The Vinaya
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The Vinaya Piṭaka is the first section of the Pāli Canon. It contains the code of conduct for the monks and nuns of the Theravada tradition along with many entertaining stories from the early saṅgha.
Table of Contents
Books (3)
Canonical Works (8)
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The first English translation of the Vinaya Pitaka, Bhikkhu Sujato and Bhikkhu Brahmali prepared this ebook version of the PTS volumes.
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Readings (15)
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The tale is best understood in the light of the need of the early Buddhist tradition to demarcate its position in the ancient Indian context vis-à-vis ascetic practices and ideology.
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The argument that a nun called Sthūlanandā really did have pendulous breasts and large buttocks is, pardon the pun, a thin one. As stock images of uncouth femininity, these outsized and ungainly physical features serve the representational project of this passage
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At the beginning of the first section of the tenth chapter of the Cullavagga, the events immediately preceding the establishment of the Buddhist Order of nuns are described. In general terms these are as follows:
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Ananda, Upali and Devadatta act out a theoretical quarrel about Buddhist attitudes to law
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Buddhist texts are, by and large, nice. There’s no draconian punishments, no irrational fervor, no ‘smiting with swords’. A serene air of reason, balance, and sanity pervades.
This niceness is a huge problem.
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When reviewed like this, the whole story appears a piece of improbable fiction, possibly a very distorted account of something which actually did take place. It is strange that a story like this, which does no credit to the Buddha, but quite the opposite, was permitted to remain in the Vinaya.
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Audio/Video (2)
Reference Shelf (1)
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A dictionary of the Pāli vocabulary found in the Vinaya Piṭaka.