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Early Buddhism
As the Saṅgha gradually grew over the next century a dispute arose regarding ten
points of discipline. A Second Buddhist Council (said in the scriptures to have
taken place 100 years after the Buddha's death) was held to resolve the points
at dispute. The result was that all the monks agreed that those 10 practices
were unallowed according to Vinaya.
At some period after the Second Council however, the Sangha began to break into
separate factions. The various accounts differ as to when the actual schisms
occurred: according to the Dipavamsa of the Pali tradition, they started
immediately after the Second Council; the Puggalavada tradition places it in 137
AN; the Sarvastivada tradition of Vasumitra says it was in the time of Asoka;
and the Mahasanghika tradition places it much later, nearly 100 BCE.
The Asokan edicts, our only contemporary sources, state that 'the Sangha has
been made unified'. This apparently refers to a dispute such as that described
in the account of the Third Buddhist Council at Pataliputta. This concerns the
expulsion of non-Buddhist heretics from the Sangha, and does not speak of a
schism.
These schisms occurred within the traditions of Early Buddhism, at a time when
the Mahāyāna movement either did not exist at all, or only existed as a current
of thought not yet identified with a separate school.
The root schism was between the Sthaviras and the Mahāsāṅghikas. The fortunate
survival of accounts from both sides of the dispute reveals disparate
traditions. The Sthavira group offers two quite distinct reasons for the schism.
The Dipavamsa of the Theravāda says that the losing party in the Second Council
dispute broke away in protest and formed the Mahasanghika. This contradicts the
Mahasanghikas' own vinaya, which shows them as on the same, winning side. On the
other hand, the northern lineages, including the Sarvastivada and Puggalavada
(both branches of the ancient Sthaviras) attribute the Mahāsāṅghika schism to
the '5 points' that erode the status of the arahant. For their part, the
Mahāsāṅghikas argued that the Sthaviras were trying to expand the Vinaya; they
may also have challenged what they perceived to be excessive claims or inhumanly
high criteria for Arhatship. Both parties, therefore, appealed to tradition.[8]
The Sthaviras gave rise to several schools, one of which was the Theravāda
school.
Buddhist proselytism at the time of emperor Aśoka the Great (260–218
BCE).Following (or leading up to) the schisms, each Saṅgha started to accumulate
an Abhidharma, a collection of philosophical texts. Early sources for these
probably existed in the time of the Buddha as simple lists. However, as time
went on and Buddhism spread further, the (perceived) teachings of the Buddha
were formalized in a more systematic manner in a new Pitaka: the Abhidhamma
Pitaka. Some modern academics refer to it as Abhidhamma Buddhism. Interestingly,
in the opinion of some scholars, the Mahasanghika school did not have an
Abhidhamma Pitaka, which agrees with their statement that they did not want to
add to the Buddha's teachings. But according to Chinese pilgrims Fa Xian (5th
century CE) and Yuan Chwang (7th century CE), they had procured a copy of
Abhidhamma which belonged to the Mahasanghika School.
Buddhist tradition records in the Milinda Panha that the 2nd century BCE
Indo-Greek king Menander converted to the Buddhist faith and became an
arhat.Buddhism may have spread only slowly in India until the time of the
Mauryan emperor Aśoka the Great, who was a public supporter of the religion. The
support of Aśoka and his descendants led to the construction of more Buddhist
religious memorials (stūpas) and to efforts to spread Buddhism throughout the
enlarged Maurya empire and even into neighboring lands – particularly to the
Iranian-speaking regions of Afghanistan and Central Asia, beyond the Mauryas'
northwest border, and to the island of Sri Lanka south of India. These two
missions, in opposite directions, would ultimately lead, in the first case to
the spread of Buddhism into China, and in the second case, to the emergence of
Theravāda Buddhism and its spread from Sri Lanka to the coastal lands of
Southeast Asia.
This period marks the first known spread of Buddhism beyond India. According to
the edicts of Aśoka, emissaries were sent to various countries west of India in
order to spread "Dhamma", particularly in eastern provinces of the neighboring
Seleucid Empire, and even farther to Hellenistic kingdoms of the Mediterranean.
This led, a century later, to the emergence of Greek-speaking Buddhist monarchs
in the Indo-Greek Kingdom, and to the development of the Greco-Buddhist art of
Gandhāra. During this period Buddhism was exposed to a variety of influences,
from Persian and Greek civilization, and from changing trends in non-Buddhist
Indian religions – themselves influenced by Buddhism.
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Noble Eightfold Path
Bodhi
Refuge in the Three Jewels
Sila
Samadhi,
Vipassana, and Buddhist meditation
Prajñā
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Early
Buddhism
Rise of Mahayana Buddhism
Emergence of
the Vajrayāna
Decline of Buddhism in India and
Central Asia
Southern Buddhism
Eastern Buddhism
Northern Buddhism
Buddhist
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Hinduism and Buddhism
Similarities between Hinduism and
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Buddhism and Eastern Teaching
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