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Rangtong and shentong

Shentong (Wylie: gzhan stong, "emptiness of other") is term for a type of Buddhist view on emptiness (śūnyatā), Madhyamaka, and the two truths in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. It is often contrasted with the term rangtong ("self-emptiness"). The term refers to a range of views held by different Tibetan Buddhist figures.[1]

The classic shentong view was developed and defended by the Jonang school of Tibetan Buddhism, especially by the great scholar Dölpopa Shérap Gyeltsen (1292–1361).[2] The view also has precursors in some Indian Buddhist works, such as the Ratnagotravibhāga and the writings of Indian figures like Ratnākaraśānti and Sajjana.

Classic Jonang shentong holds that while all relative phenomena are empty of inherent existence (svabhava), ultimate reality (paramartha-satya) is not empty of its own inherent existence.[3] In this view, ultimate reality, the buddha-wisdom (buddha-jñana) or buddha-nature (buddhadhātu), is only empty of relative and defiled phenomena, but it is not empty of its countless awakened qualities.[4] Tibetan defenders of shentong, like Dölpopa, describe opposing views on emptiness and Madhyamaka as rangtong ("empty of self", "self-empty"). These views generally hold that all phenomena (relative and ultimate) are equally empty of inherent existence and thus have the same ontological status.[5]

Jonang shentong later influenced the views of various figures in the other schools of Tibetan Buddhism, like Sakya Chokden and Situ Panchen, becoming popular in various lineages. The shentong view was officially banned by Gelug authorities in the 17th century, due to political and doctrinal conflicts with the Jonang school, and shentong texts were sometimes destroyed in this period.[5] After this period of suppression, various shentong views were propagated mainly by Jonang, Kagyu and Nyingma lamas. The 19th century saw a revival of shentong, particularly within the non-sectarian Rimé movement.[6] Nowadays, classic shentong remains the main philosophical theory of the Jonang school, and various other forms of shentong are also taught by some lamas of the Kagyu, Sakya, and Nyingma schools.[7][8]

Terms edit

Shentong (Tibetan: གཞན་སྟོང་, Wylie: gzhan stong, Lhasa dialect: [ɕɛ̃̀tṍŋ], also transliterated zhäntong or zhentong; literally "other-emptiness") is a Tibetan Buddhist philosophical view. It applies the Mahayana theory of emptiness in a specific way. While shentong sees relative reality as empty of self-nature, it argues that absolute reality (paramarthasatya)[3][note 1] is a positive "non-dual buddhajñana"[3][note 2] which is only "empty" (Wylie: stong) of "other," (Wylie: gzhan) relative phenomena (dharmas). This positive ultimate reality (the buddha-nature, tathagatagarbha, or Dharmadhatu) is not empty of its own nature, and is thus "truly existing."[10][2]

Another English translation of shentong is "extrinsic emptiness."[11] Shentong was also called "Great Mādhyamaka" (dbu ma chen po), a term which has also been used by other figures to refer to their Madhyamaka views, like Longchenpa and Mipham.[11]

The term rangtong (Tibetan: རང་སྟོང་, Wylie: rang stong; "empty of self-nature") was coined by shentong theorist Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen, who used the term "shentong" to characterise his own teachings and "rangtong" to refer to the teachings he saw as lesser to shentong.[5] Rangtong generally refers to the Madhyamaka view which holds that all phenomena are empty of self (atman) and inherent nature (svabhava) and that this emptiness is not an absolute reality, but a mere nominal designation.[5]

History edit

Indian origin and sources edit

The notion of shentong grew out of various Indian and Tibetan doctrinal discussions on the topics of Madhyamaka, Yogacara, and the theory of Buddha-nature.[12][1]

Shentong adherents generally trace the shentong view back to India, pointing to numerous Indian sources, including the tathagatagarbha sutras, a group of treatises variously attributed jointly to Asanga and Maitreya (especially the Ratnagotravibhāga), and a body of praises attributed to Nāgārjuna (the "Four Hymns" and the Dharmadhātustava).[13][14] The Ratnagotravibhāga's statement that "the true end is void of conditioned phenomena in all aspects" is a key source for shentong reasoning.[1] The same text also contains a key passage which states: "the basic element is empty of what is adventitious, which has the characteristic of being separable. It is not empty of the unsurpassable attributes, which have the characteristic of being inseparable."[1]

In developing the shentong view, Dolpopa draws on several Indian Mahayana sutras which he considered to be of definitive meaning (Sanskrit: nītārtha) including: Tathāgatagarbha sūtra, Avikalpapraveśa dhāraṇī (Dharani for Entering the Nonconceptual), Śrīmālādevī Siṃhanāda Sūtra, Mahābherīsūtra (Sutra of the Great Drum), Aṅgulimālīya Sūtra, Tathāgatamahākaruṇānirdeśasūtra (Sutra Presenting the Great Compassion of the Tathagata, also known as the Dhāraṇīśvararāja), Mahāmegha sūtra (Sutra of the Great Cloud), the Mahāyāna Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra, the “Maitreya Chapter” (found in two versions of the Tibetan Large Prajñaparamita), the Pañcaśatikāprajñāpāramitā (Perfection of Wisdom in 500 Lines), the Saṃdhinirmocanasūtra, the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra, and the Buddhāvataṃsakasūtra.[15][16]

Karl Brunnhölzl notes that several Indian sources contain a view similar to shentong. This view is an alternate interpretation of the yogacara model of the three natures which states that the perfected nature is empty of both the imaginary nature and the dependent nature.[1] This view is found in the Bṛhaṭṭīkā (a Prajñāpāramitā commentary which comments on the ‘Maitreya Chapter’ in the Large Prajñāpāramitāsūtra), the Bhagavatyāmnāyānusāriṇī (a commentary on the Aṣṭasāhasrikā), as well as in some texts by Ratnākaraśānti, which also state that the perfected nature is the buddha-nature.[1]

The Bṛhaṭṭīkā states that the perfected nature (here called dharmata-form) is empty of the dependent nature (here called "what is conceived") and the imaginary nature:

Here, what is the perfect [nature] - dharmata-form - [is empty of] characteristics such as existing as imaginary form and is empty of the form that appears as the aspect of an object that is conceived as form. It is therefore that it is called "empty."[17]

Furthermore, the Bṛhaṭṭīkā states that "being empty means being devoid of what is other" (*pararahita; gzhan bral).[18] The Prajñāpāramitā commentaries like the Bṛhaṭṭīkā also state that the perfected nature is a naturally luminous mind which is unchanging, and free of adventitious stains.[19] Brunnhölzl also writes that Jñānaśrīmitra’s Sākārasiddhiśāstra also promotes similar ideas.[1]

Another Indian source, Sajjana's Mahāyānottaratantraśāstropadeśa, a commentary on the Ratnagotravibhāga, states:

[Beings are endowed with] the heart of a tathāgata, because the disposition for the [tathāgata] exists [in them]. The suchness of the dhātu is devoid of what is afflicted—the dependent (paratantra).[1]

According to Jamgon Kongtrul's Treasury of Knowledge, shentong is associated with the "third wheel" of Dharma, the highest intention of the Buddha, which can be found in various Indian sources like the treatises of Maitreya (Dharmadharmatāvibhāga and Ratnagotravibhāga) and some of Nāgārjuna's hymns. Kongtrul traces the lineage of the third wheel of Dharma through Indian figures like Asaṅga, Vasubandhu, Dharmapāla (530-561), Candragomī, Ratnākaraśānti, Maitrīpa and his student Vajrapāṇi, who wrote a commentary on Maitrīpa's Tattvadaśaka (Ten Stanzas on True Reality). This lineage was transmitted to Tibet by Ānandakīrti and Sajjana, through Ngog Lotsāwa (1059–1109), Su Gawé Dorje, Dsen Kawoché, and entered the Kagyu tradition through Gampopa and Padampa Sangyé.[1]

Development in Tibet edit

In the Jonang tradition of Kālacakra, Yumo Mikyö Dorje is considered the key founder of shentong in Tibet. Jonang histories state he was a Kashmiri pandit and a student of a siddha named Candranātha.[1] The only surviving texts of this figure are his "Four Lucid Lamps", which focus on the six-branch yoga of Kālacakra.[1]

 
Thangkha with Jonang lama Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen (1292–1361)
 
Chödrak Gyatso (1454–1506), seventh Karmapa, head of the Kagyu School

Shentong was systematized and spread by Dölpopa Shérap Gyeltsen (1292–1361), a Sakya trained lama who later joined the Jonang school, studied under Khetsun Yonten Gyatso (1260-1327), and became a great scholar practitioner of Jonang Kālacakra.[20] In 1321 Dölpopa visited Tsurphu Monastery for the first time, and had extensive discussions with the third Karmapa Rangjung Dorje (1284–1339). Rangjung Dorje may have influenced the development of some of Dölpopa's theories.[21][note 3]

Dölpopa claimed to have extraordinary insights,[note 4] and his meditational experience seems to have played a great role in the development of his shentong view.[23] Dölpopa developed a new philosophical vocabulary, based on Sanskrit and Tibetan, to express his insights.[24] He coined new terms including shentong, and khunzhi yeshe ("universal-ground primordial awareness"), and popularized other terms like "Great Madhyamaka". He also made use of terms from Mahayana scriptures which were not in use in Tibet at the time, for example, he referred to the ultimate truth as atman, nitya (eternal), and dhruva (immovable).[24] According to Tāranātha, Dölpopa also unified two shentong lineages, the sūtra lineage of Maitreya-Asaṅga (through Maitrīpa, Ratnākaraśānti, Su Gawé Dorje, Dsen Kawoché and so on) and the Kālacakratantra shentong lineage of Kālacakrapāda the Elder (through Bodhibhadra, Paṇḍita Somanātha, and Yumowa Mikyö Dorje).[1]

In the 15th century, shentong had become accepted by some figures in the Sakya and Kagyu schools. Sakya scholar Shakya Chokden (1428–1507), Shakya's teacher Rongton, and Chödrak Gyatso, 7th Karmapa Lama (1454–1506, who was a student of Shakya Chokden), were all proponents of a shentong view, though they had their own unique interpretations of shentong that are not identical to the stronger Jonang form of shentong.[25][1]

In the Jonang tradition, Tāranātha (1575–1635) is second in importance only to Dölpopa himself. He was responsible for the short-lived renaissance of the school as a whole in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, and of the widespread revitalization of the shentong theory in particular.[26] Tāranātha wrote a commentary on the Heart Sutra which asserts that the Sutra, and prajñāpāramitā, teaches the shentong view.[27]

Criticism and repression edit

Shentong views have often come under criticism by followers of all four of the main Tibetan Buddhist schools, but particularly by the Sakya and Gelug schools. The Sakya lama Rendawa Shonu Lodro (1348-1413) was one of the earliest critics of the view, and so was his student, Je Tsongkhapa (1357–1419), the founder of the Gelug school.[28] Rendawa wrote a refutation of Jonang Kalachakra which led to further debates and counter-refutations by Jonang scholars like Jangchup Senge.[29]

The great fourteenth-century Sakya master Buton Rinchen Drub (1290–1364) was also very critical of shentong views. Gyaltsab Je and Khedrup Gelek Pelzang, 1st Panchen Lama, two of Gelug founder Je Tsongkhapa's primary disciples, were also particularly critical of shentong in the 15th century.[30]

Shentong was suppressed by the dominant Gelug school for several hundred years, equally for political reasons as doctrinal reasons. In 1658, the Gelug authorities banned the Jonang school and its texts for political reasons, forcibly converting its monks and monasteries to the Gelug school, as well as banning shentong philosophy and books, thus making the rangtong position the overwhelmingly majority one in Tibetan Buddhism.[31] The texts of Shakya Chokden, which promoted shentong and criticized Tsongkhapa, were also banned in the 17th century.[32]

 
Jamgön Kongtrül Lodrö Thayé (1813–1899), an exponent of shentong in the modern era

After the suppression of the Jonang school and its texts and the texts of Śākya Chokden by the Tibetan government in the seventeenth century, various shentong views were propagated mainly by Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lamas. Key figures of this revival include Katok Tsewang Norbu (1698–1755), the head of Katok monastery, and the Kagyu lama Situ Panchen (1700–1774), a senior court chaplain in the Kingdom of Derge, a student of Katok Tsewang Norbu and the 8th Tai Situpa.[6] These two figures were instrumental in the spread of shentong views outside of Jonang. Tsewang Norbu was a student of the Jonang lama Künsang Wangpo, and he introduced shentong and the Kālacakra tantra tradition into Kagyu and Nyingma. He was also a teacher of the Thirteenth Karmapa, and the Tenth Shamarpa.[1]

Modern period edit

The 19th century saw a further revival of shentong, particularly within figures of the Rimé movement like Jamyang Kyentsé Wangpo (1820–1892) and Jamyang Chökyi Lodrö (1896–1958).[6] A key Rime defender of a strong Dölpopa influenced shentong was Jamgön Kongtrül (1813–1899), and his work remains influential in Kagyu circles today. The influential Nyingma scholar Jamgön Ju Mipham (1846–1912) also defended a unique view of shentong in his Lion’s Roar of Shentong. However, in spite of this non-sectarian activity, Mipham was clear that his philosophy was ultimately prasangika madhyamaka. In spite of this, at least one of Mipham's students was a known shentongpa, Shechen Gyaltsab Padma Namgyal (1871–1926),[1] who was the root lama of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche and also a lama of Dzongsar Khyentse Chökyi Lodrö.

In the modern period, the Jonang school also experienced a revival. Key Jonang defenders of shentong in this era include Bamda Gelek Gyatso (1844-1904), Tsoknyi Gyatso (1880-1940), Ngawang Lodro Drakpa (1920-75), Kunga Tukje Palsang (1925-2000) and Ngawang Yonten Sangpo (1928-2002).[33]

The strong form of shentong defended by Dölpopa and Tāranātha remains the main philosophical theory of the Jonang school. Other forms of shentong (mainly influenced by the interpretations of Kongtrul and Mipham) are also taught by some lamas of the Kagyu, Sakya, and Nyingma schools.[7][8][1] According to Cyrus Stearns, Kagyu and Nyingma forms of shentong "vary a great deal from the original teachings of Dölpopa" and "represents a synthesis that has developed over time, primarily in order to enable Dölpopa’s most profound insights to be incorporated into the established doctrines of the Great Seal and the Great Perfection."[34]

Shentong philosophies edit

Forms of shentong edit

As Karl Brunnhölzl notes, there is no single shentong view, rather there is "a great variety of ways in which different Tibetan masters understand this term and how they formulate the associated view."[1] Brunnhölzl mentions a text by the twentieth-century Kagyü scholar Surmang Padma Namgyal, which includes seven main forms of shentong:[1]

  1. The Jonang shentong of Dölpopa, which sees consciousness as self-empty, and the buddha-wisdom as other-empty (shentong).
  2. Śākya Chokden's (1428–1507) view, which sees phenomenal appearance as self-empty and luminosity as other-empty.
  3. Sabsang Mati Paṇchen, a student of Dölpopa, who taught that subject-object dualism is self-empty, and that the expanse (dbyings) and wisdom is other-empty.
  4. The view of Dudul Dorje (1733–1797), the Thirteenth Karmapa, which holds that while saṃsāra is self-empty, nirvāṇa is other empty.
  5. The view of Mikyö Dorje (1507–1554), the 8th Karmapa, which holds that the pure buddha-bodies and buddha-wisdom is self-empty in terms of their mode of being, but other-empty in how they appear.
  6. The view of Situ Panchen (8th Situpa), which sees negation as self-empty and affirmation as other-empty.
  7. The view of the Gaḥto Monastery Nyingma lama Gédsé Paṇchen (1761–1829), which holds "the phase of conclusive resolve during meditative equipoise to be rangtong and the phase of clearly distinguishing during subsequent attainment to be shentong."[1]

Brunnhölzl adds that the various views listed here are based on three different understandings of the terms rangtong and shentong. As Brunnhölzl writes, "the first—and most common—category takes rangtong and shentong to refer to phenomena as belonging to two different levels of reality (seeming and ultimate), which underlies views (1)–(5). The second category refers to rangtong and shentong as two approaches to conceptually determine the subject in question (6). The third category considers rangtong and shentong as distinct (nonconceptual) experiences or phases in the process of attaining realization (7)."[1] Thus, the term shentong can refer to a metaphysical theory, a doctrinal conceptual schema and a way to explain a specific experience.

Jonang shentong edit

 
Tāranātha, a Jonang scholar

The shentong doctrine of the Jonang school views the two truths doctrine as distinguishing between an ultimate reality (buddha-nature, the dharmadhatu) and a relative reality (all other phenomena). According to this view, the buddha-nature is real (and not empty of inherent existence), while all other phenomena are empty of inherent existence or self-nature (svabhava). The ultimate reality is also described as empty, but it is empty in a different way. The absolute reality is "empty" (Wylie: stong) only of "other" (Wylie: gzhan) relative phenomena, but it is not empty of its own nature (as the expanse endowed with all buddha qualities).[2]

Thus, Dölpopa distinguishes between two different modes of emptiness, one which applies to relative truth and another which applies to the ultimate. Dölpopa writes:

Because all that is present as the two modes of emptiness are equal in being emptiness, there are statements with the single phrase, "All is emptiness," but there are also statements that distinguish between empty of self-nature and empty of other. So their intent should also be precisely presented. Concerning that, because relative and incidental entities are completely nonexistent in their true mode of existence, they are empty of own-essence. That is being empty of self-nature. Because the original absolute that is empty of those relative phenomena is never nonexistent, it is empty of other.[35]

This "other-empty" (shentong) absolute reality is the "all-basis wisdom" or "gnosis of the ground of all" (kun gzhi ye shes, Skt. ālaya-jñāna) which is "uncreated and indestructible, unconditioned and beyond the chain of dependent origination" and is the basis for both samsara and nirvana.[35] According to Stearns, Dölpopa also considers this absolute as "natural luminosity (which is synonymous with the dharmakaya) and a primordial, indestructible, eternal great bliss inherently present in every living being."[36]

The relative reality (which is empty of itself, i.e. rangtong) refers to the impermanent phenomena which arise and cease and are dependent on causes and conditions.[37] This is particularly used to refer to the impure mental defilements and worldly thoughts which veil the ultimate buddha-nature.[36] It is also associated with the ālāyavijñāna (Tib. kun gzhi rnam shes).[38] Dölpopa compares the pure all-basis wisdom or buddha-nature with a clear sky, while the impure relative phenomena are compared to clouds which only temporarily obscure it.[38]

According to Dölpopa, the tathāgatagarbha (buddha-nature, synonymous with the dharmadhātu) refers to the Ratnagotravibhāga's perfections of supreme purity, permanence, self, and bliss.[1] Brunnhölzl writes that for Dölpopa, this buddha-nature "is liberated from all characteristics of reference points, is beyond terms and thoughts, and is the object of unmistaken nonconceptual wisdom. Since it withstands analysis through reasoning, one can only mistake it for something that it is not when one subjects it to such analysis."[1] Dölpopa states that this ultimate reality is the same as "the reflections of the emptiness endowed with all supreme aspects" (sarvākāravaropetāśūnyatā) taught in the Kālacakra, which is an emptiness endowed with awakened qualities.[1]

Dölpopa referred to another view he termed "rangtong" (self-empty). This was the mainstream interpretation of emptiness and madhyamaka in Tibetan Buddhism, which held that all phenomena (dharmas) are empty of a self-nature (svabhava) in both the relative and absolute sense.[39] The term rangtong is often used by defenders of the shentong view to refer to the views of those who reject the view of shentong, such as Tsongkhapa (1357–1419). What makes "rangtong" a different view is that it rejects the idea that there is anything (even Buddhahood) that is not empty of essential nature (svabhava) and as such, all phenomena only exist dependently (even nirvana and the buddha's wisdom).[40] Shentong meanwhile holds that there is something which truly exists in an absolute sense, and this is the Buddha wisdom (buddhajñana) or the continuum of luminous mind (prabhāsvara).

In Jonang shentong, one initially studies rangtong style madhyamaka analysis through the classic Indian Madhyamaka texts (mainly Nagarjuna's Collection of Reasoning), then one goes beyond these teaching using the "Great Madhyamaka" shentong teachings of the third turning.[1][41] Thus, Dölpopa did not completely reject the rangtong view, he merely saw it as the lower and incomplete view of the second turning of the wheel of Dharma.[1] According to Dölpopa, rangtong teachings were teachings of provisional meaning, while shentong teachings were the final and definitive teachings.[42] Dölpopa also held that the ultimate intent of the provisional teachings is the same buddha-nature and therefore the scriptures of the second and third turning along with the yogacara and madhyamaka traditions are ultimately all in agreement.[43] Dölpopa draws on various Indian sources to defend this position, including the Maitreya Chapter of the Large Prajñāpāramitā sutra, the Bṛhaṭṭīkā commentary (which he attributed to Vasubandhu) and Nagarjuna's Collection of Hymns.[44]

Shentong in Kagyü edit

 
Situ Panchen, 8th Situpa, founder and head of Palpung Monastery

Numerous Kagyu lamas have taught various forms of shentong, including the Seventh Karmapa, the Eighth Karmapa, the Thirteenth Karmapa, the Fifth Shamarpa, the Eighth Situpa Situ Panchen, and Jamgön Kongtrul.[1] Shentong views have also been defended by recent Kagyu Lamas like Kalu Rinpoche, Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche and Thrangu Rinpoche.[1]

The Karmapas edit

The view of shentong upheld by the Karmapas, the traditional heads of the Karma Kagyü school, is a view which synthesizes prasangika madhyamaka with shentong ideas.[1]

According to Karl Brunnhölzl Rangjung Dorje, the Third Karmapa "is traditionally considered the foremost authority on the view of buddha nature in the Karma Kagyü School."[1] Brunnhölzl notes that his view "neither matches Shentong as understood by Dölpopa, Tāranātha, and other Jonangpas, nor Śākya Chogden’s or Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Tayé’s presentations of it."[1] The Third Karmapa's view is that the dharmakāya is an "unconditioned and spontaneously present mind" which transcends all concepts and reference points and is all pervading, like space. This is said to "exist as ultimate reality" but it is not said to be "really established, permanent, enduring, and totally unchanging."[1]

This is the view also defended by the Chödrak Gyatso (1454–1506), the Seventh Karmapa, in his Ocean of Texts on Reasoning, who also argues that "rangtong and shentong are not contradictory".[1] The Seventh Karmapa held that the buddha-nature taught in the true shentong is "the great freedom from extremes, the inseparability of appearance and emptiness, and the union of the two realities".[1] He further describes it as "mind as such, unconfined, unbiased, naturally luminous, expanse and awareness inseparable, the great sphere, ordinary mind."[1] He rejected Jonang shentong as eternalistic for positing an eternal and immutable ultimate reality permanent.[1] He also argues that this view insults the Buddhas "by implying that sentient beings are completely perfect buddhas."[1]

Similarly, the Thirteenth Karmapa, Düdül Dorje (1733–1797) states:[1]

both the middle and the final wheel [of dharma] have the purport of the sugata heart, the unity of emptiness and luminosity. The middle [wheel] explains this mainly by teaching emptiness, while the final [wheel] elucidates it mainly by teaching luminosity. I understand that, in actuality, these are not contradictory.

Jamgön Kongtrul edit

The currently popularity of shentong in the Kagyü school is mainly due to the influence of the great scholar Jamgön Kongtrul.[1]

Kongtrül held that "Shentong Madhyamaka" was the ultimate meaning of the third turning of the wheel of Dharma and of Nagarjuna's hymns. As such, he saw it as the highest view which presents "the primordial wisdom of emptiness free of elaborations."[45] According to Kongtrül, the very nature of primordial wisdom which is free of all extremes is immanent in all consciousnesses.[45] Furthermore, for Kongtrül, this non-dual primordial wisdom is truly established, otherwise the ultimate reality would be a kind of nothingness.[45]

Khenpo Tsültrim Gyamtso edit

One popular living exponent of Kagyu shentong is Khenpo Tsültrim Gyamtso, and his view is taught in Progressive Stages of Meditation on Emptiness, translated by his student Lama Shenpen Hookham.[46] In this work, Khenpo Tsültrim presents five stages of meditation (related to different schools or approaches), culminating in the shentong view. These five are:[47][48]

  • "Sravaka meditation on non-self" - meditation on the emptiness of the five aggregates and the non-existence of a personal self (atman);
  • "Cittamatra-approach" - meditation on the mind-stream, the ever-continuing process of perception, and the non-duality of perceived and perceiver;
  • "Svatantrika-Madhyamaka approach" - meditation on all dharmas, which are empty of self-nature, and the negation of any "substance";
  • "Prasangika-Madhyamaka approach" - meditation on "the non-conceptual (nisprapanca) nature of both the appearance of phenomena and their self-emptiness." In this approach, all concepts are to be abandoned;
  • Shentong (Yogacara-Madhyamaka) - meditation on the non-dual ultimate reality (paramarthasatya), which is the Buddha-wisdom (buddha-jñana), which is beyond concepts, and is described by terms like "truly existing."[49] This buddha wisdom is "the non-dual nature of Mind completely unobscured and endowed with its countless Buddha Qualities" (buddhagunas).[9]

Accoriding to Lama Shenpen Hookham, the absolute reality is described in positive terms by the shentong view because this approach helps one "overcome certain residual subtle concepts"[50] and the habit "of negating whatever experience arises."[4] While the shentong view destroys false concepts (like all madhyamaka), it also alerts the practitioner "to the presence of a dynamic, positive Reality that is to be experienced once the conceptual mind is defeated."[4]

In Nyingma edit

Katok Tsewang Norbu (1698–1755), head of Katok monastery, is the main figure who introduced shentong into the Nyingma tradition.[1] While shentong is not a widely held view in Nyingma, some important Nyingma scholars have defended shentong, including Lochen Dharmaśrī (1654–1717), and Gedsé Paṇḍita Gyurmé Tsewang Chogdrub (1761–1829).[1]

The noted nineteenth-century Nyingma lama Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso wrote works both supportive and critical of shentong positions.[note 6]

According to Stearns, Nyingma lamas such as Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche (1910-91), Kalu Rinpoche (1905-89), and Dudjom Rinpoche (1904-87) all accepted a form of shentong.[51]

One recent Nyingma lama that taught a shentong view (combined with prasangika madhyamaka) was Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche.

Shentong in practice edit

The shentong worldview is supported by different kinds of Buddhist practices in the various Tibetan buddhist traditions.

In the Jonang school, the main spiritual practice which accompanies the view of shentong is the practice of the Kālacakratantra's six branched yoga.[1] Klaus Dieter Mathes has argued that the nonconceptual yogic experiences described by sources like the Śrīlaghukālacakratantra and the Vimalaprabhā commentary are important meditative experiences in this tradition. Particularly important is the experience of the “reflection of emptiness” (śūnyatābimba: stong nyid gzugs brnyan).[52][better source needed]

In the Kagyu tradition, the main method of practice used by shentong adherents are Mahāmudrā style meditations which are strongly influenced by the Ratnagotravibhāga.[1] Some of these sources have been translated by Karl Brunnholzl in his When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra (2015).[1]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to Hookham, non-dual experience is Ultimate Reality.[9]
  2. ^ According to Hookham, "The Chinese Tathagarba schools describe Buddhajnana as the totality of all that is, which pervades every part of all that is in its totality."[9] According to Hookham, for Shentong Buddhajnana is "the non-dual nature of Mind completely unobscured and endowed with its countless Buddha Qualities (Buddhagunas).[9]
  3. ^ See also Karl Brunnhölzl (2008), In Praise of Dharmadhatu, a translation of Rangjung Dorje's commentary on the Dharmadhātustava, "I Parise of the Dharmadhatu," a treatise which is (incorrectly) attributed to Nagarjuna.
  4. ^ Dolpopa: "I discovered many profound essential points which have not been discovered, have not been realized, and have not been mastered by egotistical scholars, most great meditators endowed with experience and realization, and most of those who are arrogant as great upholders of secret mantra. Because a fine realization burst forth from within, and because I have an exceptional certainty untainted by doubts, not only most great meditators endowed with experience and realization, and those who are arrogant as great upholders of secret mantra, but even the Buddha definitely could not turn me back from this."[22]
  5. ^ (Tib. rigs, Skt. gotta), synonymous with Buddha-nature
  6. ^ I.e., in his Lion's Roar of Extrinsic Emptiness (q.v. external link cited below) and in his Long Excursus on the Core of Thus-Arrivedness i.e., tathãgatagarbha (bde-gshegs snying-po stong-thun chen-mo seng-ge'i nga-ro). In the Long Excursus Mipham Rinpoche follows closely the gist of an historically much earlier discussion of the subject of "lineage", [note 5] that of Longchenpa's Treasure of Philosophical Systems (grub mtha' mdzod). There Mipham identifies two general extremes of interpretation, the nihilistic identification of Buddha-nature with emptiness to the exclusion of form, and the identification of Buddha-nature as a substantially real entity that is "empty-of-other" (gzhan-gyis stong-pa). Thus it appears that Mipham Rinpoche wished to distance himself from both the Gelug/Sakya mainstream (e.g., rangtong or self-emptiness) interpretation as well as the shentong mainstream. However, what Mipham refers to in the Long Excursus as shentong is only vaguely defined as such, and to that extent, bears more resemblance to the stock misinterpretations of shentong as given by its ideological opponents, than with any actual position held by classical Shentongpas themselves. In the final analysis, both Longchenpa's and Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso's interpretations of Buddha-nature in the aforementioned texts are substantially identical with most (though not all) of the most important philosophical distinctions invoked by Dolpopa and others in propounding the superiority and definitude of shentong approaches. Where Longchenpa and Mipham differ most obviously from self-identified Shentongpa commentators is in not applying the shentong label to their positions, such as Great Madhyamaka of Other-Emptiness" (gzhan-stong dbu-ma chen-po).

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Brunnhölzl 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Stearns 1999, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b c Hookham 1991, p. 21.
  4. ^ a b c Hookham 1991, p. 23.
  5. ^ a b c d Stearns 2010, p. [page needed].
  6. ^ a b c Stearns 2002, p. 76.
  7. ^ a b Tai Situpa 2005, p. [page needed].
  8. ^ a b Hookham 1991, p. 13.
  9. ^ a b c d Hookham 1991, p. 37.
  10. ^ Hookham 1991, p. 12.
  11. ^ a b Pettit 1999, p. 113.
  12. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 1.
  13. ^ Hookham 1991.
  14. ^ Brunnhölzl 2008.
  15. ^ Brunnholzl 2015, p. 4.
  16. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 316, n. 28, 29.
  17. ^ Brunnhölzl 2011, p. 29.
  18. ^ Brunnhölzl 2011, p. 17.
  19. ^ Brunnhölzl 2011, p. 16.
  20. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 2.
  21. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 17, 47-48, 51-52, 61.
  22. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 54.
  23. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 46-47.
  24. ^ a b Stearns 2010, p. 48-50.
  25. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 60-63.
  26. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 68.
  27. ^ Tomlin 2017, p. [page needed].
  28. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 55-58.
  29. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 57-58.
  30. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 60.
  31. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 73-74.
  32. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 64.
  33. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 80-81.
  34. ^ Stearns 2010, pp. 82–83.
  35. ^ a b Stearns 2010, p. 88-89.
  36. ^ a b Stearns 2010, p. 89.
  37. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 88.
  38. ^ a b Stearns 2010, p. 91.
  39. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 87-88.
  40. ^ Kahn 2014.
  41. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 102.
  42. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 91-92.
  43. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 92-93.
  44. ^ Stearns 2010, p. 97-101.
  45. ^ a b c Tulku 2007, p. 219.
  46. ^ Hookham 1991, p. 19.
  47. ^ Hookham 1991, p. 19-26.
  48. ^ Gyamtso 1994, p. [page needed].
  49. ^ Hookham 1991, p. 21-22, 37.
  50. ^ Hookham 1991, p. 22.
  51. ^ Stearns 1999, p. 81-82.
  52. ^ "Klaus-Dieter Mathes: "Do the Nonconceptual Yogic Experiences in Kālacakra Lend Support to Jonang gzhan stong?" | The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies". buddhiststudies.stanford.edu. Retrieved 2023-06-13.

Works cited edit

  • Brunnhölzl, Karl (2008). In Praise of Dharmadhatu. Shambhala.
  • Brunnhölzl, Karl (2009). Luminous Heart: The Third Karmapa on Consciousness, Wisdom, and Buddha Nature. Snow Lion Publications.
  • Brunnhölzl, Karl (2011). Prajñāpāramitā, Indian "gzhan Stong Pas", and the Beginning of Tibetan Gzhan Stong. Arbeitskreis für Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien, Universität Wien.
  • Brunnhölzl, Karl (2014). "The Meditative Tradition of the Uttaratantra and Shentong". When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sūtra and Tantra. Boston: Snow Lion Publications. pp. 123–50.
  • Brunnholzl, Karl (2015). When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra. Shambhala Publications.
  • Burchardi, Anne (December 2007). "A Look at the Diversity of the Gzhan stong Tradition". JIATS (3). Archived from the original on 2012-09-13. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  • Gyamtso, Tsultrim (1994). Progressive Stages Of Meditation On Emptiness. ISBN 0-9511477-0-6.
  • Hookham, S. K. (1991). The Buddha Within: Tathagatagarbha doctrine according to the Shentong interpretation of the Ratnagotravibhaga. Albany, NY: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-0791403587.
  • Kahn, Susan (September 11, 2014). "The Two Truths of Buddhism and The Emptiness of Emptiness". Emptinessteachings.com.
  • Pettit, John Whitney (1999). Mipham's Beacon of Certainty: Illuminating the View of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-157-2.
  • Stearns, Cyrus (1999). The Buddha from Dolpo: A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-4191-1.
  • Stearns, Cyrus (2002). The Buddha from Dolpo: A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. ISBN 81-208-1833-4.
  • Stearns, Cyrus (2010). The Buddha from Dölpo: A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dölpopa Sherab Gyaltsen. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 978-1559393430.
  • Tai Situpa (2005). Ground, Path and Fruition. Zhyisil Chokyi Ghatsal Charitable Trust. ISBN 978-1877294358.
  • Tomlin, Adele (2017). Tāranātha's Commentary on the Heart Sutra. Library of Tibetan Works and Archives.
  • Tulku, Ringu (2007). The Ri-me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great: A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet. Shambhala.

Further reading edit

  • Berzin, Alexander (April 2006). "Self-Voidness and Other Voidness". Study Buddhism by Berzin Archives. Morelia, Mexico.
  • Brunnhölzl, Karl (2004). The Center of the Sunlit Sky: Madhyamaka in the Kagyu Tradition. Shambhala. ISBN 1-55939-218-5.
  • Cabezón, José Ignacio; Dargyay, Geshe (2007). Freedom from Extremes: Gampopa's "Distinguishing the Views" and the Polemics of Emptiness. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 9780861715237.
  • Jackson, Roger (Summer 2007). "The Great Debate on Emptiness: Review of The Essence of Other-Emptiness by Taranatha and Mountain Doctrine: Tibet's Fundamental Treatise on Other-Emptiness and the Buddha Matrix by Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen" (PDF). Buddhadharma: 75–76.{{cite journal}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  • Jennings, Patrick. . Archived from the original on 2015-05-18.
  • Rana Rinpoche, Acharya Mahayogi Sridhar (2011). . Byoma Kusuma Buddhadharma Sangha. Archived from the original on 11 March 2015.
  • Sheehy, Michael R. (May 29, 2008). "Dzogchen & Zhentong". Jonang Foundation.
  • Sheehy, Michael R., ed. (2019). The Other Emptiness: Rethinking the Zhentong Buddhist Discourse in Tibet. Translated by Klaus-Dieter Mathes. State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-43847-757-2.
  • Tāranātha, Jetsun (2007). The Essence of Other-Emptiness. Translated by Jeffrey Hopkins. Wisdom Books. ISBN 978-1-55939-273-0.
  • Tāranātha, Jetsun (2008). (PDF). Jonang Foundation’s Digital Library. Ngedon Thartuk Translation Initiative. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-11-07. Retrieved August 17, 2008.
  • Vose, Kevin, ed. (2006). Mountain Doctrine: Tibet's Fundamental Treatise on Other-Emptiness and the Buddha Matrix. Translated by Jeffrey Hopkins. Ithaca: Snow Lion.
  • Wellings, Nigel (2009). . Bath and Bristol Mindfulness Courses. Archived from the original on 20 October 2021. Retrieved 2 February 2018.

External links edit

  • Adele Tomlin (2018), The Shentong View of Emptiness – A Short Introduction and Reader'

rangtong, shentong, shentong, wylie, gzhan, stong, emptiness, other, term, type, buddhist, view, emptiness, śūnyatā, madhyamaka, truths, indo, tibetan, buddhism, often, contrasted, with, term, rangtong, self, emptiness, term, refers, range, views, held, differ. Shentong Wylie gzhan stong emptiness of other is term for a type of Buddhist view on emptiness sunyata Madhyamaka and the two truths in Indo Tibetan Buddhism It is often contrasted with the term rangtong self emptiness The term refers to a range of views held by different Tibetan Buddhist figures 1 The classic shentong view was developed and defended by the Jonang school of Tibetan Buddhism especially by the great scholar Dolpopa Sherap Gyeltsen 1292 1361 2 The view also has precursors in some Indian Buddhist works such as the Ratnagotravibhaga and the writings of Indian figures like Ratnakarasanti and Sajjana Classic Jonang shentong holds that while all relative phenomena are empty of inherent existence svabhava ultimate reality paramartha satya is not empty of its own inherent existence 3 In this view ultimate reality the buddha wisdom buddha jnana or buddha nature buddhadhatu is only empty of relative and defiled phenomena but it is not empty of its countless awakened qualities 4 Tibetan defenders of shentong like Dolpopa describe opposing views on emptiness and Madhyamaka as rangtong empty of self self empty These views generally hold that all phenomena relative and ultimate are equally empty of inherent existence and thus have the same ontological status 5 Jonang shentong later influenced the views of various figures in the other schools of Tibetan Buddhism like Sakya Chokden and Situ Panchen becoming popular in various lineages The shentong view was officially banned by Gelug authorities in the 17th century due to political and doctrinal conflicts with the Jonang school and shentong texts were sometimes destroyed in this period 5 After this period of suppression various shentong views were propagated mainly by Jonang Kagyu and Nyingma lamas The 19th century saw a revival of shentong particularly within the non sectarian Rime movement 6 Nowadays classic shentong remains the main philosophical theory of the Jonang school and various other forms of shentong are also taught by some lamas of the Kagyu Sakya and Nyingma schools 7 8 Contents 1 Terms 2 History 2 1 Indian origin and sources 2 2 Development in Tibet 2 3 Criticism and repression 2 4 Modern period 3 Shentong philosophies 3 1 Forms of shentong 3 2 Jonang shentong 3 3 Shentong in Kagyu 3 3 1 The Karmapas 3 3 2 Jamgon Kongtrul 3 3 3 Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso 3 4 In Nyingma 4 Shentong in practice 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Works cited 8 Further reading 9 External linksTerms editShentong Tibetan གཞན ས ང Wylie gzhan stong Lhasa dialect ɕɛ tṍŋ also transliterated zhantong or zhentong literally other emptiness is a Tibetan Buddhist philosophical view It applies the Mahayana theory of emptiness in a specific way While shentong sees relative reality as empty of self nature it argues that absolute reality paramarthasatya 3 note 1 is a positive non dual buddhajnana 3 note 2 which is only empty Wylie stong of other Wylie gzhan relative phenomena dharmas This positive ultimate reality the buddha nature tathagatagarbha or Dharmadhatu is not empty of its own nature and is thus truly existing 10 2 Another English translation of shentong is extrinsic emptiness 11 Shentong was also called Great Madhyamaka dbu ma chen po a term which has also been used by other figures to refer to their Madhyamaka views like Longchenpa and Mipham 11 The term rangtong Tibetan རང ས ང Wylie rang stong empty of self nature was coined by shentong theorist Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen who used the term shentong to characterise his own teachings and rangtong to refer to the teachings he saw as lesser to shentong 5 Rangtong generally refers to the Madhyamaka view which holds that all phenomena are empty of self atman and inherent nature svabhava and that this emptiness is not an absolute reality but a mere nominal designation 5 History editIndian origin and sources edit The notion of shentong grew out of various Indian and Tibetan doctrinal discussions on the topics of Madhyamaka Yogacara and the theory of Buddha nature 12 1 Shentong adherents generally trace the shentong view back to India pointing to numerous Indian sources including the tathagatagarbha sutras a group of treatises variously attributed jointly to Asanga and Maitreya especially the Ratnagotravibhaga and a body of praises attributed to Nagarjuna the Four Hymns and the Dharmadhatustava 13 14 The Ratnagotravibhaga s statement that the true end is void of conditioned phenomena in all aspects is a key source for shentong reasoning 1 The same text also contains a key passage which states the basic element is empty of what is adventitious which has the characteristic of being separable It is not empty of the unsurpassable attributes which have the characteristic of being inseparable 1 In developing the shentong view Dolpopa draws on several Indian Mahayana sutras which he considered to be of definitive meaning Sanskrit nitartha including Tathagatagarbha sutra Avikalpapravesa dharaṇi Dharani for Entering the Nonconceptual Srimaladevi Siṃhanada Sutra Mahabherisutra Sutra of the Great Drum Aṅgulimaliya Sutra Tathagatamahakaruṇanirdesasutra Sutra Presenting the Great Compassion of the Tathagata also known as the Dharaṇisvararaja Mahamegha sutra Sutra of the Great Cloud the Mahayana Mahaparinirvaṇa Sutra the Maitreya Chapter found in two versions of the Tibetan Large Prajnaparamita the Pancasatikaprajnaparamita Perfection of Wisdom in 500 Lines the Saṃdhinirmocanasutra the Laṅkavatara Sutra and the Buddhavataṃsakasutra 15 16 Karl Brunnholzl notes that several Indian sources contain a view similar to shentong This view is an alternate interpretation of the yogacara model of the three natures which states that the perfected nature is empty of both the imaginary nature and the dependent nature 1 This view is found in the Bṛhaṭṭika a Prajnaparamita commentary which comments on the Maitreya Chapter in the Large Prajnaparamitasutra the Bhagavatyamnayanusariṇi a commentary on the Aṣṭasahasrika as well as in some texts by Ratnakarasanti which also state that the perfected nature is the buddha nature 1 The Bṛhaṭṭika states that the perfected nature here called dharmata form is empty of the dependent nature here called what is conceived and the imaginary nature Here what is the perfect nature dharmata form is empty of characteristics such as existing as imaginary form and is empty of the form that appears as the aspect of an object that is conceived as form It is therefore that it is called empty 17 Furthermore the Bṛhaṭṭika states that being empty means being devoid of what is other pararahita gzhan bral 18 The Prajnaparamita commentaries like the Bṛhaṭṭika also state that the perfected nature is a naturally luminous mind which is unchanging and free of adventitious stains 19 Brunnholzl also writes that Jnanasrimitra s Sakarasiddhisastra also promotes similar ideas 1 Another Indian source Sajjana s Mahayanottaratantrasastropadesa a commentary on the Ratnagotravibhaga states Beings are endowed with the heart of a tathagata because the disposition for the tathagata exists in them The suchness of the dhatu is devoid of what is afflicted the dependent paratantra 1 According to Jamgon Kongtrul s Treasury of Knowledge shentong is associated with the third wheel of Dharma the highest intention of the Buddha which can be found in various Indian sources like the treatises of Maitreya Dharmadharmatavibhaga and Ratnagotravibhaga and some of Nagarjuna s hymns Kongtrul traces the lineage of the third wheel of Dharma through Indian figures like Asaṅga Vasubandhu Dharmapala 530 561 Candragomi Ratnakarasanti Maitripa and his student Vajrapaṇi who wrote a commentary on Maitripa s Tattvadasaka Ten Stanzas on True Reality This lineage was transmitted to Tibet by Anandakirti and Sajjana through Ngog Lotsawa 1059 1109 Su Gawe Dorje Dsen Kawoche and entered the Kagyu tradition through Gampopa and Padampa Sangye 1 Development in Tibet editIn the Jonang tradition of Kalacakra Yumo Mikyo Dorje is considered the key founder of shentong in Tibet Jonang histories state he was a Kashmiri pandit and a student of a siddha named Candranatha 1 The only surviving texts of this figure are his Four Lucid Lamps which focus on the six branch yoga of Kalacakra 1 nbsp Thangkha with Jonang lama Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen 1292 1361 nbsp Chodrak Gyatso 1454 1506 seventh Karmapa head of the Kagyu SchoolShentong was systematized and spread by Dolpopa Sherap Gyeltsen 1292 1361 a Sakya trained lama who later joined the Jonang school studied under Khetsun Yonten Gyatso 1260 1327 and became a great scholar practitioner of Jonang Kalacakra 20 In 1321 Dolpopa visited Tsurphu Monastery for the first time and had extensive discussions with the third Karmapa Rangjung Dorje 1284 1339 Rangjung Dorje may have influenced the development of some of Dolpopa s theories 21 note 3 Dolpopa claimed to have extraordinary insights note 4 and his meditational experience seems to have played a great role in the development of his shentong view 23 Dolpopa developed a new philosophical vocabulary based on Sanskrit and Tibetan to express his insights 24 He coined new terms including shentong and khunzhi yeshe universal ground primordial awareness and popularized other terms like Great Madhyamaka He also made use of terms from Mahayana scriptures which were not in use in Tibet at the time for example he referred to the ultimate truth as atman nitya eternal and dhruva immovable 24 According to Taranatha Dolpopa also unified two shentong lineages the sutra lineage of Maitreya Asaṅga through Maitripa Ratnakarasanti Su Gawe Dorje Dsen Kawoche and so on and the Kalacakratantra shentong lineage of Kalacakrapada the Elder through Bodhibhadra Paṇḍita Somanatha and Yumowa Mikyo Dorje 1 In the 15th century shentong had become accepted by some figures in the Sakya and Kagyu schools Sakya scholar Shakya Chokden 1428 1507 Shakya s teacher Rongton and Chodrak Gyatso 7th Karmapa Lama 1454 1506 who was a student of Shakya Chokden were all proponents of a shentong view though they had their own unique interpretations of shentong that are not identical to the stronger Jonang form of shentong 25 1 In the Jonang tradition Taranatha 1575 1635 is second in importance only to Dolpopa himself He was responsible for the short lived renaissance of the school as a whole in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries and of the widespread revitalization of the shentong theory in particular 26 Taranatha wrote a commentary on the Heart Sutra which asserts that the Sutra and prajnaparamita teaches the shentong view 27 Criticism and repression edit Shentong views have often come under criticism by followers of all four of the main Tibetan Buddhist schools but particularly by the Sakya and Gelug schools The Sakya lama Rendawa Shonu Lodro 1348 1413 was one of the earliest critics of the view and so was his student Je Tsongkhapa 1357 1419 the founder of the Gelug school 28 Rendawa wrote a refutation of Jonang Kalachakra which led to further debates and counter refutations by Jonang scholars like Jangchup Senge 29 The great fourteenth century Sakya master Buton Rinchen Drub 1290 1364 was also very critical of shentong views Gyaltsab Je and Khedrup Gelek Pelzang 1st Panchen Lama two of Gelug founder Je Tsongkhapa s primary disciples were also particularly critical of shentong in the 15th century 30 Shentong was suppressed by the dominant Gelug school for several hundred years equally for political reasons as doctrinal reasons In 1658 the Gelug authorities banned the Jonang school and its texts for political reasons forcibly converting its monks and monasteries to the Gelug school as well as banning shentong philosophy and books thus making the rangtong position the overwhelmingly majority one in Tibetan Buddhism 31 The texts of Shakya Chokden which promoted shentong and criticized Tsongkhapa were also banned in the 17th century 32 nbsp Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Thaye 1813 1899 an exponent of shentong in the modern eraAfter the suppression of the Jonang school and its texts and the texts of Sakya Chokden by the Tibetan government in the seventeenth century various shentong views were propagated mainly by Karma Kagyu and Nyingma lamas Key figures of this revival include Katok Tsewang Norbu 1698 1755 the head of Katok monastery and the Kagyu lama Situ Panchen 1700 1774 a senior court chaplain in the Kingdom of Derge a student of Katok Tsewang Norbu and the 8th Tai Situpa 6 These two figures were instrumental in the spread of shentong views outside of Jonang Tsewang Norbu was a student of the Jonang lama Kunsang Wangpo and he introduced shentong and the Kalacakra tantra tradition into Kagyu and Nyingma He was also a teacher of the Thirteenth Karmapa and the Tenth Shamarpa 1 Modern period edit The 19th century saw a further revival of shentong particularly within figures of the Rime movement like Jamyang Kyentse Wangpo 1820 1892 and Jamyang Chokyi Lodro 1896 1958 6 A key Rime defender of a strong Dolpopa influenced shentong was Jamgon Kongtrul 1813 1899 and his work remains influential in Kagyu circles today The influential Nyingma scholar Jamgon Ju Mipham 1846 1912 also defended a unique view of shentong in his Lion s Roar of Shentong However in spite of this non sectarian activity Mipham was clear that his philosophy was ultimately prasangika madhyamaka In spite of this at least one of Mipham s students was a known shentongpa Shechen Gyaltsab Padma Namgyal 1871 1926 1 who was the root lama of Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche and also a lama of Dzongsar Khyentse Chokyi Lodro In the modern period the Jonang school also experienced a revival Key Jonang defenders of shentong in this era include Bamda Gelek Gyatso 1844 1904 Tsoknyi Gyatso 1880 1940 Ngawang Lodro Drakpa 1920 75 Kunga Tukje Palsang 1925 2000 and Ngawang Yonten Sangpo 1928 2002 33 The strong form of shentong defended by Dolpopa and Taranatha remains the main philosophical theory of the Jonang school Other forms of shentong mainly influenced by the interpretations of Kongtrul and Mipham are also taught by some lamas of the Kagyu Sakya and Nyingma schools 7 8 1 According to Cyrus Stearns Kagyu and Nyingma forms of shentong vary a great deal from the original teachings of Dolpopa and represents a synthesis that has developed over time primarily in order to enable Dolpopa s most profound insights to be incorporated into the established doctrines of the Great Seal and the Great Perfection 34 Shentong philosophies editSee also Buddha nature and Luminous mind Forms of shentong edit As Karl Brunnholzl notes there is no single shentong view rather there is a great variety of ways in which different Tibetan masters understand this term and how they formulate the associated view 1 Brunnholzl mentions a text by the twentieth century Kagyu scholar Surmang Padma Namgyal which includes seven main forms of shentong 1 The Jonang shentong of Dolpopa which sees consciousness as self empty and the buddha wisdom as other empty shentong Sakya Chokden s 1428 1507 view which sees phenomenal appearance as self empty and luminosity as other empty Sabsang Mati Paṇchen a student of Dolpopa who taught that subject object dualism is self empty and that the expanse dbyings and wisdom is other empty The view of Dudul Dorje 1733 1797 the Thirteenth Karmapa which holds that while saṃsara is self empty nirvaṇa is other empty The view of Mikyo Dorje 1507 1554 the 8th Karmapa which holds that the pure buddha bodies and buddha wisdom is self empty in terms of their mode of being but other empty in how they appear The view of Situ Panchen 8th Situpa which sees negation as self empty and affirmation as other empty The view of the Gaḥto Monastery Nyingma lama Gedse Paṇchen 1761 1829 which holds the phase of conclusive resolve during meditative equipoise to be rangtong and the phase of clearly distinguishing during subsequent attainment to be shentong 1 Brunnholzl adds that the various views listed here are based on three different understandings of the terms rangtong and shentong As Brunnholzl writes the first and most common category takes rangtong and shentong to refer to phenomena as belonging to two different levels of reality seeming and ultimate which underlies views 1 5 The second category refers to rangtong and shentong as two approaches to conceptually determine the subject in question 6 The third category considers rangtong and shentong as distinct nonconceptual experiences or phases in the process of attaining realization 7 1 Thus the term shentong can refer to a metaphysical theory a doctrinal conceptual schema and a way to explain a specific experience Jonang shentong edit nbsp Taranatha a Jonang scholarThe shentong doctrine of the Jonang school views the two truths doctrine as distinguishing between an ultimate reality buddha nature the dharmadhatu and a relative reality all other phenomena According to this view the buddha nature is real and not empty of inherent existence while all other phenomena are empty of inherent existence or self nature svabhava The ultimate reality is also described as empty but it is empty in a different way The absolute reality is empty Wylie stong only of other Wylie gzhan relative phenomena but it is not empty of its own nature as the expanse endowed with all buddha qualities 2 Thus Dolpopa distinguishes between two different modes of emptiness one which applies to relative truth and another which applies to the ultimate Dolpopa writes Because all that is present as the two modes of emptiness are equal in being emptiness there are statements with the single phrase All is emptiness but there are also statements that distinguish between empty of self nature and empty of other So their intent should also be precisely presented Concerning that because relative and incidental entities are completely nonexistent in their true mode of existence they are empty of own essence That is being empty of self nature Because the original absolute that is empty of those relative phenomena is never nonexistent it is empty of other 35 This other empty shentong absolute reality is the all basis wisdom or gnosis of the ground of all kun gzhi ye shes Skt alaya jnana which is uncreated and indestructible unconditioned and beyond the chain of dependent origination and is the basis for both samsara and nirvana 35 According to Stearns Dolpopa also considers this absolute as natural luminosity which is synonymous with the dharmakaya and a primordial indestructible eternal great bliss inherently present in every living being 36 The relative reality which is empty of itself i e rangtong refers to the impermanent phenomena which arise and cease and are dependent on causes and conditions 37 This is particularly used to refer to the impure mental defilements and worldly thoughts which veil the ultimate buddha nature 36 It is also associated with the alayavijnana Tib kun gzhi rnam shes 38 Dolpopa compares the pure all basis wisdom or buddha nature with a clear sky while the impure relative phenomena are compared to clouds which only temporarily obscure it 38 According to Dolpopa the tathagatagarbha buddha nature synonymous with the dharmadhatu refers to the Ratnagotravibhaga s perfections of supreme purity permanence self and bliss 1 Brunnholzl writes that for Dolpopa this buddha nature is liberated from all characteristics of reference points is beyond terms and thoughts and is the object of unmistaken nonconceptual wisdom Since it withstands analysis through reasoning one can only mistake it for something that it is not when one subjects it to such analysis 1 Dolpopa states that this ultimate reality is the same as the reflections of the emptiness endowed with all supreme aspects sarvakaravaropetasunyata taught in the Kalacakra which is an emptiness endowed with awakened qualities 1 Dolpopa referred to another view he termed rangtong self empty This was the mainstream interpretation of emptiness and madhyamaka in Tibetan Buddhism which held that all phenomena dharmas are empty of a self nature svabhava in both the relative and absolute sense 39 The term rangtong is often used by defenders of the shentong view to refer to the views of those who reject the view of shentong such as Tsongkhapa 1357 1419 What makes rangtong a different view is that it rejects the idea that there is anything even Buddhahood that is not empty of essential nature svabhava and as such all phenomena only exist dependently even nirvana and the buddha s wisdom 40 Shentong meanwhile holds that there is something which truly exists in an absolute sense and this is the Buddha wisdom buddhajnana or the continuum of luminous mind prabhasvara In Jonang shentong one initially studies rangtong style madhyamaka analysis through the classic Indian Madhyamaka texts mainly Nagarjuna s Collection of Reasoning then one goes beyond these teaching using the Great Madhyamaka shentong teachings of the third turning 1 41 Thus Dolpopa did not completely reject the rangtong view he merely saw it as the lower and incomplete view of the second turning of the wheel of Dharma 1 According to Dolpopa rangtong teachings were teachings of provisional meaning while shentong teachings were the final and definitive teachings 42 Dolpopa also held that the ultimate intent of the provisional teachings is the same buddha nature and therefore the scriptures of the second and third turning along with the yogacara and madhyamaka traditions are ultimately all in agreement 43 Dolpopa draws on various Indian sources to defend this position including the Maitreya Chapter of the Large Prajnaparamita sutra the Bṛhaṭṭika commentary which he attributed to Vasubandhu and Nagarjuna s Collection of Hymns 44 Shentong in Kagyu edit nbsp Situ Panchen 8th Situpa founder and head of Palpung MonasteryNumerous Kagyu lamas have taught various forms of shentong including the Seventh Karmapa the Eighth Karmapa the Thirteenth Karmapa the Fifth Shamarpa the Eighth Situpa Situ Panchen and Jamgon Kongtrul 1 Shentong views have also been defended by recent Kagyu Lamas like Kalu Rinpoche Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche and Thrangu Rinpoche 1 The Karmapas edit The view of shentong upheld by the Karmapas the traditional heads of the Karma Kagyu school is a view which synthesizes prasangika madhyamaka with shentong ideas 1 According to Karl Brunnholzl Rangjung Dorje the Third Karmapa is traditionally considered the foremost authority on the view of buddha nature in the Karma Kagyu School 1 Brunnholzl notes that his view neither matches Shentong as understood by Dolpopa Taranatha and other Jonangpas nor Sakya Chogden s or Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Taye s presentations of it 1 The Third Karmapa s view is that the dharmakaya is an unconditioned and spontaneously present mind which transcends all concepts and reference points and is all pervading like space This is said to exist as ultimate reality but it is not said to be really established permanent enduring and totally unchanging 1 This is the view also defended by the Chodrak Gyatso 1454 1506 the Seventh Karmapa in his Ocean of Texts on Reasoning who also argues that rangtong and shentong are not contradictory 1 The Seventh Karmapa held that the buddha nature taught in the true shentong is the great freedom from extremes the inseparability of appearance and emptiness and the union of the two realities 1 He further describes it as mind as such unconfined unbiased naturally luminous expanse and awareness inseparable the great sphere ordinary mind 1 He rejected Jonang shentong as eternalistic for positing an eternal and immutable ultimate reality permanent 1 He also argues that this view insults the Buddhas by implying that sentient beings are completely perfect buddhas 1 Similarly the Thirteenth Karmapa Dudul Dorje 1733 1797 states 1 both the middle and the final wheel of dharma have the purport of the sugata heart the unity of emptiness and luminosity The middle wheel explains this mainly by teaching emptiness while the final wheel elucidates it mainly by teaching luminosity I understand that in actuality these are not contradictory Jamgon Kongtrul edit The currently popularity of shentong in the Kagyu school is mainly due to the influence of the great scholar Jamgon Kongtrul 1 Kongtrul held that Shentong Madhyamaka was the ultimate meaning of the third turning of the wheel of Dharma and of Nagarjuna s hymns As such he saw it as the highest view which presents the primordial wisdom of emptiness free of elaborations 45 According to Kongtrul the very nature of primordial wisdom which is free of all extremes is immanent in all consciousnesses 45 Furthermore for Kongtrul this non dual primordial wisdom is truly established otherwise the ultimate reality would be a kind of nothingness 45 Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso edit One popular living exponent of Kagyu shentong is Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso and his view is taught in Progressive Stages of Meditation on Emptiness translated by his student Lama Shenpen Hookham 46 In this work Khenpo Tsultrim presents five stages of meditation related to different schools or approaches culminating in the shentong view These five are 47 48 Sravaka meditation on non self meditation on the emptiness of the five aggregates and the non existence of a personal self atman Cittamatra approach meditation on the mind stream the ever continuing process of perception and the non duality of perceived and perceiver Svatantrika Madhyamaka approach meditation on all dharmas which are empty of self nature and the negation of any substance Prasangika Madhyamaka approach meditation on the non conceptual nisprapanca nature of both the appearance of phenomena and their self emptiness In this approach all concepts are to be abandoned Shentong Yogacara Madhyamaka meditation on the non dual ultimate reality paramarthasatya which is the Buddha wisdom buddha jnana which is beyond concepts and is described by terms like truly existing 49 This buddha wisdom is the non dual nature of Mind completely unobscured and endowed with its countless Buddha Qualities buddhagunas 9 Accoriding to Lama Shenpen Hookham the absolute reality is described in positive terms by the shentong view because this approach helps one overcome certain residual subtle concepts 50 and the habit of negating whatever experience arises 4 While the shentong view destroys false concepts like all madhyamaka it also alerts the practitioner to the presence of a dynamic positive Reality that is to be experienced once the conceptual mind is defeated 4 In Nyingma edit Katok Tsewang Norbu 1698 1755 head of Katok monastery is the main figure who introduced shentong into the Nyingma tradition 1 While shentong is not a widely held view in Nyingma some important Nyingma scholars have defended shentong including Lochen Dharmasri 1654 1717 and Gedse Paṇḍita Gyurme Tsewang Chogdrub 1761 1829 1 The noted nineteenth century Nyingma lama Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso wrote works both supportive and critical of shentong positions note 6 According to Stearns Nyingma lamas such as Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche 1910 91 Kalu Rinpoche 1905 89 and Dudjom Rinpoche 1904 87 all accepted a form of shentong 51 One recent Nyingma lama that taught a shentong view combined with prasangika madhyamaka was Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche Shentong in practice editThe shentong worldview is supported by different kinds of Buddhist practices in the various Tibetan buddhist traditions In the Jonang school the main spiritual practice which accompanies the view of shentong is the practice of the Kalacakratantra s six branched yoga 1 Klaus Dieter Mathes has argued that the nonconceptual yogic experiences described by sources like the Srilaghukalacakratantra and the Vimalaprabha commentary are important meditative experiences in this tradition Particularly important is the experience of the reflection of emptiness sunyatabimba stong nyid gzugs brnyan 52 better source needed In the Kagyu tradition the main method of practice used by shentong adherents are Mahamudra style meditations which are strongly influenced by the Ratnagotravibhaga 1 Some of these sources have been translated by Karl Brunnholzl in his When the Clouds Part The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra 2015 1 See also editNondualismNotes edit According to Hookham non dual experience is Ultimate Reality 9 According to Hookham The Chinese Tathagarba schools describe Buddhajnana as the totality of all that is which pervades every part of all that is in its totality 9 According to Hookham for Shentong Buddhajnana is the non dual nature of Mind completely unobscured and endowed with its countless Buddha Qualities Buddhagunas 9 See also Karl Brunnholzl 2008 In Praise of Dharmadhatu a translation of Rangjung Dorje s commentary on the Dharmadhatustava I Parise of the Dharmadhatu a treatise which is incorrectly attributed to Nagarjuna Dolpopa I discovered many profound essential points which have not been discovered have not been realized and have not been mastered by egotistical scholars most great meditators endowed with experience and realization and most of those who are arrogant as great upholders of secret mantra Because a fine realization burst forth from within and because I have an exceptional certainty untainted by doubts not only most great meditators endowed with experience and realization and those who are arrogant as great upholders of secret mantra but even the Buddha definitely could not turn me back from this 22 Tib rigs Skt gotta synonymous with Buddha nature I e in his Lion s Roar of Extrinsic Emptiness q v external link cited below and in his Long Excursus on the Core of Thus Arrivedness i e tathagatagarbha bde gshegs snying po stong thun chen mo seng ge i nga ro In the Long Excursus Mipham Rinpoche follows closely the gist of an historically much earlier discussion of the subject of lineage note 5 that of Longchenpa s Treasure of Philosophical Systems grub mtha mdzod There Mipham identifies two general extremes of interpretation the nihilistic identification of Buddha nature with emptiness to the exclusion of form and the identification of Buddha nature as a substantially real entity that is empty of other gzhan gyis stong pa Thus it appears that Mipham Rinpoche wished to distance himself from both the Gelug Sakya mainstream e g rangtong or self emptiness interpretation as well as the shentong mainstream However what Mipham refers to in the Long Excursus as shentong is only vaguely defined as such and to that extent bears more resemblance to the stock misinterpretations of shentong as given by its ideological opponents than with any actual position held by classical Shentongpas themselves In the final analysis both Longchenpa s and Jamgon Ju Mipham Gyatso s interpretations of Buddha nature in the aforementioned texts are substantially identical with most though not all of the most important philosophical distinctions invoked by Dolpopa and others in propounding the superiority and definitude of shentong approaches Where Longchenpa and Mipham differ most obviously from self identified Shentongpa commentators is in not applying the shentong label to their positions such as Great Madhyamaka of Other Emptiness gzhan stong dbu ma chen po References editCitations edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq Brunnholzl 2014 a b c Stearns 1999 p 3 a b c Hookham 1991 p 21 a b c Hookham 1991 p 23 a b c d Stearns 2010 p page needed a b c Stearns 2002 p 76 a b Tai Situpa 2005 p page needed a b Hookham 1991 p 13 a b c d Hookham 1991 p 37 Hookham 1991 p 12 a b Pettit 1999 p 113 Stearns 1999 p 1 Hookham 1991 Brunnholzl 2008 Brunnholzl 2015 p 4 Stearns 2010 p 316 n 28 29 Brunnholzl 2011 p 29 Brunnholzl 2011 p 17 Brunnholzl 2011 p 16 Stearns 2010 p 2 Stearns 1999 p 17 47 48 51 52 61 Stearns 1999 p 54 Stearns 1999 p 46 47 a b Stearns 2010 p 48 50 Stearns 2010 p 60 63 Stearns 2010 p 68 Tomlin 2017 p page needed Stearns 1999 p 55 58 Stearns 1999 p 57 58 Stearns 1999 p 60 Stearns 2010 p 73 74 Stearns 2010 p 64 Stearns 2010 p 80 81 Stearns 2010 pp 82 83 a b Stearns 2010 p 88 89 a b Stearns 2010 p 89 Stearns 2010 p 88 a b Stearns 2010 p 91 Stearns 2010 p 87 88 Kahn 2014 Stearns 2010 p 102 Stearns 2010 p 91 92 Stearns 2010 p 92 93 Stearns 2010 p 97 101 a b c Tulku 2007 p 219 Hookham 1991 p 19 Hookham 1991 p 19 26 Gyamtso 1994 p page needed Hookham 1991 p 21 22 37 Hookham 1991 p 22 Stearns 1999 p 81 82 Klaus Dieter Mathes Do the Nonconceptual Yogic Experiences in Kalacakra Lend Support to Jonang gzhan stong The Ho Center for Buddhist Studies buddhiststudies stanford edu Retrieved 2023 06 13 Works cited edit This article lacks ISBNs for the books listed Please help add the ISBNs or run the citation bot October 2022 Brunnholzl Karl 2008 In Praise of Dharmadhatu Shambhala Brunnholzl Karl 2009 Luminous Heart The Third Karmapa on Consciousness Wisdom and Buddha Nature Snow Lion Publications Brunnholzl Karl 2011 Prajnaparamita Indian gzhan Stong Pas and the Beginning of Tibetan Gzhan Stong Arbeitskreis fur Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien Universitat Wien Brunnholzl Karl 2014 The Meditative Tradition of the Uttaratantra and Shentong When the Clouds Part The Uttaratantra and its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra Boston Snow Lion Publications pp 123 50 Brunnholzl Karl 2015 When the Clouds Part The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra Shambhala Publications Burchardi Anne December 2007 A Look at the Diversity of the Gzhan stong Tradition JIATS 3 Archived from the original on 2012 09 13 Retrieved August 17 2008 Gyamtso Tsultrim 1994 Progressive Stages Of Meditation On Emptiness ISBN 0 9511477 0 6 Hookham S K 1991 The Buddha Within Tathagatagarbha doctrine according to the Shentong interpretation of the Ratnagotravibhaga Albany NY State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791403587 Kahn Susan September 11 2014 The Two Truths of Buddhism and The Emptiness of Emptiness Emptinessteachings com Pettit John Whitney 1999 Mipham s Beacon of Certainty Illuminating the View of Dzogchen the Great Perfection Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 157 2 Stearns Cyrus 1999 The Buddha from Dolpo A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 4191 1 Stearns Cyrus 2002 The Buddha from Dolpo A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen Motilal Banarsidass Publ ISBN 81 208 1833 4 Stearns Cyrus 2010 The Buddha from Dolpo A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen Ithaca NY Snow Lion Publications ISBN 978 1559393430 Tai Situpa 2005 Ground Path and Fruition Zhyisil Chokyi Ghatsal Charitable Trust ISBN 978 1877294358 Tomlin Adele 2017 Taranatha s Commentary on the Heart Sutra Library of Tibetan Works and Archives Tulku Ringu 2007 The Ri me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great A Study of the Buddhist Lineages of Tibet Shambhala Further reading editBerzin Alexander April 2006 Self Voidness and Other Voidness Study Buddhism by Berzin Archives Morelia Mexico Brunnholzl Karl 2004 The Center of the Sunlit Sky Madhyamaka in the Kagyu Tradition Shambhala ISBN 1 55939 218 5 Cabezon Jose Ignacio Dargyay Geshe 2007 Freedom from Extremes Gampopa s Distinguishing the Views and the Polemics of Emptiness Wisdom Publications ISBN 9780861715237 Jackson Roger Summer 2007 The Great Debate on Emptiness Review of The Essence of Other Emptiness by Taranatha and Mountain Doctrine Tibet s Fundamental Treatise on Other Emptiness and the Buddha Matrix by Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen PDF Buddhadharma 75 76 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint date and year link Jennings Patrick Tsongkhapa In Praise of Relativity The Essence of Eloquence Archived from the original on 2015 05 18 Rana Rinpoche Acharya Mahayogi Sridhar 2011 Vedanta vis a vis Shentong Byoma Kusuma Buddhadharma Sangha Archived from the original on 11 March 2015 Sheehy Michael R May 29 2008 Dzogchen amp Zhentong Jonang Foundation Sheehy Michael R ed 2019 The Other Emptiness Rethinking the Zhentong Buddhist Discourse in Tibet Translated by Klaus Dieter Mathes State University of New York Press ISBN 978 1 43847 757 2 Taranatha Jetsun 2007 The Essence of Other Emptiness Translated by Jeffrey Hopkins Wisdom Books ISBN 978 1 55939 273 0 Taranatha Jetsun 2008 The Essence of Zhentong Translation based upon the Dzam thang edition of the Gzhan stong snying po PDF Jonang Foundation s Digital Library Ngedon Thartuk Translation Initiative Archived from the original PDF on 2011 11 07 Retrieved August 17 2008 Vose Kevin ed 2006 Mountain Doctrine Tibet s Fundamental Treatise on Other Emptiness and the Buddha Matrix Translated by Jeffrey Hopkins Ithaca Snow Lion Wellings Nigel 2009 Is there anything there the Tibetan Rangtong Shentong debate Bath and Bristol Mindfulness Courses Archived from the original on 20 October 2021 Retrieved 2 February 2018 External links editAdele Tomlin 2018 The Shentong View of Emptiness A Short Introduction and Reader An exposition of the two truths by Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rimpoche Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rangtong and shentong amp oldid 1193904339, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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