tenets
Buddhist tenets are a system of ordering the philosophical positions of the four main schools of Buddhist philosophy–Vaibashika, Sautantrika, Cittamatra, and Madhyamika–and their subschools.
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View all posts in Venerable Thubten Chodron's teaching archive.
Meditation: Searching for the self
Geshe Dadul Namgyal guides a meditation on searching for the sense of "I" that inherently…
View PostRight understanding of emptiness
Tendencies to watch out for when learning about emptiness, and important distinctions to be made…
View PostThe Madhyamaka view: Questions and answers
Geshe Dadul Namgyal answers questions from the first day of teachings on the Madhyamaka view.
View PostIgnorance, afflictions, and emptiness
The relationship between the wisdom realizing emptiness and the other practices on the path, and…
View PostMeditation: The true nature of the self
An analytical meditation on searching for the true nature of the self.
View PostThe Madhyamaka view
An overview of Madhyamaka philosophy and the apparently conflicting views taught by the Buddha to…
View PostWestern perspectives on Tsongkhapa
Returning to Chapa chos kyi seng ge's refutation of Chandrakirti, which foreshadows Tsongkhapa.
View PostConventional and ultimate nature
How Tsongkhapa refutes the Svatantrika view of conventional existence, while retaining the possibility of understanding…
View PostThe Svatantrika view
Reviewing arguments that the ultimate nature cannot be known by the mind.
View PostUnderstanding through reasoned logic
The ultimate nature being unknowable by the mind, versus arguments that it is possible to…
View PostThe Prasangika view
Tsongkhapa’s interpretation of the Prasangika view, and what it means to say that objects are…
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