- of the
Mahayana path of
mental training (see five
paths pañcamārga).
Yogācārins made use of
ideas from
previous traditions, such as Prajñāpāramitā and...
-
entities existing). The
Yogācārins criticized the Mādhyamikas for
tending towards nihilism,
while the Mādhyamikas
criticized the
Yogācārins for
tending towards...
-
Sutra that the
Buddha regarded Buddhahood as a 'great atman'
caused the
Yogacarins considerable distress."
representation with face and attributes) Lochtefeld...
- of consciousness) and Cittamātra ("Mind-Only", Wylie: sems-tsam-pa).
Yogacārins base
their views on
texts from Maitreya, Asaṅga and Vasubandhu. Yogacara...
- of this
theory but such a view is
absent from the
works of the
early Yogācārins such as Asaṇga and Vasubandhu."
Yogacara postulates an
advaya (nonduality)...
-
pratyekabuddha or samyak-saṃbuddha (fully self-awakened one). For the
yogacarins then, only some
beings (those who have the "bodhisattva lineage") can...
- such as
those of the Sarvastivadins, the Sautrantikas, and even the
Yogacarins". King 2002, p. 128: "Although it is
common to find
Western scholars and...
-
Garfield and
German philologist Lambert Schmithausen argue that
Indian Yogacarins are
metaphysical idealists that
reject the
existence of a mind independent...
-
dependent and
empty way. Indeed,
Madhyamaka philosophers were
criticized by
Yogācārins like
Asanga for
being nihilistic (and thus, of
having fallen from the...
- mindstreams, and thus
Kochumuttom also
calls it a
realistic pluralism. The
Yogācārins defined three basic modes by
which we
perceive our world.
These are referred...