The Brahmā's Net Sutra: Taishō volume 24, number 1484
"The Brahmā's Net Sutra, translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka, is the primary extant vinaya text that articulates a set of precepts from a Mahayana perspective, mainly intended for 'bodhisattva practitioners,' primarily householders, rather than renunciant monks...
Gespeichert in:
Weitere Verfasser: | , |
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English Chinese |
Veröffentlicht: |
Moraga, California
BDK America, Inc
[2017]
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Schriftenreihe: | BDK English Tripiṭaka series
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Zusammenfassung: | "The Brahmā's Net Sutra, translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka, is the primary extant vinaya text that articulates a set of precepts from a Mahayana perspective, mainly intended for 'bodhisattva practitioners,' primarily householders, rather than renunciant monks or nuns. Before the appearance of this text the monastic rules and regulations in East Asian Buddhism were defined fully by the 'Hinayana' vinaya, most importantly the Fourt-part Vinaya associated with the Dharmaguptaka school in India. With the appearance of the Brahmā's Net Sutra many East Indian schools diversified their precept practices, with some groups of practitioners taking up either set of precepts, often utilizing both. Composed in China around 420, the Brahmā's Net Sutra is based on various contemporary Mahayana and Hinayana vinaya writings and includes extensive discussion of indigenous Chinese moral concepts such as filial piety, etc. The text is based in the same mainstream Mahayana thought of the Flower Ornament Sutra (Huayan jing), the Nirvana Sutra (Niepan jing), and the Sutra for Humane Kings (Renwang jing). In fact, the extend of the Brahmā's Net Sutra's agreement with the Flower Ornament Sutra is so pronounced that it is regarded as the 'concluding sutra' of the latter."--Back cover |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references (pages 87-88) and index |
Beschreibung: | xxi, 111 Seiten 24 cm |
ISBN: | 9781886439658 |
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adam_text | Contents
A Message on the Publication of the English Tripitaka
NU MATA Yehan v
Editorial Foreword Kenneth K. Tanaka vii
Publisher’s Foreword A. Charles Muller ix
Translators’ Introduction A. Charles Muller and
Kenneth K Tanaka xvii
The Brahma’s Net Sutra
Fascicle 1. Exposition of the Brahma s Net Sutra
[Preface] 3
Preface to the Brahma *s Net Sutra by âramana Sengzhao 3
The Forty Stages 4
[Convocation] 4
Ten Departures for the Destination 6
Ten Nourishing Mental States 6
Ten Adamantine Mental States 6
Ten Grounds 7
The Ten Departures toward the Destination 8
1. The Mental State of Detachment 8
2. The Mental State of Morality 8
3. The Mental State of Patience 9
4. The Mental State of Zeal 9
5. The Mental State of Concentration 10
6. The Mental State of Insight 10
7. The Mental State of Making Vows 11
8. The Mental State of Guarding 11
9. The Mental State of Joy 12
10. The Summit Mental State 12
xi
Contents
The Ten Nourishing Mental States 13
1. The Mental State of Kindness 13
2. The Mental State of Pity 13
3. The Mental State of Joy 14
4. The Mental State of Nonattachment 14
5. The Mental State of Giving 15
6. The Mental State of Caring Speech 15
7. The Mental State of Beneficence 15
8. The Mental State of Sameness 16
9. The Mental State of Concentration 16
10. The Mental State of Insight 16
The Ten Adamantine Mental States 17
1. The Mental State of Faith 17
2. The Mental State of Mindfulness 18
3. The Profound Mental State 18
4. The Mental State of Penetrating Illumination 18
5. The Direct Mental State 19
6. The Mental State of Nonretrogression 19
7. The Mental State of the Great Vehicle 19
8. The Markless Mental State 20
9. The Mental State of Wisdom 20
10. The Indestructible Mental State 21
The Ten Grounds 21
1. The Ground of the Equality of the Essence 21
2. The Ground of the Skillful Wisdom of the Essence 23
3. The Ground of the Luminosity of the Essence 25
4. The Ground of the Knowability of the Essence 26
5. The Ground of the Wisdom-illumination of the Essence 28
6. The Ground of the Floral Radiance of the Essence 29
7. The Ground of the Completion of the Essential Nature 31
8. The Ground of the Buddha’s Roar of the Essential Nature 32
9. The Ground of the Flower Ornamentation of the Essence 34
10. The Ground of Entry into the Buddha Realm
of the Essential Nature 35
xii
Contents
Fascicle 2. The Precepts
Preface to the Bodhisattva Precepts of the Brahma ys Net Sutra 37
Invocation 38
The Teaching Transmitted to the Transformation-body Buddhas 38
Repayment of Kindness and a Separate Iteration of the Teaching 39
The Exhortation 40
The Bodhisattva Precepts 41
The Transmission and Remembrance of the Founding Teacher 41
Preface to the Formation of the Precepts 42
Interlocutor’s Preface 42
The Preface of the World-honored One 42
The Preface of the Preceptor 42
The Dharma Preface 43
The Preface for the Disciples 43
The Main Sermon 43
Introduction of the Exhortation to Uphold 43
The Ten Grave Precepts 44
1. Prohibition of Killing for Pleasure 44
2. Prohibition of Stealing Others’ Property 44
3. Prohibition of the Heartless Pursuit of Lust 44
4. Prohibition of Intentional Lying 45
5. Prohibition of the Sale of Alcohol 45
6. Prohibition of Speaking of the Faults of Others 45
7. Prohibition of Praising Oneself and Disparaging Others 46
8. Prohibition of Parsimony and Abuse of Others 46
9. Prohibition of Holding Resentments and Not Accepting Apologies 46
10. Prohibition of Denigration of the Three Treasures 47
Conclusion 47
The Minor Precepts 48
Division of Ten Precepts 48
Precepts Concerning the Guarding of One’s Own Thoughts
L Do Not Show Disrespect to Senior Teachers 48
2. Do Not Drink Alcohol 48
xiii
Contents
Protecting Other’s Mental Functions
3. Do Not Eat Meat 49
4. Do Not Eat the Five Pungent Roots 49
5. Do Not Fail to Encourage Others to Repent 49
Reversing and Cultivating the Buddha-dharma
6. Do Not Fail to Request Instruction in the Dharma
from Visiting Teachers 50
7. Do Not Miss a Chance to Attend Dharma Lectures 50
8. Do Not Abandon the Great Vehicle and Regress to the
Lesser Vehicle 50
Saving and Protecting Sentient Beings
9. Do Not Fail to Care for the 111 51
10. Do Not Amass Weapons 51
Division of Ten Precepts 51
Guarding One’s Own Virtue
11. Do Not Serve as a Negotiator for the Military 52
12. Do Not Get Involved in Trade and Business that
Causes Trouble for Others 52
13. Do Not Make Groundless Accusations 52
14. Do Not Harm Living Beings by Setting Fires 52
Bringing Others into the Fold and Protecting Them
15. Do Not Teach Non-Buddhist Doctrines 53
16. Do Not be Parsimonious with Offering Material
Wealth or the Dharma 53
17. Do Not Seek to Gain Political Influence 54
18. Do Not Pretend to Be An Accomplished Teacher 54
19. Do Not Get Involved in Treachery 54
20. Do Not Fail to Help Both the Living and the Deceased 55
Division of Ten Precepts 55
The Shared Cultivation of the Three Karmic Activities
21. Do Not Be intolerant of Wrongs Done by Others 56
22. Do Not Arrogantly Despise Your Dharma Teacher 56
23. Do Not Despise Beginning Practitioners 57
Practicing with Those Who Hold the Same Vows
24. Do Not Fear the Superior and Follow the Inferior 58
xiv
Contents
Properly Maintaining the Sangha
25. Do Not Fail to Properly Fulfill Administrative Duties 58
26. Do Not Receive Guests Improperly 58
27. Do Not Accept Personal Invitations 59
28. Do Not Extend Personal Invitations to Monks 59
Harmonizing and Polishing the Precepts
29. Do Not Engage in Improper Livelihood 60
30. Do Not Hurt People While Feigning Intimacy with Them 60
Division of Nine Precepts 60
Making Proper Donations
31. Do Not Be Lax in Rescuing Vulnerable Articles and
People from Harm 61
Not Doing As One Pleases
32. Do Not Deviously Confiscate Others’ Property 61
Avoiding Harmful Influences
33. Do Not Pass Your Time in Idleness 62
Advancing in the True Vehicle
34. Do Not Abandon the Aspiration for Enlightenment 62
Not Avoiding Making Vows
35. Do Not Fail to Make Vows 63
Making Vows
36. Do Not Fail to Initiate Vows on Your Own 63
Avoiding Danger
37. Do Not Intentionally Go to Dangerous Places 65
Not Creating Confusion
38. Do Not Take Your Place Out of Order 66
Profit and Happiness
39. Do Not Pursue Personal Gain 66
Division of Nine Precepts 67
Using Moral Discipline to Gather [Believers] 67
Gathering in People of Various Capacities
40. Do Not Err in Terms of Who Can Be Taught 67
Separating Out Wrong Situations
41. Do Not Seek Disciples for the Wrong Reasons 68
XV
Contents
Guarding the External
42. Do Not Give the Precepts to Unsuitable People 70
Guarding the Internal
43. Do Not Intenionally Break the Holy Precepts 70
Showing Respect
44. Do Not Fail to Revere the Sutras and Vinayas 71
Teaching By Means of Compassion
Being Proactive 71
45. Do Not Fail to Teach Sentient Beings 71
Teaching Others
46. Do Not Preach the Dharma Using Improper Protocol 71
Warding Off Evil
47. Do Not Establish Systems that Undermine the Dharma 72
Maintaining Orthodoxy
48. Do Not Undermine the Dharma from Within 73
General Conclusion 73
Dissemination Section 74
Concluding Exhortation for Faithful Practice 74
Notes 77
Glossary 81
Bibliography 87
Index 89
A List of the Volumes of the BDK English Tripitaka (First Series) 101
xvi
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spelling | Fan wang jing The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka Moraga, California BDK America, Inc [2017] xxi, 111 Seiten 24 cm txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier BDK English Tripiṭaka series Includes bibliographical references (pages 87-88) and index "The Brahmā's Net Sutra, translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka, is the primary extant vinaya text that articulates a set of precepts from a Mahayana perspective, mainly intended for 'bodhisattva practitioners,' primarily householders, rather than renunciant monks or nuns. Before the appearance of this text the monastic rules and regulations in East Asian Buddhism were defined fully by the 'Hinayana' vinaya, most importantly the Fourt-part Vinaya associated with the Dharmaguptaka school in India. With the appearance of the Brahmā's Net Sutra many East Indian schools diversified their precept practices, with some groups of practitioners taking up either set of precepts, often utilizing both. Composed in China around 420, the Brahmā's Net Sutra is based on various contemporary Mahayana and Hinayana vinaya writings and includes extensive discussion of indigenous Chinese moral concepts such as filial piety, etc. The text is based in the same mainstream Mahayana thought of the Flower Ornament Sutra (Huayan jing), the Nirvana Sutra (Niepan jing), and the Sutra for Humane Kings (Renwang jing). In fact, the extend of the Brahmā's Net Sutra's agreement with the Flower Ornament Sutra is so pronounced that it is regarded as the 'concluding sutra' of the latter."--Back cover Mahayana (DE-588)4125803-4 gnd rswk-swf Mahayana Buddhism / Sacred books Bodhisattvas Bodhisattva stages (Mahayana Buddhism) Mahayana Buddhism Quelle gnd rswk-swf Mahayana (DE-588)4125803-4 s Quelle f DE-604 Muller, A. Charles 1953- (DE-588)141006501 trl Tanaka, Kenneth Kenichi 1947- (DE-588)1052246354 trl Digitalisierung BSB München - ADAM Catalogue Enrichment application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030546045&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 Mahayana (DE-588)4125803-4 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4125803-4 |
title | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 |
title_alt | Fan wang jing |
title_auth | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 |
title_exact_search | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 |
title_full | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka |
title_fullStr | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka |
title_full_unstemmed | The Brahmā's Net Sutra Taishō volume 24, number 1484 translated by A. Charles Muller and Kenneth K. Tanaka |
title_short | The Brahmā's Net Sutra |
title_sort | the brahma s net sutra taisho volume 24 number 1484 |
title_sub | Taishō volume 24, number 1484 |
topic | Mahayana (DE-588)4125803-4 gnd |
topic_facet | Mahayana Quelle |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=030546045&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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