The Resolve to Become a Buddha

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**{{i|(e) Union of Emptiness and Compassion: A Tibetan Controversy|245}}
**{{i|(e) Union of Emptiness and Compassion: A Tibetan Controversy|245}}
**{{i|(f) Three Positions on the Fusion of ''Śūnyatā''/''Prajñā'' and  ''Karūṇā''/ ''Upāya''|245}}
**{{i|(f) Three Positions on the Fusion of ''Śūnyatā''/''Prajñā'' and  ''Karūṇā''/ ''Upāya''|245}}
3. SubclassifYing Bodhicitta into Praflidhicitta and Prasthiinacitta........................... 246
*{{i|3. Subclassifying ''Bodhicitta'' into ''Praṇidhicitta'' and ''Prasthānacitta''|246}}
(a) The Locus Classicus of the Classification..................................................... 246
**{{i|(a) The Locus Classicus of the Classification|246}}
(b) The Possible Historical Development of the Subclassification.... ... ..... ........ 248
**{{i|(b) The Possible Historical Development of the Subclassification|248}}
(c) The Pervasiveness of the Classification........................................................ 248
**{{i|(c) The Pervasiveness of the Classification|248}}
(d) Distinctions, Interpretations, and Controversies........................................... 249
**{{i|(d) Distinctions, Interpretations, and Controversies|249}}
4. SubclassifYing Bodhicitta into Conventional and Absolute................................... 251
*{{i|4. Subclassifying ''Bodhicitta'' into Conventional and Absolute|251}}
(a) Two Strands of the Conventional-Absolute Classification........................... 252
**{{i|(a) Two Strands of the Conventional-Absolute Classification|252}}
(b) Textual Sources of the Conventional-Absolute Classification..................... 253
**{{i|(b) Textual Sources of the Conventional-Absolute Classification|253}}
(c) The Relative Chronology of the Conventional-Absolute Classification....... 255
**{{i|(c) The Relative Chronology of the Conventional-Absolute Classification|255}}
(d) Two Different Perceptions of Conventional and Absolute Bodhicitta......... 256
**{{i|(d) Two Different Perceptions of Conventional and Absolute ''Bodhicitta''|256}}
(e) Can Absolute Bodhicitta be Generated Ritually? A Tibetan Controversy.... 258
**{{i|(e) Can Absolute ''Bodhicitta'' be Generated Ritually? A Tibetan Controversy|258}}
5. Leading to the Goal and Not Leading to the Goa1................................................. 261
*{{i|5. Leading to the Goal and Not Leading to the Goal|261}}
6. A Stable One and an Unstable One........................................................................ 262
*{{i|6. A Stable One and an Unstable One|262}}
7. Twofold Classifications of Cittotpiida in the ViniscayasarrzgrahalJf..................... 263
*{{i|7. Twofold Classifications of ''Cittotpāda'' in the ''Viniścayasaṃgrahaṇī''|263}}
(a) Samiidiinasiirrzketika and Dharmatiipratilambhika....................................... 263
**{{i|(a) ''Samādānasāṃketika'' and ''Dharmatāpratilambhika''|263}}
(b) The One That Is Uncertain and the One That Is Certain. .... .... .... ... ........... .... 264
**{{i|(b) The One That Is Uncertain and the One That Is Certain|264}}
(c) The One That Is Impure and the One That Is Pure...... .... .............. ........ ... .... 264
**{{i|(c) The One That Is Impure and the One That Is Pure|264}}
(d) The One That Is Weak and the One That Is Strong...................................... 265
**{{i|(d) The One That Is Weak and the One That Is Strong|265}}
(e) The One That Has Yielded the Ultimate Result and the One
**{{i|(e) The One That Has Yielded the Ultimate Result and the One
That Has Not yet........................................................................................... 265
That Has Not yet|265}}
8. Undistinguished and Distinguished Cittotpiida...................................................... 266
*{{i|8. Undistinguished and Distinguished ''Cittotpāda''|266}}
9. The One Characterised by Karuflii and the One Characterised by Prajfzii............ 266  
9. The One Characterised by Karuflii and the One Characterised by Prajfzii............ 266  



Revision as of 14:21, 10 August 2020

The Resolve to Become a Buddha
Book
Book

Becoming a buddha ('Awakened One') under the Bodhi tree (Ficus religiosa) was undoubtedly the most significant event in the career of the historical Buddha, and may be considered the starting point of Buddhism. According to both Mahāyāna ('Greater Vehicle') and Hīnayāna ('Lesser Vehicle') or non-Mahāyāna, the historical Buddha had sometime in the distant past resolved to become a buddha, thereby launching out on the career of a bodhisattva, that is, a sentient being who strives to attain the highest state of awakening. A major distinction between non-Mahāyāna and Mahāyāna, however, is that for the former the status of being a bodhisattva or buddha is confined to the historical Buddha (or a few others like him), while the ultimate soteriological goal of a disciple is Arhatship (that is, the final state of a saint who has attained release from the cycle of birth and death) primarily for oneself. For the latter, by contrast, even an ordinary sentient being is capable of undertaking the long and arduous career of a bodhisattva by generating bodhicitta and finally becoming a buddha (just like the historical Buddha himself), primarily for the sake of many other sentient beings. In sum, a person who possesses or has generated bodhicitta is considered to be a bodhisattva, and the form of Buddhism concerned with the theory and practice of a bodhisattva is known as Mahāyāna. The idea of bodhicitta in the sense of the resolve to become a buddha is hence the bedrock of Mahāyāna, and is what distinguishes a bodhisattva from a śrāvaka, Mahāyāna from non-Mahāyāna. It is presupposed by all forms of Mahāyāna Buddhism including Vajrayāna ('Diamond Vehicle'), or tantric Mahāyāna.
      Multiple internal and external factors must have contributed to the formation and further development of the concept of bodhicitta. The psychological need of the Buddhists to make up in one way or another for the demise of the historical Buddha may have been one of the principal internal factors that contributed to the formation of the idea of the resolve to become a buddha. Such an idea would not have lacked the doctrinal justification or legitimisation that it needed, for the non-Mahāyāna sources seem to abound in doctrinal elements that could easily be used to underpin the concept of bodhicitta. In its early phase of development, the idea of generating bodhicitta probably meant only the initial resolve to become a buddha, a momentous decision made by an aspirant seeking Buddhahood (buddhatva). This was seen as an indispensable but not necessarily a sufficient condition for the attainment of Buddhahood. However, gradually the idea came to encompass the entire theory and practice of a bodhisattva and to be considered not only a necessary but in fact a sufficient condition for such an attainment. In the course of time, even the true reality that a bodhisattva or buddha experiences as a spiritual event, the meditative insight or gnosis by means of which the true reality is experienced, and all conceivable resources or means—be they psycho-physiological, visual, verbal, or visional impulses that could be employed for becoming a buddha—came to be regarded as bodhicitta. It is this idea as found explicated in Indian and Tibetan Mahāyāna Buddhism that the present study seeks to examine. (Wangchuk, introductory remarks, 21–22)

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Citation Wangchuk, Dorji. The Resolve to Become a Buddha: A Study of the Bodhicitta Concept in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism. Studia Philologica Buddhica Monograph Series 23. Tokyo: International Institute for Buddhist Studies, 2007. https://dorjipenjore.files.wordpress.com/2014/08/the-resolve-to-become-a-buddha-a-study-of-the-bodhicitta-concept-in-indo-tibetan-buddhism.pdf.