Dilun school
The Dilun School (Chinese Dilun zong地 论 宗 / 地 論 宗 or Dilun xuepai地 论 学派) or Dashabhumika School ( Sanskrit Daśabhūmikā ) or "Ten Level School" - after the ten levels that a Bodhisattva takes up to attainment the Buddhahood has to go through - was one of the thirteen schools of Chinese Buddhism of the Mahayana -tradition from the time of the Northern Wei dynasty to the early Tang dynasty . It is counted as part of Yogācāra ( yoga practice). Their representatives are called the Ten-Step Masters .
The school made the by Bodhiruci (died after the 537th) translated Daśabhūmikasūtra Sastra (Chinese Shidi jing lun , Taisho 1522) as a basis, one of Vasubandhu (4th century) wrote Treatise Dashabhumika Sutra ( Daśabhūmikasūtra ; "Ten-step Sutra "), after which it is named. There was a separation into a southern and a northern Dilun school, with Bodhiruci representing the northern and Ratnamati the southern.
literature
- Carmen Meinert : Chinese Chan- and Tibetan rDzogs chen teaching , Diss.Bonn 2004
- Kosei Ishii: Using XML for Dunhuang Manuscript Database: The Dilun Manuscript Project (PDF file; 18 kB)
Web links
Footnotes
- ↑ See Sanskrit bhūmi and Chinese ( shídì ).
- ↑ Chinese Shisan zong十三 宗
- ↑ Chinese Hanchuan Fojiao 汉 传 佛教
- ↑ Chinese Dilun shi地 论 师
- ↑ Chinese 十 地 經 論 Shídì jīng lùn; Japanese Jūji kyō ron
- ↑ Chinese Shídì jīng十 地 經
Dilun school (alternative names of the lemma) |
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地 论 宗 Dilun zong, Dìlùn zōng, Dilun school; Dilun xuepai 地 论 学派, Jiron-shū (Japanese); Jiron jong 지론 종 (kor.), Dashabhumika school, Địa luận tông (viet.) |