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Encyclopedia > Sarvastivadin
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The Sarvastivada (roughly, "Proclaiming that all exist") --a reference to one of the distinguishing doctrines of the school, the existence of dharmas in all of "the three times" (past, present, and future).


The Sarvastivada are one of only two of the "Early Schools" of Buddhism to have their written works survive in substantial, whole books unto the present day. Thus, their importance to modern scholars may be greater than their share of popular adherents had been.


Among the defining canonical texts composed by the Sarvastivada was the Maha-vaibhasa-abhidharma-shastra, traditionally considered a systematization of the spoken teachings of Gautama Buddha. This text reflects the unique Sarvastivadin cosmology and ontology, a byzantine structure of essences and universals.


The basic approach of the Sarvastivada was to regard the universe as reducible to various elements or co-efficients of existence; apparently, these were determined by taking lists of the various "indivisible" factors and substances named in the Buddha's dialogues. Heat, for instance, was the "lakshana" (distinguishing mark) of fire, and there was a common "dharma" relating all fire. The Abhidharma's approach led to many fascinating insights, including an anticipation of Newton's colour theory (specifying that white light is composed of coloured light, and then explaining those primary colours in terms of "lakshana" and "dharma"), and some very detailed systems of psychology.


Among the critics of the Sarvastivada was Nagarjuna, who completely repudiated their interpretation of the Buddha's teaching as implying atom-like unities at the basis of visible phenomena, and many of the other features of their philosophy, such as a complex theory of causality and (as mentioned) time.


Ironically it was Vasubandhu, one of Nagarjuna's followers, who put the Sarvastivada philosophy into the form in which it is most read (and used) in Buddhist religious practice today: the Abhidharma-kosa.


See also: Early Buddhist Schools, Schools of Buddhism.


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Mahayana (1875 words)
Also, emissaries were sent to various countries in order to spread Buddhism, as far as the Greek kingdoms in the West (in particular the neighboring Greco-Bactrian Kingdom, and possibly even farther to the Mediterranean according to the inscriptions left on stone pillars by Ashoka).
After 250 BC, the Sarvastivadin (who had been rejected by the 3rd council, according to the Theravada tradition) and the Dharmaguptaka schools became quite influencial in northwestern India and Central Asia, up to the time of the Kushan Empire in the first centuries of the common era.
The fourth Buddhist council was convened by the Kushan emperor Kanishka, around 100 AD at Jalandhar or in Kashmir, and is usually associated with the formal rise of Mahayana Buddhism.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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