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Compassion and Merit in Early Buddhism with the Focus on the Aṅguttara Nikāya and the Ekottarika Āgama
Author Kuan, Tse-fu (著)
Source The Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies=IIJBS
Volumev.21
Date2021
Pages53 - 82
PublisherBhikkhu Jagdish Kashyap Institute of Buddhist and Asian Studies, Aditya-Shyam Trust
LocationVaranasi, India [瓦拉納西, 印度]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
AbstractOf the four Nikāyas in Pali and the four Āgamas in Chinese, the numerical collections, i.e. the Aṅguttara Nikāya and the Ekottarika Āgama, are the most adaptable and considerate of individual needs according to ancient Indian/Chinese and modern American monks. Therefore, these two collections contain a considerable proportion of suttas/sūtras that are closely connected with the notion of compassion (karuṇā/anukampā). These two collections include many suttas addressed to Buddhists dealing with the ethical and spiritual concerns of life within the world, and thus involves the issues of merit (puñña). In this study I have illustrated the significant but often underestimated position of compassion with merit in early Buddhist doctrine. The soteriological function of compassion associated with merit is expounded in the early suttas/sūtras, particularly those in the Aṅguttara Nikāya and the Ekottarika Āgama. On the other hand, many discourses in these two collections reify great compassion by extending Buddhist concern from monastics to the laity, caring for all beings’ worldly welfare based on an ethical system of merit.
Table of contents1. Compassion and merit in relation to the purpose of the numerical collections 53
2. Compassion: finite or infinite 58
3. Merit from compassion 61
4. Compassion put into practical action 65
5. Compassion and seeing all as equals 68
6. Compassion and enlightenment in connection with merit 72
7. Conclusion 75
ISSN09724893 (P)
Hits232
Created date2022.03.08



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