When a Philosopher's Stone Turns Gold into Base Metal (Hayes 2016)
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When a Philosopher's Stone Turns Gold into Base Metal (Hayes 2016)
Journal Article
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Description
An account of how certain presuppositions led the author astray in previous attempts at interpreting a key metaphor in Śāntideva’s Bodhicaryāvatāra 1.10.
Citation
Hayes, Richard P. "When a Philosopher's Stone Turns Gold into Base Metal." Sophia 55 (2016): 517–26.
Bodhicaryāvatāra
An "Introduction to Bodhisattva Practice," the Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra is a poem about the path of a bodhisattva, in ten chapters, written by the Indian Buddhist Śāntideva (fl. c. 685–763). One of the masterpieces of world literature, it is a core text of Mahāyāna Buddhism and continues to be taught, studied, and commented upon in many languages and by many traditions around the world. The main subject of the text is bodhicitta, the altruistic aspiration for enlightenment, and the path and practices of the bodhisattva, the six perfections (pāramitās). The text forms the basis of many contemporary discussions of Buddhist ethics and philosophy.
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