Authorship of the RGV
From Buddha-Nature
- This table comes from Chapter 1 of Kazuo Kano's PhD Dissertation, "rNgog Blo-ldan-shes-rab's Summary of the Ratnagotravibhāga: The First Tibetan Commentary on a Crucial Source for the Buddha‐Nature Doctrine," University of Hamburg, 2006.
Authorship of the RGV[1] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
basic verse | comm. verse | prose comm. | ||
Chinese tradition (ca. 511) | Sāramati | |||
Central Asia (ca. late 8th cent.) | Maitreya | (not mentioned) | ||
Indian tradition (early 11th cent.) | Maitreya | |||
Tibetan tradition (late 11th cent.) | Maitreya | Asaṅga | ||
rNgog's commentary (late 11th cent.) | Maitreya | Asaṅga(?) | ||
(modern scholars) | ||||
Obermiller 1931 | Maitreya | Asaṅga | ||
Tsukinowa 1936 | Sāramati | Maitreya | Asaṅga | |
Johnston 1950 | Sthiramati | |||
Frauwallner 1956; Ui 1959 | Sāramati | |||
Nakamura 1961 | Sāramati | Vasubandhu | ||
Takasaki 1966 | (Maitreya ?) | Sāramati | ||
Seyfort Ruegg 1969 | Maitreya = Sāramati | Asaṅga |
- For the positions of modern scholars, see Tsukinowa 1936, Johnston 1950:xi, Frauwallner 1956:255, Ui 1959:89-97, Nakamura 1961, Takasaki 1966:6-9, Seyfort Ruegg 1969:46, Takasaki 1974:3-13, Takasaki 1989:392-397, Takasaki 1999:3-7. Takasaki (1999:15-18) concisely presents previous studies on the authorship of the RGV.