INDEX.

Abhimukî (sixth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [318].

Acalâ (eighth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [322].

Açoka, King, [49].

Açrava (evil), explained, [249 ft.]

Açûnya, [22], [95].

Açvaghosha, [4], [8], [61 ft.], [65 ft.], [111], [115]; on Âlaya, [66 ft.], [129], [139 ft.]; Awakening of Faith, [7]; on Suchness, [99]; on Ignorance, [118]; and Dionysius, [102 ft.]; Buddhacarita, quoted, [147]; on Mahâyânism, [246]; on the Sambhogakâya, [258], [333].

Agnosticism, [25].

Âlaya (or Âlaya-vijñâna), All-conserving Soul, [66]; as depository of “germs”, [66]; creator of the universe, [68]; and the Garbha, [125] et seq.; its evolution, [128]; and the soul, [165]; and the twelve nidânas, [183].

Amitâbha, [207], [219], [269].

Anânârtha (non-particularisation), [72].

Ânanda attempts to locate the soul, [157].

Ânâpânam, exercise in breathing, [53 ft.]

Arada, [146].

Arcismatî (fourth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [316].

Arhatship and Mahâyânism, [288].

Âryadeva, [3 ft.], [8], [60].

Asanga (and Vasubandhu), [4], [62], [65], [69], [87], [88], [153], [231], [234], [263], [354].

Asceticism repudiated, [52], [53].

Atman, and Samkhyan Lingham, [38]; and the Vedantic çarîra, [38]; and Vijñâna, [39]; and unity of consciousness, [40]; and karma, [41]; and impermanency, [43]; and egoism, [44]; and the “old man”, [165]. (See also “ego” and “soul”.)

Atonement, vicarious, [291 ft.]

Avatamsaka Sûtra, The, on Bodhisattva’s reflections, [369] et seq.

Avenikas (unique features), [327 ft.]

Avidyâ (ignorance), [35] et seq., [115].

Balas, the ten, of the Buddha, [327].

Beal, Samuel, refuted, [20] et seq. Catena of Buddhist Scriptures, quoted, [157 ft.]; Romantic History of Buddha, quoted, on Buddha’s enlightenment, [337].

Bhagavadgîta, quoted, [126 ft.]

Bhûtatathâtâ (Suchness), [99] et seq; and Mahâyâna, [7]; and perfect knowledge, [92].

Bodhi (wisdom), [46]; and Prajñâ etc., defined, [82 ft.]; as perfect knowledge, [92]; its meaning explained, [294]; by Nâgârjuna, [297]; as a reflex of Dharmakâya, [299]; how awakened in human heart, [302].

Bodhicitta (Intelligence-heart), [52]. (See also “Bodhi.”)

Bodhi-Dharma, of Dhyâna sect, [103], [149], [155].

Bodhipakshikas, the seven, [316] et seq.

Bodhisattva, above samsara and nirvana, [72]; in the three yânas, [277]; the conception of, in primitive Buddhism, [286]; we are, [290]; and love, [292]; his ten pranidhanas, [308]; his reflections, [369].

Bodhisattvahood, ten stages of, [70], [311] et seq.

Bodhisattva-yâna, [9].

Brahdaranyaka Upanishad, quoted, [102 ft.]

Buddha, and his self-relying spirit, [57]; culmination of good karma, [215]; in the Mahâyâna texts, [243]; the idealisation of, historically treated, [249] et seq.; in the Trikâya, [252]; the human, and the spiritual Dharmakâya, [255]; his [32] major and [80] minor marks of greatness, [271]; in the process of idealisation, [289]; in the Mahâyânism, [291]; and Mâra, [334]; on the ego-soul in the beginning of his religious career, [337].

Buddhacarita, quoted, [57].

Buddhadharma, [355].

Buddha-Essence, Discourse on, [357 ft.]

Buddha-intelligence, [364].

Buddhism(s), geographically divided, [3], [4]; two, [4] et seq.; and atheism, [31]; and the soul problem, [31] et seq.; and agnosticism, [35]; and modern psychology, [40]; intellectual, [56] et seq.; liberal, [56] et seq.; and speculation, [81] et seq.; and science, [97].

Buddhist(s) classified, [8] et seq.; life and love, [52]; ideal, [53]; aspiration, [368]; rule of conduct, [368].

Çâkyamuni contrasted to Devadatta, [200].

Carlyle’s Hero-Worship, quoted, [325 ft.]

Causation, universal, and emptiness, [176].

Christ and Buddha, compared, [57], [58].

Christian conception of the ego-soul, [166].

Christianity, the growth of, compared with Mahâyânism, [12] et seq.; and its founder, [13]; not intellectual, [79].

Çikshas (moral rules), ten, [70 ft.]

Confucius, [63 ft.]

Consciousness, subliminal, [201].

Conservation of energy, and karma, [34].

Convictions, the four, of the Buddha, [327].

Çrâvaka, [277].

Çrâvaka-yâna, [9].

Çrimâla Sûtra, quoted, [127].

Çûnyatâ, (or çûnya), [22], [95]; and Christian critics, [105]; explained, [173]; and universal causation, [176].

Daçabhûmi, (see “ten stages of Bodhisattvahood”), [311], [329].

Deussen, P., quoted, [107].

Devala, [361], [364].

Dharma, its meaning, [21], [221].

Dharmadhatu, [115 ft.], [193].

Dharmakâya, Mahâyâna, [7]; briefly explained, [20], [45] et seq.; the highest principle, [35]; and Brahman, [46]; and Paramâtman, [46]; and God of Christians, [46]; as love and wisdom, [46], [54], [55]; and non-ego, [47]; and the Golden Rule, [48]; and Bodhisattvas, [61]; its universal incarnation, [63 ft.]; in the Trikâya, [73], [257]; as perfect knowledge, [92]; and prajñâ, [94]; as a cosmic mind, [123]; a unity, [193]; and Suchness, [217]; as God, [219]; as religious object, [222]; in the Avatamsaka Sutra, [223]; its detailed characterisation, [224]; in the phenomenal world, [231]; as love, [232]; as a loving heart in the Avatamsaka, [233]; its seven characteristics, [234]; by Asanga and Vasubandhu, [234]; its five modes of operation, [235]; its freedom, [236]; its pûrvanidhânabala, [237]; as rational will, [238]; as father, [239]; and its perpetual revelation, [259]; the evolution of its conception, [272]; all beings are one in, [290]; and the Bodhi, [295].

Dharmapada, The, quoted, [34], [145], [336], [368].

Dharmamegha (tenth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [326].

Dharmapala, the Anâgarika, [3 ft.]

Discourse on Buddha-Essence, The, by Vasubandhu, [357].

Dûrangama (seventh stage of Bodhisattvahood), [319].

Ego, not the source of energy, [55]; noumenal, [145], [163]; phenomenal, [145]; empirical, [163].

Egoism and the evolution of Manas, [134].

Ego-soul, and its attributes, [147]; and the five skandhas, [149]; located by Ananda, [157]; and the Christian flesh, [166]; and the Vedantic conception, [167] et seq.; and Nâgârjuna, [168]; and svabhava, [171]; and Christians, [212]; as conceived by Buddha when he started on his religious career, [337]. (See also “Ego”, “âtman” and “soul”).

Ekacitta, (one mind or thought), [70 ft.]

Elders, the School of, [248] et seq.

Elephant and the blind, [100].

Emerson, quoted, [29].

Enlightenment, [55], [119]; and manas, [134]; two obstacles to, [344 ft.]

Faith, its contents vary, [27] et seq.

Fatalism, [196].

Gautama and Christ, [29]. (See also “Buddha”).

God, the Buddhist, [219]. (See also “Dharmakâya”).

Goethe’s Faust, quoted, [181].

Golden Rule, the, universal, [54].

Great Council School, the, [248] et seq.

Guyau, French sociologist, [50 ft.], [84].

Hartmann’s Unbewusste, [137].

Hetus and Pratyayas, [33], [41], [142], [148].

Hînayânism, [1], [60], [63], [280].

Hugo, Victor, quoted, [58].

Hui-K’e, second patriarch of Zen sect, [148].

Iccantika (incapable of salvation), [311].

Ignorance, [35] et seq.; and evolution, [115]; and consciousness, [120]; no evil, [122]; when evil? [124]; and Tathâgata-Garbha, [126]; and Manas, [133]; and Prakrit, [138 ft.]

Imitation of Christ, [364 fn.]

Immortality, [38]; and Dharmakâya, [54]; karmaic and not individual, [214].

Injustice, social, and karma, [186]

Intelligence, awakened by love, [362].

Jâtaka Tales, the, quoted, [156].

Jesus, [6].

Jîvâtman, [145].

Kant, [6]; Critique of Pure Reason, quoted, [324].

Karma, and the law of causation, [33]; briefly explained, [33] et seq.; and non-atman, [42]; and suchness, [181]; defined, [181]; the working of, [183]; irrefragable, [184]; and injustice, [186]; and the moral laws, [189]; an individualistic view, [192]; and the desire to communicate, [195]; and determinism, [196]; not like a machine, [198]; and immortality, [203]; and Walt Whitman (quoted), [203]; how transmitted, [205]; and Dharmakâya, [207]; and productions of art, [208]; and invention, [210]; and “seeds of activity,” [212].

Karma-seeds, [134].

Karunâ (love), [46], [82], [238], [296]; and Prajñâ, [360].

Kathopanishad, quoted, [47].

Knowledge (sambodhi), [3 ft.]; three kinds of, [67], [87].

Kuçalamûla, [199].

Lalita Vistara, quoted, on Nirvana, [338 fn.]

Lankavatara Sutra, quoted, [41], [130].

Laotze, [63 ft.]

Laotzean Wu wei, [285].

Love, and ego, [55]; and Nirvana, [362].

Madhyâmika, The, on Nirvana, [347].

Madhyâmika school, [21], [62], [66]; and the Yogacarya, on truth, [95].

Mahâpurusa, Discourse on the, [361].

Mahâsangika, [1 ft.]

Mahâyâna, [1] et seq; its original meaning, [7]; and Bodhisattvas, [61]; and Hînayâna, [70]; and spiritual life, [71]; and Samkhya, [136].

Mahâyâna-Abhisamaya Sutra, quoted, [45].

Mahâyâna-Sangraha Çâstra, [354].

Mahâyânism, (Mahâyâna Buddhism), defined, [10] et seq.; is it genuine? [11] et seq.; as a living faith, [14] et seq.; and its Christian critics, [15]; misunderstood, [16] et seq.; historically treated, [60] et seq.; and Sthiramati, [61] et seq.; its seven features, [62] et seq.; and metempsychosis, [64]; ten essential features, [65] et seq.; in its two phases, [76] et seq.; no nihilism, [135 ft.]; the development of, [247]; and individualism, [282].

Maitreya, [272].

Manas (self-consciousness), [132].

Mañjuçri, [106].

Manovijñâna (ego-consciousness), [67], [69].

Masashige, Kusunoki, [213].

Maudsley, H., quoted, [80].

Max Mueller, quoted, [108 ft.], [110 ft.], [221].

Mâya, subjective ignorance, [47].

Merits, the accumulation of, [199].

Middle path, Doctrine of the, [59], [358]; of Eight No’s, [103].

Milinda-Panha, quoted, [203].

Mitra, Rajendra, referred to, [329 ft.]

Monier Monier-Williams, refuted, [18] et seq.

Nâgârjuna, [3 ft.], [4], [8], [21], [60], [66], [95], [96], [100], [103], [168], [171], [173], [292], [297], [353].

Nâgasena and King Milinda, [153].

“Na iti,” [102].

Nânâtva, (difference), [72 ft.]

Nidânas, the twelve, [36] et seq., [179], [182].

Nirmanakâya, (Body of Transformation), [73], [257], [268].

Nirvana, [19]; and its non-Buddhist critics, [49]; briefly explained, [49] et seq.; and the surrender of ego, [50]; and Dharmakâya, [51]; and love, [51], [58]; and pessimism, [52]; and ethics, [53]; and Parinishpanna (knowledge), [94]; what is, [331] et seq.; not nihilistic, [332]; Mahâyânistic, [341]; and Dharmakâya, [342]; the Mahâyânistic conception of, [342] et seq.; absolute, [343]; four forms of, [343]; upadhiçesa, [344]; Anupadhiçesa, [344], that has no abode, [345]; and I Cor. 7, 30-31, [346]; as synonym of Dharmakâya, [346] by Chandra Kirti, [347]; its four attributes, [348]; its religious phase, [349]; and Emerson, [352]; and samsara are one, [352]; and St. Paul, [352]; and the Eight No’s of Nâgârjuna, [358]; the realisation of, [360]; as the Middle Path, [362]; comprehensively treated, [367] et seq.

Non-âtman, [37] et seq.; in things, [41] et seq, [170]; and impermanence of things, [141], (see also “non-ego”, “self”, “soul”, “ego”).

Non-duality, the Dharma of, [106].

Non-ego and Dharmakâya, [47]; and the Ganges water, [156].

No’s, The Eight, of Nâgârjuna, [358].

“Old man” and Atman, [165].

Paramârtha-satya (absolute truth), [91] et seq.

Paramâtman, [145].

Pâramitâ, [3 ft.]; six, [68]; ten, [321].

Paratantra (relative knowledge), [67]; explained, [89].

Parikalpita (illusion), [67]; explained, [88].

Parinishpanna (perfect knowledge), [67]; explained, [91].

Parivarta, (turning over), [19], [194]; doctrine of, [283].

Paul, Apostle, quoted, [48], [166], [260], [262].

Pingalaka, Nâgârjuna’s commentator, quoted, [172].

Prabhâkarî (third stage of Bodhisattvahood), [315].

Prajñâ (and Bodhi), defined, [82 ft.]; [82], [97], [119], [238], [360].

Prakṛti (Samkyan primordial matter), [66 ft.]

Pramûditâ (first stage of Bodhisattvahood), [313].

Pranidhâna, a Bodhisattva’s, [307].

Pratisamvids, the four, [325].

Pratyâyasamutpâda, (Nidânas), [36] et seq.

Pratyekabuddha, [278].

Pratyekabuddha-yâna, [9].

Precepts, the ten moral, [70 ft.]

Pudgala (ego), [42], [143 ft.]

Punyaskandha, [199].

Pure Lands, [269].

Purusha (Samkyan soul), [66 ft.]

Pûrvanidhânabala, [237].

Religion, its significance, [22] et seq.; not revealed, [23]; and mystery, [24]; its intellectual and emotional sides, [25] et seq.; and science, [26]; intellect and feeling in, [77]; and philosophy, [78]; subjective, [81] et seq.; not a philosophical system, [85].

Rockhill’s Life of the Buddha, quoted, on Nirvana, [338 fn.]

Saddharma Pundarîka, quoted, [260 ft.], [274], [277].

Sadhumatî, (ninth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [325].

Samatâ (sameness), [72 ft.]

Sambodhi, (see “Bodhi”).

Sambhogakâya (Body of Bliss), [65 ft.], [73], [257]; in Açvaghosha, [258]; its six features, [264]; a mere subjective existence, [266].

Samkhya philosophy, and Yogacarya school, [67 ft.]; referred to, [146 ft.]; on Nirvana, [340].

Samvrtti-satya (conditional truth), [95] et seq.

Samyukta Nikaya, quoted, [156], [185].

Sanskaras, enumerated, [151] et seq.

Schopenhauer, [181].

Skandhas, the five, [32 ft.], [149].

Soul-substance, denied, [164].

Sthavira, [1 ft.]

Sthiramati, on Mahâyânism, [61] et seq.; on Bodhicitta, [299].

Suchness, (see also Bhûtatathâtâ), [3]; the first principle of Buddhism, [99] et seq.; indefinable, [101]; conditioned, [109]; in history, [110]; in the world, [113]; and the Bodhi, [114]; and ignorance, [117]; in its various modes, [125]; and Dharmakâya, [127]; and karma, [181].

Sudurjayâ, (fifth stage of Bodhisattvahood), [318].

Sukhâvatî sect, the, [4], [240].

Sumedha, the story of, [280].

Sûrangama Sutra, quoted, [157].

Suvarna Prabha Sutra, [253 ft.]

Svabhava, and non-ego, [170] et seq.; and emptiness, [175].

“Tat tvam asi,” [47], [135 ft.]

Tathâgata-Garbha, [125], [145].

Teleology, [86].

Tennyson, quoted, [82].

Tîrthakas, [8].

Tolstoi, quoted, in connection with karma, [207 ft.]

Trikâya, (trinity), [73], [242], [256], [275].

Truth (satya), conditional and transcendental, [95].

Udâna, quoted, [52], [338 ft.], [341].

Universe, a mind, [122].

Upâya (expediency), [64], [260 ft.]; its meaning explained, [298 ft.]

Upâyajñâ, [320].

Vaiçaradyas (convictions), the four, [327 ft.]

Vairocana, [219].

Vasubandhu, [87], [153]; his Abhidharmakoça, referred to, [37]; on Mahâyâna, [66]; On the Completion of Karma, quoted, [194]; The Distinguishing of the Mean, quoted, [195]; on Bodhicitta, [303]; on Nirvana, [357], [359], [360].

Vasumitra, on Various Schools of Buddhism, [1 ft.]

Vedanta philosophy, and the Mahâyânism, [108 ft.]; on Nirvana, [340]; on Atman, [144].

Vicesacinta-brahma-Pariprccha Sutra, [353].

Victory, the hymn of, [336].

Vijñâna, and atman, [39].

Vijnânamâtra, (nothing but ideas), [70].

Vijnânamâtra çâstra, [265 ft.], [343].

Vimala (second stage of Bodhisattvahood), [315].

Vimalakîrti, [106], [350], [366].

Visuddhi Magga, quoted, [339], [348 ft.]

Waddell, refuted, [21] et seq.

Whitman, Walt, quoted, [155 ft.], [197].

Wilson, Dr. G. R., quoted, [201].

Yoga philosophy, The, on Nirvana, [340].

Yogacarya school, [62], [65], [87], [92], [95].

Yogavasistha, a vedantic book, quoted, [167].

[The End]