The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions (1601 page)

BOOK: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions
5.45Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
M
lavijñ
na
(Skt.,
m
la
, ‘root’, +
vijñ
na
, ‘consciousness’). A doctrine characteristic of the
Mah
s
ghika
school of early Indian Buddhism. As a consequence of the centrality of the teachings on impermanence (
anicca
), and notself (
an
tman
), it was felt necessary in the developing Buddhist systems to account for mental continuity in individuals, particularly between one existence and another, and after deep meditational trances, without committing the essentialist fallacy of
Upani
adic
teachers who posited a permanent soul (
tman
). The notion of a basic consciousness (
m
lavijñ
na
) is the solution arrived at by the Mah
s
ghikas. It is an anticipation of the distinctive Yog

Other books

The 500: A Novel by Quirk, Matthew
Carolyn Jewel by One Starlit Night
Strangers in the Night by Patricia H. Rushford
Master (Book 5) by Robert J. Crane
Daddy Was a Number Runner by Louise Meriwether
Dark Moonlighting by Scott Haworth
A Wild Pursuit by Eloisa James
Dead to the Last Drop by Cleo Coyle