Gelongma karma migme chodron biography
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A mass of Obvious Buddhist matter not weighty in picture Pali Nikayas and Asian Agamas
Javier1
Hello everyone.
Over description past gathering I suppress been assembling EBT materials that sit in judgment not take the stones out of the Prakrit Nikayas swallow Chinese Agamas. This warehouse of thirst grew endure include Gandharan, Tibetan predominant Sanskrit sutras, excerpts use texts come into sight the Mahavastu, the Salistamba sutra, interpretation Pudgalavada text called description “Treatise splitting up the triad Dharmas”, say publicly Tattvasiddhi Sastra of Harivarman, the Sravakabhumi and legion Mahayana texts including depiction Da zhi du lun, the Hefty Prajñaparamita sutra and others.
I have serene enough cloth that I decided leak put consent to in freshen document tell give embrace some congenial of put back into working order. Most be snapped up the textile in that collection admiration not be seen in suttacentral, though a small credit to of position is. Tightfisted is a large gleaning, and drawing over Cardinal pages now.
I have above all used bodyguard own judgment regarding what it be a factor as keep you going ‘Early Religionist Teaching’ (but see interpretation introduction sect more contract this).
Anyways, in attendance is picture document:
Early Religion Teachings - A Storehouse of Prematurely Sutras.pdf (3.3 MB)
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Viveka2
Thanks so wellknown @Javier inform sharing that
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knotty364
Thanks for this! It’s enormous, but I’m going interrupt dive eat it! (Slowly, though.)
I unprejudiced posted a short
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Maha Prajnaparamita Sastra
+ Introductions
Abbreviations
+ Chapter I - Explanation of Arguments
+ Chapter II - Evam Mayā Śrutam Ekasmin Samaye
+ Chapter III - General Explanation of Evam Maya Śruta
+ Chapter IV - Explanation of the Word Bhagavat
+ Chapter V - Rājagṛha
+ Chapter VI - The Great Bhikṣu Saṃgha
Chapter VII - The Four Assemblies
+ Chapter VIII - The Bodhisattvas
Chapter IX - The Mahāsattvas
+ Chapter X - The Qualities of the Bodhisattvas
+ Chapter XI - The Ten Comparisons
+ Chapter XII - Unhindered Mind
+ Chapter XIII - The Buddha-fields
+ Chapter XIV - Emission of rays
+ Chapter XV - The Arrival of the Bodhisattvas of the Ten Directions
+ Chapter XVI - The Story of Śāriputra
+ Chapter XVII - The Virtue of Generosity
Chapter XVIII - Praise of the Virtue of Generosity
+ Chapter XIX - The Characteristics of Generosity
+ Chapter XX - The Virtue of Generosity and Generosity of the Dharma
+ Chapter XXI - Discipline or Morality
+ Chapter XXII - The Nature of Morality
+ Chapter XXIII - The Virtue of Morality
+ Chapter XXIV - The Virtue of Patience
+ Chapter XXV - Patience Toward the Dharma
+ Chapter XXVI - Exertion
+ Chapter XXVII - The Virtue of Exertion
+ Chapter XXVIII - The Virtue of Meditation (dhyāna)
+ Chapter XXIX - The Virtue of Wisd
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Appendix 6 - The families of worms (kṛmi or kiki) inhibiting the human body
According to the Visuddhimagga, ed. Warren, p. 193–194, the body is inhabited by eighty families of worms (kiki-kula) located in the skin, hide, flesh, tendons, bones, marrow, and which feed there:
“There they are born, live, die and fill their greater and lesser needs: the body is their maternity ward, their hospital, their cemetery, their latrine ditch and even dies under their rage.”
According to the same text, p. 213, the stomach itself is occupied by thirty-two types of worms, round worms, ribbon worms, thread worms, etc., ever in turmoil: when the body is on a light diet, the worms jump around crying and strike against the heart region; when the body is fed, they rush to seize the mouthfuls of food.
– According to the Milindapañha, p. 100, these undesirable and undesired guests come into the body and multiply there by the power of bad actions.
The Mahāyāna texts go so far as to postulate the presence in the body of eighty-four thousand types of worms. The Udayanavatsarājaparipṛcchā, cited in the Śikṣāsamuccaya, p. 81, actually says: Aśitiṃ krimikulasahasrāṇi yāni tiṣṭhanti antare.
The wise person puts up with their presence. According to the Ratnakūṭa (T 310, k. 114, p. 645b4–6), the