

It will be very interesting to read here.Huifeng wrote:The Kosa is a large and complex text. It requires some method in studying it. One really can't just open at page one, and take it from there. (Well, okay one can, but realistically speaking, how far will that go?)
Do you have a guide to lead through the key points, so that things don't get bogged down in inessentials and difficult areas?
but nobody else I think would ever use it but me) of Analytical Study of the Abhidharmakosa by Sukomal Chaudhuri (1983) which details and summarizes the text chapter by chapter and also provides a good introduction.Huseng wrote:I was wondering if anyone on the forum would be interesting in doing an Abhidharmakosa study group here?
Huifeng wrote:The Kosa is a large and complex text. It requires some method in studying it. One really can't just open at page one, and take it from there. (Well, okay one can, but realistically speaking, how far will that go?)
Do you have a guide to lead through the key points, so that things don't get bogged down in inessentials and difficult areas?
Huseng wrote:It would be Poussin's translation by Pruden I guess as no other translation in full exists to my knowledge.
mr. gordo wrote:Unfortunately, it's too expensive for me to pick up right now.
Will wrote:Huifeng wrote:The Kosa is a large and complex text. It requires some method in studying it. One really can't just open at page one, and take it from there. (Well, okay one can, but realistically speaking, how far will that go?)
Do you have a guide to lead through the key points, so that things don't get bogged down in inessentials and difficult areas?
As a Bhikshu you probably have some ideas or maybe even a text that gives a way to handle all the information. I have tried to read it from page one, but gad, what a tremendous amount of difficult-ness.
Namdrol started an online study of it, but never followed through. Wonder what he is up to now?
Huseng wrote:Will wrote:Huifeng wrote:The Kosa is a large and complex text. It requires some method in studying it. One really can't just open at page one, and take it from there. (Well, okay one can, but realistically speaking, how far will that go?)
Do you have a guide to lead through the key points, so that things don't get bogged down in inessentials and difficult areas?
As a Bhikshu you probably have some ideas or maybe even a text that gives a way to handle all the information. I have tried to read it from page one, but gad, what a tremendous amount of difficult-ness.
Namdrol started an online study of it, but never followed through. Wonder what he is up to now?
That's a good question...
Venerable Huifeng, is there a way students in the monastery approach the text?
At my university we just take a chapter and read it from the first page together in the Sanskrit with reference to multiple translation including Paramartha and Xuanzang. We're pretty much expected to prepare everything on our own.
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