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Topic: Sanron


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In the News (Tue 14 Feb 12)

  
  Nara Buddhism   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
The six schools of Nara Buddhism, introduced into Japan during the seventh and eighth centuries CE were Hosso (= Mind-Only, Yogacara); Sanron (= Three Treatises, Madhyamika), Kegon (Flower-Garland, Avatamsaka); Ritsu (= Rules of Discipline, Vinaya); Jojitsu (= Establishment of truth, Satyasiddhi); and Kusha (study of the Abhidharma-kosha texts).
They were simply extensions into Japan of well-established Korean or Chinese Buddhist institutions and their text-based philosophical doctrines were derived directly from Chinese or Korean parent denominations.
For example, the Sanron school was led in Nara by a Korean monk and took as its basic scriptures the same three Madhyamaka texts (Middle Treatise, Hundred Treatise, Twelve-Topic Treatise) as the 'Three Treatises' school in China and Korea of which it formed a part.
philtar.ucsm.ac.uk /encyclopedia/easia/nara.html   (497 words)

  
 Thought You'd Seen It All ?
Sanron are currently in the process of obtaining permission from the various Governmental and Council bodies to make the three Australian jumps, and believe there will be no objection by anyone.
Sanron is a small privately owned Australian company engaged in engineering entrepreneuring - patent marketing, research and development, and consultant engineering - and is financed by a group of private businessmen.
An important feature of the Sanron rotary engine is its ability to develop high power on an external combustion cycle, using the full high temperature discharge of a rocket combustion motor.
www.northernthunder.com /sanron.html   (2087 words)

  
 Manjushri - Japanese Sanron School Teaching   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
This school was brought to Japan by the Korean monk Ekwan in the year 625 and further spread there by two of his students.
The Sanron in Japan was never an independently organized school; its teachings were studied by followers of all Buddhist schools because it contained essential elements for an understanding of the Mahayana that served as a theoretical basis for many schools.
The Sanron school was a major influence on Prince Shotoku (574-622), who unified Japan.
www.manjushri.com /TEACH/jSanron.htm   (143 words)

  
 The Collected Works of Shinran Commentaries Notes on the Inscriptions on Sacred Scrolls 10
The esoteric practices of Shingon or Tendai meditation are hard to master with a mind like a monkey's; the Sanron or Hosso teachings easily bewilder the eyes of cows and sheep.
In my school, the act that is the cause of birth has been settled in Amida's Primal Vow as the ten utterances; Shan-tao deliberated and determined that the only qualification is the three minds.
The Sanron or Hosso teachings easily bewilder the eyes of cows and sheep: The eyes of the Buddhists of this Saha world are like those of cows and sheep and will surely be confused by the self-power teachings of the Path of Sages, such as those of the Sanron and Hosso schools.
www.shinranworks.com /commentaries/inscriptions10.htm   (1016 words)

  
 Adherents.com
"By the Nara period (710-94), six schools had been brought over from China: Sanron and Jojitsu (both established in 624), Hosso (654), Kusha (658), Kegon (736), and Ritsu (754); Jojitsu, Kusha, and Ritsu were Hinayana, the other three Mahayana.
sanron, 'three treatises'; the Japanese form of the Chinese San-lun school, which in turn comes from the Indian Madhyamaka.
The Sanron in Japan was never an independently organized school; its teachings were studied by followers of all Buddhist schools...
www.adherents.com /Na/Na_580.html   (3788 words)

  
 Repaying Debts of Gratitude
Once I had understood this and prepared to cease deferring to my parents and teachers and instead to delve into the truths of Buddhism, I found that there are ten bright mirrors that reflect the sacred doctrines of the Buddha's lifetime of teachings.
These various men of the Kegon, Sanron, Hosso and other sects expounded the teachings of the founders of their respective sects just as they had learned them.
In the preface to that work, he writes: "The school of Shingon Buddhism that has recently been brought to Japan deliberately distorts its teachings to suit its purposes, while the Kegon school that was introduced earlier attempts to disguise the fact that it was influenced by the doctrines of T'ien-t'ai.
www.sgi-usa.org /buddhism/library/Nichiren/Gosho/RepayingDebtsGratitude.htm   (14973 words)

  
 Honzon Mondo Sho
The true object of worship for the followers of the Lotus Sutra is thus the Odaimoku of the Lotus Sutra.
The object of worship in two schools Hosso and Sanron is the Buddha of Superior Manifestation (Sho-ojin).
The Sanron Sohool (which claims that the ultimate truth or reality is revealed through negation) is a sect which belongs to the provisional Mahayana, but they are convinced that they are expounding the true Mahayana teachings.
www.geocities.com /chris_holte/Buddhism/Gosho/honzonmondosho.htm   (6068 words)

  
 A CONCISE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF BUDDHISM
The doctrines of the school are based on the Establishment of Truth (Satyasiddhi) by the fourth-century Indian Buddhist scholar Harivarman.
Although it was a distinct school in China, in Japan it was considered to be a part of the Sanron (Chin.
During the Nara period (710-784), it became one of the six main schools of Japanese Buddhism (the others were Kusha, Hosso, Sanron, Ritsu, and Kegon)
www.oneworld-publications.com /books/texts/concise-encyclopedia-of-buddhism-j.htm   (3376 words)

  
 JAPANESE BUDDHISM
During this period it was primarily the Sanron school that spread.
there were already six schools of Buddhism in Japan: Kosha, Hosso, Sanron, Jojitsu, Ritsu and Kegon.
It was firmly established in the imperial house which expecially took the teachings of the
cla.calpoly.edu /~bmori/syll/Hum310japan/JBUDDHISM.html   (2034 words)

  
 Sanlun - Wikipedia
The name derives from the fact that three principal Madhyamikan texts were translated by Kumarajiva to form the basis for the tradition.
In 625, the Korean monk Ekwan brought the Sanlun school to Japan, where it was known as Sanron.
This page was last modified 00:40, 31 July 2005.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Sanlun   (96 words)

  
 The Opening of the Eyes
The four sects of Kegon, Shingon, Sanron and Hosso are all Mahayana schools of Buddhism.
Among them the Hosso and Sanron sects honor a Buddha who is comparable to the Buddha of the superior manifested body.
Chi-tsang of the Sanron school asserts that the Hannya Sutra and the Lotus Sutra are different names for a single entity, two sutras that preach one teaching.
www.sgi-usa.org /buddhism/library/Nichiren/Gosho/OpeningEyesPart2.htm   (13128 words)

  
 Boone County Journal
Farmer and landowner Ralph Goetting sold the 22-acre property.
He said that he had purchased the parcel of land about 20 years ago and had not been trying to sell it very long when Sanron Development decided to purchase it.
Owners of the Columbia-based Sanron Development Brian Buffield and Larry Butler would not say what their plans are for the site, but said that they will disclose that information within the next couple of weeks.
www.bocojo.com /articles/2005/08/03/news/news2.txt   (171 words)

  
 A Photograph Collection   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
Also known as Okamotodera, Enichiji was first established in 709 when the Buddhist priest Jikei (Sanron sect), from Nara, built a grass hut here called Jihôsan Enichiji in an attempt to broaden Shô-toku Taishi's (574-622) understanding of Buddhist doctrines.
In 940, Taira no Masakado's third daughter, Takiyasha-hime, fled to Enichiji, changed her name to Nyozôni, and became a devout Buddhist.
It also became the twenty-eighth of Iwaki's thirty-three Kan'on temples and thus is known also as Tamayama Kan'on Temple.
www.npo-hiroshima.jp /home/kagura_cd_rom_data2004-8/html/e-037.html   (120 words)

  
 Japanese Buddhism: a Short History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-14)
However, in later years the Kofukuji built close contacts with the government.
The third important Nara religion was Sanron (Ch.
However, the Hosso sect still has half a million adherents, Kegon has about 40 thousand adherents but Sanron has disappeared.
www.shinshufin.info /japbuddh.htm   (1472 words)

  
 magiergilde.de
Nach einigen Jahren des Wanderns und der Abenteuer traf Garan bei Kunchom auf den Magier Sanron, der ihm ein Lehrmeister und Mentor werden sollte.
Doch ehe Sanron die zweite Ausbildung Garans vollenden konnte verstarb er.
Er lebte fortan in jenem Turm, den ihm Sanron vererbt hatte.
www.magiergilde.de /garan.php   (569 words)

  
 Sanron's Page on RateItAll.com
Click HERE to read all of Sanron's comments
Click HERE to leave a private message for Sanron
Sanron created and manages the following personal ratings list(s):
www.rateitall.com /user.aspx?RI=8161598   (65 words)

  
 [No title]
, a text of unknown authorship, which basically is an alignment of textual quotes on important Indian, Chinese, Korean and Japanese predecessors of the Sanron lineage as viewed by the Japanese compiler.
Thus, at least parts of the lengthy quote from the Ssu-lun hsüan-i found in the Sanron soshi den shū can be corroborated with parallel citations in much earlier sources.
For lack of additional sources, any attempt to determine an exact chronology of the events soon will reach its limits.
www.aks.ac.kr /EngHome/files/rel6.html   (6174 words)

  
 Gošo: Otvaranje očiju - 1. deo, treće parče
But in the case of the Lotus Sutra, it differs so greatly from the previous Mahayana sutras that Shariputra and the other voice-hearers, the great bodhisattvas, and the various human and heavenly beings, when they heard the Buddha preach it, were led to think, "Is this not a devil pretending to be the Buddha?"
The passage that expounds the identity of "the mind, the Buddha and all living beings" represents not only the core of Kegon teachings, but of the teachings of the Hosso, Sanron, Shingon and Tendai sects as well.
A uz to ti kratkovidi ljudi Kegon, Hoso, Sanron i Nembutsu sekti su svi mislili da su njihove sutre potpuno iste kao Lotos sutra.
www.angelfire.com /mi2/mica2/gosoOtvaranjeOciju3-1.html   (5433 words)

  
 Buddism - 4393111710 - Sanron kyogaku no kenkyu / Hirai Shun ei kanshu. - What's Been Published
Buddism - 4393111710 - Sanron kyogaku no kenkyu / Hirai Shun ei kanshu.
Sanron kyogaku no kenkyu / Hirai Shun ei kanshu.
Print this page and give it to your librarian.
www.pitbossannie.com /iss-bq-4393111710.html   (119 words)

  
 Gošo: Otvaranje oèiju - 1. deo, èetvrto parèe
Again, there are the Kegon and Shingon schools, which are incomparably higher in level than the Hosso and Sanron schools.
They claim that the doctrines that persons of the two vehicles may attain Buddhahood and that the Buddha achieved enlightenment in the remote past are to be found not only in the Lotus Sutra, but in the Kegon and Dainichi sutras as well.
Opet, tu su Kegon i Šingon škole, koje su na neuporedivo višem nivou od Hoso i Sanron škola.
www.angelfire.com /mi2/mica2/gosoOtvaranjeOciju4-1.html   (4988 words)

  
 Buddism - 4393112032 - Sanron kyogaku to Bukkyo shoshiso : Hirai Shun ei Hakushi koki kinen ronshu / [hensha Hirai Shun ...
Buddism - 4393112032 - Sanron kyogaku to Bukkyo shoshiso : Hirai Shun ei Hakushi koki kinen ronshu / [hensha Hirai Shun ei Hakushi Koki Kinen Ronbunshu Kankokai].
Sanron kyogaku to Bukkyo shoshiso : Hirai Shun ei Hakushi koki kinen ronshu / [hensha Hirai Shun ei Hakushi Koki Kinen Ronbunshu Kankokai].
List of works by Hirai Shun ei: p.
www.pitbossannie.com /iss-bq-4393112032.html   (164 words)

  
 Adherents.com: By Location
"By the Nara period (710-94), six schools had been brought over from China: Sanron and Jojitsu (both established in 624), Hosso (654), Kusha (658), Kegon (736) [in Chinese: Hua-yen], and Ritsu (754); Jojitsu, Kusha, and Ritsu were Hinayana, the other three Mahayana.
This teaching was brought to Japan in 625 by Ekwan, a Korean monk who had studied this school in China.
Since then, this teaching has been studied in Japan by students of many Buddhist leanings but never regarded as an independent school, rather as part of the Sanron school.
www.adherents.com /adhloc/Wh_164.html   (3773 words)

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