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To those familiar with the esoteric traditions of Buddhism, the Great Perfection is well known as a pathway of instant enlightenment, a vehicle for a sudden breakthrough of enlightened awareness here in the present. We may wonder, though, what the Great Perfection has to say about the obvious reality that there are all kinds of different beings who live under all kinds of conditions, and the reality that we ourselves go through all kinds of emotional turbulence even as we study the Great Perfection. What does the Great Perfection have to say about the demonic side of things? What does it say about our understandings of what divine beings are? How does it integrate a vision of the divine and the demonic into the fabric of instantaneous enlightenment? How do practitioners of the Great Perfection understand their own demons and preferred deities, and come to terms with them? In a world view wherein everyone is already enlightened, what is the function of compassion? These concerns are addressed in The Gods and the Demons Are Not Two. This Tantra offers a lengthy discussion of the demonic and the divine, with information on the recognition of demons and their different classes, how we can know whether our lives are controlled by demons, a discussion of exorcism, and a thorough presentation on the Great Perfection�s concern for all classes of living beings. We are introduced into a mythological world populated by a wide variety of demonic and heavenly beings and are encouraged to �share the taste� (ro snyoms) of what life is like for them, a kind of sympathetic comprehension of other beings. We are guided through the realms of samsara, and encouraged to share in the taste of what it would be like if we were some other being. How would it feel to be an element, a demon, an illness, a denizen of hell, an animal, or a god? Empathy is used to point us toward an understanding of a kind of perfection that there is in each and every living thing, a great perfection.
Great Perfection Series from Christopher Wilkenson
The Gods and Demons Are Not Two, Christopher Wilkinson, Paperback, 217 Pages, 2015, $34.99
Christopher Wilkinson began his career in Buddhist literature in 1972 at the age of fifteen, taking refuge vows from his guru Dezhung Rinpoche. In that same year he began formal study of Tibetan language at the University of Washington under Geshe Ngawang Nornang and Turrell Wylie. He then received many instructions from Kalu Rinpoche, completing the traditional practice of five hundred thousand Mahamudra preliminaries. He became a Buddhist monk at the age of eighteen, living in the home of Dezhung Rinpoche while he continued his studies at the University of Washington. He graduated in 1980 with a B.A. degree in Asian Languages and Literature and another B.A. degree in Comparative Religion (College Honors, Magna Cum Laude, Phi Beta Kappa). After a two year tour of Buddhist pilgrimage sites throughout Asia he worked for five years in refugee resettlement in Seattle, Washington, then proceeded to the University of Calgary for an M.A. in Buddhist Studies where he wrote a groundbreaking thesis on the Yangti transmission of the Great Perfection tradition titled "Clear Meaning: Studies on a Thirteenth Century rDzog chen Tantra." He proceeded to work on a critical edition of the Sanskrit text of the 20,000 line Perfection of Wisdom in Berkeley, California, followed by an intensive study of Burmese language in Hawaii. In 1990 he began three years' service as a visiting professor in English Literature in Sulawesi, Indonesia, exploring the remnants of the ancient Sri Vijaya Empire there. He worked as a research fellow for the Shelly and Donald Rubin Foundation for several years, playing a part in the early development of the famous Rubin Museum of Art. In the years that followed he became a Research Fellow at the Centre de Recherches sur les Civilisations de l'Asie Orientale, Collge de France, and taught at the University of Calgary as an Adjunct Professor for five years. He is currently completing his doctoral dissertation, a study of the Yoginitantra first translated into Tibetan during the Eighth century of our era, at the University of Leiden's Institute for Area Studies.
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<br> contents
CONTENTS: The Gods and the Demons are not Two |
|
Acknowledgments |
i |
Introduction |
iii |
1. The
all good one is beyond the dharma |
1 |
2. A discourse in which
vajra dharma man blesses the five nirmanakayas |
9 |
3, An explanation of the
blessings of the three kayas of the children of the victorious ones |
17 |
4.
Self-liberation through recognition of the view |
25 |
5. Recognising the meditator
and cutting through the roots of Mara's life |
31 |
6.
The recognition of Maras in our practice |
37 |
7. A presentation on results |
43 |
8. A description of the
dharmakaya's blessings upon the sambhogakaya |
55 |
9. A
description of the blessings of the dharmakaya and the recognition of
the dharmakaya in the six classes of living things |
67 |
10.
Recognition of the sambhogakaya |
71 |
11. The nirmanakaya
appearsin the circle of the light of awareness |
79 |
12. The revelation
that vemacitra is nirmanakaya |
83 |
13. Sharing the
taste of being an external fury |
89 |
14. Sharing the
taste of diseases from intermittent attachment and hatred |
95 |
15. Sharing a taste
for ideas |
101 |
16.Sharing the
taste of being a secret and unsurpassed deity |
109 |
17. The time of the
destruction of the world |
113 |
18. Living in a
peaceful abiding |
117 |
19. Teachings on
the roots of our attachments to the world |
121 |
20. Attachment to
the land of the gods and teaching the dharma there |
125 |
21. Attachment to
the self-originating compassion while in the land of humans |
129 |
22. The ways in
which the asuras are attached, and turning the wheel of the
dharma for them |
135 |
23. The ways we are
attached to the world of the animals and the descent of compassion even
on them |
137 |
24. Teachings to
destroy that hungry ghosts' attachment to the external world and
turning the wheel that brings compassion down from above |
141 |
25. Turning the
wheel of the dharma of compassion the the abodes of hell. |
145 |
26. Turning the
wheel of self-evident compassion for the cold hells and for the
temporary hells that are near them. |
147 |
27. Teaching the
way we become attached to the vajra hell and turning the wheel of the
dharma of compassion there |
149 |
28. A teaching that
turns the wheel of the dharma of compassion on attachment, destruction
and emptiness along with the three kinds of beings who experience them
and that their magnificent pilgrimage sites will not endure |
153 |
29. Teaching that
compassion falls upon the philosophical theories in the scriptures
about the vehcles and their conclusive result |
157 |
30. The spike of
reason is planted through the external and internal and plants the
spike of analogies for teaching, plants the the spike of words of
vision, and plants the spike of meanings into words |
161 |
31. Revealing the
heart that conceals the external, internal and secret |
163 |
32. Bequest of the
tantra |
165 |
Tibetan Text |
167 |
About the translator |
215 |
notes to the
introduction |
217 |
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<br><br> <br>
<br> contents
CONTENTS: Fathoming the Mind: Inquiry and
Insight in Dudjom Lingpa's Vajra Essence |
|
Foreword by Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche |
ix |
Foreword by Tsokny Rinpoche |
xiii |
Preface |
xv |
Introduction |
1 |
A serviceable mind |
2 |
The
current dark age of materialism |
11 |
1. The nature of mind |
29 |
The
phenomenological nature of consciousness |
30 |
The essential nature of the mind |
38 |
The ultimate nature of the mind |
44 |
The transcendent
nature of consciousness |
48 |
2.
Revealing your own face as the sharp vajra of vipasyana |
55 |
3.
Revealing the ground dharmakaya |
71 |
Determining the
identitylessness of persons as subjects |
71 |
Determining the
identitylessness of phenomena as objects |
85 |
Coarse and subtle
considerations for determing emptiness |
116 |
How all phenomena
arise and appear |
124 |
The point of
realising the emptiness of phenomena |
180 |
Epilogue |
191 |
Afterword:
New frontiers in the collaboration ob buddhism and science |
197 |
Glossary |
209 |
Notes |
231 |
Bibliography |
245 |
Index |
257 |
About the translator |
269 |
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