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Mahāyāna Sūtras in Recent Scholarship
Author Drewes, David (著)
Source Canadian Journal of Buddhist Studies
Volumev.16
Date2021
Pages36 - 74
PublisherNalanda College of Buddhist Studies
Publisher Url http://jps.library.utoronto.ca/index.php/cjbs
LocationToronto, Canada [多倫多, 加拿大]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
AbstractMahāyāna sūtras are a large class of ancient Buddhist texts composed primarily during the first centuries CE. They take the literary form of more traditional sūtras, but are distinguished mainly in their claim to present special teachings intended for bodhisattvas. Although they were long considered the scriptural texts of "Mahāyāna Buddhism," their authors and users never split institutionally from so-called Hīnayāna Buddhists. Rather than the texts of a distinct form of Buddhism, it is better to regard them as a controversial class of text that spread within pre-existing Buddhist institutional structures. Although they were thought to have been composed and used chiefly in written form, they were mainly transmitted orally by figures known as dharmabhāṇakas, or "preachers of Dharma," who recited and taught them in public preaching rituals. Rather than advocating that they become bodhisattvas, the authors of these texts depict their followers as having already become advanced bodhisattvas in past lives. Some have argued that early sūtras show an orientation toward asceticm and meditation, but the texts rarely mention these practices. They mainly advocate practices oriented toward the supernatural and the afterlife, especially textual practices focused on Mahāyāna sūtras themselves.
Table of contentsIntroduction 38
Historical Background 39
Textual Practice 43
Multiple Mahāyānas 46
Standard Interpretations 48
The Idea of the Bodhisattva 53
Soteriology 55
Ontology and Buddhology 63
Conclusion 65
Appendix: Overview of Scholarship 66
Bibliography 68
ISSN1710825X (P); 17108268 (E)
Hits113
Created date2022.03.10
Modified date2022.11.22



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