Verse III.5

From Buddha-Nature
Ratnagotravibhāga Root Verse III.5

Verse III.5 Variations

स्थानास्थाने विपाके च कर्मणामिन्द्रियेषु च
धातुष्वप्यधिमुक्तौ च मार्गे सर्वत्रगामिनि
E. H. Johnston as input by the University of the West.[1]
sthānāsthāne vipāke ca karmaṇāmindriyeṣu ca
dhātuṣvapyadhimuktau ca mārge sarvatragāmini
E. H. Johnston as input by the University of the West.[2]
།གནས་དང་གནས་མིན་ལས་རྣམས་ཀྱི།
།རྣམ་སྨིན་དང་ནི་དབང་པོ་དང་།
།ཁམས་རྣམས་དང་ནི་མོས་པ་དང་།
།ཀུན་འགྲོའི་ལམ་དང་བསམ་གཏན་སོགས།
What is the case and what is not the case,
Maturation of karmas, faculties,
Constitutions, inclinations,
The path that leads everywhere,
Le correct et l’incorrect,
La rétribution des actes, les facultés,
Les tempéraments, les aspirations,
Les voies de toutes les destinées, les concentrations

RGVV Commentary on Verse III.5

།སྟོབས་རྣམས་དང་ལྡན་པ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ་ནི། གནས་དང་གནས་མིན་ལས་རྣམས་ཀྱི། །རྣམ་སྨིན་དང་ནི་དབང་པོ་དང་། །ཁམས་རྣམས་དང་ནི་མོས་པ་དང་། །ཀུན་འགྲོའི་ལམ་དང་བསམ་གཏན་སོགས། །ཉོན་མོངས་དྲི་མ་མེད་པ་དང་། །{br}གནས་ནི་རྗེས་སུ་དྲན་པ་དང་། །ལྷ་ཡི་མིག་དང་ཞི་བ་དག །མཁྱེན་པའི་སྟོབས་ནི་རྣམ་པ་བཅུ།

Other English translations[edit]

Textual sources[edit]

Commentaries on this verse[edit]

Academic notes[edit]

  1. Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon Unicode Input
  2. Digital Sanskrit Buddhist Canon Unicode Input
  3. Brunnhölzl, Karl. When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and its Meditative Tradition as a Bridge between Sūtra and Tantra. Boston: Snow Lion Publications, an imprint of Shambhala Publications, 2014.
  4. VT (fol. 15v2–3) glosses "what is the case" as "[karmic] causes"; "maturation of karmas," as "the maturation of these karmic [causes]"; "faculties," as the five mental faculties "such as confidence"; "constitutions," as "having the nature of desire and so on"; "inclinations," as "the inclinations of those who have such natures"; "the path that leads everywhere," as "going to hell due to hateful behavior and to heaven, due to virtuous behavior"; "[afflicted] dhyānas," as "obscurations of dhyāna"; and "peace," as "the termination of contamination." For the individual causes of the ten powers according to the Ratnadārikāsūtra, see the note on III.5–6 in CMW.