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Buddhist Books

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Showing 1 to 20 of 940 items in a total of 47 pages
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FREEING THE BUDDHA: Diversity on a Sacred Path - Large Scale Concerns (A Course on major aspects of Buddhism plus a dangerous collection of essays)
by Brian Ruhe
Hardcover (Edition: 2005)
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd.

Item Code: IDE802
Price: $39.50
Buddhist Chants & Prayers for Daily Living (Modern Buddhist Healing)
by Charles Atkins
Paperback (Edition: 2007)
Jaico Books

Item Code: NAC756
Price: $15.00
Buddhist Images of Human Perfection (The Arahant of the Sutta Pitaka Compared with the Bodhisattva and the Mahasiddha)
by Nathan Katz
Hardcover (Edition: 2010)
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Pvt. Ltd

Item Code: NAC764
Price: $30.00
The Dispute Between Tea and Chang
by Dr. Alexander Fedotov & Acharya Sangye T. Naga
Paperback
Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, New Delhi

Item Code: NAC766
Price: $11.50
On Being Mindless: Buddhist Meditation and the Mind-Body Problem
by Paul J. Griffiths
Hardcover (Edition: 1919)
Sri Satguru Publications

Item Code: NAC769
Price: $25.00
Anagatavamsa Desana the Sermon of the Chronicle-To-Be
by Udaya Meddegama, Edited with an introduction, glossary and notes by John Clifford Holt
Hardcover (Edition: 2010)
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited

Item Code: IDC071
Price: $16.50
Buddhist Cosmology: Science and Theology in the Images of Motion and Light
by W. Randolph Kloetzli
Hardcover (Edition: 2007)
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited

Item Code: IDC128
Price: $25.00
Buddhist Wisdom: The Mystery of the Self
by George Grimm
Paperback (Edition: 2008)
Motilal Banarsidas Publishers Pvt. Ltd.

Item Code: IDC152
Price: $16.00
Buddhism, Sexuality, and Gender
by Edited By: Jose Ignacio Cabezon
Hardcover (Edition: 1992)
Sri Satguru Publications

Item Code: IDE917
Price: $27.00
Selected Stories from Jataka Tales: The Stories from Lord Buddha's Lives with Sublime Messages of Love, Mercy and Compassion
by Dr. Mahendra Mittal
Paperback
Manoj Publications

Item Code: IDG975
Price: $11.50
Mahamudra and Atiyoga
by Giuseppe Baroetto & Translated by Andrew Lukianowicz
Hardcover (Edition: 2005)
D. K. Printworld (p) Ltd

Item Code: IDJ940
Price: $24.00
Ancient Metria Medica: Sowa - Rigpa (Tibetan Science of Healing)
by Dr. Smanla T. Phuntsog
Paperback (Edition: 2006)
Paljor Publications (P) Ltd.

Item Code: IDL141
Price: $31.50
Mahayana Buddhist Meditation (Theory and Practice)
by Minoru Kiyota
Hardcover (Edition: 2009)
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers

Item Code: IHL149
Price: $40.00
The Life of Buddha As Legend and History
by Edward J.Thomas
Hardcover (Edition: 1997)
Motilal Banarsidass

Item Code: NAB028
Price: $32.20
Eurasian Mythology in the Tibetan Epic of Ge-sar
by Siegbert Hummel
Paperback (Edition: 1998)
Library of Tibetan works and Archives

Item Code: NAB707
Price: $15.00
Buddhism’s Relation to Christianity (A Miscellaneous Anthology with Occasional Comment)
by Michael Lockwood
Hardcover (Edition: 2011)
Tambaram Research Associates, Chennai

Item Code: NAC705
Price: $40.00
Introduction to the Buddhist Tantric Systems (With Original Text and Annot.)
by F.D. Lessing and Alex Wayman
Hardcover (Edition: 2008)
Motilal Banarsidas Publishers Pvt. Ltd.

Item Code: IDC222
Price: $37.50
Tantrayana Art An Album
by S.K. Saraswati

Hardcover (Edition: 2003)
The Asiatic Society, Kolkata

Item Code: IDF365
Price: $75.00
Yoga Tantra: Theory and Praxis- In the light of the Hevajra Tantra, A Metaphysical Perspective
by Dr. Tomy Augustine
Hardcover (Edition: 2008)
Sri Satguru Publications

Item Code: IHF097
Price: $50.00
Chinnamasta: The Aweful Buddhist and Hindu Tantric Goddess
by Elisabeth Anne Benard
Paperback (Edition: 2010)
Motilal Banarsidass

Item Code: NAB308
Price: $22.50
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Buddhist Text Literature: What the Buddha Said and Taught
Knowledge of the teachings of the Buddha is based on several canons of scripture, which derive from the early Sangha’s oral transmission of bodies of teachings agreed on at several councils. The Theravadin ‘Pali Canon’ is preserved in the Pali language, which is based upon a dialect close to that spoken by the Buddha. It is the most complete extant early canon, and contains some of the earliest material. Most of its teachings are in fact the common property of all Buddhist schools, being simply the teachings which the Theravadins preserved from the early common stock.

The Pali literature has been divided by one scholar into roughly three periods. The early, or classical, period begins with the Pali Canon itself and ends with the Milindha-pañha about the turn of the Christian era. After a period of being in comparative disuse or decline, Pali underwent a renaissance in the 4th or 5th century with the help of Buddhaghosa, and this period lasted until the 12th Century. The third period coincides with major political changes in Burma and lasted for some time in Sri Lanka, and much longer in Burma.

The Canon is traditionally described by the Theravada as the Word of the Buddha (Buddhavacana), though this is obviously not intended in a literal sense, since it includes teachings by disciples.

The traditional Theravādin (Mahavihārin) interpretation of the Pali Canon is given in a series of commentaries covering nearly the whole Canon, compiled by Buddhaghosa (4th–5th century CE) and later monks, mainly on the basis of earlier materials now lost. Subcommentaries have been written afterward, commenting further on the Canon and its commentaries. The traditional Theravādin interpretation is summarized in Buddhaghosa's Visuddhimagga.

The Pāli Canon falls into three general categories, called pitaka (from Pali piṭaka, meaning "basket"). Because of this, the canon is traditionally known as theTipiṭaka (Sanskrit: Tripiṭaka; "three baskets"). The three pitakas are as follows:

Vinaya Pitaka ("Discipline Basket"), dealing with rules for monks and nuns

Sutta Pitaka (Sutra/Sayings Basket), discourses, mostly ascribed to the Buddha, but some to disciples

Abhidhamma Pitaka, variously described as philosophy, psychology,metaphysics, etc.

Six complete vinayas survive:

Theravada, written in Pali.

Mula-Sarvāstivāda, written in Sanskrit, but surviving complete only in Tibetan translation.

Mahāsānghika, Sarvāstivāda, Mahīshāsika, and Dharmagupta, originally in Indian languages, but only surviving in Chinese translation.

The Suttas contain the main teachings of Buddhism. Which in the Pali Canon are divided into five Nikaya’s or ‘Collections’, the first four (sixteen volumes) generally being the older. The Pali Canon was one of the earliest to be written down, this being in Sri Lanka in around 80 BC, after which little, if any, new material was added to it. There are also sections of six non-Theravadin early canons preserved in Chinese and Tibetan translations, fragments of a Sanskrit Canon still existing in Nepal, and odd texts in various languages of India and Central Asia found in Tibet, Central Asia, and Japan.

Abhidharma (in Pali, Abhidhamma) means 'further Dharma' and is concerned with the analysis of phenomena. It grew initially out of various lists of teachings such as the 37 Bodhipaksika-dharmas or the 37 Factors leading to Awakening. The Abhidharma literature is chiefly concerned with the analysis of phenomena and the relationships between them. The Theravāda Abhidhamma survives in the Pali Canon. Outside of the Theravada monasteries the Pali Abhidharma texts are not well-known.

The extensive non-canonical Pali literature includes additional Abhidhamma works, historical chronicles, and many volumes of commentaries. An extremely clear introduction to many points of Buddhist doctrine is the Milindapanha, which purports to record conversations between a Buddhist monk and Milinda (Menander; c.155-130 BC), a king of Greek ancestry. Another is the Visuddhimagga, a very influential Theravada compendium of meditation practices and doctrine, written by Buddhaghosa (fifth century AD).

Mahayana texts were composed from around the first century BC, originating as written, not oral, works. In time, they were recorded in a form of the Indian prestigious language, Sanskrit. Mahayana sutras are traditionally considered by Mahayanists to be the word of the Buddha, but transmitted either in secret, via lineages of supernatural beings (such as the nagas), or revealed directly from other Buddhas or bodhisattvas. Some 600 Mahayana Sutras have survived in Sanskrit, or in Chinese and/or Tibetan translation.While many are attributed to the Buddha, their form and content clearly show that they were later re-statements and extensions of the Buddha’s message. The main sources for our understanding of Mahayana teachings are the very extensive Chinese and Tibetan Buddhist Canons. While most of the Pali Canon has been translated into English, only selected texts from these have been translated into Western languages, though much progress is being made.

Here is a wide range of Buddhist books, covering the primary literature of Buddhism, including the complete Pali canon, as also secondary and modern studies on the texts believed to reflect the Buddha's teachings directly.

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