SECTION ONE: THE TRANSLATIONS
- List of Illustrationsxv
- Foreword by Shenpen Dawa Rinpochexxv
- Preface to the Second Editionxxxii
- Credits for Illustrations and Mapsxxxiii
- Technical Notexxxv
- Guide to Pronunciationxxxvii
- Abbreviations for Section Onexli
BOOK ONE: FUNDAMENTALS OF THE NYINGMA SCHOOL OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM
- Detailed Contents of Book One3
- Translator’s Introduction11
THE TEXT
- Verses of Invocation45
- Introduction47
PART ONE: DOCTRINES OF SAṂSĀRA AND NIRVĀNA
- 1 The Essence and Defmition of Dharma51
- 2 Doctrines of Saṃsāra54
- 3 Doctrines of Nirvāṇa70
- 4 Transmitted Precepts73
- 5 Treatises88
- 6 Quantitative Treatises97
- 7 Treatises of Inner Science108
PART TWO: THE NATURE OF THE TEACHER ENDOWED
WITH THE BUDDHA-BODIES
- Introduction113
- 1 Samantabhadra, the Buddha-body of Reality115
- 2 Vajradhara, the Emanation of Samantabhadra120
- 3 The Two Buddha-bodies of Form123
- 4 The Five Buddha-bodies and Five Pristine Cognitions139
- 5 Distinctive Attributes of the Buddha-bodies and Pristine Cognitions 144
PART THREE: CAUSAL VEHICLES OF DIALECTICS
- Introduction151
- 1 The Three Promulgations of the Doctrinal Wheel153
- 2 The Lesser Vehicle156
- 3 The Greater Vehicle160
- 4 The Superiority of Great Madhyamaka to Mind Only178
- 5 The Provisional and Definitive Meaning of the Transmitted Precepts187
- 6 The Enlightened or Buddha Family191
- 7 The Two Truths According to Great Madhyamaka206
- 8 Key to the Appraisal of Causal Vehicle Texts217
- 9 A Recapitulation of the Causal Vehicles223
PART FOUR: RESULTANT VEHICLES OF SECRET MANTRA
- Introduction241
- 1 The Superiority of Secret Mantra243
- 2 The Essence and Defmition of Secret Mantra257
- 3 The Three Continua of Ground, Path and Result263
- 4 The Four Tantrapiṭaka268
- 5 Mahāyoga275
- 6 Anuyoga284
- 7 Key to the Appraisal of Secret Mantra Texts290
- 8 The Superiority of Atiyoga, the Great Perfection294
- 9 The Definition of Atiyoga311
- 10 The Divisions of Atiyoga319
- 11 A Recapitulation of the Resultant Vehicles346
CONCLUSION
- 1 Concluding Remarks375
- 2 Dedicatory Verses376
- 3 Colophon378
BOOK TWO: HISTORY OF THE NYINGMA SCHOOL OF TIBETAN BUDDHISM
- Detailed Contents of Book Two383
- Translators’ Introduction393
THE TEXT
PART ONE: THE ORIGIN OF THE PRECIOUS TEACHING OF THE CONQUEROR IN THIS WORLD
- Introduction409
- 1 The Coming of Buddha, Teacher of the Doctrine411
- 2 The Collecting of Transmitted Precepts by Councils428
- 3 The Patriarchs of the Teaching432
- 4 The Preservation of the Teaching and Spread of the Greater Vehicle440
PART TWO: THE RISE OF THE PRECIOUS TEACHING OF SECRET MANTRA
Introduction 445
- 1 The Turning of the Secret Mantra Wheel447
- 2 The Collecting of Transmitted Precepts by Different Compilers451
- 3 The Emergence of this Teaching in the Human World452
- 4 The Lineage of Mahāyoga, the Class of Tantras458
- 5 The Lineage of Mahāyoga, the Class of Means for Attainment475
- 6 The Lineage of Anuyoga, the Perfection Stage485
- 7 The Lineage of Atiyoga, the Great Perfection490
- 8 Concluding Remarks502
PART THREE: THE ORIGIN OF THE CONQUEROR’S TEACHING IN TIBET
- Introduction507
- 1 The Three Ancestral Religious Kings510
- 2 The Decline and Expansion of the Doctrine during the Intermediate Period523
- 3 The Revival and Later Expansion of the Teaching524
PART FOUR: THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE THREE INNER CLASSES OF TANTRA IN TIBET
- Introduction531
- 1 Mahāyoga and Anuyoga533
- 2 The Mental and Spatial Classes of Atiyoga538
- 3 The Esoteric Instructional Class of Atiyoga, the Innermost Spirituality 554
- 4 Longcen Rapjampa575
PART FIVE: THE DISTANT LINEAGE OF TRANSMITTED PRECEPTS
- Introduction599
- 1 The Lineage of Nyak601
- 2 The Lineage of Nup607
- 3 The Lineage of the Zur Family617
- 4 Biographies of the Rong Tradition650
- 5 Dotokpa’s Lineage of the Zur Tradition685
- 6 Biographies of the Kham Tradition688
- 7 Miscellaneous Lineages of the Zur and Kham Traditions700
- 8 Rongzom Chöki Zangpo703
- 9 The Traditions of Vajrakīla710
- 10 The Lineages of the Empowerment of the Sūtra which Gathers All
Intentions717
- 11 Later Lineages of the Transmitted Precepts733
PART SIX: THE CLOSE LINEAGES OF THE TREASURES
- 1 The Nature, Purpose and Kinds of Treasure743
- 2 Biographies of the Treasure-finders750
- 3 Sangye Lama751
- 4 Trapa Ngönshe753
- 5 Nyang-rel Nyima Özer755
- 6 Guru Chöki Wangcuk760
- 7 Como Menmo771
- 8 Orygen Lingpa775
- 9 Ngödrup Gyeltsen or Rikdzin Gödemcen780
- 10 Sangye Lingpa784
- 11 Dorje Lingpa789
- 12 Ratna Lingpa793
- 13 Pema Lingpa796
- 14 Karma Lingpa800
- 15 Thangtong Gyelpo802
- 16 Ngari Pancen Pema Wangyel805
- 17 Rikdzin Jatsön Nyingpo809
- 18 Rikdzin Düdül Dorje813
- 19 Lhatsün Namka Jikme818
- 20 The Fifth Dalai Lama821
- 21 Rikdzin Terdak Lingpa, the Great Treasure-finder of Mindröling825
- 22 Jikme Lingpa835
- 23 Chogyur Decen Lingpa841
- 24 Jamyang Khyentse Wangpo849
- 25 Jamgön Kongtrül Lodrö Thaye859
- 26 Mipham Jamyang Namgyel Gyamtso869
- Conclusion881
PART SEVEN: A RECTIFICATION OF MISCONCEPTIONS CONCERNING THE NYINGMA SCHOOL
- 1 General Reply to Criticisms of the Nyingmapa Tantras887
- 2 On the View of the Great Perfection896
- 3 Response to Critics of the Sūtra which Gathers All Intentions911
- 4 Response to Critics of the Root Tantra of the Secret Nucleus914
- 5 The Continuity of the Nyingmapa Tradition and its Impact on the Other Schools918
- 6 On the Validity of the Treasures927
- 7 The Shortcomings of Refutation and Proof929
- 8 On The Prophecies Found in the Treasures934
- 9 The Relationship between the Nyingmapa and Pönpo Traditions936
- 10 On the "Bad Luck of the Nyingmapa"938
PA R T EIG H T: T H E C H R O N O L O G Y O F T H E D O C T R IN E
1 Duration of the Doctrine 943
2 A Chronology of the Buddha’s Life 946
3 From the Buddha’s Final Nirvāna until the Beginning of the First
Tibetan Sexagenary Cycle 948
4 FromtheBeginningoftheFirstSexagenaryCycletothePresent 951
5 Some Prophecies 960
C LO SING ST A T E M E N T S
1 Primary Sources 965
2 Concluding Benedictions 967
3 Colophon 972
S E C T IO N T W O : R E FE R E N C E M A TE R IA L
Contents v
Introduction vii
Guide to Pronunciation xi
Abbreviations for Section Two xv
N O T E S
1 Fundamentals 3
2 History 27
G L O SSA R Y O F E N U M E R A T IO N S
Introduction 103
Glossary of Enumerations 105
B IB L IO G R A PH Y
Introduction 191
Part One: Works Cited by the Author
Works Cited by the Author 199
Part Two: Works Referred to by the Translators
1 Indic Texts 293
2 Tibetan Texts 297
3 Secondary Literature 301
4 Addenda to the Bibliography 316
ARTIFACTS AND MATERIAL TREASURES
Introduction 320
Artifacts and MaterialTreasures 321
INDEX OF TECHNICAL TERMS
Introduction 331
Index of Technical Terms 333
INDEX OF PERSONAL NAMES
Introduction 391
Index of Personal Names 393
INDEX OF LOCATIONS
Introduction 453
Index of Locations 455
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3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
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General Contents xiii
M APS
Introduction 489
Buddhist India and Adjacent Regions 490
North-Central India 492
Tibet 494
Western Tibet and Nepal 496
North-Central Tibet 498
South-Central Tibet and Bhutan 500
North-West Kham 502
South-West Kham 506
Amdo 508
North-East Kham 510
South-East Kham 512
The work on philosophical doctrines, entitled Fundamentals of the Nyingma School, presents a comprehensive account of traditional philosophical views, both secular and religious, non-Buddhist and Buddhist. It also includes an extended discussion of the validity of the esoteric scriptures and the special (tantra) distinctions of the Nyingma. In the second translated work, entitled History of the Nyingma School, Dudjom Rinpoche directly addresses the legacy of criticism of the Nyingma tradition in a special section entitled “A Rectification of Misconceptions Concerning the Nyingma School.” He responds to various charges against the authenticity of the Nyingma tradition and provides a discussion of the “Great Perfection” (dzogchen) view. He also explores the continuity of the Nyingmapa tradition and its impact on the other schools, the shortcomings of logical argumentation, prophecies found in the treasure tradition, and the relationship between the Nyingmapa and the “pre-Buddhist” tradition of the Bonpo.