Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Characters in Call of Duty and Mindstream: Difference between pages

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{{Tibetan Buddhism}}
'''Mindstream''' is a compound [[lexical item]] composed of ''[[mind]]'' and ''[[stream]]'' used to translate a term from [[Buddhist philosophy]]. In [[Vajrayana]] (Tantric Buddhism) it may be understood as an ''[[upāya]]'' (Sanskrit) doctrine of the [[nonlocal]], [[:wikt:atemporal|atemporal]]<ref>Nonlocal and atemporal may be resolved into a qualification of [[omnipresent]].</ref> metaphorical stream of moments<ref>The [[lexical item]] 'Moment', has been employed in the sense of its [[etymon]] "momentum" though the 'stream', 'array' or 'procession' is atemporal and [[nonlocal]].</ref>(Tibetan: ''bkod pa thig le''<ref>Source: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/bkod_pa_thig_le] (accessed: January 8, 2008)</ref>) or '[[quanta]] of [[consciousness]]' (Tibetan: ''thig le''; Sanskrit: ''[[Bindu]]'') proceeding endlessly in a lifetime, between lifetimes (Tibetan: ''[[Bardo]]''), from lifetime to lifetime, prior to engagement in the [[Bhavacakra]] of [[Samsara]] and beyond as an inclusive '[[continuum]]' (Tibetan: ''rgyud'') rather than an individuated, separate, or discrete perceptual, cognitive, or experiential [[entity]], as in the conception of the [[Ātman]]. Waldron (undated) states:
<blockquote>
Indian Buddhists see the 'evolution' of mind i[n] terms of the continuity of individual mind-streams from one lifetime to the next, with karma as the basic causal mechanism whereby transformations are transmitted from one life to the next.<ref>Waldron, William S. (undated). ''Buddhist Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Thinking about <nowiki>'Thoughts without a Thinker'</nowiki>''. Source: [http://www.purifymind.com/EcologyMindSteps.htm] (accessed: November 1, 2007)</ref>
</blockquote>


[[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] (2007: p.82-83) establishing the processive reciprocality of the training of the mindstream and the [[Buddhadharma]], holds that:
===[[Characters in Call of Duty]]===
<blockquote>
{{REMOVE THIS TEMPLATE WHEN CLOSING THIS AfD|g}}
The Buddhadharma is a process, one through which we train and tame our own mindstreams. One approach is to go to the root of what we mean by "I," our sense of self or individual self-identity.<ref>Rinpoche, Dzogchen (2007). ''Taming the Mindstream'' in Wolter, Doris (ed.) "Losing the Clouds, Gaining the Sky: Buddhism and the Natural Mind." Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0861713591 p.82-83 Source: [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=9_9tW2cHtOcC&pg=PA81&lpg=PA81&dq=mindstream&source=web&ots=zVowKgfwAK&sig=m601WoY8B5h-3y4pgC9k36tDT-c&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result] (accessed: July 29, 2008)</ref>
</blockquote>


[[Thanissaro Bhikkhu]] (1996: unpaginated) in contextualizing and redressing what he believes to be the general misconception of ''[[anātman]]'' (rendered as "no self") and ''[[ātman]]'' (rendered as "self"), in relation to the view he holds of the intention of [[Shakyamuni Buddha]], states:
:{{la|Characters in Call of Duty}} (<span class="plainlinks">[{{fullurl:Characters in Call of Duty|wpReason={{urlencode:AfD discussion: [[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Characters in Call of Duty]]}}&action=delete}} delete]</span>) – <includeonly>([[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Characters in Call of Duty|View AfD]])</includeonly><noinclude>([[Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/Log/2008 April 21#{{anchorencode:Characters in Call of Duty}}|View log]])</noinclude>
<blockquote>
Characters have no notability in of themselves. Almost all of the material is included in the various articles for each iteration of the game. Much of the article curently is being used for speculation as to the fates of characters in Call of Duty 4, something that is completely original research per that page's talk page consensus, hence this article is being used as a POV fork. Also, reads very much like a game guide. Lacking any significant sources as well. [[User:Swatjester|<font color="red">&rArr;</font>]][[User_talk:Swatjester|<font face="Euclid Fraktur"><font color="black">SWAT</font><font color="goldenrod">Jester</font></font>]] [[WP:CLIMBING|<small><sup>Son of the Defender</sup></small>]] 03:56, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
...the Buddha was asked point-blank whether or not there was a self, he refused to answer. When later asked why, he said that to hold either that there is a self or that there is no self is to fall into extreme forms of wrong view that make the path of Buddhist practice impossible.<ref>Bhikkhu, Thanissaro (1996). ''No-self or Not-self?''. Source: [http://www.dharmaweb.org/index.php/No-self_or_Not-self%3F] (accessed: December 5, 2007)</ref>
</blockquote> This clear evocation of what later became canonized in Buddhist discourse as [[Madhyamika]] or "middle way", is key to tender a description of the ineffable ''[[Mysterium Magnum]]'' of the "Great Continuum" that is rendered in English as "Mindstream": the [[nondual]] resolution of ''[[ātman]]'' and ''[[anātman]]''.


In the entwined [[Dzogchen]] traditions of ''[[Bönpo]]'' and ''[[Nyingmapa]]'', the Mindstream is constituted by a continuum of ''[[gankyil]]'' comprised of the [[Five Pure Lights]] of the [[Five Wisdoms]] which unite the ''[[trikaya]]''. These 'tantric correlations' (or [[Twilight Language]]) are evident in the iconographic representation of the ''[[Five Jinas]]''<ref>Bucknell, Roderick & Stuart-Fox, Martin (1986). ''The Twilight Language: Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism''. Curzon Press: London. ISBN 0-312-82540-4</ref> and the ''[[saṃpanna-krama]]'' of the ''gankyil'' and [[mandala]] in Dzogchen ''[[sādhana]]''. The 'supreme [[siddhi]]' or 'absolute [[bodhicitta]]' of the Dzogchenpa is when the Mindstream of their '[[bodymind]]' (a rendering of ''[[namarupa]]'') is 'released' (a rendering of [[Nirvana]]) as the [[Rainbow Body]].
* <span style="font-size: smaller;">Note: This debate has been added to the [[Wikipedia:WikiProject Video games/Deletion|list of video game deletions]]. [[User:MrKIA11|MrKIA11]] ([[User talk:MrKIA11|talk]]) 14:53, 21 April 2008 (UTC)</span>
*'''Weak Keep''' I thought the running consesnus was the it is better to have lists of characters rather than having to fend off page creation of each one, piecemeal. I know that there are character lists for other games out there. But the OR and sourcing problems probably need to be worked out.[[User:Protonk|Protonk]] ([[User talk:Protonk|talk]]) 15:28, 21 April 2008 (UTC)
Capriles (2004: p.35) defines the 'consciousness of the base-of-all' (Skt., [[alayavijnana|alayavijñana]]; Tib., kunzhi namshee) as congruent with the 'Mindstream' (Skt., santana; Tib., gyü) and mentions [[vasanas]], [[bija]]s, and [[tathata]]:
<blockquote>
The consciousness of the base-of-all was not conceived as an immutable absolute, which is how the Atman of Hinduism is described; in agreement with the Hinayana idea of a succession of instants of knowledge, it was explained as a continually changing stream of consciousness (Skt., santana; Tib., gyü), and was said to be the vehicle that carries the karmic imprints (vasanas or bijas) that go from one life to the next. In turn, from the standpoint of experience, the consciousness of the base-of-all is an ample condition that yogis may find by absorption. Though the consciousness of the base-of-all is of the nature of thatness (Skt., tathata; Tib., dezhinnyia)—the absolute nature that is the single constituent of all entities—this consciousness is also the root of samsara.<ref>Capriles, Elías (2004). ''Clear Discrimination of Views Pointing at the Definitive Meaning: the Four Philosophical Schools of the Sutrayana Traditionally Taught in Tibet with Reference to the Dzogchen Teachings''. Source: [http://eliascapriles.dzogchen.ru/philosophicalschools.pdf] (accessed: January 15, 2008)</ref>
</blockquote>

==Nomenclature, orthography and etymology==
The nomenclature and etymology of the '''Mindstream''' (Tibetan: ''dam pa'i byin rlabs'' or ''sems-rgyud''; Sanskrit: ''citta-santāna'') is convoluted and tied to: the [[History of Buddhism in India|historical context of Buddhism in India]]; the [[History of Buddhism|historical development of Buddhism]]; the [[Silk Road transmission of Buddhism]], the [[syncretic]] and [[dialogic]] doctrinal development of Buddhism; and to the [[secession]] of Buddhism from, and its persistent entwining relationship with, ''[[Sanatana Dharma]]'' and other [[Indian religions]], [[Chinese religions]] and [[Bön]].

===心相續 (Chinese)===
The Chinese rendering of 'Mindstream ' (Tibetan: ''sems kyi rgyud'') is constituted by three characters: [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/86/ 心] (Romanized: ''sam'') [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/598/ 相] (Romanized: ''soeng'') [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/2885/ 續] (Romanized: ''zuk'').

====心====
CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 心 (sam) as:
<blockquote>
[1] [n] heart [2] mind [3] conscience; moral nature [4] intention; idea; ambition; design [5] [n] core; middle; center; inside [6] one of the 28 constellations [7] Kangxi radical 61<ref>CantoDict Project Online (2007). ''心 (sam)''. Source: [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/86/] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008) </ref>
</blockquote>

====相====
CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 相 (soeng) as:
<blockquote>
{1)[1] [v] examine; study; read; [2] [n] countenance; appearance; facial features; looks; bearing; posture [3] [n] prime minister (in feudal times) [4] [v] assist; help
{2)[1] each other; one another; mutually; reciprocal [2] substance. <ref>CantoDict Project Online (2007). ''相 (soeng)''. Source: [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/598/] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008) </ref>
</blockquote>

====續====
CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 續 (zuk) as:
<blockquote>
[a] continue; carry on [b] succeed.<ref>CantoDict Project Online (2007). ''續 (zuk)''. Source: [http://www.cantonese.sheik.co.uk/dictionary/characters/2885/] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008) </ref>
</blockquote>

===''{{IAST|Citta-saṃtāna}}'' (Sanskrit)===
Citta (Sanskrit) holds the semantic field of "that which is conscious", "the act of mental apprehension known as ordinary consciousness", "the conventional and relative mind/heart".<ref>Source: [http://www.dharmafellowship.org/library/essays/buddhist-glossary.htm#santana] (accessed: December 13, 2007)</ref> Citta has two aspects: "...Its two aspects are 'attending to,' and, 'collecting' of impressions or traces (Sanskrit: [[Vasanas|vāsanā]]) cf. [[vijñāna]]."<ref>Source: [http://www.dharmafellowship.org/library/essays/buddhist-glossary.htm#santana] (accessed: December 13, 2007)</ref> Citta is often rendered as "sems" in Tibetan.

{{IAST|Saṃtāna}} or Santāna (Sanskrit) holds the [[semantic field]] of "eternal", "continuum", "a series of momentary events", "life-stream".<ref>Source: [http://www.dharmafellowship.org/library/essays/buddhist-glossary.htm#santana] (accessed: December 13, 2007)</ref>

In the [[Sanskrit language]], ''citta-santāna'' may be parsed as per the analyses of
Keown, ''et. al.'' (2003: p.62) who state:
<blockquote>
Literally, "the stream of mind", a general term used to indicate the continuity of the personality of an individual in the absence of the permanently abiding 'self' (ātman) that Buddhism denies."<ref>Keown, Damien (ed.) with Hodge, Stephen; Jones, Charles; Tinti, Paola (2003). ''A Dictionary of Buddhism''. Great Britain, Oxford: Oxford University Press. P.62. ISBN 0-19-860560-9</ref>
</blockquote>

===''dam pa'i byin rlabs'' (Tibetan)===
In the [[Tibetan language]], ''dam pa'i byin rlabs'' may be [[Parsing|parsed]] into ''dam pa'i'' which contains the [[semantic field]] of "flow", "stream"; whilst the semantic field of ''byin rlabs'' holds "blessing", "sacred", "empowerment", "inspiration". Therefore, "empowering flow from the sacred" which has been rendered into English as "mindstream".

===''Sems-rgyud'' or ''sems kyi rgyud'' (Tibetan)===
The Tibetan term ''rgyud'' holds the [[semantic field]] of "continuum", "stream", and "thread". Interestingly, it is the term that Tibetan 'translators' (Tibetan: ''lotsawa'') employed to translate and render the Sanskrit term "[[tantra]]".<ref>Berzin, Alexander (2002; 2007). ''Making Sense of Tantra''. Source: [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/e-books/unpublished_manuscripts/making_sense_tantra/pt1/making_sense_tantra_01.html] (accessed: December 13, 2007)</ref>

===''Thugs-rgyud'' (Tibetan)<ref>[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/Main_Page Dharma Dictionary] (28 December 2005). Source: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/thugs_rgyud] (accessed: July 17, 2008)</ref>===

''Thugs-rgyud'' may be parsed into "thugs" and "rgyud".

Please refer above for "rgyud". ''Thugs'' holds the semantic field: "Buddha-mind", "(enlightened) mind", "mind", "soul", "spirit", "purpose", "intention", "unbiased perspective", "spirituality", "responsiveness", "spiritual significance", "awareness", "primordial (state, experience)", "enlightened mind", "heart", "breast", "feelings" and is sometimes a homonym of "citta" (Sanskrit).<ref>[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/Main_Page Dharma Dictionary] (4 October 2006). Source: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/thugs] (accessed: July 17, 2008)</ref>

''Thugs-rgyud'' holds the [[semantic field]] and has been rendered into English as: "wisdom", "transmission", "heart-mind continuum", "mind", "[continuum/ stream of] mind", "nature of mind" and is a homonym for "sems rgyud" or "rgyud". <ref>[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/Main_Page Dharma Dictionary] (28 December 2005). Source: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/thugs_rgyud] (accessed: July 17, 2008)</ref>

===Mental continuum===
[[Alexander Berzin|Berzin]] (2007) identifies "mental continuum" as Tibetan: ''sems-rgyud'' and Sanskrit: "santana" and defines it as:
<blockquote>
The stream of continuity of mental activity (mind, awareness) of an individual being, which has no beginning, which continues even into Buddhahood, and, according to Mahayana, has no end. According to the Hinayana tenets, it comes to an end when an arhat or Buddha dies. Also called a "mind-stream."<ref>[[Alexander Berzin|Berzin, Alexander]] (2007). [http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/about/glossary/glossary.html Glossary of English Terms] (access: November 1, 2007))</ref>
</blockquote>

==Metaphoric foundation==
There are two entwined mindstreams according to the [[Two Truths]], the absolute and relative, that are ultimately [[non-dual]]. The Divine Mindstream of 'consciousness' which is engaged in the [[phowa]] [[sadhana]], for example; and the mindstream of thought, ideation (Tibetan: ''[[sem]]''; Sanskrit: ''[[:wikt:manas|manas]]'') (''{{IAST|vṛtti-citta}}''<ref>"Moving Mind" [http://www.pranayoga-la.com/Media/YogaSutras.doc]</ref>) and which [[William James|James]] named "Stream of Consciousness", for example; are founded upon the metaphor of the stream which is endemic to Buddhist literature and worldview.

[[Tenzin Gyatso|Gyatso]], [[Thupten Jinpa|Jinpa]] & [[B. Alan Wallace|Wallace]] (2003: p.97) identify two kinds of consciousness continuum and associate the most subtle state of consciousness continuum, elsewhere identified within this Wikipedia article as the 'mindstream substrate' with what is known in Tibetan Buddhist, Dzogchen and Bonpo discourse as '[[clear light]]':
<blockquote>
In Vajrayāna Buddhism the subtlest state of consciousness is known as ''clear light''. In terms of categories of consciousness, there is one type of consciousness that consists of a permanent stream or an unending continuity and there are other forms of consciousness whose continuum comes to an end. Both these levels of consciousness - one consisting of an endless continuum and the other of a finite continuum - have a momentary nature. That is to say, they arise from moment to moment, and they are constantly in a state of flux. So the permanence of the first kind is only in terms of its continuum. The subtlest consciousness consists of such an eternal continuum, while the streams of the grosser states of consciounsness do end.<ref>Gyatso, Tenzin (author); [[Thupten Jinpa|Jinpa, Thupten]] (translator) & [[B. Alan Wallace|Wallace, B. Alan]] (translator)(2003). "Understanding and Transforming the Mind" in Wallace, B. Alan (editor, 2003). ''Buddhism & Science: Breaking New Ground''. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12335-3 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.97 </ref>
</blockquote>

[[Sogyal Rinpoche]] (1994: p.73) frames the importance of the stream metaphor in relation to meditation and the nature of mind, the objective of meditative sadhana:
<blockquote>
In the ancient meditation instructions, it is said that at the beginning thoughts will arrive one on top of another, uninterrupted, like a steep mountain waterfall. Gradually, as you perfect meditation, thoughts become like the water in a deep, narrow gorge, then a great river slowly winding its way down to the sea, and finally the mind becomes like a still and placid ocean, ruffled by only the occasional ripple or wave.<ref>Rinpoche, Sogyal (1994). ''[[The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying]]''. London, UK: Rider. ISBN 0 7126 5752 5 (paperback). P.73</ref>
</blockquote>

As Bucknell, ''et. al.'' (1986: p.112-113) in linking ''[[Tipiṭaka|{{IAST|Tipiṭaka}}]]'', ''[[Mahāmudrā]]'' and ''[[David-Neel|David-Néel]]'' state:
<blockquote>
In Buddhist literature the mental condition in which sequences of imagery and verbalizing run on endlessly is often compared to a flowing stream. We find in the oldest section of the {{IAST|Tipiṭaka}} the term 'stream of consciousness' ({{IAST|viññāṇa-sotaṃ}}).<ref>D iii 105. See Vishwanath Pandey, 'Early Buddhist Conception of Consciousness', ''Bharatiya Vidya'' 29 (1972), p. 68, note 95.</ref> The same metaphor is often found in the Tibetan literature. The guru Padma Karpo spoke of 'thoughts...following one after the other as if in a continuous stream';<ref>As quoted in Beyer, ''The Buddhist Experience'', p.157. See also Evans-Wentz, ''Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines'', p.129., </ref> Mipham Nampar Gyalba observed that the 'stream of images flows unbroken';<ref>''Calm and Clear'', ''Mi-pham 'Jam-dbyangs rnam-gyal rgya-mtsho'', transl. by Tarthang Tülku (Emerville, Calif.: Dharma, 1973), p.105.</ref> and in the Vow of Mahāmudrā, there is reference to 'the mind river'.<ref>See Garma C. C. Chang, ''Teachings of Tibetan Yoga'' (New York: University Books, 1963), p.35.</ref> This manner of speaking is also common at the present day. Tarthang Tülku refers to 'the stream of mental images'<ref>Tarthang, ''Calm and Clear'', p.77.</ref> and 'the flow of thoughts and images';<ref>Tarthang, ''Openness Mind'', p.67.</ref> and David-Neel, in a discussion of the meditation practices she observed in Tibet, speaks of 'the continual, swift, flowing stream of thoughts and mental images...'<ref>David-Neel, ''Magic and Mystery in Tibet'', p.245.</ref><br />The stream metaphor has also been found appropriate by western psychologists. William James wrote: 'It flows. A "river" or a "stream" are the metaphors by which it is most naturally described. ''In talking of it hereafter, let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness, or of subjective life.''<ref>William James, The Principles of Psychology (London: macmillan, 1901), vol. I, p.239. (Emphasis in original.)</ref> James's term 'stream of consciousness' has since become widely adopted in a variety of contexts.
</blockquote>

==Historical development of the Mindstream doctrine==
The rudimentary origins of the Buddhist [[upaya]] doctrine of the mindstream may be tentatively found in the [[Pudgalavada|Pudgalavāda]] which was at one time the ascendant form of [[Shravakayana|Śrāvakayāna]].<ref>Priestley, Leonard (2005). "Pudgalavāda Buddhist Philosophy" in ''The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy''. Source: [http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/pudgalav.htm](accessed: September 18, 2008)</ref> Priestley (2005: unpaginated) holds that the Pudgalavāda:
<blockquote>...thought of some aspect or dimension of the self as transcending the aggregates and may have identified that aspect with Nirvana, which like most early Buddhists they regarded as an eternal reality. In its involvement with the aggregates through successive lives, the self could be seen as characterized by incessant change; but in its eternal aspect, it could be seen as having an identity that remains constant through all its lives until it fulfils itself in the impersonal happiness of Parinirvana. Although their account of the self seemed unorthodox and irrational to their Buddhist opponents, the Pudgalavādins evidently believed that only such an account could do justice to the Buddha’s moral teaching, to the accepted facts of karma, rebirth and liberation, and to our actual experience of selves and persons.<ref>Priestley, Leonard (2005). "Pudgalavāda Buddhist Philosophy" in ''The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy''. Source: [http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/pudgalav.htm](accessed: September 18, 2008)</ref>
</blockquote>

[[Manjushrimitra]] states in the ''[[Bodhicittabhavana]]'', a seminal early text of [[Ati Yoga]] that the: "The mental-continuum (citta-santana) is without boundaries or extension; it is not one thing, nor supported by anything."<ref>Manjushrimitra (undated). ''Bodhicittabhavana''. NB: An English rendering of this text by [[Kunpal Tulku]] (2005) is entitled ''The Cultivation of Enlightened Mind''. This is an English rendering from the Tibetan translation of [[Sri Simha]] and the Tibetan translator [[Bhikshu Vairocanaraksita]], the original text is no longer extant. Source: [http://www.dharmafellowship.org/library/texts/cultivation-of-enlightened-mind.htm#two] (accessed: November 28, 2007)</ref>

Mindstream is a conflation subsuming '[[heartmind]]' (Sanskrit: ''bodhi-citta'') and 'wisdom-mind' (Sanskrit: ''jnana-dharmakaya''; Tibetan: ''ye-shes chos-sku'').

Lusthaus (undated) in mapping the development and doctrinal relationships of ''[[ālaya-vijñāna]]'', ''[[tathāgatagarbha]]'', [[Yogācāra]], ''[[ātman]]'', [[Abhidharma]], ''[[prakriti|{{IAST|prakṛti}}]]'' and the Mindstream states:
<blockquote>
Several Yogācāra notions basic to the Abhidharma wing [of Yogācāra] came under severe attack by other Buddhists, especially the notion of ''ālaya-vijñāna'', which was denounced as something akin to the Hindu notions of ''ātman'' (permament, invariant self) and ''{{IAST|prakṛti}}'' (primordial substrative nature from which all mental, emotional and physical things evolve). Eventually the critiques became so entrenched that the Abhidharma wing atrophied. By the end of the eighth century it was ecliped by the logico-epistemic tradition [of Yogācāra] and by a hybrid school that combined basic Yogācāra doctrines with ''Tathāgatagarbha'' thought. The logico-epistemological wing in part side-stepped the critique by using the term ''citta-santāna'', "mind-stream", instead of ''ālaya-vijñāna'', for what amounted to roughly the same idea. It was easier to deny that a "stream" represented a reified self. On the other hand, the Tathāgatagarbha hybrid school was no stranger to the charge of smuggling notions of selfhood into its doctrines, since, for example, it explicitly defined the ''tathāgatagarbha'' as "permanent, pleasurable, ''self'', and pure (''nitya'', ''sukha'', ''ātman'', ''śuddha''). Many Tathāgatagarbha texts, in fact, argue for the acceptance of selfhood (''ātman'') as a sign of higher accomplishment. The hybrid school attempted to conflate ''tathāgatagarbha'' with the ''ālaya-vijñāna''.<ref>Lusthaus, Dan (undated). ''What is and isn't Yogācāra.'' Source: [http://www.acmuller.net/yogacara/articles/intro-uni.htm] (accessed: December 4, 2007) </ref>
</blockquote>

The word "atman" is used in tathagatagarbha literature after being defined in new, idiosyncratic way. The Buddha-Nature Treatise for example defines "Self" as the perfection of the anatman-paramita. Thus one realizes his/her "true self" by perfecting his/her understanding of the truth of [[anatta|anatman]]. See [[Atman (Buddhism)]].

[[Dzogchen Rinpoche]] (2007: p.84) asserts an unsourced paraphrase or [[pastiche]] of a view attributed to [[Nagarjuna]]:
<blockquote>
Nagarjuna says that the mindstream of every unenlightened being is permeated by the heart essence of buddhahood. The fundamental nature of our mindstreams is ''tathagatagarbha'', or buddha nature, the seed and heart essence of an enlightened being. It is this quality that gives us the capacity to become buddhas.<ref>Rinpoche, Dzogchen (2007). ''Taming the Mindstream'' in Wolter, Doris (ed.) "Losing the Clouds, Gaining the Sky: Buddhism and the Natural Mind." Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0861713591 p.84 Source: [http://books.google.com.au/books?id=9_9tW2cHtOcC&pg=PA81&lpg=PA81&dq=mindstream&source=web&ots=zVowKgfwAK&sig=m601WoY8B5h-3y4pgC9k36tDT-c&hl=en&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=7&ct=result] (accessed: July 29, 2008)</ref>
</blockquote>

The view in the direct quotation above is generally attibuted to the [[Yogachara]]. It is clear that the first sentence in the above quotation holds the position attributed to Nagarjuna. It is unclear whether the latter two sentences in the quotation are also that of Nagarjuna, or alternatively the position of Dzogchen Rinpoche.

Waldron (2003: p.178) renders [[Vasubandhu]]'s [[Yogacara]] account from the ''[[Abhidharmakośabhāṣya]]'' of 'cyclic causality' ([[bhavacakra]]), [[kleśa]] and [[karma]] in relation to the mindstream:
<blockquote>
...the mind stream (''santāna'') increases gradually by the mental afflictions (''kleśa'') and by actions (''karma''), and goes again to the next world. In this way the circle of existence is without beginning."<ref>AKBh:III 19a-d: Yathākṣepaṃ kramād vṛddhaḥ santānaḥ kleśakarmabhiḥ / paralokaṃ punaryāti...ityanādibhavacakrakam</ref><ref>Waldron, William S. (2003). "Common Ground, Common Cause: Buddhism and Science on the Afflictions of Identity" in Wallace, B. Alan (editor, 2003). ''Buddhism & Science: Breaking New Ground''. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12335-3 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.178 </ref>
</blockquote>

==Mindstream in ''sadhana''==
In the 'Discourse on Mindfulness' (Pali: ''[[Satipatthana Sutta|Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta]]'') located within the ''[[Majjhima Nikaya]]'' of the [[Pali Canon]], Buddha Shakyamuni is rendered as foregrounding '[[mindfulness]]' or the enduring presence of the immediacy of experience and a foundational practice to Buddhist spiritual discipline and a preliminary to ''[[śamatha]]'' (Sanskrit) and ''[[vipaśyanā]]'' (Sanskrit). Fenner (1994) provides an accessible point of entry to ''satipaṭṭhāna'' sadhana:<blockquote>
In this meditative practice, we learn to recognize and observe the individual components that make up the full range of human experience. The exercise is to attend to the different processes and
phenomena that occur in the here-and-now as we are sitting in meditative posture or engaged in the various activities of our lives. This involves systematically observing our experience to find out what is there.<ref>Fenner, Peter (1994). "Spiritual Inquiry in Buddhism" in ''ReVision''; Vol. 17, No. 2 Fall. 1994. Pp.13-25. Source: [http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-ADM/peter.htm] (accessed: September 14, 2008)</ref> </blockquote> The experience of ''satipaṭṭhāna'' sadhana provides the 'outer' or coarse experience of the mindstream or the flow of representation and mentation and is intimately connected with the technical term '[[sotapanna]]' (Pali). [[Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche]] clearly charts the developmental relationship of the [[sadhana]]s of ''shamatha'' and ''vipashyana'':
<blockquote>
The ways these two aspects of meditation are practiced is that one begins with the practice of ''shamatha''; on the basis of that, it becomes possible to practice ''vipashyana'' or ''lhagthong''. Through one's practrice of ''vipashyana'' being based on and carried on in the midst of ''shamatha'', one eventually ends up practicing a unification of ''shamatha'' and ''vipashyana''. The unification leads to a very clear and direct experience of the nature of all things. This brings one very close to what is called the absolute truth.<ref>Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). ''In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers''. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambala. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.76. </ref></blockquote> In the context of the skillful mindstream doctrine, this 'absolute truth' is cognate with the mindstream substrate, the base or foundation of mind, lucidity and consciousness and is known in the [[Nyingmapa]] and [[Bonpo]] traditions of [[Dzogchen]] as the '[[clear light]]' (Wylie: ''<nowiki>'</nowiki>od gsal'') also rendered as 'inner radiance' and 'luminosity'.

Buddhist and [[Hinduism|Hindu]] [[Tantric]] ''[[sadhana]]'', and particularly that entwined heritage promulgated by the [[Mahasiddha]], involve the ''[[sadhaka]]'' 'generating a linkage' ''[[kye-rim]]'' between their mindstream with that of a ''[[guru]]'' or ''[[yidam]]'' as a precursor to 'fully aspecting' ''[[dzog-rim]]'' their yidam and [[ishta-deva]] and their "spiritual personality".<ref>Dowman, Keith (1984). ''Introduction to Masters of Mahamudra''. Source: [http://keithdowman.net/essays/siddhas.htm] (accessed: December 4, 2007) </ref> The mindstream and the imaginal interiority of visualization are employed in the ''kye-rim'' mode of meditative [[trance]] sadhana and the internal construction of the [[buddhafield]], [[mandala]] and [[refuge tree]].

Gyatso (1998: p.27) translates [[Jigme Lingpa]]'s autobiographical work "Dancing Moon in the Water" ('Chudai Garken'; Wylie:?) that foregounds [[Dream Yoga]] sadhana:<br />
<br />
Then, again while sleeping for a bit,<br />
through the force of the blessing<br />
:from realizing the heart-mind continuum,
the conceptual thoughts of the ground-of-all<br />
woke as the Dharma body.<br />
<br />
I became absorbed<br />
in the spectacle of empty radiant light,<br />
a manifestation without conceptions.<br />
<br />
Then it spread,<br />
moved into an external manifestation,<br />
and I saw,<br />
in the awareness-radiation<br />
:of vision-producing radiant light,
several self-produced patterns<br />
on the surface of a rock<br />
shined upon by the sun.<ref>Gyatso, Janet (1998). ''Apparitions of the Self: The Secret Autobiographies of a Tibetan Visionary; a Translation and Study of Jigme Lingpa's 'Dancing Moon in the Water' and 'Ḍākki's Grand Secret-Talk''<nowiki>'</nowiki>. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01110-9 (cloth: alk. paper) p.27</ref>

[[Lati Rinbochay|Lati]], [[Leah Zahler|Zahler]] and [[Jeffrey Hopkins|Hopkins]] (1983, 1997: pp.24-25) through the institutionalized lens of the [[Gelugpa]] and their graduated and developmental 'stages of the path' (Tibetan: ''[[lamrim]]''), frame the sadhana that [[Shakyamuni Buddha]] employed to extinguish that which was unwholesome in his mental continuum and mention: [[artha]], [[Mettā|maitri]], [[karuṇā|karuna]], [[bodhisattva]], [[bodhi]], [[śūnyatā]], [[pāramitā]], [[five paths]], [[bhūmi]] and [[dharma]]:
<blockquote>
...Buddha...came to discard his own welfare (''don, artha'') and to have concern for the welfare of others; and he cultivated love (''byams pa, maitri'') and compassion (''snying rje, karuṇā''), which served as the root for the special mind, the Bodhisattva attitude. Bodhisattva (''byang chub sems dpa<nowiki>'</nowiki>'') means "hero with respect to contemplating enlightenment (''byang chub, bodhi'')." Thus, he changed his original attitude of cherishing himself and discarding others to that of cherishing others and discarding his own welfare. He also meditated on emptiness (''stong pa nyid, śūnyatā''). Through cultivating in union the wisdom realizing emptiness and the special Bodhisattva attitude, the altruistic mind of enlightenment, and through accompanying these practices with the six perfections (''phar phyin, pāramitā'') - giving (''sbyin pa, dāna''), ethics (''tshul khrims, śīla''), patience (''bzod pa, kṣānti''), effort (''brtson grus, vīrya''), concentration (''bsam gtan, dhyāna''), and wisdom (''she rab, prajñā'') - he ascended the five paths (''lam, mārga'') - the paths of accumulation (''tshogs lam, saṃbhāramārga''), preparation (''prayogamārga, sbyor lam''), seeing (''mthong lam, darśanamārga''), meditation (''sgom lam, bhāvanāmārga''), and no more learning (''mi slob lam, aśaikṣamārga'') - and the ten grounds (''sa, bhūmi'') and completed the collections of merit (''bsod nams, puṇya'') and exalted wisdom (''ye shes, jñāna''). He was able to extinguish all faults in his own mental continuum (''rgyud, saṃtāna'') and to accomplish all auspicious attributes. He was able to achieve the wisdom that knows phenomena (''chos, dharma'') and their status, and when he did this, he became a Buddha. Thus, a Buddha is not someone who is produced causelessly; ...[but] is produced in dependence on causes.<ref>Rinbochay, Lati (orator); Zahler, Leah (editor); & Hopkins, Jeffrey (translator) (1983, 1997). 'Lati Rinbochay's Oral Presentation of the Concentrations and Formless Absorptions' in Rinbochay, Lati; Rinbochay, Denma Lochö; Zahler, Leah (translator); & Hopkins, Jeffrey (translator) (1983, 1997). ''Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism''. Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-119-X. pp.24-25 </ref>
</blockquote>

== Universality ==
Though a conceptual mystery, mindstream may be conceived as [[nonlinear]] and [[wholistic]]. The medium and [[conduit]] of mindstream is [[æther]] or [[space]] and is unbounded by [[temporality]] or [[Location (geography)|locality]]. Welwood describes it in this way:

<blockquote>If the contents of mind are like pails and buckets floating in a stream, and the mindstream is like the dynamic flowing of the water, pure awareness is like the water itself in its essential wetness. Sometimes the water is still, sometimes it is turbulent; yet it always remains as it is – wet, fluid, watery. In the same way, pure awareness is never confined [n]or disrupted by any mind-state. Therefore, it is the source of liberation and true equanimity. (Welwood, 2000)</blockquote>

Welwood introduces "pure awareness", the [[essence]]-[[quality]] of the mindstream, and may be considered synonymous with 'natural mind' [[rigpa]] (Tibetan) or the [[primordial]] and principal constitutional consciousness of [[being]] and accessible by (and the point of origin of) all sentient beings. 'Sentient beings' is a technical Vajrayana term denoting the mindstream(s) of all those consciousness(es) not yet aware of the emptiness and fullness of perfection. Welwood (2000: unpaginated) links the mindstream with the [[trikaya]]:

<blockquote>In terms of the Buddhist teaching of the three kayas, we could say that the contents of consciousness belong to the nirmanakaya, the realm of manifest form. The pulsation of the mindstream, with its alternation between movement and stillness, belongs to the sambhogakaya, the realm of energy flow. And the larger, open ground of awareness, first discovered in moments of stillness, is the dharmakaya, the realm of pure being (the thing-in-itself), eternally present, spontaneous, and free of entrapment in any form whatsoever. (Welwood, 2000)</blockquote>

The Buddhist and Bön teachings of mindstream and [[heartmind]] inform one another, as does [[Bodymind_(in_meditation_traditions)|bodymind]]. As Chodron (1991) states: "Just as the body is a 'continuity' even though it has parts, the mindstream or consciousness is also a 'continuity', although it has parts." Hawter (1995) succinctly relates that: "All of our actions lay down imprints on our mindstream which have the potential to ripen at some time in the future." This should not imply that the mindstream is linear and only flows one way, but the mindstream is understood in the Himalayan Tradition to flow all ways, always. For Morrell (1999): "The Mahayanists also contend that the mind forms a continuous, unending and unbroken mindstream or flow of consciousness, from beginningless time and indestructible. Thoughts and feelings in the mindstream are regarded as of supreme importance to Buddhist practice."

[[Kelzang Gyatso, 7th Dalai Lama|Kelzang Gyatso]] ([[1708]]-[[1757]] CE), His Holiness [[Dalai Lama]] VII is translated in Mullin (1982) as stating that: "all things in the world and beyond [a]re simply projections of names and thoughts. Not even the tiniest atom exists by itself, [i]ndependently [or] in its own right" (Mullin, 1982: 53). Therefore, the Universe<ref>The Universe here is qualified by Rawson (1991: p.9) who states that even before 400 [[Common Era|CE]]: "...the classic ''Lotus Sutra'' had developed the intuition that the universe is unknowably vast, containing millions upon millions of cosmoses and worlds 'numberless as the sand-grains of the Ganges river', all continuously arising from and falling back into an indefinable Ultimate." In this context the "indefinable Ultimate" may be equated with [[dharmakaya]]. In addition, the term [[Multiverse]] or [[Metaverse]] may be more apt, though still in the sense of the etymology of the Universe in 'revolving as one'.</ref><ref>A footnote in the English rendering of Manjushrimitra's ''Bodhicittabhavana'', by [[Kunpal Tulku]] (2005) entitled ''The Cultivation of Enlightened Mind'' states that: <blockquote>
In Buddhist terminology the Universe is referred to as a Tri-sahasra-mahasahasra-dhatu. This describes a Universe consisting of galaxies of (1000)3 x 1000 world-systems with an almost unimaginable event horizon. In every direction these world-systems stretch out, some circling distant uninhabited hot stellar nebula, others rich in sentient beings. When we gaze upwards at the stars, we are gazing toward countless civilizations spanning across the shoreless ocean of the night sky. And yet what we see is only a fraction of the Universe as such. '''Source:''' [http://www.dharmafellowship.org/library/texts/cultivation-of-enlightened-mind.htm#two] (accessed: November 28, 2007)
</ref><ref>[[Patrul Rinpoche]] ''et. al.'' (1994: p.407) define 'Cosmos of a billion universes' (Tibetan: ''stong gsum'') as :
<blockquote>
...a cosmos composed of one billion (1000<sup>3</sup>) universes like ours and corresponding to the area of activity of one Buddha.
</blockquote> '''Source:''' [[Patrul Rinpoche|Rinpoche, Patrul]] (author); Brown, Kerry (ed.); and Sharma, Sima (ed.)(1994). ''The Words of My Perfect Teacher'' (Tibetan title: ''kunzang lama'i shelung''). Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group. With a forward by the Dalai Lama. San Francisco, California, USA: HarperCollins''Publishers''. ISBN 0-06-066449-5 (cloth: alk. paper). p.407
</ref> is the [[thoughtform]] of the collective mindstream of all [[sentient beings]] (and there is nothing which is non-sentient; [[:wikt:pansentience|pansentience]]<ref>Orofino (1990: p.82) in discussing the [[Bönpo]] [[Dzogchenpa]] view of ''Kun-gzhi'' (Tibetan: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/kun Kun]-[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/gzhi gzhi]) (the "all-base") renders into English an extract from the ''Kun-gzhi'i zhal-shes sgrong-ma'', a philosophical tract from the ''[[Zhang-zhung snyan-rgyud]]'', the discourse of [[Tapihritsa]] who in a vision, appeared to ''sNang-bzher lod-po'', who (by implication) transcribed the discourse (fol. 1a et seq.):
::'Here will be given the oral teaching which removes doubts on the natural state of ''kun-gzhi'': like the sky, it may appear to be divided into external and internal. Some people with limited minds think that the Wisdom Mind is found within one's own mind but does not pervade external objects. The space of the sky, for example, totally and uniformly pervades all phenomenal existence without any difference between inside and outside, but in constructing a house one separates internal from external space, and one gives this internal space a form, be it square, tringular, oval or round, according to the space the house takes. In the same way the Wisdom Mind totally and uniformly pervades ''saṃsāra'' and ''nirvāṇa'', without a division of internal and external. There is no separation of external and internal within space in itself: just as it pervades the external, so it also pervades the internal. Thus the mind of living beings distinguishes dualistically an original mind and an internal one. But because internal and external do not exist, neither do these limits. Self-originated wisdom, just as it pervades the consciousness of every individual also pervades all phenomenal objective existence and the entire external universe. It expands in all directions without a centre or a periphery, having no inside or outside.' Orofino, Giacomella (translation & commentary) (1990). ''Sacred Tibetan Teachings on Death and Liberation: Texts from the most Ancient Traditions of Tibet.'' Preface by [[Namkhai Norbu]]. Bridport, Dorset, U.K.: Prism Press. ISBN 1 85327 049 0. p.82. </ref>). This pansentient totality '''is''' the great continuum, the "great perfection" or "total completion" (Tibetan: ''rdzog pa chen po'') of Dzogchen and [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/Ati_Yoga Ati Yoga] (Tibetan: [http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/shin_tu_rnal_'byor shin tu rnal 'byor] where "[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/shin_tu shin tu]" holds the semantic field "total", "complete", "absolute" and "[http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/rnal_'byor rnal <nowiki>'</nowiki>byor]" holds the semantic field of "yoga"; Sanskrit: "Ati" holds the semantic field "primordial", "original", "first"; "yoga" holds the semantic field "communion", "union").

===Iconography===
For an example of an [[iconographic]] representation of the mindstream refer this 'icon' (Tibetan: ''[[thangka]]'') of [http://oblako-9.gorodok.ca/images/photos/bonchildren/deities/Tapihritsa01.jpg Tapihritsa].

== Use and application ==
In an unknown (though insightful) commentator's purport to [[Patanjali]]'s [[Yoga Sutras]] Sutra I.34, [[pranayama]], meditation on the breath, is linked to the mindstream:

<blockquote>Thus the outflow of the breath, being associated with release, it is used to release the negative energy, thoughts, and emotions which interrupt the Divine mind-stream. Since breath is related to our basic energy, in this light then, we can also understand how we can can regulate the cit-prana and soothe and clarify the mind by bringing our awareness back to the exhalation of the breath and the regulation of the breath. This will bring freshness and clarification to the mindstream.<ref>http://www.rainbowbody.net/HeartMind/Yogasutra1.htm (accessed: January 17, 2007)</ref> </blockquote>

When His Holiness the Dalai Lama is asked "what is the nature of the mindstream that [[reincarnation|reincarnates]] from lifetime to lifetime?" (1997) he answers making reference to the [[soul]], [[continuum]], the [[Sakya]] master [[Rendawa]], the composite of body and mind, the [[Skandha|aggregates]], [[alayavijnana]], and the [[Consciousness-only|Mind-Only]] school, as follows:
<blockquote>If one understands the term "soul" as a continuum of individuality from moment to moment, from lifetime to lifetime, then one can say that Buddhism also accepts a concept of soul; there is a kind of continuum of consciousness. From that point of view, the debate on whether or not there is a soul becomes strictly semantic. However, in the Buddhist doctrine of selflessness, or "no soul" theory, the understanding is that there is no eternal, unchanging, abiding, permanent self called "soul." That is what is being denied in Buddhism.<br />
<br />
Buddhism does not deny the continuum of consciousness. Because of this, we find some Tibetan scholars, such as the Sakya master Rendawa, who accept that there is such a thing as self or soul, the "kangsak ki dak" (Tib. ''gang zag gi bdag''). However, the same word, the "kangsak ki dak," the self, or person, or personal self, or identity, is at the same time denied by many other scholars.<br />
<br />
We find diverse opinions, even among Buddhist scholars, as to what exactly the nature of self is, what exactly that thing or entity is that continues from one moment to the next moment, from one lifetime to the next lifetime. Some try to locate it within the aggregates, the composite of body and mind. Some explain it in terms of a designation based on the body and mind composite, and so on.... One of the divisions of [the "Mind-Only"] school maintains there is a special continuum of consciousness called alayavijnana which is the fundamental consciousness.
</blockquote>

Waldron links [[Vasubandhu]], [[bhavachakra]], [[klesha]] and [[karma]]:
<blockquote>
Vasubandhu describes this classic account of cyclic causality in terms of one's 'mind stream': "the mind stream (santana) increases gradually by the mental afflictions (klesa) and by actions (karma), and goes again to the next world. In this way the circle of existence is without beginning (anadibhavacakraka)." (AKBh III 19a-d; Poussin, tome 2, pp. 57-59; Shastri, pp. 433-34.)
<ref>Waldron, William S. (undated). ''Buddhist Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Thinking about <nowiki>'Thoughts without a Thinker'</nowiki>''. Source: [http://www.purifymind.com/EcologyMindSteps.htm] (accessed: November 1, 2007)</ref>
</blockquote>

[[Vajranatha]] states:
<blockquote>
When we look inside of ourselves and just observe, we find that there is only a stream of consciousness (T. shes-rgyud, S. vijnana-santana). The Buddha introduced this term long before William James did some hundred years ago. When we say “my mind”, this refers not to a thing or a vestment. Yet this stream of consciousness has a continuity and an individuality. Our stream of consciousness is separate from those of other people. There are individual streams of consciousness and individual mental processes. We are not all One Mind. If we were, as soon as one of us realized something, all of us would simultaneously realize it.<ref>Vajranatha (2001). ''Dzogchen and Meditation''. Source: [http://vajranatha.com/teaching/DzogchenMeditation.htm] (accessed: November 1, 2007)</ref>
</blockquote>

===Mindstream and initiation===

Yuthok ''et. al.'' (1997: p.46) elucidates the intimate connection of the mindstream, [[Empowerment (Tibetan Buddhism)|initiation]] and [[mandala]]:
<blockquote>
It is only through initiation that the blessings of...a mandala may be stamped on the individual's mindstream. Initiation can be given and received only when the time, location and circumstances are appropriate. Only an enlightened, undisputed master may bestow it. The initiation is not given to large crowds of people. It may be received only by disciples who are receptive by virtue of their faith and devotion. If the transmission is successful, disciples will experience it at some level. This may be physical, mental or verbal. People who receive the physical form of blessing sometimes move about and shake. Those who receive verbal blessings may utter all sorts of mantras that they never heard before, which block out their perception of normal sounds. When the mindstream is blessed, the mind is inundated with a new vision of reality. Initiations normally rely on an external mandala, usually painted in sand or on cloth. Once a disciple is initiated, he must re-initiate himself daily through regular practice. Eventually, this will lead him or her to realisation.<ref>Yuthok, Choedak (1997). ''Lamdre: Dawn of Enlightenment.'' (Transcribed and edited by Pauline Westwood with valued assistance
from Ot Rastsaphong, Rob Small, Brett Wagland and Whitethorn. Cover Design: Rob Small) Canberra, Australia: Gorum Publications. ISBN 0 9587085 0 9. Source: [http://www.buddhanet.net/pdf_file/lamdre.pdf] (accessed: January 3, 2008) </ref>
</blockquote>

==Atiyoga==
In general Himalayan spiritual discourse, Atiyoga is held to be the peak of the Dharma of the Nine Vehicles for both the [[Nyingmapa]] and [[Bonpo]] and is comparable to the complete realization of [[Mahamudra]] for the [[Sarma (Tibetan Buddhism)|Sarma]] traditions. Though this hierarchical view is the general paradigm, Atiyoga is also the unity, fulfillment and primordial base of all the other Yana. It is commonly held that Atiyoga speaks its own language and this is impenetrable for those who have not had empowerments, lung and direct experience, establishing the clear view of the nature of the mindstream. In the other Yana there is the doctrine of inter- and intra-permeable mindstreams, that support the entwining [[nirmanakaya]] or [[tulku]] lineages of the re-embodiment and 'treasure' (Wylie: ''gTer'') traditions. Padma Translation Committee's rendering of an embedded quotation of one of the famed "Twelve Vajra Laughs" (drawn from the 'Pile of Jewels Tantra'; Wylie: ''Rin po che spungs pa' rgyud'') cited in the ''[[Nelug Dzö]]'' one of [[Longchenpa]]'s 'Seven Treasures' (Wylie: ''mDzod bdun'') '''''is''''' clearly an example of the technical [[twilight language]] of Ati Yoga and the pedigree of the '[[upaya|skillful]]' doctrine of the mindstream:
<blockquote>
Listen further, O Vajra of Speech! Behold the nature of phenomena, empty and all-pervasive timeless awareness. How marvelous--it is unborn and abides timelessly, coemergent with being itself. Even if a person were to seize a sharp weapon and slay all beings at once, that person's mindstream would still be free of benefit or harm. Ha! Ha!<ref>Rabjam, Longchen & The Padma Translation Committee (1998). ''The Precious Treasury of The Way of Abiding'' (Wylie: ''Gnas lugs mdzod''). Junction City, CA, USA: Padma Publishing. ISBN 1-881847-09-8 (hardback). p.95</ref>
</blockquote>

In a [[Charles Peirce|Peircean]] or [[Ferdinand de Saussure|de Sassurian]] [[semiotic]] analysis of the semantic [[signifier]] "mindstream", the signifier mindstream denotes an ineffable signified of an open and pervasive mystery: To limit the limitless by stating that it may not subject itself to boundaries or limit itself by grace is bunk. Sky is a limitless limit. Ati Yoga is a verb. Ati Yoga: "ati" or "adi" a Sanskrit term that holds the [[semantic field]] "beginning", "wellspring", "origination"; and "yoga" a Sanskrit term that may be rendered most appropriately into English in its full semantic analogue, "comm''union''". Therefore, the verb or process of Atiyoga is ''to commune'' with the primordiality of the unknowable and pregnant 'void' or 'zero' (Sanskrit: ''śunyā''). The perfect infinitive tense "to commune" was employed to convey an embedded philosophical view of the viewless Great Perfection. Void, is Emptiness, is Sky, is Space, is Zero: a garland of analogues. In the Dharmic traditions, [[Dharma]] has a 5000 year tradition of being conveyed and rarefied by realization forded through analysis and grammar of alphanumeric systems and semiology both esoteric and exoteric. Case in point in Ati Yoga, the final or thirteenth [[bhumi]] of the 'absolute bodhichitta', being the [[varnamala]], the 'garland of [[bija]]'. 'Atiyoga' begins and ends with "Ah". For the Nyingma who self-identify as the [[ngagpa]]s, [[siddha]]s and [[sadhaka]]s of "Secret Mantra", "Ah" is the [[bija]] [[mantra]] of the nature of the mindstream of [[Samantabhadra]]. Unlike the Dzogchen tradition of the Nyingma, the Bonpo Dzogchenpa have a sophisticated technical and iconographic language and semiology for limiting that which cannot be limited.

==See also==
*[[Luminous mind]]
*[[Cognition]]
*[[Flow (psychology)]]
*[[Linga sarira]]
*[[Personal identity (philosophy)]]
*[[Quantum mind]]
*[[Sadhana]]
*[[Svabhava]]
*[[Thoughtform]]
*[[Three Vajras]]
*[[Stream of consciousness]]

==Notes==
{{reflist}}

==References==
<div class="references-small">
===Print===
* Bucknell, Roderick & Stuart-Fox, Martin (1986). ''The Twilight Language: Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism''. Curzon Press: London. ISBN 0-312-82540-4
* Chodron, Thubten (1991). ''Basic Buddhist Topics: Mind, Rebirth, Cyclic Existence and Enlightenment'' (transcript). Seattle: Dharma Friendship Foundation. Source: http://www.thubtenchodron.org/GradualPathToEnlightenment/LR_003_BasicTopics_May91.pdf (accessed: Sunday March 25, 2007)
*Gradinarov, Plamen (2005). ''Husserl and Yogacara''. "Indo-Pacific Journal of Phenomenology", Volume 5, Edition 1, April 2005. Source: [http://www.ipjp.org/april2005/gradinarov_5e1.pdf] (accessed: November 1, 2007)
* Guenther, Herbert V. (1956). "Tibetan Buddhism in Western Perspective: The Concept of Mind in Buddhist Tantrism." ''Journal of Oriental Studies'': 3:261-77.
*Gyatso, Janet (1998). ''Apparitions of the Self: The Secret Autobiographies of a Tibetan Visionary; a Translation and Study of Jigme Lingpa's 'Dancing Moon in the Water' and 'Ḍākki's Grand Secret-Talk''<nowiki>'</nowiki>. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01110-9 (cloth: alk. paper)
* Hawter, Pende (1995). ''Healing: A Tibetan Buddhist Perspective''. http://www.sacred-texts.com/bud/tib/heal_tib.htm (accessed: Saturday January 13, 2007)
* James, William. (1890). ''The Principles of Psychology''. New York: Holt.
* Lama, Dalai (1997). ''Healing Anger: The Power of Patience from a Buddhist Perspective''. Translated by Geshe Thupten Jinpa. Snow Lion Publications. Source: [http://www.tysonwilliams.com/archives/what_is_the_nature_of_the_mindstream_that_reincarnates_from_lifetime_to_lifetime.html] (accessed: Sunday March 25, 2007)
* Morrell, Peter (1999). ''The Three Poisons And The Three Jewels: An Outline Of The Buddhist Schools''. http://www.homeoint.org/morrell/buddhism/outline.htm (accessed: Saturday January 13, 2007)
* Mullin, Glenn H. (1982). ''Selected Works of the Dalai Lama VII''. Snow Lion, USA.
* Priestley, Leonard (1999). ''Pudgalavāda Buddhism: The Reality of the Indeterminate Self''. Toronto: Centre for South Asian Studies, University of Toronto.
* Rawson, Philip (1991). ''Sacred Tibet''. London, Thames and Hudson. ISBN(?) 90-70359.
* Tulku, Tarthang (1974). "On Thoughts" in ''Crystal Mirror'': 3:7-20.
* Waldron, William S. (undated). ''Buddhist Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Thinking about <nowiki>'Thoughts without a Thinker'</nowiki>''. Source: [http://www.purifymind.com/EcologyMindSteps.htm] (accessed: November 1, 2007).
* Waldron, William S. (undated). ''How Innovative is the Ālayavijñāna?: The ālayavijñāna in the context of canonical and Abhidharma vijñāna theory.'' Source: [http://www.gampoabbey.org/translations2/Innovative-alayavijnana.pdf] (accessed: January 23, 2008)
* Wangyal, Tenzin (1997). ''A-Khrid Teachings''. Vol. 2. Berkeley, CA: privately published.
* Welwood, John (2000). ''The Play of the Mind: Form, Emptiness, and Beyond''. Source: http://www.purifymind.com/PlayMind.htm (accessed: Saturday January 13, 2007)

=== Electronic ===
* http://www.bodhipath-west.org/glossary.htm (accessed: Saturday January 13, 2007)
</div>

== External links ==
* [http://www.snowlionpub.com/pages/dlquote.php July 15, 2006] A quotation from the Dalai Lama discusses the nature of the mindstream and how it is placed within the [[Vajrayana]] tradition (accessed: December 13, 2007)

{{TibetanBuddhism}}
{{Buddhism topics}}

[[Category:Philosophy of mind]]
[[Category:Buddhist terms]]
[[Category:Hindu philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Metaphors]]
[[Category:Buddhist philosophical concepts]]
[[Category:Hypnosis]]
[[Category:Consciousness studies]]
[[Category:Yoga]]
[[Category:Spirituality]]
[[Category:Meditation| ]]
[[Category:Mind-body interventions]]
[[Category:Self]]
[[Category:Religion articles needing expert attention]]
[[Category:Tibetan Buddhism]]

Revision as of 01:06, 13 October 2008

Template:IndicText

Mindstream is a compound lexical item composed of mind and stream used to translate a term from Buddhist philosophy. In Vajrayana (Tantric Buddhism) it may be understood as an upāya (Sanskrit) doctrine of the nonlocal, atemporal[1] metaphorical stream of moments[2](Tibetan: bkod pa thig le[3]) or 'quanta of consciousness' (Tibetan: thig le; Sanskrit: Bindu) proceeding endlessly in a lifetime, between lifetimes (Tibetan: Bardo), from lifetime to lifetime, prior to engagement in the Bhavacakra of Samsara and beyond as an inclusive 'continuum' (Tibetan: rgyud) rather than an individuated, separate, or discrete perceptual, cognitive, or experiential entity, as in the conception of the Ātman. Waldron (undated) states:

Indian Buddhists see the 'evolution' of mind i[n] terms of the continuity of individual mind-streams from one lifetime to the next, with karma as the basic causal mechanism whereby transformations are transmitted from one life to the next.[4]

Dzogchen Rinpoche (2007: p.82-83) establishing the processive reciprocality of the training of the mindstream and the Buddhadharma, holds that:

The Buddhadharma is a process, one through which we train and tame our own mindstreams. One approach is to go to the root of what we mean by "I," our sense of self or individual self-identity.[5]

Thanissaro Bhikkhu (1996: unpaginated) in contextualizing and redressing what he believes to be the general misconception of anātman (rendered as "no self") and ātman (rendered as "self"), in relation to the view he holds of the intention of Shakyamuni Buddha, states:

...the Buddha was asked point-blank whether or not there was a self, he refused to answer. When later asked why, he said that to hold either that there is a self or that there is no self is to fall into extreme forms of wrong view that make the path of Buddhist practice impossible.[6]

This clear evocation of what later became canonized in Buddhist discourse as Madhyamika or "middle way", is key to tender a description of the ineffable Mysterium Magnum of the "Great Continuum" that is rendered in English as "Mindstream": the nondual resolution of ātman and anātman.

In the entwined Dzogchen traditions of Bönpo and Nyingmapa, the Mindstream is constituted by a continuum of gankyil comprised of the Five Pure Lights of the Five Wisdoms which unite the trikaya. These 'tantric correlations' (or Twilight Language) are evident in the iconographic representation of the Five Jinas[7] and the saṃpanna-krama of the gankyil and mandala in Dzogchen sādhana. The 'supreme siddhi' or 'absolute bodhicitta' of the Dzogchenpa is when the Mindstream of their 'bodymind' (a rendering of namarupa) is 'released' (a rendering of Nirvana) as the Rainbow Body.

Capriles (2004: p.35) defines the 'consciousness of the base-of-all' (Skt., alayavijñana; Tib., kunzhi namshee) as congruent with the 'Mindstream' (Skt., santana; Tib., gyü) and mentions vasanas, bijas, and tathata:

The consciousness of the base-of-all was not conceived as an immutable absolute, which is how the Atman of Hinduism is described; in agreement with the Hinayana idea of a succession of instants of knowledge, it was explained as a continually changing stream of consciousness (Skt., santana; Tib., gyü), and was said to be the vehicle that carries the karmic imprints (vasanas or bijas) that go from one life to the next. In turn, from the standpoint of experience, the consciousness of the base-of-all is an ample condition that yogis may find by absorption. Though the consciousness of the base-of-all is of the nature of thatness (Skt., tathata; Tib., dezhinnyia)—the absolute nature that is the single constituent of all entities—this consciousness is also the root of samsara.[8]

Nomenclature, orthography and etymology

The nomenclature and etymology of the Mindstream (Tibetan: dam pa'i byin rlabs or sems-rgyud; Sanskrit: citta-santāna) is convoluted and tied to: the historical context of Buddhism in India; the historical development of Buddhism; the Silk Road transmission of Buddhism, the syncretic and dialogic doctrinal development of Buddhism; and to the secession of Buddhism from, and its persistent entwining relationship with, Sanatana Dharma and other Indian religions, Chinese religions and Bön.

心相續 (Chinese)

The Chinese rendering of 'Mindstream ' (Tibetan: sems kyi rgyud) is constituted by three characters: (Romanized: sam) (Romanized: soeng) (Romanized: zuk).

CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 心 (sam) as:

[1] [n] heart [2] mind [3] conscience; moral nature [4] intention; idea; ambition; design [5] [n] core; middle; center; inside [6] one of the 28 constellations [7] Kangxi radical 61[9]

CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 相 (soeng) as:

{1)[1] [v] examine; study; read; [2] [n] countenance; appearance; facial features; looks; bearing; posture [3] [n] prime minister (in feudal times) [4] [v] assist; help {2)[1] each other; one another; mutually; reciprocal [2] substance. [10]

CantoDict Project Online (2007) defines the character 續 (zuk) as:

[a] continue; carry on [b] succeed.[11]

Citta-saṃtāna (Sanskrit)

Citta (Sanskrit) holds the semantic field of "that which is conscious", "the act of mental apprehension known as ordinary consciousness", "the conventional and relative mind/heart".[12] Citta has two aspects: "...Its two aspects are 'attending to,' and, 'collecting' of impressions or traces (Sanskrit: vāsanā) cf. vijñāna."[13] Citta is often rendered as "sems" in Tibetan.

Saṃtāna or Santāna (Sanskrit) holds the semantic field of "eternal", "continuum", "a series of momentary events", "life-stream".[14]

In the Sanskrit language, citta-santāna may be parsed as per the analyses of Keown, et. al. (2003: p.62) who state:

Literally, "the stream of mind", a general term used to indicate the continuity of the personality of an individual in the absence of the permanently abiding 'self' (ātman) that Buddhism denies."[15]

dam pa'i byin rlabs (Tibetan)

In the Tibetan language, dam pa'i byin rlabs may be parsed into dam pa'i which contains the semantic field of "flow", "stream"; whilst the semantic field of byin rlabs holds "blessing", "sacred", "empowerment", "inspiration". Therefore, "empowering flow from the sacred" which has been rendered into English as "mindstream".

Sems-rgyud or sems kyi rgyud (Tibetan)

The Tibetan term rgyud holds the semantic field of "continuum", "stream", and "thread". Interestingly, it is the term that Tibetan 'translators' (Tibetan: lotsawa) employed to translate and render the Sanskrit term "tantra".[16]

Thugs-rgyud (Tibetan)[17]

Thugs-rgyud may be parsed into "thugs" and "rgyud".

Please refer above for "rgyud". Thugs holds the semantic field: "Buddha-mind", "(enlightened) mind", "mind", "soul", "spirit", "purpose", "intention", "unbiased perspective", "spirituality", "responsiveness", "spiritual significance", "awareness", "primordial (state, experience)", "enlightened mind", "heart", "breast", "feelings" and is sometimes a homonym of "citta" (Sanskrit).[18]

Thugs-rgyud holds the semantic field and has been rendered into English as: "wisdom", "transmission", "heart-mind continuum", "mind", "[continuum/ stream of] mind", "nature of mind" and is a homonym for "sems rgyud" or "rgyud". [19]

Mental continuum

Berzin (2007) identifies "mental continuum" as Tibetan: sems-rgyud and Sanskrit: "santana" and defines it as:

The stream of continuity of mental activity (mind, awareness) of an individual being, which has no beginning, which continues even into Buddhahood, and, according to Mahayana, has no end. According to the Hinayana tenets, it comes to an end when an arhat or Buddha dies. Also called a "mind-stream."[20]

Metaphoric foundation

There are two entwined mindstreams according to the Two Truths, the absolute and relative, that are ultimately non-dual. The Divine Mindstream of 'consciousness' which is engaged in the phowa sadhana, for example; and the mindstream of thought, ideation (Tibetan: sem; Sanskrit: manas) (vṛtti-citta[21]) and which James named "Stream of Consciousness", for example; are founded upon the metaphor of the stream which is endemic to Buddhist literature and worldview.

Gyatso, Jinpa & Wallace (2003: p.97) identify two kinds of consciousness continuum and associate the most subtle state of consciousness continuum, elsewhere identified within this Wikipedia article as the 'mindstream substrate' with what is known in Tibetan Buddhist, Dzogchen and Bonpo discourse as 'clear light':

In Vajrayāna Buddhism the subtlest state of consciousness is known as clear light. In terms of categories of consciousness, there is one type of consciousness that consists of a permanent stream or an unending continuity and there are other forms of consciousness whose continuum comes to an end. Both these levels of consciousness - one consisting of an endless continuum and the other of a finite continuum - have a momentary nature. That is to say, they arise from moment to moment, and they are constantly in a state of flux. So the permanence of the first kind is only in terms of its continuum. The subtlest consciousness consists of such an eternal continuum, while the streams of the grosser states of consciounsness do end.[22]

Sogyal Rinpoche (1994: p.73) frames the importance of the stream metaphor in relation to meditation and the nature of mind, the objective of meditative sadhana:

In the ancient meditation instructions, it is said that at the beginning thoughts will arrive one on top of another, uninterrupted, like a steep mountain waterfall. Gradually, as you perfect meditation, thoughts become like the water in a deep, narrow gorge, then a great river slowly winding its way down to the sea, and finally the mind becomes like a still and placid ocean, ruffled by only the occasional ripple or wave.[23]

As Bucknell, et. al. (1986: p.112-113) in linking Tipiṭaka, Mahāmudrā and David-Néel state:

In Buddhist literature the mental condition in which sequences of imagery and verbalizing run on endlessly is often compared to a flowing stream. We find in the oldest section of the Tipiṭaka the term 'stream of consciousness' (viññāṇa-sotaṃ).[24] The same metaphor is often found in the Tibetan literature. The guru Padma Karpo spoke of 'thoughts...following one after the other as if in a continuous stream';[25] Mipham Nampar Gyalba observed that the 'stream of images flows unbroken';[26] and in the Vow of Mahāmudrā, there is reference to 'the mind river'.[27] This manner of speaking is also common at the present day. Tarthang Tülku refers to 'the stream of mental images'[28] and 'the flow of thoughts and images';[29] and David-Neel, in a discussion of the meditation practices she observed in Tibet, speaks of 'the continual, swift, flowing stream of thoughts and mental images...'[30]
The stream metaphor has also been found appropriate by western psychologists. William James wrote: 'It flows. A "river" or a "stream" are the metaphors by which it is most naturally described. In talking of it hereafter, let us call it the stream of thought, of consciousness, or of subjective life.[31] James's term 'stream of consciousness' has since become widely adopted in a variety of contexts.

Historical development of the Mindstream doctrine

The rudimentary origins of the Buddhist upaya doctrine of the mindstream may be tentatively found in the Pudgalavāda which was at one time the ascendant form of Śrāvakayāna.[32] Priestley (2005: unpaginated) holds that the Pudgalavāda:

...thought of some aspect or dimension of the self as transcending the aggregates and may have identified that aspect with Nirvana, which like most early Buddhists they regarded as an eternal reality. In its involvement with the aggregates through successive lives, the self could be seen as characterized by incessant change; but in its eternal aspect, it could be seen as having an identity that remains constant through all its lives until it fulfils itself in the impersonal happiness of Parinirvana. Although their account of the self seemed unorthodox and irrational to their Buddhist opponents, the Pudgalavādins evidently believed that only such an account could do justice to the Buddha’s moral teaching, to the accepted facts of karma, rebirth and liberation, and to our actual experience of selves and persons.[33]

Manjushrimitra states in the Bodhicittabhavana, a seminal early text of Ati Yoga that the: "The mental-continuum (citta-santana) is without boundaries or extension; it is not one thing, nor supported by anything."[34]

Mindstream is a conflation subsuming 'heartmind' (Sanskrit: bodhi-citta) and 'wisdom-mind' (Sanskrit: jnana-dharmakaya; Tibetan: ye-shes chos-sku).

Lusthaus (undated) in mapping the development and doctrinal relationships of ālaya-vijñāna, tathāgatagarbha, Yogācāra, ātman, Abhidharma, prakṛti and the Mindstream states:

Several Yogācāra notions basic to the Abhidharma wing [of Yogācāra] came under severe attack by other Buddhists, especially the notion of ālaya-vijñāna, which was denounced as something akin to the Hindu notions of ātman (permament, invariant self) and prakṛti (primordial substrative nature from which all mental, emotional and physical things evolve). Eventually the critiques became so entrenched that the Abhidharma wing atrophied. By the end of the eighth century it was ecliped by the logico-epistemic tradition [of Yogācāra] and by a hybrid school that combined basic Yogācāra doctrines with Tathāgatagarbha thought. The logico-epistemological wing in part side-stepped the critique by using the term citta-santāna, "mind-stream", instead of ālaya-vijñāna, for what amounted to roughly the same idea. It was easier to deny that a "stream" represented a reified self. On the other hand, the Tathāgatagarbha hybrid school was no stranger to the charge of smuggling notions of selfhood into its doctrines, since, for example, it explicitly defined the tathāgatagarbha as "permanent, pleasurable, self, and pure (nitya, sukha, ātman, śuddha). Many Tathāgatagarbha texts, in fact, argue for the acceptance of selfhood (ātman) as a sign of higher accomplishment. The hybrid school attempted to conflate tathāgatagarbha with the ālaya-vijñāna.[35]

The word "atman" is used in tathagatagarbha literature after being defined in new, idiosyncratic way. The Buddha-Nature Treatise for example defines "Self" as the perfection of the anatman-paramita. Thus one realizes his/her "true self" by perfecting his/her understanding of the truth of anatman. See Atman (Buddhism).

Dzogchen Rinpoche (2007: p.84) asserts an unsourced paraphrase or pastiche of a view attributed to Nagarjuna:

Nagarjuna says that the mindstream of every unenlightened being is permeated by the heart essence of buddhahood. The fundamental nature of our mindstreams is tathagatagarbha, or buddha nature, the seed and heart essence of an enlightened being. It is this quality that gives us the capacity to become buddhas.[36]

The view in the direct quotation above is generally attibuted to the Yogachara. It is clear that the first sentence in the above quotation holds the position attributed to Nagarjuna. It is unclear whether the latter two sentences in the quotation are also that of Nagarjuna, or alternatively the position of Dzogchen Rinpoche.

Waldron (2003: p.178) renders Vasubandhu's Yogacara account from the Abhidharmakośabhāṣya of 'cyclic causality' (bhavacakra), kleśa and karma in relation to the mindstream:

...the mind stream (santāna) increases gradually by the mental afflictions (kleśa) and by actions (karma), and goes again to the next world. In this way the circle of existence is without beginning."[37][38]

Mindstream in sadhana

In the 'Discourse on Mindfulness' (Pali: Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta) located within the Majjhima Nikaya of the Pali Canon, Buddha Shakyamuni is rendered as foregrounding 'mindfulness' or the enduring presence of the immediacy of experience and a foundational practice to Buddhist spiritual discipline and a preliminary to śamatha (Sanskrit) and vipaśyanā (Sanskrit). Fenner (1994) provides an accessible point of entry to satipaṭṭhāna sadhana:

In this meditative practice, we learn to recognize and observe the individual components that make up the full range of human experience. The exercise is to attend to the different processes and

phenomena that occur in the here-and-now as we are sitting in meditative posture or engaged in the various activities of our lives. This involves systematically observing our experience to find out what is there.[39]

The experience of satipaṭṭhāna sadhana provides the 'outer' or coarse experience of the mindstream or the flow of representation and mentation and is intimately connected with the technical term 'sotapanna' (Pali). Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche clearly charts the developmental relationship of the sadhanas of shamatha and vipashyana:

The ways these two aspects of meditation are practiced is that one begins with the practice of shamatha; on the basis of that, it becomes possible to practice vipashyana or lhagthong. Through one's practrice of vipashyana being based on and carried on in the midst of shamatha, one eventually ends up practicing a unification of shamatha and vipashyana. The unification leads to a very clear and direct experience of the nature of all things. This brings one very close to what is called the absolute truth.[40]

In the context of the skillful mindstream doctrine, this 'absolute truth' is cognate with the mindstream substrate, the base or foundation of mind, lucidity and consciousness and is known in the Nyingmapa and Bonpo traditions of Dzogchen as the 'clear light' (Wylie: 'od gsal) also rendered as 'inner radiance' and 'luminosity'.

Buddhist and Hindu Tantric sadhana, and particularly that entwined heritage promulgated by the Mahasiddha, involve the sadhaka 'generating a linkage' kye-rim between their mindstream with that of a guru or yidam as a precursor to 'fully aspecting' dzog-rim their yidam and ishta-deva and their "spiritual personality".[41] The mindstream and the imaginal interiority of visualization are employed in the kye-rim mode of meditative trance sadhana and the internal construction of the buddhafield, mandala and refuge tree.

Gyatso (1998: p.27) translates Jigme Lingpa's autobiographical work "Dancing Moon in the Water" ('Chudai Garken'; Wylie:?) that foregounds Dream Yoga sadhana:

Then, again while sleeping for a bit,
through the force of the blessing

from realizing the heart-mind continuum,

the conceptual thoughts of the ground-of-all
woke as the Dharma body.

I became absorbed
in the spectacle of empty radiant light,
a manifestation without conceptions.

Then it spread,
moved into an external manifestation,
and I saw,
in the awareness-radiation

of vision-producing radiant light,

several self-produced patterns
on the surface of a rock
shined upon by the sun.[42]

Lati, Zahler and Hopkins (1983, 1997: pp.24-25) through the institutionalized lens of the Gelugpa and their graduated and developmental 'stages of the path' (Tibetan: lamrim), frame the sadhana that Shakyamuni Buddha employed to extinguish that which was unwholesome in his mental continuum and mention: artha, maitri, karuna, bodhisattva, bodhi, śūnyatā, pāramitā, five paths, bhūmi and dharma:

...Buddha...came to discard his own welfare (don, artha) and to have concern for the welfare of others; and he cultivated love (byams pa, maitri) and compassion (snying rje, karuṇā), which served as the root for the special mind, the Bodhisattva attitude. Bodhisattva (byang chub sems dpa') means "hero with respect to contemplating enlightenment (byang chub, bodhi)." Thus, he changed his original attitude of cherishing himself and discarding others to that of cherishing others and discarding his own welfare. He also meditated on emptiness (stong pa nyid, śūnyatā). Through cultivating in union the wisdom realizing emptiness and the special Bodhisattva attitude, the altruistic mind of enlightenment, and through accompanying these practices with the six perfections (phar phyin, pāramitā) - giving (sbyin pa, dāna), ethics (tshul khrims, śīla), patience (bzod pa, kṣānti), effort (brtson grus, vīrya), concentration (bsam gtan, dhyāna), and wisdom (she rab, prajñā) - he ascended the five paths (lam, mārga) - the paths of accumulation (tshogs lam, saṃbhāramārga), preparation (prayogamārga, sbyor lam), seeing (mthong lam, darśanamārga), meditation (sgom lam, bhāvanāmārga), and no more learning (mi slob lam, aśaikṣamārga) - and the ten grounds (sa, bhūmi) and completed the collections of merit (bsod nams, puṇya) and exalted wisdom (ye shes, jñāna). He was able to extinguish all faults in his own mental continuum (rgyud, saṃtāna) and to accomplish all auspicious attributes. He was able to achieve the wisdom that knows phenomena (chos, dharma) and their status, and when he did this, he became a Buddha. Thus, a Buddha is not someone who is produced causelessly; ...[but] is produced in dependence on causes.[43]

Universality

Though a conceptual mystery, mindstream may be conceived as nonlinear and wholistic. The medium and conduit of mindstream is æther or space and is unbounded by temporality or locality. Welwood describes it in this way:

If the contents of mind are like pails and buckets floating in a stream, and the mindstream is like the dynamic flowing of the water, pure awareness is like the water itself in its essential wetness. Sometimes the water is still, sometimes it is turbulent; yet it always remains as it is – wet, fluid, watery. In the same way, pure awareness is never confined [n]or disrupted by any mind-state. Therefore, it is the source of liberation and true equanimity. (Welwood, 2000)

Welwood introduces "pure awareness", the essence-quality of the mindstream, and may be considered synonymous with 'natural mind' rigpa (Tibetan) or the primordial and principal constitutional consciousness of being and accessible by (and the point of origin of) all sentient beings. 'Sentient beings' is a technical Vajrayana term denoting the mindstream(s) of all those consciousness(es) not yet aware of the emptiness and fullness of perfection. Welwood (2000: unpaginated) links the mindstream with the trikaya:

In terms of the Buddhist teaching of the three kayas, we could say that the contents of consciousness belong to the nirmanakaya, the realm of manifest form. The pulsation of the mindstream, with its alternation between movement and stillness, belongs to the sambhogakaya, the realm of energy flow. And the larger, open ground of awareness, first discovered in moments of stillness, is the dharmakaya, the realm of pure being (the thing-in-itself), eternally present, spontaneous, and free of entrapment in any form whatsoever. (Welwood, 2000)

The Buddhist and Bön teachings of mindstream and heartmind inform one another, as does bodymind. As Chodron (1991) states: "Just as the body is a 'continuity' even though it has parts, the mindstream or consciousness is also a 'continuity', although it has parts." Hawter (1995) succinctly relates that: "All of our actions lay down imprints on our mindstream which have the potential to ripen at some time in the future." This should not imply that the mindstream is linear and only flows one way, but the mindstream is understood in the Himalayan Tradition to flow all ways, always. For Morrell (1999): "The Mahayanists also contend that the mind forms a continuous, unending and unbroken mindstream or flow of consciousness, from beginningless time and indestructible. Thoughts and feelings in the mindstream are regarded as of supreme importance to Buddhist practice."

Kelzang Gyatso (1708-1757 CE), His Holiness Dalai Lama VII is translated in Mullin (1982) as stating that: "all things in the world and beyond [a]re simply projections of names and thoughts. Not even the tiniest atom exists by itself, [i]ndependently [or] in its own right" (Mullin, 1982: 53). Therefore, the Universe[44][45][46] is the thoughtform of the collective mindstream of all sentient beings (and there is nothing which is non-sentient; pansentience[47]). This pansentient totality is the great continuum, the "great perfection" or "total completion" (Tibetan: rdzog pa chen po) of Dzogchen and Ati Yoga (Tibetan: shin tu rnal 'byor where "shin tu" holds the semantic field "total", "complete", "absolute" and "rnal 'byor" holds the semantic field of "yoga"; Sanskrit: "Ati" holds the semantic field "primordial", "original", "first"; "yoga" holds the semantic field "communion", "union").

Iconography

For an example of an iconographic representation of the mindstream refer this 'icon' (Tibetan: thangka) of Tapihritsa.

Use and application

In an unknown (though insightful) commentator's purport to Patanjali's Yoga Sutras Sutra I.34, pranayama, meditation on the breath, is linked to the mindstream:

Thus the outflow of the breath, being associated with release, it is used to release the negative energy, thoughts, and emotions which interrupt the Divine mind-stream. Since breath is related to our basic energy, in this light then, we can also understand how we can can regulate the cit-prana and soothe and clarify the mind by bringing our awareness back to the exhalation of the breath and the regulation of the breath. This will bring freshness and clarification to the mindstream.[48]

When His Holiness the Dalai Lama is asked "what is the nature of the mindstream that reincarnates from lifetime to lifetime?" (1997) he answers making reference to the soul, continuum, the Sakya master Rendawa, the composite of body and mind, the aggregates, alayavijnana, and the Mind-Only school, as follows:

If one understands the term "soul" as a continuum of individuality from moment to moment, from lifetime to lifetime, then one can say that Buddhism also accepts a concept of soul; there is a kind of continuum of consciousness. From that point of view, the debate on whether or not there is a soul becomes strictly semantic. However, in the Buddhist doctrine of selflessness, or "no soul" theory, the understanding is that there is no eternal, unchanging, abiding, permanent self called "soul." That is what is being denied in Buddhism.


Buddhism does not deny the continuum of consciousness. Because of this, we find some Tibetan scholars, such as the Sakya master Rendawa, who accept that there is such a thing as self or soul, the "kangsak ki dak" (Tib. gang zag gi bdag). However, the same word, the "kangsak ki dak," the self, or person, or personal self, or identity, is at the same time denied by many other scholars.

We find diverse opinions, even among Buddhist scholars, as to what exactly the nature of self is, what exactly that thing or entity is that continues from one moment to the next moment, from one lifetime to the next lifetime. Some try to locate it within the aggregates, the composite of body and mind. Some explain it in terms of a designation based on the body and mind composite, and so on.... One of the divisions of [the "Mind-Only"] school maintains there is a special continuum of consciousness called alayavijnana which is the fundamental consciousness.

Waldron links Vasubandhu, bhavachakra, klesha and karma:

Vasubandhu describes this classic account of cyclic causality in terms of one's 'mind stream': "the mind stream (santana) increases gradually by the mental afflictions (klesa) and by actions (karma), and goes again to the next world. In this way the circle of existence is without beginning (anadibhavacakraka)." (AKBh III 19a-d; Poussin, tome 2, pp. 57-59; Shastri, pp. 433-34.) [49]

Vajranatha states:

When we look inside of ourselves and just observe, we find that there is only a stream of consciousness (T. shes-rgyud, S. vijnana-santana). The Buddha introduced this term long before William James did some hundred years ago. When we say “my mind”, this refers not to a thing or a vestment. Yet this stream of consciousness has a continuity and an individuality. Our stream of consciousness is separate from those of other people. There are individual streams of consciousness and individual mental processes. We are not all One Mind. If we were, as soon as one of us realized something, all of us would simultaneously realize it.[50]

Mindstream and initiation

Yuthok et. al. (1997: p.46) elucidates the intimate connection of the mindstream, initiation and mandala:

It is only through initiation that the blessings of...a mandala may be stamped on the individual's mindstream. Initiation can be given and received only when the time, location and circumstances are appropriate. Only an enlightened, undisputed master may bestow it. The initiation is not given to large crowds of people. It may be received only by disciples who are receptive by virtue of their faith and devotion. If the transmission is successful, disciples will experience it at some level. This may be physical, mental or verbal. People who receive the physical form of blessing sometimes move about and shake. Those who receive verbal blessings may utter all sorts of mantras that they never heard before, which block out their perception of normal sounds. When the mindstream is blessed, the mind is inundated with a new vision of reality. Initiations normally rely on an external mandala, usually painted in sand or on cloth. Once a disciple is initiated, he must re-initiate himself daily through regular practice. Eventually, this will lead him or her to realisation.[51]

Atiyoga

In general Himalayan spiritual discourse, Atiyoga is held to be the peak of the Dharma of the Nine Vehicles for both the Nyingmapa and Bonpo and is comparable to the complete realization of Mahamudra for the Sarma traditions. Though this hierarchical view is the general paradigm, Atiyoga is also the unity, fulfillment and primordial base of all the other Yana. It is commonly held that Atiyoga speaks its own language and this is impenetrable for those who have not had empowerments, lung and direct experience, establishing the clear view of the nature of the mindstream. In the other Yana there is the doctrine of inter- and intra-permeable mindstreams, that support the entwining nirmanakaya or tulku lineages of the re-embodiment and 'treasure' (Wylie: gTer) traditions. Padma Translation Committee's rendering of an embedded quotation of one of the famed "Twelve Vajra Laughs" (drawn from the 'Pile of Jewels Tantra'; Wylie: Rin po che spungs pa' rgyud) cited in the Nelug Dzö one of Longchenpa's 'Seven Treasures' (Wylie: mDzod bdun) is clearly an example of the technical twilight language of Ati Yoga and the pedigree of the 'skillful' doctrine of the mindstream:

Listen further, O Vajra of Speech! Behold the nature of phenomena, empty and all-pervasive timeless awareness. How marvelous--it is unborn and abides timelessly, coemergent with being itself. Even if a person were to seize a sharp weapon and slay all beings at once, that person's mindstream would still be free of benefit or harm. Ha! Ha![52]

In a Peircean or de Sassurian semiotic analysis of the semantic signifier "mindstream", the signifier mindstream denotes an ineffable signified of an open and pervasive mystery: To limit the limitless by stating that it may not subject itself to boundaries or limit itself by grace is bunk. Sky is a limitless limit. Ati Yoga is a verb. Ati Yoga: "ati" or "adi" a Sanskrit term that holds the semantic field "beginning", "wellspring", "origination"; and "yoga" a Sanskrit term that may be rendered most appropriately into English in its full semantic analogue, "communion". Therefore, the verb or process of Atiyoga is to commune with the primordiality of the unknowable and pregnant 'void' or 'zero' (Sanskrit: śunyā). The perfect infinitive tense "to commune" was employed to convey an embedded philosophical view of the viewless Great Perfection. Void, is Emptiness, is Sky, is Space, is Zero: a garland of analogues. In the Dharmic traditions, Dharma has a 5000 year tradition of being conveyed and rarefied by realization forded through analysis and grammar of alphanumeric systems and semiology both esoteric and exoteric. Case in point in Ati Yoga, the final or thirteenth bhumi of the 'absolute bodhichitta', being the varnamala, the 'garland of bija'. 'Atiyoga' begins and ends with "Ah". For the Nyingma who self-identify as the ngagpas, siddhas and sadhakas of "Secret Mantra", "Ah" is the bija mantra of the nature of the mindstream of Samantabhadra. Unlike the Dzogchen tradition of the Nyingma, the Bonpo Dzogchenpa have a sophisticated technical and iconographic language and semiology for limiting that which cannot be limited.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Nonlocal and atemporal may be resolved into a qualification of omnipresent.
  2. ^ The lexical item 'Moment', has been employed in the sense of its etymon "momentum" though the 'stream', 'array' or 'procession' is atemporal and nonlocal.
  3. ^ Source: [1] (accessed: January 8, 2008)
  4. ^ Waldron, William S. (undated). Buddhist Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Thinking about 'Thoughts without a Thinker'. Source: [2] (accessed: November 1, 2007)
  5. ^ Rinpoche, Dzogchen (2007). Taming the Mindstream in Wolter, Doris (ed.) "Losing the Clouds, Gaining the Sky: Buddhism and the Natural Mind." Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0861713591 p.82-83 Source: [3] (accessed: July 29, 2008)
  6. ^ Bhikkhu, Thanissaro (1996). No-self or Not-self?. Source: [4] (accessed: December 5, 2007)
  7. ^ Bucknell, Roderick & Stuart-Fox, Martin (1986). The Twilight Language: Explorations in Buddhist Meditation and Symbolism. Curzon Press: London. ISBN 0-312-82540-4
  8. ^ Capriles, Elías (2004). Clear Discrimination of Views Pointing at the Definitive Meaning: the Four Philosophical Schools of the Sutrayana Traditionally Taught in Tibet with Reference to the Dzogchen Teachings. Source: [5] (accessed: January 15, 2008)
  9. ^ CantoDict Project Online (2007). 心 (sam). Source: [6] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008)
  10. ^ CantoDict Project Online (2007). 相 (soeng). Source: [7] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008)
  11. ^ CantoDict Project Online (2007). 續 (zuk). Source: [8] (accessed: Wednesday Januaru 23, 2008)
  12. ^ Source: [9] (accessed: December 13, 2007)
  13. ^ Source: [10] (accessed: December 13, 2007)
  14. ^ Source: [11] (accessed: December 13, 2007)
  15. ^ Keown, Damien (ed.) with Hodge, Stephen; Jones, Charles; Tinti, Paola (2003). A Dictionary of Buddhism. Great Britain, Oxford: Oxford University Press. P.62. ISBN 0-19-860560-9
  16. ^ Berzin, Alexander (2002; 2007). Making Sense of Tantra. Source: [12] (accessed: December 13, 2007)
  17. ^ Dharma Dictionary (28 December 2005). Source: [13] (accessed: July 17, 2008)
  18. ^ Dharma Dictionary (4 October 2006). Source: [14] (accessed: July 17, 2008)
  19. ^ Dharma Dictionary (28 December 2005). Source: [15] (accessed: July 17, 2008)
  20. ^ Berzin, Alexander (2007). Glossary of English Terms (access: November 1, 2007))
  21. ^ "Moving Mind" [16]
  22. ^ Gyatso, Tenzin (author); Jinpa, Thupten (translator) & Wallace, B. Alan (translator)(2003). "Understanding and Transforming the Mind" in Wallace, B. Alan (editor, 2003). Buddhism & Science: Breaking New Ground. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12335-3 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.97
  23. ^ Rinpoche, Sogyal (1994). The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying. London, UK: Rider. ISBN 0 7126 5752 5 (paperback). P.73
  24. ^ D iii 105. See Vishwanath Pandey, 'Early Buddhist Conception of Consciousness', Bharatiya Vidya 29 (1972), p. 68, note 95.
  25. ^ As quoted in Beyer, The Buddhist Experience, p.157. See also Evans-Wentz, Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines, p.129.,
  26. ^ Calm and Clear, Mi-pham 'Jam-dbyangs rnam-gyal rgya-mtsho, transl. by Tarthang Tülku (Emerville, Calif.: Dharma, 1973), p.105.
  27. ^ See Garma C. C. Chang, Teachings of Tibetan Yoga (New York: University Books, 1963), p.35.
  28. ^ Tarthang, Calm and Clear, p.77.
  29. ^ Tarthang, Openness Mind, p.67.
  30. ^ David-Neel, Magic and Mystery in Tibet, p.245.
  31. ^ William James, The Principles of Psychology (London: macmillan, 1901), vol. I, p.239. (Emphasis in original.)
  32. ^ Priestley, Leonard (2005). "Pudgalavāda Buddhist Philosophy" in The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Source: [17](accessed: September 18, 2008)
  33. ^ Priestley, Leonard (2005). "Pudgalavāda Buddhist Philosophy" in The Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Source: [18](accessed: September 18, 2008)
  34. ^ Manjushrimitra (undated). Bodhicittabhavana. NB: An English rendering of this text by Kunpal Tulku (2005) is entitled The Cultivation of Enlightened Mind. This is an English rendering from the Tibetan translation of Sri Simha and the Tibetan translator Bhikshu Vairocanaraksita, the original text is no longer extant. Source: [19] (accessed: November 28, 2007)
  35. ^ Lusthaus, Dan (undated). What is and isn't Yogācāra. Source: [20] (accessed: December 4, 2007)
  36. ^ Rinpoche, Dzogchen (2007). Taming the Mindstream in Wolter, Doris (ed.) "Losing the Clouds, Gaining the Sky: Buddhism and the Natural Mind." Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0861713591 p.84 Source: [21] (accessed: July 29, 2008)
  37. ^ AKBh:III 19a-d: Yathākṣepaṃ kramād vṛddhaḥ santānaḥ kleśakarmabhiḥ / paralokaṃ punaryāti...ityanādibhavacakrakam
  38. ^ Waldron, William S. (2003). "Common Ground, Common Cause: Buddhism and Science on the Afflictions of Identity" in Wallace, B. Alan (editor, 2003). Buddhism & Science: Breaking New Ground. New York: Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-12335-3 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.178
  39. ^ Fenner, Peter (1994). "Spiritual Inquiry in Buddhism" in ReVision; Vol. 17, No. 2 Fall. 1994. Pp.13-25. Source: [22] (accessed: September 14, 2008)
  40. ^ Ray, Reginald A. (Ed.)(2004). In the Presence of Masters: Wisdom from 30 Contemporary Tibetan Buddhist Teachers. Boston, Massachusetts, USA: Shambala. ISBN 1-57062-849-1 (pbk.: alk. paper) p.76.
  41. ^ Dowman, Keith (1984). Introduction to Masters of Mahamudra. Source: [23] (accessed: December 4, 2007)
  42. ^ Gyatso, Janet (1998). Apparitions of the Self: The Secret Autobiographies of a Tibetan Visionary; a Translation and Study of Jigme Lingpa's 'Dancing Moon in the Water' and 'Ḍākki's Grand Secret-Talk'. Princeton, New Jersey, USA: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-01110-9 (cloth: alk. paper) p.27
  43. ^ Rinbochay, Lati (orator); Zahler, Leah (editor); & Hopkins, Jeffrey (translator) (1983, 1997). 'Lati Rinbochay's Oral Presentation of the Concentrations and Formless Absorptions' in Rinbochay, Lati; Rinbochay, Denma Lochö; Zahler, Leah (translator); & Hopkins, Jeffrey (translator) (1983, 1997). Meditative States in Tibetan Buddhism. Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-119-X. pp.24-25
  44. ^ The Universe here is qualified by Rawson (1991: p.9) who states that even before 400 CE: "...the classic Lotus Sutra had developed the intuition that the universe is unknowably vast, containing millions upon millions of cosmoses and worlds 'numberless as the sand-grains of the Ganges river', all continuously arising from and falling back into an indefinable Ultimate." In this context the "indefinable Ultimate" may be equated with dharmakaya. In addition, the term Multiverse or Metaverse may be more apt, though still in the sense of the etymology of the Universe in 'revolving as one'.
  45. ^ A footnote in the English rendering of Manjushrimitra's Bodhicittabhavana, by Kunpal Tulku (2005) entitled The Cultivation of Enlightened Mind states that:

    In Buddhist terminology the Universe is referred to as a Tri-sahasra-mahasahasra-dhatu. This describes a Universe consisting of galaxies of (1000)3 x 1000 world-systems with an almost unimaginable event horizon. In every direction these world-systems stretch out, some circling distant uninhabited hot stellar nebula, others rich in sentient beings. When we gaze upwards at the stars, we are gazing toward countless civilizations spanning across the shoreless ocean of the night sky. And yet what we see is only a fraction of the Universe as such. Source: [24] (accessed: November 28, 2007)

  46. ^ Patrul Rinpoche et. al. (1994: p.407) define 'Cosmos of a billion universes' (Tibetan: stong gsum) as :

    ...a cosmos composed of one billion (10003) universes like ours and corresponding to the area of activity of one Buddha.

    Source: Rinpoche, Patrul (author); Brown, Kerry (ed.); and Sharma, Sima (ed.)(1994). The Words of My Perfect Teacher (Tibetan title: kunzang lama'i shelung). Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group. With a forward by the Dalai Lama. San Francisco, California, USA: HarperCollinsPublishers. ISBN 0-06-066449-5 (cloth: alk. paper). p.407
    
    
  47. ^ Orofino (1990: p.82) in discussing the Bönpo Dzogchenpa view of Kun-gzhi (Tibetan: Kun-gzhi) (the "all-base") renders into English an extract from the Kun-gzhi'i zhal-shes sgrong-ma, a philosophical tract from the Zhang-zhung snyan-rgyud, the discourse of Tapihritsa who in a vision, appeared to sNang-bzher lod-po, who (by implication) transcribed the discourse (fol. 1a et seq.):
    'Here will be given the oral teaching which removes doubts on the natural state of kun-gzhi: like the sky, it may appear to be divided into external and internal. Some people with limited minds think that the Wisdom Mind is found within one's own mind but does not pervade external objects. The space of the sky, for example, totally and uniformly pervades all phenomenal existence without any difference between inside and outside, but in constructing a house one separates internal from external space, and one gives this internal space a form, be it square, tringular, oval or round, according to the space the house takes. In the same way the Wisdom Mind totally and uniformly pervades saṃsāra and nirvāṇa, without a division of internal and external. There is no separation of external and internal within space in itself: just as it pervades the external, so it also pervades the internal. Thus the mind of living beings distinguishes dualistically an original mind and an internal one. But because internal and external do not exist, neither do these limits. Self-originated wisdom, just as it pervades the consciousness of every individual also pervades all phenomenal objective existence and the entire external universe. It expands in all directions without a centre or a periphery, having no inside or outside.' Orofino, Giacomella (translation & commentary) (1990). Sacred Tibetan Teachings on Death and Liberation: Texts from the most Ancient Traditions of Tibet. Preface by Namkhai Norbu. Bridport, Dorset, U.K.: Prism Press. ISBN 1 85327 049 0. p.82.
  48. ^ http://www.rainbowbody.net/HeartMind/Yogasutra1.htm (accessed: January 17, 2007)
  49. ^ Waldron, William S. (undated). Buddhist Steps to an Ecology of Mind: Thinking about 'Thoughts without a Thinker'. Source: [25] (accessed: November 1, 2007)
  50. ^ Vajranatha (2001). Dzogchen and Meditation. Source: [26] (accessed: November 1, 2007)
  51. ^ Yuthok, Choedak (1997). Lamdre: Dawn of Enlightenment. (Transcribed and edited by Pauline Westwood with valued assistance from Ot Rastsaphong, Rob Small, Brett Wagland and Whitethorn. Cover Design: Rob Small) Canberra, Australia: Gorum Publications. ISBN 0 9587085 0 9. Source: [27] (accessed: January 3, 2008)
  52. ^ Rabjam, Longchen & The Padma Translation Committee (1998). The Precious Treasury of The Way of Abiding (Wylie: Gnas lugs mdzod). Junction City, CA, USA: Padma Publishing. ISBN 1-881847-09-8 (hardback). p.95

References

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Electronic

External links

  • July 15, 2006 A quotation from the Dalai Lama discusses the nature of the mindstream and how it is placed within the Vajrayana tradition (accessed: December 13, 2007)