The Profound Treasury of the Ocean of Dharma, Volume One

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LibraryBooksThe Profound Treasury of the Ocean of Dharma, Volume One

 
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|BookEssay=This book represents a distillation of key teachings given by Chögyam Trungpa on the "Path of Individual Liberation." An extremely influential Tibetan teacher in North America, Chögyam Trungpa coined many terms, influenced the translation of Tibetan into English, and introduced Buddhist thought and terminology to many western peoples between the 1960s and the 1980s. His style is a unique expression of Buddhist ideas for a western audience. In this first volume, buddha-nature is related to as a basis for practice and as the inherent capacity for awakening shared by all people.
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|BookEssay=This comprehensive guide to the body of Buddhist teachings known as the hinayana brings together theory and practice in a way that reveals contemplative experience to be inseparable from the traditional concepts used to describe it. Based on teachings from the Vajradhatu Seminaries—the three-month-long meditation-and-study retreats that Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche led annually from 1973 to 1986—it covers in detail topics such as the four noble truths, karma, the four foundations of mindfulness, meditation, the refuge vows, the three jewels, the five skandhas, and more. The Path of Individual Liberation, along with its two companion volumes, presents a complete map of the Tibetan Buddhist path from beginning to middle to end, from a teacher who had an extraordinary ability to convey the buddhadharma to the hearts and minds of his students. ([https://www.shambhala.com/the-path-of-individual-liberation-volume-1-3107.html Shambhala Publications - Source Accessed March 21, 2019])
  
 
"To begin with, we have to find out who we are. When we do so, we realize that we are buddha already, that we possess buddha nature. We might like that, or we might find that difficult to accept." (page 17)
 
"To begin with, we have to find out who we are. When we do so, we realize that we are buddha already, that we possess buddha nature. We might like that, or we might find that difficult to accept." (page 17)
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"In the Buddhist-English terminology that has developed, suchness or isness refers to something that is fully and truly there. It is connected with rediscovering buddha nature." (page 446)
 
"In the Buddhist-English terminology that has developed, suchness or isness refers to something that is fully and truly there. It is connected with rediscovering buddha nature." (page 446)
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|BookToc=<center>''Foreword by the Seventeenth Karmapa • xi''</center>
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<center>''Foreword by the Ninth Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche • xiii''</center>
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<center>''Foreword by the Seventh Shechen Rabjam • xv''</center>
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<center>''Foreword by Tulku Thondup Rinpoche • xix''</center>
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<center>''Foreword by Diana Judith Mukpo • xxi''</center>
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<center>''Publisher’s Foreword • xxiii''</center>
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<center>''Preface by the Sakyong, Jamgön Mipham Rinpoche • xxv''</center>
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<center>''Acknowledgments • xxvii''</center>
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<center>''Editor’s Introduction • xxxi''</center>
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<center>''Pronunciation of Sanskrit and Tibetan • li''</center>
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*Part One: Entering the Path
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<center>''Encountering the Dharma''</center>
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**{{i|1. Beginning at the Beginning|3}}
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**{{i|2. The Frozen Space of Ego|6}}
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**{{i|3. The Path of Individual Salvation|11}}
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**{{i|4. Opening to the True Dharma|21}}
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**{{i|5. Joining Study and Practice|40}}
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**{{i|6. Achieving Sanity Here on Earth|46}}
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**{{i|7. The Path, the Vehicle, and the Traveler|56}}
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**{{i|8. Relating with a Teacher|61}}
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**{{i|9. The Painful Reality of Samsara|65}}
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<center>''Taking Refuge''</center>
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**{{i|10. Buddhadharma Fever|81}}
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**{{i|11. Taking Refuge in the Three Jewels|89}}
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<center>''Reflecting on the Three Jewels''</center>
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**{{i|12. The Sutra of the Recollection of the Noble Three Jewels|97}}
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**{{i|13. The Buddha|100}}
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**{{i|14. The Dharma |113}}
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**{{i|15. The Sangha|116}}
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*Part Two: Discipline/Shila
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<center>''Taming Neurosis''</center>
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**{{i|16. The Loneliness and Joy of Discipline|127}}
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**{{i|17. Taming the Neurotic Mind|133}}
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**{{i|18. Cutting the Root of Samsara|138}}
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**{{i|19. Continually Gnawing Rock|144}}
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<center>''Cultivating Virtue''</center>
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**{{i|20. Becoming a Dharmic Person|155}}
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**{{i|21. Refraining from Harm|165}}
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*Part Three: Meditation/Samadhi
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<center>''Shamatha: The Practice of Mindfulness''</center>
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**{{i|22. Simplicity|173}}
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**{{i|23. Following the Example of the Buddha|179}}
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**{{i|24. The Basic Minimum|187}}
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**{{i|25. Taking Your Seat|193}}
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**{{i|26. Breathing Out|201}}
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**{{i|27. Labeling Thoughts|207}}
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**{{i|28. Touch and Go|212}}
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**{{i|29. Encountering Problems|215}}
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**{{i|30. Leading a Spotless Life|223}}
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<center>''Refining Your Shamatha Practice''</center>
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**{{i|331. Resting in Shamatha|231}}
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**{{i|332. Identifying Obstacles to Shamatha|243}}
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**{{i|333. Antidotes to the Obstacles to Shamatha|248}}
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**{{i|334. Cutting Thoughts and Short-Circuiting the Kleshas|257}}
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**{{i|335. An Element of Magic|264}}
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<center>''Working with the Mind''</center>
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**{{i|36. Transcending Dualistic Mind|267}}
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**{{i|37. Rediscovering Your Own Mind|273}}
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**{{i|38. Mixing Mind with Space|281}}
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<center>''The Four Foundations of Mindfulness''</center>
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**{{i|39. Mindfulness of Body|285}}
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**{{i|40. Mindfulness of Life|294}}
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**{{i|41. Mindfulness of Effort|304}}
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**{{i|42. Mindfulness of Mind|316}}
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<center>''Vipashyana: The Practice of Awareness''</center>
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**{{i|43. The Freshness of Unconditional Mind|329}}
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**{{i|44. Beyond Picking and Choosing|337}}
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**{{i|45. The Art of Everyday Living|343}}
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**{{i|46. Glimpses of Emptiness|348}}
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**{{i|47. Investigating the Subtleties of Experience|353}}
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**{{i|48. Sharpening One’s Perception|359}}
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**{{i|49. Self-Perpetuating Awareness|367}}
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*Part Four: The Four Noble Truths
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<center>''Suffering''</center>
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**{{i|50. The Snowballing of Deception|373}}
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**{{i|51. Recognizing the Reality of Suffering|377}}
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**{{i|52. Dissecting the Experience of Suffering|382}}
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<center>''The Origin of Suffering''</center>
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**{{i|53. The Power of Flickering Thoughts|397}}
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**{{i|54. The Development of Set Patterns|401}}
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**{{i|55. Perpetually Re-Creating Suffering|406}}
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<center>''The Cessation of Suffering''</center>
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**{{i|56. Awakening and Blossoming|421}}
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**{{i|57. Meditation as the Path to Buddhahood|426}}
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**{{i|58. Transcending Samsara and Nirvana|431}}
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<center>''The Truth of the Path''</center>
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**{{i|59. The Doubtless Path|443}}
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**{{i|60. The Five Paths|449}}
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*Part Five: The Hinayana Journey
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<center>''The Journey in Terms of Yanas''</center>
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**{{i|61. Shravakayana: The Yana of Hearing and Proclaiming|467}}
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**{{i|62. Pratyekabuddhayana: The Yana of Individual Salvation|478}}
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<center>''The Journey in Terms of Paths''</center>
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**{{i|63. The Lesser Path of Accumulation|489}}
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**{{i|64. The Middle Path of Accumulation|499}}
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**{{i|65. The Greater Path of Accumulation|505}}
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**{{i|66. The Path of Unification|511}}
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*Part Six: Knowledge/Prajna
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<center>''Unraveling the Myth of Ego''</center>
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**{{i|67. Ego: The Thought That We Exist|519}}
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**{{i|68. Cutting Through the Numbness of Ego|526}}
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**{{i|69. Taking the Teachings to Heart|535}}
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<center>''Appendix 1: A Hinayana Morning Liturgy • 547''</center>
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<center>''Appendix 2: Working with Threefold Logic • 549''</center>
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<center>''Appendix 3: Outline of Teachings • 551''</center>
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<center>''Glossary • 573''</center>
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<center>''Sources • 597''</center>
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<center>''Resources • 607''</center>
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<center>''About the Author • 609''</center>
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<center>''Credits • 615''</center>
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<center>''Index • 617''</center>
 
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Latest revision as of 13:20, 31 July 2023

The Profound Treasury of the Ocean of Dharma, Volume One
Book
Book

This comprehensive guide to the body of Buddhist teachings known as the hinayana brings together theory and practice in a way that reveals contemplative experience to be inseparable from the traditional concepts used to describe it. Based on teachings from the Vajradhatu Seminaries—the three-month-long meditation-and-study retreats that Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche led annually from 1973 to 1986—it covers in detail topics such as the four noble truths, karma, the four foundations of mindfulness, meditation, the refuge vows, the three jewels, the five skandhas, and more. The Path of Individual Liberation, along with its two companion volumes, presents a complete map of the Tibetan Buddhist path from beginning to middle to end, from a teacher who had an extraordinary ability to convey the buddhadharma to the hearts and minds of his students. (Source: Shambhala Publications)


Citation Trungpa, Chögyam, and Judith L. Lief. The Profound Treasury of the Ocean of Dharma. Vol. 1, The Path of Individual Liberation. Boston: Shambhala Publications, 2013.