Longchen Rabjam (1308–1363), also known as Longchenpa, is a great luminary of Tibetan Buddhism. He was highly skilled in all aspects of scholarship from an early age and excelled throughout his life in the practice and accomplishment of the Dharma. Regarded as a great Dzogchen master, Longchenpa had many pure visions where he was given direct instructions from Guru Padmasambhava and is recognized as an emanation of Vimalamitra. Longchenpa’s prolific writings have made him one of Tibet’s most renowned and precious teachers.
摘要
Released in paperback for the first time, this new translation of the Tibetan master Longchenpa’s famous work systematically presents the path of meditation according to the Tibetan Dzogchen tradition.
Longchenpa’s Finding Rest in Meditation is a classic Buddhist text outlining the main points of meditation, namely, where one should meditate, what qualities a practitioner should possess and develop, and what should be practiced. These instructions are a pithy distillation of the entirety of the Buddhist path designed to stabilize one’s direct awareness of the nature of mind through meditative absorption.
The Padmakara Translation Group has provided us with a clear and fluid translation to Finding Rest in Meditation, which will serve as a genuine aid to study and meditation. This text follows the first volume of Longchenpa’s trilogy, Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind, which focuses on establishing the view and precedes the final volume, Finding Rest in Illusion, which focuses on post-meditation yogic conduct.
目次
Finding Rest in the Nature of the Mind 1 Enlightenment 85 The Generation and Perfection Stages and Their Union 103 The View That Dwells in Neither of the Two Extremes 115 The Three Aspects of Meditative Concentration 143 The Great Spontaneously Present Result 151 Conclusion 163 Mind Intellect and Consciousness 171 The Three Natures 179 The Universal Ground 191 The Universal Ground the Eight Consciousnesses 201 Refuge 243 The Three Concentrations of the Generation Stage 253 The Mind and the Objects That Appear to It 261 Notes 269 Texts Cited in The Great Chariot 301 The Padmakara Translation Group Translations into English 309