Download The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press
This book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press is expected to be one of the most effective vendor book that will make you feel satisfied to purchase and also review it for completed. As understood could typical, every publication will certainly have certain things that will certainly make someone interested so much. Even it comes from the author, type, content, and even the author. However, many individuals also take the book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press based upon the theme as well as title that make them impressed in. and right here, this The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press is really recommended for you because it has fascinating title and style to check out.
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press
Download The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press
Reserve The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press is one of the priceless well worth that will certainly make you always rich. It will not mean as rich as the cash offer you. When some individuals have absence to deal with the life, individuals with many e-books often will be better in doing the life. Why need to be book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press It is really not meant that publication The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press will give you power to get to every little thing. Guide is to read and also just what we suggested is guide that is checked out. You can additionally see just how the e-book entitles The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press as well as varieties of e-book collections are giving here.
This letter could not influence you to be smarter, however guide The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press that we provide will evoke you to be smarter. Yeah, at least you'll know more than others which do not. This is exactly what called as the high quality life improvisation. Why should this The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press It's considering that this is your favourite motif to check out. If you such as this The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press style about, why don't you check out the book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press to enhance your discussion?
The here and now book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press we provide here is not type of usual book. You recognize, checking out currently does not mean to manage the printed book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press in your hand. You could obtain the soft data of The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press in your gadget. Well, we mean that guide that we extend is the soft file of guide The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press The content and all points are very same. The difference is just the forms of the book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press, whereas, this condition will exactly pay.
We discuss you likewise the method to obtain this book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press without visiting the book establishment. You can continue to visit the link that we offer and also ready to download and install The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press When lots of people are busy to look for fro in the book establishment, you are very easy to download and install the The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press here. So, what else you will choose? Take the inspiration here! It is not only offering the right book The Dhammapada: The Sayings Of The Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press yet additionally the best book collections. Here we constantly give you the very best as well as simplest way.
The Dhammapada, the Pali version of one of the most popular texts of the Buddhist canon, ranks among the classics of the world's great religious literature.
Like all religious texts in Pali, the Dhammapada belongs to the Therevâda school of the Buddhist tradition, adherents of which are now found primarily in Kampuchea, Laos, Sri Lanka, and Thailand. Dhammapada, or "sayings of the dhamma," is taken to be a collection of the utterances of the Buddha himself. Taken together, the verses form a key body of teaching within Buddhism, a guiding voice along the struggle-laden path towards true enlightenment, or Nirvana. However, the appeal of these epithets of wisdom extends beyond its religious heritage to a general and universal spirituality.
This edition provides an introduction and notes which examine the impact that the text has had within the Buddhist heritage through the centuries.
About the Series: For over 100 years Oxford World's Classics has made available the broadest spectrum of literature from around the globe. Each affordable volume reflects Oxford's commitment to scholarship, providing the most accurate text plus a wealth of other valuable features, including expert introductions by leading authorities, voluminous notes to clarify the text, up-to-date bibliographies for further study, and much more.
- Sales Rank: #773958 in Books
- Published on: 2008-12-15
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: 4.90" h x .60" w x 7.50" l, .19 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 112 pages
Review
Far surpasses any previous translation of the Dhammapada in terms of its scope and contextual accuracy. Carter and Palihawadana have not only proivde a fresh English translation of the Pali but a transliteration of the Dhammapada (which makes it eminently useful for students of Pali) and, most impressively, a translation of the exhaustive and extremely commentarial Pali Dhammapadatthakatha...This, then, is a work of wide scholarly magnitude and great philological erudition. Religious Studies Review
Language Notes
Text: English (translation)
About the Author
John Ross Carter is in the Department of Philosophy and Religion, Colgate University. Mahinda Palihawadana is Professor Emeritus of Sanskrit, Sri Jayawardhanapura.
Most helpful customer reviews
46 of 47 people found the following review helpful.
A Scholarly Dhammapada
By Robin Friedman
The Dhammapada is a deeply-inspiring religious text and the best-known work of the Theravada Buddhist canon. It consists of 423 short verses arranged in 26 chapters which cover, in brief form, the major aspects of the Buddha's teachings from the most mundane to the deepest. About 25 percent of the verses appear elsewhere in the Theravada Buddhist canon. In many Buddhist countries, children memorize this text which has much to teach both the learned and the simple. In its combination of simplicity and depth, the closest analogue to the Dhammapada in the Jewish-Christian Scriptures is the book of Psalms.
The Dhammapada has been well-served by many excellent translations. The translation under review here, by John Ross Carter, Professor of Philosophy at Colgate University, and Mahinda Palhawandana, Professer of Sanskrit Emeritus in Sri Lanka, is unique in its care and in the scope of its learning. In addition to the text, this translation includes line-by-line translations of the earliest Sri Lankan commentaries on the Dhammapada. These commentaries were written over the course of many centuries and systematized in about 1000 A.D. There is a separate and later series of commentaries on the text in which stories were written to illustrate the events that gave rise to the Buddha's utterance of each verse. These stories are not included here, but they are summarized in another well-known translation of the Dhammapada by the monk Narada, which I shall mention below.
This edition begins with a scholarly introduction to the text and the commentaries followed by an English rendition of the text of the Dhammapada without commentary. The next section of the book repeats the English translation together with the Pali text with the addition of the extensive commentary. Each chapter is arranged in accordance with the commentarial arrangement in which some verses are considered singly and others are combined in groups. Following the translation of text and commentary, there is a series of notes. Some of these notes deal with points of grammar while others describe in detail points of Buddhist teaching to illuminate the text and commentary.
The goal of this detailed presentation is to make the Dhammapada and its ancient interpretations available so that the interested reader may study the text with his or her own eyes. As Carter and Palihawanana state in their introduction (p. 9):
"It was our endeavor to make this work as much as possible a 'stitching of the centuries'. What this reveals is on the one hand the prodoundly evocative power of the religious sentiments expressed in the text, and on the other the conservatism of the tradition that interprets the text as we see in these documents. ... But from the way we set about it, what is of singular importance is the arrangement of this book: presenting the text itself as a text and presenting the history of its study in the setting of a growing tradition of interpretation....We wanted to make the text, as something in human hands, to point forward from the past through present into the future."
I want to give two brief examples from the translation. First, verse 183 of the Dhammapada is universally regarded as offering the shortest, most basic statement of the Buddha's teaching. Here it is in Carter and Palihawadana:
"Refraining from all that is detrimental,
The attainment of what is wholesome,
The purification of one's mind:
This is the instruction of Awakened Ones."
Note how the translation avoids the use of the word "bad" in line one and "good" in line two. Many might question this. But the point of this translation is to avoid the theistic connotations many Western readers will bring to the words "good" and "bad". Also note the term "Awakened Ones" in the final line rather than the more literal and traditional translation, "all the Buddhas". The difference points in the direction of universalizing the teaching rather than, perhaps, limiting it by sectarianism.
I want to look briefly at verse 1 of the Dhammapada which is basic to much of what follows in the text. It is also perhaps the most difficult verse in the work. Here it is in Carter and Palihawadana:
"Preceded by perception are mental states,
For them is perception supreme,
From perception have they sprung.
If, with perception polluted, one speaks or acts,
Thence suffering follows
As a wheel the draught ox's foot."
Most translation of verse 1 speak in terms of "the mind." Thus, Narada translates the beginning of the verse: "Mind is the forerunner of (all evil) states. Mind is chief: mind-made are they." ... Carter and Palihawadana try to present the text in a way that will not encourage the Western reader to equate it with the idealism of Plato or Berkeley. The verse remains a difficult and deep teaching on any reading.
I have the good fortune to participate in a Sutta Study Group where we read the Dhammapada chapter-by-chapter over the course of about one year. We used Carter and Palihawadana together with several other translations, as we discussed and debated and tried to understand the Dhammapada together.
The reader may not by lucky enough to have access to such a group, but the Dhammapada is a work that will reward individual study at any level. Some readers may find Carter and Palihawandana more than they need to begin. But for those wanting to make a detailed study of this great text, this work is invaluable.
21 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
Sadly, a too-highly (!) condensed version of the famed scholarly translation
By Brad4d
FAIR WARNING: This book of 112 pages is NOT the same as the book that has received praise for its scholarly and careful commentary!
This abbreviated version does not have the footnotes and the explanation of Pali terms which the expanded, 500+ page version has.
Please do NOT purchase this abbreviated version if you expect to use it as a reference version to help you understand the Pali text. Someone should feel ashamed of themselves in selling this abbreviated version to those expecting the original, without noting the helpful scholarly commentaries are gone. It was like being very disappointed in an old friend.
I know one person who ordered this text assuming it was the expanded version after I had recommended this translation -- she was very disappointed and so was I. Unfortunately, if you want to purchase the old expanded version, you may have to pay top dollar for a used copy.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.
Fine translation
By Riku Simonen
I have previously read classic Max Muller's version and some translations foud at numerous web-pages. I think this is clearly
the best of them. Carter and Palihawadana have retained texts lyric style but still their ambition is to bring autentic text as such to us. Hence reader have to use glossary where most importánt words and referensees are. I may be a bit annoying but
If you really want know exactly what what is in original dhammapada you has to use such method. Some at web "intreprete"
too much, then the text may look easier but It may go also wrong.
Only negative comment is that people to which english is not native language, text may have too mamy many fine but unfamiliar words. I recommend this book. It is one of the classics of Worlds religious teachings.
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press PDF
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press EPub
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press Doc
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press iBooks
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press rtf
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press Mobipocket
The Dhammapada: The Sayings of the Buddha (Oxford World's Classics)From Oxford University Press Kindle
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar