Question about Theravada tradition

Exploring Theravāda's connections to other paths - what can we learn from other traditions, religions and philosophies?
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hanzze_
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by hanzze_ »

polarbuddha101 wrote:When did followers of the Dhamma-Vinaya start calling themselves Theravadins?
Maybe because they just grow old.

...they had no problem when youngsters called them like that (let the elders...) and some days later they called themselves like that, with a kind of self-humor. With right view, critic can become a honor as well, but honor also leads easy back to pride. A turning wheel.
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cooran
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by cooran »

Hello Wesley,

These two articles may contain what you are looking for:

Theravada Buddhism: A Chronology
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/history.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

What is Theravada Buddhism? by Dr. V. A. Gunasekara
http://www.urbandharma.org/udharma3/theravada.html" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

with metta
Chris
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greggorious
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by greggorious »

Anyone know what the very first Mahayana schools were called? Tibetan Buddhism came quite a bit after the mahayana sutra's were written, Zen had many different forms quite a bit fater the sutra's were written too.
"The original heart/mind shines like pure, clear water with the sweetest taste. But if the heart is pure, is our practice over? No, we must not cling even to this purity. We must go beyond all duality, all concepts, all bad, all good, all pure, all impure. We must go beyond self and nonself, beyond birth and death. When we see with the eye of wisdom, we know that the true Buddha is timeless, unborn, unrelated to any body, any history, any image. Buddha is the ground of all being, the realization of the truth of the unmoving mind.” Ajahn Chah
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Nyana »

greggorious wrote:Anyone know what the very first Mahayana schools were called?
The Mahāyāna is a vehicle (yāna) encompassing many historical developments. The two Indian Mahāyāna commentarial traditions are the Madhyamaka and the Yogācāra.
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Wesley1982
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Wesley1982 »

polarbuddha101 wrote:When did followers of the Dhamma-Vinaya start calling themselves Theravadins?
Hmm, I think Theravada Buddhists are traditionally Indian. As pertaining to their local custom.
dude
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by dude »

Wesley1982 wrote:How did Theravada tradition become distinct from Mahayana & Vajrayana tradtions? . .thanks
Probably a good while after the Buddha's death, when the Theras (elders), decided they were cooler than the lay believers.
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Dan74
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Dan74 »

If you are interested in actual facts and research as opposed to some misinformation, you could try

http://books.google.com/books/about/How ... edir_esc=y

or

http://www.misterdanger.net/books/Buddh ... d%20ed.pdf
_/|\_
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by ubeysekaramapa »

I like to pause two questions:

1) can suicide solve the problem of dukka?

If not, how did Buddha declare Ven. Channa who committed suicide , as an arahant? He committed suicide due to unbearable pain as explained by him to Ven Sariputta (See Cannovada Sutta -114 in MN). That means, he was not an arahant when he committed suicide; but in the process of death by suicide he became an arahant!

2) Why is DUKKA not found in Girimananda Sutta? It is a sutta related by the Buddha to Ven. Ananda to be conveyed to Ven.Girmananda who was sick.
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Javi »

Geography, culture and time, lots of time.
Vayadhammā saṅkhārā appamādena sampādethā — All things decay and disappoint, it is through vigilance that you succeed — Mahāparinibbāna Sutta

Self-taught poverty is a help toward philosophy, for the things which philosophy attempts to teach by reasoning, poverty forces us to practice. — Diogenes of Sinope

I have seen all things that are done under the sun, and behold, all is vanity and a chase after wind — Ecclesiastes 1.14
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Coëmgenu
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Coëmgenu »

Both of the traditions contain elements of the undivided school of Buddhism which could be called the "original teaching".

Both traditions also contain innovations, or teachings that were "revealed later", whichever way you want to put it. The Mahayana has a great diversity of innovative later sutras that come into the written canon of history considerably after the Pali Canon, the most famous of which, perhaps, is the Lotus Sutra.

It should be noted that the Mahayana teachings outrightly identify themselves as new, revelatory teachings, whereas Theravada are less likely to consider their teachings "new" in the same way. In Mahayana thought, the Lotus Sutra was taught by Gautama-Buddha toward the end of his life to a select number of apostles (a lot of which seem to be supernatural entities), possibly in a spiritual symbolic Pure Land wherein is found a 'perfect' prototype of Gṛdhrakūṭa, or in English, the Holy Eagle Peak.

(My own maybe-slightly-less-than-orthodox Buddhism is coming out here, instead of an objective approach, because as a dubious Mahayanist I believe the Lotus Sutra, and later Mahayana sutras, to be largely symbolic and mythic expoundings of the Dharma, versus the 'core' Pali teachings, which are more direct. I will try to return to being objective though in the interest of accurately disseminating information as best I can in regards to the theme of this thread.)

The Lotus Sutra was believed to have then been subsumed into the realm of the Nagas (divine snakes: it is pertinent here to remember that snakes have always been symbolically associated with wisdom, secret-teachings, and knowledge, in both Eastern Indic traditions and Western Mesopotamian and Abrahamic traditions). The Lotus Sutra claims to be the revealed teachings of the Buddha, revealed from behind the veil of "wisdom" (i.e. the nagas), to the Northerly Buddhist schools that would become the later Mahayana movement.

Similarly, the Southern School has a belief about the Buddhadharma of specifically the Abhidhamma being preached in the trāyastriṃśa heaven by the Buddha, and later revealed to the earthly realms as the Abhidhamma via direct revelation through the apostle Śāriputra. Alas I do not know enough about the Abhidhamma and the background of it to elaborate on it as much as I did the Lotus Sutra.

Both traditions do share a general "core teaching", and both canons (Mahayana and Pali) have this core teaching preserved, one way or another, through "original Buddhist" teachings that reference the same body of knowledge that the Pali Canon is a harmonization of. Mahayana Buddhists, if they are worth their salt at all, also revere the wisdom-teachings of the Pali Canon because they are the foundation upon which all later innovation rests.

For an example of this, I would like to quote the user "Dhamma_Basti" from the thread "the pali texts are incoherent?":
Dhamma_Basti wrote: Another nice example of contradiction in the Pali texts are the references to anattā, here pointed out by Alexander Wynne: http://ocbs.org/wp-content/uploads/2015 ... atijbs.pdf" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
The book in the link he provided gives us examples of parallel passages from a Northern-School tripitaka (specifically from the canon of the Mūlasarvāstivāda school (who used Sanskrit as its language of Dharma-transmission, and who committed their inherited Buddhadharma to text quite a bit later than the Pali Canon) and the Pali Canon (who used Pali, as we all know).

Here is the section entitled Saṅghabhedavastu from the Northern canon, in Sanskrit:
Kiṃ manyadhve bhikṣavo: rūpaṃ nityam vā ? Anityam idaṃ bhadanta. Yat punar anityaṃ duḥkham vā tan na vā duḥkham? Duḥkham idaṃ bhadanta. Yat punar anityaṃ duḥkhaṃ vipariṇāmadharmi, api nu tac chrutavān āryaśrāvaka ātmata upagacched etan mama, eso ’ham asmy, eṣa me ātmeti?
It is quite close to the Pali Canon's Mahāvagga, the citation for which is given as "Vin I.14.5":
Taṃ kiṃ maññatha bhikkhave: rūpaṃ niccaṃ vā aniccaṃ vā ti? Aniccaṃ bhante. Yaṃ panāniccaṃ dukkhaṃ vā taṃ sukhaṃ vā ti? Dukkhaṃ bhante. Yaṃ panāniccaṃ dukkhaṃ vipariṇāmadhammaṃ, kallan nu taṃ samanupassituṃ: etaṃ mama, eso ’haṃ asmi, eso me attā ti?
As you can see, the two are very close, but there are still material discrepancies, small and large, between the two inherited traditions of Buddhadharma, in how they are communicated. Sometimes there are even outright contradictions between the Northern and Southern canons. The kinds of discrepancies you have between between the texts of the Northern and Southern schools (excluding, of course, the later Mahayana innovations) are generally the same sort of inconsistencies one encounters in different Gospel accounts in the Bible, in one Jesus says this, in the other Jesus says something slightly different, but generally the same. Or names of people and places things happened with switch around, but the lessons and teachings will be the same (or not).

Who inherited the "truer" tradition? Who can say. Although I will hand it to the Southern Schools/modern-day Theravada that they committed their canon to immutable text much before the Northern Schools did.
Last edited by Coëmgenu on Wed Jul 27, 2016 3:11 am, edited 1 time in total.
What is the Uncreated?
Sublime & free, what is that obscured Eternity?
It is the Undying, the Bright, the Isle.
It is an Ocean, a Secret: Reality.
Both life and oblivion, it is Nirvāṇa.
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cappuccino
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by cappuccino »

ubeysekaramapa wrote:1) can suicide solve the problem of dukka?
No.
If you're at a low, you must live for the high.
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Dhamma_Basti
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Dhamma_Basti »

To the question of Wesley1982:
We have a split between the Sthaviravādins and the Mahāsāṃghikas not long after the Buddha died, and as the legend goes the Mahāsāṃghikas, who went to the east, we more inclined to magic and worship than the Sthaviravādins, who went to the west and focussed more on meditation.

If you read what the japanese scholars usually write you get the impression that Mahāyāna must have started with the earliest days of the Mahāsāṃghikas. This is not entirely impossible, I personally believe that many of the elements that later developed into Mahāyāna are there in the Mahāsāmghika-sources. Especially if one reads the Mahāvastu, the focus of magic, supernatural powers, worship of the Buddha as a deity etc. seems to have it's echo there.
However what we today call Mahāyāna is usually something different. In order to get to the gist of this movement we need some more ingredients, for example the tathāgatagarbha-doctrine. So probably the full development of Mahāyāna-concepts was not complete until the Tathāgatagarbha-Sūtra, the Mahāparinirvāṇa-mahāsūtra and some related texts. The Mahāyāna-traditions themselves seem to have their difficulties in labeling stuff as Mahāyāna, as this was only done at a later point of time. So we end up with the Vaitulya/Vaipulya-confusion and the question what actually is early Mahāyāna, who composed it, why it was done and where it started is until today very much unsolved.
And also the attempt to associate Mahāyāna with one certain school or group seems rather unfruitful to me. I have the impression that Mahāyāna is something that went on across boundaries of certain sects, similar to the anti-war movement in the USA in the 60s (which might was generally associated with the left-winged political parties, but in no way limited to one group or one party) or the nationalistic movement that we have nowadays in Europe. They do generally share a common goal (or at least a direction) but there can be very different when one looks into the details.

Coëmgenu: Yep it is a difficult question. There is also a lot of pre-mahāyāna stuff transmitted in the northern tradition, yet this material has not been widely studied yet. This is partly due to the fact those people who are able to deal with the earliest chinese translations (such as Seishi Karashima) usually have a mahāyāna-background and are not much interested in the study of the non-mahāyāna-material. The few people who do engage in the studies of chinese pre-mahāyāna-material usually are not deeply trained in dealing with chinese sources, so there is some room to improve here. :)

To give an example the last month I was doing a comparison of the different transmissions of a small portion of the Mahāparinirvāṇa Sūtra. The MPS is not a bad Sūtra to start with since it is quite long, has been well transmitted in a lot of different languages and contains some passages which are of importance for the later doctrinal developments.
My impression is that in order to gain an impression of what the original text might have looked like we usually have to go through comparative study.
In the case of the MPS the northern and southern transmission complement each other quite well, so by comparison it is possible to puzzle together what the original might have been once. The northern transmission seems to be generally the older one in this case, at least concerning the fragment that I went through. This one can see in the fact that the Pāli-Version sometimes has a tendency to simplify, cut down, harmonize and 'arrange' stuff more readily than the sanskrit fragments. This gives the Pāli version a rather dry appearance. the Sanskrit version however suffers from the fact that some of the passages appear to have been written with a sort of 'creative genius' attitude, not always strictly focussed on telling what exactly happened. This is especially true if one looks at the earliest chinese translations (Taishō No. 5 and No. 6, probably 200-250CE).
In general I do however hold the view that the Pāli-canon is preferable to the Mūlasarvāstivāda-material when it comes to antiquity, but in order to get the oldest layer comparison is unavoidable.

By the way, as the master Karashima himself discovered, the term 'mahāyāna' is propably a wrong retranslation of a middle word that once was 'mahājñāna' 'the great knowledge'.
It does make a lot of sense since the southern transmission (and early indian sources in general) don't talk much of vehicles, but are focussed on knowledge and the ways to achieve it. :)
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Coëmgenu
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Coëmgenu »

Dhamma_Basti wrote: This one can see in the fact that the Pāli-Version sometimes has a tendency to simplify, cut down, harmonize and 'arrange' stuff more readily than the sanskrit fragments. This gives the Pāli version a rather dry appearance. the Sanskrit version however suffers from the fact that some of the passages appear to have been written with a sort of 'creative genius' attitude, not always strictly focussed on telling what exactly happened.
The "creative genius" thing made me LOL.

That seems to be the most jarring and evident surface-level difference between the Mahayana literary style and the Theravada style: the Mahayana accounts of everything have a tendency toward extreme and obvious hyperbole.

Take for instance The Immeasurable Meanings Sutra:
They maintained this state unmoving for a million hundred thousand kalpas. Immeasurable doctrines were all manifest before them. They had acquired great wisdom, had fully understood all phenomena, perceived and distinguished the truth regarding natures and characteristics, and displayed absolute clarity concerning being and nonbeing, long and short.


Surely no one in there right mind would believed that the Buddha preached atop the Holy Eagle Peak for a million hundred thousand kalpas, there simply isn't the time.

There seems to be this tendency toward fantastical, mythic, overlarge, presentations of the subject material. Some people discount the Mahayana traditions because of this. I just think it is a sign that these sutras were never meant to be read "literally as history". Perhaps this could be also said of the Sutta Nikaya? Whose primary purpose seems to be more-so to preserve the teaching, not codify 'every exact word' spoken and give a historical-materialist account of the reality of what happened. Certainly I have had encounters with other practitioners who have such a literalist reading of the Sutta Nikaya that when there appears to be a contradiction in it, they excise one of the two suttas as "inauthentic" because it didn't produce a coherent materialist historical vision of the past to them.
Dhamma_Basti wrote: By the way, as the master Karashima himself discovered, the term 'mahāyāna' is propably a wrong retranslation of a middle word that once was 'mahājñāna' 'the great knowledge'.
It does make a lot of sense since the southern transmission (and early indian sources in general) don't talk much of vehicles, but are focussed on knowledge and the ways to achieve it. :)
This is very interesting, it certainly complicates the Parable of the Burning House in the Lotus Sūtra, do you have any links that elaborate on Karashima's findings vis-a-vis "mahājñāna/mahāyāna"?

I do hope I am not too off-topic.

Suffice to say, another difference between the Mahayana and Theravada traditions is their main texts have a very different literary style.

I am not an Abhidhammic scholar, but I have read that the Theravada Adhidhamma describes reality as being reducable to "prime dhammas". Does anyone have any idea if that is correct, and if so, what that means?

I say this because I have a book on Nagarjuna that argues that he spent a lot of his life trying to refute the Abhidhammic teachings, saying there are no "prime dhammas".

That would be another difference between the traditions to look into, if a highly scholastic one that might not have any substantial effects on day-to-day practice.
What is the Uncreated?
Sublime & free, what is that obscured Eternity?
It is the Undying, the Bright, the Isle.
It is an Ocean, a Secret: Reality.
Both life and oblivion, it is Nirvāṇa.
justindesilva
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by justindesilva »

To inquisitive Wesley 82
Good question and In my knowledge a Prince from South india in the 5th century by the name of Bodhidharma travelled to China . After a spiritual confrontation with a then king of China he travelled in China Japan and closet territories.
He established the zen (Chan) schools of Buddhism in China and Japan. He established a buddhist practise of martial arts in order to protect the villagers from robbers and set up schools in a similar manner.
The zen buddhist monks protected the villagers within the precepts of buddhism. Finally mixed with various cultures other patterns of martial arts were established.
How ever zen buddhism if well followed with meditation will carry one to liberation of the mind. But it is my view it is a more domesticated pattern of buddhism created within buddhist principles not to be treated lightly.
In comparison may I indicate that " thera" means a priest.
(This may be verified by going in to webs introducing Bodhidharma)
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Re: Question about Theravada tradition

Post by Caodemarte »

Sorry, but the story of Bodhidharma and Zen in the comment seems to be entirely made up and completely fanciful without even a legendary basis. If you are interested in this topic, please check any standard source.

It is probably a mistake to think of early Theravada and Mahayana (of which Vajrayana is a subset) as distinct ideological movements rather than as broad tendencies, slowly jelling into fairly distinct groupings. In SE Asia Theravada was an alternative "reform" movement that came after and replaced Vajrayana so it clearly developed there after Vajrayana. I suspect the same is true in India as well, that Theravada was a reform movement that developed in reaction to Vajrayana and possibly proto- Mahayanist schools. What seems clear is that Theravada looked back to the 3rd Council for inspiration (so did not start as an identifiable movement until at least a century later). So using that date as a rough guide and depending on when you decide Mahayana started (from the first mention of the bodhisattva ideal?) there is a strong case that Mahayana predates Theravada or developed at roughly the same time.

However, this is interesting only from the historical point of view. From the religious point of view, it matters less "what Buddha historically said" or "what document is older than which" than what results from practice (or so I believe the Buddha said :smile: ). So the primary question becomes " Is it true and is it useful?"
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