Gzhan stong khas len seng ge'i nga ro

From Buddha-Nature
LibraryCommentariesGzhan stong khas len seng ge'i nga ro
(Created page with "{{Text |TextClass=Commentary |FullTextEnglish=No |FullTextSanskrit=No |FullTextSktRoman=No |FullTextTibetan=No |FullTextChinese=No |FullTextPali=No |CoverFile=File:Gzhan stong...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 2: Line 2:
|TextClass=Commentary
|TextClass=Commentary
|FullTextEnglish=No
|FullTextEnglish=No
|FullTextFrench=No
|FullTextSanskrit=No
|FullTextSanskrit=No
|FullTextSktRoman=No
|FullTextSktRoman=No

Latest revision as of 14:26, 2 September 2020




གཞན་སྟོང་ཁས་ལེན་སེང་གེའི་ང་རོ།
gzhan stong khas len seng ge'i nga ro
Lion's Roar: Affirming Other Emptiness
SOURCE TEXT

Mipam's other "lion's roar"—his Lion's Roar: Affirming Other Emptiness—shows the way he establishes an other-emptiness view that affirms the existence of the ultimate truth as not empty of its own essence. (Source: Duckworth, Douglas. Jamgön Mipham: His Life and Teachings. Boston: Shambhala Publications, 2011: p 58.)

Relevance to Buddha-nature

This text argues that buddha-nature is not empty of its natural qualities but only the adventitious impurities in the context of establishing what is ontologically existent or non-existent on the conventional level. Thus, it justifies the position of the other emptiness in the context of the verifying conventional ontic reality.


This Text on Adarsha - If it doesn't load here, refresh your browser.

The wikipage input value is empty (e.g. <code>, [[]]</code>) and therefore it cannot be used as a name or as part of a query condition.