Dharmarakṣita: Difference between revisions

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|MainNamePhon=Dharmarakṣita
|MainNamePhon=Dharmarakṣita
|SortName=Dharmarakṣita
|SortName=Dharmarakṣita
|MainNameTib=དྷརྨ་རཀྴི་ཏ་
|MainNameSkt=Dharmarakṣita
|MainNameSkt=Dharmarakṣita
|bio=Dharmarakṣita is a c. 9th century Indian Buddhist credited with composing an important Mahayana text called the ''Wheel of Sharp Weapons'' (Tib. ''blo-sbyong mtshon-cha 'khor-lo''). He was the teacher of Atiśa, who was instrumental in establishing a second wave of Buddhism in Tibet.
|bio=Dharmarakṣita is a c. 9th century Indian Buddhist credited with composing an important Mahayana text called the ''Wheel of Sharp Weapons'' (Tib. ''blo-sbyong mtshon-cha 'khor-lo''). He was the teacher of Atiśa, who was instrumental in establishing a second wave of Buddhism in Tibet.
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Despite the fact that ''Wheel of Sharp Weapons'' has come to be considered a Mahayana text, Dharmarakṣita is said to have subscribed to the Vaibhāṣika view. His authorship of the text is considered questionable by scholars for various reasons. [(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharmarak%E1%B9%A3ita_(9th_century) Source Accessed May 18, 2021])
Despite the fact that ''Wheel of Sharp Weapons'' has come to be considered a Mahayana text, Dharmarakṣita is said to have subscribed to the Vaibhāṣika view. His authorship of the text is considered questionable by scholars for various reasons. [(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharmarak%E1%B9%A3ita_(9th_century) Source Accessed May 18, 2021])
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors
|BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P3532
|BdrcPnum=3532
|ReligiousAffiliation=Vaibhāṣika
|ReligiousAffiliation=Vaibhāṣika
|TeacherOf=Atiśa
|TeacherOf=Atiśa

Revision as of 14:38, 18 May 2021

PersonType Category:Classical Indian Authors
MainNamePhon Dharmarakṣita
MainNameTib དྷརྨ་རཀྴི་ཏ་
MainNameSkt Dharmarakṣita
SortName Dharmarakṣita
bio Dharmarakṣita is a c. 9th century Indian Buddhist credited with composing an important Mahayana text called the Wheel of Sharp Weapons (Tib. blo-sbyong mtshon-cha 'khor-lo). He was the teacher of Atiśa, who was instrumental in establishing a second wave of Buddhism in Tibet.

Wheel of Sharp Weapons is an abbreviated title for The Wheel of Sharp Weapons Effectively Striking the Heart of the Foe. This text is often referenced as a detailed source for how the laws of karma play out in our lives; it reveals many specific effects and their causes. A poetic presentation, the "wheel of sharp weapons" can be visualized as something we throw out or propel, which then comes back to cut us... something like a boomerang. In the same way, Dharmarakṣita explains, the non-virtuous causes we create through our self-interested behavior come back to 'cut us' in future lives as the ripening of the negative karma such actions create. This, he explains, is the source of all our pain and suffering. He admonishes that it is our own selfishness or self-cherishing that leads us to harm others, which in turn creates the negative karma or potential for future suffering. Our suffering is not a punishment, merely a self-created karmic result. In most verses, Dharmarakṣita also offers a suggested alternative virtuous or positive action to substitute for our previous non-virtuous behavior, actions that will create positive karma and future pleasant conditions and happiness.

Despite the fact that Wheel of Sharp Weapons has come to be considered a Mahayana text, Dharmarakṣita is said to have subscribed to the Vaibhāṣika view. His authorship of the text is considered questionable by scholars for various reasons. [(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dharmarak%E1%B9%A3ita_(9th_century) Source Accessed May 18, 2021])

ReligiousAffiliation Vaibhāṣika
TeacherOf Atiśa
BDRC https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P3532
IsInGyatsa No
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Tibetan Names[edit]

Tibetan: དྷརྨ་རཀྴི་ཏ་

Wylie: d+harma rak+Shi ta

Sanskrit Names[edit]

Dharmarakṣita

Other Transliterations in use:
Dharmarakshita
Dharma Rakṣita
Dharma Rakshita

Dates[edit]

Born:
Died:

Other Biographical Information[edit]

TBRC RID: P3532

Main Students[edit]

Main Teachers[edit]

Quotes[edit]

Writings about Dharmarakṣita[edit]

Writings[edit]

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