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Difference between revisions of "Abhidharma texts"

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  repositories of several centuries of {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[activity]] representing multiple branches of the [[Sarvastivada school]], which was spread throughout greater north­ [[western]] [[India]]. However, they came to be particu­ larly associated by [[tradition]] with the [[Sarvastivadins]] of [[Kashmir]] who, thereby, acquired the appellation, Sarvastivada-Vaibhasika. Three other texts composed during the same period that are associated with the northwestern region of Gand­ [[hara]] display a markedly different {{Wiki|structure}} and {{Wiki|purpose}}: the *Abhidharmahrdaya5i'istra ([[Heart of Abhidharma]]) by Dharmasre thin; the *Abhidharmahrdaya5astra ([[Heart of Abhidharma]]) by Upasanta; and the *Misrakabhid­ harmahrdaya5astra ([[Heart of Abhidharma]] with Miscel­ laneous Additions) by [[Dharmatrata]]. Composed in verse with an accompanying prose auto-commentary, these texts function as summary digests of all aspects of the [[teaching]] presented according to a [[logical]] and non­ repetitive {{Wiki|structure}}. In contrast to the earlier numeri­ cally guided taxonomic lists well-suited as {{Wiki|mnemonic}} aids, these texts adopt a new method of [[organization]], attempting to subsume the prior taxonomic lists and all [[discussion]] of specific [[doctrinal]] points under gen­ eral topical [[sections]]. This new organizational {{Wiki|structure}} was to become paradigmatic for the texts of the final period of [[Sarvastivada abhidharma]]. This final period in the [[development]] ofSarvastivada [[abhidharma]] treatises includes texts that are the prod­ ucts of single authors and that adopt a polemical style of [[exposition]] displaying a fully developed {{Wiki|sectarian}} [[self-consciousness]]. They also employ increasingly so­ phisticated methods of {{Wiki|argumentation}} in order toes­ tablish the position of their [[own]] school and to refute at length the [[views]] of others. Despite this polemical approach, they nonetheless purport to serve as well­ organized expository treatises or pedagogical digests for the entirety of [[Buddhist teaching]]. The Abhidhar­ makosa ([[Treasury of Abhidharma]]), including both verses ([[karika]]) and an auto-commentary (bh ya), by VASUBANDHU became the most important text from this period, central to the subsequent [[traditions]] of ab­ hidharma studies in [[Tibet]] and {{Wiki|East Asia}}. Adopting both the verse-commentary {{Wiki|structure}} and the topical orga­ nization of the *[[Abhidharmahrdaya]], the Abhidhar­ makosa presents a detailed account of [[Sarvastivada abhidharma]] [[teaching]] with frequent [[criticism]] of Sar­ vastivada positions in its auto-commentary. The Ab­ hidharmakosa provoked a response from certain [[Kashmiri]] [[Sarvastivada]] [[masters]] who attempted to refute non-Sarvastivada [[views]] presented in [[Vasubandhu's]] work and to reestablish their [[own]] [[interpretation]] of or- thodox [[Kashmiri]] [[Sarvastivada]] positions. These works, the *Nyayanusara5astra (Conformance to Correct Prin­ ciple) and *Abhidharmasamayapradzpika ([[Illumination]] of the Collection of [[Abhidharma]]) by [[Sanghabhadra]] and the Abhidharmadzpa ([[Illumination]] of [[Abhidharma]]) by an unknown author who refers to himself as the Di:pa­ [[kara]] (author of the Dzpa) were the final works of the [[Sarvastivada abhidharma]] [[tradition]] that have survived.
+
 
  
[[Abhidharma]] {{Wiki|exegesis}} [[Abhidharma]] {{Wiki|exegesis}} evolved over a long period as both the agent and the product of a nascent and then increas­ ingly disparate [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|sectarian}} [[self-consciousness]]. Given the voluminous [[nature]] of even the surviving lit­ erature that provides a record of this long [[doctrinal]] history, any outline of [[abhidharma]] method must be content with sketching the most general contours and [[touching]] on a few representative examples. Nonethe­ less, scanning the history of [[abhidharma]], one discerns a general course of [[development]] that in the end re­ sulted in a complex interpretative edifice radically dif­ ferent from the siitras upon which it was believed to be based.
 
  
In its earliest stage, that is, as elaborative commen­ tary, [[abhidharma]] was guided by the [[intention]] simply to clarify the content of the siitras. Taxonomic lists were used as a {{Wiki|mnemonic}} device facilitating oral preservation and [[transmission]]; catechetical investiga­ tion was employed in a [[teaching]] {{Wiki|environment}} of oral commentary guided by the pedagogical technique of question and answer. Over time, the taxonomic lists grew in complexity as the simpler lists presented in the siitra teachings were combined in new ways, and ad­ ditional categories of qualitative analysis were created to specify modes of interaction among discrete aspects of the siitra [[teaching]]. The initially terse catechetical in­ vestigation was expanded with discursive [[exposition]] and new methods of [[interpretation]] and argumenta­ tion, which were demanded by an increasingly polem­ ical {{Wiki|environment}}. These developments coincided with a move from oral to written methods of textual trans­ [[mission]] and with the challenge presented by other [[Buddhist]] and [[non-Buddhist]] groups. In its final stage, [[abhidharma]] texts became complex [[philosophical]] trea­ tises employing sophisticated methods of argumenta­ tion, whose {{Wiki|purpose}} was the analysis and [[elaboration]] of [[doctrinal]] issues for their [[own]] sake. The very [[sutras]] from which [[abhidharma]] arose were now subordinated as mere statements in need of analysis that only the ab­ hidharmacould provide. No longer serving as the start­ ing point for [[abhidharma]] {{Wiki|exegesis}}, the siitras were
 
  
5. [[Yamaka]] (Pairs); 6. Pattha na ([[Foundational Conditions]]); and 7. [[Katha vatthu]] ([[Points of Discussion]]). The [[Sarvastivada]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] collection, also including seven texts, is extant only in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation: 1. San? g�ltipary�aya ([[Discourse]] on the San? g�lti); 2. [[Dharmaskandha]] (Aggregation of Factors); 3. Prajñaptis´a� stra ([[Treatise on Designations]]); 4. [[Dha]]� tuka� ya (Collection on the [[Elements]]); 5. Vijña� naka� ya (Collection on {{Wiki|Perceptual}} [[Consciousness]]); 6. Prakaran� apa� da ([[Exposition]]); and 7. Jña� naprastha� na (Foundations of [[Knowledge]]). Certain other early [[abhidharma]] texts extant in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation probably represent the [[abhidharma]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] texts of yet other schools: for example, the *S´a� riputra� bhidharmas´a� stra (T. 1548), which may have been affiliated with a Vibhajyava�da school, or the *Sam� mat�lya´s�astra (T. 1649) affiliated by its title with the Sam� mat��ya school, associated with the Va�ts ��putr��yas. In the absence of historical {{Wiki|evidence}} for the accurate dating of the extant [[abhidharma]] treatises, [[scholars]] have tentatively proposed [[relative]] chronologies based primarily upon internal formal criteria that presuppose a growing complexity of structural [[organization]] and of {{Wiki|exegetical}} method. It is assumed that [[abhidharma]] texts of the earliest period bear the closest similarities to the su�tras, and are often structured as commentaries on entire su�tras or on su�tra [[sections]] arranged according to taxonomic lists. The Vibhan? ga and [[Puggalapaññatti]] of the Therava�dins and the San? g�ltipary�aya and [[Dharmaskandha]] of the Sarva�stiva�dins exemplify these [[characteristics]]. The next set of [[abhidharma]] texts exhibits {{Wiki|emancipation}} from the confines of commentary upon {{Wiki|individual}} su�tras, by adopting a more abstract stance that subsumes [[doctrinal]] material from a variety of sources under an abstract analytical framework of often newly created categories. This middle period would include the five remaining [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] texts within the Therava�da and the Sarva�stiva�da [[abhidharma]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections.
 
  
The catechetical style of {{Wiki|commentarial}} {{Wiki|exegesis}}, evident even in the earliest [[abhidharma]] texts, becomes more structured and [[Wikipedia:Formula|formulaic]] in texts of the middle period. The final products in this process of {{Wiki|abstraction}} are the truly {{Wiki|independent}} treatises that display marked {{Wiki|creativity}} in technical {{Wiki|terminology}} and [[doctrinal]] [[elaboration]]. Some of the texts, in particular the [[Katha vatthu]] of the [[Theravadins]] and the Vijñanaka ya of the [[Sarvastivadins]], display an [[awareness]] of differences in [[doctrinal]] [[interpretation]] and factional alignments, although they do not adopt the developed polemical stance typical of many subsequent [[abhidharma]] works. The composition of [[abhidharma]] treatises did not end with the [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections, but continued with commentaries on previous [[abhidharma]] works and with {{Wiki|independent}} summary digests or {{Wiki|exegetical}} manuals. Within the [[Theravada tradition]], several fifth-century C.E. commentators compiled new works based upon earlier commentaries dating from the first several centuries C.E. They also composed {{Wiki|independent}} summaries of [[abhidhamma]] analysis, prominent among which are the [[Visuddhimagga]] ([[Path of Purification]]) by BUDDHAGHOSA and the [[Abhidhamma]] vata ra ([[Introduction to Abhidhamma]]) by [[Buddhadatta]]. The Abhidhammatthasan ? [[gaha]] (Collection of [[Abhidhamma]] Matters) composed by [[Anuruddha]] in the twelfth century C.E. became thereafter the most frequently used summary of [[abhidhamma]] [[teaching]] within the Therava da [[tradition]]. The first five centuries C.E. were also a creative period of efflorescence for the [[abhidharma]] of the Sarva stivadins. In texts of this period, summary [[exposition]] combines with exhaustive [[doctrinal]] analysis and polemical [[debate]].
 
  
The [[teaching]] is reorganized in accordance with an abstract and more [[logical]] {{Wiki|structure}}, which is then interwoven with the earlier taxonomic lists. Preeminent among these texts for both their breadth and their influence upon later {{Wiki|scholastic}} compositions are the voluminous, [[doctrinal]] compendia, called [[vibha]] sa , which are represented by three different recensions extant in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation, the last and best known of which is called the [[Maha]] [[vibha]] sa (Great {{Wiki|Exegesis}}). Composed over several centuries from the second century C.E. onward, these ostensibly simple commentaries on an earlier [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] text, the Jña naprastha na, exhaustively enumerate the positions of contending groups on each [[doctrinal]] point, often explicitly attributing these [[views]] to specific schools or [[masters]]. Instead of arguing for a single, [[orthodox]] viewpoint, the [[vibha]] sa compendia display an {{Wiki|encyclopedic}} [[intention]] that is often content with comprehensiveness in cataloguing the full spectrum of differing {{Wiki|sectarian}} positions. The [[vibhasa]] compendia are [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] collections. For example, the collection of miscellaneous texts (khuddakapitaka) of the [[canon]] of the [[THERAVADA]] school includes two texts utilizing these methods that were not [[recognized]] to be [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] “[[abhidharma]]” texts.
 
  
The [[Patisambhida]] [[magga]] ([[Path of Discrimination]]) contains brief discussions of [[doctrinal]] points structured according to a topical list (ma tika ), and the [[Niddesa]] ([[Exposition]]) consists of commentary on the early verse collection, the Suttanipa ta. In fact, a clear-cut point of origin for the [[abhidharma]] as an {{Wiki|independent}} section of the textual [[canon]] only reflects the {{Wiki|perspective}} of the later [[tradition]] that designates, after a long forgotten [[evolution]], certain texts as “[[abhidharma]]” in contrast to [[sutras]] or other possibly earlier expository works that share similar [[characteristics]]. [[Abhidharma]] texts [[Traditional]] accounts of early [[Indian Buddhist schools]] suggest that while certain schools may have shared some textual collections, many transmitted their [[own]] {{Wiki|independent}} [[abhidharma]] treatises. [[XUANZANG]] (ca. 600–664 C.E.), the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] who visited [[India]] in the seventh century C.E., is reported to have collected numerous texts of as many as seven {{Wiki|mainstream}} [[Buddhist]] schools. These almost certainly included [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] texts representing various schools.
 
  
However, only two complete [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections, representing the [[Theravada]] and Sarvastiva da schools, and several texts of [[undetermined]] {{Wiki|sectarian}} affiliation are preserved. Even though each of the [[Theravada]] and [[Sarvastivada abhidharma]] collections contains seven texts, the {{Wiki|individual}} texts of the [[two collections]] cannot be neatly identified with one another. However, a close {{Wiki|examination}} of certain texts from each collection and a comparison with other extant [[abhidharma]] materials reveals similarities in the underlying taxonomic lists, in {{Wiki|exegetical}} {{Wiki|structure}}, and in the topics discussed. These similarities suggest either [[contact]] among the groups who composed and transmitted these texts, or a common ground of [[doctrinal exegesis]] and even textual material predating the [[emergence]] of the separate schools. The [[Theravada]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] collection, the only one extant in an [[Indian]] [[language]] (Pa�li), contains seven texts: 1. Vibhan? ga (Analysis); 2. [[Puggalapaññatti]] ([[Designation of Persons]]); 3. [[Dha]] tukatha ([[Discussion of Elements]]); 4. Dhammasan? gan i ([[Enumeration of Factors]]);
+
 
 +
 
 +
[[Traditional]] accounts of early [[Indian Buddhist schools]] suggest that while certain schools may have shared some textual collections, many transmitted their [[own]] {{Wiki|independent}} [[abhidharma]] treatises. [[XUANZANG]] (ca. 600–664 C.E.), the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Buddhist]] [[pilgrim]] who visited [[India]] in the seventh century C.E., is reported to have collected numerous texts of as many as seven {{Wiki|mainstream}} [[Buddhist]] schools.
 +
 
 +
These almost certainly included [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] texts representing various schools. However, only two complete [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections, representing the [[Theravada]] and [[Sarvastivada]] schools, and several texts of [[undetermined]] {{Wiki|sectarian}} affiliation are preserved.  
 +
 
 +
Even though each of the [[Theravada]] and [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]] collections contains seven texts, the {{Wiki|individual}} texts of the [[two collections]] cannot be neatly identified with one another.  
 +
 
 +
However, a close {{Wiki|examination}} of certain texts from each collection and a comparison with other extant [[abhidharma]] materials reveals similarities in the underlying taxonomic lists, in {{Wiki|exegetical}} {{Wiki|structure}}, and in the topics discussed.  
 +
 
 +
These similarities suggest either [[contact]] among the groups who composed and transmitted these texts, or a common ground of [[doctrinal exegesis]] and even textual material predating the [[emergence]] of the separate schools.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The [[Theravada]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] collection, the only one extant in an [[Indian]] [[language]] ([[Pali]]), contains seven texts:
 +
 
 +
1. [[Vibhanga]] (Analysis);
 +
 
 +
2. [[Puggalapaññatti]] ([[Designation of Persons]]);  
 +
 
 +
3. [[Dhatukatha]] ([[Discussion of Elements]]);  
 +
 
 +
4. [[Dhammasangani]] ([[Enumeration of Factors]]);
 +
 
 +
5. [[Yamaka]] (Pairs);
 +
 
 +
6. [[Patthana]] ([[Foundational Conditions]]); and
 +
 
 +
7. [[Kathavatthu]] ([[Points of Discussion]]).
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The [[Sarvastivada]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] collection, also [[including]] seven texts, is extant only in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation:
 +
 
 +
 
 +
1. [[Sangltiparyaya]] ([[Discourse]] on the Sanglti);
 +
 
 +
2. [[Dharmaskandha]] (Aggregation of Factors);
 +
 
 +
3. [[Prajñaptisastra] ([[Treatise on Designations]]);
 +
 
 +
4. [[Dhatukaya]] (Collection on the [[Elements]]);
 +
 
 +
5. [[Vijñanakaya]] (Collection on {{Wiki|Perceptual}} [[Consciousness]]);
 +
 
 +
6. [[Prakaranapada]] ([[Exposition]]); and
 +
 
 +
7. [[Jñanaprasthana]] (Foundations of [[Knowledge]]).
 +
 
 +
Certain other early [[abhidharma]] texts extant in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation probably represent the [[abhidharma]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] texts of yet other schools:
 +
 
 +
for example, the *[[Sariputra abhidharmasastra]] (T. 1548), which may have been affiliated with a [[Vibhajyavada]] school, or the *[[Sammatlyasastra]] (T. 1649) affiliated by its title with the [[Sammatya]] school, associated with the Vatsputryas.
 +
 
 +
In the absence of historical {{Wiki|evidence}} for the accurate dating of the extant [[abhidharma]] treatises, [[scholars]] have tentatively proposed [[relative]] chronologies based primarily upon internal formal criteria that presuppose a growing complexity of structural [[organization]] and of {{Wiki|exegetical}} method.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
It is assumed that [[abhidharma]] texts of the earliest period bear the closest similarities to the [[sutras]], and are often structured as commentaries on entire [[sutras]] or on [[sutra]] [[sections]] arranged according to taxonomic lists.
 +
 
 +
The [[Vibhanga]] and [[Puggalapaññatti]] of the [[Theravadins]] and the [[Sangltiparyaya]] and [[Dharmaskandha]] of the [[Sarvastivadins]] exemplify these [[characteristics]].
 +
 
 +
The next set of [[abhidharma]] texts exhibits {{Wiki|emancipation}} from the confines of commentary upon {{Wiki|individual}} [[sutras]], by adopting a more abstract stance that subsumes [[doctrinal]] material from a variety of sources under an abstract analytical framework of often newly created categories.
 +
 
 +
This middle period would include the five remaining [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] texts within the [[Theravada]] and the [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]] [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections. The [[catechetical]] style of {{Wiki|commentarial}} {{Wiki|exegesis}}, evident even in the earliest [[abhidharma]] texts, becomes
 +
 
 +
 
 +
more structured and [[Wikipedia:Formula|formulaic]] in texts of the middle period. The final products in this process of {{Wiki|abstraction}} are the truly {{Wiki|independent}} treatises that display marked {{Wiki|creativity}} in technical {{Wiki|terminology}} and [[doctrinal]] [[elaboration]].
 +
 
 +
Some of the texts, in particular the [[Kathavatthu]] of the [[Theravadins]] and the [[Vijñanakaya]] of the [[Sarvastivadins]], display an [[awareness]] of differences in [[doctrinal]] [[interpretation]] and factional alignments, although they do not adopt the developed polemical stance typical of many subsequent [[abhidharma]] works.
 +
 
 +
The composition of [[abhidharma]] treatises did not end with the [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] collections, but continued with commentaries on previous [[abhidharma]] works and with {{Wiki|independent}} summary digests or {{Wiki|exegetical}} manuals. Within the [[Theravada tradition]], several fifth-century C.E. commentators compiled new works based upon earlier commentaries dating from the first several centuries C.E.
 +
 
 +
They also composed {{Wiki|independent}} summaries of [[abhidhamma]] analysis, prominent among which are the [[Visuddhimagga]] ([[Path of Purification]]) by BUDDHAGHOSA and the [[Abhidhammavatara]] ([[Introduction to Abhidhamma]]) by [[Buddhadatta]].
 +
 
 +
The [[Abhidhammatthasangaha]] (Collection of [[Abhidhamma]] Matters]]) composed by [[Anuruddha]] in the twelfth century C.E. became thereafter the most frequently used summary of [[abhidhamma]] [[teaching]] within the [[Theravavada]]  [[tradition]].
 +
 
 +
The first five centuries C.E. were also a creative period of efflorescence for the [[abhidharma]] of the [[Sarvastivadins]]. In texts of this period, summary [[exposition]] combines with exhaustive [[doctrinal]] analysis and polemical [[debate]]. The [[teaching]] is reorganized in accordance with an abstract and more [[logical]] {{Wiki|structure}}, which is then interwoven with the earlier taxonomic lists.
 +
 
 +
Preeminent among these texts for both their breadth and their influence upon later {{Wiki|scholastic}} compositions are the voluminous, [[doctrinal]] compendia, called [[vibhasa]] , which are represented by three different recensions extant in {{Wiki|Chinese}} translation, the last and best known of which is called the [[Maha vibhasa]]  (Great {{Wiki|Exegesis}}).
 +
 
 +
Composed over several centuries from the second century C.E. onward, these ostensibly simple commentaries on an earlier [[Wikipedia:canonical|canonical]] [[abhidharma]] text, the [[Jñanaprasthana]], exhaustively enumerate the positions of contending groups on each [[doctrinal]] point, often explicitly attributing these [[views]] to specific schools or [[masters]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Instead of arguing for a single, [[orthodox]] viewpoint, the [[vibhasa]] compendia display an {{Wiki|encyclopedic}} [[intention]] that is often content with comprehensiveness in cataloguing the full spectrum of differing {{Wiki|sectarian}} positions. The [[vibhasa]] compendia are
 +
 
 +
 
 +
repositories of several centuries of {{Wiki|scholastic}} [[activity]] representing multiple branches of the [[Sarvastivada school]], which was spread throughout greater {{Wiki|northwestern India}}. However, they came to be particularly associated by [[tradition]] with the [[Sarvastivadins]] of [[Kashmir]] who, thereby, acquired the appellation, [[Sarvativada]]-[[Vaibhasika]].a
 +
 
 +
Three other texts composed during the same period that are associated with the northwestern region of [[Gandhara]] display a markedly different {{Wiki|structure}} and {{Wiki|purpose}}: the *[[Abhidharmahrdayasastra]] ([[Heart of Abhidharma]]) by Dharmas´resthin; the *[[Abhidharmahrdayasastra]] ([[Heart of Abhidharma]]) by [[Upasanta]]; and the *Misrakabhidharmahrdayasastra ([[Heart of Abhidharma]] with Miscellaneous Additions) by [[Dharmatrata]].
 +
 
 +
Composed in verse with an accompanying prose auto-commentary, these texts function as summary digests of all aspects of the [[teaching]] presented according to a [[logical]] and nonrepetitive {{Wiki|structure}}.
 +
 
 +
In contrast to the earlier numerically guided taxonomic lists well-suited as {{Wiki|mnemonic}} aids, these texts adopt a new method of [[organization]], attempting to subsume the prior taxonomic lists and all [[discussion]] of specific [[doctrinal]] points under general topical [[sections]].
 +
 
 +
This new organizational {{Wiki|structure}} was to become paradigmatic for the texts of the final period of [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]].
 +
 
 +
This final period in the [[development]] of [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]] treatises includes texts that are the products of single authors and that adopt a polemical style of [[exposition]] displaying a fully developed {{Wiki|sectarian}} [[self-consciousness]]. They also employ increasingly sophisticated [[methods]] of {{Wiki|argumentation}} in order to establish the position of their [[own]] school and to refute at length the [[views]] of others.
 +
 
 +
Despite this polemical approach, they nonetheless purport to serve as well organized expository treatises or pedagogical digests for the entirety of [[Buddhist teaching]].
 +
 
 +
 
 +
The [[Abhidharmakosa]] ([[Treasury of Abhidharma]]), [[including]] both verses ([[karika]] ) and an auto-commentary ([[bhasya]]), by VASUBANDHU became the most important text from this period, central to the subsequent [[traditions]] of [[abhidharma]] studies in [[Tibet]] and {{Wiki|East Asia}}.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
Adopting both the verse-commentary {{Wiki|structure}} and the topical [[organization]] of the *[[Abhidharmahrdaya]], the [[Abhidharmakosha]] presents a detailed account of [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]] [[teaching]] with frequent [[criticism]] of [[Sarvastivada]] positions in its auto-commentary.
 +
 
 +
The [[Abhidharmakosa]] provoked a response from certain  [[Kashmiri]] [[Sarvastivada]] [[masters]] who attempted to refute non-Sarvastivada [[views]] presented in [[Vasubandhu’s]] work and to reestablish their [[own]] [[interpretation]] of [[orthodox]]
 +
 
 +
 
 +
[[Kashmiri]] [[Sarvastivada]] positions. These works, the *[[Nyayanusarasastra]] ([[Conformance to Correct Principle]]) and *Abhidharmasamayapradlpika ([[Illumination]] of the Collection of [[Abhidharma]]) by [[Sanghabhadra]] and the [[Abhidharmadlpa]] ([[Illumination]] of [[Abhidharma]]) by an unknown author who refers to himself as the [[Dpakara]] (author of the [[Dlpa]]) were the final works of the [[Sarvastivada]] [[abhidharma]] [[tradition]] that have survived.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
 
 +
{{E}}
 +
[[Category:Abhidharma]]

Latest revision as of 23:40, 10 February 2020






Traditional accounts of early Indian Buddhist schools suggest that while certain schools may have shared some textual collections, many transmitted their own independent abhidharma treatises. XUANZANG (ca. 600–664 C.E.), the Chinese Buddhist pilgrim who visited India in the seventh century C.E., is reported to have collected numerous texts of as many as seven mainstream Buddhist schools.

These almost certainly included canonical abhidharma texts representing various schools. However, only two complete canonical collections, representing the Theravada and Sarvastivada schools, and several texts of undetermined sectarian affiliation are preserved.

Even though each of the Theravada and Sarvastivada abhidharma collections contains seven texts, the individual texts of the two collections cannot be neatly identified with one another.

However, a close examination of certain texts from each collection and a comparison with other extant abhidharma materials reveals similarities in the underlying taxonomic lists, in exegetical structure, and in the topics discussed.

These similarities suggest either contact among the groups who composed and transmitted these texts, or a common ground of doctrinal exegesis and even textual material predating the emergence of the separate schools.


The Theravada canonical abhidharma collection, the only one extant in an Indian language (Pali), contains seven texts:

1. Vibhanga (Analysis);

2. Puggalapaññatti (Designation of Persons);

3. Dhatukatha (Discussion of Elements);

4. Dhammasangani (Enumeration of Factors);

5. Yamaka (Pairs);

6. Patthana (Foundational Conditions); and

7. Kathavatthu (Points of Discussion).


The Sarvastivada canonical abhidharma collection, also including seven texts, is extant only in Chinese translation:


1. Sangltiparyaya (Discourse on the Sanglti);

2. Dharmaskandha (Aggregation of Factors);

3. [[Prajñaptisastra] (Treatise on Designations);

4. Dhatukaya (Collection on the Elements);

5. Vijñanakaya (Collection on Perceptual Consciousness);

6. Prakaranapada (Exposition); and

7. Jñanaprasthana (Foundations of Knowledge).

Certain other early abhidharma texts extant in Chinese translation probably represent the abhidharma canonical texts of yet other schools:

for example, the *Sariputra abhidharmasastra (T. 1548), which may have been affiliated with a Vibhajyavada school, or the *Sammatlyasastra (T. 1649) affiliated by its title with the Sammatya school, associated with the Vatsputryas.

In the absence of historical evidence for the accurate dating of the extant abhidharma treatises, scholars have tentatively proposed relative chronologies based primarily upon internal formal criteria that presuppose a growing complexity of structural organization and of exegetical method.


It is assumed that abhidharma texts of the earliest period bear the closest similarities to the sutras, and are often structured as commentaries on entire sutras or on sutra sections arranged according to taxonomic lists.

The Vibhanga and Puggalapaññatti of the Theravadins and the Sangltiparyaya and Dharmaskandha of the Sarvastivadins exemplify these characteristics.

The next set of abhidharma texts exhibits emancipation from the confines of commentary upon individual sutras, by adopting a more abstract stance that subsumes doctrinal material from a variety of sources under an abstract analytical framework of often newly created categories.

This middle period would include the five remaining canonical texts within the Theravada and the Sarvastivada abhidharma canonical collections. The catechetical style of commentarial exegesis, evident even in the earliest abhidharma texts, becomes


more structured and formulaic in texts of the middle period. The final products in this process of abstraction are the truly independent treatises that display marked creativity in technical terminology and doctrinal elaboration.

Some of the texts, in particular the Kathavatthu of the Theravadins and the Vijñanakaya of the Sarvastivadins, display an awareness of differences in doctrinal interpretation and factional alignments, although they do not adopt the developed polemical stance typical of many subsequent abhidharma works.

The composition of abhidharma treatises did not end with the canonical collections, but continued with commentaries on previous abhidharma works and with independent summary digests or exegetical manuals. Within the Theravada tradition, several fifth-century C.E. commentators compiled new works based upon earlier commentaries dating from the first several centuries C.E.

They also composed independent summaries of abhidhamma analysis, prominent among which are the Visuddhimagga (Path of Purification) by BUDDHAGHOSA and the Abhidhammavatara (Introduction to Abhidhamma) by Buddhadatta.

The Abhidhammatthasangaha (Collection of Abhidhamma Matters]]) composed by Anuruddha in the twelfth century C.E. became thereafter the most frequently used summary of abhidhamma teaching within the Theravavada tradition.

The first five centuries C.E. were also a creative period of efflorescence for the abhidharma of the Sarvastivadins. In texts of this period, summary exposition combines with exhaustive doctrinal analysis and polemical debate. The teaching is reorganized in accordance with an abstract and more logical structure, which is then interwoven with the earlier taxonomic lists.

Preeminent among these texts for both their breadth and their influence upon later scholastic compositions are the voluminous, doctrinal compendia, called vibhasa , which are represented by three different recensions extant in Chinese translation, the last and best known of which is called the Maha vibhasa (Great Exegesis).

Composed over several centuries from the second century C.E. onward, these ostensibly simple commentaries on an earlier canonical abhidharma text, the Jñanaprasthana, exhaustively enumerate the positions of contending groups on each doctrinal point, often explicitly attributing these views to specific schools or masters.


Instead of arguing for a single, orthodox viewpoint, the vibhasa compendia display an encyclopedic intention that is often content with comprehensiveness in cataloguing the full spectrum of differing sectarian positions. The vibhasa compendia are


repositories of several centuries of scholastic activity representing multiple branches of the Sarvastivada school, which was spread throughout greater northwestern India. However, they came to be particularly associated by tradition with the Sarvastivadins of Kashmir who, thereby, acquired the appellation, Sarvativada-Vaibhasika.a

Three other texts composed during the same period that are associated with the northwestern region of Gandhara display a markedly different structure and purpose: the *Abhidharmahrdayasastra (Heart of Abhidharma) by Dharmas´resthin; the *Abhidharmahrdayasastra (Heart of Abhidharma) by Upasanta; and the *Misrakabhidharmahrdayasastra (Heart of Abhidharma with Miscellaneous Additions) by Dharmatrata.

Composed in verse with an accompanying prose auto-commentary, these texts function as summary digests of all aspects of the teaching presented according to a logical and nonrepetitive structure.

In contrast to the earlier numerically guided taxonomic lists well-suited as mnemonic aids, these texts adopt a new method of organization, attempting to subsume the prior taxonomic lists and all discussion of specific doctrinal points under general topical sections.

This new organizational structure was to become paradigmatic for the texts of the final period of Sarvastivada abhidharma.

This final period in the development of Sarvastivada abhidharma treatises includes texts that are the products of single authors and that adopt a polemical style of exposition displaying a fully developed sectarian self-consciousness. They also employ increasingly sophisticated methods of argumentation in order to establish the position of their own school and to refute at length the views of others.

Despite this polemical approach, they nonetheless purport to serve as well organized expository treatises or pedagogical digests for the entirety of Buddhist teaching.


The Abhidharmakosa (Treasury of Abhidharma), including both verses (karika ) and an auto-commentary (bhasya), by VASUBANDHU became the most important text from this period, central to the subsequent traditions of abhidharma studies in Tibet and East Asia.


Adopting both the verse-commentary structure and the topical organization of the *Abhidharmahrdaya, the Abhidharmakosha presents a detailed account of Sarvastivada abhidharma teaching with frequent criticism of Sarvastivada positions in its auto-commentary.

The Abhidharmakosa provoked a response from certain Kashmiri Sarvastivada masters who attempted to refute non-Sarvastivada views presented in Vasubandhu’s work and to reestablish their own interpretation of orthodox


Kashmiri Sarvastivada positions. These works, the *Nyayanusarasastra (Conformance to Correct Principle) and *Abhidharmasamayapradlpika (Illumination of the Collection of Abhidharma) by Sanghabhadra and the Abhidharmadlpa (Illumination of Abhidharma) by an unknown author who refers to himself as the Dpakara (author of the Dlpa) were the final works of the Sarvastivada abhidharma tradition that have survived.