adds that non Gelug schools give less emphasis to the AA but study a somewhat larger number of works including the other texts of the Maitreya Asanga corpus in correspondingly less detail Contents 1 Title of the work 2 Philosophical perspective 3 The Eight Categories and Seventy Topics 3 1 The Three Knowledges 3 2 The Four Practices 3 3 The Resultant Truth Body 4 Ancillary Topics 4 1 Twenty Sangha 4 2 Definitive and Interpretable Scriptures 4 3 Form and Formless Realm Absorptions Trances 5 Commentarial literature 5 1 In India 5 2 In Tibet 5 3 In East Asia 5 4 In the West 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 Sources 9 External links 9 1 In ChineseTitle of the work edit nbsp 13th century Tibetan PP manuscript with images of Shakyamuni Buddha and the goddess Prajnaparamita Photo Walters Art Museum 2001 The text s full title is Sanskrit Abhisamayalaṅkaranamaprajnaparamitopadesasastra Tibetan Shes rap kyi pha rol tu phyin pa i man ngag gi bstan bcos mngon par rtogs pa i rgyan ces bya baWhich means abhisamaya mngon par rtogs pa Realization s alaṅkara rgyan Ornament Berzin prefers Filigree nama zhes bya ba called prajnaparamita shes rap kyi pha rol tu phyin ba Perfection of Wisdom upadesa man ngag Instructions literally an up close look sastra bstan bcos Treatise Thus a Treatise of Instructions on the Perfection of Wisdom called the Ornament of for Realization s Sparham explains The word abhisamaya is made up of the prefix abhi toward over the prefix sam together with and the root i a verb of motion with the secondary meaning to understand Generally speaking abhisamaya means a coming together a re union particularly of a knower with something to be known hence a clear realization In a title abhisamaya may just mean chapter hence the title Abhisamayalaṅkara means Ornament for the Clear Realizations or Ornament for the Chapters 10 Conze adds some details about the term s origins In the Pali scriptures the term is used to designate the stage when we comprehend the four holy truths In the Abhidharmakosa VI 122 it is interpreted as the correct sam samyak knowledge aya which is turned toward abhi Nirvaṅa In the Prajnaparamita Sutra itself it is invariably coupled with prapti attainment and in one place it is a synonymn for saksatkriya realization 11 As to whether we are speaking of one realization or of eight Sparham offers the following explanation by rGyal tshab rJe a 14th 15th century Tibetan commentator An admirer views a naturally beautiful woman adorned with golden ornaments reflected in a mirror The Perfection of Wisdom Sutras are the naturally beautiful woman The systematization of the contents of the Sutras into eight subjects and seventy topics are the golden ornaments and the Ornament the mirror through which they view her 12 Elaborating on the metaphor Geshe Jampa Gyatso distinguishes between a natural ornament the beautiful woman the Perfection of Wisdom beautifying ornament her jewelry the eight categories and seventy topics clarifying ornament the mirror the AA and joyful ornament the joy of the beholder or AA devotee 13 Philosophical perspective editThe PP Sutras form the basis for the Madhyamika Middle Way school of Indian Buddhist philosophy which Tibetan consensus acknowledges as the highest truest best tenet system Other writings by Maitreya and Asaṅ ga however form the basis for the rival Yogacara Yoga Adepts or Cittamatra Mind Only or Consciousness Only school It is therefore perhaps understandable that the AA as Sparham writes straddles the ground between Indian Middle Way and Mind Only 2 Conze concurs ascribing to the AA an intermediate position between Madhyamikas and Yogacarins 14 Conze discovers in the AA some affinities with other Yogacarin works and suggests a number of precise correspondences At the same time he notes Two of the specific doctrines of the Yogacarins i e the storeconsciousness and the three kinds of own being svabhava are quite ignored 15 Eugene Obermiller on the other hand writes that The main philosophical view expressed in the Abhisamayalaṅkara is that of strictest Monism and of the Non substantiality and Relativity sunyata of all separate elements of existence i e the standpoint of the Madhyamikas Obermiller sees the AA as the product of interaction between Mahayana Buddhism and the Hindu Vedanta philosophy 16 Gelugpa writers following Bu ston affirm Maitreya s text to represent the Prasaṅgika viewpoint but consider Haribhadra and later commentators to have taught something called Yogacara Svatantrika Madhyamaka 17 The category is often criticized as artificial even by the standards of Tibetan doxography Nyingma and Sakya writers agree that the AA contains Madhyamaka teachings without necessarily endorsing the subdivisions proposed by Gelugpas In an aside Ian Charles Harris finds it curious that Maitreya is generally considered to be the mythical instructor of Asaṅ ga and therefore for those who see Mahayana Buddhism in terms of schools as Harris does not to be the founder of the Yogacara Vijnananavada One wonders why someone seeking to establish a rival school to Nagarjuna should wish to write a treatise on the Prajnaparamita if as many authors believe it is amenable only to an interpretation from the standpoint of the Prasaṅgika Madhyamaka 18 Harris goes on to note the strange fact that Tsongkhapa would be a self avowed Prasangika despite his system s assignment of all the great Madhyamaka authorities on the Prajnaparamita to Yogacara Svatantrika Madhyamaka 19 According to Makransky the AA was designed to impose a Yogacara framework and vocabulary onto the PP AA commentator Arya Vimuktisena preserves this Yogacara reading however Makransky sees Haribhadra s reading as an attempt to Madhyamika ize the AA Later Tibetan commentators broadly follow Haribhadra 20 The Eight Categories and Seventy Topics editThe AA is divided into eight categories which correspond to the eight chapters of the work and with one technical exception in chapter eight 21 to the eight realizations said to be necessary for full enlightenment Conze remarks that these eight are not attested elsewhere 22 This division into eight appears thus at the beginning of the AA itself The Buddhas proclaim the Perfection of Wisdom Sutra by way of eight subjects These eight are the knowledge of all aspects knowledge of paths and all knowledge Then there is the awakening to all aspects when culmination is attained serial awakening in an instant and the Truth Body AA verses 1 4 and 1 5 Sparham translation 23 These eight categories naturally fall into three groups as shown below The seventy topics here enumerated but not shown are their subdivisions Obermiller traces this list to a manual attributed to Jam dbyangs Bzhad pa who also created the various definitions and category boundaries familiar to Tibetan debaters 24 The text may be subdivided further still into 1 200 items Unless otherwise indicated the English terms below follow Sparham s translation which revises Conze s The Three Knowledges edit The first three categories represent the objects or goals of practice whose attainment leads to peace for the four classes of Buddhist practitioner Obermiller calls them the 3 Kinds of Omniscience while Toh prefers the Three Exalted Knowers and Berzin the Three Sets of Realized Awareness 1 Knowledge of all aspects Sarvakarajnata rnam pa tham cad mkhyen pa 10 topics Wisdom attained by Buddhas inclusive of categories two and three below dd 2 Knowledge of paths Margakarajnata lam shes pa 11 topics Wisdom attained by bodhisattvas inclusive of category three below dd 3 All knowledge Sarvajnata gzhi shes pa 9 topics Wisdom attained by sravakas and pratyekabuddhas i e Hinayana practitioners dd Berzin explains these categories as groupings of realizations gained by the three sets of aryas phags pa highly realized beings those who have gained nonconceptual cognition of the sixteen aspects of the four noble truths The three are organized into basis pathway and resultant stages and thus in a complex manner are cumulative They are studied however in reverse order to their attainment in order to inspire interest in developing them 25 Sravakas and Pratyekabuddhas in order to discern the truths of anitya impermanence anatman selflessness and dukha suffering must acquire knowledge of the fundamental constituents of reality vastu namely the skandhas ayatanas and dhatus which are the subjects of Abhidharma This is the all knowledge of chapter three A bodhisattva in order to benefit all sentient beings must additionally cognize the various possible paths by which others may progress so that he may for example teach in different ways in accordance with their various situations and capacities This is the knowledge of paths of chapter two According to the Mahayana understanding only a fully enlightened Buddha has eliminated obstacles to omniscience jneyavaranaheya as well as obstacles to liberation kleshavaranaheya Knowledge of all aspects in the first chapter refers to this ultimate state The AA begins with this as the most impressive of the three and the ultimate goal of the Mahayana practitioner The Four Practices edit Categories four through seven in this order represent progressive stages of spiritual practice en route to enlightenment Conze calls them four understandings Obermiller practical methods Toh applications and Berzin who notes the close connection to yoga ngal sbyor applied realizations 4 Full awakening to all aspects Sarvakarabhisambodha rnam rzdogs sbyor ba 11 topics dd 5 Culmination clear realization Murdhabhisamaya rtse mor phyin pa i sbyor ba 8 topics dd 6 Serial clear realization Anupurvabhisamaya mthar gyis pa i sbyor ba 13 topics dd 7 Clear realization in a single instant Ekaksanabhisamaya skad cig ma i sbyor ba 4 topics dd Referring to the above Dreyfus explains that the Ornament presents the four practices or realizations chapters 4 7 emphasizing particularly the practice of all the aspects rnam rzdogs sbyor ba which is treated in the fourth chapter In fact that practice is the central topic of the text and may have been an actual practice in which all the aspects of the three wisdoms chapters 1 3 are brought together But and this point is crucial no teacher I have ever met seems to have practiced this meditation or even to have been clear on how to do so Clearly the work s central themes are not practiced in the Tibetan scholastic traditions 26 Tibetan tradition lays special emphasis on chapter four perhaps because it is the longest and most complex and therefore best suited to commentary and debate This fourth chapter enumerates and extensively describes in Obermiller s words 173 forms of the Bodhisattva s yoga as realizing respectively the 173 aspects of the 3 forms of Omniscience 27 The Resultant Truth Body edit The last Category concerns the result of spiritual practice 8 The Resultant Truth Body Dharmakayabhisambodha chos sku 4 topics 70 topics dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd dd By this is meant the Dharmakaya one of several glorified spiritual bodies Makransky prefers embodiments which a Buddha is said to possess A commentarial tradition beginning with Arya Vimuktisena interprets the AA as teaching the existence of three such bodies the trikaya doctrine a rival tradition follows Haribhadra in identifying four such bodies with the fourth disputed kaya being the Svabhavikakaya Tib ngo bo nyid kyi sku or Nature Essence Body Other writers interpret this last term as a synonym for Dharmakaya or else as symbolizing the unity of the three Makransky whose Buddhism Embodied focuses on this eighth chapter of the AA writes that Haribhadra had read AA 8 as a systematic treatise whose purpose was to present a logically coherent model of Buddhahood His perspective owed much to Buddhist logic and Abhidharma traditions that had sought such systematic coherence Ratnakarasanti basing himself instead on the perspective on nondual yogic traditions specifically understood the terms svabhavikakaya and dharmakaya in AA 8 and throughout Mahayana literature to refer to a Buddha s own perspective on the nature of his attainment not to a human perspective on it Tsong kha pa influenced by the logico epistemological approach expressed in Haribhadra s work supported his interpretation of AA 8 Go ram pa drawing from a perspective framed by nondual yogic praxis supported Ratnakorasanti s call to return to Arya Vimuktisena s previous interpretation Tsong kha pa and Go ram pa s interpretations are closely related to their differing perspectives on a Buddha s awareness which was an explicit topic of discussion in Candrakirti s Madhyamikavatara upon which they both commented 28 For Makransky the controversy reflects a fundamental tension between immanent and transcendent aspects of Buddhism which is also reflected in debate over the Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma or gradual vs sudden enlightenment as at Samye In his view all these controversies stem from a fundamental difficulty in reconciling the transcendent nature of Buddhahood with the immanent nature of bodhicitta Ancillary Topics editObermiller describing the curriculum of Drepung s Bras spungs Go mang college reports that the monks studied the AA in a four year sequence after certain preliminary subjects and that each class also studied a prescribed secondary subject zur bkol for that year First class Introduction to the AA as well as the special topic the Twenty Sangha Second class Finished through the seventh topic of the first AA chapter the supplementary topic was dependent origination pratityasamutpada Third class Finished the first AA chapter and continued also studied the Yogacara theory of the storehouse consciousness alayavijnana and the difference between definitive and interpretable scripture as taught by Madhyamaka and Yogacara Fourth class Focused on the fourth chapter of the AA which is regarded as the most difficult supplemented with the teaching about the four degrees of trance in the sphere of Etherial Bodies and the four degrees of mystic absorption in the Immaterial Sphere The fourth year students would conclude with a celebratory feast Obermiller adds that All these studies are conducted in the form of lectures which are accompanied by controversies between the different groups of students according to the method of sequence and reason thal phyir 29 Twenty Sangha edit The subject of Twenty Sangha vimsatiprabhedasamgha dge dun nyi shu aims at schematizing the various spiritual levels through which one might pass on the way to enlightenment Here Sangha refers not so much to actual monks and nuns the term s most common meaning but to an idealized gradated schema of all the types of accomplished Buddhist The AA explains that it is the latter sense of Sangha which constitutes the object of Buddhist Refuge and in an especially cryptic verse offers the following subdivision into twenty types There are Twenty categories those with dull and sharp faculties those who have attained faith and vision those who are born from family to family those born with one interval those who are born in the intermediate state those who are born with effort and effortlessly those who go to Akanistha three who leap those who go to the upper limit of the world those who destroy attachment to the form realm those who pacify visual phenomena the bodily witness and the rhinoceros AA verses 1 23 24 James Apple translation 30 What does this mean Akanistha is the name of the highest Buddha field in the Form Realm inhabited by pious gods and tenth ground bodhisattvas The solitary nature of the rhinoceros made that animal a traditional symbol for pratyekabuddhas solitary Buddhas Beyond that the list is quite difficult to decipher The basic project seems to have been inspired by an earlier typology of four Stream Enterer Once Returner Non Returner Arhat which may be expanded to eight by distinguishing between approachers to zhugs pa or abiders at bras gnas each level Unfortunately the list of twenty does not correspond very well with this earlier one Furthermore Tibetan exegetical tradition estimates the actual number of types of Sangha including combinations and subdivisions to approach the tens of thousands 31 Such difficulties seem to account for much of the subject s popularity in debate See Apple s monograph on the subject Definitive and Interpretable Scriptures edit Tibetan tradition accepts the common Mahayana view that Sakyamuni Buddha the historical Buddha taught various kinds of teachings that do not seem to agree hence the various discrepancies between nikaya Buddhism and the Mahayana scriptures and following the Sandhinirmocana Sutra hold that the Buddha taught three grand cycles called Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma According to the sutra the first of these consists of Hinayana teachings the second of Mahdyamaka teachings and the third of Yogacara teachings The sutra seems to assume the third cycle to consist of the highest teachings However Tibetan tradition generally sides with Madhyamaka and therefore must read the sutra in this light The issue becomes more pressing since Tibetan Buddhist doctrine in fact combines elements from all three cycles and is therefore faced with the task of defending its authorities while simultaneously minimizing contradictions between them Form and Formless Realm Absorptions Trances editCommentarial literature editIn India edit The oldest extant commentary is that of Arya Vimuktisena Grol sde called Illuminating the Twenty Thousand A Commentary on the Ornament Pancavimsatisahasrikaprajnaparamitopadesasastrabhisamayalaṅ karavrtti nyi khri snang ba Written in a different style from its successors it makes frequent reference to Vasubandhu s Abhidharmakosasastra Even more influential have been the commentaries of Haribadra Seng ge Bzang Po especially his Blossomed Meaning Sphuṭartha grel pa don gsal and Light for the Ornament Abhisamayalaṅ karalokaprajnaparamitavyakhya rgyan snang Haribhadra also edited an abridgment of this work called the Short Commentary Sphuṭartha grel pa don gsal grel chung Altogether 21 ancient Indian AA commentaries are said to have been translated into Tibetan although it is possible to doubt the existence of some of the titles listed For example an ambiguous reference at the beginning of Haribhadra s prefatory homage is sometimes interpreted to mean that Asanga wrote an AA commentary If so the work is no longer extant Haribhadra also mentions an AA commentary by Vasubandhu entitled Padhati The Well Trodden Path and one by Bhadanta Vimuktisena the Intelligent Vimuktisena not to be confused with Arya the Noble Vimuktisena called Excellent Explanation of the Twenty Thousand Abhisamayalaṅkara varttika tshig le ur byas pa i rnam par drel pa However the commentaries by Arya Vimuktisena and Haribhadra are most fundamental to the subsequent commentarial tradition Sparham writes that practically speaking the Light Haribhadra s commentary is the more readable explanation It has fewer words to explain since it is based on the 8 000 line PP rather than the 25 000 line version Arya may well be the more profound thinker but Hari s is the better book This perhaps explains why Hari not Arya became the most influential Indian figure in the study of the Perfection of Wisdom in Tibet even though Arya is more admired It also perhaps explains why Hari s own abridgement of his Light is the basis of nearly every Tibetan Perfection of Wisdom commentary 32 Makransky on the other hand feels that Arya Vimuktasena s commentary better captures the AA s Yogacara assumptions In Tibet edit The AA was extremely influential in Tibet resulting in the production of numerous commentaries The first were those of Ngok Lotsawa or Ngok the Translator Rngog Lo tsa ba Bal ldan Shes rab 1059 1109 Mngon rtogs rgyan gyi don bsdus pa a summary Shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa i man ngag mngon par rtogs pa i rgyan gi tik chung a small commentary and an 8000 line Prajnaparamita summary called Yum brgyad stong pa i grel pa i don bsdus possibly a sub commentary to Haribhadra s Short Commentary Well known Nyingma commentaries on the AA include the sher phyin mngon rtogs rgyan gyi spyi don by Dza Patrul Rinpoche Orgyen Jikme Chokyi Wangpo which forms the whole of the sixth volume of his Collected Works and The Words of the Invincible Maitreya ma pham zhal lung by Popa Tulku Dongak Tenpe Nyima Sakya commentators on the AA include Go rams pa bsod nams seng ge four commentaries Sakya Chokden Shes ba Kun rig seven commentaries and treatises 33 and G Yag ston Sangs gyas dpal g yag phrug pa 1350 1414 The latter s work is King of Wish Fulfilling Jewels Mngon rtogs rgyan grel pa rin chen bsam phel dbang rgyal in eight volumes Kagyu commentaries on the AA include Padma Karpo s The Words of Jetsun Maitreya the Short and Clear commentary mngon rtogs rgyan gyi grel pa nyung ngu rnam gsal 34 by Shamar Konchok Yenlag Introducing the Lamp of the Three Worlds A commentary on the Ornament of Realization mngon rtogs rgyan rtsa grel gyi sbyor tika jig rten gsum sgron la jugs pa 35 by Karma ThinleypaTsongkhapa s teacher Don grub Rin chen encouraged him to study the five texts of Maitreya especially the AA 36 One of Tsongkhapa s major works Golden Garland gSer phreng is an AA commentary His disciple Gyaltsab rGyal tshab Dar ma Rin chen also wrote an AA subcommentary called Ornament of the Essence mngon rtongs rgyan gyi grel pa dor gsal rnam bshad snying po i rgyan In East Asia edit The AA seems not to have been translated into Chinese until the 1930s At this time the Chinese monk Fazun 法尊 an associate of Taixu 太虛 produced a translation entitled 現觀莊嚴論 for use by the Sino Tibetan Buddhist Institute 漢藏教理院 in Sichuan The institute s leaders sought to harmonize the Buddhisms of China and Tibet and improve relations between the Khampas and Han Chinese immigrants to Eastern Tibet Fazun had studied in the geshe program of the Drepung Bras spungs college grwa tshang of Loseling Blo gsal gling near Lhasa and possibly even obtained the degree 37 The institute failed to survive the Chinese Civil War In the West edit The AA seems not to have attracted the attention of Western scholars until the 1930s when Eugene Obermiller and Theodore Stcherbatsky produced an edition of the Sanskrit Tibetan text Obermiller a specialist in Yogacara and Tathagatagarbha literature also wrote a lengthy article on the AA The Doctrine of PP and was in the process of composing Analysis of the AA when he died While Obermiller approached the AA from the perspective of Monism which he associated with Vedanta his studies in the Buryat Mongolian monastery of Dgah ldan dar rgyas gling Chilutai exposed him to a more traditional hermeneutic framework Along with a translation of the AA or the three fifths of it which he finished he also provided a summary of Haribhadra s commentary for each section Edward Conze who was active from the 1950s to the 1970s devoted his career to PP translations and commentaries his AA translation being an early example An especially significant work was his translation of the PP Sutra in 25 000 lines which he organized according to the AA topics This required a certain amount of creative editing on his part for example his translation does not strictly follow the 25 000 line AA but incorporates text from other PP Sutras Like Obermiller Conze s writings betray a certain German idealistic influence hence his references to Union with the Absolute During the 2000s several Western scholars with experience as Buddhist monks living among the Tibetan exile community in Dharamsala who had participated in traditional geshe studies published articles and books related to the AA Their ranks included Gareth Sparham who translated the AA anew along with the commentaries of Arya Vimuktisena Haribhadra and Tsongkhapa and Geshe Georges Dreyfus whose writings describe the contemporary social context of AA study In addition studies and translations by Karl Brunnholzl and the Padmakara Translation Group have focused on non Gelug readings of this text which the earlier literature had neglected The AA has also received attention from several Western dharma centers notably those associated with the Foundation for the Preservation of the Mahayana Tradition whose FPMT Masters Program devotes several years to its study with the result that the AA has now been transmitted to the West not only as a text but as a living spiritual tradition Bibliography editAmano Hirofusa A Fragment from the Abhisamayalaṅkara namaprajnaparamitopadesa sastravṛtti alias Sphuṭartha of Haribhadra Annual Report of the Tohoku Research Institute of Buddhist Culture vol 3 1961 pp 1 25 in Japanese Amano Hirofusa A Study on the Abhisamaya Alaṅkara Karika Sastra Vṛtti Tokyo 1975 Amano Hirofusa On the Composite Purpose of the Abhisamayalaṅkara karika sastra Haribhadra s Way of Explaining Journal of Indian and Buddhist Studies vol 17 no 2 1969 pp 59 69 in Japanese Amano Hirofusa Sanskrit Manuscript of the Abhisamayalaṅkara vṛtti in six parts Bulletin of the Hijiyama Women s Junior College vol 7 1983 pp 1 15 Bulletin of the Faculty of Education of Shimane University vol 19 1985 pp 124 138 vol 20 1986 pp 67 86 vol 21 1987 pp 39 51 vol 22 1988 pp 10 25 vol 23 1989 pp 1 7 Apple James B Stairway to Nirvana A Study of the Twenty Samghas base on the works of Tsong Kha Pa SUNY Press 2008 Apple James B Twenty Varieties of the Samgha A Typology of Noble Beings Arya in Indo Tibetan Scholasticism in two parts Parts I permanent dead link and Part II permanent dead link Journal of Indian Philosophy 31 2003 503 592 and 32 2004 211 279 These are chapters of Apple s doctoral dissertation for the University of Wisconsin Madison which later evolved into the monograph Stairway to Nirvana see above Brunnholzl Karl translator Gone Beyond The Prajnaparamita Sutras The Ornament of Clear Realization and Its Commentaries in the Tibetan Kagyu Tradition in two volumes Ithaca Snow Lion 2011 and 2012 Conze Edward The Prajnaparamita Literature Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal Publishers 2000 1978 See pp 101 120 Conze Edward translator and editor The Large Sutra on Perfect Wisdom With the Divisions of the Abhisamayalankara Univ of California Press 1985 Conze Edward translator Abhisamayalankara Introduction and Translation from Original Text With Sanskrit Tibetan Index Serie Orienta Rome n d actually 1954 Dreyfus Georges The Sound of Two Hands Clapping The Education of a Tibetan Buddhist Monk University of California Press 2003 Ch 8 pp 174 182 of this edition discusses the role of the Abhisamayalankara in the Tibetan monastic curriculum Dreyfus Georges Tibetan scholastic education and the role of soteriology In Paul Williams ed Buddhism Critical Concepts in Religious Studies vol VI pp 32 57 Originally published in the Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies vol 20 no 1 1997 pp 31 62 This is an early and extended version of material later incorporated into The Sound of Two Hands Clapping Dreyfus s discussion of the Abisamayalankara begins on pp 46 and continues to the end of the article Jackson David P ed Rong ston on the Prajnaparamita Philosophy of the Abhisamayalaṃkara His Sub commentary on Haribhadra s Sphuṭartha A Facsimile Reproduction of the Earliest Known Blockprint Edition from an Exemplar Preserved in the Tibet House New Delhi Nagata Bunshodo Kyoto 1988 Makransky John J Buddhism Embodied Sources of Controversy in India and Tibet SUNY Press 1997 Focuses on the eighth chapter of the AA Instead of three or four bodies kaya Makransky prefers to speak of embodiments Obermiller E ugene Analysis of the Abhisamayalamkara Asian Humanities Press 2003 Original publication London Luzac amp Co 1936 Obermiller E The Doctrine of Prajna Paramita as Exposed in the Abhisamayalamkara of Maitreya Canon Publications 1984 Originally published in Acta Orientalia 11 1932 33 pp 1 133 334 354 Obermiller E amp T heodore I Shcherbatskoi Abhisamahalankara Prajnaparamita Upadesa Sastra The Work of Bodhisattva Maitreya Sri Satguru Publications 1992 Sparham Gareth translator Abhisamayalamkara with Vrtti and Aloka in four volumes Jain Publishing Company 2006 vol 1 and 2008 vol 2 Sparham Gareth editor Golden Garland of Eloquence vols 1 and 2 Jain Publishing Company 2008 Translation of an AA commentary by Tsongkhapa Toh Sze Gee translator The Explanation Ornament of the Essence along with i the Root Text of theTreatise of Quintessential Instructions of the Perfection of Wisdom Ornament for Clear Realizationand ii the Commentary Clear Meaning by Gyaltsab Darma Rinchen FPMT Masters Program Translation 2009 Available from FPMT Education Services References edit See ch 9 of Makransky a b Sparham AA vol 1 p xiv Makransky p 129 Among them are Edward Conze The PP Literature p 104 and James Apple Stairway to Nirvana p 49 From his Preface to the Large Sutrap x From his AA translation p 10 Sparham AA vol 1 p xx Conze The PP Literature p 104 Makransky p 10 In his Overview cited below second sentence Dreyfus Georges B J 2003 The Sound of Two Hands Clapping The Education of a Tibetan Buddhist Monk pp 175 176 University of California Press Sparham AA vol 1 pp xiii xiv Conze The PP Literature pp 104 105 Sparham AA vol 1 p xiii From pp 3 4 of an oral commentary given in Pomaia Italy 1998 Transcript reprinted by the Istituto Lama Tsong Khapa Pomaia 2008 Conze The PP Literature p 101 Conze The PP Literature pp 102 103 p Obermiller Analysis of the AA ii iii This is also a main point of his article The Doctrine of PP See Alexander Berzin s The Five Pathway Minds The Five Paths Advanced Presentation par 3 The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogacara in Indian Mahayana Buddhism Leiden Brill 1991 p 72 The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogacara in Indian Mahayana Buddhism Leiden Brill 1991 p 73 Makransky p 10 According to Geshe Jampa Gyatso the eighth category is the resultant truth body whereas the eighth clear realization is the resultant exalted wisdom truth body This reflects a Gelug understanding From p 1 of a 1998 oral commentary printed in 2008 and privately circulated by the Istituto Lama Tsong Khapa in Pomaia Italy The Prajnaparamita Literature p 105 Sparham AA vol 1 p xviii Obermiller Analysis of the AA p v Berzin Overview subheading entitled The Three Sets of Realized Awareness Two Hands Clapping p 176 Obermiller Analysis of the AA p 6 Makransky pp 15 18 Obermiller Analysis of the AA p v vii Apple Twenty Varieties of the Sangha pt 1 p 514 Apple Stairway to Nirvana p 9 Sparham AA vol 1 p xxvi See David Jackson Kyoto 1988 zhwa dmar dkon mchog yan lag mngon rtogs rgyan gyi grel pa nyung ngu rnam gsal Sarnath Vajra Vidhya Institute Library p 360 ISBN 81 89017 08 X karma phrin las mngon rtogs rgyan rtsa grel gyi sbyor tika jig rten gsum sgron la jugs pa Sarnath Vajra Vidhya Institute Library p 390 ISBN 81 89017 04 7 Apple Stairway to Nirvana p 39 Chibs edu tw Archived October 15 2006 at the Wayback Machine For background on this school see Gray Tuttle Tibetan Buddhists in the Making of Modern China Columbia UP 2005 Sources editConze Edward 1954 Abhisamayalankara Introduction and Translation from Original Text With Sanskrit Tibetan Index PDF Rome Istituto italiano per il Medio ed Estremo Oriente Archived from the original PDF on 2006 09 24 Maitreyanatha Sparham Gareth trans 2006 Abhisamayalamkara with Vrtti and Aloka Vol 1 Jain Publishing ISBN 0 89581 991 0 First Abhisamaya with the Vrtti of Arya Vimuktisena and the Aloka of Haribhadra Maitreyanatha Sparham Gareth trans 2008 Abhisamayalamkara with Vrtti and Aloka Vol 2 Jain Publishing ISBN 0 89581 992 9 Second and Third Abhisamayas with the Vrtti of Arya Vimuktisena and the Aloka of Haribhadra Maitreyanatha Obermiller E Stcherbatsky Th 1929 Abhisamayalankara Prajnaparamita Upadesa Sastra The Work of Bodhisattva Maitreya Sri Satguru Publications reprint published 1992 ISBN 81 7030 304 4 Makransky John J 1997 Buddhahood Embodied Sources of Controversy in India and Tibet SUNY ISBN 0 7914 3431 1 a study of interpretations of the Abhisamayalankara Obermiller Eugene Analysis of the Abhisamayalamkara Asian Humanities Press ISBN 0 89581 940 6 reprint edition of 1936 publication Thrangu Rinpoche 1999 The Ornament of Clear Realization A Commentary on the Prajnaparamita of the Maitreya Buddha Namo Buddha Seminar ASIN B000OZ6VC2 Tsong kha pa Sparham Gareth trans 2008 Golden Garland of Eloquence Vol 1 Jain Publishing ISBN 0 89581 865 5 First Abhisamaya the first part of Tsongkhapa s legs bshad gser phreng commentary on the AA Tsong kha pa Sparham Gareth trans 2008 Golden Garland of Eloquence Vol 2 Jain Publishing ISBN 0 89581 865 5 Second and Third Abhisamaya External links editBerzin Alexander The Five Paths February 2002 revised April 2006 Berzin Alexander The Five Pathway Minds The Five Paths Advanced Presentation March 2004 revised April 2006 Berzin Alexander Overview of the Eight Sets of Realizations in Abhisamayamankara February 2002 revised July 2006 Rigpa Shedra wiki Abhisamayalankara Shenga Khenchen Prologue to the Abhisamayalankara Tsondru Khenpo The Seventy Points The Words of Jikme Chokyi Wangpo A Commentary Presenting the Subject Matter of the Great Treatise the Abhisamayalankara Tsulga Geshe Oral Commentaries on the Ornament of Clear Realizations and its Seventy Topics given to the Kurukulla Center Scroll about halfway down the page for audio files In Chinese edit 現觀莊嚴論羅時憲 現觀莊嚴論略釋講義 Concise Translation and Course Notes on the Abhisamayalankara Hong Kong Dharmalakshana Buddhist Institute 佛教法相學會 2005 Includes traditional permanent dead link and simplified character versions free as well as audio lectures in the form of MP3 files Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Abhisamayalankara amp oldid 1180564417, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.