'Khandha Passages' in the Vinayapitaka and the Four Main Nikayas Author
8 Angebote vergleichen
Bester Preis: € 46,90 (vom 21.11.2019)The Khandha Passages in the Vinayapitaka and the Four Main Nikayas (Paperback) (2000)
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, in Deutsch, Austrian Academy of Sciences, Austria, Taschenbuch, neu.
Von Händler/Antiquariat, The Book Depository EURO [60485773], London, United Kingdom.
Language: English,Chinese,Sanskrit,Tibetan Brand New Book. This book investigates all passages in the first parts of the Pali canon that refer to the teaching of the five branches of a person that should be distanced. 449 passages mentioning the series rupa, vedana, san n a, san.khara and vin n ana (translated as body, feeling, ideation, impulses and sensation) or hinting at them by means of the terms upada nakkhandha or khandha are recorded. All passages that are not repetitions are critically edited and translated into English. If the context allows, remarks on their soteriological function are made; if available, parallels in (hybrid) Sanskrit fragments, Chinese and Tibetan translations are referred to or quoted. The long introduction points to possible historical arrangements of different formulations of this teaching and discusses the meaning of the five terms rupa, etc, with special emphasis on san.khara. Appendix 1 shows where the terms upadanakkhandha or khandha can be found and whether a passage refers to a person that should distance the five items (ca.60 of the passages), or only speaks of distancing without mentioning a person (ca.40 ), or denies the existence of a person (1 passage). Appendix 2 quotes, with English translations, the few traces of this teaching in the verse texts of the fifth Nikaya (none in the Suttanipata!). Apendix 3 refers to stereotype formulas and Apendix 4 contains ancient names and terms.
'Khandha Passages' in the Vinayapitaka and the Four Main Nikayas Tilmann Vetter Author
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, vermutlich in Englisch, Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, Taschenbuch, neu.
This book investigates all passages in the first parts of the Pali canon that refer to the teaching of the five branches of a person that should be distanced. 449 passages mentioning the series rupa, vedana, san~n~a, san.khara and vin~n~ana (translated as body, feeling, ideation, impulses and sensation) or hinting at them by means of the terms upada nakkhandha or khandha are recorded. All passages that are not repetitions are critically edited and translated into English. If the context allows, remarks on their soteriological function are made; if available, parallels in (hybrid) Sanskrit fragments, Chinese and Tibetan translations are referred to or quoted. The long introduction points to possible historical arrangements of different formulations of this teaching and discusses the meaning of the five terms rupa, etc, with special emphasis on san.khara. Appendix 1 shows where the terms upadanakkhandha or khandha can be found and whether a passage refers to a person that should distance the five items (ca.60% of the passages), or only speaks of distancing without mentioning a person (ca.40%), or denies the existence of a person (1 passage). Appendix 2 quotes, with English translations, the few traces of this teaching in the verse texts of the fifth Nikaya (none in the Suttanipata!). Apendix 3 refers to stereotype formulas and Apendix 4 contains ancient names and terms.
The "Khandha Passages" in the Vinayapitaka and the four main Nikayas
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, vermutlich in Englisch, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien, Österreich, neu, Hörbuch.
This book investigates all passages in the first parts of the Pali canon that refer to the teaching of the five “branches” of a person that should be distanced. 449 passages mentioning the series rupa, vedana, san~n~a, san.khara and vin~n~ana (translated as “body”, “feeling”, “ideation”, “impulses” and “sensation”) or hinting at them by means of the terms upada nakkhandha or khandha are recorded. All passages that are not repetitions are critically edited and translated into English. If the context allows, remarks on their soteriological function are made, if available, parallels in (hybrid) Sanskrit fragments, Chinese and Tibetan translations are referred to or quoted.The long introduction points to possible historical arrangements of different formulations of this teaching and discusses the meaning of the five terms rupa, etc, with special emphasis on san.khara. Appendix 1 shows where the terms upadanakkhandha or khandha can be found and whether a passage refers to a person that should distance the five items (ca.60% of the passages), or only speaks of distancing without mentioning a person (ca.40%), or denies the existence of a person (1 passage). Appendix 2 quotes, with English translations, the few traces of this teaching in the verse texts of the fifth Nikaya (none in the Suttanipata!). Apendix 3 refers to stereotype formulas and Apendix 4 contains ancient names and terms.
The Khandha Passages in the Vinayapitaka and the four main Nikayas
ISBN: 3700129327 bzw. 9783700129325, vermutlich in Englisch, Verlag D.Oesterreichische, Taschenbuch, neu.
The "Khandha Passages" in the Vinayapitaka and the four main Nikayas
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, vermutlich in Englisch, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien, Österreich, neu, Hörbuch.
Die Beschreibung dieses Angebotes ist von geringer Qualität oder in einer Fremdsprache. Trotzdem anzeigen
The "Khandha Passages" in the Vinayapitaka and the four main Nikayas (2000)
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, in Deutsch, Verlag D.Oesterreichische Jan 2000, Taschenbuch, neu.
Neuware - 357 pp. Englisch.
'Khandha Passages' in the Vinayapitaka and the fo (2000)
ISBN: 9783700129325 bzw. 3700129327, vermutlich in Englisch, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien, Österreich, Taschenbuch, neu.
Die Beschreibung dieses Angebotes ist von geringer Qualität oder in einer Fremdsprache. Trotzdem anzeigen