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Early Buddhist schools

The early Buddhist schools are those schools into which the Buddhist monastic saṅgha split early in the history of Buddhism. The divisions were originally due to differences in Vinaya and later also due to doctrinal differences and geographical separation of groups of monks. The original saṅgha split into the first early schools (generally believed to be the Sthavira nikāya and the Mahāsāṃghika) during or after the reign of Aśoka.[1] Later, these first early schools were further divided into schools such as the Sarvāstivādins, the Dharmaguptakas, and the Vibhajyavāda, and ended up numbering 18 or 20 schools according to traditional accounts.[2]

Map of the major geographical centers of major Buddhist schools in South Asia, at around the time of Xuanzang's visit in the seventh century.
* Red: non-Pudgalavāda Sarvāstivāda school
* Orange: non-Dharmaguptaka Vibhajyavāda schools
* Yellow: Mahāsāṃghika
* Green: Pudgalavāda (Green)
* Gray: Dharmaguptaka
Note the red and grey schools already gave some original ideas of Mahayana Buddhism and the Sri Lankan section (see Tamrashatiya) of the orange school is the origin of modern Theravada Buddhism.

The textual material shared by the early schools is often termed the Early Buddhist Texts and these are an important source for understanding their doctrinal similarities and differences.

Formation and development

The first council

According to the scriptures (Cullavagga XI.1 ff), three months after the parinirvana of Gautama Buddha, a council was held at Rajagaha Rajgir) by some of his disciples who had attained arahantship, presided over by Mahākāśyapa, one of his most senior disciples, and with the support of king Ajātasattu, reciting the teachings of the Buddha. The accounts of the council in the scriptures of the schools differ as to what was actually recited there. Purāṇa is recorded as having said: "Your reverences, well chanted by the elders are the Dhamma and Vinaya, but in that way that I heard it in the Lord's presence, that I received it in his presence, in that same way will I bear it in mind." [Vinaya-pitaka: Cullavagga XI:1:11]. According to Theravāda tradition, the teachings were divided into various parts and each was assigned to an elder and his pupils to commit to memory, and there was no conflict about what the Buddha taught.

Some scholars argue that the first council actually did not take place.[3][4][5]

Divergence between the Sthaviravāda and the Mahāsāṃghika

The expansion of orally transmitted texts in early Buddhism, and the growing distances between Buddhist communities, fostered specialization and sectarian identification.[1] One or several disputes did occur during Aśoka's reign, involving both doctrinal and disciplinary (vinaya) matters, although these may have been too informal to be called a "council". The Sthavira school had, by the time of Aśoka, divided into three sub-schools, doctrinally speaking, but these did not become separate monastic orders until later.

Only two ancient sources (the Dīpavaṃsa and Bhavya's third list) place the first schism before Aśoka, and none attribute the schism to a dispute on Vinaya practice. Lamotte and Hirakawa both maintain that the first schism in the Buddhist sangha occurred during the reign of Ashoka.[6][7] According to scholar Collett Cox "most scholars would agree that even though the roots of the earliest recognized groups predate Aśoka, their actual separation did not occur until after his death."[1] According to the Theravada tradition, the split took place at the Second Buddhist council, which took place at Vaishali, approximately one hundred years after Gautama Buddha's parinirvāṇa. While the second council probably was a historical event,[8] traditions regarding the Second Council are confusing and ambiguous. According to the Theravada tradition the overall result was the first schism in the sangha, between the Sthavira nikāya and the Mahāsāṃghika, although it is not agreed upon by all what the cause of this split was.[9]

The various splits within the monastic organization went together with the introduction and emphasis on Abhidhammic literature by some schools. This literature was specific to each school, and arguments and disputes between the schools were often based on these Abhidhammic writings. However, actual splits were originally based on disagreements on vinaya (monastic discipline), though later on, by about 100 CE or earlier, they could be based on doctrinal disagreement.[10] Pre-sectarian Buddhism, however, did not have Abhidhammic scriptures, except perhaps for a basic framework, and not all of the early schools developed an Abhidhamma literature.

Third council under Aśoka

Theravādin sources state that, in the 3rd century BCE, a third council was convened under the patronage of Aśoka.[11] Some scholars argue that there are certain implausible features of the Theravādin account which imply that the third council was ahistorical. The remainder consider it a purely Theravāda-Vibhajjavāda council.[12]

According to the Theravādin account, this council was convened primarily for the purpose of establishing an official orthodoxy. At the council, small groups raised questions about the specifics of the vinaya and the interpretation of doctrine. The chairman of the council, Moggaliputta Tissa, compiled a book, the Kathavatthu, which was meant to refute these arguments. The council sided with Moggaliputta and his version of Buddhism as orthodox; it was then adopted by Emperor Aśoka as his empire's official religion. In Pali, this school of thought was termed Vibhajjavāda, literally "thesis of [those who make] a distinction".

The distinction involved was as to the existence of phenomena (dhammas) in the past, future and present. The version of the scriptures that had been established at the third council, including the Vinaya, Sutta and the Abhidhamma Pitakas (collectively known as the "Tripiṭaka"), was taken to Sri Lanka by Emperor Aśoka's son, the Venerable Mahinda. There it was eventually committed to writing in the Pali language. The Pāli Canon remains the most complete set of surviving Nikāya scriptures, although the greater part of the Sarvāstivādin canon also survives in Chinese translation, some parts exist in Tibetan translations, and some fragments exist in Sanskrit manuscripts, while parts of various canons (sometimes unidentified), exist in Chinese and fragments in other Indian dialects.

Further divisions

Around the time of Aśoka that further divisions began to occur within the Buddhist movement and a number of additional schools emerged. Etienne Lamotte divided the mainstream Buddhist schools into three main doctrinal types:[13]

  1. The “personalists”, such as the Pudgalavādin Vātsīputrīyas and Saṃmittīyas
  2. The “realists”, namely the Theravāda and Sarvāstivāda Ābhidharmikas
  3. The “nominalists”, for instance, the Mahāsāṃghika Prajñaptivādins, and possibly non-Abhidharma Sthaviravadins.

One of them was faction of the Sthavira group which called themselves Vibhajjavādins. One part of this group was transmitted to Sri Lanka and to certain areas of southern India, such as Vanavasi in the south-west and the Kañci region in the south-east. This group later ceased to refer to themselves specifically as "Vibhajjavādins", but reverted to calling themselves "Theriyas", after the earlier Theras (Sthaviras). Still later, at some point prior to the Dipavamsa (4th century), the Pali name Theravāda was adopted and has remained in use ever since for this group.

Other groups included the Sarvāstivāda, the Dharmaguptakas, the Saṃmitīya, and the Pudgalavādins. The Pudgalavādins were also known as Vatsiputrīyas after their putative founder. Later this group became known as the Sammitīya school after one of its subdivisions. It died out around the 9th or 10th century CE. Nevertheless, during most of the early medieval period, the Sammitīya school was numerically the largest Buddhist group in India, with more followers than all the other schools combined. The Sarvāstivādin school was most prominent in the north-west of India and provided some of the doctrines that would later be adopted by the Mahāyāna. Another group linked to Sarvāstivāda was the Sautrāntika school, which only recognized the authority of the sutras and rejected the abhidharma transmitted and taught by the Vaibhāṣika wing of Sarvāstivāda. Based on textual considerations, it has been suggested that the Sautrāntikas were actually adherents of Mūlasarvāstivāda. The relation between Sarvāstivāda and the Mūlasarvāstivāda, however, is unclear. All of these early schools of Nikāya Buddhism eventually came to be known collectively as "the eighteen schools" in later sources. With the exception of the Theravāda, none of these early schools survived beyond the late medieval period by which time several were already long extinct, although a considerable amount of the canonical literature of some of these schools has survived, mainly in Chinese translation. Moreover, the origins of specifically Mahāyāna doctrines may be discerned in the teachings of some of these early schools, in particular in the Mahāsānghika and the Sarvāstivāda.

The schools sometimes split over ideological differences concerning the "real" meaning of teachings in the Sutta Piṭaka, and sometimes over disagreement concerning the proper observance of vinaya. These ideologies became embedded in large works such as the Abhidhammas and commentaries. Comparison of existing versions of the Suttapiṭaka of various sects shows evidence that ideologies from the Abhidhammas sometimes found their way back into the Suttapiṭakas to support the statements made in those Abhidhammas.[citation needed]

Some of these developments may be seen as later elaborations on the teachings. According to Gombrich, unintentional literalism was a major force for change in the early doctrinal history of Buddhism. This means that texts were interpreted paying too much attention to the precise words used and not enough to the speaker's intention, the spirit of the text. Some later doctrinal developments in the early Buddhist schools show scholastic literalism, which is a tendency to take the words and phrases of earlier texts (maybe the Buddha's own words) in such a way as to read-in distinctions which it was never intended to make.[note 1]

The eighteen schools

The Eighteen schools
The Śāriputraparipṛcchā ("Questions of Śāriputra") is a Mahāsāṃghikan history, which gives the following list:
The Samayabhedo Paracana Cakra, composed by the Sarvāstivādin monk Vasumitra (d. 124 BCE) gives the following list:
The Sri Lankan chronicles, Dipavamsa (3rd–4th century CE) and Mahavamsa (5th century CE), discern the following schools.

In addition, the Dipavamsa lists the following six schools without identifying the schools from which they arose:

  • Hemavatika (Sanskrit: Haimavata)
  • Rajagiriya
  • Siddhatthaka
  • Pubbaseliya
  • Aparaseliya (Sanskrit: Aparaśaila)
  • Apararajagirika
Vinitadeva (c. 645–715), a Mūlasarvāstivādin monk, gives the following list:
Twenty schools according to Mahayana scriptures in Chinese:

It is commonly said that there were eighteen schools of Buddhism in this period. What this actually means is more subtle. First, although the word "school" is used, there was not yet an institutional split in the saṅgha. The Chinese traveler Xuanzang observed even when the Mahāyāna were beginning to emerge from this era that monks of different schools would live side by side in dormitories and attend the same lectures. Only the books that they read were different. Secondly, no historical sources can agree what the names of these "eighteen schools" were. The origin of this saying is therefore unclear.

A.K. Warder identified the following eighteen early Buddhist schools (in approximate chronological order): Sthaviravada, Mahasamghika, Vatsiputriya, Ekavyavaharika, Gokulika (a.k.a. Kukkutika, etc.), Sarvastivada, Lokottaravāda, Dharmottariya, Bhadrayaniya, Sammitiya, Sannagarika, Bahusrutiya, Prajnaptivada, Mahisasaka, Haimavata (a.k.a. Kasyapiya), Dharmaguptaka, Caitika, and the Apara and Uttara (Purva) Saila. Warder says that these were the early Buddhist schools as of circa 50 BCE, about the same time that the Pali Canon was first committed to writing and the presumptive origin date of the Theravada sect, though the term 'Theravada' was not used before the fourth century CE.[note 4]

A hypothetical combined list would be as follows:

New elements

Newly introduced concepts

Some Buddhist concepts that were not existent in the time of pre-sectarian Buddhism are:

Newly composed scriptures

In later times, the arguments between the various schools were based in these newly introduced teachings, practices and beliefs, and monks sought to validate these newly introduced teachings and concepts by referring to the older texts (Sutta-pitaka and Vinaya-pitaka). Most often, the various new Abhidhamma and Mahayana teachings were bases for arguments between sects.[citation needed]

Abhidhamma

As the last major division of the canon, the Abhidhamma Pitaka has had a checkered history. It was not accepted as canonical by the Mahasanghika school[15][16] and several other schools.[note 8] Another school included most of the Khuddaka Nikaya within the Abhidhamma Pitaka.[15] Also, the Pali version of the Abhidhamma is a strictly Theravada collection, and has little in common with the Abhidhamma works recognized by other Buddhist schools.[17] The various Abhidhamma philosophies of the various early schools have no agreement on doctrine[18] and belong to the period of 'Divided Buddhism'[18] (as opposed to Undivided Buddhism). The earliest texts of the Pali Canon (the Sutta Nipata and parts of the Jataka), together with the first four (and early) Nikayas of the Suttapitaka, have no mention of (the texts of) the Abhidhamma Pitaka.[19] The Abhidhamma is also not mentioned at the report of the First Buddhist Council, directly after the death of the Buddha. This report of the first council does mention the existence of the Vinaya and the five Nikayas (of the Suttapitaka).[20][21]

Although the literature of the various Abhidhamma Pitakas began as a kind of commentarial supplement upon the earlier teachings in the Suttapitaka, it soon led to new doctrinal and textual developments and became the focus of a new form of scholarly monastic life.[note 9][22] The various Abhidhamma works were starting to be composed from about 200 years after the passing away of the Buddha.[note 10]

Traditionally, it is believed (in Theravadin culture) that the Abhidhamma was taught by Buddha to his late mother who was living in Tavatimsa heaven. However, this is rejected by scholars, who believe that only small parts of the Abhidhamma literature may have been existent in a very early form.[note 11] Some schools of Buddhism had important disagreements on subjects of Abhidhamma, while having a largely similar Sutta-pitaka and Vinaya-pitaka. The arguments and conflicts between them were thus often on matters of philosophical Abhidhammic origin, not on matters concerning the actual words and teachings of Buddha.

One impetus for composing new scriptures like the Adhidhammas of the various schools, according to some scholars[who?], was that Buddha left no clear statement about the ontological status of the world – about what really exists.[note 12] Subsequently, later Buddhists have themselves defined what exists and what not (in the Abhidhammic scriptures), leading to disagreements.

Parts of the Khuddaka Nikaya

Oliver Abeynayake has the following to say on the dating of the various books in the Khuddaka Nikaya:

‘The Khuddaka Nikaya can easily be divided into two strata, one being early and the other late. The texts Sutta Nipata, Itivuttaka, Dhammapada, Therigatha (Theragatha), Udana, and Jataka tales belong to the early stratum. The texts Khuddakapatha, Vimanavatthu, Petavatthu, Niddesa, Patisambhidamagga, Apadana, Buddhavamsa and Cariyapitaka can be categorized in the later stratum.’[23]

The texts in the early stratum date from before the second council (earlier than 100 years after Buddha’s parinibbana), while the later stratum is from after the second council, which means they are definitely later additions to the Sutta Pitaka, and that they might not have been the original teachings by the Buddha, but later compositions by disciples.

The following books of the Khuddaka Nikaya can thus be regarded as later additions:

And the following three which are included in the Burmese Canon:

The original verses of the Jatakas are recognized as being amongst the earliest part of the Canon,[19] but the accompanying (and more famous) Jataka Stories are purely commentarial, an obvious later addition.

Parivara

The Parivara, the last book of the Vinaya Pitaka, is a later addition to the Vinaya Pitaka.[24]

Other later writings

Hinayana and Mahāyāna

Between the 1st century BCE and the 1st century CE, the terms "Mahāyāna" and "Hīnayāna" were first used in writing, in, for example, the Lotus Sutra. The later Mahayana schools may have preserved ideas which were abandoned by the "orthodox" Theravada, such as the Three Bodies doctrine, the idea of consciousness (vijnana) as a continuum, and devotional elements such as the worship of saints. [26][27][note 13]

Although the various early schools of Buddhism are sometimes loosely classified as "Hīnayāna" in modern times, this is not necessarily accurate. According to Jan Nattier, Mahāyāna never referred to a separate sect of Buddhism (Skt. nikāya), but rather to the set of ideals and doctrines for bodhisattvas.[28] Paul Williams has also noted that the Mahāyāna never had nor ever attempted to have a separate vinaya or ordination lineage from the early Buddhist schools, and therefore each bhikṣu or bhikṣuṇī adhering to the Mahāyāna formally belonged to an early school.

Membership in these nikāyas, or monastic sects, continues today with the Dharmaguptaka nikāya in East Asia, and the Mūlasarvāstivāda nikāya in Tibetan Buddhism. Therefore, Mahāyāna was never a separate rival sect of the early schools.[29] Paul Harrison clarifies that while Mahāyāna monastics belonged to a nikāya, not all members of a nikāya were Mahāyānists.[30] From Chinese monks visiting India, we now know that both Mahāyāna and non-Mahāyāna monks in India often lived in the same monasteries side by side.[31] Additionally, Isabella Onians notes that Mahāyāna works rarely used the term Hīnayāna, typically using the term Śrāvakayāna instead.[32]

The Chinese Buddhist monk and pilgrim Yijing wrote about relationship between the various "vehicles" and the early Buddhist schools in India. He wrote, "There exist in the West numerous subdivisions of the schools which have different origins, but there are only four principal schools of continuous tradition." These schools are namely the Mahāsāṃghika nikāya, Sthavira, Mūlasarvāstivāda and Saṃmitīya nikāyas.[33] Explaining their doctrinal affiliations, he then writes, "Which of the four schools should be grouped with the Mahāyāna or with the Hīnayāna is not determined." That is to say, there was no simple correspondence between a Buddhist monastic sect, and whether its members learn "Hīnayāna" or "Mahāyāna" teachings.[34]

The Chinese pilgrims

During the first millennium, monks from China such as Faxian, Xuanzang, and Yijing made pilgrimages to India and wrote accounts of their travels when they returned home. These Chinese travel records constitute extremely valuable sources of information concerning the state of Buddhism in India during the early medieval period.

By the time the Chinese pilgrims Xuanzang and Yijing visited India, there were five early Buddhist schools that they mentioned far more frequently than others. They commented that the Sarvāstivāda/Mūlasarvāstivāda, Mahāsāṃghika, and Saṃmitīya were the principal early Buddhist schools still extant in India, along with the Sthavira sect.[35] The Dharmaguptakas continued to be found in Gandhāra and Central Asia, along the Silk Road.

Timeline

Timeline: Development and propagation of Buddhist traditions (c. 450 BCE – c. 1300 CE)

  450 BCE[note 14] 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE 700 CE 800 CE 1200 CE[note 15]

 

India

Early
Sangha

 

 

 

Early Buddhist schools Mahāyāna Vajrayāna

 

 

 

 

 

Sri Lanka &
Southeast Asia

 

 

 

 

Theravāda

 

 

 

 

Tibetan Buddhism

 

Nyingma

 

Kadam
Kagyu

 

Dagpo
Sakya
  Jonang

 

East Asia

 

Early Buddhist schools
and Mahāyāna
(via the silk road
to China, and ocean
contact from India to Vietnam)

Tangmi

Nara (Rokushū)

Shingon

Chan

 

Thiền, Seon
  Zen
Tiantai / Jìngtǔ

 

Tendai

 

 

Nichiren

 

Jōdo-shū

 

Central Asia & Tarim Basin

 

Greco-Buddhism

 

 

Silk Road Buddhism

 

  450 BCE 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE 700 CE 800 CE 1200 CE
  Legend:   = Theravada   = Mahayana   = Vajrayana   = Various / syncretic

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "I would also argue that unintentional literalism has been a major force for change in the early doctrinal history of Buddhism. Texts have been interpreted with too much attention to the precise words used and not enough to the speaker's intention, the spirit of the text. In particular I see in some doctrinal developments what I call scholastic literalism, which is a tendency to take the words and phrases of earlier texts (maybe the Buddha's own words) in such a way as to read in distinctions which it was never intended to make." How Buddhism Began, Richard F. Gombrich, Munshiram Manoharlal, 1997, pp. 21–22
  2. ^ Sarvāstivādin (説一切有部), Haimavata (雪山部), Vatsīputrīya (犢子部), Dharmottara (法上部), Bhadrayānīya (賢冑部), Sammitīya (正量部), Channagirika (密林山部), Mahisasaka (化地部), Dharmaguptaka (法蔵部), Kāśyapīya (飲光部), Sautrāntika (経量部).
  3. ^ Mahāsāṃghika (大衆部) was split into 9 sects. There were: Ekavyahārika (一説部), Lokottaravāda (説出世部), Gokulika (鶏胤部), Bahuśrutīya (多聞部), Prajñaptivāda (説仮部), Caitika (制多山部), Aparaśaila (西山住部), and Uttaraśaila (北山住部).
  4. ^ See Ajahn Sucitto, "What Is Theravada" (2012); see also A.K. Warder, Indian Buddhism, 3rd rev. ed. (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2000), chapters 8 and 9).
  5. ^ a b c d e f According to Buswell and Lopez, the Kāśyapīya and Mahīśāsaka were offshoots of the Sarvastivadins, but are grouped under the Vibhajjavāda as "non-sarvastivada" groups.[14]
  6. ^ "Theravada Buddhism, in texts such as Cariyapitaka, Buddhavamsa, and Dhammapadatthakatha, postulates the following ten perfections", Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004, p. 632
  7. ^ "It is evident that the Hinayanists, either to popularize their religion or to interest the laity more in it, incorporated in their doctrines the conception of Bodhisattva and the practice of paramitas. This was effected by the production of new literature: the Jatakas and Avadanas.' Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, Motilal Banararsidass Publishers (Delhi), 2nd Edition, 1978, p. 251. The term 'Semi-Mahayana' occurs here as a subtitle.
  8. ^ "several schools rejected the authority of abhidharma and claimed that abhidharma treatises were composed by fallible, human teachers." in: Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism (2004), p. 2. (A similar statement can be found on pp. 112 and 756.)
  9. ^ "Although begun as a pragmatic method of elaborating the received teachings, this scholastic enterprise soon led to new doctrinal and textual developments and became the focus of a new form of scholarly monastic life."
  10. ^ "Independent abhidharma treatises were composed over a period of at least seven hundred years (ca. third or second centuries B.C.E. to fifth century C.E.).", MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004, p. 2
  11. ^ "These similarities (between the Abhidhammas of the various schools) suggest either contact among the groups who composed and transmitted these texts, or a common ground of doctrinal exegesis and even textual material predating the emergence of the separate schools.", MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004, p. 2
  12. ^ "If I am right in thinking that the Buddha left no clear statement about the ontological status of the world – about what 'really' exists – this would explain how later Buddhists could disagree about this question." How Buddhism Began, Richard F. Gombrich, Munshiram Manoharlal, 1997, p. 34
  13. ^ See also Atthakavagga and Parayanavagga
  14. ^ Cousins, L.S. (1996); Buswell (2003), Vol. I, p. 82; and, Keown & Prebish (2004), p. 107. See also, Gombrich (1988/2002), p. 32: “…[T]he best we can say is that [the Buddha] was probably Enlightened between 550 and 450, more likely later rather than earlier."
  15. ^ Williams (2000, pp. 6-7) writes: "As a matter of fact Buddhism in mainland India itself had all but ceased to exist by the thirteenth century CE, although by that time it had spread to Tibet, China, Japan, and Southeast Asia." [36] (Originally 1958), "Chronology," p. xxix: "c. 1000-1200: Buddhism disappears as [an] organized religious force in India." See also, Robinson & Johnson (1970/1982), pp. 100-1, 108 Fig. 1; and, Harvey (1990/2007), pp. 139-40.

References

  1. ^ a b c Cox (1995), p. 23.
  2. ^ Hanh 1999, p. 16.
  3. ^ Prebish, Charles S. Buddhism
  4. ^ Hoiberg & Ramchandani 2000, p. 264.
  5. ^ Williams 1989, p. 6.
  6. ^ Lamotte, Étienne (1988) History of Indian Buddhism: From the Origins to the Śaka Era, translated from the French by Sara Boin-Webb, Louvain: Peeters Press
  7. ^ Hirakawa, Akira (1990), A History of Indian Buddhism: From Sakyamuni to Early Mahāyāna, tr. Paul Groner, University of Hawaii Press
  8. ^ Editors of Encyclopædia Britannica 1998.
  9. ^ Skilton 2004, p. 47.
  10. ^ Harvey,Introduction to Buddhism, Cambridge University Press, 1990, p. 74
  11. ^ Berkwitz 2009, p. 45.
  12. ^ Dube, S. N. (1972). "The Date of Kathāvatthu". East and West. 22 (1/2): 79–86. ISSN 0012-8376. JSTOR 29755746.
  13. ^ Huifeng 2013, pp. 175–228.
  14. ^ Buswell & Lopez 2013, p. 859.
  15. ^ a b "Abhidhamma Pitaka." Encyclopædia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008.
  16. ^ Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, 1978, p. 58
  17. ^ "Buddhism." Encyclopædia Britannica. Ultimate Reference Suite. Chicago: Encyclopædia Britannica, 2008.
  18. ^ a b Kanai Lal Hazra, Pali Language and Literature – A Systematic Survey and Historical Survey, 1994, Vol. 1, p. 415
  19. ^ a b Kanai Lal Hazra, Pali Language and Literature – A Systematic Survey and Historical Survey, 1994, Vol. 1, p. 412
  20. ^ I.B. Horner, Book of the Discipline, Volume 5, p. 398
  21. ^ The Mahisasaka Account of the First Council mentions the four agamas here. see http://santifm1.0.googlepages.com/thefirstcouncil(mahisasakaversion)[permanent dead link]
  22. ^ MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004, p. 1.
  23. ^ A textual and Historical Analysis of the Khuddaka Nikaya – Oliver Abeynayake Ph.D. , Colombo, First Edition – 1984, p. 113.
  24. ^ This work (the Parivara) is in fact a very much later composition, and probably the work of a Ceylonese Thera. from: Book of the Discipline, vol. VI, p. ix (translators' introduction)
  25. ^ would throw the earliest phase of this literature (the Mahayana Sutras) back to about the beginning of the common era., Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004, p. 493
  26. ^ Lindtner 1997.
  27. ^ Lindtner 1999.
  28. ^ Nattier 2003, p. 193–194.
  29. ^ Williams 1989, p. 4–5.
  30. ^ Xing 2004, p. 115.
  31. ^ Williams, Paul (2000) Buddhist Thought: A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition: p. 97
  32. ^ Isabelle Onians, "Tantric Buddhist Apologetics, or Antinomianism as a Norm," D.Phil. dissertation, Oxford, Trinity Term 2001 p. 72
  33. ^ Walser, Joseph (2005) Nagarjuna in Context: Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture: p. 41
  34. ^ Walser, Joseph (2005) Nagarjuna in Context: Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture: pp. 41–42
  35. ^ Encyclopedia of Buddhism. edited by Edward Irons. Facts on File: 2008. ISBN 978-0-8160-5459-6 p. 419
  36. ^ Embree 1988.

Sources

  • "Buddhist Council", Encyclopædia Britannica, 1998
  • Berkwitz, Stephen C. (2009), South Asian Buddhism: A Survey, Routledge, ISBN 978-0415452489
  • Buswell, Robert E.; Lopez, Donald S. (2013), The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, Princeton University Press
  • Buswell, Jr., Robert E. (ed.) (2003). Encyclopedia of Buddhism (MacMillan). ISBN 0-02-865718-7.
  • Cousins, L.S. (1996). "The Dating of the Historical Buddha: A Review Article" in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, Series 3, 6.1 (1996): 57–63. Retrieved 29 Nov 2008 from "Indology" at https://www.webcitation.org/5vDULzfTE?url=http://indology.info/papers/cousins/
  • Cox, Collett (1995), Disputed Dharmas: Early Buddhist Theories on Existence, Tokyo: The Institute for Buddhist Studies, ISBN 4-906267-36-X
  • Embree, Ainslie T.; Hay, Stephen N.; de Bary, Wm. Theodore, eds. (1988) [1958], Sources of Indian Tradition: From the Beginning to 1800, vol. 1, A.L. Bashram, R.N. Dandekar, Peter Hardy, J.B. Harrison, V. Raghavan, Royal Weiler, and Andrew Yarrow (2nd ed.), New York: Columbia University Press, ISBN 0-231-06651-1
  • Gombrich, Richard F. (1988; 6th reprint, 2002). Theravāda Buddhism: A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo (London: Routledge). ISBN 0-415-07585-8.
  • Gombrich, Richard F. (1997), How Buddhism Began, Munshiram Manoharlal
  • Harvey, Peter (1990; 15th printing, 2007). An Introduction to Buddhism: Teachings, History and Practices (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press). ISBN 0-521-31333-3.
  • Hanh, Thich Nhat (1999), The Heart of Buddha's Teachings, Harmony, ISBN 978-0767903691
  • Hoiberg, Dale; Ramchandani, Indu (2000), "Early Buddhist schools", Students' Britannica India, Popular Prakashan, ISBN 0-85229-760-2
  • Huifeng, Shi (2013), "'Dependent Origination = Emptiness' – Nāgārjuna's Innovation? An Examination of the Early and Mainstream Sectarian Textual Sources", Journal of the Centre for Buddhist Studies, Sri Lanka, vol. 11, pp. 175–228, ISSN 1391-8443
  • Hirakawa (1990), History of Indian Buddhism, volume 1, Hawai'i University Press
  • Hurvitz, Leon (1976), Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma, Columbia University Press
  • Jong, J.W. de (1993), "The Beginnings of Buddhism", The Eastern Buddhist, 26 (2)
  • Keown, Damien and Charles S Prebish (eds.) (2004). Encyclopedia of Buddhism (London: Routledge). ISBN 978-0-415-31414-5.
  • Lindtner, Christian (1997), "The Problem of Precanonical Buddhism", Buddhist Studies Review, 14: 2
  • Lindtner, Christian (1999), "From Brahmanism to Buddhism", Asian Philosophy, 9 (1)
  • Nakamura (1989), Indian Buddhism, Motilal Banarsidas
  • Nattier, Jan (2003), A Few Good Men : The Bodhisattva Path According to the Inquiry of Ugra (Ugraparipṛcchā), University of Hawai'i Press, ISBN 978-0824830038
  • Robinson, Richard H. and Willard L. Johnson (1970; 3rd ed., 1982). The Buddhist Religion: A Historical Introduction (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth Publishing). ISBN 0-534-01027-X.
  • Skilton, Andrew (2004), A Concise History of Buddhism, Windhorse Publications, ISBN 978-0904766929
  • Sects & Sectarianism: The Origins of Buddhist Schools, Santi Forest Monastery, 2006 by Bhikkhu Sujato
  • Williams, Paul (1989), Mahayana Buddhism, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-35653-4
  • Williams, Paul with Anthony Tribe (2000). Buddhist Thought (London: Routledge). ISBN 0-415-20701-0. Retrieved 29 Nov 2008 from "Google Books" at https://books.google.com/books?id=v0Rpvycf1t0C.
  • Xing, Guang (2004), The Concept of the Buddha: Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory (Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism), Routledge, ISBN 978-0415333443

Further reading

  • Coogan, Michael D., ed. (2003), The Illustrated Guide to World Religions, Oxford University Press, ISBN 1-84483-125-6
  • Dhammananda, K. Sri (1964), What the Buddhist Believe (PDF), Buddhist Mission Society of Malaysia, ISBN 983-40071-1-6
  • Gethin, Rupert (1998), Foundations of Buddhism, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-289223-1
  • Gunaratana, Bhante Henepola (2002), Mindfulness in Plain English, Wisdom Publications, ISBN 0-86171-321-4
  • Lowenstein, Tom (1996), The vision of the Buddha, Duncan Baird Publishers, ISBN 1-903296-91-9
  • Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti: Mahayana Scripture, translated by Thurman, Robert A. F., Pennsylvania State University Press, 1976, ISBN 0-271-00601-3
  • Walpola Rahula (1974), What the Buddha Taught, Grove Press ISBN 0-8021-3031-3.
  • Page, Tony (ed.), Mahayana Mahaparinirvana Sutra, translated by Yamamoto, Kosho, Nirvana Publications
  • Shun, Yin (1998), The Way to Buddhahood: Instructions from a Modern Chinese Master, translated by Wing, Yeung H., Wisdom Publications ISBN 0-86171-133-5.

External links

  • The Sects of the Buddhists. Rhys Davids. T. W. The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1891. pp. 409–422
  • Sects & Sectarianism – The origins of Buddhist Schools
  • Sources on early Buddhism

early, buddhist, schools, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, a. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Early Buddhist schools news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message The early Buddhist schools are those schools into which the Buddhist monastic saṅgha split early in the history of Buddhism The divisions were originally due to differences in Vinaya and later also due to doctrinal differences and geographical separation of groups of monks The original saṅgha split into the first early schools generally believed to be the Sthavira nikaya and the Mahasaṃghika during or after the reign of Asoka 1 Later these first early schools were further divided into schools such as the Sarvastivadins the Dharmaguptakas and the Vibhajyavada and ended up numbering 18 or 20 schools according to traditional accounts 2 Map of the major geographical centers of major Buddhist schools in South Asia at around the time of Xuanzang s visit in the seventh century Red non Pudgalavada Sarvastivada school Orange non Dharmaguptaka Vibhajyavada schools Yellow Mahasaṃghika Green Pudgalavada Green Gray DharmaguptakaNote the red and grey schools already gave some original ideas of Mahayana Buddhism and the Sri Lankan section see Tamrashatiya of the orange school is the origin of modern Theravada Buddhism The textual material shared by the early schools is often termed the Early Buddhist Texts and these are an important source for understanding their doctrinal similarities and differences Contents 1 Formation and development 1 1 The first council 1 2 Divergence between the Sthaviravada and the Mahasaṃghika 1 3 Third council under Asoka 1 4 Further divisions 2 The eighteen schools 3 New elements 3 1 Newly introduced concepts 3 2 Newly composed scriptures 3 3 Abhidhamma 3 4 Parts of the Khuddaka Nikaya 3 5 Parivara 3 6 Other later writings 4 Hinayana and Mahayana 5 The Chinese pilgrims 6 Timeline 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksFormation and development EditThe first council Edit Main article First Buddhist council According to the scriptures Cullavagga XI 1 ff three months after the parinirvana of Gautama Buddha a council was held at Rajagaha Rajgir by some of his disciples who had attained arahantship presided over by Mahakasyapa one of his most senior disciples and with the support of king Ajatasattu reciting the teachings of the Buddha The accounts of the council in the scriptures of the schools differ as to what was actually recited there Puraṇa is recorded as having said Your reverences well chanted by the elders are the Dhamma and Vinaya but in that way that I heard it in the Lord s presence that I received it in his presence in that same way will I bear it in mind Vinaya pitaka Cullavagga XI 1 11 According to Theravada tradition the teachings were divided into various parts and each was assigned to an elder and his pupils to commit to memory and there was no conflict about what the Buddha taught Some scholars argue that the first council actually did not take place 3 4 5 Divergence between the Sthaviravada and the Mahasaṃghika Edit The expansion of orally transmitted texts in early Buddhism and the growing distances between Buddhist communities fostered specialization and sectarian identification 1 One or several disputes did occur during Asoka s reign involving both doctrinal and disciplinary vinaya matters although these may have been too informal to be called a council The Sthavira school had by the time of Asoka divided into three sub schools doctrinally speaking but these did not become separate monastic orders until later Only two ancient sources the Dipavaṃsa and Bhavya s third list place the first schism before Asoka and none attribute the schism to a dispute on Vinaya practice Lamotte and Hirakawa both maintain that the first schism in the Buddhist sangha occurred during the reign of Ashoka 6 7 According to scholar Collett Cox most scholars would agree that even though the roots of the earliest recognized groups predate Asoka their actual separation did not occur until after his death 1 According to the Theravada tradition the split took place at the Second Buddhist council which took place at Vaishali approximately one hundred years after Gautama Buddha s parinirvaṇa While the second council probably was a historical event 8 traditions regarding the Second Council are confusing and ambiguous According to the Theravada tradition the overall result was the first schism in the sangha between the Sthavira nikaya and the Mahasaṃghika although it is not agreed upon by all what the cause of this split was 9 The various splits within the monastic organization went together with the introduction and emphasis on Abhidhammic literature by some schools This literature was specific to each school and arguments and disputes between the schools were often based on these Abhidhammic writings However actual splits were originally based on disagreements on vinaya monastic discipline though later on by about 100 CE or earlier they could be based on doctrinal disagreement 10 Pre sectarian Buddhism however did not have Abhidhammic scriptures except perhaps for a basic framework and not all of the early schools developed an Abhidhamma literature Third council under Asoka Edit Main article Third Buddhist council Theravadin sources state that in the 3rd century BCE a third council was convened under the patronage of Asoka 11 Some scholars argue that there are certain implausible features of the Theravadin account which imply that the third council was ahistorical The remainder consider it a purely Theravada Vibhajjavada council 12 According to the Theravadin account this council was convened primarily for the purpose of establishing an official orthodoxy At the council small groups raised questions about the specifics of the vinaya and the interpretation of doctrine The chairman of the council Moggaliputta Tissa compiled a book the Kathavatthu which was meant to refute these arguments The council sided with Moggaliputta and his version of Buddhism as orthodox it was then adopted by Emperor Asoka as his empire s official religion In Pali this school of thought was termed Vibhajjavada literally thesis of those who make a distinction The distinction involved was as to the existence of phenomena dhammas in the past future and present The version of the scriptures that had been established at the third council including the Vinaya Sutta and the Abhidhamma Pitakas collectively known as the Tripiṭaka was taken to Sri Lanka by Emperor Asoka s son the Venerable Mahinda There it was eventually committed to writing in the Pali language The Pali Canon remains the most complete set of surviving Nikaya scriptures although the greater part of the Sarvastivadin canon also survives in Chinese translation some parts exist in Tibetan translations and some fragments exist in Sanskrit manuscripts while parts of various canons sometimes unidentified exist in Chinese and fragments in other Indian dialects Further divisions Edit Around the time of Asoka that further divisions began to occur within the Buddhist movement and a number of additional schools emerged Etienne Lamotte divided the mainstream Buddhist schools into three main doctrinal types 13 The personalists such as the Pudgalavadin Vatsiputriyas and Saṃmittiyas The realists namely the Theravada and Sarvastivada Abhidharmikas The nominalists for instance the Mahasaṃghika Prajnaptivadins and possibly non Abhidharma Sthaviravadins One of them was faction of the Sthavira group which called themselves Vibhajjavadins One part of this group was transmitted to Sri Lanka and to certain areas of southern India such as Vanavasi in the south west and the Kanci region in the south east This group later ceased to refer to themselves specifically as Vibhajjavadins but reverted to calling themselves Theriyas after the earlier Theras Sthaviras Still later at some point prior to the Dipavamsa 4th century the Pali name Theravada was adopted and has remained in use ever since for this group Other groups included the Sarvastivada the Dharmaguptakas the Saṃmitiya and the Pudgalavadins The Pudgalavadins were also known as Vatsiputriyas after their putative founder Later this group became known as the Sammitiya school after one of its subdivisions It died out around the 9th or 10th century CE Nevertheless during most of the early medieval period the Sammitiya school was numerically the largest Buddhist group in India with more followers than all the other schools combined The Sarvastivadin school was most prominent in the north west of India and provided some of the doctrines that would later be adopted by the Mahayana Another group linked to Sarvastivada was the Sautrantika school which only recognized the authority of the sutras and rejected the abhidharma transmitted and taught by the Vaibhaṣika wing of Sarvastivada Based on textual considerations it has been suggested that the Sautrantikas were actually adherents of Mulasarvastivada The relation between Sarvastivada and the Mulasarvastivada however is unclear All of these early schools of Nikaya Buddhism eventually came to be known collectively as the eighteen schools in later sources With the exception of the Theravada none of these early schools survived beyond the late medieval period by which time several were already long extinct although a considerable amount of the canonical literature of some of these schools has survived mainly in Chinese translation Moreover the origins of specifically Mahayana doctrines may be discerned in the teachings of some of these early schools in particular in the Mahasanghika and the Sarvastivada The schools sometimes split over ideological differences concerning the real meaning of teachings in the Sutta Piṭaka and sometimes over disagreement concerning the proper observance of vinaya These ideologies became embedded in large works such as the Abhidhammas and commentaries Comparison of existing versions of the Suttapiṭaka of various sects shows evidence that ideologies from the Abhidhammas sometimes found their way back into the Suttapiṭakas to support the statements made in those Abhidhammas citation needed Some of these developments may be seen as later elaborations on the teachings According to Gombrich unintentional literalism was a major force for change in the early doctrinal history of Buddhism This means that texts were interpreted paying too much attention to the precise words used and not enough to the speaker s intention the spirit of the text Some later doctrinal developments in the early Buddhist schools show scholastic literalism which is a tendency to take the words and phrases of earlier texts maybe the Buddha s own words in such a way as to read in distinctions which it was never intended to make note 1 The eighteen schools EditThe Eighteen schoolsThe Sariputraparipṛccha Questions of Sariputra is a Mahasaṃghikan history which gives the following list Sthaviravada Sarvastivada Mahisasaka Dharmaguptaka Suvarsa Vatsiputriya Dharmottariya zh Bhadrayaniya Sammatiya Sannagarika Kasyapiya Sutravadin Samkrantika zh Mahasaṃghika Vyavahara Lokottaravada Gokulika Bahusrutiya Prajnaptivada Mahadeva Caitika UttarashailaThe Samayabhedo Paracana Cakra composed by the Sarvastivadin monk Vasumitra d 124 BCE gives the following list Sthaviravada Haimavata zh First schism referred to by Sarvastivadins as the original Sthavira School but this school was only influential in the north of India Sarvastivada First schism Vatsiputriya Second schism Dharmottariya zh Third schism Bhadrayaniya Third schism Saṃmitiya Third schism Sannagarika Third schism Mahisasaka Fourth schism Dharmaguptaka Fifth schism Kasyapiya Sixth schism Sautrantika Seventh schism Mahasaṃghika Ekavyaharikas First schism Lokottaravada First schism Gokulika First schism Bahusrutiya Second schism Prajnaptivada Third schism Caitika Fourth schism Apara Saila Fourth schism Uttara Saila Fourth schismThe Sri Lankan chronicles Dipavamsa 3rd 4th century CE and Mahavamsa 5th century CE discern the following schools Sthaviravada Vibhajjavada Theravada Mahisasaka First schism Sarvastivada Third schism Kasyapiya Fourth schism Sankrantika zh Fifth schism Sautrantika Sixth schism Dharmaguptaka Third schism Vatsiputriya First schism Dharmottariya zh Second schism Bhadrayaniya Second schism Sannagarika Second schism Saṃmitiya Second schism Mahasaṃghika Gokulika First schism Prajnaptivada Second schism Bahusrutiya Second schism Ekavyaharikas First schism Caitika Third schism according to Dipavamsa but in the Mahavamsa it is said to have arisen from the Pannati and BahussutakaIn addition the Dipavamsa lists the following six schools without identifying the schools from which they arose Hemavatika Sanskrit Haimavata Rajagiriya Siddhatthaka Pubbaseliya Aparaseliya Sanskrit Aparasaila ApararajagirikaVinitadeva c 645 715 a Mulasarvastivadin monk gives the following list Sthaviravada Jetavaniya Abhayagirivasin Mahaviharavasin Sammatiya Kaurukullaka Avantaka Vatsiputriya Sarvastivadin Mulasarvastivadin Kasyapiya Mahisasaka Dharmaguptaka Bahusrutiya Tamrasatiya Vibhajyavadin Mahasaṃghika Purvasaila Aparasaila Haimavata Lottaravadin PrajnaptivadaTwenty schools according to Mahayana scriptures in Chinese Sthaviravada later Haimavata zh note 2 Sarvastivadin Vatsiputriya Dharmottara Bhadrayaniya Sammitiya Channagirika Sannagarika Mahisasaka Dharmaguptaka Kasyapiya Sautrantika Mahasaṃghika note 3 Ekavyaharika Caitika Lokottaravadin Aparasaila Gokulika Uttarasaila Bahusrutiya PrajnaptivadaIt is commonly said that there were eighteen schools of Buddhism in this period What this actually means is more subtle First although the word school is used there was not yet an institutional split in the saṅgha The Chinese traveler Xuanzang observed even when the Mahayana were beginning to emerge from this era that monks of different schools would live side by side in dormitories and attend the same lectures Only the books that they read were different Secondly no historical sources can agree what the names of these eighteen schools were The origin of this saying is therefore unclear A K Warder identified the following eighteen early Buddhist schools in approximate chronological order Sthaviravada Mahasamghika Vatsiputriya Ekavyavaharika Gokulika a k a Kukkutika etc Sarvastivada Lokottaravada Dharmottariya Bhadrayaniya Sammitiya Sannagarika Bahusrutiya Prajnaptivada Mahisasaka Haimavata a k a Kasyapiya Dharmaguptaka Caitika and the Apara and Uttara Purva Saila Warder says that these were the early Buddhist schools as of circa 50 BCE about the same time that the Pali Canon was first committed to writing and the presumptive origin date of the Theravada sect though the term Theravada was not used before the fourth century CE note 4 A hypothetical combined list would be as follows Sthaviravada Pudgalavada Personalist c 280 BCE Vatsiputriya during Asoka later name Saṃmitiya Dharmottariya zh Bhadrayaniya Sannagarika Vibhajjavada prior to 240 BCE during Asoka Theravada c 240 BCE Kasyapiya after 232 BCE note 5 Mahisasaka after 232 BCE note 5 Dharmaguptaka after 232 BCE note 5 Sarvastivada c 237 BCE Kasyapiya after 232 BCE note 5 Mahisasaka after 232 BCE note 5 Dharmaguptaka after 232 BCE note 5 Sautrantika between 50 BCE and c 100 CE Mulasarvastivada 3rd and 4th centuries Vaibhaṣika Mahasaṃghika Ekavyaharikas during Asoka Lokottaravada Gokulika during Asoka Bahusrutiya late third century BCE Prajnaptivada late third century BCE Caitika mid first century BCE Apara Saila Uttara SailaNew elements EditNewly introduced concepts Edit Some Buddhist concepts that were not existent in the time of pre sectarian Buddhism are Building paramis or paramitas The ten paramis are described in Theravadin texts of late origin note 6 note 7 while the Mahayana paramitas are found in the Mahayana Sutras such as the Dasabhumika Sutra and the Surangama Sutra also of late origin The Bodhisattva vows which is only found in the Mahayana Sutras Newly composed scriptures Edit In later times the arguments between the various schools were based in these newly introduced teachings practices and beliefs and monks sought to validate these newly introduced teachings and concepts by referring to the older texts Sutta pitaka and Vinaya pitaka Most often the various new Abhidhamma and Mahayana teachings were bases for arguments between sects citation needed Abhidhamma Edit As the last major division of the canon the Abhidhamma Pitaka has had a checkered history It was not accepted as canonical by the Mahasanghika school 15 16 and several other schools note 8 Another school included most of the Khuddaka Nikaya within the Abhidhamma Pitaka 15 Also the Pali version of the Abhidhamma is a strictly Theravada collection and has little in common with the Abhidhamma works recognized by other Buddhist schools 17 The various Abhidhamma philosophies of the various early schools have no agreement on doctrine 18 and belong to the period of Divided Buddhism 18 as opposed to Undivided Buddhism The earliest texts of the Pali Canon the Sutta Nipata and parts of the Jataka together with the first four and early Nikayas of the Suttapitaka have no mention of the texts of the Abhidhamma Pitaka 19 The Abhidhamma is also not mentioned at the report of the First Buddhist Council directly after the death of the Buddha This report of the first council does mention the existence of the Vinaya and the five Nikayas of the Suttapitaka 20 21 Although the literature of the various Abhidhamma Pitakas began as a kind of commentarial supplement upon the earlier teachings in the Suttapitaka it soon led to new doctrinal and textual developments and became the focus of a new form of scholarly monastic life note 9 22 The various Abhidhamma works were starting to be composed from about 200 years after the passing away of the Buddha note 10 Traditionally it is believed in Theravadin culture that the Abhidhamma was taught by Buddha to his late mother who was living in Tavatimsa heaven However this is rejected by scholars who believe that only small parts of the Abhidhamma literature may have been existent in a very early form note 11 Some schools of Buddhism had important disagreements on subjects of Abhidhamma while having a largely similar Sutta pitaka and Vinaya pitaka The arguments and conflicts between them were thus often on matters of philosophical Abhidhammic origin not on matters concerning the actual words and teachings of Buddha One impetus for composing new scriptures like the Adhidhammas of the various schools according to some scholars who was that Buddha left no clear statement about the ontological status of the world about what really exists note 12 Subsequently later Buddhists have themselves defined what exists and what not in the Abhidhammic scriptures leading to disagreements Parts of the Khuddaka Nikaya Edit Oliver Abeynayake has the following to say on the dating of the various books in the Khuddaka Nikaya The Khuddaka Nikaya can easily be divided into two strata one being early and the other late The texts Sutta Nipata Itivuttaka Dhammapada Therigatha Theragatha Udana and Jataka tales belong to the early stratum The texts Khuddakapatha Vimanavatthu Petavatthu Niddesa Patisambhidamagga Apadana Buddhavamsa and Cariyapitaka can be categorized in the later stratum 23 The texts in the early stratum date from before the second council earlier than 100 years after Buddha s parinibbana while the later stratum is from after the second council which means they are definitely later additions to the Sutta Pitaka and that they might not have been the original teachings by the Buddha but later compositions by disciples The following books of the Khuddaka Nikaya can thus be regarded as later additions the Khuddakapatha the Vimanavatthu the Petavatthu the Niddesa the Patisambhidamagga the Apadana the Buddhavamsa the Cariyapitaka And the following three which are included in the Burmese Canon the Milindapanha the Nettippakarana the PetakopadesaThe original verses of the Jatakas are recognized as being amongst the earliest part of the Canon 19 but the accompanying and more famous Jataka Stories are purely commentarial an obvious later addition Parivara Edit The Parivara the last book of the Vinaya Pitaka is a later addition to the Vinaya Pitaka 24 Other later writings Edit all literature of the Mahayana the Mahayana Sutras 25 all commentarial works atthakatha of Theravada and other early Buddhist schools Hinayana and Mahayana EditBetween the 1st century BCE and the 1st century CE the terms Mahayana and Hinayana were first used in writing in for example the Lotus Sutra The later Mahayana schools may have preserved ideas which were abandoned by the orthodox Theravada such as the Three Bodies doctrine the idea of consciousness vijnana as a continuum and devotional elements such as the worship of saints 26 27 note 13 Although the various early schools of Buddhism are sometimes loosely classified as Hinayana in modern times this is not necessarily accurate According to Jan Nattier Mahayana never referred to a separate sect of Buddhism Skt nikaya but rather to the set of ideals and doctrines for bodhisattvas 28 Paul Williams has also noted that the Mahayana never had nor ever attempted to have a separate vinaya or ordination lineage from the early Buddhist schools and therefore each bhikṣu or bhikṣuṇi adhering to the Mahayana formally belonged to an early school Membership in these nikayas or monastic sects continues today with the Dharmaguptaka nikaya in East Asia and the Mulasarvastivada nikaya in Tibetan Buddhism Therefore Mahayana was never a separate rival sect of the early schools 29 Paul Harrison clarifies that while Mahayana monastics belonged to a nikaya not all members of a nikaya were Mahayanists 30 From Chinese monks visiting India we now know that both Mahayana and non Mahayana monks in India often lived in the same monasteries side by side 31 Additionally Isabella Onians notes that Mahayana works rarely used the term Hinayana typically using the term Sravakayana instead 32 The Chinese Buddhist monk and pilgrim Yijing wrote about relationship between the various vehicles and the early Buddhist schools in India He wrote There exist in the West numerous subdivisions of the schools which have different origins but there are only four principal schools of continuous tradition These schools are namely the Mahasaṃghika nikaya Sthavira Mulasarvastivada and Saṃmitiya nikayas 33 Explaining their doctrinal affiliations he then writes Which of the four schools should be grouped with the Mahayana or with the Hinayana is not determined That is to say there was no simple correspondence between a Buddhist monastic sect and whether its members learn Hinayana or Mahayana teachings 34 The Chinese pilgrims EditDuring the first millennium monks from China such as Faxian Xuanzang and Yijing made pilgrimages to India and wrote accounts of their travels when they returned home These Chinese travel records constitute extremely valuable sources of information concerning the state of Buddhism in India during the early medieval period By the time the Chinese pilgrims Xuanzang and Yijing visited India there were five early Buddhist schools that they mentioned far more frequently than others They commented that the Sarvastivada Mulasarvastivada Mahasaṃghika and Saṃmitiya were the principal early Buddhist schools still extant in India along with the Sthavira sect 35 The Dharmaguptakas continued to be found in Gandhara and Central Asia along the Silk Road Timeline EditTimeline Development and propagation of Buddhist traditions c 450 BCE c 1300 CE 450 BCE note 14 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE 700 CE 800 CE 1200 CE note 15 India EarlySangha Early Buddhist schools Mahayana Vajrayana Sri Lanka amp Southeast Asia Theravada Tibetan Buddhism Nyingma KadamKagyu DagpoSakya Jonang East Asia Early Buddhist schools and Mahayana via the silk roadto China and oceancontact from India to Vietnam TangmiNara Rokushu ShingonChan Thiền Seon ZenTiantai Jingtǔ Tendai Nichiren Jōdo shu Central Asia amp Tarim Basin Greco Buddhism Silk Road Buddhism 450 BCE 250 BCE 100 CE 500 CE 700 CE 800 CE 1200 CE Legend Theravada Mahayana Vajrayana Various syncreticSee also EditAtthakavagga and Parayanavagga Buddhist Councils Early Buddhist Texts History of Buddhism Index of Buddhism related articles Nikaya Buddhism Pyrrhonism Rhinoceros Sutra Schools of Buddhism Secular Buddhism Timeline of BuddhismNotes Edit I would also argue that unintentional literalism has been a major force for change in the early doctrinal history of Buddhism Texts have been interpreted with too much attention to the precise words used and not enough to the speaker s intention the spirit of the text In particular I see in some doctrinal developments what I call scholastic literalism which is a tendency to take the words and phrases of earlier texts maybe the Buddha s own words in such a way as to read in distinctions which it was never intended to make How Buddhism Began Richard F Gombrich Munshiram Manoharlal 1997 pp 21 22 Sarvastivadin 説一切有部 Haimavata 雪山部 Vatsiputriya 犢子部 Dharmottara 法上部 Bhadrayaniya 賢冑部 Sammitiya 正量部 Channagirika 密林山部 Mahisasaka 化地部 Dharmaguptaka 法蔵部 Kasyapiya 飲光部 Sautrantika 経量部 Mahasaṃghika 大衆部 was split into 9 sects There were Ekavyaharika 一説部 Lokottaravada 説出世部 Gokulika 鶏胤部 Bahusrutiya 多聞部 Prajnaptivada 説仮部 Caitika 制多山部 Aparasaila 西山住部 and Uttarasaila 北山住部 See Ajahn Sucitto What Is Theravada 2012 see also A K Warder Indian Buddhism 3rd rev ed Delhi Motilal Banarsidass 2000 chapters 8 and 9 a b c d e f According to Buswell and Lopez the Kasyapiya and Mahisasaka were offshoots of the Sarvastivadins but are grouped under the Vibhajjavada as non sarvastivada groups 14 Theravada Buddhism in texts such as Cariyapitaka Buddhavamsa and Dhammapadatthakatha postulates the following ten perfections Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 632 It is evident that the Hinayanists either to popularize their religion or to interest the laity more in it incorporated in their doctrines the conception of Bodhisattva and the practice of paramitas This was effected by the production of new literature the Jatakas and Avadanas Buddhist Sects in India Nalinaksha Dutt Motilal Banararsidass Publishers Delhi 2nd Edition 1978 p 251 The term Semi Mahayana occurs here as a subtitle several schools rejected the authority of abhidharma and claimed that abhidharma treatises were composed by fallible human teachers in Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 2 A similar statement can be found on pp 112 and 756 Although begun as a pragmatic method of elaborating the received teachings this scholastic enterprise soon led to new doctrinal and textual developments and became the focus of a new form of scholarly monastic life Independent abhidharma treatises were composed over a period of at least seven hundred years ca third or second centuries B C E to fifth century C E MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 2 These similarities between the Abhidhammas of the various schools suggest either contact among the groups who composed and transmitted these texts or a common ground of doctrinal exegesis and even textual material predating the emergence of the separate schools MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 2 If I am right in thinking that the Buddha left no clear statement about the ontological status of the world about what really exists this would explain how later Buddhists could disagree about this question How Buddhism Began Richard F Gombrich Munshiram Manoharlal 1997 p 34 See also Atthakavagga and Parayanavagga Cousins L S 1996 Buswell 2003 Vol I p 82 and Keown amp Prebish 2004 p 107 See also Gombrich 1988 2002 p 32 T he best we can say is that the Buddha was probably Enlightened between 550 and 450 more likely later rather than earlier Williams 2000 pp 6 7 writes As a matter of fact Buddhism in mainland India itself had all but ceased to exist by the thirteenth century CE although by that time it had spread to Tibet China Japan and Southeast Asia 36 Originally 1958 Chronology p xxix c 1000 1200 Buddhism disappears as an organized religious force in India See also Robinson amp Johnson 1970 1982 pp 100 1 108 Fig 1 and Harvey 1990 2007 pp 139 40 References Edit a b c Cox 1995 p 23 Hanh 1999 p 16 Prebish Charles S Buddhism Hoiberg amp Ramchandani 2000 p 264 Williams 1989 p 6 Lamotte Etienne 1988 History of Indian Buddhism From the Origins to the Saka Era translated from the French by Sara Boin Webb Louvain Peeters Press Hirakawa Akira 1990 A History of Indian Buddhism From Sakyamuni to Early Mahayana tr Paul Groner University of Hawaii Press Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica 1998 Skilton 2004 p 47 Harvey Introduction to Buddhism Cambridge University Press 1990 p 74 Berkwitz 2009 p 45 Dube S N 1972 The Date of Kathavatthu East and West 22 1 2 79 86 ISSN 0012 8376 JSTOR 29755746 Huifeng 2013 pp 175 228 Buswell amp Lopez 2013 p 859 a b Abhidhamma Pitaka Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 Buddhist Sects in India Nalinaksha Dutt 1978 p 58 Buddhism Encyclopaedia Britannica Ultimate Reference Suite Chicago Encyclopaedia Britannica 2008 a b Kanai Lal Hazra Pali Language and Literature A Systematic Survey and Historical Survey 1994 Vol 1 p 415 a b Kanai Lal Hazra Pali Language and Literature A Systematic Survey and Historical Survey 1994 Vol 1 p 412 I B Horner Book of the Discipline Volume 5 p 398 The Mahisasaka Account of the First Council mentions the four agamas here see http santifm1 0 googlepages com thefirstcouncil mahisasakaversion permanent dead link MacMillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 1 A textual and Historical Analysis of the Khuddaka Nikaya Oliver Abeynayake Ph D Colombo First Edition 1984 p 113 This work the Parivara is in fact a very much later composition and probably the work of a Ceylonese Thera from Book of the Discipline vol VI p ix translators introduction would throw the earliest phase of this literature the Mahayana Sutras back to about the beginning of the common era Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism 2004 p 493 Lindtner 1997 Lindtner 1999 Nattier 2003 p 193 194 Williams 1989 p 4 5 Xing 2004 p 115 Williams Paul 2000 Buddhist Thought A Complete Introduction to the Indian Tradition p 97 Isabelle Onians Tantric Buddhist Apologetics or Antinomianism as a Norm D Phil dissertation Oxford Trinity Term 2001 p 72 Walser Joseph 2005 Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture p 41 Walser Joseph 2005 Nagarjuna in Context Mahayana Buddhism and Early Indian Culture pp 41 42 Encyclopedia of Buddhism edited by Edward Irons Facts on File 2008 ISBN 978 0 8160 5459 6 p 419 Embree 1988 Sources Edit Buddhist Council Encyclopaedia Britannica 1998 Berkwitz Stephen C 2009 South Asian Buddhism A Survey Routledge ISBN 978 0415452489 Buswell Robert E Lopez Donald S 2013 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton University Press Buswell Jr Robert E ed 2003 Encyclopedia of Buddhism MacMillan ISBN 0 02 865718 7 Cousins L S 1996 The Dating of the Historical Buddha A Review Article in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society Series 3 6 1 1996 57 63 Retrieved 29 Nov 2008 from Indology at https www webcitation org 5vDULzfTE url http indology info papers cousins Cox Collett 1995 Disputed Dharmas Early Buddhist Theories on Existence Tokyo The Institute for Buddhist Studies ISBN 4 906267 36 X Embree Ainslie T Hay Stephen N de Bary Wm Theodore eds 1988 1958 Sources of Indian Tradition From the Beginning to 1800 vol 1 A L Bashram R N Dandekar Peter Hardy J B Harrison V Raghavan Royal Weiler and Andrew Yarrow 2nd ed New York Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 06651 1 Gombrich Richard F 1988 6th reprint 2002 Theravada Buddhism A Social History from Ancient Benares to Modern Colombo London Routledge ISBN 0 415 07585 8 Gombrich Richard F 1997 How Buddhism Began Munshiram Manoharlal Harvey Peter 1990 15th printing 2007 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 31333 3 Hanh Thich Nhat 1999 The Heart of Buddha s Teachings Harmony ISBN 978 0767903691 Hoiberg Dale Ramchandani Indu 2000 Early Buddhist schools Students Britannica India Popular Prakashan ISBN 0 85229 760 2 Huifeng Shi 2013 Dependent Origination Emptiness Nagarjuna s Innovation An Examination of the Early and Mainstream Sectarian Textual Sources Journal of the Centre for Buddhist Studies Sri Lanka vol 11 pp 175 228 ISSN 1391 8443 Hirakawa 1990 History of Indian Buddhism volume 1 Hawai i University Press Hurvitz Leon 1976 Scripture of the Lotus Blossom of the Fine Dharma Columbia University Press Jong J W de 1993 The Beginnings of Buddhism The Eastern Buddhist 26 2 Keown Damien and Charles S Prebish eds 2004 Encyclopedia of Buddhism London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 31414 5 Lindtner Christian 1997 The Problem of Precanonical Buddhism Buddhist Studies Review 14 2 Lindtner Christian 1999 From Brahmanism to Buddhism Asian Philosophy 9 1 Nakamura 1989 Indian Buddhism Motilal Banarsidas Nattier Jan 2003 A Few Good Men The Bodhisattva Path According to the Inquiry of Ugra Ugraparipṛccha University of Hawai i Press ISBN 978 0824830038 Robinson Richard H and Willard L Johnson 1970 3rd ed 1982 The Buddhist Religion A Historical Introduction Belmont CA Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 0 534 01027 X Skilton Andrew 2004 A Concise History of Buddhism Windhorse Publications ISBN 978 0904766929 Sects amp Sectarianism The Origins of Buddhist Schools Santi Forest Monastery 2006 by Bhikkhu Sujato Williams Paul 1989 Mahayana Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 35653 4 Williams Paul with Anthony Tribe 2000 Buddhist Thought London Routledge ISBN 0 415 20701 0 Retrieved 29 Nov 2008 from Google Books at https books google com books id v0Rpvycf1t0C Xing Guang 2004 The Concept of the Buddha Its Evolution from Early Buddhism to the Trikaya Theory Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism Routledge ISBN 978 0415333443Further reading EditCoogan Michael D ed 2003 The Illustrated Guide to World Religions Oxford University Press ISBN 1 84483 125 6 Dhammananda K Sri 1964 What the Buddhist Believe PDF Buddhist Mission Society of Malaysia ISBN 983 40071 1 6 Gethin Rupert 1998 Foundations of Buddhism Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 289223 1 Gunaratana Bhante Henepola 2002 Mindfulness in Plain English Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 321 4 Lowenstein Tom 1996 The vision of the Buddha Duncan Baird Publishers ISBN 1 903296 91 9 Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti Mahayana Scripture translated by Thurman Robert A F Pennsylvania State University Press 1976 ISBN 0 271 00601 3 Walpola Rahula 1974 What the Buddha Taught Grove Press ISBN 0 8021 3031 3 Page Tony ed Mahayana Mahaparinirvana Sutra translated by Yamamoto Kosho Nirvana Publications Shun Yin 1998 The Way to Buddhahood Instructions from a Modern Chinese Master translated by Wing Yeung H Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 133 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Buddhism The Sects of the Buddhists Rhys Davids T W The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 1891 pp 409 422 Sects amp Sectarianism The origins of Buddhist Schools Sources on early Buddhism Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Early Buddhist schools amp oldid 1132255478, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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