Difference between revisions of "Abhayākaragupta"
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{{Person | {{Person | ||
− | |pagename= | + | |HasDrlPage=Yes |
+ | |HasBnwPage=Yes | ||
+ | |pagename=Abhayākaragupta | ||
|PersonType=Classical Indian Authors | |PersonType=Classical Indian Authors | ||
|images=File:Abhayakaragupta2 HAR.jpg{{!}} [[Abhayākaragupta Himalayan Art Resources]] | |images=File:Abhayakaragupta2 HAR.jpg{{!}} [[Abhayākaragupta Himalayan Art Resources]] | ||
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|MainNamePhon=Abhayākaragupta | |MainNamePhon=Abhayākaragupta | ||
− | |MainNameTib= | + | |SortName=Abhayākaragupta |
− | |MainNameWylie='jigs med 'byung gnas | + | |MainNameTib=འཇིགས་མེད་འབྱུང་གནས་སྦས་པ་ |
− | |MainNameSkt= | + | |MainNameWylie='jigs med 'byung gnas sbas pa |
− | |AltNamesWylie=a b+ha yA ka ra gup+ta; 'jigs med 'byung | + | |MainNameSkt=Abhayākaragupta |
− | |AltNamesTib=ཨ་བྷ་ཡཱ་ཀ་ར་གུཔྟ་; | + | |AltNamesWylie=a b+ha yA ka ra gup+ta; 'jigs med 'byung; paN+Di ta a b+ha yA ka ra gup+ta |
− | |AltNamesOther= | + | |AltNamesTib=ཨ་བྷ་ཡཱ་ཀ་ར་གུཔྟ་; འཇིགས་མེད་འབྱུང་གནས་; པཎྜི་ཏ་ཨ་བྷ་ཡཱ་ཀ་ར་གུཔྟ་ |
+ | |AltNamesOther=Abhayākara; Paṇḍita Abhayākaragupta | ||
|YearBirth=11th century | |YearBirth=11th century | ||
|YearDeath=circa 1125 | |YearDeath=circa 1125 | ||
+ | |TeacherOf=Suvarṇadvīpa Dharmakīrti; | ||
|BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P0RK166 | |BdrcLink=https://www.tbrc.org/#!rid=P0RK166 | ||
|BnwShortPersonBio=Indian tantric Buddhist master who was born into a brāhmaṇa family in either Orissa or northeast India near Bengal. Sources vary regarding his dates of birth and death, although most agree that he was a contemporary of the Pāla king Rāmapāla, who began his reign during the final quarter of the eleventh century. Abhayākaragupta became a Buddhist monk in response to a prophetic vision and trained extensively in the esoteric practices of tantra, while nevertheless maintaining his monastic discipline (''vinaya''). Abhayākaragupta was active at the monastic university of Vikramaśīla in Bihar and became renowned as both a scholar and a teacher. He was a prolific author, composing treatises in numerous fields of Buddhist doctrine, including monastic discipline and philosophy as well as tantric ritual practice and iconography. Many Sanskrit manuscripts of his works have been preserved in India, Nepal, and Tibet, and his writings were influential both in India and among Newari Buddhists in Nepal. Translations of his works into Tibetan were begun under his supervision, and more than two dozen are preserved in the Tibetan canon. To date, Abhayākaragupta’s writings best known in the West are his treatises on tantric iconography, the ''Vajrãvalī'' and ''Niṣpannayogāvalī'', and his syncretistic abhidharma treatise ''Munimatãlaṃkāra''. (Source: "Abhayākaragupta." In ''The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism'', 2. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.) | |BnwShortPersonBio=Indian tantric Buddhist master who was born into a brāhmaṇa family in either Orissa or northeast India near Bengal. Sources vary regarding his dates of birth and death, although most agree that he was a contemporary of the Pāla king Rāmapāla, who began his reign during the final quarter of the eleventh century. Abhayākaragupta became a Buddhist monk in response to a prophetic vision and trained extensively in the esoteric practices of tantra, while nevertheless maintaining his monastic discipline (''vinaya''). Abhayākaragupta was active at the monastic university of Vikramaśīla in Bihar and became renowned as both a scholar and a teacher. He was a prolific author, composing treatises in numerous fields of Buddhist doctrine, including monastic discipline and philosophy as well as tantric ritual practice and iconography. Many Sanskrit manuscripts of his works have been preserved in India, Nepal, and Tibet, and his writings were influential both in India and among Newari Buddhists in Nepal. Translations of his works into Tibetan were begun under his supervision, and more than two dozen are preserved in the Tibetan canon. To date, Abhayākaragupta’s writings best known in the West are his treatises on tantric iconography, the ''Vajrãvalī'' and ''Niṣpannayogāvalī'', and his syncretistic abhidharma treatise ''Munimatãlaṃkāra''. (Source: "Abhayākaragupta." In ''The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism'', 2. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.) |
Latest revision as of 10:07, 4 August 2022
འཇིགས་མེད་འབྱུང་གནས་སྦས་པ་
Wylie | 'jigs med 'byung gnas sbas pa |
---|---|
Romanized Sanskrit | Abhayākaragupta |
English Phonetics | Abhayākaragupta |
Sort Name | Abhayākaragupta |
Other names
- ཨ་བྷ་ཡཱ་ཀ་ར་གུཔྟ་
- འཇིགས་མེད་འབྱུང་གནས་
- པཎྜི་ཏ་ཨ་བྷ་ཡཱ་ཀ་ར་གུཔྟ་
- a b+ha yA ka ra gup+ta
- 'jigs med 'byung
- paN+Di ta a b+ha yA ka ra gup+ta
Alternate names
- Abhayākara
- Paṇḍita Abhayākaragupta
Dates
Birth: | 11th century |
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Death: | circa 1125 |
Tibetan calendar dates
About
- Students
- Suvarṇadvīpa Dharmakīrti
Other Biographical info:
Links
- Wiki Pages
Buddha Nature Project
- Person description or short bio
- Indian tantric Buddhist master who was born into a brāhmaṇa family in either Orissa or northeast India near Bengal. Sources vary regarding his dates of birth and death, although most agree that he was a contemporary of the Pāla king Rāmapāla, who began his reign during the final quarter of the eleventh century. Abhayākaragupta became a Buddhist monk in response to a prophetic vision and trained extensively in the esoteric practices of tantra, while nevertheless maintaining his monastic discipline (vinaya). Abhayākaragupta was active at the monastic university of Vikramaśīla in Bihar and became renowned as both a scholar and a teacher. He was a prolific author, composing treatises in numerous fields of Buddhist doctrine, including monastic discipline and philosophy as well as tantric ritual practice and iconography. Many Sanskrit manuscripts of his works have been preserved in India, Nepal, and Tibet, and his writings were influential both in India and among Newari Buddhists in Nepal. Translations of his works into Tibetan were begun under his supervision, and more than two dozen are preserved in the Tibetan canon. To date, Abhayākaragupta’s writings best known in the West are his treatises on tantric iconography, the Vajrãvalī and Niṣpannayogāvalī, and his syncretistic abhidharma treatise Munimatãlaṃkāra. (Source: "Abhayākaragupta." In The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, 2. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.)
Expand to see this person's philosophical positions on Buddha-nature.
Is Buddha-nature considered definitive or provisional? | |
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Position: | |
Notes: | |
All beings have Buddha-nature | |
Position: | |
If "Qualified", explain: | |
Notes: | |
Which Wheel Turning | |
Position: | |
Notes: | |
Yogācāra vs Madhyamaka | |
Position: | Madhyamaka |
Notes: | Kano, K., Buddha-Nature and Emptiness, p. 109; he cites Ruegg for this, and agrees. |
Zhentong vs Rangtong | |
Position: | |
Notes: | |
Promotes how many vehicles? | |
Position: | 1 |
Notes: | Kano, K., Buddha-Nature and Emptiness, p. 110. |
Analytic vs Meditative Tradition | |
Position: | |
Notes: | |
What is Buddha-nature? | |
Position: | Tathāgatagarbha as the Emptiness That is a Non-implicative Negation (without enlightened qualities) |
Notes: | More specifically he asserts that buddha-nature is equivalent to the selflessness of the dharmatā. This is not exactly the same as buddha-nature = emptiness. Kano explains that this is a precursor to that position. Kano, K., Buddha-Nature and Emptiness, p. 111 et passim. |
Svātantrika (རང་རྒྱུད་) vs Prāsaṅgika (ཐལ་འགྱུར་པ་) | |
Position: | Svātantrika (རང་རྒྱུད་) |
Notes: | Kano, K., Buddha-Nature and Emptiness, p. 109: he cites Khedrubje for this designation. |
Causal nature of the vajrapāda | |
Position: | the first three are causes of the later four |