Yogacarabhumi-sastra
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Yogācārabhūmi-śāstra, also known as "Discourse on the Stages of Yogic Practice" is the encyclopaedic and definitive text of the Yogācāra school of Buddhism. It is thought to have been composed in India between 300 and 350 CE.
The complete work comprises five major sections: the seventeen levels (bāhu-bhūmi) which covers the entire range of mental and spiritual levels in Buddhism according to Mahāyāna; the Compendium of Definitions (viniścaya-samgraha) which discusses and explicates aspects of the bāhu-bhūmi portion; the Compendium of Exegesis (vivarana-samgraha), a manual of hermeneutical and exegetical techniques; the Compendium of Synonyms (paryāya-samgraha) defining many of the various strings of quasi-synonymical expressions found in the Agamas; the Compendium of Topics (vastu-samgraha) summarizing and explainin the key topics of each sūtra contained in the Samyukta-āgama; and the Compendium of the Vinaya (vinaya-samgraha). The Chinese version also contains a Compendium of Abhidharma, missing from the Tibetan translation.
Most of the bāhu-bhūmi section which includes such seminal works as the Bodhisattva-bhūmi and the Śrāvaka-bhūmi suvives in Sanskrit, but little survives from the other parts.
Actually there is a difference between yoga and sastra according to Indians.Satra word is generally uses in many sense like it is generally uses in the terms for a collection, sometimes it is used for indian ancient books which is known as sastra. it is not neccesary that sastra is scientifically proved but yoga is scientifically proved....SATYANAND(SATISH) Direct disciple of SWAMI ATMANAND JI SARASWATI
[edit] Tibetan translation
The Tibetan version was done by team of Indian scholars including Jinamitra, Prajñāvarma, Surendrabodhi, together with the renowned Tibetan translator, Ye-shes sDe. In East Asia, authorship is attributed to Maitreya-nātha, while the Tibetan tradition considers it to have been composed by Asanga, but in all probability it is the work of several writers who compiled it during the 4th century CE.
Master Nan Huai-Chin touches on the Yogacarabhumi-sastra in his book "To Realize Enlightenment."
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
- Digital Dictionary of Buddhism (log in with userID "guest")
- Summary of the Yogācārabhūmi-śāstra, Charles Muller and Dan Lusthaus
- Chinese-Sanskrit-Tibetan Terms: Yogacarabhumi
- Indica et Buddhica - Lexica (searchable Yogācārabhūmi included) by Richard Mahoney et al.
- Yogācārabhūmi Database (Complete marked-up Chinese text with much of the available Sanskrit and some Tibetan)