Chariot of the Profound View: Difference between revisions
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These are the systems of (1) [[Nagarjuna]], and (2) [[Asanga]]; | These are the systems of (1) [[Nagarjuna]], and (2) [[Asanga]]; | ||
According to the system of Nagarjuna, the Chariot of the Profound View, [the precepts are to refrain from the following]: | According to the system of Nagarjuna, the ''Chariot of the Profound View'', [the precepts are to refrain from the following]: | ||
*to | *to steal the funds of the Three Jewels; | ||
*to commit the act of forsaking the Dharma; | *to commit the act of forsaking the Dharma; | ||
*to punish or cause to lose the precepts and so forth, people who possess or have lapsed from the trainings; | *to punish or cause to lose the precepts and so forth, people who possess or have lapsed from the trainings; |
Latest revision as of 03:21, 25 May 2006
see also in The Light of Wisdom, Vol.1, pg.265-6; (ISBN 9627341371) The Traditions of the Two Chariots
These are the systems of (1) Nagarjuna, and (2) Asanga;
According to the system of Nagarjuna, the Chariot of the Profound View, [the precepts are to refrain from the following]:
- to steal the funds of the Three Jewels;
- to commit the act of forsaking the Dharma;
- to punish or cause to lose the precepts and so forth, people who possess or have lapsed from the trainings;
- to commit the five acts with immediate result;
- to violate the five definitive precepts for a king, such as keeping wrong views and so forth;
- to violate the five definitive precepts for a minister, such as destroying a village, valley, city, district, or country;
- to give premature teachings on emptiness to people who have not trained in Mahayana;
- to aspire toward the shravakas of the Hinayana after reached the Mahayana;
- to train in the Mahayana after forsaking the Individual Liberation;
- to disparage the Hinayana;
- to praise oneself and disparage others;
- to be highly hypocritical for the sake of honor and gain;
- to let a monk receive punishment and be humiliated;
- to harm others by bribing a king or a minister in order to punish them;
- to give the food of a renunciant meditator to a reciter of scriptures and thus causing obstacles for the cultivation of shamatha. The eighty subsidiary infractions are to forsake the happiness of another being and so forth.