The Abhidharma-samuccaya (Sanskrit; ; English: "Compendium of
Abhidharma
The Abhidharma are a collection of Buddhist texts dating from the 3rd century BCE onwards, which contain detailed scholastic presentations of doctrinal material appearing in the canonical Buddhist scriptures and commentaries. It also refers t ...
") is a
Buddhist text composed by
Asaṅga. The ''Abhidharma-samuccaya'' is a systematic account of
Abhidharma
The Abhidharma are a collection of Buddhist texts dating from the 3rd century BCE onwards, which contain detailed scholastic presentations of doctrinal material appearing in the canonical Buddhist scriptures and commentaries. It also refers t ...
. According to
J. W. de Jong it is also "one of the most important texts of the
Yogācāra
Yogachara (, IAST: ') is an influential tradition of Buddhist philosophy and psychology emphasizing the study of cognition, perception, and consciousness through the interior lens of meditation, as well as philosophical reasoning (hetuvidyā). ...
school."
[Review of Rahula, Walpola ''Abhidharmasamuccaya'' by J. W. de Jong in Asanga; Boin-Webb, Sara; Rahula, Walpola (2001), pp. 291-299. riginal French published in T'oung Pao, LIX (1973), pp. 339-46. Reprinted in Buddhist Studies byJ.W. dejong, ed. Gregory Schopen, Berkeley: Asian Humanities Press, 1979, pp. 601-8./ref> According to Frauwallner, this text is based on the Abhidharma of the Mahīśāsaka tradition.
The text exists in Chinese, Tibetan and a reconstructed ]Sanskrit
Sanskrit (; stem form ; nominal singular , ,) is a classical language belonging to the Indo-Aryan languages, Indo-Aryan branch of the Indo-European languages. It arose in northwest South Asia after its predecessor languages had Trans-cultural ...
version. Its Taishō Tripiṭaka (Chinese Canon) number is 1605. In the Tibetan Tengyur, it is number 4049 in the Derge Tengyur and 5550 in the Peking Kangyur.
According to Traleg Rinpoche, the ''Abhidharma-samuccaya'' is one of Asanga's most essential texts and also one of the most psychologically oriented. It provides a framework, as well as a general pattern, as to how a practitioner is to follow the path, develop oneself and finally attain Buddhahood.[Traleg Rinpoche (1993), p.1.] It presents the path according to the Yogācāra
Yogachara (, IAST: ') is an influential tradition of Buddhist philosophy and psychology emphasizing the study of cognition, perception, and consciousness through the interior lens of meditation, as well as philosophical reasoning (hetuvidyā). ...
school of Mahayana Buddhism
Mahāyāna ( ; , , ; ) is a term for a broad group of Buddhist traditions, texts, philosophies, and practices developed in ancient India ( onwards). It is considered one of the three main existing branches of Buddhism, the others being Thera ...
.[
]
Overview
According to de Jong, "whilst the '' Mahāyānasaṃgraha'' is a compendium of specifically Māhāyanist teachings of the Yogācara school, the ''Samuccaya'' is a systematic guide to the Abhidharma section of the doctrinal system of the said school." According to Dan Lusthaus, Asaṅga, "was primarily an Agamist, i.e., one who based himself on the ''āgamas''. This text served as his overview of abhidharma from his developing Yogacaric perspective."
The ''Abhidharmasamuccaya'' survives in full Chinese (by Xuanzang
Xuanzang (; ; 6 April 6025 February 664), born Chen Hui or Chen Yi (), also known by his Sanskrit Dharma name Mokṣadeva, was a 7th-century Chinese Bhikkhu, Buddhist monk, scholar, traveller, and translator. He is known for the epoch-making ...
) and Tibetan translations (by Yeshe de). About two fifths of the Sanskrit text was recovered in Tibet by Rāhula Saṅkṛtyayana in 1934 and Pralhad Pradhan produced a reconstructed Sanskrit version of the full text in 1950 (basing himself on the Sanskrit material as well as the Chinese and Tibetan translations). Walpola Rahula translated this reconstruction into French in 1971.[Lusthaus, Dan]
Asaṅga's ''Abhidharmasamuccaya,'' 大乘阿毘達磨集論
acmuller.net
Contemporary scholar Achim Bayer asserts that different sections of the ''Abhidharma-samuccaya'' might be heterogenous. For example, the important term ''ālayavijñāna'' (" Store-house Consciousnesses") appears not more than six times, with all six occurrences in the "Lakṣaṇasamuccaya" section, i.e. in the first third of the work.[Bayer (2010), p.11.]
According to Walpola Rahula the ''Abhidharmasamuccaya'' is more faithful to the presentation of the dhyānas found in the suttas than the Theravada Abhidhamma texts.
Mental factors
The second chapter of this text enumerates fifty-one mental factors (), divided into the following categories:
* five ever-functioning factors (, 遍行心所, ),
* five ascertaining (object-determining) ones (''yul nges lnga'', 別境心所, ),
* eleven virtuous (or constructive) emotions (''dge ba bcu gcig'', 善心所, ),
* six root disturbing emotions and attitudes (''rtsa nyon drug'', 煩惱心所, ),
* twenty auxiliary disturbing emotions (''nye nyon nyi shu'', 隨煩惱心所, ),
* four changeable factors (''gzhan 'gyur bzhi'', 不定心所, ).
Commentaries
There are various commentaries to this text, including:
* ''Abhidharmasamuccayabhāṣya.'' The full Sanskrit manuscript was re-discovered and photographed by Rāhula Saṅkṛtyayana. A critical edition, edited by Nathmal Tatia, was published in 1976. It also exists in a Tibetan translation. The Tibetan canon attributes this text to Jinaputra, while the Chinese canon attributes it to a certain Chueh Shih tsu (Buddhasiṃha?).
* ''Abhidharmasamuccayavyākhyā'' (which is a combination of the ''Abhidharmasamuccaya'' and its ''bhāṣya''). It exists in Tibetan translation and in Chinese translation (''Dasheng apidamo zaji lun'' 大乘阿毘達磨雜集論). The Tibetan canon attributes this text to Jinaputra, while the Chinese canon attributes it to Sthiramati.
* K'uei-chi wrote a sub-commentary to Xuanzang's translation of the ''Abhidharmasamuccayavyākhyā.''
*A Tibetan commentary by Bu-ston (1290–1364).
*A Tibetan commentary by Gyaltsab Je (1364-1432).
*A Tibetan commentary by Sabzang Mati Panchen Jamyang Lodrö (1294-1376).[Tsering Wangchuk (2017). ''The Uttaratantra in the Land of Snows: Tibetan Thinkers Debate the Centrality of the Buddha-Nature Treatise'', p. 153. SUNY Press.]
Notes
Sources
* Bayer, Achim (2010)
''The Theory of Karman in the Abhidharmasamuccaya.''
Tokyo: International Institute for Buddhist Studies.
* Berzin, Alexander (2006)
''Primary Minds and the 51 Mental Factors''
Study Buddhism.
* Traleg Rinpoche (1993). ''The Abhidharmasamuccaya: Teachings by the Venerable Traleg Kyabgon Rinpoche''. The Kagyu E-Vam Buddhist Institut
Multilingual edition of the first chapter of Abhidharmasamuccaya in the Bibliotheca Polyglotta
*Asanga; Boin-Webb, Sara; Rahula, Walpola (2001). ''Abhidharmasamuccaya: The Compendium of the Higher Teaching (Philosophy)'', Asian Humanities Press.
*Dan Martin. ''Gray Traces: Tracing the Tibetan Teaching Transmission of the mNgon pa kun btus (Abhidharmasamuccaya) Through the Early Period of Disunity in Helmut Eimer and David Germano (ed.), ''The Many Canons of Tibetan Buddhism'', Leiden: Brill, 2002
{{Yogācāra
Mahayana texts
Abhidharma
Yogacara
4th-century books