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  1. en.m.wikipedia.org › wiki › AsangaAsanga - Wikipedia

    Japanese wood statue of Asaṅga from 1208 CE. Asaṅga ( Sanskrit: असंग, Tibetan: ཐོགས་མེད།, Wylie: thogs med, traditional Chinese: 無著; ; pinyin: Wúzhuó; Romaji: Mujaku) ( fl. 4th century C.E.) was one of the most important spiritual figures of Mahayana Buddhism and the founder of the Yogachara school.

  2. Asaṅga was an influential Buddhist philosopher who established the Yogācāra (“Practice of Yogā”) school of idealism. Asaṅga was the eldest of three brothers who were the sons of a Brahman, a court priest at Puruṣapura, and who all became monks in the Sarvāstivāda order (which held the doctrine that.

  3. studybuddhism.com › en › tibetan-buddhismAsanga — Study Buddhism

    Asanga is one of the most pre-eminent masters of early Mahayana Buddhism and the main formulator of the Chittamatra tenet system.

  4. Biography. Tibetan depiction of Asaṅga and Maitreya. According to later hagiographies, Asaṅga was born as the son of a high caste father in Puruṣapura (present day Peshawar in Pakistan ), which at that time was part of the ancient kingdom of Gandhāra. [5] Current scholarship places him in the fourth century CE.

  5. Asanga (Skt. Asaṅga; Tib. ཐོགས་མེད་, Tokmé, Wyl. thogs med) — one of the most famous Indian saints; he lived in the fourth century and was the elder brother of Vasubandhu. He received teachings from Maitreya and transcribed them as the ‘ Five Treatises of Maitreya ’.

  6. Asanga. Asanga (also called Aryasanga), born around 300 C.E., was a great exponent of the Yogacara. Born in Gandhara in north India as a Brahmin’s son, he was perhaps originally a member of the Mahīśāsaka or the Mūlasarvāstivāda school but later converted to Mahāyāna; after many years of intense meditation, during which time some ...

  7. Asanga was one of the most famous Indian Buddhist saints, and lived in the fourth century. He went to the mountains to do a solitary retreat, concentrating all his meditation practice on the Buddha Maitreya, in the fervent hope that he would be blessed with a vision of this Buddha and receive teachings from him.

  8. Asanga, along with his brother Vasabandu, is an inestimably important figure in Mahayana Buddhism, associated with some of the most important works on ethical and moral dimensions of progress on the path, as well as the Yogacara philosophical school. He is particularly revered in Tibet and East Asia.

  9. Feb 5, 2019 · The first complete English translation of Asanga's Mahayanasamgraha, the most important and comprehensive Indian Yogacara text, and all its available Indian commentaries. Winner of the Khyentse...

  10. Asanga(Skt. Asaṅga, Tib. ཐོགས་མེད་, Tokmé; Wyl. thogs med) — one of the most famous Indian saints, he lived in the fourth century and was the elder brother of Vasubandhu.