Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Religion - Buddhism
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 8     141-160 of 195    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Buddhism:     more books (100)
  1. Introducing Buddhism by Chris Pauling, 2004-08-01
  2. The Middle Way: The Story of Buddhism (Religion) by Jinananda, 1997-10

141. Buddhist Studies - La Trobe University
A 13 week distance education unit taught online from La Trobe University. Explores the origins and evolution of the Buddhist tradition and its contemporary place in society and follows the progress of buddhism through Indian history focusing on its responses to local cultural, political and economic conditions.
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/asianstudies/Buddha/index.html
  • La Trobe Home Skip to Content Contact La Trobe Sitemap ... Contact
    School of Social Sciences
    Buddhist Studies - Distance Education
    Welcome
    Distance Learning Buddhist Studies is taught via a mix of correspondence, email lists and phone based communication between staff and student. This year two units are available Buddhism Past and Present and Buddhist Meditation Traditions. See what some former students have said about the units Note: These units will not be available in 2005 for one year.
    Buddhism past and present
    View list of unit contents

    View references (pdf format 108 kb)
    Buddhist meditation traditions
    View list of unit contents

    View first chapter as pdf document

    This unit is an investigation of Buddhist meditation traditions. It looks at the ancient Indian context within which meditation developed and the practice of meditation in the contemporary world. We explore definitions of meditation and the role of meditation in the Buddha's life and investigate the characteristics of jhana, vipassana, samatha and metta meditations and their relationship with puja and protection rituals. We then consider contemplation of the Buddha and meditation in the context of the lay community and the Buddhist nuns' order. We briefly sample aspects of Mahayana traditions from Tibet, Japan and China and conclude with a review of two centuries of Western involvement in Buddhist meditation traditions.

142. Buddhism And Its Spread Along The Silk Road
The civilizations which flourished along the Silk Road in the first millenniumCE were open to cultural and religious influences from both East and West.
http://www.silk-road.com/artl/buddhism.shtml
Buddhism and Its Spread Along the Silk Road
"There one sees a structure of an elevation prodigious in height; it is supported by gigantic pillars and covered with paintings of all the birds created by God. In the interior are two immense idols carved in the rock and rising from the foot of the mountains to the summit....One cannot see anything comparable to these statues in the whole world."
-Yakut describing Bamiyan in his geographical dictionary in 1218
Besides silk, paper and other goods, the Silk Road carried another commodity which was equally significant in world history. Along with trade and migration, the world's oldest international highway was the vehicle which spread Buddhism through Central Asia. The transmission was launched from northwestern India to modern Pakistan, Afghanistan, Central Asia, Xinjiang (Chinese Turkistan), China, Korea and Japan. Buddhism not only affected the lives and cultures on those regions but also left us with a world of wonders in arts and literature. (Figure on the right: Princes from Central Asian states in Lamentation, Dunhuang Cave 158. After Sakyamuni entered nirvana, princes of different Central Asian states gathered to express their grief, crying, beating their chests, piercing themselves with swords or knives, or cutting off their noses or ears. This painting not only depicts their devotions to Buddha, but also accurately presents the appearances, garments and customs of different nations along the Silk Road and the history of cultural exchange between them.)

143. Buddhist Bioethics
Redmond (1992) discusses the relationship of buddhism to medicine from Concepts of Disease in buddhism, in Buddhist Studies Present and Future, ed.
http://www.changesurfer.com/Bud/BudBioEth.html
Buddhism and Medical Ethics: A Bibliographic Introduction
James J. Hughes
MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics Damien Keown
Goldsmiths, University of London Published in the Journal of Buddhist Ethics , Volume Two, 1995 ISSN 1076-9005
BUDDHISM AND MEDICINE
It has not gone unnoticed that the Buddhist aim of eliminating suffering coincides with the objectives of medicine (Duncan et al, 1981; Soni, 1976). The Buddhist emphasis on compassion finds natural expression in the care of the sick, and according to the Vinaya the Buddha himself stated "Whoever, O monks, would nurse me, he should nurse the sick" (Zysk, 1991:41). Buddhist clergy and laity have been involved with the care of the sick for over two thousand years. The Indian Buddhist emperor Asoka states in his second Rock Edict that provision has been made everywhere in his kingdom for medical treatment for both men and animals, and that medicinal herbs suitable for both have been imported and planted. Birnbaum (1979) and Demieville (1985) provide good general introductions to Buddhism and medicine. Buddhism appears to have played an important role in the evolution of traditional Indian medicine (Zysk, 1991), and there are many parallels between Buddhist medicine, as recorded in the Pali canon, and Aayurveda (Mitra, 1985). There are short monographs by Haldar on the scientific (1977) and public heath aspects (1992) of medicine in the Pali sources. It is likely that as Buddhism spread through Asia it would have interacted with indigenous medical traditions promoting the cross-fertilization of ideas. Redmond (1992) discusses the relationship of Buddhism to medicine from Theravaada and Mahaayaana perspectives and compares Buddhist and Daoist concepts of disease. Discussions of Tibetan medicine may be found in Clifford (1984), Dhonden (1986), and Rechung (1976), while Ohnuki-Tierney (1984) discusses illness and culture in contemporary Japan.

144. ON REBIRTH: Buddhism And Reincarnation
Exerpted from Paul Williams, The Unexpected Way On Converting from buddhism to Catholicism.
http://www.angelfire.com/realm/bodhisattva/rebirth.html
setAdGroup('67.18.104.18'); var cm_role = "live" var cm_host = "angelfire.lycos.com" var cm_taxid = "/memberembedded"
Search: Lycos Angelfire 40 Yr Old Virgin Share This Page Report Abuse Edit your Site ... Next
ON REBIRTH: Buddhism and Reincarnation
Paul Williams

[Excerpted from Paul Williams, THE UNEXPECTED WAY: On Converting from Buddhism to Catholicism , pp. 198-203. ISBN 567 088308]
PAUL WILLIAMS

The Buddhist position on rebirth is always stated to be that the rebirth is neither the same as, nor different from, the one who died. The Buddhist sees our present life as a causal continuum. We are constantly changing, with each moment of our life arising in causal dependence upon a preceding moment that has since ceased, and acting to cause the next moment in the continuum. It is a bit like the flow of a river. This flow that we are is made of Five Strands : physical matter, sensations, determinate perceptions, additional factors like volition (intentions), and consciousness. These are called the Five Aggregates (Sanskrit: skandha ). They are each a flow, each constantly changing. Upon this fivefold flow we superimpose for everyday practical purposes a singular identity, called by a name like 'Archibald', or 'Fiona'. Thus we are in fact a bundle, or a bundle of bundles. But because of beginningless ignorance we have a tendency to overrate this practical everyday unity, and to think that there is some sort of unchanging essence constantly present. The presupposed unchanging essence, the stable referent for the use of 'I', we think of as our 'Self' (Sanskrit:

145. Index
buddhism in Brazil a Bibliography. buddhism IN BRAZIL A BIBLIOGRAPHY.
http://cmrocha.sites.uol.com.br/
BUDDHISM IN BRAZIL: A BIBLIOGRAPHY

146. Malaysian Buddhist Association
Promote buddhism through Dharma propagation and research. Provides news, activities, funds and photo gallery. Main office in Penang, branches countrywide.
http://www.malaysianbuddhistassociation.org.my/
This page uses frames, but your browser doesn't support them.

147. Buddhist Traditions
An introduction to buddhism, with a Thai flavor, by way of cartoons, humor, andcommentary. Digital Dictionary of buddhism (Japan)
http://www.clas.ufl.edu/users/gthursby/rel/buddhism.htm
Buddhist Traditions

148. Buddhism In Toronto - Centre
List of Buddhist temples and centres in Toronto Centre.
http://buddhismcanada.com/toronto-c.html
Buddhism in Toronto - Centre
The following list shows Buddhist temples and centres in Toronto - Centre. Toronto (GTA) west of the DVP, including Toronto Island, York, Etobicoke, Mississauga, Oakville, Thornhill, Richmond Hill, Newmarket, Markham, Maple, and Caledon East.
  • Amida Temple
    Chùa A Di Ðà
    1118 - 1120 Queen St. W
    Toronto, Ont. M6J 1H9 meeting place: 101 Lisgar Street (corner of Lisgar and Queen Street West) Activity: see Web site at www.anlac.ca Languages: Vietnamese and English
    Updated August 25, 2005
  • Buddha's Light International Association (BLIA)
    6525 Millcreek Dr.
    Mississauga, Ont. L5N 7K6 905-814-0465; fax: 905-814-0469 e-mail: info fgs.ca Spiritual head: Ven. Master Hsing Yun; Humanistic Buddhism; affiliated with Fo Guang Shan , Taiwan Activities: See Web site at www.blia.ca Contact: Stanley Kwan, president
    Updated 21 April, 2002 Buddhist Association of Canada
    1224 Lawrence Ave W
    Toronto, Ontario M6A 1E3
    Updated March 15, 2005 Buddhist Association of Canada Hong Fa Temple
  • 1330 Bloor St. W Toronto, Ont. M6H 1P2

    149. Buddhism Glossary
    On the website of a university Buddhist study and practise group.
    http://www.sinc.sunysb.edu/Clubs/buddhism/glossary.html
    Buddhism Glossary A
    A/ B C D E ... Z Agadas

    adj.: healthy; n.: antidote, panacea, universal remedy. Agamas
    Generic term applied to a collection of traditional doctrines and precepts; also means the home or collecting-place of the law or truth; the peerless law; the ultimate absolute truth. The Four Agamas are as follows: (1) Dirghagama, "law treatises on cosmogony; (2) Madhyamagama, "middle" treatises on metaphysics; (3) Samyuktagama, "miscellaneous" treatises on abstract contemplation; (4) Edottaragama, "numerical" treatises on subjects treated numerically.The sutras of Theravada are referred to at times as the Agamas. Agara
    House, dwelling, receptacle; also, used in the sense of a Bodily organ, e.g., the ear for sound, etc. Agaru/Aguru
    Sandalwood incense. Alaya Consciousness
    The fundamental consciousness of all sentient beings. As defined by the Yogacara School, Alaya means the "storehouse", implying that this consciousness contains and preserves all past memories and potential psychic energy within its fold; it is the reservoir of all ideas, memories and desires and is also the fundamental cause of both Samsara and Nirvana. Almsgiving
    see charity.

    150. Houston Shambhala Meditation Center
    Offers meditation instruction and group practice supporting the paths of Shambhala Training and Vajrayana buddhism. Includes news, events, and photo gallery.
    http://web2.airmail.net/dharma/
    Houston Shambhala Meditation Center Home Introductory Information The Gates of Shambhala Regular Practice Schedule News and Coming Events ... Make a Donation "Our life is an endless journey; it is like a broad highway that extends infinitely into the distance. The practice of meditation provides a vehicle to travel on that road. Our journey consists of constant ups and downs, hope and fear, but is a good journey. The practice of meditation allows us to experience all the textures of the roadway, which is what the journey is all about."
    Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior Welcome to the Houston Shambhala Meditation Center!

    151. Basic Teachings And Philosophical Doctrines Of Buddhism
    Places where Theravâda spread Theravâda buddhism is presently practiced in Shri During the Theravâda period, buddhism also spread into Afghanistan,
    http://www.friesian.com/buddhism.htm

    THE BASIC TEACHINGS OF BUDDHISM
    budh , "to wake up"), was born to a royal Ks.atriya family. At his birth there was a prophecy that either he would become a world conqueror, or he would "conquer" the world by renouncing it and becoming a Buddha. His father preferred the more tangible kind of conquest and tried to shield Siddhartha from all the evils of life that might tempt him into spiritual reflection. This strategy backfired; for when, about age thirty, Siddhartha finally did experience evils, by encountering a sick man, an old man, a dead man, and a wandering ascetic, he determined immediately to renounce the world and seek enlightenment like the ascetic. This violated Siddhartha's duty as a householder, since his wife had just given birth to their first child, but Vedic duties and the traditional four stages of life were no longer of interest to him. After years of fasting and other ascetic practices, during which he supposedly subsisted on as little as one grain of rice a day, Siddhartha felt that he had achieved nothing. He ceased his fasting, but then sat down under a tree with the determination not to arise until he had achieved enlightenment. The tree became the

    152. Los Angeles Dari Rulai Temple Of Chinese Buddhism
    Learn Chinese buddhism, zen meditation, treasure vase, the medicine Buddha dharma, prajna akasagarbha and healing with master Yu Tian Jian, living buddha Dechan Jueren.
    http://www.dari-rulai-temple.org
    Welcome to the Los Angeles Dari Rulai Temple The Dari Rulai Temple was established in Los Angeles by the Great Enlightener Golden Crown Dharma King, Living Buddha Dechan Jueren. Living Buddha Dechan Jueren holds the complete teachings of the Mahavairocana Buddha passed down by Nagarjuna Bodhisattva to Subhakarasimha, Vajrabodhi, and Amoghavajra. Are you, or do you know someone suffering from illness? Please consider stopping by for our free healing Sunday prayer service if you live in the Los Angeles Area, or browse our services page for ways to receive spiritual help. Want to learn how to meditate? Living Buddha Dechan Jueren has empowered his senior disciples to transmit Buddha Dharma. You can check out our calendar of ongoing classes or even request an instructor to travel to your area.

    153. Ethics Of Buddha And Buddhism By Sanderson Beck
    Describes the life of the Buddha and his teachings.
    http://www.san.beck.org/EC9-Buddha.html
    BECK index
    Buddha and Buddhism
    Siddartha Gautama
    Buddha

    Doctrine
    (Dharma) ... (Sangha)
    This chapter has been published in the book
    For information on ordering click here.
    The oldest known date in the history of India is the death of the one called Buddha in 483 BC, and even that date is somewhat controversial. Buddha means "one who is intuitive, awakened, or enlightened." The famous historical person known as Buddha was also called the Tathagata, which means "the one who has come thus," and Shakyamuni, which means "the sage of the Shakya tribe." He is said to have lived eighty years, and thus was probably born in 563 BC.
    Siddartha Gautama
    His father Suddhodana of the Gautama clan was elected king of the Shakya tribe by its five hundred families just south of the Himalaya mountains in the realm of influence of the powerful Kosala monarchy. The son was born in the Lumbini garden and named Siddartha, which means "he who has accomplished his aim." Many myths and legends surround the birth of Siddartha, but most of these seem to have been developed centuries later in the Jatakas . A famous seer named Asita predicted that the child would either become a great king or, if he left home, a great teacher. His mother Maya died seven days after giving birth, and her younger sister Mahapajapati, who was also married to Suddhodana, became his foster mother.

    154. Index-eng17-Buddhist Vegetarianism
    Articles from Theravada and Mahayana buddhism.
    http://www.buddhismtoday.com/index/index-eng17-veg.htm
    English Section Vietnamese Section
    Buddhism Today
    VEGETARIANISM
    The Buddhist Diet
    Michael Ohlsson
    Buddhist Vegetarianism

    Liberating Living Beings

    Genetic Engineering: A Major Threat to Vegetarians
    Ronald Epstein
    A Buddhist perspective on animal rights
    . Ronald Epstein
    Animal Rights and the Dhammapada
    . Rosemary A. Amey
    Buddhism and Biotechnology
    . Ron Epstein
    Buddhism and Vegetarianism
    . Ajahn Jagaro
    Buddhism and Vegetarianism
    . Dr V. A. Gunasekara Genetic Engineering: A Buddhist Assessment . Dr. Ron Epstein Animal rights as Buddhists what do we think of them . Bhikkhu Prof. Dhammavihari Buddhism and Vegetarianism: The Rationale for the Buddha's Views on the Consumption of Meat . Dr V. A. Gunasekara Soy sauce cancer warning . BBC Reflections on Buddhist soul food . The Japan Times
    Buddhism for Beginners The Buddha and His Teachings Buddhist Texts Quotes of the Month ... Links to Buddhist Resources -oOo- Feedback Add URL For contributions, please sent to the editor at: buddhismtoday@yahoo.com Last updated: September 6, 2001

    155. World Almanac For Kids
    Read about the origin, growth, and teachings of buddhism.
    http://www.worldalmanacforkids.com/explore/religion/buddism.html
    EXPLORE ANIMALS ENVIRONMENT HISTORICAL BIRTHDAYS ... home Contents
    BUDDHISM, a major world religion, founded in northeastern India and based on the teachings of Siddhartha Gautama, who is known as the Buddha, or Enlightened One. Buddhism today is divided into two major branches known to their respective followers as Theravada, the Way of the Elders, and Mahayana, the Great Vehicle. Followers of Mahayana refer to Theravada using the derogatory term Hinayana, the Lesser Vehicle. Buddhism has been significant not only in India but also in Sri Lanka, Thailand, Cambodia, Burma, and Laos, where Theravada has been dominant; Mahayana has had its greatest impact in China, Japan, Taiwan, Tibet, Nepal, Mongolia, Korea, and Vietnam, as well as in India. The number of Buddhists worldwide has been estimated at between 150 and 300 million. The reasons for such a range are twofold: Throughout much of Asia religious affiliation has tended to be nonexclusive; and it is especially difficult to estimate the continuing influence of Buddhism in Communist countries such as China.
    ORIGINS Select a section ORIGINS The Four Noble Truths.

    156. Buddhism
    Buddhist Studies WWW Virtual Library The Internet Guide to buddhism and BuddhistStudies This site provides a guide to Internet resources on buddhism.
    http://www.wabashcenter.wabash.edu/Internet/buddhism.htm
    Buddhism syllabi and teaching resources electronic texts Asian Classics Input Project
    http://www.asianclassics.org/

    "The Asian Classics Input Project presents a database containing texts from the Kangyur and Tengyur (classical collections of Sanskrit literature in Tibetan translation), and the Sungbum (Tibetan language commentaries on these) transliterated into roman (ASCII) characters. These texts span the time period from the Fifth Century, BCE to the twentieth Century, CE. The database has been produced primarily for scholars of classical Asian literature and other interested persons. Text entry is accomplished by Tibetan monk scholars at Sera Mey Monastic University and other nearby centers in southern India." The Edicts of King Ashoka
    http://www.cs.colostate.edu/~malaiya/ashoka.html

    "The story of a cruel and ruthless king who converted to Buddhism and thereafter established a reign of virtue." Resources for the Study of East Asian Language and Thought
    http://www.human.toyogakuen-u.ac.jp/~acmuller/index.html

    157. Buddhism
    History of buddhism Basic Beliefs Geographic Concentration buddhism Terms Links to More buddhism Sites. BOROBUDUR BEYOND THE REACH OF TIME
    http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/cultural/religion/buddhism/buddhism.html
    Buddhism
    History of Buddhism Basic Beliefs Geographic Concentration Buddhism Terms ... Links to More Buddhism Sites BOROBUDUR - BEYOND THE REACH OF TIME: restoring Indonesia's great Buddhist shrine. Video from the Roland Collection. var Video_ID=16 To play this video you will need Real Audio. Get it free here Thai Buddha statue Written by Sara Wenner, 2001

    158. Definition Of Buddhism
    A no holds barred attack on buddhism by Our Lady's Warriors, an informal group of Catholic Laity who defend the fullness of Truth in the Catholic Faith by remaining obedient to the Holy See and Magisterium and fighting dissent within the Church.
    http://www.ourladyswarriors.org/dissent/defbuddh.htm
    Definition of Buddhism
    The religious, monastic system, founded c. 500 B.C. on the basis of pantheistic Brahminism. The speculations of the Vedanta school of religious thought, in the eighth and following centuries, B.C., gave rise to several rival schemes of salvation. These movements started with the same morbid view that conscious life is a burden and not worth the living, and that true happiness is to be had only in a state like dreamless sleep free from all desires, free from conscious action. They took for granted the Upanishad doctrine of the endless chain of births, but they differed from pantheistic Brahminism both in their attitude towards the Vedas and in their plan for securing freedom from rebirth and from conscious existence. In their absolute rejection of Vedic rites, they stamped themselves as heresies. Of these the one destined to win greatest renown was Buddhism.
    I. THE FOUNDER
    Of Buddha, the founder of this great movement, legendary tradition has much to say, but very little of historical worth is known. His father seems to have been a petty raja , ruling over a small community on the southern border of the district now known as Nepal. Buddha's family name was Gotama (Sanskrit

    159. Tantric Buddhism - Sexual Pantheism.
    Tantric buddhism, pantheism and sexual mysticism with texts.
    http://members.aol.com/Heraklit1/tantra.htm

    Member of GSAnet Banner Swap
    Tantric Buddhism - sexual pantheism.
    A history of pantheism and scientific pantheism by Paul Harrison. Are you a pantheist? Find out now at Scientific Pantheism.
    I have visited in my wanderings shrines and other places of pilgrimage, But I have not seen another shrine blissful like my own body.
    Preparing a woman for ritual intercourse, Rajasthani, 18th century. At first sight nothing seems more alien to the oldest form of Buddhism, Theravada, than Tantric Buddhism. Where Theravada urges us to reflect on the repulsiveness of the body, Tantric Buddhism tells us to revere it as a temple and to indulge its most sensual impulses. Theravada preaches the renunciation of all desires: Tantric Buddhism their over-fulfillment. These are very real and significant differences. If we regard nirvana as an ultimate reality which is revered as virtually divine, then most Mahayana schools of Buddhism are pantheisms of the world-rejecting and world-denying varieties (see Varieties of Pantheism ). Tantric Buddhism is a pantheism of the world-accepting variety which sees nirvana in the midst of sense-phenomena. Tantric Buddhism also laid great emphasis on mantras (incantations), on

    160. Learning Guide
    Academic introduction to buddhism and Zen by Guy Newland, Ph.d., Central Michigan University.
    http://www.chsbs.cmich.edu/Guy_Newland/REL 320/Learning Guide Folder/learning_gu
    by Guy Newland I. BUDDHISM AND THE LIFE OF THE BUDDHA II. THE DHARMA III. Nirvana and Ethics IV. Meditation and No-Self ... XI. The Practice of the Wild

    A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 8     141-160 of 195    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

    free hit counter