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Title: Buddhism with an Attitude: The Tibetan Seven-Point Mind-Training
Authors: B. Alan Wallace
Keywords: Kinh điển và triết học phật giáo
Issue Date: 2001
Publisher: Snow Lion Publications
Abstract: All of us have attitudes. Some of them accord with reality and serve us well throughout the course of our lives. Others are out of alignment with reality and cause us problems. Tibetan Buddhist practice isn't just sitting in silent meditation, it's developing fresh attitudes that align our minds with reality. Attitudes need adjusting, just like a spinal column that has been knocked out of alignment. In this book, B. Alan Wallace explains a fundamental type of Buddhist mental training which is designed to shift our attitudes so that our minds become pure wellsprings of joy instead of murky pools of problems, anxieties, fleeting pleasures, hopes, and frustrations. Wallace shows us the way to develop attitudes that unveil our full capacity for spiritual awakening. The author draws on his thirty-year training in Buddhism, physics, the cognitive sciences, and comparative religion to challenge readers to reappraise many of their assumptions about the nature of the mind and physical world. By explicitly addressing many practical and theoretical issues that uniquely face us in the modern world, Wallace brings this centuries-old practice into the twenty-first century.
Description: The Aphorisms of the Seven-Point Mind-Training The First Point: The Preliminaries First, train in the preliminaries. The Second Point: Cultivating Ultimate and Relative Bodhichitta Once you have achieved stability, reveal the mystery. Regard all events as if they were dreams. Examine the unborn nature of awareness. -Even the remedy itself is free right where it is. The essential nature of the path is resting in the universal ground. Between sessions, be an illusory person. Alternately practice giving and taking. Mount them both upon your breath. Three objects, three poisons,and three roots of virtue. In everything you do, practice with words. The Third Point: Transforming Adversity into an Aid to Spiritual Awakening When the whole world is enslaved by vices, transform adversities into the path of spiritual awakening. Blame everything on one culprit. Reflect on the kindness of all those around you. By meditating on delusive appearances as the four embodiments, emptiness becomes the best protection. The best strategy is to have four practices. Whatever you encounter, immediately apply it to meditation. The Fourth Point: A Synthesis of Practice for One Life To synthesize the essence of this practical guidance, apply yourself to the five powers. The Mahayana teaching on transferring consciousness is precisely these five powers, so your conduct is crucial. The Fifth Point: The Criterion of Proficiency in the Mind-Training The whole of Dharma is synthesized in one aim. Attend to the chief of two witnesses. Constantly resort to a sense of good cheer. The Sixth Point: The Pledges of the MindTraining Always abide by three principles. Shift your priorities but stay as you are. Do not speak of others' limitations. Do not stand in judgment of others. Abandon all hope of reward. Avoid poisonous food. Do not indulge in self-righteousness. Do not engage in malicious sarcasm. Do not wait in ambush. Do not load the burden of a dzo on an ox. Do not flatter your way to the top. Avoid pretense. Do not bring a god down to the level of a demon. Do not take advantage of another's misfortune. The Seventh Point: The Precepts of the MindTraining Synthesize all meditative practices in one. Respond in one way to all bouts of dejection. There are two tasks, at the beginning and at the end. Bear whichever of the two occurs. Guard the two at the cost of your life. Practice the three austerities. Acquire the three principal causes. Cultivate three things without letting them deteriorate. Maintain three things inseparably. Meditate constantly on the distinctive ones. Do not depend on other factors. Now practice what is important. Make no mistake. Do not be erratic. Practice with total conviction. Free yourself by means of investigation and analysis. Do not try to make an impression. Do not be bound by distemper. Don't be temperamental. Do not yearn for gratitude.
URI: http://tnt.ussh.edu.vn:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/411
Appears in Collections:CSDL Phật giáo

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