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Avidyā (Buddhism)

Avidyā (Sanskrit: अविद्या; Pāli: अविज्जा, Avijjā; Tibetan phonetic: ma rigpa) in Buddhist literature is commonly translated as "ignorance".[1][2][3] The concept refers to ignorance or misconceptions about the nature of metaphysical reality, in particular about the impermanence and anatta doctrines about reality.[2][4][5] It is the root cause of Dukkha (suffering, pain, unsatisfactoriness),[6] and asserted as the first link, in Buddhist phenomenology, of a process that leads to repeated birth.[7]

Translations of
avidyā
Englishignorance, misconceptions
Sanskritavidyā
(Dev: अविद्या)
Paliavijjā
(Dev: अविज्जा)
Burmeseအဝိဇ္ဇာ
(MLCTS: əweɪʔzà)
Chinese無明
(Pinyin: wú míng)
Japanese無明
(mumyō)
Khmerអវិជ្ជា
(UNGEGN: âvĭchchéa; ALA-LC: avijjā; IPA: [ʔaʋicciə])
Korean(Hangeul) 무명
(Hanja) 無明

(RR: mu myeong)
Sinhalaඅවිද්‍යාව
Tibetanམ་རིག་པ
(Wylie: ma rig pa;
THL: ma rigpa
)
Thaiอวิชชา
(RTGSawitcha)
Vietnamesevô minh
Glossary of Buddhism

Avidyā is mentioned within the Buddhist teachings as ignorance or misunderstanding in various contexts:

  • Four Noble Truths[8]
  • The first link in the twelve links of dependent origination
  • One of the three poisons within the Mahayana Buddhist tradition
  • One of the six root kleshas within the Mahayana Abhidharma teachings
  • One of the ten fetters in the Theravada tradition
  • Equivalent to moha within the Theravada Abhidharma teachings

Within the context of the twelve links of dependent origination, avidya is typically symbolized by a person who is blind or wearing a blindfold.[citation needed]

Etymology

Avidyā is a Vedic Sanskrit word, and is a compound of a- prefix and vidya, meaning "not vidya". The word vidya is derived from the Sanskrit root vid, which means "to see, to knowingly-see, to know".[9] Therefore, avidya means to "not see, not know". The vid*-related terms appear extensively in the Rigveda and other Vedas.[9]

In Vedic literature, avidya refers to "ignorance, spiritual ignorance, illusion"; in early Buddhist texts, states Monier-Williams, it means "ignorance with non-existence".[10]

The word is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *weid-, meaning "to see" or "to know". It is a cognate with the Latin verb vidēre ("to see") and English wit.

Overview

Avidya is explained in different ways or on different levels within different Buddhist teachings or traditions. On the most fundamental level, it is ignorance or misunderstanding of the nature of reality; [a] more specifically about the nature of not-Self and dependent origination doctrines.[2][5][13] Avidya is not lack of information, states Peter Harvey, but a "more deep seated misperception of reality".[8] Gethin calls Avidya as 'positive misconception', not mere absence of knowledge.[14] It is a key concept in Buddhism, wherein Avidya about the nature of reality, rather than sin, is considered the basic root of Dukkha.[15] Removal of this Avidya leads to overcoming of Dukkha.[16]

While Avidyā found in Buddhism and other Indian philosophies is often translated as "ignorance", states Alex Wayman, this is a mistranslation because it means more than ignorance. He suggests the term "unwisdom" to be a better rendition.[17] The term includes not only ignorance out of darkness, but also obscuration, misconceptions, mistaking illusion to be reality or impermanent to be permanent or suffering to be bliss or non-self to be self (delusions).[17] Incorrect knowledge is another form of Avidya, states Wayman.[17]

Ignorance

Monks, but when there is the attitude 'I am',
there there is descent of the
five sense-faculties of eye.... body.
Monks, there is the mind organ,
there are mental objects,
there is the element of knowledge;
monks, the uninstructed ordinary person,
touched by feeling,
born of stimulation by spiritual ignorance [Avijja],
thinks 'I am'.

Samyutta Nikaya III.46[18]

In other contexts, avidya includes not knowing or not understanding the nature of phenomena as impermanent, the Four Noble Truths,[8] other Buddhist doctrines, or the path to end suffering.[19][20] Sonam Rinchen states Avidya in the context of the twelve links, that "[Ignorance] is the opposite of the understanding that the person or other phenomena lack intrinsic existence. Those who are affected by this ignorance create actions which precipitate them into further worldly existence."[21] Not understanding the Four Noble Truths, or its implications, is also Avidya.[22]

In Buddhist traditions

Avidya appears as a major item of discussion in two doctrines about the nature of reality, in various Buddhist traditions.[23][24] One relates to the Anatta (Anatman) doctrine, that is ignorance or misconceptions about "Self", when in reality there is only non-Self according to Buddhism.[25][26][27] The second relates to Anicca doctrine, that is ignorance or misconceptions about "permanence", when the nature of reality is impermanence.[28][29][30]

Theravada

Bhikkhu Bodhi states that Avidya is an important part of the Theravada Abhidharma teachings about dependent arising about conditions that sustain the wheel of birth and death. One such condition is the karmic formations that arise from ignorance. In other words, states Bodhi, ignorance (avijja) obscures "perception of the true nature of things just as a cataract obscures perception of visible objects". In the Suttanta literature, this ignorance refers to the non-knowledge of the Four Noble Truths. In the Abhidharma literature, in addition to the Four Noble Truths, it is the non-knowledge of one's 'past pre-natal lives' and 'post-mortem future lives' and of dependent arising.[31]

Mahayana

The Mahayana tradition considers ignorance about the nature of reality and immemorial past lives to be a primordial force, which can only be broken through the insight of Emptiness (sunyata).[32] However, compared to other Buddhist traditions, states Jens Braarvig, Avidyā is not so much emphasized, instead the emphasis on "construing an illusory reality" based on conceptualization when the ultimate reality is Emptiness.[33]

Avidya is the greatest impurity and the primary cause of suffering, rebirth. The insight into Emptiness, state Garfield and Edelglass, that is the "lack of inherent nature of all phenomena, including the self, cuts the impurities", an insight into Emptiness yields full awakening.[34]

Vajrayana

The Vajrayana tradition considers ignorance as fetters of bondage into samsara, and its teachings have focussed on a Tantric path under the guidance of a teacher, to remove Avidya and achieve liberation in a single lifetime.[35]

Avidyā is identified as the first of the twelve links of dependent origination (twelve nidanas)—a sequence of links that describe why a being reincarnates and remains bound within the samsara, a cycle of repeated births and deaths in six realms of existence.[36] The twelve nidanas are an application of the Buddhist concept of pratītyasamutpāda (dependent origination). This theory, presented in Samyutta Nikaya II.2–4 and Digha Nikaya II.55–63, asserts that rebirth, re-aging and re-death ultimately arise through a series of twelve links or nidanas ultimately rooted in Avidyā, and the twelfth step Jarāmaraṇa triggers the dependent origination of Avidyā, recreating an unending cycle of dukkha (suffering, pain, unsatisfactoriness).[36][37]

Removing avidya

Avidya or ignorance can be eliminated directly by cultivating its opposite viz. Knowledge, wisdom and perception, where the above refer to the true knowledge and perception of reality. The various ways to remove Avidya is by learning from Guru/teacher who knows or from books and scriptures. Also Avidya can be removed through Meditation or more precisely practice of Dhyana and Yoga. Through practice of Dharma and righteousness Avidya gets removed. Unrighteous karma increases Ignorance while Ignorance perpetuates Adharma.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Avidya can be defined on different levels; for example, it can be defined as a mis-perception of the nature of reality, or as not understanding the four noble truths. For example:
    • Jeffrey Hopkins states: "[Ignorance] isn't just an inability to apprehend the truth but an active misapprehension of the status of oneself and all other objects—one's own mind or body, other people, and so forth. It is the conception or assumption that phenomena exist in a far more concrete way than they actually do. Based on this misapprehension of the status of persons and things, we are drawn into afflictive desire (raga) and hatred (dvesha)..."[11]
    • Sonam Rinchen states: "Every action leaves its imprint on the mind, and later craving and grasping activate the imprint to bring about its result. Underlying this kind of action is our ignorance, namely our innate misconception of the self, the root of all our troubles.[12]

References

  1. ^ Keown 2013, p. 73.
  2. ^ a b c Trainor 2004, p. 74.
  3. ^ Robert Buswell & Donald Lopez 2013, pp. 1070.
  4. ^ Dan Lusthaus (2014). Buddhist Phenomenology: A Philosophical Investigation of Yogacara Buddhism and the Ch'eng Wei-shih Lun. Routledge. pp. 533–534. ISBN 978-1-317-97342-3.
  5. ^ a b Conze 2013, pp. 39–40.
  6. ^ Robert Buswell & Donald Lopez 2013, p. 86.
  7. ^ David Webster (31 December 2004). The Philosophy of Desire in the Buddhist Pali Canon. Routledge. p. 206. ISBN 978-1-134-27941-8.
  8. ^ a b c Harvey 1990, p. 67.
  9. ^ a b Monier Monier-Williams (1872). A Sanskrit-English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. p. 918.
  10. ^ Monier Monier-Williams (1872). A Sanskrit-English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. p. 96.
  11. ^ Dalai Lama (1992), p. 4 (from the Introduction by Jeffrey Hopkins)
  12. ^ Sonam Rinchen (2006), p. 14.
  13. ^ Williams & Tribe 2000, pp. 66–67, Quote: From this perspective Not-Self and dependent origination together come to form the two pillars of the final gnosis (vidya) which is the antidote to ignorance (avidya)..
  14. ^ Gethin 1998, p. 150.
  15. ^ Harvey 1990, pp. 65–68.
  16. ^ Edelglass 2009, p. 171.
  17. ^ a b c Alex Wayman (1957). "The Meaning of Unwisdom (Avidya)". Philosophy East and West. 7 (1/2): 21–25. doi:10.2307/1396830. JSTOR 1396830.
  18. ^ Peter Harvey 2013, p. 40.
  19. ^ Johannes Bronkhorst (2009), Buddhist Teaching in India, Simon & Schuster, ISBN 0-861715667, pages 40-43
  20. ^ Peter Harvey 2013, pp. 5, 40, 134–137.
  21. ^ Sonam Rinchen (2006), p. 51.
  22. ^ Ajahn Sucitto (2010), Kindle Locations 1125-1132.
  23. ^ Winston L. King (2013). Buddhism and Christianity: Some Bridges of Understanding. Routledge. pp. 186–192. ISBN 978-1-134-56555-9.
  24. ^ Joseph Mitsuo Kitagawa; Frank E. Reynolds; Theodore M. Ludwig (1980). Transitions and Transformations in the History of Religions: Essays in Honor of Joseph M. Kitagawa. BRILL Academic. pp. 56–58. ISBN 90-04-06112-6., Quote: Suffering describes the condition of samsaric (this worldly) existence that arises from actions generated by ignorance of anatta and anicca. The doctrines of no-self and impermanence are thus the keystones of dhammic order."
  25. ^ Gethin 1998, pp. 146–159, 243.
  26. ^ Harvey 1990, p. 72, 125-126, 144.
  27. ^ Ian Charles Harris (1991). The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism. BRILL Academic. pp. 138–141. ISBN 90-04-09448-2.
  28. ^ Gethin 1998, pp. 73–75.
  29. ^ Harvey 1990, p. 68.
  30. ^ Ian Charles Harris (1991). The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogācāra in Indian Mahāyāna Buddhism. BRILL Academic. pp. 174–178. ISBN 90-04-09448-2.
  31. ^ A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma: The Abhidhammattha Sangaha, Bhikkhu Bodhi (2003), p. 295
  32. ^ Bruno Petzold (1995). The Classification of Buddhism. Otto Harrassowitz Verlag. pp. 259–260, 849. ISBN 978-3-447-03373-2.
  33. ^ Guttorm Fløistad (2012). Philosophie asiatique/Asian philosophy. Springer. p. 201. ISBN 978-94-011-2510-9.
  34. ^ Jay L. Garfield; William Edelglass (2011). The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy. Oxford University Press. p. 288. ISBN 978-0-19-532899-8.
  35. ^ Trainor 2004, p. 162.
  36. ^ a b Peter Harvey (2015). Steven M. Emmanuel (ed.). A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 50–60. ISBN 978-1-119-14466-3.
  37. ^ F Harold Smith (2013). The Buddhist Way of Life: Its Philosophy and History. Routledge. pp. 37–38. ISBN 978-1-135-02929-6.

Sources

  • Robert Buswell; Donald Lopez (2013), Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, ISBN 9780691157863
  • Conze, Edward (2013), Buddhist Thought in India: Three Phases of Buddhist Philosophy, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-134-54231-4
  • Edelglass, William; et al. (2009), Buddhist Philosophy: Essential Readings, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-532817-2
  • Gethin, Rupert (1998), Foundations of Buddhism, Oxford University Press
  • Harvey, Peter (1990), An Introduction to Buddhism, Cambridge University Press
  • Peter Harvey (2013), The Selfless Mind: Personality, Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism, Routledge, ISBN 978-1-136-78329-6
  • Keown, Damien (2013). Buddhism: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-966383-5.
  • Trainor, Kevin (2004), Buddhism: The Illustrated Guide, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-517398-7
  • Williams, Paul; Tribe, Anthony (2000), Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition, Routledge, ISBN 0-415207010
  • Ajahn Sucitto (2010). Turning the Wheel of Truth: Commentary on the Buddha's First Teaching. Shambhala.
  • Bhikkhu Bodhi (2003), A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma, Pariyatti Publishing
  • Chogyam Trungpa (1972). "Karma and Rebirth: The Twelve Nidanas, by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche." Karma and the Twelve Nidanas, A Sourcebook for the Shambhala School of Buddhist Studies. Vajradhatu Publications.
  • Dalai Lama (1992). The Meaning of Life, translated and edited by Jeffrey Hopkins, Boston: Wisdom.
  • Mingyur Rinpoche (2007). The Joy of Living: Unlocking the Secret and Science of Happiness. Harmony. Kindle Edition.
  • Sonam Rinchen (2006). How Karma Works: The Twelve Links of Dependent Arising, Snow Lion.

Further reading

  • Avijjā and Āsava, Surendranath Dasgupta, 1940
  • Daniel Goleman: Vital Lies, Simple Truths: The Psychology of Self Deception (1985) Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-0-7475-3413-6
  • Avijja Sutta Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Preceded by Twelve Nidānas
Avidyā
Succeeded by

avidyā, buddhism, similar, concept, hindu, thought, avidya, hinduism, avidyā, sanskrit, अव, pāli, अव, avijjā, tibetan, phonetic, rigpa, buddhist, literature, commonly, translated, ignorance, concept, refers, ignorance, misconceptions, about, nature, metaphysic. For a similar concept in Hindu thought see Avidya Hinduism Avidya Sanskrit अव द य Pali अव ज ज Avijja Tibetan phonetic ma rigpa in Buddhist literature is commonly translated as ignorance 1 2 3 The concept refers to ignorance or misconceptions about the nature of metaphysical reality in particular about the impermanence and anatta doctrines about reality 2 4 5 It is the root cause of Dukkha suffering pain unsatisfactoriness 6 and asserted as the first link in Buddhist phenomenology of a process that leads to repeated birth 7 Translations ofavidyaEnglishignorance misconceptionsSanskritavidya Dev अव द य Paliavijja Dev अव ज ज Burmeseအဝ ဇ ဇ MLCTS eweɪʔza Chinese無明 Pinyin wu ming Japanese無明 mumyō Khmerអវ ជ ជ UNGEGN avĭchchea ALA LC avijja IPA ʔaʋiccie Korean Hangeul 무명 Hanja 無明 RR mu myeong Sinhalaඅව ද ය වTibetanམ ར ག པ Wylie ma rig pa THL ma rigpa Thaixwichcha RTGS awitcha Vietnamesevo minhGlossary of BuddhismAvidya is mentioned within the Buddhist teachings as ignorance or misunderstanding in various contexts Four Noble Truths 8 The first link in the twelve links of dependent origination One of the three poisons within the Mahayana Buddhist tradition One of the six root kleshas within the Mahayana Abhidharma teachings One of the ten fetters in the Theravada tradition Equivalent to moha within the Theravada Abhidharma teachingsWithin the context of the twelve links of dependent origination avidya is typically symbolized by a person who is blind or wearing a blindfold citation needed Contents 1 Etymology 2 Overview 3 In Buddhist traditions 3 1 Theravada 3 2 Mahayana 3 3 Vajrayana 4 Removing avidya 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further readingEtymology EditAvidya is a Vedic Sanskrit word and is a compound of a prefix and vidya meaning not vidya The word vidya is derived from the Sanskrit root vid which means to see to knowingly see to know 9 Therefore avidya means to not see not know The vid related terms appear extensively in the Rigveda and other Vedas 9 In Vedic literature avidya refers to ignorance spiritual ignorance illusion in early Buddhist texts states Monier Williams it means ignorance with non existence 10 The word is derived from the Proto Indo European root weid meaning to see or to know It is a cognate with the Latin verb videre to see and English wit Overview EditAvidya is explained in different ways or on different levels within different Buddhist teachings or traditions On the most fundamental level it is ignorance or misunderstanding of the nature of reality a more specifically about the nature of not Self and dependent origination doctrines 2 5 13 Avidya is not lack of information states Peter Harvey but a more deep seated misperception of reality 8 Gethin calls Avidya as positive misconception not mere absence of knowledge 14 It is a key concept in Buddhism wherein Avidya about the nature of reality rather than sin is considered the basic root of Dukkha 15 Removal of this Avidya leads to overcoming of Dukkha 16 While Avidya found in Buddhism and other Indian philosophies is often translated as ignorance states Alex Wayman this is a mistranslation because it means more than ignorance He suggests the term unwisdom to be a better rendition 17 The term includes not only ignorance out of darkness but also obscuration misconceptions mistaking illusion to be reality or impermanent to be permanent or suffering to be bliss or non self to be self delusions 17 Incorrect knowledge is another form of Avidya states Wayman 17 Ignorance Monks but when there is the attitude I am there there is descent of the five sense faculties of eye body Monks there is the mind organ there are mental objects there is the element of knowledge monks the uninstructed ordinary person touched by feeling born of stimulation by spiritual ignorance Avijja thinks I am Samyutta Nikaya III 46 18 In other contexts avidya includes not knowing or not understanding the nature of phenomena as impermanent the Four Noble Truths 8 other Buddhist doctrines or the path to end suffering 19 20 Sonam Rinchen states Avidya in the context of the twelve links that Ignorance is the opposite of the understanding that the person or other phenomena lack intrinsic existence Those who are affected by this ignorance create actions which precipitate them into further worldly existence 21 Not understanding the Four Noble Truths or its implications is also Avidya 22 In Buddhist traditions EditAvidya appears as a major item of discussion in two doctrines about the nature of reality in various Buddhist traditions 23 24 One relates to the Anatta Anatman doctrine that is ignorance or misconceptions about Self when in reality there is only non Self according to Buddhism 25 26 27 The second relates to Anicca doctrine that is ignorance or misconceptions about permanence when the nature of reality is impermanence 28 29 30 Theravada Edit The 12 Nidanas Ignorance Formations Consciousness Name amp Form Six Sense Bases Contact Feeling Craving Clinging Becoming Birth Old Age amp Death Bhikkhu Bodhi states that Avidya is an important part of the Theravada Abhidharma teachings about dependent arising about conditions that sustain the wheel of birth and death One such condition is the karmic formations that arise from ignorance In other words states Bodhi ignorance avijja obscures perception of the true nature of things just as a cataract obscures perception of visible objects In the Suttanta literature this ignorance refers to the non knowledge of the Four Noble Truths In the Abhidharma literature in addition to the Four Noble Truths it is the non knowledge of one s past pre natal lives and post mortem future lives and of dependent arising 31 Mahayana Edit See also Svatantrika Prasaṅgika distinction Ignorance The Object to be Negated The Mahayana tradition considers ignorance about the nature of reality and immemorial past lives to be a primordial force which can only be broken through the insight of Emptiness sunyata 32 However compared to other Buddhist traditions states Jens Braarvig Avidya is not so much emphasized instead the emphasis on construing an illusory reality based on conceptualization when the ultimate reality is Emptiness 33 Avidya is the greatest impurity and the primary cause of suffering rebirth The insight into Emptiness state Garfield and Edelglass that is the lack of inherent nature of all phenomena including the self cuts the impurities an insight into Emptiness yields full awakening 34 Vajrayana Edit Main article Twelve Nidanas The Vajrayana tradition considers ignorance as fetters of bondage into samsara and its teachings have focussed on a Tantric path under the guidance of a teacher to remove Avidya and achieve liberation in a single lifetime 35 Avidya is identified as the first of the twelve links of dependent origination twelve nidanas a sequence of links that describe why a being reincarnates and remains bound within the samsara a cycle of repeated births and deaths in six realms of existence 36 The twelve nidanas are an application of the Buddhist concept of pratityasamutpada dependent origination This theory presented in Samyutta Nikaya II 2 4 and Digha Nikaya II 55 63 asserts that rebirth re aging and re death ultimately arise through a series of twelve links or nidanas ultimately rooted in Avidya and the twelfth step Jaramaraṇa triggers the dependent origination of Avidya recreating an unending cycle of dukkha suffering pain unsatisfactoriness 36 37 Removing avidya EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Avidya or ignorance can be eliminated directly by cultivating its opposite viz Knowledge wisdom and perception where the above refer to the true knowledge and perception of reality The various ways to remove Avidya is by learning from Guru teacher who knows or from books and scriptures Also Avidya can be removed through Meditation or more precisely practice of Dhyana and Yoga Through practice of Dharma and righteousness Avidya gets removed Unrighteous karma increases Ignorance while Ignorance perpetuates Adharma See also EditAvidya Hinduism Kleshas Buddhism Maya illusion Mental factors Buddhism Tanha for a complementary root of suffering in Buddhism Three poisons Buddhism Twelve NidanasNotes Edit Avidya can be defined on different levels for example it can be defined as a mis perception of the nature of reality or as not understanding the four noble truths For example Jeffrey Hopkins states Ignorance isn t just an inability to apprehend the truth but an active misapprehension of the status of oneself and all other objects one s own mind or body other people and so forth It is the conception or assumption that phenomena exist in a far more concrete way than they actually do Based on this misapprehension of the status of persons and things we are drawn into afflictive desire raga and hatred dvesha 11 Sonam Rinchen states Every action leaves its imprint on the mind and later craving and grasping activate the imprint to bring about its result Underlying this kind of action is our ignorance namely our innate misconception of the self the root of all our troubles 12 References Edit Keown 2013 p 73 a b c Trainor 2004 p 74 Robert Buswell amp Donald Lopez 2013 pp 1070 Dan Lusthaus 2014 Buddhist Phenomenology A Philosophical Investigation of Yogacara Buddhism and the Ch eng Wei shih Lun Routledge pp 533 534 ISBN 978 1 317 97342 3 a b Conze 2013 pp 39 40 Robert Buswell amp Donald Lopez 2013 p 86 David Webster 31 December 2004 The Philosophy of Desire in the Buddhist Pali Canon Routledge p 206 ISBN 978 1 134 27941 8 a b c Harvey 1990 p 67 a b Monier Monier Williams 1872 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford University Press p 918 Monier Monier Williams 1872 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Oxford University Press p 96 Dalai Lama 1992 p 4 from the Introduction by Jeffrey Hopkins Sonam Rinchen 2006 p 14 Williams amp Tribe 2000 pp 66 67 Quote From this perspective Not Self and dependent origination together come to form the two pillars of the final gnosis vidya which is the antidote to ignorance avidya Gethin 1998 p 150 Harvey 1990 pp 65 68 Edelglass 2009 p 171 a b c Alex Wayman 1957 The Meaning of Unwisdom Avidya Philosophy East and West 7 1 2 21 25 doi 10 2307 1396830 JSTOR 1396830 Peter Harvey 2013 p 40 Johannes Bronkhorst 2009 Buddhist Teaching in India Simon amp Schuster ISBN 0 861715667 pages 40 43 Peter Harvey 2013 pp 5 40 134 137 Sonam Rinchen 2006 p 51 Ajahn Sucitto 2010 Kindle Locations 1125 1132 Winston L King 2013 Buddhism and Christianity Some Bridges of Understanding Routledge pp 186 192 ISBN 978 1 134 56555 9 Joseph Mitsuo Kitagawa Frank E Reynolds Theodore M Ludwig 1980 Transitions and Transformations in the History of Religions Essays in Honor of Joseph M Kitagawa BRILL Academic pp 56 58 ISBN 90 04 06112 6 Quote Suffering describes the condition of samsaric this worldly existence that arises from actions generated by ignorance of anatta and anicca The doctrines of no self and impermanence are thus the keystones of dhammic order Gethin 1998 pp 146 159 243 Harvey 1990 p 72 125 126 144 Ian Charles Harris 1991 The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogacara in Indian Mahayana Buddhism BRILL Academic pp 138 141 ISBN 90 04 09448 2 Gethin 1998 pp 73 75 Harvey 1990 p 68 Ian Charles Harris 1991 The Continuity of Madhyamaka and Yogacara in Indian Mahayana Buddhism BRILL Academic pp 174 178 ISBN 90 04 09448 2 A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma The Abhidhammattha Sangaha Bhikkhu Bodhi 2003 p 295 Bruno Petzold 1995 The Classification of Buddhism Otto Harrassowitz Verlag pp 259 260 849 ISBN 978 3 447 03373 2 Guttorm Floistad 2012 Philosophie asiatique Asian philosophy Springer p 201 ISBN 978 94 011 2510 9 Jay L Garfield William Edelglass 2011 The Oxford Handbook of World Philosophy Oxford University Press p 288 ISBN 978 0 19 532899 8 Trainor 2004 p 162 a b Peter Harvey 2015 Steven M Emmanuel ed A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy John Wiley amp Sons pp 50 60 ISBN 978 1 119 14466 3 F Harold Smith 2013 The Buddhist Way of Life Its Philosophy and History Routledge pp 37 38 ISBN 978 1 135 02929 6 Sources Edit Robert Buswell Donald Lopez 2013 Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton NJ Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691157863 Conze Edward 2013 Buddhist Thought in India Three Phases of Buddhist Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 54231 4 Edelglass William et al 2009 Buddhist Philosophy Essential Readings Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 532817 2 Gethin Rupert 1998 Foundations of Buddhism Oxford University Press Harvey Peter 1990 An Introduction to Buddhism Cambridge University Press Peter Harvey 2013 The Selfless Mind Personality Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 78329 6 Keown Damien 2013 Buddhism A Very Short Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966383 5 Trainor Kevin 2004 Buddhism The Illustrated Guide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517398 7 Williams Paul Tribe Anthony 2000 Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition Routledge ISBN 0 415207010 Ajahn Sucitto 2010 Turning the Wheel of Truth Commentary on the Buddha s First Teaching Shambhala Bhikkhu Bodhi 2003 A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma Pariyatti Publishing Chogyam Trungpa 1972 Karma and Rebirth The Twelve Nidanas by Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche Karma and the Twelve Nidanas A Sourcebook for the Shambhala School of Buddhist Studies Vajradhatu Publications Dalai Lama 1992 The Meaning of Life translated and edited by Jeffrey Hopkins Boston Wisdom Mingyur Rinpoche 2007 The Joy of Living Unlocking the Secret and Science of Happiness Harmony Kindle Edition Sonam Rinchen 2006 How Karma Works The Twelve Links of Dependent Arising Snow Lion Further reading EditAvijja and Asava Surendranath Dasgupta 1940 Daniel Goleman Vital Lies Simple Truths The Psychology of Self Deception 1985 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 7475 3413 6 Avijja Sutta Translated from the Pali by Thanissaro BhikkhuPreceded byJaramaraṇa Twelve NidanasAvidya Succeeded bySaṃskara Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Avidya Buddhism amp oldid 1116957308, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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