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{{Person
{{Person
|HasDrlPage=No
|StudentOf='jam dbyangs mkhyen brtse'i dbang po; 'jam mgon kong sprul; Dpal sprul rin po che; Lung rtogs bstan pa'i nyi ma; Dzogchen Drubwang, 4th
|HasLibPage=No
|TeacherOf=A 'dzoms 'brug pa 'gro 'dul dpa' bo rdo rje; Las rab gling pa; Dodrupchen, 3rd; Zhechen Gyaltsab, 4th; Lung rtogs bstan pa'i nyi ma; Pad+ma dbang mchog rgyal po; Kun bzang dpal ldan; Khyentse, Dilgo
|HasRtzPage=No
|ReligiousAffiliation=Nyingma
|MainNamePhon=Mipam Gyatso
|MainNameTib=མི་ཕམ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་
|MainNameWylie=mi pham rgya mtsho
|PersonType=Classical Tibetan Authors
|images=File:Mi-pham-rgya-mtsho-rin-po-che-Padmakara.jpg
File:Mipham (R. Beer).jpg{{!}}Line Drawing by Robert Beer Courtesy of [http://www.tibetanart.com/ The Robert Beer Online Galleries]
|YearBirth=1846
|YearDeath=1912
|BornIn=sde dge
|BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P252
|BdrcPnum=252
|TolLink=http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Mipam-Gyatso/4228
|tolExcerpt=Ju Mipam Gyamtso was a prolific author who brought formal philosophical study, including debate, to the Nyingma tradition. Based in Kham during a period of great inter-sectarian exchange, he trained with the Kagyu lama Jamgön Kongtrul and the Sakya lama Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo, among others, even as he preserved a strong Nyingma identity. Among his most celebrated works are the ''Beacon of Certainty'' and a commentary on the Ninth Chapter of the ''Bodhicaryāvatāra''. In addition to his considerable literary output he spent decades of his life in retreat.
|HasDrlPage=Yes
|HasLibPage=Yes
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|HasDnzPage=No
|HasDnzPage=No
|HasBnwPage=Yes
|HasBnwPage=Yes
|PersonType=Author
|MainNameWylie=mi pham rgya mtsho
|MainNameTib=མི་ཕམ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་
|MainNamePhon=Mipham Gyamtso
|AltNamesWylie=mi pham 'jam dbyangs rnam rgyal rgya mtsho; 'jam dpal dgyes pa'i rdo rje; 'ju mi pham
|AltNamesWylie=mi pham 'jam dbyangs rnam rgyal rgya mtsho; 'jam dpal dgyes pa'i rdo rje; 'ju mi pham
|AltNamesTib=མི་ཕམ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་; འཇམ་དཔལ་དགྱེས་པའི་རྡོ་རྗེ་; འཇུ་མི་ཕམ་
|AltNamesTib=མི་ཕམ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་; འཇམ་དཔལ་དགྱེས་པའི་རྡོ་རྗེ་; འཇུ་མི་ཕམ་
|YearBirth=1846
|AltNamesOther=mipham;
|YearDeath=1912
|BornIn=sde dge
|TibDateGender=Male
|TibDateGender=Male
|TibDateElement=Fire
|TibDateElement=Fire
|TibDateAnimal=Horse
|TibDateAnimal=Horse
|TibDateRabjung=14
|TibDateRabjung=14
|ReligiousAffiliation=Nyingma
|StudentOf='jam dbyangs mkhyen brtse'i dbang po; 'jam mgon kong sprul; Dpal sprul 'jigs med chos kyi dbang po; Lung rtogs bstan pa'i nyi ma; Rdzogs chen bzhi pa mi 'gyur nam mkha'i rdo rje
|TeacherOf=Las rab gling pa; 'jigs med bstan pa'i nyi ma; 'gyur med pad+ma rnam rgyal; A 'dzoms 'brug pa 'gro 'dul dpa' bo rdo rje; Lung rtogs bstan pa'i nyi ma; Dil mgo mkhyen brtse bkra shis dpal 'byor; Pad+ma dbang mchog rgyal po
|BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P252
|TolLink=http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Mipam-Gyatso/4228
|images=File:Mipham (R. Beer).jpg{{!}}Line Drawing by Robert Beer Courtesy of [http://www.tibetanart.com/ The Robert Beer Online Galleries]
|PosBuNayDefProv=Definitive
|PosBuNayDefProv=Definitive
|PosBuNayDefProvNotes="Mipam explains that the last wheel’s status as the definitive meaning does not refer to everything taught in the last wheel, but specifically concerns the teaching of Buddha-nature: ...'Although the meaning of the last wheel is praised in the sūtras and commentaries, [this does] not [refer to] everything in the last wheel, but is spoken in this way concerning the definitive meaning position of demonstrating the [Buddha-]nature.' [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], pp. 4-5.
|BuNayDefProvComplex=No
|PosAllBuddha=Yes
|PosBuNayDefProvNotes="Mipam explains that the last wheel’s status as the definitive meaning does not refer to everything taught in the last wheel, but specifically concerns the teaching of Buddha-nature: ...'Although the meaning of the last wheel is praised in the sūtras and commentaries, [this does] not [refer to] everything in the last wheel, but is spoken in this way concerning the definitive meaning position of demonstrating the [Buddha-]nature.' [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', pp. 4-5.
|PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes="The primordial endowment of the qualities of Buddha in sentient beings is a central part of Mipam’s presentation of Buddha-nature. This is an important aspect of his interpretation that he shares in common with the Jonang tradition." [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 97.
|PosAllBuddha=Qualified Yes
|PosAllBuddhaNote=For sentient beings, buddha-nature is present, but not yet manifest.
|PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes="The primordial endowment of the qualities of Buddha in sentient beings is a central part of Mipam’s presentation of Buddha-nature. This is an important aspect of his interpretation that he shares in common with the Jonang tradition." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 97.
 
*"In his ''Trilogy of Innate Mind'', Mipam also calls this suchness of mind “Buddhanature”: “Existing in the minds of all sentient beings in the manner of suchness on the occasion when obscurations dwell as suitable to be removed, it is called ‘Buddha-nature’ because when this suchness of mind is realized, one becomes a Buddha.”The suchness, or nature, of mind is Buddha-naure. Self-existing wisdom is simply made manifest; it is not produced by a cause." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 100.
|PosWheelTurn=Third Turning
|PosWheelTurn=Third Turning
|PosWheelTurnNotes=Buddha-nature is a third wheel teaching, but he holds both third and second to be of definitive meaning and integrates the two as noncontradictory in his presentation of buddha-nature as the unity of emptiness and appearance. [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], pp. 4-5.
|BuNayWheelTurnComplex=No
|PosZhenRangNotes=He aligns his view with Nagarjuna, but seems to assert rangtong in terms of the relative and zhentong in terms of the ultimate, as Duckworth quotes Mipam's Lion's Roar:
|PosWheelTurnNotes=Buddha-nature is a third wheel teaching, but he holds both third and second to be of definitive meaning and integrates the two as noncontradictory in his presentation of buddha-nature as the unity of emptiness (in the seceond wheel) and appearance (of kayas and wisdoms in the third wheel). [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', pp. 4-5.
"First it is necessary to ascertain the lack of intrinsic nature of all phenomena in accordance with the scriptures of the protector Nāgārjuna; because if this is not known, one will not be able to ascertain the manner that relative [phenomena] are empty from their own side and the manner that the ultimate is empty of what is other. Therefore, one should first ascertain the freedom from constructs which is what is known reflexively." [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 71.
|PosYogaMadhya=Madhyamaka
|BuNayYogaMadhyaComplex=No
|PosZhenRang=Rangtong
|BuNayZhenRangComplex=No
|PosZhenRangNotes=Though his view is nuanced and he at times wrote from both perspectives. Following are some examples of these variations.
*He aligns his view with Nāgārjuna, but seems to assert rangtong in terms of the relative and zhentong in terms of the ultimate, as Duckworth quotes Mipam's ''Lion's Roar'':
"First it is necessary to ascertain the lack of intrinsic nature of all phenomena in accordance with the scriptures of the protector Nāgārjuna; because if this is not known, one will not be able to ascertain the manner that relative [phenomena] are empty from their own side and the manner that the ultimate is empty of what is other. Therefore, one should first ascertain the freedom from constructs which is what is known reflexively." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 71.
*However, Mipam is also quoted as stating:
*However, Mipam is also quoted as stating:
"In the tradition of self-emptiness, since there is only the ultimately nonexistent, an ultimately existing phenomenon is impossible. In the tradition of other-emptiness, what is ultimately nonexistent is the relative, and what is ultimately existent is the ultimate itself. My tradition is clear in the Rapsel Rejoinder, the tradition propounding
"In the tradition of self-emptiness, since there is only the ultimately nonexistent, an ultimately existing phenomenon is impossible. In the tradition of other-emptiness, what is ultimately nonexistent is the relative, and what is ultimately existent is the ultimate itself. My tradition is clear in the ''Rapsel Rejoinder'', the tradition propounding self-emptiness." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 74.
self-emptiness." [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 74.
*Mipam's position depends on the definitions used for these terms, as Duckworth points out:
*Mipam's position depends on the definitions used for these terms, as Duckworth points out:
"When we consider Mipam’s depiction of emptiness in light of the categories of “self-emptiness” and “other-emptiness,” we can see that according to Khenpo Lodrö Drakpa’s definitions of a proponent of self-emptiness
"When we consider Mipam’s depiction of emptiness in light of the categories of “self-emptiness” and “other-emptiness,” we can see that according to Khenpo Lodrö Drakpa’s definitions of a proponent of self-emptiness (claiming a non-implicative negation as the consummate ultimate) and other-emptiness (claiming wisdom as not empty of its own essence), Mipam is a proponent of neither self-emptiness nor other-emptiness. However, according to Lochen’s definitions of self-emptiness and other-emptiness, we see how Mipam can be said to be a proponent of both self-emptiness and other-emptiness!"  
(claiming a non-implicative negation as the consummate ultimate) and other-emptiness (claiming wisdom as not empty of its own essence), Mipam is a proponent of neither self-emptiness nor other-emptiness. However, according to Lochen’s definitions of self-emptiness and otheremptiness, we see how Mipam can be said to be a proponent of both self-emptiness and other-emptiness!"  
And, later on,  
And, later on,  
"It is clear that Mipam defines himself as a proponent of self-emptiness—as one who propounds that there is nothing ultimately existent—in accord with his definition of the term. [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 74.
"It is clear that Mipam defines himself as a proponent of self-emptiness—as one who propounds that there is nothing ultimately existent—in accord with his definition of the term. [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 74.
|PosEmptyLuminNotes=* "Mipam states that the basic element (Buddha-nature) is empty of adventitious defilements, yet not empty of consummate qualities. These consummate qualities are inseparable from the suchness of phenomena that is luminous clarity and self-existing wisdom." [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 18.
|BuNayVehiclesComplex=No
|BuNayAnalyticMeditComplex=No
|PosEmptyLumin=Tathāgatagarbha as the Unity of Emptiness and Luminosity
|BuNayEmptyLuminComplex=No
|PosEmptyLuminNotes=Though Mipam clearly presents several different perspectives on this issue:
* "Mipam states that the basic element (Buddha-nature) is empty of adventitious defilements, yet not empty of consummate qualities. These consummate qualities are inseparable from the suchness of phenomena that is luminous clarity and self-existing wisdom." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 18.
 
* "Mipam’s two models of two truths support his interpretation of the compatibility of emptiness and Buddha-nature. The indivisibility of the two truths, empty appearance, is Buddha-nature; and the unity of appearance and emptiness is what is known in authentic experience." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 26.
 
*"In his ''Trilogy of Innate Mind'', Mipam also calls this suchness of mind “Buddhanature”: “Existing in the minds of all sentient beings in the manner of suchness on the occasion when obscurations dwell as suitable to be removed, it is called ‘Buddha-nature’ because when this suchness of mind is realized, one becomes a Buddha.” The suchness, or nature, of mind is Buddha-naure.
Self-existing wisdom is simply made manifest; it is not produced by a cause." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 100.
 
*"Mipam also refers to Buddha-nature as the abiding reality of the “ground of the primeval beginning” (ye thog gi gzhi) in his Trilogy of Innate Mind: Buddha-nature is not a mere absence; it is emptiness and luminous clarity. It is the abiding reality of the ground of the primeval beginning of all phenomena, the abiding reality that is the indivisible truth of unity—emptiness endowed with all supreme aspects (rnam kun mchog ldan gyi stong nyid)." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 105.
 
*"In his ''Lion’s Roar: Exposition of Buddha-Nature'', Mipam describes the essence of the Buddha-nature as follows: “The essence of the Buddha-nature itself is free from all conceptual constructs such as existence and nonexistence, permanence and annihilation; it is the equality of the single sphere of indivisible truth.” [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 107.


* "Mipam’s two models of two truths support his interpretation of the compatibility of emptiness and Buddha-nature. The indivisibility of the two truths, empty appearance, is Buddha-nature; and the unity of appearance and emptiness is what is known in authentic experience." [[Duckworth, D.]], [[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]], p. 26.
*In conclusion Duckworth sums up Mipam's view as such, "Since he depicts Buddha-nature with the qualities of the Buddha present at the time of a sentient being, his presentation shares an important feature with the Jonang tradition. His interpretation also shares a quality with the Geluk tradition, given that he equates Buddha-nature with emptiness. However, Mipam’s integration of Buddha-nature and emptiness most directly reflects Longchenpa’s description of the ground of the Great Perfection, the pinnacle of Buddhist vehicles in his Nyingma tradition, where Buddha-nature represents the unity of primordial purity and spontaneous presence." [[Duckworth, D.]], ''[[Mipam on Buddha-Nature]]'', p. 115.
|IsInGyatsa=No
|IsInGyatsa=No
|pagename=Mi pham rgya mtsho
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 14:15, 10 February 2023

Mi-pham-rgya-mtsho-rin-po-che-Padmakara.jpg Line Drawing by Robert Beer Courtesy of The Robert Beer Online Galleries
PersonType Category:Classical Tibetan Authors
MainNamePhon Mipam Gyatso
MainNameTib མི་ཕམ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་
MainNameWylie mi pham rgya mtsho
AltNamesTib མི་ཕམ་འཇམ་དབྱངས་རྣམ་རྒྱལ་རྒྱ་མཚོ་  ·  འཇམ་དཔལ་དགྱེས་པའི་རྡོ་རྗེ་  ·  འཇུ་མི་ཕམ་
AltNamesWylie mi pham 'jam dbyangs rnam rgyal rgya mtsho  ·  'jam dpal dgyes pa'i rdo rje  ·  'ju mi pham
AltNamesOther mipham
YearBirth 1846
YearDeath 1912
BornIn sde dge
TibDateGender Male
TibDateElement Fire
TibDateAnimal Horse
TibDateRabjung 14
ReligiousAffiliation Nyingma
StudentOf Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo  ·  Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Taye  ·  Patrul Rinpoche  ·  Nyoshul Lungtok Tenpai Nyima  ·  Fourth Dzogchen Drubwang Mingyur Namkhai Dorje
TeacherOf Adzom Drukpa Drodul Pawo Dorje  ·  Lerab Lingpa  ·  The Third Dodrupchen Jigme Tenpai Nyima  ·  The Fourth Shechen Gyaltsap Gyurme Pema Namgyal  ·  Nyoshul Lungtok Tenpai Nyima  ·  Pad+ma dbang mchog rgyal po  ·  Kunzang Palden  ·  Dilgo Khyentse Tashi Paljor
BDRC https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P252
Treasury of Lives http://treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Mipam-Gyatso/4228
IsInGyatsa No
PosBuNayDefProv Definitive
PosBuNayDefProvNotes "Mipam explains that the last wheel’s status as the definitive meaning does not refer to everything taught in the last wheel, but specifically concerns the teaching of Buddha-nature: ...'Although the meaning of the last wheel is praised in the sūtras and commentaries, [this does] not [refer to] everything in the last wheel, but is spoken in this way concerning the definitive meaning position of demonstrating the [Buddha-]nature.' Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, pp. 4-5.
PosAllBuddha Qualified Yes
PosAllBuddhaNote For sentient beings, buddha-nature is present, but not yet manifest.
PosAllBuddhaMoreNotes "The primordial endowment of the qualities of Buddha in sentient beings is a central part of Mipam’s presentation of Buddha-nature. This is an important aspect of his interpretation that he shares in common with the Jonang tradition." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 97.
  • "In his Trilogy of Innate Mind, Mipam also calls this suchness of mind “Buddhanature”: “Existing in the minds of all sentient beings in the manner of suchness on the occasion when obscurations dwell as suitable to be removed, it is called ‘Buddha-nature’ because when this suchness of mind is realized, one becomes a Buddha.”The suchness, or nature, of mind is Buddha-naure. Self-existing wisdom is simply made manifest; it is not produced by a cause." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 100.
PosWheelTurn Third Turning
PosWheelTurnNotes Buddha-nature is a third wheel teaching, but he holds both third and second to be of definitive meaning and integrates the two as noncontradictory in his presentation of buddha-nature as the unity of emptiness (in the seceond wheel) and appearance (of kayas and wisdoms in the third wheel). Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, pp. 4-5.
PosYogaMadhya Madhyamaka
PosZhenRang Rangtong
PosZhenRangNotes Though his view is nuanced and he at times wrote from both perspectives. Following are some examples of these variations.
  • He aligns his view with Nāgārjuna, but seems to assert rangtong in terms of the relative and zhentong in terms of the ultimate, as Duckworth quotes Mipam's Lion's Roar:

"First it is necessary to ascertain the lack of intrinsic nature of all phenomena in accordance with the scriptures of the protector Nāgārjuna; because if this is not known, one will not be able to ascertain the manner that relative [phenomena] are empty from their own side and the manner that the ultimate is empty of what is other. Therefore, one should first ascertain the freedom from constructs which is what is known reflexively." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 71.

  • However, Mipam is also quoted as stating:

"In the tradition of self-emptiness, since there is only the ultimately nonexistent, an ultimately existing phenomenon is impossible. In the tradition of other-emptiness, what is ultimately nonexistent is the relative, and what is ultimately existent is the ultimate itself. My tradition is clear in the Rapsel Rejoinder, the tradition propounding self-emptiness." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 74.

  • Mipam's position depends on the definitions used for these terms, as Duckworth points out:

"When we consider Mipam’s depiction of emptiness in light of the categories of “self-emptiness” and “other-emptiness,” we can see that according to Khenpo Lodrö Drakpa’s definitions of a proponent of self-emptiness (claiming a non-implicative negation as the consummate ultimate) and other-emptiness (claiming wisdom as not empty of its own essence), Mipam is a proponent of neither self-emptiness nor other-emptiness. However, according to Lochen’s definitions of self-emptiness and other-emptiness, we see how Mipam can be said to be a proponent of both self-emptiness and other-emptiness!" And, later on, "It is clear that Mipam defines himself as a proponent of self-emptiness—as one who propounds that there is nothing ultimately existent—in accord with his definition of the term. Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 74.

PosEmptyLumin Tathāgatagarbha as the Unity of Emptiness and Luminosity
PosEmptyLuminNotes Though Mipam clearly presents several different perspectives on this issue:
  • "Mipam states that the basic element (Buddha-nature) is empty of adventitious defilements, yet not empty of consummate qualities. These consummate qualities are inseparable from the suchness of phenomena that is luminous clarity and self-existing wisdom." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 18.
  • "Mipam’s two models of two truths support his interpretation of the compatibility of emptiness and Buddha-nature. The indivisibility of the two truths, empty appearance, is Buddha-nature; and the unity of appearance and emptiness is what is known in authentic experience." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 26.
  • "In his Trilogy of Innate Mind, Mipam also calls this suchness of mind “Buddhanature”: “Existing in the minds of all sentient beings in the manner of suchness on the occasion when obscurations dwell as suitable to be removed, it is called ‘Buddha-nature’ because when this suchness of mind is realized, one becomes a Buddha.” The suchness, or nature, of mind is Buddha-naure.

Self-existing wisdom is simply made manifest; it is not produced by a cause." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 100.

  • "Mipam also refers to Buddha-nature as the abiding reality of the “ground of the primeval beginning” (ye thog gi gzhi) in his Trilogy of Innate Mind: Buddha-nature is not a mere absence; it is emptiness and luminous clarity. It is the abiding reality of the ground of the primeval beginning of all phenomena, the abiding reality that is the indivisible truth of unity—emptiness endowed with all supreme aspects (rnam kun mchog ldan gyi stong nyid)." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 105.
  • "In his Lion’s Roar: Exposition of Buddha-Nature, Mipam describes the essence of the Buddha-nature as follows: “The essence of the Buddha-nature itself is free from all conceptual constructs such as existence and nonexistence, permanence and annihilation; it is the equality of the single sphere of indivisible truth.” Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 107.
  • In conclusion Duckworth sums up Mipam's view as such, "Since he depicts Buddha-nature with the qualities of the Buddha present at the time of a sentient being, his presentation shares an important feature with the Jonang tradition. His interpretation also shares a quality with the Geluk tradition, given that he equates Buddha-nature with emptiness. However, Mipam’s integration of Buddha-nature and emptiness most directly reflects Longchenpa’s description of the ground of the Great Perfection, the pinnacle of Buddhist vehicles in his Nyingma tradition, where Buddha-nature represents the unity of primordial purity and spontaneous presence." Douglas Duckworth, Mipam on Buddha-Nature, p. 115.
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