'bras bu: Effect, result, fruition (the kayas and wisdoms
etc.) -lam du byed pa: Making the fruition one's path. -theg:
The last three of the nine yanas in which the fruition itself becomes the
working basis. Vs. rgyu mtshan theg pa in which the result is produced
causally by purification, practice, etc.
'bud: See bud.
'byed pa med pa: Without distinction, of dualistic conceptions
etc. -thugs rje, impartial, distinctionless compassion. It
is there for all beings equally, regardless of their state of virtue, understanding
etc, as rain falls on the just and unjust alike.
'byor ba'i bkod: Rich display.
'byung ba lnga: sa, chu, rlung, me, nam mkha'; earth,
water, air, fire, and space. In their coarse form as substantial
existents, they are obstacles to enlightenment. In their subtle form,
they are phenomenal principles that respond to the will of the yogin.
Thus they are known as the consorts of the five bhagavans. In their
subtlest form, they are not different from insight-bodhicitta itself.
'dre ba: mix. Eg. things are seen clearly without
being mixed up in ji snyed ye shes, qv.
'du ba: 1 Gather, assemble, accumulate, collect, join,
meet. (active sense). 2 Be united or included (of changeless
entities). 3 To embody (of deities etc).
'du bral med: Without gathering or separation, without
adding or taking away.
'du byed: the fourth skandha, formations, habitual tendencies,
karmic formations.
'du ma byas: Uncompounded, unconditioned. Not produced
by combining dharmas through cause and effect.
'du shes: Perception, [conception] discernment, ideation,
inclination, the third skandha.
'dul ba: the teachings of monastic discipline, such as the 250
rules for monks and 350 for nuns. One of the 3 pitakas or baskets
of the teachings, sde gsum. Vinaya, [monastic] discipline, conversion,
cultivation, taming. 'dul byed, is the tamer or teacher and 'dul
bya, the tamed or disciple.
'dus pa: See 'du ba.
'dzin: See gzung 'dzin.
'gag med: 1 Unobstructed, unlimited by or free from...,
able to manifest. 2 Unceasing.
'gag: 1 Pith, crucial or principle point. Cf. gnad.
2 To cease.
'gogs pa gnyis of discriminating awareness 1 without complexity
resting in natureless meaning in which defilements are like the sky.
'gro ba: 1 Sentient being = sems can. 2 Animal.
3 To go.
'gro ba'i lam: Path of one's travels, path of beings.
'gyu ba: movement, moving thoughts, discursive [vibration],
thinking. Has the connotation of unsteady flickering like lightning,
tongues of flame, or reflections on water. All distracting mental
activities including perceptions, feelings, and the undercurrent of subconscious
gossip are included. 'phro: Flickering emanations of the moving,
more or less equal to, rnam rtog, discursive thoughts; erratic, mental
activity.
'jam dpal: Manjushri bodhisattva of knowledge.
'jog pa: 1 Put, place. 2 Leave, abandon. 3
Postulate, assert. 4 Classify, pigeonhole. 5 Rest the mind
in meditation.
'khor ba: Sa.msara; confused, cyclic, transmigratory existence;
to whirl or spin; rotate.
'khrul pa: Confusion, deception, mistake, frenzy, madness,
bewilderment.
'od gsal: Luminosity, luminous clarity. The glory
of the vision of the pure bhuumis from the eighth upward, in which the
two obscurations are removed. non-objectivized manifestation within
the great emptiness. Its full blown form is the buddhas' vision of
things as they are, corresponding to ji snyed ye shes or kun mkhyen ye
shes. All schools of the mahayana accept its existence. Therefore,
it is a mistake to understand emptiness in a way that excludes such vision.
'od: Light, radiance.
'og min: Akanishtha, = gandavyuha, the highest realm,
pure land, or buddha field, that of the vision of enlightenment.
It is on the level of sambhogakaya, and said to be inhabited by mahasattvas,
(who alone can apprehend it.) It was at first the name for the highest
of the realms of the gods.
'phags pa bden bzhi: Four noble truths. 1 All is
suffering, sdug bsngal. 2 The origin, kun 'byung, of suffering, ego
grasping etc. 3 'gag pa, Cessation of suffering. 4 The path,
lam, leading to the end of suffering.
'phags pa nor bdun, faith discipline, generosity, learning,
decency, modesty, prajna.
'phags pa: Arya: Changeless, without transition
or change. Cf. pho ba, the yoga of transference of consciousness.
a nu: Anu yoga, the eighth yana. See theg pa dgu.
a ti: Ati yoga, the great perfection, the ninth yana.
See theg pa dgu.
a'dod pa lnga: desirable qualities of the 5 senses.
a'jigs chen bzhi: old age, illness, death, deterioration.
a'khor lo bsgyur ba'i rgyal po. Universal monarch, especially
Dharma kings.
bag chags: vasanas Habitual tendency or pattern, karmic
propensity or seed. In yogacara philosophy karma is stored as bag
chags, in kun gzhi, alaya, a formless and neutral basic consciousness.
These mature into such manifestations as being born in a physical body,
having particular mental propensities or character, seeing the world in
terms of sa.msaric confusion, experiencing the karmic result of previous
good and evil deeds, etc.
bar do: Intermediate state in cyclical existence, especially
those experienced between death and rebirth, according to texts like the
bar do thos grol, the Tibetan Book of the Dead. These are the 'chi
ka'i bardo, the bardo of the moment of death, where the radiance of dharmata
is experienced; the chos nyid bar do, bardo of dharmata, where visions
of peaceful and wrathful wisdom-deities etc. are experienced; and
the srid pa bar do, the bardo of becoming or rebirth.
bar snang: Space. (The literal words could mean
appearance in the middle but seldom do.)
bar: The middle, middle way between opposites, eg.
inner mind and external appearance. It may become an object of fixation,
and it is said that the wise do not dwell in the middle either.
bcom ldan 'das lnga: the five bhagavans, peaceful deities
or sambhogakaya buddhas, Ak.shobhya, Ratnasambhava, Amitabha, Amoghasiddhi,
Vairochana. They are said to appear in the visions of the chos nyid
bardo, and also figure in many tantric visualization practices. They
represent the enlightened forms of the five skandhas, form, feeling, perception,
formations, and consciousness and five kleshas anger, pride, desire, jealousy,
and ignoring. They manifest as the five wisdoms, mirror-like, equality,
discriminating, all-accomplishing, and dharmadhatu wisdoms. Locana,
Mamaki, Pandaravasini, Tara, and Akashadhatvishvari are their consorts,
representing the pure form of water, earth, fire, air, and space.
bcom ldan 'das: bhagava[n][t], blessed one, the Buddha.
bcos ma (n) pa (v): Fabricated, artificial, created, cranked
up, created purposely, fake, unnatural, pretended.
bdag pa chen po: great being
bdag: Self, ego, atman (false and delusive) master, sovereign.
-nyid = bdag or sometimes = essence, ngo bo or similar words. - pa chen
po : great being, mahatma, universal mind of enlightenment or buddhahood,
as symbolized by Samantabhadra etc. By becoming enlightened one attains
this. There is no conflict with emptiness. This self is empty
in essence like any other.
bde ba chen [po'i sku]: Mahasukha[kaya], the body of great
bliss, referring to the intrinsic and inseparable bliss of enlightenment,
bde ba, which is closer to well-being and equanimity than physical pleasure.
bde bar gshegs pa: Sugata, epithet of buddha, the blissfully
gone one, due to experience of mahasukha.
bde gshegs snying po: Sugatagarbha, sugata essence, buddha
nature, the ultimate, changeless reality from which temporary phenomena
arise and to which they return. v. Uttaratantra etc.
Because of its existence as our real nature we are of the "enlightened
family" and can attain enlightenment. Sometimes sugatagarrbha refers
to that potential or Buddha nature.
bden gnyis: the relative and absolute, kun rdzob and don dam:
The two truths are usually said to be emptiness and appearance, in the
third turning they are also presented as appearances being or not being
like things as they are.
bdud rtsi: amrita. The intoxicating nectar of the
gods, which conveys long life, bliss, and spiritual accomplishment.
The literal words mean "devil juice."
bkod pa, (n or v): Arrange[ment], display, order, setup,
array.
bdud: Mara, demonic or obstructing forces, either personified
or seen as psychological or karmic propensities. Mara is the king
of such demons or forces, as the Devil is in the west. There are
many divisions (see text), especially the four maras: The klesha
and skandha maras (personifications of those); mrityu mara, personifying
death, rigidity, darkness, depression and such life-destroying forces;
and the deva putra (son of deity) mara concerned with the seductions of
pleasure, power, and various ego-building experiences.
bla ma: guru. Teacher who embodies, displays, and
transmits the sacred reality of enlightenment, also teaching the path by
which it may be obtained and so forth. In tantric teachings like
ati it is generally held that even though enlightenment is our true nature,
it would be extremely difficult to realize this without the guru.
Therefore great respect is in order for those rare persons who can properly
perform this function. At the same time one must transcend devotional
conceptions about the guru as separate to attain realization. Over-conceptualized
devotion can actually be a hinderance.
blang 'dor: Accepting and rejecting, receiving and abandoning,
taking and discarding.
blo: (Conceptual) mind, intellect, cognition, awareness,
plan; -zangs, good intelligence -'das, beyond conceptual or sa.msaric mind,
beyond thought or intellect.
bram ze: brahman, hindu priestly caste.
brgya byin: king of the 33 gods in Hinduism
brtag pa: Vitarka. Investigate, inquire, examine;
-s: Pf. of rtog: Think conceptualize. Applied and focused
thought approaching and determining the nature of its object. Cf.
dpyod pa.
brtags pa gnyis pa: Condensed text from the cycle of the
Hevajra Tantra.
bsam gtan bzhi: the dhyana "trances" have five factors
concets, analysis/scruitiny, joy, well-being and equanimity [rtog pa, dpyod
pa, dga'a ba, bde ba, btang snyoms). Accounts vary. In each
successive dhyana one drops out until the 4th has equanimity alone.
These states also correspond to heaven realms where the gods have correspondiong
realizations. See Ch. 4.
bsam gtan: Dhyana, state of meditation. In particular,
the nine dhyanas, four with form and five formless concentrations.
See snyom 'jug.
bsgom pa: Meditate, action of meditation. See text
for divisions. V. shamatha, vipashyana.
bshugs: Xbskal pa: In Hindu-Buddhist cosmology a great
kalpa consists of 4 to 80 (depending on the source) small kalpas of about
eight million years. During this period the world evolves, develops,
deteriorates and finally is completely destroyed in fire. It is said
we live in a sub-period called the good kalpa because many buddhas appear
in it.
bskyang: p. of skyong: Protect, guard, maintain, preserve,
care for, nurture, govern, enjoy. Dharma protector deities are chos
skyong.
bskyed rim: Developing stage. One performs various
liturgies involving visualization of deities, making praises and offerings
to them, reciting their essence mantras, and so forth. The deities
are more aspects of enlightened mind than disembodied, personal entities
external to and more powerful than oneself. But they are sometimes
experienced as personlike beings. Eventually one hopes to see the
phenomenal world as embodying various aspects of the pure environment and
inhabitants of the mandalas of deities.
bskyed: Generate, cultivate, create, produce, visualize,
develop.
bsod nams bsngo: all good deeds including practice accumulate
merit or good karma. When ego thinks it owns good karma it is easily
defiled, so it is best to give or deicate it to beings and the path.
bstan pa'i dbye ba bcu gnyis: General/sutras, verse summaries,
prophecies, verse teachings, exhortations, biographical tales, narratives
of former examples, conditional eclarations, extensive teachings, narrativges
of former births, resolutions, narratives of miracles.
btang bshag med: Without taking or leaving: Intransitive
or participle of 'bud, revealed, occurred. It just happens.
bud pa, dispense with. 'bud, transitive: strip, lay bare, reveal,
set free, expel, slander, blow (conch, on fire etc.), endeavor.
bya ba grub pa'i ye shes: All-accomplishing wisdom, the
karma family wisdom. The speed, struggle, and poverty mentality of
jealousy is transmuted by realization that real achievement is effortless
and self-existing. As with Vajrakilaya (indestructible dagger) practice,
the power of realization cuts through the confusion of obstacles.
bya rgyud: Kriya tantra. See theg pa dgu.
byams pa: the next buddha, Maitreya, now residing in the Tushita
Heaven.
byang chub lnga: The five manifestations of enlightenment
are 1 Sitting on a sun and moon seat. 2 One's body completely
manifests the body of the deity. 3 One's speech manifests the
seed syllables. 4 Mind manifests the attributes of the deity's
scepter, eg. Vajrayogini's trident and skull cup. 5 Jnanasattvas
descend.
byang chub sems dpa': Bodhisattva. One who has reached
at least the path of seeing of the five paths, but not yet attained complete
buddhahood. With the buddhas they are called noble ones or aryas,
'phags pa. There are usually said to be ten levels or bhuumis of
the bodhisattva path, on each of which a certain perfection or paramita
is emphasized, though up to fifteen are sometimes mentioned. -theg
pa: The bodhisattvayana practices the paramitas in the context of
the understanding, and later the vision, of emptiness. see theg pa
dgu.
byang chub sems gnyis: aspiring and entering smon 'jug.
byang chub sems: Bodhicitta, enlightened mind. In
the mahayana there are the bodhicitta of aspiring to enlightenment, and
that of actually entering into it. There are relative bodhicitta,
concerned with compassion and the details of practicing the paramitas etc.
and absolute bodhicitta, the ultimate nature of things. Bodhicitta
is presented in ati as the absolute mind of enlightenment. It is
more or less equivalent to rig pa, insight, and sugatagarbha, when they
are used to refer to the fruition.
byang chub: Bodhi, enlightenment. byang: purified
of obscurations and chub = perfected in enlightenment.
bye brag pa: Either the vaishe.shikas among the six hindu
schools, or the vaibha.shikas among the shravaka schools. The eighteen
schools more or less followed these tenets. Stcherbatsky's The Central
Conception of Buddhism is one of many sources. They define the relative
as the composite, and hold that the absolute is physical atoms and the
momentary dharmas of mind. They also hold that these absolutes are
linked by various truly existing causes and conditions. They hold
that the three times, space, etc. are established as substances.
They hold that partless atoms aggregate into gross objects, and that partless
moments of consciousness directly perceive their objects. They hold
that effects in some sense pre-exist in their causes
bying rgod: Drowsiness and wildness, sinking into dullness
and the arising of uncontrollable discursiveness, as obstacles experienced
in meditation. They are said to be defenses of ego against fundamental
space in which it does not exist.
byis pa: 1 Immature persons, children. 2 Disparaging:
childish fools.
byung po: Ghost, generic name for 'dre, gdon (dāns) and
bgegs (geks) etc. Demon, evil spirit, esp. of the preta realm of
the six lokas.
cha med: Nothing whatsoever, partless, without aspects.
cha phra: Infinitesimal, subtle [parts].
chad lta: Nihilistic view. Those who hold that nothing
truly exists or who are skeptics holding that we cannot know what exists
are nihilists. But this fault is most often ascribed to those who
hold that there is no moral order of karmic cause and effect, so that the
various good and bad events in the world arise only by chance. Thus
many scientists would be nihilists from the buddhist viewpoint.
cho 'phrul: Magical display, apparition, illusion, trick,
creation, power, miracle, magical attack.
cho ga rnam pa lnga: The five aspects of sadhana:
Visualization, recitation, offering, praise, and blessing.
chos can: That which possesses the various qualities of
individual dharmas as opposed to the single nature of dharmas, emptiness,
dharmata. The subject of a logical reasoning. Sometimes the
phenomenal in general.
chos dbyings: Dharmadhatu. Space, source, or realm
of phenomena. Absolute reality, the Dharma = enlightened mind, bodhicitta
etc.. In the eighteen dhatus of hinayana, as presented by the Abhidharmakosha,
dharmadhatu is the object, vi.shaya, yul, of the mental sense.
In this sense there are as many dharmadhatus as there are sentient beings.
chos kyi 'khor lo 'khor: The three turnings of the wheel
of Dharma. The first was at the deer park in Varanasi with hinayana
teachings of truly existing dharmas, the four noble truths, and eightfold
path; the second at the vulture peak taught emptiness of true existence;
the third in the indefinite realms taught the changeless, eternal, ultimate
nature, absolute bodhicitta or sugatagarbha.
chos nyid: Used in the Abhidharmakosha etc to mean absolute
reality or realities, the real nature of something. It is sometimes
used in this text in such a sense. The Tibetan schools all accept
emptiness as the absolute reality, so the terms are more or less synonymous.
In ati this is the great emptiness beyond emptiness and non-emptiness,
things as they are beyond concept, their ultimate being or nature.
chos sku: Dharmakaya. See sku gsum.
chos skyongs: Dharma protector, dharmapalas, various generally
wrathful deities, who protect the teachings, attack those who pervert them
for reasons of ego etc. In general when basic sanity begins to slip,
the phenomenal world gives gentle messages, like you can't find your car
keys. If that fails, you might drive your car into a tree.
That is called a manifestation of the protectors. Mahakala, Vaitali,
Ekajati etc, are examples.
chos: 1 dharma, phenomenon, thing, existent, ultimate
constituent of existence, that which is suitable to be known by the mind,
mental object. 2 Dharma (capitalized): The Buddhadharma, the
teachings of buddhism. 3 Religion in general. 4 quality, property.
5 Right, duty, moral law. 6 Scripture or doctrine. 7 Truth,
order, law. 8 Principle, topic. 9 Meaning, value. 10
In ati the vision of realization is the end of the buddhadharma, and this
is called "the Dharma." If the guru transmits this vision to someone,
it is called "giving the Dharma."
dag pa gnyis: rang bzhin dag, glo bur dag. Purity
of nature and purity of pure experience from the incidental. The
two purities result from removing the veils of conflicting emotions, the
kleshas, and of primitive beliefs about reality that obscure omniscient
wisdom.
dag pa gsum: There are various lists of three purities.
In the bodhisattva path there is threefold purity (=emptiness) of actor,
action, and object. In mahayoga there are purity of the outer world,
inner contents, and the continuity of the mind stream
snod, bcud, rgyud. The list referred to in the text, during a discussion
of kriya is probably this: 1 lha dag dkyil 'khor, the mandala
of the pure deity 2 rdzas dang longs spyod dag, pure substance
= longs spyod, enjoyment or abundance 3 sangs rgyas don dag
ting nge 'dzin the samadhi of the pure meaning of buddhahood. [ES
lists sngags dang ting nge 'dzin, purity of mantra and samadhi for 3]
It is worth noting that ES's source specifically refers to kriya and ours
is more a mahayoga feast commentary.
dag pa'i sa: The three pure bodhisattva bhuumis, the eighth,
ninth, and tenth. They are so called because only on these levels
do luminosity, pure appearance, wisdom, the ornament, gandavyuuha, Akani.shtha,
etc. manifest. Bodhisattvas of these levels are to some extent
like the buddhas in seeing things as they are. Those on a lower level
have direct cognition of emptiness in meditation. But they have not
yet removed the obscurations of primitive beliefs about reality that veil
pure appearance.
dag snang: Pure appearance, sacred outlook (VCTR, who
wanted to that here everything appears has a sense of overwhelming sacred
value). Enlightened vision of the relative = luminosity possessing
the two purities etc. Ultimately = the kayas and wisdoms.
dam bca': Thesis, promise, oath, claim, idea. "Dam"
here = firm, stable.
dam tshig srung ba: To keep, guard, or maintain samaya.
It is sometimes said that this is almost impossible for someone who is
not enlightened. For buddhas it is self-existing and effortless.
dbang bzhi vase (5 buddha families, water, crown, vajra, bell,
and name), secret (inner feelings and phenomena are the mandala),
prajnajnana (bliss of union), suchness (the nature).
dbang drug: The six indriyas, or sense organs, the six
senses, the five usual senses plus the mental sense; ES: six tantric
empowerments of yoga, but he does not list them.
dbang lgna: 1 The five senses. 2 The five powers:
faith, perserverence, mindfulness, samadhi, and prajna.
dbang po chen po"the great Lord,"a Hindu creator god.
dbang po: Hindu god, of the three Bhrama, Vishnu, and Shiva
he is associated with destruction and ascetic yoga, and with the dance
of existence. He is also much associated with Hindu tantra.
dbang: 1 Empowerment (= dbang bskur, abhi.sheka)
Typically a ceremony introducing students the ritual and mandala of a particular
deity. One can also be empowered as a teacher or with a certain state
of being. 2 Power. 3 Senses or their faculties (=
dbang po, usually as conditioned experiences to be transcended. 4
Mental acuity or capacity. 5 Ruler.
dbu ma: 1 The middle way. 2 The central channel
visualized in tantric yoga. 3 The madhyamaka philosophy of emptiness
established by Nagarjuna. Nagarjuna claimed to establish logically
the teachings of the prajnaparamita suutras that absolute reality is empty
of true existence of what conventional concepts impute to it, of any real
nature and so forth. Interdependent arising of all conventional things
is one way of establishing this. The prasangika school dbu ma thal
'gyur, emphasizes that reality transcends concepts, even that of emptiness.
Therefore, insofar as possible, it makes no attempt to establish doctrines
of its own, but limits itself to showing the inadequacies in the doctrines
of others. Ati is highly influenced by the prasangika viewpoint,
which it presupposes. Reasoned arguments do not appear in this text,
because they have been resolved previously. Therefore, one who wishes
to study ati should first have personally resolved the meaning of emptiness
as presented by madhyamaka. Then it is possible to go on to realize
how emptiness manifests in experience as non-dual emptiness/luminosity.
Ati to some degree also accepts the notion of svatantrika madhyamaka:
without distinction, division, classification, or exclusion.
dbyings kyi snying po: Garbha of space = sugatagarbha.
Sometimes = dharmadhatu, sometimes the seed, potentiality, or "genes" of
dharmadhatu, which makes it possible for sentient beings to attain it,
as in the Uttaratantra.
dbyings las mi g.yo: Not departing from space, going beyond
it in the sense of becoming something with a truly existent different nature,
not of one taste with it, non-empty, something dual in relation to insight.
dbyings: Field, dhatu, realms, [basic] space, expanse,
totality continuum, source. dbyings su, can mean spontaneously.
dbyings su dag, can mean spontaneous or fundamental purity. Basic
nature, eg. wetness can be called the dbyings of water.
de bzhin gshegs pa['i snying po]: Tathagata [garbha] [womb of
the] thus-gone. tathagata = buddha qua one who courses in suchness
= emptiness = things as they are. Tathagatagarbha: the buddha
nature or essence. It is like sugatagarbha except the emphasis is
on the emptiness rather than the bliss aspect. Sometimes it refers
to the buddha nature as potential for enlightenment in all beings, as opposed
to full blown enlightenment. Sometimes it means realization of absolute
truth = absolute bodhicitta etc.
de bzhin nyid: Suchness, emptiness, things as they are
= chos nyid.
ded dpon: Guide. Literally it means a ship captain,
as a metaphor of one who can guide people safely on a long journey.
dgag sgrub: Assert or deny; prove or refute in the verbal
sphere; hinder or establish in the experiential sphere.
dge a'dun: followers of the Buddha's teachings.
dgnos grub: The relative thun mong or kun rdzob, siddhis
are accomplishments such as the six higher perceptions, mgnon shes.
Absolute siddhi, thun mong ma yin or don dam) = enlightenment.
dgnos po: Thing, conceptualized as something solid and
real with a fixed, independent essence. That which has the power
to produce an effect, don byed nus pa, is a thing. What does not,
like space, is a non-thing. cf. dgnos su, in reality.
dgnos [por] 'dzin: To recognize, either things as they
are or in terms of some conceptual reference point falsely fixated as invariant
and objective; to grasp as solid or as things having fixated characteristics
of essence and effect-producing power. The experiential quality of
the world so grasped.
dgongs pa: Literally intended meaning, and thence by extension
vision or realization. KPSR.
dkon mchog bzhi: Buddha Dharma, Sangha, and guru.
dkyil 'khor gsum: body, speech, and mind.
dkyil 'khor: Mandala. Literally, center and border.
The mandala of a deity has that deity with customary accoutrements at the
center. Around the central deity are the retinue and attendants of
the four families other than that of the deity. Around that are the
palace, vajra fence, charnel grounds, and other environmental symbols.
Altogether they symbolize in detail the particular modes of being, action,
and awareness symbolized by the particular deity. Mandala is also
used to mean the experience of body, speech, and mind of primordial buddhahood.
Such a mandala is not an artificial creation, but a self-existing display
for whoever reaches this level. This display of the mandala of the
king of dharmata is not chaotic, but is experientially as organized as
the experience of a real king's court. By extension almost any perspective
or arrangement can be called a mandala.
dmigs pa: Conception, image, object-focus, perceived object,
visualization. -med: without any of the above, inconceivable,
inexperiencable, unimaginable. -rkyen object condition of perception.
-med pa'i snying rje: objectless (impartial, egoless) compassion.
dngos grub thun mong brgyad: magic pills, eye medicine,
sword, going in space, invisibility, deathlessness, conquersing sickness.
don byed nus pa: Ability to perform a function or produce
a result. The defining characteristic of things.
don dam: True, real, absolute, ultimate. rnam grangs-
the conceptually describable absolute vs. rnam grangs min pa'i -, which
cannot be described but only experienced.
don gnyis: rang don and gzhan don, benefit for self and other.
don grub: Attainment, accomplishment, success. =
Siddhartha. KSTR.
don: 1 Meaning, sense, significance. 2 Object, thing.
3 Fact. 4 True, real, ultimate. 5 Topic, subject. 6 Purpose,
benefit. 7 Result. 8 Nature. 9 Message.
dpyod pa: Vichara. Sustained analytical thought
on objects determined by vitarka, usually with the intent of resolving
them in terms of practical judgement. Subconscious gossip on sense
impressions, an ongoing indistinct murmur of conceptuality (manojalpa)
underlying our experience. Vitarka searches to match sense experiences
to conceptual reference points. Vicara attempts to fix them there
definitively. Thus, one might use them to decide respectively that
sa.msaric objects are impermanent and empty, and should not be relied on
by one who hopes for liberation. In hinayana brtags pa and dpyod
pa, are considered desirable in building concentration that leads one to
a more direct cognition of reality in dhyana, meditation. But they
drop out in the second dhyana leading to clear lucidity (samprasada.) PPA,
appropriate sanskrit index headings. In the Tibetan schools also
examination and analysis are considered as preludes to the clarity of direct
comprehension. In CYD and LT analysis is almost invariably madhyamaka analysis
for the absolute: Memory and understanding, wakefulness.
drag po, Hindu god, of the three Bhrama, Vishnu, and Shiva he
is associated with destruction and ascetic yoga, and with the dance of
existence. He is also much associated with Hindu tantra.
dran pa: Memory, mindfulness, a term for conditioned sa.msaric
consciousness altogether, as used eg. by Saraha.
dri ma gnyis: The two obscurations of kleshas and knowables.
KSTR.
dri med: Stainless, spotless, immaculate, undefiled.
dri za: celestial musician spirits said to susbust on smells.
dril ba: Include, essentialize, wrap up, sum up.
dug gsum: The three poisons; chags pa, zhe sdang, gti
mug; passion, aggression, and ignorance.
dug lnga: The five poisons = the five kleshas, anger,
pride lust, jealousy, and ignoring.
dus med: Timeless, constant.
dus bzhi: The four times: Past, present, future,
and the all-inclusive fourth.
dus gsum: The three times, past present and future.
dus: age krita, treta, dvepara and kali are four ages of the
universe after which the world is destroyed. The first is like a
golden age dominated by bhramins (priests). The following ages deteriorate,
and are controlled by kshatriyas (rulers/warirs) vaishyas (merchants) and
shudras (servants/ laborers
gdod ma'i dbyings: gdod= Primordial. dbyings= chos
kyi dbyings= Space of dharmadhatu, [= The dhatu], as sphere, source, and
element of all there is.
gdod nas: Primordially. Sim. thog nas, ye nas.
gdon: Malevolent or demonic spirit, especially of the
preta realm, said to bring about disease and accidents for those who lack
mindfulness.
glo bur: Temporary, incidental, transient, adventitious,
not innate or intrinsic, sudden, abrupt.
glod: Relax, rest, be natural, free, loose, release, let
go, set free.
gnad: Main, essential, vital or key point; pith, essence,
secret. -kyis: due to. -'gag, put into a single
point. lus kyi gnad: teachings of physical practice, hatha
yoga etc.
gnas lugs [tshul]: Natural: Antidote, remedy.
Eg., the contemplation of disgusting aspects of the body is a hinayana
antidote for carnal lust. The path as a whole is the antidote for
sa.msara. Emptiness is the antidote for belief in self-nature.
Tibetans often think of the bodhisattvayana as the one that principally
employs antidotes. Whereas the first two yanas are said to find nothing
good in negative thoughts and emotions and to recommend suppressing them,
the bodhisattvayana compares them to an unpleasant tasting medicine.
They may be useful in building resolve for enlightenment, non-attachment,
compassion, and other wholesome attitudes. From the viewpoint of
ati, since buddhahood is self-existing, there is no need for antidotes.
gnas: Place, basis, ground = gzhi, abide, exist, to live,
lifetime, remain, endure, be stable, establish oneself, domain, realm.
-skabs: Occasion. -'gyur: Transformation.
-cha: Stability, section of a text, point, topic. -snang:
The way things appear and the way things are.
gnyis med: Non-duality, non-existence of either or both.
Eg. gzung 'dzin gnyis med, may mean that grasping subject and grasped object
are non-dual, not separate states, co-emergent, in union etc; or it may
mean that neither of them exists. The former approach is characteristic
of the mind-only school, where enlightenment is defined as realization
of ultimate mind as one without subject/object duality. The latter
is characteristic of madhyamaka, which says that neither mind nor its objects
truly exist as independent entities with a nature of their own and so forth.
But the same arguments that refute them also refute any truly existing
ground such as dharmadhatu that would be beyond mind. So they cannot
be said to exist non-dually as that or anything else.
Ati ultimately accepts the madhyamaka viewpoint:
Straying, deviation, misunderstanding; place where these can occur -gsum:
clinging to bliss, clarity, and non-thought. -bzhi: Dilgo Khyentse
Rinpoche in LM: Misunderstanding the great primordial emptiness,
one labels mind with conceptual negation. This is known as straying
into the realm of conceptual shuunyata (emptiness). Not having faith
in the ground and fruition of ordinary mind within oneself, one hopes for
a new acquisition of the fruition of dharmakaya elsewhere. This is
known as straying in regard to the path. Misunderstanding the way
of self-liberation, one seeks antidotes elsewhere than in the kleshas themselves.
This is known as straying in regard to the antidote. Thinking that
all dharmas of apparent existence, sa.msara and nirvana, are merely shuunyata,
one is stuck in a fixation of nihilism. This is known as straying
into labeling."
goms: 1 Proficient, habituated, trained, skillful, adept,
having mastered, accustomed, developed. 2 Paces, footsteps.
grol ba: Liberation, freedom, to liberate oneself or another,
untying, releasing escaping from, recovering from illness, to end [a meeting].
to become non-existent [of things] = cease. -bzhi, the four kinds
of liberation: shar grol, liberation on arising; gcer [cer] grol
direct liberation; rang grol, self-liberation, and ye grol eternal liberation.
grub thob: Siddhi, accomplishment; siddha, the one who
has such accomplishment. Absolute siddhi is enlightenment.
The relative siddhis involve miraculous displays of power over phenomena,
the higher perceptions, mngon shes qv., and the like.
gsal ba: Clear, clearly appearing, clearly explained,
luminous. See 'od gsal.
gtad med: Not solid, shifty, offering no fixed or steady
reference point. KPSR. VCTR.
gtan la 'bebs pa: Establish, resolve with certainty, determine,
settle, clarify, put in order, usually of doctrines.
gzhan stong: Empty of other. In shentong philosophy
it is said: Foundation, ground, basis, object [-ive support] basic
nature, = buddha nature (sugatagarbha, the Space of insight) , source,
subject. - gzhi: the thing which is . (eg. stong gzhi, the thing
which is empty.) -grub, established foundation. -rten
ground and support, foundation = gzhi. -lam 'bras: ground,
path, and fruition: Eg. the ground, one's nature, sugatagarbha, emptiness
possessing all the supreme characteristics, is the nature as cause and
ground. Therefore, one can practice the path of the buddhadharma
in the ways described in this text, and attain the fruition, enlightenment,
the manifestation of the kayas and wisdoms and so forth. This text
is presented in that order.
gzhi gnas: 1 Intrinsically present, abiding in the ground,
gzhi gnas ye shes gsum qv. 2 Shamatha meditation: One-pointed
meditation on an object, most often the breath. It is a means of
cutting through conceptualizations and attachments so that one can experience
the basic self-existing nature.
gzhi med: Groundless. Things are mere appearance
of what does not exist. Cf. med pa gsal snang, stong gzugs, rten
med. KPSR.
gzugs brnyan: Reflection. Ordinarily we think of
reflections as reflections of something that is not itself a reflection,
such as the moon in water, or "reflected" in visual experience. But
here all phenomena are "reflections" in that they arise interdependently.
The external moon is a considered to be a projected, false conception,
with even less reality than the experienced one, and so forth. Whatever
arises is experienced as empty, in something like the way we experience
the moon in water now, or like the way we experience a dream, when we know
we are dreaming.
gzugs sku: Ruupakaya. The two form kayas sambhogakaya
and nirmanakaya, constituting the benefit for others. See trikaya.
gzung 'dzin: Usu. Abbr. gzung ba'i yul dang 'dzin
pa'i sems: Fixated or grasped object , gzung ba and fixating or grasping
mind, 'dzin pa; illusory, sa.msaric fixations of independent, truly existing
subjects and objects. VCTR translated this "grasping and fixation,"
rather than the more common "subject and object." One reason is that
enlightenment in ati is not envisioned, as sometimes in hinayana, as nihilistic
cessation of experience of subject and object; nor, as in mind-only, as
their becoming one thing. The enlightened object is the kayas, emptiness
possessing all the supreme aspects. Theenlightened subject is insight-wisdom.
They can be said to be inseparable and non-dual, so that this perception
is self-insight of itself. But for ati this state is also the great
emptiness beyond existence and non-existence, beyond mind and no-mind etc.
Ati accepts the madhyamaka claim that no predicates can adequately describe
absolute reality. So it is beyond the absolute mind of mind-only.
Thus, VCTR used "grasping and fixation" to indicate that enlightenment
transcended confused conceptualizations of the perceiver and the perceived.
Those who translate gzung 'dzin gnyis med, as [with neither][without the
duality of] subject and object are in general aware of these considerations,
so that in the end there need be no fundamental disagreement. VCTR
sometimes used these terms so that they seemed to refer to a simultaneous
co-dependence of subject and object, and sometimes spoke of a successive
occurrence of the subject-object split, gzung ba, followed by mental grasping,
'dzin pa. Obviously one should not mix the two usages.
It is traditionally said that the shravakas
realize the non-existence of gzung 'dzin, of the individual ego,
and that pratyekabuddhas also realize half-egolessness of dharmas by realizing
the non-existence of gzung but not of 'dzin. KPSR explains that this
means that there is no individual ego ('dzin) and therefore no objects
(gzung) that have a substantial, causal, or any other kind of dependence
to it. Pratyekabuddhas are said to realize interdependent arising,
according to the twelve links of interdependent arising and so forth.
Therefore, they realize that dharmas of the external world do not exist
with an independent nature of their own. They view them as aspects
of the experience of a perceiver. However such a perceiver is not
an individual ego. Such a view is very like mind-only, or perhaps
some versions of Sautrantika Abhidharma that anticipate mind-only.
cf. BPTP. Bodhisattvas have full realization of emptiness, and therefore
do not accept the grasper of dharmas as truly existing any more than those
dharmas themselves.
gzung: V. gzung 'dzin.
ji lta ba'i ye shes: Wisdom of the absolute nature of
everything as it is, ie. as the great emptiness.
ji snyed pa'i ye shes: Wisdom of extent; ji snyed = as
much as there is, whatever kinds, as suitable; omniscient qualitative wisdom
of all phenomena as they are, discriminating all details without confusion.
ka dag: Primordial purity, purity from the start.
kha ldog lnga: Blue, white, yellow, red, and green, the
colors of the five families and elements.
khams/ 'byung ba bzhi: these are the 5 minus space.
khams bco brgyad: The eighteen khams, dhatus, (classes
of dharmas) are the six sense powers, dbang po, indriyas, including the
mano-dhatu or, yid kyi dbang po, the faculty of intellect; the six sense-objects,
yul, vishaya, including the dharmadhatu, here in its original sense = the
realm of non-sensuous, intellectual objects; and the six consciousnesses
including the manovijnana or intellectual sense. The consciousness
of touch is called the kaya consciousness, meaning here "of solid bodies."
the six senses, their six objects, and the six consciousnesses of those
objects. Here "dharma," in a special sense, means intellectual object,
and dharmadhatu is the realm of such objects, analogous to the realm
of colors, sounds, etc.
khams gsum: Three worlds. 1 The desire realm, the
realm of material form. 2 Pure non-material form, the realm of the
impure visions of dreams, and those of the god realms; and the pure ones
of meditation, such as visions of the sambhogakaya deities. 3 The
formless realm [objectless space, time, consciousness, neither perception
nor non-perception.]
khams: 1 Element, dhatu, realm. 2 Disposition
of individual personality; the nature of something, sim. rang bzhin; the
elements. Eg. the khams of fire is heat. Such natures
are partial vs. 3 the basic nature = rigs (gotra) = sugatagarbha,
buddha nature. potential or seed; semen.
khong yangs pa: [Innerly] vast or wide open, open minded,
to perceive or understand.
khra lam: Vivid, clear, bright, splendid.
khrol khrol: Bright, sparkling (cf. khrol po) (loud or
rumbling of musical instruments); insubstantial, unobstructed (cf. khral
khrol); LUS: Continuously liberated (cf. bkrol ba).
khyab 'jug: Hindu god. Of the threw Bhrama, Vishnu and
Shiva, responsible for maintaining the universe. He has a number
of incaranations such as Krishna, and according to the Hindus, the Buddha.
klong: Space (capitalized in text) expanse, sphere, realm
of..., mass, immensity vastness, scope or boundaries. -gyur:
attaining perfection or mastery. -chen, immense space or knowledge
= dharmadhatu -chen rab 'byams: realization of vast universal Space
or knowledge = Longchenpa. -zer, : nail of space. See
gzer.
Longchenpa says in LT that klong can be differentiated
from dbyings as the space of ultimate mind vs. that of the universal ground.
VCTR differentiated them by comparing dbyings to the vastness of contemplating
the horizon from the seashore. Klong is more like skydiving in the
middle of the night. He was referring in particular to the black
klong experience of the forty-nine day bardo retreat in darkness.
Here Space is beyond reference points of vastness and constraint.
klu: Naga, water spirit, serpent [deity]. Living
in low watery places and caverns, they are often associated with the lower
aspects of the human situation, either those which are necessary, but not
exalted, or those which are dark, evil and poisonous. Thus they are
associated with skin diseases such as leprosy. In this aspect, they
are the enemy of garuda. However, they are said to have great wealth,
and to have received the wisdom of the prajnaparamita from the Buddha,
guarding it until Nagarjuna, klu grub, could receive them. Also the
nagas protected Buddha from attacks of the maras on the night before his
enlightenment.
kri ya [rgyud]: Kriya tantra, = bya rgyud, the fourth
yana. see theg pa dgu.
kun btags: False conception, parikalpita, the merely imputed
or illlusory nature of external reality projected onto mind-only, which
has no true existence at all, like space.
kun byed rgyal po: The all-creating (doing, accomplishing)
King, title of the main scripture of the SemdÈ. The King =
bodhicitta, personified as Samantabhadra qv. His attributes are explained
at length in the text. The King also is one's true enlightened nature.
kun gzhi rnam gsum: the neutral alaya, alaya of various habitaul
patterns, alaya of reality.
kun gzhi rnam par shes pa: Alayavijnana: Universal
ground- consciousness. See rnam shes brgyad.
kun gzhi: Alaya: Universal ground. See rnam
shes brgyad.
kun mkhyen ye shes: The omniscient wisdom of enlightenment,
which sees all phenomena without mixing them up. cf. ji snyed ye
shes.
kun rdzob: Relative, conventional, obscured (in the sense
of disguised or costumed) truth, as opposed to don dam, absolute truth.
Various systems have different views of what constitutes the relative.
See bden gnyis. -gnyis, the two aspects of the relative are, [yang]
dag pa'i kun rdzob and log pa'i kun rdzob. Sometimes these refer
to ordinary right and wrong judgements within the everyday sphere.
In this text they differentiate the confused perception of sa.msara and
the perception of enlightenment which sees things as they are. yang
dag is sometimes called absolute truth, but the sense is different from,
though not in conflict with the absolute truth of emptiness, which it presupposes.
kun tu bzang po [mo]: Samantabhadra [-i] literally means
total or universal goodness. In mahayana Samantabhadra is one of
the eight main bodhisattvas, an emanation of Vajrasattva. In sadhanas the
environment is purified as pure appearance by the Samantabhadra offerings,
in which offerings of desirable things of the five sense objects are visualized
like clouds filling the whole of space. In ati Samantabhadra is the
first, primordial buddha, who spontaneously achieved understanding of his
own nature as universal enlightenment. His consort is Samantabhadri.
Usually he is blue, she is white, and they are naked. The text presents
this in detail. When Samantabhadra is united with his consort Samantabhadri,
she symbolizes the primordial space of the empty essence, dharmadhatu and
prajnaparamita. He symbolizes pure arising in that space of entities
that do not go beyond its nature. Samantabhadra does not exist as
an ego or individual being, but = buddhahood, one's own true nature.
Therefore, all who are enlightened are said to be equal to him. The
"I" of the K¸njÈ, who is the all-creating King, is Samantabhadra.
He may be considered the essence of all that is sacred. Ati might
say that this is the real concern of all religions and their deities.
Some have wondered whether Samantabhadra as lha and bdag chen, big mind,
the great self, was not like God in the western sense. I think this
is true in a sense. Bdag pa chen po is the great mind beyond ego
and non-ego, or self and other, and even God and atheism. In
theory the via negativa of Dionysius and "God is not a what" of Aquinas
are compatible with this. If there are theists who have no problem
with God being emptiness and not something removed by a gap from what we
really are, so be it.
lag na rdo rje: bodhiattva who is the lord of secret vajra teachings.
lam bgrod: Treading, traversing the path.
lam lnga: Thedvcion, tshogs lam: One accumulates
merit and wisdom and avoids confusion and evil deeds so that one will escape
the lower realms and enlightenment will eventually manifest. The
four foundations of mindfulness are practiced and developed in shamatha.
This leads to the clear seeing of vipashyana. 2) Preparation (unification),
sbyor lam, Developing vipashyana, one develops a deep understanding of
the four noble truths, cutting the root of the desire realm. 3) Seeing,
mthong.lam: The practitioner comes to understand the unsatisfactoriness
of all the realms of form, including the god realm. Direct vision
of emptiness is seen. This conveys the essence of liberation, and
one enters the first bhuumi, supremely joyful. 4) Meditation, sgom
lam: Practicing meditation and relating to the phenomenal world through
the paramitas, pha rol tu phyin pa, one attains the second through tenth
bhuumis. This culminates in the vision of luminosity and wisdom.
5) Fulfillment or no more learning, mthar phyin or mi slob,
Attaining the vajra-like samadhi the practitioner enters the eleventh bhuumi,
prabhasvara, kun tu 'od, the complete luminosity of buddhahood. See
JOL.
lam: The practitioner's way to enlightenment as taught
by the Buddha, the method of practice, "the path" = the buddhadharma altogether.
-khyer, make something into the path, practice, bring something to the
path. eg. one can use kleshas as a means of practice in various ways.
las rlung: Karmic energy, karma prana, as opposed to ye
shes rlung, the energy of wisdom.
las: 1 From, as, which is, instead of, rather than.
2) Karma.
lha min: jealous gods who are enemies of the gods, one of the
six realms of existence, rigs drug
lha: Deities, the divine, the level of things that are
exalted. Sometimes buddhist scriptures accept the existence of the
entire hindu pantheon on deities as the highest sort of temporarily existing
beings. The deities of sadhana, yidams, protectors, buddhas and bodhisattvas
(such as Samantabhadra in this text) sometimes seem to be approached as
beings having a personal existence, and sometimes as principles of the
energies of one's mind and the phenomena of the world. In any case
they are ultimately empty of essence. Buddhahood is eternal, but
a certain being Samantabhadra was first to realize it. Doing so,
he ceased to be merely personal. We too can become what he became.
It is not the existence and nonexistence of deities that differentiates
Buddhism from "theistic" religions. It is that the whole issue shifts
elusively, leaving one nothing to rely on, so that one is just left hanging.
The "theism" that Buddhism eschews has less to do with accepting and worshipping
deities than trying to fix the reference points of one's universe through
conceptual idolatry. This the great theistic religions also decry.
Fixating emptiness and nihilism about any divine nature in any sense is
part of that "theism."
It has sometimes been noted that Buddhism
sometimes makes statements, eg. about Chakrasa.mvara or Samantabhadra,
that are indistinguishable from those theistic dogmatists make. But
since these perspectives are not fixated, but seen in the context of the
great emptiness, they become a commentary on the phenomenological possibilities
of religion. Such openness is the very reverse of cultish dogmatism (or
should be). Here one can compare what Longchenpa says about the difference
between the use of sems tsam terminology to establish metaphysical and
spiritual dogmas and the use in ati to go beyond them.
lhag mthong: Vipashyana, clear seeing. Having calmed
the mind through shamatha, and in that stillness gained some sense of the
self-existing basic nature, the meditator continues with mindfulness on
the breath etc., but lets the boundary dissolve into all-inclusive, panoramic
awareness in which all phenomena, not just those of mind, are included
without accepting and rejecting. This occurs by seeing there is no
real step between the two. The sense of boundary is an illusory fabrication
that requires maintenance. As one explores the phenomenal world in
this way, the connections of interdependence that lead to sa.msara and
nirvana become self-evident. This deepens into direct experience
of emptiness as one enters the bodhisattva bhuumis.
lhan [cig] skyes pa'i [ye shes]: Sa.msara and nirvana
arise in one's situation simultaneously. Therefore, the solidity
of each is annihilated, and the wisdom beyond both spontaneously appears.
Very intense suffering naturally tends to self-liberate into co-emergence,
and the attempt to stabilize a nirvana free of sa.msara tends naturally
to evoke co-emergent, conceptualization, fixation, ignorance and so forth.
-kun btags, co-emergent false conceptions, ; -ma rig pa, co-emergent ignorance.
lhun grub: Self-existing, of the changeless essence.
In particular, the self-existing, spontaneously present nature of dharmadhatu,
which, from the path viewpoint, arises effortlessly when pure perception
is achieved. One of four states of meditation in SemdÈ according
to NN.
lhun: 1 = lhun grub. 2 Monolithic, massive.
3 Dignity.
like thunder you can hear but not see: having no real identity,
cf. nges med, ngos 'dzin med. It is like a cloud of no fixed shape
or a mutter in stadium that seems to be saying something, but it isn't
quite clear what. Really it is not anything in particular.
The situation is like a dream where one feels that something crucial is
happening, and yet nothing really justifies such a feeling.
log: Eliminate, wrong, perverted: lta log, wrong
view.
longs spyod rdzogs pa'i sku: sambhogakaya. KPSR
presents longs spyod literally being activity = bya ba, which includes
in particular the realization of extent ji snyed. longs spyod also
means enjoyment and in fact, since nothing needs to be accomplished the
realization of sambhogakaya is appreciation, and the activity celebration.
It is often so glossed. see sku gsum.
lung bstan: Give instruction, teach, prophesy.
lung ma bstan: 1) It is not taught. (occurs frequently
in the K¸njÈ. 2) it comes to nothing. It is also
used this way in the "Song of Lodrā Thaye" in The Rain of Wisdom.
3) Neutral, neither wholesome nor harmful, bad or good. Eg. kun gzhi
lung ma bstan, the neutral alaya.
lung: 1 Scripture. 2 Passage or quotation
from scripture (as in lung gi gter mdzod, The Scriptural Treasury, the
name of Longchenpa's commentary on The Precious Treasury of Dharmadhatu.
3 Reading transmission of a text or practice. 4 Precept. 5
Teaching.
lus ngag sems: Body, speech, and mind (non-honorific),
vs. sku gsung thugs. These sets of terms can be used to differentiate
the body, speech, and mind of the enlightened and unenlightened states.
ma 'dres: Unmixed, unconfused. Eg. in ji snyed ye
shes all the different, individual things are clear and distinct.
They do not get mixed up with each other or confused. Unadulterated:
Wisdom is not mixed = adulterated with sa.msaric fixation and grasping.
ma 'gags: See 'gag med.
ma bskyed: Not purposely produced, developed, or cranked
up. Hence, self-existing, natural. Cf. ma bcos.
ma btsal: Literally, "not sought." But things could
be unsought for reasons of ignorance. Also, they are often missed
just because they are sought too greedily. So the sense is more like
not needing to be sought, because they are self-existing.
ma rig pa: Ignorance, as opposed to rig pa, understanding,
insight. ma rig pa occurs when rig pa is covered over by incidental
defilements.
mchod rten: stupa. Originally a memorial structure containing
relics of the Buddha. Later other holy objects and texts were also
put in.
mdo sde pa: Sautrantikas, an abhidharma school of the
hinayana. The Abhidharmakosha of Vasubandhu, dbyig gnyen, propounds
this viewpoint. The logicians, such as Dignaga and Dharmakirti, hold
that what has the power to produce an effect, is absolute truth, and that
what does not is relative. They deny the, bye brag pa, vaibha.shika,
assertions that space and cessation substantially exist, and that there
are simultaneous cause and effect. They hold that consciousnesses
do not nakedly see their objects but are themselves generated in the image
[rang rig]. They deny the self of persons, but accept that there
are other truly existing entities. Thus they accept the self of dharmas.
mdo: Confluence, juncture, main point, suutra (a discourse
of the Buddha) mdor na: In summary.
med pa gsal snang: This could mean that the appearances
themselves do not exist at all, which is the case from the madhyamaka viewpoint.
But all informants concur that the idea is that they are there but are
empty of any truly existing object of which they are appearances.
They do not exist with a nature of their own.
mgnon chos: Abhidharma, schools of philosophy such as
the hinayana, bye brag pas and mdo sde pas and the mahayana sems
tsam pas who believe in various truly existing dharmas (as madhyamaka and
ati do not). These dharmas are grouped into classifications such as the
5 skandhas, 18 dhatus, and 12 ayatanas. They are held to arise interdependently
through various causes and conditions. To accept such doctrines is
to deny the doctrine of emptiness, a key feature of madhyamaka and tantric
systems such as ati.
VCTR said that abhidharma still has a place
in tantric systems like ati in charting the geography and evolution of
sa.msara and enlightenment. When a kind of free floating panic causes
the freezing of basic space and we divide it to try and check what went
wrong, the seemingly solid, dualistic phenomena of abhidharma appear and
proliferate. In enlightenment the same phenomena become manifestations
of the five wisdoms and so forth. In ati dharmas are not thought
of as truly existing as in hinayana. They are not even truly existing
dharmas of mind as in mind-only. For example, this account is given
of the evolution of the illusory experience of the five skandhas.
The dualistic split and solidification manifest as form gzugs. Levels
of basic accepting and rejecting, feeling , tshor ba, and instinctual
patterns of meaning/response = perception 'du shes) appear. A whole
repertory of conditioned attitudes and responses builds up to define the
emotional and motivational fabric of the world = samskaras, formations,
'du byed). The discursive thoughts and intellectualizations of consciousness,
rnam shes) fill in every gap to create a seemingly solid situation of full
blown egohood in an external world of fixed entities. Meditation
reverses this evolution, returning phenomena to the state of basic space
of dharmadhatu, as described at length in the present text.
mi ma yin: Literally non-men; pretas, such as graveyard
ghosts, often malevolent.
mi pham Rinpoche: Mipham, a nineteenth century Nyingma
master and member of the nonsectarian ris med, rimÍ, school.
He formulated Nyingma doctrines in such a way that it became possible to
consider them in a detailed way in relation to the views of other schools..
Eg. SSN argues that there is no ultimate incompatibility between Nyingma
and shentong doctrines and those of the Gelug school, or between the intentions
of Nagarjuna explaining the scriptures of the second turning and those
of Asaga in explaining the scriptures of the third turning. Cf. chos
kyi 'khor lo 'khor.
mi rtog pa: Non-thought, non-conceptuality, non-discursiveness.
Longchenpa distinguishes the following: 1 The artificial non-thought
of one-pointed meditation which does not go beyond sa.msara. 2 The
nyams, nyam, of mi rtog which is a sign of some accomplishment, but is
not ultimate realization and is a possible object of attachment and straying.
3 Non-thought = self-existing samadhi or wisdom which is an aspect of realization.
The essence of the latter is absence of grasping and fixation rather than
a mind clear of phenomena. Thus it is possible for a teacher who
has stabilized the mind of non-thought to give teachings etc. nondual mind,
sugatagarbha, dharmata. It is beyond all complexities and opposites.
mi'am ci class of spirits included with the deva realm.
Some are oddly shaped with a horse's head etc.
mkha' 'gro: One who goes in the sky. Usually = dakini.
In one instance in this text = bird. Sometimes general for gods or
those who have attained godlike powers. Usually female tantric deities
of the five families who guard, serve, present, and embody the tantric
teachings, and are the consorts of the Herukas, the male tantric deities.
They seem to have evolved from a mischievous and sometimes malevolent class
of forest spirits. On the whole they are wrathful or semi-wrathful,
symbolizing compassion, emptiness, prajna, the basic fertile space from
which everything arises, the unity of desire and space, and the tricky
and playful aspect of phenomena. The higher ones give basic inspiration
to seek enlightenment or cut through perversions of the teachings.
Some of the lower ones are said to be on the level of local deities or
spirits, ghosts, and demons.
mkha' mnyam: The equality of space, as limitless as space.
mnga' bdag: Master, sovereign, lord.
mngon par dga' ba: Abhirati, the eastern buddha field
of Ak.shobhya.
mngon shes: abhijna. Relative siddhis. The
five -, : 1 seeing at a distance. 2 Hearing at a distance.
3 Reading others' minds. 4 Remembering past lives. 5 Manifesting
miracles. the six-, : Includes the ability to destroy defilements.
This last is said to occur on attaining the state of an arhat.
mnyam bzhag: Meditation. (vs. rjes thob, post-meditation)
In particular it often refers to the direct intuition of emptiness in the
formless meditation of the noble ones, vs. their illusion-like apprehension
of appearances in post-meditation.
mnyam nyid: 1 Equality, (especially in terms of the essence,
emptiness). 2 Equanimity, as the state of mind of someone realizing
1
mnyam pa chen po: The great equality.
mtha' brgyad: The Muulamadhyamakakarika says:
That which arises interdependently
Is without cessation and has no birth.
It is neither eternal or nothingness.
It is without any coming and any going.
It is not different, nor is it a unity.
Pacifying complexity, it is taught as peace.
To the perfected buddhas who have said this,
To those holy ones I make prostration.
mtha' bzhi med: Without the four extremes. A predicate
does not apply, not apply, both, or neither. Eg. to say that for
all dharmas true existence is empty is to say that in absolute truth all
dharmas do not truly exist, not truly exist, both, or neither. According
to madhyamaka, if any of these assertions is maintained, a contradictory
consequence can be derived.
mtha' la = mtha gcig tu: Completely, without qualification
[by its opposite].
mtha': Extreme. A one-sided, rigidly conceptualized
viewpoint that confuses features of concepts with those of reality.
Concepts are useful in various kinds of practical situations, but to think
they have an absolute validity independent of the situations in which they
are used, invariably leads to mistakes, according to madhyamaka.
The four and eight extremes are kinds of extremes that should be avoided.
Thus, if one understands the conventions and limits of words, one can use
them to talk about the world and the teachings without falling into extremes.
Mipham says SSN. "Not every assertion of existence asserts the extreme
of existence. Not every assertion of non-existence asserts the extreme
of non-existence.. etc."
mtshan dang dpe [byad]: The thirty-two major and 80 minor
marks of a buddha. They are (sometimes fantastical) physical characteristics,
wheels on the hands and feet, arms descending to the knees etc.
mtshan ma'i yul (chos): Objects having fixated characteristics
(dharmas).
mtshan/mtshon med: Things like dharmadhatu without fixed
characteristics. Such things can be talked about of course, but elude
being successfully pigeonholed or exhaustively described by any particular
description.
mu stegs: Non-buddhists, tirthikas, especially hindus,
the variety most typically encountered within buddhist tradition.
The term has a sense of infidel or heretic.
mya ngan las 'das pa: Nirvana, enlightenment. It
is said enlightenment in ati is beyond sa.msara and nirvana to differentiate
it from partial notions of the lower yanas which, from the viewpoint of
ati, are not free from conceptualization and attachment. Such notions
would be cessation, emptiness, knowledge, power, bliss, purity, morality,
compassion, and social improvement, or their negations. Superficial
imitation of the good qualities of former enlightened ones by turning them
into preconceived programs is good at the beginning of the path.
But in the end it is only creating more samsaric obscuration of the naked,
boundless relation with our situation that Longchenpa presents as true
enlightenment.
na da: iconographically the tip of the bindu, the first and
last existence before nothingness. cosmic sound.
ngag 'khyal: Discipline of functional talking, restraining
frivolous and unnecessary speech.
ngang du [las]: Within that [state], as that [state]
1 Uncertain. 2 Not ascertained as anything in particular.
3 Unfixed, unfixated, unpredictable. 4 Untrue, unreal.
ngo bo: as opposed to manifestation and variety, emptiness possessing
all the supreme aspects, nothing whatever but everything arises from it,
Essence. Being, principle, substance, identity. In general
like rang bzhin, but when they are distinguished, of sugatagarbha, etc.
ngo bo refers to the essence, emptiness, and rang bzhin to the nature,
the spontaneous presence of luminosity. (The terminology of the kun
byed reverses these two.) ngo bo rang bzhin thugs rje: see sku gsum.
Cf. snying po, bdag nyid. me long gi : Surface
of a mirror. It can be said the essence of water is cohesion, the
nature wetness, and the function cleansing or thirst- quenching.
ngo bo should be distinguished from ngo = Face, viewpoint, side.
ngo sprod: Transmission, pointing out [instruction], showing,
introduction, bring face to face with something.
ngos bzung: Recognizable or identifiable, fixated in terms
of reference points.
nyams: Temporary experiences of meditation, which, however,
are signs of a certain development in practice. (vs. sgyu ma, nying
'khrul, illusory and hallucinatory experiences.) The three usually mentioned
are bliss, luminosity, and non-thought.
nyan thos: shravakas, the hearers or disciples of the
hinayana, the first of the nine yanas. See theg pa dgu.
nye bar [nyer] len gyi phung po lnga: ES: Perpetuating,
substantializing, bringing about, grasping, solidifying the skandhas; nye
bar len lnga = phung po lnga.
nyon mongs gsum: = The three poisons, passion, aggression,
and ignorance, chags, zhe sdang, gti mug.
nyon mongs lgna; rtsa ba'i-: The five root kleshas are
hatred, envy, desire, jealousy, and ignorance.
pha rgyud: Father tantras of the anuttara tantras, emphasize
form, upaya, and working with aggression, vs. mother tantras emphasizing
space, prajna, illusion, desire, and compassion. Maha is considered
father tantra and anu mother tantra.
pha rol tu phyin pa drug: generosity, discipline, patience,
exertion, meditation, prajna/knowledge.
pha rol tu phyin pa: Paramitas or perfection practices
of the bodhisattva path. All are practiced on every bhuumi, but on
each of the ten bhuumis one is emphasized. 1 rab tu dga' ba, supreme
joy: Generosity, sbyin pa. 2 dri ma med pa, stainless:
Discipline, tshul khrims. 3 'od byed pa, illuminator: Patience,
bzod pa. 4 'od phro ba, blazing light: Diligence, brtson 'grus.
5 shin tu sbyang dka', difficult to conquer: Meditation, bsam gtam.
6 mngon tu 'gyur ba, presence: Knowledge, prajna. 7 ring du
song ba, far going: Skillful means, upaya. 8 mi g.yo ba, motionless:
Aspiration, smon lam. 9 legs pa'i blo gros, good intellect:
Power, stobs. 10 chos kyi sprin, clouds of dharma: Wisdom,
ye shes. They are perfect or transcendent in being practiced from
the perspective of emptiness. For example, generosity is perfect
when there is no thought of giver, gift, and receiver, any action of giving.
Then the action is pure and spontaneous. See JOL
phra: Subtle. Probably similar to description of
Kagy¸ divisions in SKK 3,323: When the eighty kinds of innate
thoughts of coarse mind, possessing the three appearances [of body, grasping
subject, and grasped object are eliminated and cease, and everything abides
merely in emptiness, that is subtle mind. Free from grasping the
characteristic of the experience of emptiness, luminosity, absolute bodhicitta,
which is called the manifestation of enlightenment, is the subtlest mind.
Thus mind that is said to have defiled continuity is called subtle, and
undefiled continuity is the subtlest. Similarly as for body, ...all
the skandhas, dhatus, and ayatanas, having the nature of the environment
and its inhabitants, are resolved as the coarse circle of the deities.
Nadi, prana, and pure bodhicitta are resolved as the subtle essence.
The well established singularity of support and supported is taught as
the very subtle, co-emergence. Thus in meditating in the developing
stage, first all the skandhas, dhatus, and ayatanas of the impure body
which are to be purified as emptiness are the coarse body. Prana,
nadi, and bindu, which are to be established as the body, speech, and mind
mandalas of the deities are the subtle. At the time of fruition,
the co-emergent three vajras, trikaya, the inseparable body of the realities
of the natural state, are the subtlest...Thus, the coarse is the designated
ground of purification, the subtle the object of purification in process,
and the subtlest the ultimate state of the object of purification.
phrin las: Enlightened activity, buddha activity, which
is egoless, beyond conception, spontaneously arising, and spontaneously
perfect and appropriate. In particular, the buddha activities of
the five families, pacifying (suffering etc), enriching (accumulations
of good qualities), magnetizing (students), destroying (whatever needs
to be destroyed or those who cling to that), and self-existing, effortless
accomplishment
phrin las: the spontaneous activity of enlightened beings.
For ecample, without thionking about it buddhas emmanate limitless emanations
in limitless times and places to tame liitless sentient beings. However
the ordinary teaching activities etc. of an enlightened person are also
called buddha activity.
phun sum tshogs pa lnga: The five perfections, most often
attributes of sambhogakaya, but in this text applied to the three kayas:
excellent teacher, teaching, retinue, place, and time.
phung po: Expanse [eg. of wisdom] phung po lnga:
the five skandhas or "heaps," one of the systems of categories under which
the dharmas are organized in the abhidharma: 1 Form, gzugs, including
physical objects. 2 Feelings, tshor ba, positive, negative, or neutral.
3 Perception, 'du shes. 4 Formations, 'du byed. 5 Consciousness,
rnam shes. In ati consciousness is understood in terms of the eight
consciousnesses of yogacara. In hinayana abhidharma, eg. Abhidharmakosha,
the skandhas are classes of truly existing dharmas. In ati they can
also be thought of as an evolving series of non-existent confusions.
Cf. mngon chos. In enlightenment these vanish and the skandhas manifest
as the five wisdoms. Cf. mngon chos.
phyag rgya bzhi [of mahayoga]: In particular: 1
thugs dam tshig gi phyag rgya (mind as samayamudra). 2 gsung
chos kyi phyag rgya (speech is dharmamudra). 3 sku phyag rgya chen
po (body is mahamudra). 4 phrin las las kyi phyag rgya (Buddha activity
is karmamudra).
phyag rgya chen po: Mahamudra, great seal. 1 Consort
of empty form. 2 One of the four mudras of mahayoga. 3 Fruition
teachings associated especially with the kagy¸ lineage as Dzogchen
is primarily associated with the nyingma lineage.
phyag rgya: Mudra, symbolic [hand gesture], seal, symbolic
encounter, consort.
phyi nang gsang: Outer concerns the external world, inner
the body, secret the inner life of feelings etc.
phyi rgyud: The outer tantras which understand luminosity/emptiness
beyond conception, but still believe that the fruition is established through
stages and effort.
phyogs bcu: The ten directions, the four cardinal
directions, four intermediate, up and down.
phyogs med: Impartial, without conceptual partialities.
When one is impartial =without accepting or rejecting, one is not attached
to partialities of concept. Thus, the impartiality = non-bias, inseparability,
of the two truths is transparently seen.
phyogs: Direction, part, aspect, bias, partiality, side.
rab 'byams: Infinite, vast, encompassing, universal, immense,
boundless, the whole of..., widely and deeply learned.
rab 'byor: Subhuti, a prominent and analytically inclined
disciple of the Buddha.
rags: 1 Coarse. 2 Dependent.
rang bshag: Let be as it is, rest as it is = cog gshag;
self-absorbed, self-rested, self-established, established as merely one's
own experience.
rang byung: Natural; naturally occurring or arising; self-arising,
spontaneous. Eg. hunger is rang byung when one does not eat.
A shape like a face found on a rock is a rang byung sculpture. Impromptu
verse is rang byung.
rang bzhin gsum: kun btags, gzhan dbang, yong grub; parikalpita,
paratantra, parinishpanna; false conceptions, other-caused relativity,
the completely perfect. See Ch 3.
rang bzhin: Nature, actuality, natural expression, natural,
intrinsic, inherent. In relation to sugatagarbha etc it means the
luminous manifestation, vs. the ngo bo emptiness. ngo bo/ rang bzhin/
thugs rje. See sku gsum
rang dbang: Freedom, independence, mastery vs. gzhan dbang,
arising interdependently from others. The second of the three natures
of mind-only.
rang ga [ma]: Spontaneous, ordinary.
rang gsal: Natural, clearly as it is; intrinsic clarity,
radiance, brilliance, luminosity; naturally awake; self-cognizing.
[esp in mind-only] See rang rig rang gsal.
rang mtshan: Own-, specific, or individuating characteristics
that things would have if they were independent, individual entities existing
in their own right. Ati accepts Madhyamaka claims to establish the
impossibility of rang mtshan. The real thing, intrinsically identifiable,
independently existing.
rang ngo: [One's] own nature, original face, true nature,
self-nature.
rang rgyal: Pratyekabuddha, the second of the nine yanas.
See theg pa dgu.
rang rgyud: 1 One's own being or stream of consciousness.
2 Svatantrika school of madhyamaka. 3 Independent vs. gzhan rgyud.
rang rig: 1 Intrinsic insight or awareness, = rang byung
rig pa. 2 one's own insight or awareness, = rang gi rig pa.
3 self-cognizance, self-insight, self-knowledge, rang gis rang rig.
KPSR seems to favor 2), as 1) seems prima facie to involve claims of a
fixed nature or entity that would conflict with madhyamaka, and 3 is specifically
rejected in madhyamaka critiques of mind only. 1) Self-arising =
natural = intrinsic insight is favored by TT and LUS; rang gyis rang rig
self-insight in the sense of non-duality, and non-other of insight and
its objects. [KSTR, KTHR]. They all agree that all these interpretations
are relevant if understood in the right way. They also agree that
any acceptable interpretation must be distinguished from the rang rig rang
gsal of the mind only school, conceived to be a truly-existing, self-intuiting
substance. Ati accepts the madhyamaka refutation of such a substance.
Part of the apparent disagreement is because Tibetan does not require choosing
among these various uses of rang. The demand to do so is somewhat
artificial. Cf. rang shar. See the passage in the text where
Longchenpa specifically addresses the difference between mind-only and
ati use of mind-only terminology. The main point is that ati does
not accept these terms as describing dharmas that truly or absolutely exist,
and so does not fixate these conceptions.
rang rig was introduced by the sautrantikas:
The two terms are pretty well equivalent here. rang gsal in mind-only
means more or less self-apprehended, ie. self-illuminating or clarifying,
appearing clearly to itself. In mind-only, sa.msara has perception
of duality of subject and object, and enlightenment involves seeing that
in reality there are no external objects distinct from mind, but only various
states of mind, which alone truly exists. All experience has to be
the mind's experience of itself, because there is nothing else to be experienced.
When one understands that this mind is changeless, eternal, and naturally
blissful, letting go of attachments to the incidental waves on the great
ocean of mind, one loses hope and fear about sa.msara and becomes enlightened.
In ati too, insight is rang rig rang gsal, self-apprehending insight, and
the luminous manifestations of the nature are actually of the essence of
insight and do not go beyond it. But where sems tsam presents this
as absolute truth, ati presents it as having only provisional, conventional
validity. It is more valid than ordinary perception for the same
kinds of reason that, in the venerable example, seeing the rope is more
valid than seeing the snake. From the absolute viewpoint, insight
has no more true existence than external objects. If it did, it would
be contradictory in madhyamaka terms to say that insight, which does not
appear with distinct qualities etc., is the same thing as appearances that
have these qualities etc. Mind-only, in claiming absolute validity
for its formulations, falls into such faults as this. Ati tries to
avoid them by claiming that the true state of affairs transcends conceptualization.
rang sar: Naturally, spontaneously, its own condition,
in itself, as it is.
rang shar: 1) = rang 'byung: Self-arising, naturally
occurring. Mere spontaneous arising is not peculiar to enlightenment,
since the kleshas and obscurations are also notorious for arising by themselves
in the superficial sense that they are not willed or produced by a specific
effort. 2) Longchenpa glosses at least one occurrence as = rang snang
shar. In that passage rang shar is taken to entail rdzogs, exhausted
of defilements and therefore perfected. Thus, by appearing as mere
experience, an aspect of insight, and thus appearing as they really are,
they are perfected/exhausted.
rang snang: Personal experience. One's own experience.
When delusive, it has a sense of snang = false appearance, one's own projection.
When good, it can mean natural or self-appearance of things as they are,
in particular of objects appearing merely as one's own experience, and
not as solid external entities. Self appearing, [of sambhogakaya
deities etc]. Intrinsically appearing [as the rays of the sun].
Of the same nature with oneself.
rang stong: Emptiness of its own nature or of itself.
The typical sort of madhyamaka system, vs. gzhan stong which claims the
absolute nature exists, but is empty of any truly existing other.
See SSN. for Mipam's view on this distinction.
rang: Self, prefixing compounds: self-, one's own,
spontaneously, intrinsically, natural, [only] as it is, merely within one's
own experience (and hence unreal), acting on itself. This multiplicity
cam make rang- compounds very difficult to evaluate. Often more than
one sense is relevant. In such cases LUS was inclined to think that
all the different aspects were part of the meaning.
rbad chod la chod: rbad = entirely. chod, cf. chig
chod = sufficient.
rdo rje 'dzin: Level of a vajra holder, sometimes the
thirteenth bhuumi.
rdo rje chang: Vajradhara personifies the state of primordial
buddhahood. His function in the kagy¸ teachings is rather like
that of Samantabhadra in nyingma.
rdo rje dbyings: Vajradhatu, indestructible space, the
vajra-like aspect of ultimate space.
rdo rje sems dpa': Vajrasattva, a buddha of the vajra
family, white and associated with purity.
rdo rje theg pa: the tantra or mantra path, one of the three
vehicles, theg pa gsum. It is characterized by features like visualization
practice, yoga, and strong samaya vows to the teacher and lineage.
rdo rje: 1 Prince of stones, diamond. 2 Indestructible,
adamantine. 3 The weapon of indra, the thunderbolt.
rdol thabs su smra: One just puts forward one's own ideas
without due attention to traditional knowledge in a situation where it
is not appropriate, as eg. in arguing points of law or scientific theory.
rdzogs pa: Perfection, exhaustion, completion, fulfillment.
Sa.msaric, impure aspects are exhausted, revealing things as the eternal
perfection of the kayas and wisdoms. VCTR once suggested using perfection
for this, but changing one's understanding of what perfection is-neither
an eternalistic fixation on an impossible standard, or a nihilistic rejection
of everything there is in its name. In this tradition emptiness/luminosity
IS perfection.
rdzogs rim: Tantric stage of completion or perfection,
sampannakrama, as opposed to visualization practice of sadhana. Both
formless meditation and yogic practices such as the six yogas of Naropa
are included.
rdzogs [pa] chen [po]: Ati, great perfection, mahasandhi,
the ninth yana.
rgyal ba: capitalized the Buddha, otherwise buddhas.
rgyu mtshan theg pa: Vehicles of cause and characteristics.
In particular the first three yanas which present enlightenment as a causal
process. Sometimes = hinayana, since it does not postulate emptiness.
However all vehicles but ati have certain characteristics that are to be
abandoned and attained by causal means.
rgyud: Continuity, tantra. In the latter case the
continuity is that of the basic nature, sugatagarbha etc. See rang
rgyud.
ri rgyal rab: Mount Meru, which in Indian cosmology is
at the center of the world surrounded by four continents. Of these
we inhabit the southern continent, Jambudvipa (Jambuling).
rig 'dzin: awareness holder
rig pa: 1 Insight, [intrinsic] awareness of the absolute,
pretty much equivalent to wisdom. [KSTR] 2) Mind, knowledge, intelligence,
understanding in the ordinary sense. -lnga: philosophy, reasoning,
grammar, medicine, mechanical arts and crafts. However 1 is also
the essence of 2, and in realization 2 does not go beyond 1 It was
to bring out this dual aspect that VCTR preferred the translation "insight."
cf. rang rig.
rigs drug: gods, asuras, humans, animals, pretas, hell beings.
rigs drug: gods, asuras, humans, animals, pretas, hell
beings.
rigs drug: The six realms or lokas of sa.msara in which
beings take rebirth. They are those of gods, asuras (demigod enemies
of the gods), humans, animals, hungry ghosts (pretas), and hell beings.
rigs lnga: The five divisions of the families of the mandala:
Vajra, rdo rje; ratna, rin chen, jewel padma; lotus; karma; and sangs rgyas,
buddha. They are associated respectively with sa.msaric and enlightened
forms of intellect and aggression; feeling, richness and territoriality;
passion; artistic sense, discrimination; energy of activity and accomplishment;
and spaciousness, the overall viewpoint, or neurotically just ignoring
things. There are extensive descriptions in VCTR's Cutting through
Spiritual Materialism and The Myth of Freedom. The five families
are associated with the five colors, kleshas, skandhas, elements, bhagavans
and their consorts, and wisdoms, qv. They are also associated with
the seasons, time of day etc.
rigs sngags: Vidya mantra. rigs = esoteric knowledge.
Knowledge of magic and magical formulas. By means of these the magician
is said to create illusions, destroy enemies, change the weather, and demonstrate
power over phenomena in other ways.
rigs: 1 Kinds, varieties, aspects 2 Family, lineage 3
Caste 4 Nature = snying po 5 Buddha nature 6 Realm = khams 7 Reasoning,
logic, philosophy, ....rigs: It is logical, certain that ....
rigs: being of the family of beings who can attain enlightenment.
The eternal gotra is dharmadhatu. The incidental gotra is our intrinsic
potential of achieving this combined with the process of the path of purification.
rim pa: Stage, detail, aspect.
rin chen sna bdun: wheel, jewel, queen, minister, elephant,
horse, general. Or ruby, sapphire, lapis, gold, silver, spug mu tig
dmar po ???, emerald
ris med: Without limits, borders, bias, partiality, as
between phenomena and dharmata, sa.msara and nirvana etc. Non-sectarian
school founded in the nineteenth century by Khyentse the great, Jamgān
Kongtrul the great, and others.
rje btsun: jets¸n, [exalted] lord.
rjes thob: Post-meditation as opposed to the meditative
state, mnyam bshag. In particular the noble ones who have not attained
the pure bhuumis are said to cognize emptiness directly in meditation.
In post-meditation false appearance still appears to them, but they know
it to be empty, so it has the aspect of a dream or illusion. In general,
all Tibetan schools agree that buddhas have transcended this distinction.
They know the appearances of all sentient beings, but directly perceive
their emptiness at the same time. Controversial points are just how
accurate the perception of the bodhisattvas of the pure bhuumis is, and
the extent to which lesser beings are capable of flashes of pure perception
that can be used on the path. Ati tradition holds that sa.msara is
self-liberating and enlightenment self-existing and self-actualizing.
The guru points out that the nature of enlightenment is already within
us, and that even ordinary persons can have brief flashes of experience
of this. From that perspective, the path consists of acknowledging
this and learning to let it be as it is.
rlung lnga: life, equalizing, upward moving downward moving,
fire. See ch 9.
rlung: Prana. Part of the trio of prana, nadi, and
bindu, rtsa, lung, thig le. rtsa: Nadi, root, vein, artery,
psychic channel as visualized in yoga (such as gtum mo, tummo, (heat
yoga)), any tubular organ. They are said in tibetan medicine to occur
throughout the body, and to cluster together like wheels, chakras, in various
energy centers of the body, such as the heart, brain etc. rlung:
Wind (vayu), breathing, vital energy. In tibetan medicine the various
vital energies move along the nadis. las - Karma prana, karmic
energy. thig le: Bindu, 1 Dot, circle, ring, in particular
colored dot on the forehead between the eyes, dot on letter or mantric
syllable representing the anusvara, eg. "M" in HAM. It is typically
presented as a small flame. 2 The red and white thig les, the male
and female vital essences as represented and embodied in semen and menstrual
blood. When acted on by the pranas, these are refined, melting into
a more subtle form that produces bliss etc. 3 = thig le nyag gcig:
The single universal essence, the sole seed = byang chub sems, chos dbyings,
ngo bo stong pa, etc.
rnal 'byor bzhi: In this text this refers usually to the
four yogas of mahayoga as presented eg. in the K¸njÈ:
1 sems dpa': The yoga of the two sattvas, samayasattva and jnanasattva,
as practiced in the three lower tantras. 2 ma ha: Mahayoga,
which works especially with the developing stage. 3 yongs su:
Perfecting yoga, anu, which works especially with the perfecting stage.
4 shin tu: supreme yoga or ati.
rnal 'byor rgyud: Yoga tantra, the sixth yana. See
theg pa dgu.
rnal 'byor [pa]: Yoga, yogin, literally meaning inseparable
union with the absolute.
rnal a'byor spyod: yogachara philosophy. See sems tsam
rnal ma: The fundamental state before the various projections
of subject and object occur. Cf. gnas lugs [tshul]
rnam kun mchog ldan stong nyid: Emptiness possessing all
the supreme aspects, as described in the Uttaratantra. Emptiness
as realized by the buddhas is not nihilistic nothingness. It is the
great emptiness, the union of appearance and emptiness, possessing the
kayas, wisdoms, buddha qualities and activities, etc. The details
are an important part of resolving the view of emptiness.
rnam pa: Aspect, phenomena, always.
rnam rtog: Discursive thought, conceptualization, the
conceptualized phenomena of sa.msara.
rnam shes lnga/drug eye, ear, nose, tongue/ taste, body
rten 'brel: 1 Interdependent arising, eg. as a rainbow
appears from interconnection of sunlight, rain, air, the eyes, and mind,
as reflections appear in a mirror, or as appearances appear in the
mind. The rainbow is not the appearance of any of these, or all of
these, Yet it is not the appearance of something completely independent
of the above either. In madhyamaka rten 'brel is equated to emptiness.
2 Auspicious coincidence.
rten dang brten pa: Environment and inhabitants.
OR support and supported. For example it will be said in general
that the physical environment is he support and mind the supported, cf.
snod bcud. In particular, the environment of the mandala, the palace
and surrounding features, and the deities inhabiting it are called rten
dang brten pa.
rtog pa: Concept, or perceiving things in terms of concepts.
rtogs su ma chod: Not cut off by concepts.
rtsa gsum: the 3 main channels of prana, wind or vital energy
in the body. These are the central channel, and the right and left
channels ro ma and rkyang ma. They are visualized in breath control
yoga.
rtsa rlung thig le: Nadi, prana, and bindu. These
are aspects of hatha yoga practices such as gtum mo that lead to awareness
of insight. See for example Chang and others. See rlung.
The direct insight of tregchā is not directly concerned with these practices.
sa bcu: The ten bhuumis or levels of the bodhisattva path,
entered on attaining the path of seeing from the five paths, lam lnga,
and perfected on the path of meditation. See pha rol tu phyin pa.
sa bon: 1 = bag chags. The seeds of good and bad
karma. From the path viewpoint, transmission and practice are like
planting and cultivating seeds that will ripen as the fruition. 2)
But from the absolute viewpoint this is only uncovering the ultimate sugatagarbha
that was there all along. So relative reality is itself a seed of
buddhahood in that sense.
sa gsum: above the earth (god realms) on the earth (human realm
etc. and below the earth (nagas and hells)
sa sbyang: Training on the bhuumis. See JOL.
Sa ra ha: Saraha, a mahasiddha, grub thob chen po, who
worked as an arrow-maker and had a consort of the same trade. He
composed many songs or dohas describing the enlightened state.
sal le ba: Vividness. Ego fixation draws on the
energy of the natural state to produce blockage and obscuration.
So, by comparison, experience of things as they are is one of vivid splendor
and immensity.
sang nge [ba]: Pristine etherial; the spacious clarity
and primordial purity of emptiness, like fresh mountain air.
sangs rgyas kyi yon tan the pure qualities of enlightened perception
of things as they are.
sangs rgyas: Buddha[hood], enlightenment.
sangs: Purified, awakened.
sangs rgyas: buddha, enlightened
sbubs: 1) Covering, cocoon, shell, confinement, hollow,
narrow space, sheath. 2) TT essence (cf. bcud), nature. 3)
Field of....
sdug bsngal brgyad: birth old age, sickness, death, meeting
enemies, separation frm intimates, not getting what we want, sufferings
of the skandhas.
sdug bsngal gsum: the sufferings of suffering, the composite,
and change.
sems can: Sentient being = 'gro ba, unenlightened inhabitant
of the six lokas having dualism of body and mind, vessel and essence, snod
bcud, etc.
sems dang yid dang chos: TT sems = Basic mind of duality,
alayavijnana and klesha consciousness. yid = Intellectual consciousness,
yid kyis rnam shes. chos = Perceptions of the sense consciousnesses.
sems dp'a: = bodhisattva, byang chub sems dp'a
sems dpa' chen po: mahasattva, a bodhisattva of the pure
bhuumis from the eighth upward, who experiences the pure vision of luminosity.
sems dpa'i rnal 'byor: Sattva yoga: See rnal 'byor
bzhi.
sems las 'byung ba: Mental contents, inner feelings and
so forth, not counting external perceptions of the five senses.
sems tsam: With madhyamaka one of the two great philosophical
systems of the mahayana. It is associated with Asaga and his brother
Vasubandhu. It is also propounded in such sutras of the third turning
(chos kyi 'khor lo 'khor) such as the Lakavatara and Sandhinirmocana.
It is said to record the realization experience of those who emphasized
yoga more than the logical dialectics of madhyamaka, and hence is also
known as rnal 'byor spyod. It holds that luminous mind is the absolute
reality, yongs grub, parinispanna. Experiences of mind, like waves
in water, are relative, dependently arising reality, gzhan dbang, paratantra.
Our beliefs concerning a world of external objects that are other than
mind are confused, merely imputed, and false, kun btags, parikalpita.
Therefore, the duality of perceiver and object is a feature of sa.msaric
confusion, and does not occur for enlightened mind. As there is nothing
other than enlightened mind for it to perceive, it can be said to be intrinsically
self-perceiving, rang rig rang gsal. Ati too accepts non-duality,
the absolute nature of mind itself, rang rig rang gsal etc. But as
Longchenpa notes in the text it sees this in the light of madhyamaka emptiness.
Therefore it is not accepted that any of this terminology describes anything
that is truly existing or non-empty of the level of the absolute.
The use is for practical benefit in the relative sphere, in the same way
exponents of madhyamaka speak practically of chairs and tables in everyday
life, without believing that they have absolute existence. This kind
of use all schools of madhyamaka sanction.
sems: 1 Dualistic mind. 2 = sems nyid or byang chub
sems: The nature of mind, mind itself, bodhicitta (occurs in the
titles of tantras 3) = SemdÈ in compounds like sems smad:
The lesser texts of the SemdÈ.
sgo gsum: The three gates, body, speech, and mind.
grol ba'i sgo gsum: The three gates of liberation: the signless,
markless, and wishless.
sgrib ma gnyis: nyon mongs and shes bya: Kleshas,
knowables or primitive beliefs about reality. They are the obstacles
to omniscience, and the pure vision of luminosity.
sgrol ma: one of the five consorts of the five lords of the
sambhogakaya buddha families, of the karma, buddha activity family, symbolizing
compassionate activity for beings.
sgrub: Affirm, establish
sgyu ma dpe brgyad: The eight examples of illusion:
1 Dream. 2 Echo. 3 City of the gandharvas (celestial musicians
etc. who live on smells). 4 mig thor: A growth on the eyes,
cataracts? 5 Mirage. 6 Illusion. 7 Reflection.
8 A magically emanated city. Sometimes the moon in water, lightning,
a rainbow, and a bubble are added, making twelve].
shang shang: half human mythical bird, something like a garuda.
shes pa: Awareness, knowledge.
shes rab: Literally, supreme knowledge, prajna.
Intelligence, discriminating knowledge in general, and in particular knowledge
of emptiness as presented in the prajnaparamita scriptures, the reasoning
of madhyamaka etc. shes rab pha rol tu phyin pa: Perfection
of prajna, the sixth of the ten paramitas. Emptiness is directly
realized in a way transcending concepts. In a strict sense this refers
to realization in formless meditation. Shes rab and ye shes can be
loosely used so that they are equivalent, referring to the transcendent
knowledge of realization. ye shes involves the further realization
of luminosity, pure appearance, omniscience, and the various other aspects
of wisdom. It is the final paramita, the culmination of their development.
Prajna clearly sees the essence of things, but does not yet see things
as they are as the buddhas do.
shin rje: He and his retinue preside over Hell.
shin tu rnal 'byor: Supreme yoga = ati. See rnal
'byor bzhi.
shugs 'byung: Spontaneous, self-arising, suddenly-arising.
skra shad: Seeing hairs or spots in the eyes, due to solidification
and opacity of the vitreous humor.
sku bzhi: the three kayas + svabhavikakaya, de kho na nyid kyi
sku.
sku gdung: The bodily remains of a teacher after death
or the reliquary in which they are placed -'bar ba: A text, The Blazing
Relics of the Buddha Body.
sku gsum: Dharmakaya, chos sku; sambhogakaya, longs spyod
rdzogs pa'i sku; and nirmanakaya, sprul sku. the first is the essence
of buddhahood, the benefit for oneself, unborn primordial insight, awareness
devoid of content, like space. It is called [buddha]dharmakaya, because
it embodies the essence and fruition of the teachings. Dharmakaya
is sometimes used in the sense of non-dual dharmakaya. In that case
it includes all the phenomena of trikaya, in the aspect of inclusion within
dharmakaya and not going beyond its essence. In this sense it is
similar to dharmadhatu. Among the three kayas dharmakaya is associated
particularly with the essence, emptiness. Sambhogakaya, and nirmanakaya
are the two ruupakayas or form bodies, which are the benefit for others.
Sambhogakaya is the realm of enjoyment/realization
of pure form, contemplated aside from existence as external objects.
This includes visions of the pure lands and teachers (eg. of Samantabhadra,
akani.shtha etc.) and form altogether as seen from that perspective.
It is associated with the vision of luminosity, the nature.
Nirmanakaya is associated with the play of
appearance of this dualistic, material world and so forth, which arise
from the power of compassion to ripen beings for enlightenment. Longchenpa
makes the remark that, strictly speaking,the two ruupakayas should be regarded
as the ground of arising of their respective form phenomena rather than
as those phenomena themselves. Otherwise contradictions may arise
from regarding dharmakaya, which is essentially non-apparent and various
apparent phenomena as having the same essence. This seems a little
odd after all he has said about everything being included in the essence
of insight-bodhicitta. But it does explain why he frequently uses
formulas like thugs rje'i 'char gzhi, the ground of arising of compassion.
sku gsung thugs: Body, speech, and mind (honorific).
When juxtaposed with lus ngag sems (non-honorific) it can mean enlightened
vs. unenlightened body, speech, and mind.
sku lnga: There are various lists of the five kayas.
The most common is trikaya (sku gsum) plus the mahasukhakaya, bde ba chen
po'i sku, the body of great bliss, representing the inseparable bliss aspect,
and the svabhavikakaya, ngo bo nyid kyi sku, which represents the unity
of the kayas. Another list that is cited in the text is the changeless
vajrakaya, mi 'gyur rdo rje sku; the kaya of full manifestation of enlightenment,
mngon par byang chub pa'i sku; Peaceful dharmakaya; sambhogakaya; and the
variously manifested nirmanakaya cir yang sprul pa'i sku. Cf. TT88.
See appendix 2.
sku: sometimes = The kaya of emptiness, dharmakaya.
skye ba bzhi: The four modes of birth: womb, egg,
heat and moisture, and spontaneous. See ch. 9.
skye ba med: From the absolute viewpoint, unborn, non-arising,
non-truly-existent, because things and arising are empty. Relatively
enlightened reality is unborn because it is eternally self-existing, and
never arises as a limited thing. Nevertheless, from unborn dharmakaya,
which is born as nothing at all, the pure appearance of ruupakaya rises.
Though born in that sense, it too is unborn in the sense of becoming truly
existing things other than dharmakaya.
skye mched bcu gnyis: The twelve ayatanas. The six
senses and their objects. Cf. khams bcu brgyad
skyong: Guard, protect or maintain is the basic meaning.
In ati the sense is remembering that we are always resting in the essence.
In a negative sense, it means trying to maintain something self-existing
that has no need of that and in fact will even be obscured by the attempt.
snang ba: 1) Appearance 2) False appearance of truly existent
other etc, eg. perceptions of rocks and trees. 3) The objects of
2, the apparent rocks and trees themselves. Eg. med pa gsal
snang means that the objects, not the appearances do not exist.
sngags kyi theg pa: the tantric or vajrayana teachings.
sngags: Mantra, praise.
snod bcud: the vessel is the environment, the world, and the
essence the inhabitants, sentient beings. The vessel and essence.
(as metaphor). snod = The container as the external world.
bcud = The experience of beings within it, here compared to the liquid
in a bottle, the essential part of the situation. Sometimes rendered
"the environment and inhabitants (of the phenomenal world).
snying po: 1 Heart. 2 Heart-essence or essence.
3 Garbha, = sugatagarbha, bde bshegs snying po.
snyom 'jug: Meditative absorption, samapatti. One
might use it to obtain bsam gtan, dhyana. Samadhi originally in the
abhidharma is an omnipresent faculty of concentration on whatever objects
are present. It came to mean absorption in various objects, and thus
ting nge 'dzin tends to be differentiated by its objects. Longchenpa
too differentiates purposefully attained bsam gtan from naturally existing
ting nge 'dzin qua awareness of the absolute.
so so rang rig [ye shes]: Since it discriminates mind
and wisdom, it can be called discriminating-awareness wisdom. since
wisdom is also self-awareness in the sense of being insight of otherlessness,
it can be called discriminating self-awareness wisdom. Since it is
a non-conceptual personal encounter with wisdom, it can be called individual
and personal wisdom. So so can be interpreted to mean either the
individual entities that are known or the individual knower. rang
rig has the various interpretations of that term qv. In any case
it should not be confused with the padma family wisdom so sor rtags pa'i
ye shes, discriminating wisdom [of individual things].
spangs rtogs: Simultaneous renunciation/ realization.
This is an aspect of enlightenment, not experienced by ordinary beings.
Because of realization, confused perceptions and desires naturally do not
arise for them. Everything is enlightenment for them. This
is very different from nges 'byung, which is a distaste for and rejection
[zhen log] of sa.msara in ordinary beings like ourselves who aspire to
whatever we think we understand as enlightenment. [KTHR.]
spros bral: Simplicity; unconditioned; free from conceptualization,
complexity, elaboration, constructions. One of the four yogas of
mahamudra. spros bral often refers to direct vs. conceptual
realization of emptiness by wisdom.
sprul sku gsum: bzo ba'i sprul sku, skye b'i sprul
sku, mchog gi sprul sku. OR skye ba'i sprul sku, mchog gi sprul sku
OR sna tshogs sprul sku; 'gro 'dul sprul sku and rang bzhin sprul sku:
The
working or various t¸lkus are gifted individuals, artists, craftsmen,
scientists etc who so benefit beings. The born or taming t¸lkus
are the rinpoches usually called t¸lkus, who have taken human birth
in order to tame beings by the dharma. The supreme t¸lku is
the Buddha.
sprul sku: Nirmanakaya. See sku gsum.
spyan lnga: The five eyes. 1 The eye of flesh.
2 The divine eye (of relative siddhi). 3 The eye of prajna (emptiness).
4 The dharma eye of pure vision. 5 The buddha eye of omniscience.
spyan ras gzigs: bodhisattva of compassion.
spyi blugs: Literally head-vase, a coronation vase, especially
golden, used in crowning kings. Later similar vases were used in
empowerments. To say wisdom is the coronation vase means that it
confers empowerment as King of dharmata.
spyod rgyud: Upa yoga, the fifth yana. See theg
pa dgu.
spyod yul: Sphere of behavior, realization, instantiation.
-med: It does not exist. skal med spyod yul ma yin: Not
realized by those without good fortune.
spyod: 1 Behavior. 2 Apprehension. 3 Action
in the trio view, practice, and action
srid gsum: The three realms: The desire realm and
its inhabitants, the realm of pure form (visions, the deities of pure form
etc), and the formless realm (inhabited by formless deities).
srid pa: The phenomenal world, sa.msara.
srin po: demonic vampire-like beings. Among other things
they can kill with their touch.
Stages can vary for different sadhanas. Examples might be these:
1 Visualizing the deity and palace: shastra, a treatise or discourse
on any topic. A discourse delivered by the Buddha is a suutra.
stobs kyi rigs pa: The power of direct experience of reality,
the ultimate source of all reasoning.
stong pa [nyid]: Emptiness. It is established conceptually
by showing that a concept cannot be instantiated, eg. round square.
It is directly intuited in the formless meditation of the aryas.
At the time of fruition it is realized as a direct vision of naturelessness
as the nature of the absolute, "nothing whatever and so it arises as all
there is."
stong pa'i rang gzugs: rang gzugs, self-form, is like rang snang,
self-appearance qua one's own appearance. Forms appear to one, but
they are empty of any truly existing nature of their own. They are
kun btags, dualistic, false conceptions in the sense of yogacara and natureless
in the sense of Nagarjuna.
stugs po bkod pa: Gandavyuuha, the densely ornamented
or densely structured realm, as described in the sutra of the same name.
This is the form of the vision of the sambhogakaya realm that realizes/enjoys
the pure perceptions and energies of omniscient wisdom. This is also
aesthetic perception of form etc. as the ornament. The array
is dense not only because it is elaborate, but because of its multifarious
connections of rten 'brel etc, which are such that everything is said to
be contained within everything else. In this closed, endless web
of pure vision, everything contains everything else and presupposes everything
else, so ultimates of time, space, and meaning are nowhere to be found.
Thus, according to the Avata.msaka Suutra, within every atom of the universe
the whole universe is contained, and within every instant all of eternity
is contained. This interpenetration is not discussed in this text,
as it is more an aspect of the vision of mahayoga. (eg. the gsang
snying). This aspect never seems to have the emphasis in Tibet it
does in certain Hwa Yen and Zen teachings. But it is there, and it
is correct to think of ati notions of the form aspect of enlightenment
in this way. [KPSR VCTR]
thabs: Upaya, skillful means, method, expediency.
In the mahayana, the paramitas are called the path of means that ripens,
and prajna is called the path that frees. In the tantra a similar
distinction is often made between the practices having form as upaya and
the formless ones beyond distinction like mahamudra or ati as the path
that frees.
thag gcod: Settle, resolve, decide, have "got it."
thams cad mkhyen pa['i ye shes]: Omniscient [wisdom] which knows
all phenomena without mixing, as the buddhas do. It is associated
with the wisdom of extent, pure perception, and the vision of gandavyuuha.
theg chen: Mahayana, the bodhisattvayana.
theg dman: Hinayana, including the shravaka yana and pratyekabuddha
yana.
theg pa dgu: the nine vehicles
I. Hinayana:
1 shravaka yana nyan thos, the hearers or disciples. This
is the monastic buddhism taught by the nirmanakaya. It emphasizes
the four noble truths: Life is full of suffering, this arises from
the causal setup of dharmas, skandhas etc, which are transient without
any enduring self. But given this situation, suffering too depends
on a transient setup and cessation is possible. This is achieved
by means of the eightfold path, right view, speech, thought, action, livelihood,
exertion, mindfulness and samadhi. By learning to be there, doing
everything properly and mindfully, one cuts off the suffering arising from
the speed, clinging, and desire for self-aggrandizement of ego, and attains
enlightenment. One relearns like a baby to sit, eat, and walk like
a buddha. Practicing shamatha and vipashyana, zhi gnas and lhag mthong,
one learns to have the buddha mind. And yet it is said, the fathers
dwell in complete humility.
2 Pratyekabuddha yana, rang rgyal: The
basic physical setup has already been determined. Here solitary yogins
traditionally unlock the development of mind in sa.msara and nirvana, seeing
how the skandhas, phung po, develop. Contemplating a corpse, one
reasons backward through birth and craving etc to ignorance, the ultimate
cause of life's sufferings. Cutting craving and attachment to externals,
the yogin realizes the self sufficiency of one's ultimate nature.
Letting this be as buddhahood is maitri, the ultimate kindness to oneself.
In ati tradition the account given sounds very like the view of mind-only.
It is said that the yogin realizes the emptiness of individual ego and
of objects other than mind, but not of mind itself. Pratyekabuddha
solitariness betrays a subtle remainder of belief in the independence and
separability of self and other, which is basic to ego.
I. Mahayana, theg pa chen po:
3 Bodhisattvayana, byang chub sems dpa'i theg
pa: Here madhyamaka emptiness is realized. In ati tradition
the emphasis is not nihilistic. Rather the nature of enlightened
mind glimpsed in mind-only is seen to have always been universal and unobstructed.
The skandhas and so forth which cause suffering are seen to be like mere
temporary clouds on the face of the basic nature, sugatagarbha. Therefore,
with great joy one enters the path of the bhuumis that goes beyond sa.msara.
As self and other do not exist, there is no boundary between maitri and
compassion for all sentient beings. Yet this path is not trod by
turning away from the phenomenal world, but rather relating to all situations
fully as expressions of the ultimate nature. This is like the mindfulness
of the eightfold path, but now it is unleashed in emptiness. It manifests
as the practice of the ten paramitas, by which finally the proper manifestation
of the body, speech, and mind, buddhahood, trikaya, is attained.
However there can be a problem here. For example, the elder Vimalakirti
was totally devoted to virtue and saving others. He goes among sewer-like
dens of thieves and whores and was not corrupted. But the whole human
world still looked like a sewer inhabited by perverts and criminals.
One may see the absolute and the natural world as pure, and still have
no pure vision of the relative altogether and of human society. So
even with the vision of sugatagarbha and the paramitas, relative existence
is something of a crude joke, a pot of night-soil. Hence the need
for vajrayana.
II. Vajrayana, rdo rje theg pa:
A. the outer tantras,
phyi rgyud:
4 kriya yoga, kri ya, bya rgyud, the tantra
of action): Here we find that within us there is also the sacredness
of the vajra world, the sambhogakaya world of pure perception inhabited
by deities, who are like kings and queens with their palaces and retinues.
Because they have become totally egoless, everything they do is pure, sacred,
and immensely powerful. In fact we encounter this world by relating
to the guru's world, which invokes this pure aspect of ourselves.
At first we may feel rather like stupid, filthy monkeys in relation to
this world. We cannot participate as equals, but only as spectators.
However, if we surrender ourselves to this as devoted servants, there is
a possibility of becoming part of the vajra world. That is the logic
of kriya. Meanwhile one can purify oneself and one's basic energies
in hopes of becoming a decent vajra-citizen. In kriya this is very
literal, with many baths and changes of clothes, white food, etc.
5 Upa, The most basic difference as we progress
to upa through the outer tantras is that one begins the relate to the deity
as a friend. Oneself is samayasattva, the deity is jnanasattva, the
real thing, who is sending his wisdom down on us, and the pretence of being
of that nature seems less and less preposterous.
6 yoga: Finally we truly realize that
the deity, who represents the nature of the guru's vajra world, also is
our own true nature as well. So we can actually become mahasukha
princes and princesses of the five families. That is the fruition
of the yoga yana. The five skandhas etc. have been transmuted
into the perfection of the five wisdoms.
B. The inner tantras:
But even here there is a subtle reference
point of perfection, wisdom-message, divinity and so forth, vs. something
imperfect, unwise and so forth that is co-emergently ignored. Hence
the further journey of the inner tantras that transcend reference point
altogether.
7 Maha: Here there is much more confidence
in situations as embodying the continuity of the self-existing fruition
mandala. For example, in the eight heruka mandala, bka'.brgyad,
the herukas are less embodiments of ideas, than means of cutting through
such conceptualizations. Yangdag yang dag, the vajra heruka punctures
concepts with a scepter like a pin, revealing naked space The ratna heruka
is the King of Death , shi rje, with an owl. Hayagriva and Vajrakilaya,
rta mgrin/ rdo rje phur ba, the padma and karma herukas, reveal naked
passion and aggression. etc. This yana emphasizes the visualizations
of the developing stage, bsked rim.
8 In comparison to this complex network of
divine forces:, a sort of tibetan cabala, anu, is relatively simplified,
in essence one sees everything as the union of primordial space and wisdom,
eg. the bliss of union of Samantabhadra and Samantabhadri in their cosmic
dance. The complexities of the lower yanas are largely removed.
The means for doing this is the practice of the fulfillment stage, and
in particular, the yoga of nadi, prana and bindu.
9 Ati is like the punch line, and doesn't
make proper sense without the other yanas. All remaining conceptualizations
are stripped away so that the fruition becomes completely naked and self
existing. As the text says, this is how it is for one who has done
all the work. One can say to a superbly trained musician etc,"Just
let go and do it," and hope to hear beautiful music. If one gives
the same advice to a person without musical training, this result is unlikely.
Thus ati traditionally functions as the framework and culmination of the
nine yana training, as a means for removing nirvanic neurosis and so on.
It is not generally meant as a complete program in its own right.
Most distortions of ati come from ignoring this.
thig le: Bindu. See rlung.
thog babs chen po: The great suddenness. Sudden
realization.
three kinds of enlightenment: byang chub rnam gsum: of buddhas and
bodhisattvas, pratyekabuddhas, and shravakas.
thub pa: 1 Capable or mighty one: Reach, arrive,
encounter.
thugs rje: In ati is sometimes equivalent to the power
of manifestation [rtsal] and like the latter = manifestation in general
= ruupakaya which produces benefit for others, bringing them to dharmakaya,
the benefit for oneself. But here there is the idea that all manifestations
are either offerings for the enjoyment of enlightened beings, or presentations
of the teachings to those who are not enlightened. In this case these
sense of rtsal as skillful performance, articulation, etc is relevant.
The individual receives teachings exactly suited to his needs and understanding,
a personalized mandala as it were. So below compassion is the power
and ground of arising. Or, opposed to power, one can say that compassion
is the manifested power of the ground. In the context of essence,
nature, and compassion, ngo bo rang bzhin thugs rje it refers to the nirmanakaya
level of dualistic manifestation in particular.
ting 'dzin gsum: The three samadhis: 1) de bzhin
nyid, suchness. 2 kun tu snang ba, the nature appearing as everything.
3 rgyu: The single cause.
ting nge 'dzin: Samadhi. See snyom 'jug.
tsa nda li: Chandali. gtum mo. Heat yoga practice
involving prana, nadi, and bindu, rlung rtsa and thig le.
tshad ma: valid cognition
tshad med bzhi: kindness, compassion, joy, equanimity, brtse
ba, snying rje, dga'a ba, btang snyoms.
tshad: Measure, scope, criteria.
tshangs pa'i gnas bzhi: Lesser versions of the four immeasurables,
tshad med gsum.
tshogs brgyad. The 5 sense consciousnesses plus mind consciousness
yid (memory and conception) plus klesha mind consciousness nyon yid, plus
alaya or all-ground consciousness, kun gzhi rnam shes. The eight
consciousnesses.
tshogs drug: The six senses (including the mental sense).
tshogs gnyis: bsod nams dang ye shes. Merit and wisdom,
the first having a focus or conceptual object, and the second not.
tshogs gnyis: The two accumulations, merit and wisdom.
u pa: Upa yoga, upayayoga, the fifth yana. See theg
pa dgu.
yang dag: Real, true, actual, genuine, authentic, proper,
perfect, very, completely. -kun rdzob, vs. log pa'i kun rdzob:
True and false relative, in the conventional sense. dag vs. ma dag
pa'i kun rdzob: The impure vision of ordinary beings vs. the
pure vision of the noble ones, 'phags pa. Embodied as yang dag, the
vajra heruka of the bka' brgyad, the mandala of eight heruka-principle
of mahayoga.
ye nas: Like gdod nas, back-looking eternity, primordial,
from the beginning; hence translated "from all eternity." But it
also keeps going limitlessly and hence is eternal.
ye shes lgna: The mirror like wisdom, wisdom of equality,
wisdom of individual discrimination, all-accomplishing wisdom, and dharmadhatu
wisdom. They are discussed in the text.
ye shes: wisdom, literally primordial awareness or knowledge.
Pristine cognition, direct intuition of absolute reality beyond conception.
Sometimes the kayas and wisdoms: kun mkhyen-, snang ba'i, lhan cig-,
so rang rig-.
ye shes sems dpa': One visualizes that jnanasattva, of
similar appearance to one's visualization of the deity of sadhana, samayasattva,
embodying spontaneously existing wisdom, descends and transmutes one's
visualization. Ideally an experience of this actually occurs.
Usually the visualization has the same outer form as that of samayasattva.
yi dam: Short for yid kyi dam tshig, samaya of mind.
Deity of tantric practice that one is performing, eg. Chakrasa.mvara, Vajrayogini,
especially the deity of one's main practice.
yi dwags: hungry ghost, one of the 6 realms of beings. Preta.
Some have huge bellies and minute throats and suffer great torments of
hunger and thirst. Some are rather like our conceptions of ghosts
or malignant spirits
yid bzhin nor bu: Wish-fulfilling gem, a mythical gem
that makes things "as one desires," rather like Aladdin's lamp.
yid dpyod: Intellectualization, conclusion reached merely
conceptually. ES.
yid kyi rnam shes: Intellectual consciousness. See
tshogs brgyad.
yid: Mind, intellect in general; = Yid kyi rnam shes.
yo ga: Yoga, the sixth yana, see theg pa dgu.
yod pa: Existence. In conventional truth it is said
that there can be no existence without non-existence. They are complimentary.
In madhyamaka it is argued that if anything has the characteristic of existence
it ought to be intrinsically existent and hence eternal. So existence
is equated with eternalism, and nonexistence with nihilism. What
exists should be changeless and incapable of interaction with anything
else. Relying on this logic, the texts will sometimes draw conclusions
about existence that seem less than
obvious in ordinary english. Readers will have to resolve questions
of the ultimate validity of these statements for themselves by studying
the appropriate texts.
yon tan bcu: Various lists will sometimes be so called.
1) The ten paramitas. 2) The stobs yon tan bcu, the ten powers of
a buddha. 3) The ten abstentions from unwholesome karmic paths:
1 Not destroying life. 2 Not taking what is not given. 3 Refraining
from improper sexual activities [together these are the three good actions
of body.] 4 Not speaking falsely. 5 Not using abusive language.
6 Not slandering. 7 Not speaking frivolously or irrelevantly [together
these are the four good actions of speech.] 8 Not being covetous.
9 Not being malicious. 10 Not having wrong view [these together are
the three good actions of mind.] see CH 4
yon tan: 1 good quality, virtue, excellence 2 object,
property 3 skill, learning, knowledge. 4 Buddha qualities, enlightened
qualities, the qualities of the pure perception of enlightenment.
They are said to be eternally existing but to manifest when one attains
enlightenment, as does wisdom etc. Sometimes these are differentiated
from qualities of enlightenment that can be said to be produced.
In particular the ten powers, four fearlessnesses, eighteen distinct doctrines
of the buddhas, and thirty-two major marks are called the sixty-four qualities
of a buddha. They are described eg, in the Uttaratantra.
yongs su rnal 'byor: Perfect[ing] yoga = anuyoga.
See theg pa dgu.
yul can ye shes: the samsaric perceiver is the grasper, a'dzin
pa, but the elnightened perceiver is nondual wisdom.
yul dag: 1 Pure of [sa.msaric, dualistic] objects.
2 Objects of pure appearance, free of objects of the preceding kind.
3 The pure sphere.
zab: Profound refers to the emptiness of dharmakaya, =ji
lta, Vast, rgyas) often refers to ruupakaya = ji snyed qv.
zhi gnas: Calm abiding, tranquility, serenity, quiescence
[neither = nirvana of the karma of pacifying] A basic meditation practice
found in most schools of buddhism. The mind is tamed and sharpened
by being brought back again and again to the meditative object. In
practice the breath is the most used object. Originally in hinayana
shamatha was practiced in order to attain the dhyana states, bsam gtan)
yogic trance states in which bliss, equanimity, and various higher perceptions
were claimed to be experienced. However even hinayana claims that
such states do not constitute enlightenment and can easily lead to various
spiritual attachments.
In ati:, shamatha is practiced not to attain
one-pointed trance-concentration on an object, but to cut off attachment
to thoughts and perceptions, which then are left as they are. By
doing this one can directly experience one's self-existing,true nature,
one and all sufficient, and rest in that. With repeated practice
this resting becomes spontaneous, and one realizes the basic nature as
unchangeable and self-existing, like a mountain. This is the same
buddha nature that is realized as bodhicitta and so forth in ati.
However, here it is realizes only as one's own true nature. Many
subtle conceptualizations must be eliminated before it becomes known as
the universal nature.
In the SemdÈ shamatha is described
as part of a fourfold process of realization, zhi gnas, lhag mthong, gnyis
med, lhun grub. NN
-steng po: inert shamatha. -ltengs
po, the pool of shamatha = -steng po
zhi: 1 Peace. 2 Pacifying (one of the phrin las
lnga). 3 Nirvana
zhing or sangs rgyas zhing: Realms of particular buddhas
where sentient beings attain enlightenment. Eg. this is jambudvipa
which is the buddha field of the buddha Shakyamuni. The infinity
of buddha fields is a major theme in such tathagatagarbha suutras as the
Gandavyuuha and Avata.msaka. Pure land or realm. Each of the
five bhagavans is associated with one. Akani.shtha and gandavyuuha
are called buddha fields. Twenty-five [sometimes twenty-one] such
fields are said to be on the hands of Vairochana, Yid bzhin mdzod 28ff.
[v. ES] corresponding to the permutations of body, speech, mind, quality
and action, as body of body, speech of body, etc.