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  • Toh 94

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བསྐལ་པ་བཟང་པོ།

The Good Eon

Bhadra­kalpika
འཕགས་པ་བསྐལ་པ་བཟང་པོ་ཞེས་བྱ་བ་ཐེག་པ་ཆེན་པོའི་མདོ།
’phags pa bskal pa bzang po zhes bya ba theg pa chen po’i mdo
The Noble Great Vehicle Sūtra “The Good Eon”
Ārya­bhadra­kalpika­nāma­mahāyāna­sūtra

Toh 94

Degé Kangyur vol. 45 (mdo sde, ka), folios 1.b–340.a

ᴛʀᴀɴsʟᴀᴛᴇᴅ ɪɴᴛᴏ ᴛɪʙᴇᴛᴀɴ ʙʏ
  • Vidyākara­siṁha
  • Palgyi Yang
  • Paltsek

Imprint

84000 logo

Translated by the Dharmachakra Translation Committee
under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha

First published 2022

Current version v 1.1.22 (2025)

Generated by 84000 Reading Room v2.26.1

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co.

Table of Contents

ti. Title
im. Imprint
co. Contents
s. Summary
ac. Acknowledgements
i. Introduction
+ 3 sections- 3 sections
· The Multiplicity of Buddhas and the Buddhas of the Good Eon
· The Good Eon as a “samādhi sūtra”
· Sources and Translation
tr. The Translation
+ 2 chapters- 2 chapters
1. Chapter 1
2. Chapter 2
2.A. The names
2.B. The lives
2.C. The engendering of the mind of awakening
c. Colophon
ab. Abbreviations
n. Notes
b. Bibliography
+ 2 sections- 2 sections
· Tibetan Sources
· Secondary Sources
g. Glossary

s.

Summary

s.­1

While resting in a park outside the city of Vaiśālī, the Buddha is approached by the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja, who requests meditation instruction. The Buddha proceeds to give a teaching on a meditative absorption called elucidating the way of all phenomena and subsequently delivers an elaborate discourse on the six perfections. Prāmodyarāja then learns that all the future buddhas of the Good Eon are now present in the Blessed One’s audience of bodhisattvas. Responding to Prāmodyarāja’s request to reveal the names under which these present bodhisattvas will be known as buddhas in the future, the Buddha first lists these names, and then goes on to describe the circumstances surrounding their birth, awakening, and teaching in the world. In the sūtra’s final section, we learn how each of these great bodhisattvas who are on the path to buddhahood first developed the mind of awakening.


ac.

Acknowledgements

ac.­1

Translated by the Dharmachakra Translation Committee under the guidance of Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche. Thomas Doctor produced the translation and Andreas Doctor, Anya Zilman, and Nika Jovic compared the draft translation with the original Tibetan and edited the text. The introduction was written by Thomas Doctor and the 84000 editorial team.

The translation was completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.


ac.­2

The generous sponsorship of Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche, Zhou Tian Yu, Chen Yi Qin, Zhou Xun, Zhao Xuan, Chen Kun, and Zhuo Yue, which helped make the work on this translation possible, is most gratefully acknowledged.


i.

Introduction

i.­1

The Good Eon recounts the names and circumstances pertaining to all the one thousand and four buddhas1 who will appear in our world during this current eon, which is commonly known among Mahāyāna Buddhists as the Good Eon.2 Listed as the first scripture in the General Sūtra section of most Kangyur collections, it is among the longest of the Mahāyāna sūtras translated into Tibetan.3 Besides occupying this place of honor in the Kangyur, The Good Eon was often copied or printed separately in Tibet, where it has long functioned as a special ceremonial scripture that is read aloud by lamas on special occasions to foster well-being and good fortune, and that is often kept on the family altar in Tibetan homes for this purpose.

The Multiplicity of Buddhas and the Buddhas of the Good Eon

The Good Eon as a “samādhi sūtra”

Sources and Translation


Text Body

The Translation
The Noble Great Vehicle Sūtra
The Good Eon

1.

Chapter 1

[B1] [F.1.b]


1.­1

Homage to all buddhas and bodhisattvas.


1.­2

Thus did I hear at one time. The Blessed One was residing at Śrāvasti, where he had observed the summer retreat. After the three months of summer had passed, he prepared his Dharma robes. Once he had prepared his Dharma robes, he put on the robes, took up his alms bowl, and, together with one hundred thousand monks and eight hundred million bodhisattvas, proceeded toward the city of Vaiśālī. On the way, the Blessed One entered a large forest, where he later arose from meditative seclusion.


2.

Chapter 2

2.­1

The Blessed One then said this to the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja: “Prāmodyarāja, in this way you must devote yourself to generosity and make offerings to the Dharma. Prāmodyarāja, long ago, many incalculable eons in the past, there was a thus-gone one, a worthy one, a complete and perfect buddha known as Golden Beauty, King of the Splendid Light of Ascertainment. His lifespan was unfathomable, the features of his buddhafield were infinite, and his retinue was beyond count.


2.A.

The names

2.A.­1

When the Blessed One had said this, the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja asked, “Revered Blessed One, within this gathering of attending bodhisattva great beings, are there any who have attained these absorptions, these applications of the perfections, these eighty-four thousand gateways of absorption?”

2.A.­2

The Blessed One answered the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja in the following way: [F.96.a] “Prāmodyarāja, except for the four thus-gone ones who in this Good Eon have already awakened to perfect buddhahood, all the rest of those who will awaken to perfect buddhahood in this Good Eon are present within this retinue of bodhisattva great beings, and they have attained those absorptions, those applications of the perfections, and those eighty-four thousand gateways of absorption.”


2.B.

The lives

2.B.­1

When the Blessed One had spoken these words, the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja made the following request: “Blessed One, this is excellent. Blessed One, for the benefit of gods and humans, please explain about the birthplace, the family, the light, the father, the mother, the son, the attendant, the two foremost and excellent followers, the perfect community of monks, the lifespan, the duration of the sacred Dharma, and the manifestation of relics that pertain to each of these buddhas of the Good Eon, so that numerous beings may receive healing and be happy, and so that bodhisattvas of the future may persevere in hearing and remain inspired, become exceptionally accomplished in the sacred Dharma, and become sources of insight.”


2.C.

The engendering of the mind of awakening

2.C.­1

When the Blessed One had spoken these words, the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja once more addressed him: “Excellent, O Blessed One, excellent. Now please make clear the identity of the blessed buddhas before whom these blessed buddhas of the Good Eon first gave rise to the mind of awakening. Please also state the roots of virtue that allowed them to venerate those buddhas [F.288.a] and give rise to the mind of awakening.”


c.

Colophon

c.­1

This translation was produced by the Indian preceptor Vidyākara­siṁha and the translator Venerable Palgyi Yang. The translation was revised and finalized by the great translator-editor Venerable Paltsek.

c.­2
Śubhaṁ astu sarvaja gatāṁ
c.­3
Oṃ ye dharmā hetuprabhavā 
hetuṃ teṣāṃ tathāgato hy avadat, 
teṣāṃ ca yo nirodha 
evaṃvādī mahāśramaṇaḥ
c.­4
Maṅgala bhavatu

ab.

Abbreviations

C Choné (co ne) Kangyur
D Degé (sde dge) Kangyur
H Lhasa Zhöl (zhol) Kangyur
J Lithang (li thang) Kangyur
K Kangxi Peking (pe) Kangyur
N Narthang (snar thang) Kangyur
S Stok Palace (stog pho brang bris ma) Kangyur
Y Yongle (g.yung lo) Kangyur

n.

Notes

n.­1
Note that the number of buddhas given in the sūtra varies in the three enumerations in the text (described below in i.­5–i.­7). Only the first list of names contains one thousand and four buddhas.
n.­2
The notion of “a good eon” generally implies an eon in which more than one buddha appears. Skilling 2010: p. 200.
n.­3
Skilling 2010: pp. 195–96.
n.­4
The sequential order of the thousand and four buddhas has been carefully compared across the three enumerations as mentioned here, and their placement has been documented in the glossary entries for each. For those who may be interested in this research, a spreadsheet detailing this comparison across the three lists is available for download here.
n.­5
It is worth noting here that the long and remarkable teaching on the six perfections deserves more detailed attention and study than it has hitherto received.
n.­6
The stages of spiritual practice are the topic of numerous scriptures, treatises, and commentaries, some in vast detail such as the Buddha­vataṃsaka­sūtra (Toh 44) and the Yogācārabhūmi (Toh 4035–4037). Perhaps the most succinct summary comes in the opening lines of the Mahāvastu, where four stages are described: (1) prakṛticaryā (“natural career”), (2) pranidhāna­caryā (“resolving stage”), (3) anulomacaryā (“conforming stage”), and (4) anivartana­caryā (“preserving career”). See Mahāvastu, vol. I, 1.2; the four stages are explained in more detail in vol. 1, ch. 5. See also Jaini 2001, p. 453.
n.­7
This text’s main emphasis is on these buddhas’ future lives (the second, most extensive list, 2.B.­2 et seq.), and the only event in these buddhas’ past lives that it includes is their first generating of the mind set on awakening (the third listing, 2.C.­4 et seq.).
n.­8
Found (1) in Pali in the Dīghanikāya as the Mahāpadānasutta (DN 14; for translation see Sujato 2018); (2) in several Chinese translations including 大本經 (Daben jing in the Dīrghāgama, Taishō 1), 七佛經 (Qi fojing, Taishō 2), and 毘婆尸佛經 (Pipo shi fojing, Taishō 3); and (3) in Sanskrit as the Mahā­vadāna­sūtra in a number of fragmentary manuscripts from which the text has been reconstructed (Waldschmidt 1952–8, Fukita 2003).

b.

Bibliography

Tibetan Sources

bskal pa bzang po (Bhadrakalpika). Toh 94, Degé Kangyur vol. 45 (mdo sde, ka), folios 1.b–340.a.

bskal pa bzang po (Bhadrakalpika). Toh 94, Stok Palaca Kangyur vol. 52 (mdo sde, ka), folios 1.a–478.a.

bskal pa bzang po. (dpe bsdur ma) [Comparative Edition of the Kangyur], krung go’i bod rig pa zhib ’jug ste gnas kyi bka’ bstan dpe sdur khang (The Tibetan Tripitaka Collation Bureau of the China Tibetology Research Center). 108 volumes. Beijing: krung go’i bod rig pa dpe skrun khang (China Tibetology Publishing House), 2006–9, vol. 45, pp. 3–852.

rgya cher rol pa (Lalita­vistara). Toh 95, Degé Kangyur vol. 46 (mdo sde, kha), folios 1.b–216.b. English translation in Dharmachakra Translation Committee 2013.

chos yang dag par sdud pa’i mdo (Dharma­saṅgīti­sūtra). Toh 238, Degé Kangyur vol. 65 (mdo sde, zha), folios 1.a–99.b. English translation in Tibetan Classics Translators Guild of New York 2024.

theg pa chen po’i man ngag (Mahāyānopadeśa­sūtra). Toh 169, Degé Kangyur vol. 59 (mdo sde, ba), folios 260.a–307.a.

dam pa’i chos pad ma dkar po (Saddharma­puṇḍarīka). Toh 113, Degé Kangyur vol. 51 (mdo sde, ja), folios 1.b–180.b. English translation in Roberts 2018b.

tshe dang ye shes dpag tu med pa theg pa chen po’i mdo (Aparimitāyurjñāna-nāma-mahā­yāna­sūtra). Toh 674, Degé Kangyur vol. 91 (rgyud ’bum, ba), folios 211.b–216.a; Toh 849, vol. 100 (gzungs ’dus, e), folios 57.b–62.a. English translation in Roberts 2021.

yul ’khor skyong gis zhus pa (Rāṣṭra­pāla­paripṛcchā). Toh 62, Degé Kangyur vol. 42 (dkon brtsegs, nga), folios 227.a–257.a. English translation in Vienna Buddhist Translation Studies Group 2021.

shes phyin khri pa (Daśa­sāhasrikā­prajñā­pāramitā). Toh 11, Degé Kangyur vol. 31 (shes phyin, ga), folios 1.b–91.a; vol. 32 (shes phyin, nga), folios 92.b–397.a. English translation in Padmakara Translation Group 2018.

theg pa chen po rgyud bla ma’i bstan bcos (Mahāyānottara­tantra­śāstra) [Ratnagotravibhāga]. Toh 4024, Degé Tengyur vol. 123 (sems tsam, phi), folios 54.b–73.a.

mdo kun las btus pa (Sūtrasamuccaya). Toh 3934, Degé Tengyur vol. 110 (dbu ma, ki), folios 148.b–215.a.

Āryaśūra. skyes pa’i rabs kyi rgyud (Jātakamālā). Toh 4150, Degé Tengyur vol. 168 (skyes rabs, hu), folios 1.b–135.a.

Asaṅga. rnal ’byor spyod pa’i sa (Yogācārabhūmi). Toh 4035, Degé Tengyur vol. 127 (sems tsam, tshi), folios 1.b–283.a.

Asaṅga. theg pa chen po bsdus pa (Mahā­yāna­saṃgraha). Toh 4048, Degé Tengyur vol. 134 (sems tsam, ri), folios 1.b–43.a.

Śāntideva. bslab pa kun las btus pa (Śikṣāsamuccaya). Toh 3940, Degé Tengyur vol. 111 (dbu ma, khi), folios 3.a–194.b.

Vasubandhu. chos mngon pa’i mdzod kyi tshig le’ur byas pa (Abhidharma­kośa­kārikā). Toh 4089, Degé Tengyur vol. 140 (mngon pa, ku), folios 1.b–25.a.

Vasubandhu. chos mngon pa’i mdzod kyi bshad pa (Abhidharma­kośa­bhāṣya). Toh 4090, Degé Tengyur vol. 140 (mngon pa, ku), folios 26.b–258.a; vol. 141 (mngon pa, khu), folios 1.b–95.a.

Denkarma (pho brang stod thang ldan [/ lhan] dkar gyi chos ’gyur ro cog gi dkar chag). Degé Tengyur vol. 206 (sna tshogs, jo), folios 294.b–310.a.

bye brag tu rtogs par byed pa chen po (Mahāvyutpatti). Toh 4346, Degé Tengyur vol. 204 (sna tshogs, co), folios 1.b–131.a.

Butön (bu ston rin chen grub). chos ’byung [History of the Dharma] (bde bar gshegs pa’i bstan pa’i gsal byed chos kyi ’byung gnas gsung rab rin po che’i mdzod). In gsung ’bum/_rin chen grub/ (zhol par ma/ ldi lir bskyar par brgyab pa/) [The Collected Works of Bu-ston: Edited by Lokesh Chandra from the Collections of Raghu Vira], vol. 24, pp. 633–1056. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture, 1965–71.

Secondary Sources

Beal, Samuel. The Romantic Legend of Sâkya Buddha from the Chinese-Sanscrit. London: Trübner and Co, 1875. Available online at Internet Archive.

Bhaiṣajya Translation Team, trans. The Chapter on Medicines (Bhaiṣajya­vastu, Toh 1, ch. 6). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2021.

Boucher, Daniel. “Dharmarakṣa and the Transmission of Buddhism to China.” Asia Major, 3rd ser., 19, no. 1/2 (2006): 13–37.

Brunnhölzl, Karl. A Compendium of the Mahāyāna: Asaṅga’s Mahā­yāna­saṃgraha and Its Indian and Tibetan Commentaries. 3 vols. Boulder: Snow Lion, 2018.

Dharmachakra Translation Committee, trans. (2013). The Play in Full (Lalita­vistara, Toh 95). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2013.

Dharmachakra Translation Committee, trans. (2016). The Absorption that Encapsulates All Merit (Sarva­puṇya­samuccaya­samādhi, Toh 134). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2016.

Dharmachakra Translation Committee, trans. (2020). The Absorption of the Miraculous Ascertainment of Peace (Pra­śānta­viniścaya­prāti­hārya­samādhi, Toh 129). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2020.

Herrmann-Pfandt, Adelheid. Die lHan kar ma: ein früher Katalog der ins Tibetische übersetzten buddhistischen Texte. Vienna: Verlag der österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2008.

The Fortunate Aeon: How the Thousand Buddhas Became Enlightened. 4 vols. Berkeley: Dharma Publishing, 1986.

Jaini, Padmanabh S. “Stages in the Bodhisattva Career of the Tathāgata Maitreya,” in Sponberg and Hardacre (eds.), Maitreya, the Future Buddha, pp 54-90. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988. Reprinted with additional material in Jaini, Padmanabh S. Collected Papers on Buddhist Studies, ch. 26. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 2001.

Fukita, Takamichi. “The Mahāvadānasūtra: A new edition based on manuscripts discovered in northern Turkestan.” In Sanskrit-Wörterbuch der buddhistischen Texte aus den Turfan-Funden, Beiheft 10. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht, 2003.

Kongtrul, Jamgön, tr. Ngawang Zangpo. Buddhism’s Journey to Tibet. Books Two, Three, and Four of The Treasury of Knowledge. Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2010.

Li, Can (2015). “A Newly Identified Fragment of a Lost Translation of the Bhadra­kalpika-sūtra.” Annual Report of the International Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 18 (2015): 235–51.

Li, Can (2018). “A Preliminary Report on Some New Sources of the Bhadra­kalpika-sūtra (1).” Annual Report of the International Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 21 (2018): 417–22.

Padmakara Translation Group, trans. The Transcendent Perfection of Wisdom in Ten Thousand Lines (Daśa­sāhasrikā­prajñā­pāramitā, Toh 11). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2018.

Pruden, Leo M., trans. Abhidharmakośabhāṣyam of Vasubandhu. 4 vols. Berkeley: Asian Humanities Press, 1988–90.

Roberts, Peter Alan, trans. (2018a). The King of Samādhis (Samādhi­rāja, Toh 127). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2018.

Roberts, Peter Alan, trans. (2018b). The White Lotus of the Good Dharma (Saddharma­puṇḍarīka, Toh 113). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2018.

Roberts, Peter Alan, trans. (2021). The Aparimitāyurjñāna Sūtra (1) (Aparimitāyurjñāna­sūtra, Toh 674). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2021.

Roberts, Peter Alan, trans. (2023). The White Lotus of Compassion (Karuṇā­puṇḍarīka­sūtra, Toh 112). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2023.

Rouse, W. H. D., trans. “Valāhassa-jātaka.” In The Jātaka or Stories of the Buddha’s Former Births, edited by E. B. Cowell, 2:89–90. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1895.

Sakaki, Ryōzaburō, ed., Honyaku myōgi taishū (Mahāvyutpatti). 2 vols. 1916. Reprint, Tokyo: Kokusho Kanakōkai, 1987.

Salomon, Richard (2014). “Gāndhārī Manuscripts in the British Library, Schøyen and Other Collections.” In From Birch Bark to Digital Data, edited by Paul Harrison and Jens-Uwe Hartmann. Vienna: Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2014: 1–17.

Salomon, Richard (2018). The Buddhist Literature of Ancient Gandhāra: An Introduction with Selected Translations. Somerville: Wisdom Publications, 2018.

Skilling, Peter (2010). “Notes on the Bhadrakalpika-sūtra.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 13 (2010): 195–229.

Skilling, Peter (2011). “Notes on the Bhadrakalpika-sūtra (II): Beyond the Fortunate Aeon: What comes next?” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 14 (2011): 59–72.

Skilling, Peter (2012). “Notes on the Bhadrakalpika-sūtra (III): Beyond the Fortunate Aeon.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 15 (2012): 117–26.

Skilling, Peter and Saerji (2014). “How the Buddhas of the Fortunate Aeon First Aspired to Awakening: The Pūrva-praṇidhānas of Buddhas 1–250.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 17 (2014): 245–91.

Skilling, Peter and Saerji (2016). “How the Buddhas of the Fortunate Aeon First Aspired to Awakening: The Pūrva-praṇidhānas of Buddhas 251–500.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 19 (2016): 149–92.

Skilling, Peter and Saerji (2017). “How the Buddhas of the Fortunate Aeon First Aspired to Awakening: The Pūrva-praṇidhānas of Buddhas 501–750.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 20 (2017): 167–204.

Skilling, Peter and Saerji (2018). “How the Buddhas of the Fortunate Aeon First Aspired to Awakening: The Pūrva-praṇidhānas of Buddhas 751–994.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 21 (2018): 209–44.

Skilling, Peter and Saerji (2019). “Jātakas in the Bhadra­kalpika-sūtra: A Provisional Inventory I.” Annual Report of the International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology at Soka University 22 (2019): 209–44.

Skilton, Andrew. “State or Statement? Samādhi in Some Early Mahāyāna Sutras.” The Eastern Buddhist XXXIV, 2 (2002): 51–93.

Sujato, Bhikkhu. “The Great Discourse on the Harvest of Deeds.” In Long Discourses: A Faithful Translation of the Dīgha Nikāya. Sutta Central, 2018.

Thurman, Robert, trans. The Teaching of Vimalakīrti (Vimala­kīrti­nirdeśa­sūtra, Toh 176). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2017.

Tibetan Classics Translators Guild of New York, trans. The Dharma Council (Dharmasaṅgīti, Toh 238). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2024.

Tournier, Vincent. “Buddhas of the Past: South Asia.” In Brill’s Encyclopedia of Buddhism, edited by Jonathan Silk et al., vol. 2, Lives, 95–108. Leiden: Brill, 2019.

Waldschmidt, Ernst. Das Mahāvadānasūtra: Ein kanonischer Text über die sieben letzten Buddhas: Auf Grund von Turfan-Handschriften herausgegeben. Teil I-II. Berlin: Abhandlungen der deutschen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, Klasse für Sprachen, Literatur und Kunst, 1952/8, 1954/3.

Vienna Buddhist Translation Studies Group, trans. The Questions of Rāṣṭrapāla (Rāṣṭra­pāla­paripṛcchā­sūtra, Toh 62). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2021.


g.

Glossary

Types of attestation for names and terms of the corresponding source language

AS

Attested in source text

This term is attested in a manuscript used as a source for this translation.

AO

Attested in other text

This term is attested in other manuscripts with a parallel or similar context.

AD

Attested in dictionary

This term is attested in dictionaries matching Tibetan to the corresponding language.

AA

Approximate attestation

The attestation of this name is approximate. It is based on other names where the relationship between the Tibetan and source language is attested in dictionaries or other manuscripts.

RP

Reconstruction from Tibetan phonetic rendering

This term is a reconstruction based on the Tibetan phonetic rendering of the term.

RS

Reconstruction from Tibetan semantic rendering

This term is a reconstruction based on the semantics of the Tibetan translation.

SU

Source unspecified

This term has been supplied from an unspecified source, which most often is a widely trusted dictionary.

g.­1

Abandoner of Anger

Wylie:
  • tha spangs ma
Tibetan:
  • ཐ་སྤངས་མ།
Sanskrit:
  • —

Mother of the buddha Merudhvaja.

Located in 1 passage in the translation:

  • 2.B.­679
g.­2

Abandoning Displeasure

Wylie:
  • mi dga’ spong
Tibetan:
  • མི་དགའ་སྤོང་།
Sanskrit:
  • —

Foremost in terms of insight among the followers of the buddha Guṇagaṇa.

Located in 1 passage in the translation:

  • 2.B.­959
g.­3

Abandoning Doubt

Wylie:
  • yid gnyis spong
Tibetan:
  • ཡིད་གཉིས་སྤོང་།
Sanskrit:
  • —

Son of the buddha Mahāyaśas.

Located in 1 passage in the translation:

  • 2.B.­81
g.­787

calm abiding

Wylie:
  • zhi gnas
Tibetan:
  • ཞི་གནས།
Sanskrit:
  • śamatha

One of the two primary forms of meditation in Buddhism, the other being special insight.

Located in 14 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­25
  • 1.­28
  • 1.­44
  • 2.­30
  • 2.­35
  • 2.­73
  • 2.­115
  • 2.­136
  • 2.­262
  • 2.­264
  • 2.­352
  • 2.B.­2185
  • g.­5713
  • g.­7500
g.­991

concentration

Wylie:
  • bsam gtan
Tibetan:
  • བསམ་གཏན།
Sanskrit:
  • dhyāna

Definition from the 84000 Glossary of Terms:

Dhyāna is defined as one-pointed abiding in an undistracted state of mind, free from afflicted mental states. Four states of dhyāna are identified as being conducive to birth within the form realm. In the context of the Mahāyāna, it is the fifth of the six perfections. It is commonly translated as “concentration,” “meditative concentration,” and so on.

Located in 347 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­23
  • 1.­45
  • 1.­52
  • 2.­20
  • 2.­31
  • 2.­35
  • 2.­42-370
  • 2.B.­1385
  • g.­3059
  • g.­3575
  • g.­5402
  • g.­5710
  • g.­5711
  • g.­6423
  • g.­6760
  • g.­6998
  • g.­8065
  • g.­8462
  • g.­8664
g.­1162

defilement

Wylie:
  • nyon mongs
Tibetan:
  • ཉོན་མོངས།
Sanskrit:
  • kleśa

Definition from the 84000 Glossary of Terms:

The essentially pure nature of mind is obscured and afflicted by various psychological defilements, which destroy the mind’s peace and composure and lead to unwholesome deeds of body, speech, and mind, acting as causes for continued existence in saṃsāra. Included among them are the primary afflictions of desire (rāga), anger (dveṣa), and ignorance (avidyā). It is said that there are eighty-four thousand of these negative mental qualities, for which the eighty-four thousand categories of the Buddha’s teachings serve as the antidote.

Kleśa is also commonly translated as “negative emotions,” “disturbing emotions,” and so on. The Pāli kilesa, Middle Indic kileśa, and Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit kleśa all primarily mean “stain” or “defilement.” The translation “affliction” is a secondary development that derives from the more general (non-Buddhist) classical understanding of √kliś (“to harm,“ “to afflict”). Both meanings are noted by Buddhist commentators.

Located in 69 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­4
  • 1.­27-28
  • 1.­30
  • 1.­51
  • 1.­55
  • 1.­66
  • 2.­29
  • 2.­37
  • 2.­48
  • 2.­54
  • 2.­56
  • 2.­60
  • 2.­69-71
  • 2.­73
  • 2.­79
  • 2.­88
  • 2.­98
  • 2.­120-121
  • 2.­158
  • 2.­202
  • 2.­204
  • 2.­220-221
  • 2.­243-244
  • 2.­256
  • 2.­276
  • 2.­305
  • 2.­336
  • 2.­349
  • 2.­365
  • 2.­374
  • 2.­385
  • 2.B.­202
  • 2.B.­214
  • 2.B.­608
  • 2.B.­645
  • 2.B.­798
  • 2.B.­852
  • 2.B.­892
  • 2.B.­1157
  • 2.B.­1173
  • 2.B.­1177
  • 2.B.­1221
  • 2.B.­1313
  • 2.B.­1377
  • 2.B.­1381
  • 2.B.­1409
  • 2.B.­1422
  • 2.B.­1437
  • 2.B.­1445
  • 2.B.­1465
  • 2.B.­1478
  • 2.B.­1633
  • 2.B.­1817
  • 2.B.­1949
  • 2.B.­2205
  • 2.B.­2289
  • 2.B.­2353
  • g.­3062
  • g.­7400
  • g.­8065
  • g.­8463
  • g.­8493
  • g.­9317
g.­1789

elucidating the way of all phenomena

Wylie:
  • chos thams cad kyi tshul la nges par ston pa
Tibetan:
  • ཆོས་ཐམས་ཅད་ཀྱི་ཚུལ་ལ་ངེས་པར་སྟོན་པ།
Sanskrit:
  • —

The name of a meditative absorption of the Buddha, described in detail in 1.­19 et seq., a teaching on which the bodhisattva Prāmodyarāja requests in The Good Eon.

Located in 8 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • i.­2
  • i.­8
  • i.­20
  • 1.­19-20
  • 1.­34
  • 1.­49
g.­2051

eon

Wylie:
  • bskal pa
Tibetan:
  • བསྐལ་པ།
Sanskrit:
  • kalpa

According to the traditional Abhidharma understanding of cyclical time, a great eon (mahākalpa) is divided into eighty lesser or intervening eons. In the course of one great eon, the external universe and its sentient life takes form and later disappears. During the first twenty of the lesser eons, the universe is in the process of creation and expansion (vivartakalpa); during the next twenty it remains created; during the third twenty, it is in the process of destruction or contraction (samvartakalpa); and during the last quarter of the cycle, it remains in a state of destruction. For the different kinds of kalpas according to Abhidharma teachings, see the Abhidharma­kośa­bhāṣya (Toh 4090) on AK III.89d–93 (for English translation, see Pruden 1988–90, vol. 2, 475–81). The Good Eon referenced in this text is the name Buddhists give to our current eon and generally refers to any eon in which more than one buddha appear.

Located in 46 passages in the translation:

  • i.­1-2
  • i.­8
  • i.­11-12
  • i.­14-15
  • 1.­3
  • 1.­52-53
  • 1.­81
  • 1.­83
  • 1.­86
  • 1.­88
  • 1.­90
  • 1.­136
  • 2.­1
  • 2.­3
  • 2.­5-7
  • 2.­10
  • 2.­46-47
  • 2.­53
  • 2.­88
  • 2.­127
  • 2.­144
  • 2.­146
  • 2.­287
  • 2.A.­103
  • 2.C.­1015
  • 2.C.­1020
  • 2.C.­1025
  • 2.C.­1037
  • n.­2
  • n.­33
  • n.­62
  • n.­297
  • g.­313
  • g.­3511
  • g.­3655
  • g.­6725
  • g.­7194
  • g.­7333
  • g.­7741
g.­3442

god

Wylie:
  • lha
Tibetan:
  • ལྷ།
Sanskrit:
  • deva

Definition from the 84000 Glossary of Terms:

In the most general sense the devas‍—the term is cognate with the English divine‍—are a class of celestial beings who frequently appear in Buddhist texts, often at the head of the assemblies of nonhuman beings who attend and celebrate the teachings of the Buddha Śākyamuni and other buddhas and bodhisattvas. In Buddhist cosmology the devas occupy the highest of the five or six “destinies” (gati) of saṃsāra among which beings take rebirth. The devas reside in the devalokas, “heavens” that traditionally number between twenty-six and twenty-eight and are divided between the desire realm (kāmadhātu), form realm (rūpadhātu), and formless realm (ārūpyadhātu). A being attains rebirth among the devas either through meritorious deeds (in the desire realm) or the attainment of subtle meditative states (in the form and formless realms). While rebirth among the devas is considered favorable, it is ultimately a transitory state from which beings will fall when the conditions that lead to rebirth there are exhausted. Thus, rebirth in the god realms is regarded as a diversion from the spiritual path.

Located in 78 passages in the translation:

  • i.­3
  • 1.­3
  • 1.­7
  • 1.­10
  • 1.­28
  • 1.­52
  • 1.­54-63
  • 1.­65
  • 1.­85
  • 1.­89
  • 1.­132
  • 1.­143
  • 2.­18
  • 2.­22
  • 2.­39
  • 2.­49
  • 2.­53
  • 2.­103
  • 2.­123
  • 2.­194
  • 2.­197
  • 2.­202-203
  • 2.­207
  • 2.­216
  • 2.­247
  • 2.­297
  • 2.­364
  • 2.­369-370
  • 2.­373
  • 2.­391
  • 2.­393
  • 2.A.­3
  • 2.B.­1
  • 2.B.­957
  • 2.B.­1254
  • 2.B.­1330
  • 2.B.­1402
  • 2.B.­1510
  • 2.B.­1674
  • 2.B.­1693
  • 2.B.­1757
  • 2.B.­1770
  • 2.B.­1778
  • 2.B.­1802
  • 2.B.­1826
  • 2.B.­1961
  • 2.B.­1970
  • 2.B.­2241
  • 2.B.­2294
  • 2.B.­2341
  • 2.C.­51
  • 2.C.­340
  • 2.C.­461
  • 2.C.­490
  • 2.C.­628
  • 2.C.­643
  • 2.C.­738
  • 2.C.­924
  • 2.C.­928
  • 2.C.­962
  • 2.C.­1038-1039
  • g.­377
  • g.­3479
  • g.­6193
  • g.­7938
  • g.­7942
g.­3488

Golden Beauty, King of the Splendid Light of Ascertainment

Wylie:
  • gser sdug mdzes pa rnam par nges pa’i ’od kyi gzi brjid kyi rgyal po
Tibetan:
  • གསེར་སྡུག་མཛེས་པ་རྣམ་པར་ངེས་པའི་འོད་ཀྱི་གཟི་བརྗིད་ཀྱི་རྒྱལ་པོ།
Sanskrit:
  • —

A buddha of the past.

Located in 1 passage in the translation:

  • 2.­1
g.­3511

Good Eon

Wylie:
  • bskal pa bzang po
Tibetan:
  • བསྐལ་པ་བཟང་པོ།
Sanskrit:
  • bhadra­kalpika

The name of our current eon, during which one thousand buddhas are prophesied to appear. See also n.­2.

Located in 13 passages in the translation:

  • i.­1
  • i.­4-5
  • i.­9
  • 2.A.­2
  • 2.A.­100
  • 2.C.­1021
  • n.­2
  • n.­297
  • g.­2051
  • g.­3655
  • g.­6351
  • g.­7194
g.­5710

meditative absorption

Wylie:
  • ting nge ’dzin
Tibetan:
  • ཏིང་ངེ་འཛིན།
Sanskrit:
  • samādhi

A central term in Buddhism, generally denoting states of deep concentration or contemplations that foster wholesome states of mind. In this text (see Introduction i.­19 et seq.) it most often refers, more broadly, to a wide range of teachings and practices that constitute the bodhisattva path.

Located in 119 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • i.­2-4
  • i.­8
  • i.­19-21
  • 1.­3-4
  • 1.­12
  • 1.­16
  • 1.­19-20
  • 1.­26-27
  • 1.­29
  • 1.­34-35
  • 1.­37-39
  • 1.­41
  • 1.­43-44
  • 1.­46-47
  • 1.­49
  • 1.­53
  • 1.­64
  • 1.­67
  • 1.­70
  • 1.­75
  • 1.­78
  • 1.­81
  • 1.­83
  • 1.­86-89
  • 1.­91
  • 1.­94-95
  • 1.­98
  • 1.­112
  • 1.­133
  • 1.­135-136
  • 1.­143
  • 2.­2-4
  • 2.­11-14
  • 2.­17-21
  • 2.­24
  • 2.­38
  • 2.­54
  • 2.­58
  • 2.­69-70
  • 2.­72-73
  • 2.­75
  • 2.­87
  • 2.­91
  • 2.­98
  • 2.­143
  • 2.­201
  • 2.­208
  • 2.­212
  • 2.­243
  • 2.­248
  • 2.­254
  • 2.­263-264
  • 2.­290
  • 2.­304
  • 2.­329
  • 2.­371
  • 2.­385
  • 2.A.­1-2
  • 2.A.­104-105
  • 2.B.­136
  • 2.B.­681
  • 2.B.­1130
  • 2.C.­424
  • 2.C.­1014
  • 2.C.­1016
  • 2.C.­1019-1026
  • 2.C.­1031
  • 2.C.­1037-1038
  • n.­36
  • n.­162
  • g.­323
  • g.­1764
  • g.­1789
  • g.­2605
  • g.­2875
  • g.­3057
  • g.­4129
  • g.­7329
  • g.­8462
g.­5713

meditative seclusion

Wylie:
  • nang du yang dag ’jog
  • nang du yang dag par ’jog pa
Tibetan:
  • ནང་དུ་ཡང་དག་འཇོག
  • ནང་དུ་ཡང་དག་པར་འཇོག་པ།
Sanskrit:
  • pratisaṃlayana

This term can mean both physical seclusion and a meditative state of withdrawal. It often refers specifically to the practice of calm abiding (śamatha) and special insight (vipaśyanā).

Located in 8 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­2-3
  • 1.­22
  • 1.­128
  • 2.­18
  • 2.­23
  • 2.­27
  • 2.­255
g.­6351

one thousand buddhas of the Good Eon

Wylie:
  • bskal pa bzang po pa’i sangs rgyas stong
Tibetan:
  • བསྐལ་པ་བཟང་པོ་པའི་སངས་རྒྱས་སྟོང་།
Sanskrit:
  • —

The one thousand and four buddhas that will appear in the current Good Eon.

Located in 15 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • i.­1-2
  • i.­4
  • i.­7-8
  • i.­15-16
  • 2.­3
  • 2.B.­1
  • 2.C.­1
  • n.­1
  • n.­33
  • g.­221
  • g.­8468
g.­6382

Palgyi Yang

Wylie:
  • dpal gyi dbyangs
Tibetan:
  • དཔལ་གྱི་དབྱངས།
Sanskrit:
  • —

Tibetan translator of The Good Eon.

Located in 2 passages in the translation:

  • i.­26
  • c.­1
g.­6383

Paltsek

Wylie:
  • dpal brtsegs
Tibetan:
  • དཔལ་བརྩེགས།
Sanskrit:
  • —

Definition from the 84000 Glossary of Terms:

Paltsek (eighth to early ninth century), from the village of Kawa north of Lhasa, was one of Tibet’s preeminent translators. He was one of the first seven Tibetans to be ordained by Śāntarakṣita and is counted as one of Guru Rinpoché’s twenty-five close disciples. In a famous verse by Ngok Lotsawa Loden Sherab, Kawa Paltsek is named along with Chokro Lui Gyaltsen and Zhang (or Nanam) Yeshé Dé as part of a group of translators whose skills were surpassed only by Vairotsana.

He translated works from a wide variety of genres, including sūtra, śāstra, vinaya, and tantra, and was an author himself. Paltsek was also one of the most important editors of the early period, one of nine translators installed by Tri Songdetsen (r. 755–797/800) to supervise the translation of the Tripiṭaka and help catalog translated works for the first two of three imperial catalogs, the Denkarma (ldan kar ma) and the Samyé Chimpuma (bsam yas mchims phu ma). In the colophons of his works, he is often known as Paltsek Rakṣita (rak+Shi ta).

In this text:

Tibetan editor of The Good Eon.

Located in 2 passages in the translation:

  • i.­26
  • c.­1
g.­6645

Prāmodyarāja

Wylie:
  • mchog tu dga’ ba’i rgyal po
Tibetan:
  • མཆོག་ཏུ་དགའ་བའི་རྒྱལ་པོ།
Sanskrit:
  • prāmodyarāja

Bodhisattva who requests the teaching of The Good Eon.

Located in 58 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • i.­2-4
  • i.­6-7
  • i.­24
  • 1.­3-4
  • 1.­6-7
  • 1.­19-20
  • 1.­34
  • 1.­49
  • 1.­86
  • 1.­124
  • 1.­133-134
  • 1.­143
  • 2.­1
  • 2.­3-4
  • 2.­17
  • 2.­23
  • 2.­25-29
  • 2.­38-42
  • 2.­372
  • 2.A.­1-5
  • 2.B.­1-2
  • 2.B.­5-6
  • 2.C.­1-3
  • 2.C.­1019
  • 2.C.­1021-1022
  • 2.C.­1025-1026
  • 2.C.­1037-1039
  • n.­26
  • g.­1789
g.­6725

prophecy

Wylie:
  • lung bstan pa
Tibetan:
  • ལུང་བསྟན་པ།
Sanskrit:
  • vyākaraṇa

In this text and many others, the formal statement by a buddha that a particular individual (or occasionally a group) will attain awakening as a named tathāgata, often in a named world system during a named future eon. The same term is also used (though not in this text) to refer to a category of scriptures in which such prophetic statements are made; more generally, it can mean simply a teaching or explanation.

Located in 8 passages in the translation:

  • i.­11-12
  • i.­15-17
  • 1.­84
  • 1.­110
  • g.­3511
g.­7500

special insight

Wylie:
  • lhag mthong
  • lhag par mthong ba
Tibetan:
  • ལྷག་མཐོང་།
  • ལྷག་པར་མཐོང་བ།
Sanskrit:
  • vipaśyanā

One of the two primary forms of meditation in Buddhism, the other being calm abiding.

Located in 13 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­25
  • 2.­30
  • 2.­35
  • 2.­47
  • 2.­56
  • 2.­74
  • 2.­95
  • 2.­101
  • 2.­115
  • 2.­136
  • 2.­265
  • g.­787
  • g.­5713
g.­7641

Śrāvasti

Wylie:
  • mnyan yod
Tibetan:
  • མཉན་ཡོད།
Sanskrit:
  • śrāvasti

Definition from the 84000 Glossary of Terms:

During the life of the Buddha, Śrāvastī was the capital city of the powerful kingdom of Kośala, ruled by King Prasenajit, who became a follower and patron of the Buddha. It was also the hometown of Anāthapiṇḍada, the wealthy patron who first invited the Buddha there, and then offered him a park known as Jetavana, Prince Jeta’s Grove, which became one of the first Buddhist monasteries. The Buddha is said to have spent about twenty-five rainy seasons with his disciples in Śrāvastī, thus it is named as the setting of numerous events and teachings. It is located in present-day Uttar Pradesh in northern India.

Located in 2 passages in the translation:

  • i.­2
  • 1.­2
g.­8468

the first list of one thousand buddhas of the Good Eon

Wylie:
  • —
Tibetan:
  • —
Sanskrit:
  • —

The first list of the of the one thousand buddhas which is found in The Good Eon beginning at 2.A.­7 and in fact lists one thousand and four buddhas in total.

Located in 1,013 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • n.­1
  • n.­144
  • n.­148-149
  • n.­165-166
  • n.­213
  • g.­16
  • g.­17
  • g.­18
  • g.­19
  • g.­20
  • g.­21
  • g.­22
  • g.­23
  • g.­81
  • g.­82
  • g.­125
  • g.­126
  • g.­129
  • g.­130
  • g.­189
  • g.­197
  • g.­199
  • g.­201
  • g.­202
  • g.­203
  • g.­210
  • g.­211
  • g.­212
  • g.­214
  • g.­215
  • g.­216
  • g.­217
  • g.­218
  • g.­219
  • g.­220
  • g.­223
  • g.­224
  • g.­225
  • g.­226
  • g.­227
  • g.­228
  • g.­229
  • g.­230
  • g.­231
  • g.­232
  • g.­233
  • g.­235
  • g.­236
  • g.­237
  • g.­238
  • g.­239
  • g.­240
  • g.­241
  • g.­242
  • g.­243
  • g.­244
  • g.­245
  • g.­246
  • g.­247
  • g.­248
  • g.­249
  • g.­250
  • g.­251
  • g.­252
  • g.­253
  • g.­254
  • g.­255
  • g.­257
  • g.­258
  • g.­259
  • g.­260
  • g.­261
  • g.­262
  • g.­264
  • g.­271
  • g.­273
  • g.­275
  • g.­276
  • g.­277
  • g.­278
  • g.­279
  • g.­280
  • g.­281
  • g.­282
  • g.­283
  • g.­324
  • g.­325
  • g.­326
  • g.­327
  • g.­328
  • g.­329
  • g.­330
  • g.­331
  • g.­332
  • g.­333
  • g.­334
  • g.­335
  • g.­336
  • g.­337
  • g.­338
  • g.­339
  • g.­340
  • g.­348
  • g.­349
  • g.­350
  • g.­351
  • g.­352
  • g.­353
  • g.­354
  • g.­362
  • g.­378
  • g.­379
  • g.­408
  • g.­409
  • g.­410
  • g.­428
  • g.­430
  • g.­438
  • g.­440
  • g.­441
  • g.­442
  • g.­444
  • g.­445
  • g.­607
  • g.­608
  • g.­611
  • g.­612
  • g.­613
  • g.­614
  • g.­619
  • g.­620
  • g.­621
  • g.­622
  • g.­623
  • g.­624
  • g.­625
  • g.­668
  • g.­669
  • g.­670
  • g.­671
  • g.­681
  • g.­684
  • g.­732
  • g.­733
  • g.­734
  • g.­735
  • g.­736
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g.­8841

Vaiśālī

Wylie:
  • yangs pa can
Tibetan:
  • ཡངས་པ་ཅན།
Sanskrit:
  • vaiśālī

The ancient capital of the Licchavi republican state.

Located in 8 passages in the translation:

  • s.­1
  • i.­2-3
  • 1.­2
  • 2.­18-19
  • 2.­319
  • g.­5055
g.­8950

Vidyākara­siṁha

Wylie:
  • bidyA ka ra sing ha
Tibetan:
  • བིདྱཱ་ཀ་ར་སིང་ཧ།
Sanskrit:
  • vidyākara­siṁha

Indian translator of The Good Eon.

Located in 2 passages in the translation:

  • i.­26
  • c.­1
g.­9317

worthy one

Wylie:
  • dgra bcom pa
  • dgra bcom
Tibetan:
  • དགྲ་བཅོམ་པ།
  • དགྲ་བཅོམ།
Sanskrit:
  • arhat

One who has achieved the fourth and final level of attainment on the śrāvaka path and who has attained liberation with the cessation of all defilements.

Located in 251 passages in the translation:

  • 1.­13
  • 1.­20
  • 1.­22
  • 1.­55
  • 1.­86
  • 2.­1
  • 2.­18-19
  • 2.­37
  • 2.­347
  • 2.­351
  • 2.A.­6
  • 2.B.­6
  • 2.B.­9
  • 2.B.­29
  • 2.B.­31
  • 2.B.­43-45
  • 2.B.­47-50
  • 2.B.­52-58
  • 2.B.­60
  • 2.B.­62-63
  • 2.B.­83
  • 2.B.­111
  • 2.B.­131
  • 2.B.­139
  • 2.B.­155
  • 2.B.­163
  • 2.B.­171
  • 2.B.­187
  • 2.B.­191
  • 2.B.­202
  • 2.B.­214
  • 2.B.­218
  • 2.B.­226
  • 2.B.­238
  • 2.B.­257
  • 2.B.­261
  • 2.B.­276
  • 2.B.­280
  • 2.B.­284
  • 2.B.­288
  • 2.B.­296
  • 2.B.­304
  • 2.B.­308
  • 2.B.­320
  • 2.B.­324
  • 2.B.­328
  • 2.B.­336
  • 2.B.­340
  • 2.B.­348
  • 2.B.­352
  • 2.B.­360
  • 2.B.­364
  • 2.B.­372
  • 2.B.­380-381
  • 2.B.­384
  • 2.B.­392
  • 2.B.­396
  • 2.B.­408
  • 2.B.­412
  • 2.B.­416
  • 2.B.­424
  • 2.B.­428
  • 2.B.­432
  • 2.B.­440
  • 2.B.­444
  • 2.B.­448
  • 2.B.­452
  • 2.B.­460
  • 2.B.­472
  • 2.B.­476
  • 2.B.­480
  • 2.B.­488
  • 2.B.­496
  • 2.B.­500
  • 2.B.­504
  • 2.B.­544-546
  • 2.B.­557-558
  • 2.B.­562-569
  • 2.B.­574
  • 2.B.­593
  • 2.B.­599
  • 2.B.­608
  • 2.B.­616
  • 2.B.­633
  • 2.B.­649
  • 2.B.­653
  • 2.B.­665
  • 2.B.­680
  • 2.B.­732
  • 2.B.­744
  • 2.B.­760
  • 2.B.­772
  • 2.B.­796
  • 2.B.­804
  • 2.B.­808
  • 2.B.­816
  • 2.B.­828
  • 2.B.­832
  • 2.B.­856
  • 2.B.­860
  • 2.B.­880
  • 2.B.­940
  • 2.B.­988
  • 2.B.­1000
  • 2.B.­1004
  • 2.B.­1009-1014
  • 2.B.­1041
  • 2.B.­1125
  • 2.B.­1149
  • 2.B.­1157
  • 2.B.­1161
  • 2.B.­1165
  • 2.B.­1197
  • 2.B.­1217
  • 2.B.­1233
  • 2.B.­1237
  • 2.B.­1241
  • 2.B.­1249
  • 2.B.­1257
  • 2.B.­1261
  • 2.B.­1269
  • 2.B.­1277
  • 2.B.­1281
  • 2.B.­1313
  • 2.B.­1317
  • 2.B.­1325
  • 2.B.­1337
  • 2.B.­1341
  • 2.B.­1345
  • 2.B.­1405
  • 2.B.­1417
  • 2.B.­1445
  • 2.B.­1449
  • 2.B.­1457
  • 2.B.­1469
  • 2.B.­1473
  • 2.B.­1481
  • 2.B.­1485
  • 2.B.­1493
  • 2.B.­1536-1543
  • 2.B.­1545
  • 2.B.­1560-1562
  • 2.B.­1565-1568
  • 2.B.­1571-1578
  • 2.B.­1597-1598
  • 2.B.­1601
  • 2.B.­1645
  • 2.B.­1653
  • 2.B.­1661
  • 2.B.­1676
  • 2.B.­1680
  • 2.B.­1688
  • 2.B.­1700
  • 2.B.­1709
  • 2.B.­1724
  • 2.B.­1753
  • 2.B.­1756
  • 2.B.­1761
  • 2.B.­1781
  • 2.B.­1805
  • 2.B.­1812
  • 2.B.­1829
  • 2.B.­1849
  • 2.B.­1857
  • 2.B.­1884
  • 2.B.­1889
  • 2.B.­1904
  • 2.B.­1912
  • 2.B.­1916
  • 2.B.­1941
  • 2.B.­1945
  • 2.B.­1972
  • 2.B.­1976
  • 2.B.­1981
  • 2.B.­1989
  • 2.B.­1993
  • 2.B.­2117
  • 2.B.­2121
  • 2.B.­2125
  • 2.B.­2133
  • 2.B.­2173
  • 2.B.­2193
  • 2.B.­2209
  • 2.B.­2213
  • 2.B.­2225
  • 2.B.­2277
  • 2.B.­2297
  • 2.B.­2317
  • 2.B.­2337
  • 2.B.­2381
  • 2.B.­2389
  • 2.B.­2401
  • 2.B.­2405
  • 2.B.­2417
  • 2.B.­2421
  • 2.B.­2473
  • 2.B.­2477
  • 2.B.­2485
  • 2.B.­2489
  • 2.B.­2493
  • g.­3796
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    The Good Eon

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    84000. The Good Eon (Bhadra­kalpika, bskal pa bzang po, Toh 94). Translated by Dharmachakra Translation Committee. Online publication. 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2025. https://84000.co/translation/toh94.Copy
    84000. The Good Eon (Bhadra­kalpika, bskal pa bzang po, Toh 94). Translated by Dharmachakra Translation Committee, online publication, 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2025, 84000.co/translation/toh94.Copy
    84000. (2025) The Good Eon (Bhadra­kalpika, bskal pa bzang po, Toh 94). (Dharmachakra Translation Committee, Trans.). Online publication. 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha. https://84000.co/translation/toh94.Copy

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