Book Title: Reviews Of Etienne Lamotte
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Page #1 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS 105 Etienne Lamotte, Le Traite de la Grande Vertu de Sagesse de Nagarjuna (Mahaprajnaparamitasastra), avec une nouvelle Introduction. Tome III, chapitres XXXIXLII. Publie avec le concours de la Fondation Francqui. Publications de l'Institut Orientaliste de Louvain, Vol. II, pp. lxviii+1119-1733. Louvain, Institut Orientaliste, 1970. Fr. 1100. In 1944 Professor Lamotte published the first volume of his translation of the Ta-chih-tu-lun (Taisho 1509) followed in 1949 by a second volume (cf. W. Baruch, AM, III, 1952-3, pp. 109-12). The third volume contains the translation of chapters 31-42 (chuan 19-26 and the beginning of 27). In the Taisho edition the Ta-chih-tu-lun occupies about 700 pages of which 200 have been translated by Professor Lamotte in these three volumes. One cannot possibly expect L. to translate the entire work. However, the most important part is the first 34 chuan which, according to the colophon, contain a complete translation of the first parivarta of the Sanskrit text. The other parivarta have been abridged by the translator (cf. P. Demieville, JA, 1950, p. 388). It is to be hoped that L. will publish a fourth volume containing a translation of the final part of Kumarajiva's translation of the first parivarta (the remainder of chuan 27 and chuan 28-34). On completion of these four volumes only one desideratum would remain: a detailed index which would make this translation one of the most important reference works available to students of Buddhism and India. The third volume is preceded by a long introduction (pp. v-lx) in which L. deals with several problems relating to the author and the sources of the Ta-chih-tu-lun. In his review of Volume II Demieville had suggested that the original title must have been Mahaprajnaparamita-upadesa (JA, 1950, p. 375, n. 1). In his subsequent publications L. has used this title but without discussing the arguments advanced by Demieville. On pp. vii-viii he states his reason for assuming that the title must have been Prajnaparamitopadesa or Mahaprajnaparamitasutropadesa (cf. also his note in Jacques May's review of K. V. Ramanan's Nagarjuna's Philosophy, TP, LIV, 1968, pp. 334-5). Demieville quoted a biography of Nagarjuna which is traditionally attributed to Kumarajiva: Lung-shu p'u-sa chuan (Taisho 2047). According to L., Kumarajiva is not the author of this biography (cf. pp. liv-lv). Already in his L'Enseignement de Vimalakirti (henceforth: Vk.), Lamotte mentions the "rocambolesque Biographie de Nagarjuna (Long-chou pou-sa tchouan, T 2047), attribuee abusivement a Kumarajiva" (p. 71). In his Early Madhyamika in India and China,1 Richard H. Robinson believes that "In so far as it is genuine, this Biography must consist of Kumarajiva's oral account as worded by his disciples" (p. 25; cf. also pp. 21, 22). This conclusion agrees with Demieville's description of the biography as belonging to "les biographies chinoises de Nagarjuna, qui doivent emaner de Kumarajiva" (op. cit., p. 375, n. 1). The authorship of the biography is not without importance, because it says at the end that one hundred years have lapsed since Nagarjuna's death. If this statement is due to Kumarajiva himself, it would indicate that Kumarajiva believed Nagarjuna to have lived in the third century. However, even in this case it seems difficult to consider it as a decisive argument for 1 Lamotte does not refer to Robinson's book; neither is it mentioned in the "Supplement a la bibliographie" (pp. lxi-lxviii), although this lists many publications to which no reference is made in the text. Page #2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ 106 REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS determining the date of Nagarjuna. Rather surprisingly, L. quotes this statement, although he attaches no value to the biography (cf. Vk., p. 76).2 The Upadesa has traditionally been attributed to Nagarjuna (cf. Demieville, op. cit., p. 381, n. 1). In his preface to the first volume L. wrote as follows: "Il [=Nagarjuna] vecut probablement au IIe siecle de notre ere et joua un role de premier plan dans la formation du bouddhisme du Grand Vehicule. Originaire du Sud (pays d'Andhra), il etendit son influence jusqu'au Nord-Ouest de l'Inde" (p. x). In an article, published in 1954: "Sur la formation du Mahayana" (Asiatica, Leipzig, 1954, pp. 377-96), L. had changed his point of view and wrote: "La critique moderne y va de sa legende a elle et propose de chercher les origines du Mahayana dans l'Inde du Sud, en pays Andhra" (p. 386). Nagarjuna exercised his activity in the north-west of India and his role in the formation of Mahayana Buddhism is not primordial: "Nagarjuna est bien posterieur a l'eclosion des Mahayanasutra, car on trouve dans ses oeuvres et notamment dans son Upadesa (T 1509) et sa Dasabhumivibhasa (T 1522) des references et des citations empruntees a une bonne cinquantaine de sutra et sastra mahayanistes" (p. 391). L.'s change of opinion, which was characterized by Demieville as a "volte-face" (OLZ, 1959, Sp. 248), is carried to a logical conclusion in his most recent discussion of the problem of the authorship. Whereas in 1954 he still considered Nagarjuna to be the author of the Upadesa, in the introduction to Volume III of this translation (henceforth: III, Intr.) the author is said to have lived after the first Madhyamika: Nagarjuna, Aryadeva and Rahulabhadra, probably in the beginning of the fourth century (p. xl). L. even sketches in some detail the spiritual development of the author as a sarvastivadin converted to the Madhyamaka (cf. also Demieville, JA, 1950, p. 382). The date of the author depends on two lines of argument. The first shows that Nagarjuna lived between A.D. 243 and 300. The second that the author of the Upadesa quotes not only Nagarjuna's works, but also those of his pupil, Aryadeva, and of his contemporary, Rahulabhadra. The date of Nagarjuna has been studied by L. in his Vk. (pp. 70-7). In III, Intr. L. quotes the same texts but the argumentation is not entirely the same (pp. li-lv). The texts, quoted by him, are well known (cf. Mochizuki, op. cit., p. 4996a-b). According to Tao-an of the Later Chou Kumarajiva adopted 637 B.C. as the date of Buddha's Nirvana (Vk. p. 73; III, Intr. p. li). Robinson rightly queries the authenticity of this passage which was written in A.D. 568, a century and a half after Kumarajiva (op. cit., p. 23). In the second place L. quotes a preface to the Satyasiddhisastra, written by Seng-jui, a disciple of Kumarajiva. This preface is lost, but is quoted by Chi-tsang in his commentaries. According to this quotation Asvaghosa was born 350 years after the Nirvana of the Buddha and Nagarjuna in the year 530. L. explains that this can be understood in two ways: (1) Asvaghosa and Nagarjuna were born, respectively, 350 and 530 years after the Nirvana; (2) Asvaghosa was born 350 years after the Nirvana and Nagarjuna 530 years after Asvaghosa. L. tries to prove that the second alternative has to be preferred. However, Mochizuki has already pointed out two other quotations of the same preface, in which the addition of hou or ch'i hou clearly indicates that 530 years after Asvaghosa are meant.3 Consequently Nagarjuna was born 880 years after the Nirvana of the Buddha (637 B.C.) A.D. 243. L. arrives at the date of A.D. 300 for his death by referring to the Lung-shu p'u-sa chuan, as mentioned above, and to the Tibetische Lebensbeschreibung Sakyamuni's (tr. A. Schiefner, St. Petersburg, 1848, p. 310) according to which Nagarjuna lived 60 years. Schiefner's work is an abridged translation of a text written in 1734 (cf. T'oung Pao, XLIII, 1955, PP. 317-18). Moreover, L. quotes as "un indice, permettant de controler l'exactitude de la date 243 p.C. proposee pour la naissance de Nagarjuna" the fact that 2 Thomas Watters already referred to the Biography: "If we regard his Life as having been composed by Kumarajiva, its professed translator, he lived in the latter part of the 3rd century of our era" (On Yuan Chwang's travels in India, Vol. II, 1905, p. 204). Cf. also Mochizuki Shinko's Bukkyodaijiten, Vol. V, 1933, p. 4996b; Robinson, op. cit., p. 25. 3 Op cit., p. 4996b1-2. Mochizuki refers to Taisho 1855 (p. 119a21 ff.) and to Hui-ying's commentary on the Upadesa (Dainihon bukkyo zensho, Vol. XCIV, p. 110b). Page #3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ 107 according to two Chinese catalogues Dharmaraksa translated between 265 and 313 a work described as an extract of the Dasabhumikasastra (cf. Vk., p. 76). It is difficult to see how this information, even assuming that it is correct and that Nagarjuna is indeed the author of the Dasabhumikasastra, can confirm 243 as the date of birth of Nagarjuna. Hikata, from whom L. has taken this indication, argues that the Dasabhumika must have reached Tun-huang before 265 (the date of Dharmaraksa's departure from Tun-huang) and that the text must have come into existence by 250 at the latest. In that case Nagarjuna would have written the text at the age of seven at the latest! In III, Intr. L. does not refer any more to the Lung-shu p'u-sa chuan, the Tibetische Lebensbeschreibung Sakyamuni's and Dharmaraksa's translation of an extract of the Dasabhumika, but he still seems to consider Tao-an's information concerning the date of Nirvana, accepted by Kumarajiva, and Seng-jui's preface to the Satyasiddhisastra, as indications sufficient to determine which dates Kumarajiva and his disciples adopted for the Nirvana of the Buddha and the lives of Asvaghosa and Nagarjuna. However, one must remark that Tao-an wrote in 568 and that Seng-jui's preface is only known from quotations. Even admitting that this information is reliable and that it originated in Kashmir where Kumarajiva studied in his youth, it is still difficult to attach much value to it. L. himself points out that the period of more than 500 years ("pres de 500 ans" is probably a slip of the pen for "plus de 500 ans") between Asvaghosa and Nagarjuna is not acceptable. He continues: "On n'echappe pas a l'impression que toutes ces datations relevent de vues theoriques sur les etapes successives de la Bonne Loi et que, en chronologie absolue, leur valeur est plutot faible" (p. liii). REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS Much more important is the internal evidence which can be gained from the Upadesa itself. On p. 1370 occurs the following passage: "Tous les dharma dependent des causes et conditions: dependant des causes et conditions, ils ne sont pas autonomes; puisqu'ils ne sont pas autonomes, il n'y a pas de Moi, et le caractere du Moi est inexistant, ainsi qu'il est dit dans le P'o-wo-p'in (Atmapratisedhaprakarana) 'Chapitre de la refutation du Moi'." This passage is followed by a long note (pp. 1370-5) in which L. maintains that P'o-wo-p'in refers to the tenth chapter of Aryadeva's Catuhsataka: "Le Traite ne se refere pas davantage ici a un chapitre des Mulamadhyamakakarika (ou Madhyamakasastra) de Nagarjuna car le chapitre XVIII qui y traite de l'Atman est intitule 'Examen de l'Atman' (Atmapariksa en sanskrit, Bdag brtag pa en tibetain, Kouan-wo en chinois). Le seul chapitre entrant ici en ligne de compte est l'Atmapratisedhaprakarana du Catuhsataka d'Aryadeva." L. continues: "Cette citation est d'importance car elle prouve que les premiers auteurs Madhyamika (Nagarjuna, Aryadeva, Rahulabhadra) etaient connus de l'auteur du Traite et que par consequent ce dernier leur est posterieur." There is not the slightest doubt that the author of the Upadesa quotes Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika and Rahulabhadra's Prajnaparamitastotra (cf. pp. 1060-5).4 However, this fact in itself does not prove that Nagarjuna cannot have been the author of the Upadesa. He may well have quoted his own work. As to Rahulabhadra, his relation to Nagarjuna is not well established. The Indian tradition seems to consider him as Nagarjuna's teacher (cf. Lamotte, "Sur la formation du Mahayana", p. 391; Upadesa pp. 1373-4). This is followed by the Tibetan tradition (cf. Bu-ston's History of Buddhism, tr. E. Obermiller, II, Heidelberg, 1932, p. 123; The Blue Annals, tr. George N. Roerich, I, Calcutta, 1949, p. 35). L. quotes two Chinese texts to prove that Rahulabhadra was a contemporary of Nagarjuna and a commentator of his works (ibid.), but not much value can be attached to texts written in China in the seventh and eighth centuries.5 In any case, there is not enough evidence to 4 On this stotra see Ui Hakuju, Indo tetsugaku kenkyu, I, Tokyo, 1924, pp. 339-54 (first published in 1920-1 in the Tetsugaku zasshi); W. Baruch, Asia Major, III, 1952, p. 112; Edward Conze (ed.), Buddhist Texts through the Ages (Oxford, 1954), pp. 147-9. Rahulabhadra is also the author of 20 slokas in honour of the Saddharmapundarika. The text of these verses has been published in the edition of the SP by Wogihara and Tsuchida (Tokyo, 1934-5, pp. 37-9). 5 Chi-tsang's Chung-kuan-lun shu (Taisho, 1824) was probably written in 602, cf. Sato Tatsugen, "Kichizo no senjutsusho ni tsuite," Indogaku bukkyogaku kenkyu, X, 1962, p. 566. Page #4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ 108 REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS consider Rahulabhadra "un successeur proche ou lointain" of Nagarjuna. For this reason, the quotation from Aryadeva is much more important because in India, China and Tibet Aryadeva is unanimously considered to be a disciple of Nagarjuna. However, does P'o-wo-p'in really refer to the tenth chapter of the Catuhsataka? The Upadesa contains a long passage on the atman (pp. 734-40). L. remarks in a note (p. 734, n. I): "Il est a remarquer que le Mpps [=Upadesa], attribue a tort ou a raison a Nagarjuna, ne manifeste, dans sa refutation de l'Atman, aucune ressemblance speciale avec les Madh. karika de Nagarjuna, et, pour tout dire, semble les avoir negligees, alors qu'en d'autres endroits il y a eu frequemment recours." This passage it not based on the eighteenth chapter of the Mulamadhyamakakarika, nor is it based on the tenth chapter of the Catuhsataka. The passage, quoted on p. 1370, is too short to enable us to determine its source, but I have not found any evidence in the tenth chapter of the Catuhsataka to prove that it has been used by the author of the Upadesa. L.'s only argument seems to be the title of the tenth chapter of the Catuhsataka in the Chinese translations (Taisho 1570-1). However, both translations were made by Hsuan-tsang in 650-1 (cf. p. 1371). The name of the Sanskrit version has not been handed down; that of the Tibetan version is * Atmapratisedhabhavanasamdarsana (Bdag dgag-pa bsgom-pa bstan-pa).6 There is no evidence that the author of the Upadesa was able to use a text of this chapter bearing the name * Atmapratisedhaprakarana. Therefore, neither the contents of the tenth chapter of the Catuhsataka nor its name confirm Li's hypothesis. On the other hand, the possibility is not to be ruled out that P'o-wo-p'in refers to the eighteenth chapter of Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika. In Sanskrit this text is transmitted together with Candrakirti's commentary, the Prasannapada. According to this commentary the title of the eighteenth chapter is Atmapariksa (in Tibetan: Bdag brtag-pa). Nagarjuna's Mulamadhyamakakarika are transmitted separately in a Tibetan translation, but this version has been corrected with the help of the Tibetan translation of Candrakirti's commentary (cf. P. Cordier; Catalogue du fonds tibetain de la bibliotheque nationale. III, Paris, 1915, pp. 290-1: Mdo-grel, XVII, 1). Therefore the fact that, in this version, the name of the eighteenth chapter is * Atmapariksa does not prove that this was the original name of this chapter. The Tibetan Tanjur contains three other commentaries on the Mulamadhyamakakarika: the Akutobhaya (Peking edn. -No. 5229; Cordier, op. cit., XVII, 6), Buddhapalita's commentary (Peking edn. No. 5242; Cordier, op. cit., XVII, 20) and Bhavaviveka's Prajnapradipa (Peking edn. No. 5253; Cordier, op. cit., XVIII, 8). Both Buddhapalita's and Bhavaviveka's commentaries are quoted by Candrakirti. In all these three commentaries the name of the eighteenth chapter is * Atmadharmapariksa (Tib. Bdag dan chos brtag-pa). According to the Chinese versions of the commentary ascribed to Pin-lo-chieh (Taisho 1564) and of Bhavaviveka's commentary (Taisho 1566) the name of this chapter is *Dharmapariksa (kuan-fa p'in W ). Therefore, only Candrakirti's commentary and the revised Tibetan version of the Mulamadhyamakakarika give the name Atmapariksa to the eighteenth chapter. According to the other commentaries the title is either * Atmadharmapariksa or "Dharmapariksa. It is impossible to decide whether the original title was Atmapariksa, Atmadharmapariksa or Dharmapariksa. The chapter itself contains a refutation of the Atman. It is quite possible that the author of the Upadesa has referred to it by the name * Atmapratisedhaprakarana, even though the real name is probably different. Another possibility is that Kumarajiva translated *Atmapariksaprakarana as P'o-wo-p'in. For a similar instance one may compare the Chinese translation of Pin-lochieh's commentary (Taisho 1564), in which the names of chapters three and five are *Sadindriyapariksa and *Saddhatupariksa (Kuan-liu-ch'ing p'in ; Kuan liuchung p'in A). However, the text itself refers to these two chapters as *Indriyapratisedhaprakarana (P'o-ken p'in * , p. 24624) and *Saddhatupratisedhaprakarana (P'o liu-chung p'in , p. 24a26). In this case, too, it is impossible to know 6 The fragments of the Sanskrit text, published by Haraprasad Sastri, do not contain the name of this chapter. The name Atmasuddhyupayasamdarsana, which is mentioned by L., is a rather fanciful reconstruction from the Tibetan by P. L. Vaidya. Probably Vaidya has misread dag-pa for dgag-pa. Page #5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS 109 if this is due to the author or to the translator. Therefore, it is certainly possible that P'o-wo p'in refers to the eighteenth chapter of the Mulamadhyamakakarika. There is not enough evidence to support Li's supposition that the Upadesa was written in the beginning of the fourth century in north-western India. According to Kumarajiva's biography, he studied in Kashmir between the age of nine and twelve (cf. Robert Shih, Biographies des Moines eminents, Louvain, 1968, pp. 62-3). Whichever dates we adopt for his life (344-413 or 350-409), Kumarajiva must have lived in Kashmir in the beginning of the second half of the fourth century, about half a century after the composition of the Upadesa. It seems difficult to admit with L. that Kumarajiva did obtain reliable information on the dates of Nagarjuna but not on the authorship of the Upadesa. If this work had really been written in the beginning of the fourth century in north-western India, Kumarajiva would almost certainly have met younger contemporaries of the author. For this reason, it seems preferable not to attach too much value both to the computation of the dates of Nagarjuna and to the attribution of the authorship of the Upadesa to him by Kumarajiva. From the Upadesa itself it is obvious that the author was well-versed in the Abhidharma literature of the Sarvastivadin and that he lived in north-western India. It does not seem necessary to assume that he was a former Sarvastivadin converted to the Madhyamaka. As L. indicates (III, Intr. p. xlii), even for a Madhyamika the Abhidharma remained important as belonging to the samortisatya. The author of the Upadesa often quotes the Mulamadhyamakakarika but, to my knowledge, he does not seem to refer to any of the other works attributed to Nagarjuna. It is difficult to give a satisfactory explanation of this fact for it seems probable that Nagarjuna is the author of several works. Some information about the works attributed to Nagarjuna can be obtained from Candrakirti's Madhyamakasastrastuti to which L. refers twice (III, Intr. pp. xliii-xliv; pp. 1373-4). Candrakirti lived several centuries after Nagarjuna, but if we compare the list of eight works mentioned by him to the long lists of works enumerated as Nagarjuna's works by Tibetan and Chinese catalogues, it makes a much more reliable impression. It is not an exhaustive list of the works attributed to Nagarjuna by Candrakirti. Recently, Uryuzu Ryushin has shown that, in his commentary on the Catuhsataka, Candrakirti refers twice to the Bodhisambhara (Taisho 1660), a work also mentioned by Bu-ston (op. cit., II, p. 126 where Bodhigana must be corrected to Bodhisambhara).' Bu-ston attributes six works to Nagarjuna (op. cit., I, p. 51) as mentioned by L., but attention must be drawn to the fact that Bu-ston considers these six to be his logical works. Among other works of Nagarjuna he enumerates the Ratnavali, stotras, works dedicated to the practical side of the doctrine: the Sutrasamuccaya, the Swapnacintamani parikatha and works on the conduct of householders and of monks: Suhrllekha and Bodhisambhara (op. cit., II, pp. 125-6). The authorship of the Akutobhaya is disputed among the Tibetans. Obermiller refers to Mkhas-grub's discussion of the fact that the Akutobhaya quotes from the Catuhsataka with the words: "It has thus been said by the venerable Aryadeva" (Acta Orientalia, XI, 1933, p. 4, n. 9). Walleser has already observed that the same quotation occurs at the same place in Pin-lo-chieh's commentary (tr. Walleser, Heidelberg, 1912, p. 189). L. considers Pin-lo-chieh's work to belong to the authentic works of Aryadeva (cf. p. 1373), but it seems more likely that both the Akutobhaya and the commentary attributed to Pin-lo-chieh have been written by authors who knew Aryadeva's works.10 ? According to Seng-jui, Kumarajiva has taken great liberties with the text (cf. Robinson, op. cit., p. 29). 8 The dates 350-409 have recently been proposed by Tsukamoto Zenryu, cf. Robinson, op. cit., pp. 244-7. Robinson discusses in detail Tsukamoto's arguments. Uryuzu Ryushin, "Bodaishiryoron no Ryuju shinsen ni tsuite", Indogaku bukkyogaku kenkyu, XVII, 1969, pp. 513-19. 10 On Pin-lo-chieh and his commentary (Taisho 1564) see Mochizuki, op. cit., III, Pp. 2793b-4a; Robinson, op. cit., pp. 28-30. On the relation between chapters XXIIIXXVII of the Akutobhaya and the corresponding chapters of Buddhapalita's commentary, -Continued on following page Page #6 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS The authenticity of Aryadeva's Satakasastra (Taisho 1569) is also open to grave doubts. Ui listed 17 quotations from Aryadeva in Chinese Buddhist texts. He was able to identify 9 with verses of the Catuhsataka, but did not discover a single quotation from the Satakasastra (op. cit., pp. 277-81). The fact that Candrakirti often quotes the Catuhsataka by the name Sataka seems also to indicate that Aryadeva did not write both a Catuhsataka and a Sataka. 11 The uncertainty regarding the authenticity of the works attributed to Nagarjuna makes it difficult to form a reliable picture of his philosophical and religious ideas. In his review of Frederick J. Streng's Emptiness, A Study in Religious Meaning (Nashville, New York, 1967) Jacques May rightly remarks that Nagarjuna has been studied until now chiefly as a philosopher or as a logician (Asiatische Studien Etudes Asiatiques, XXIV, 1970, p. 69). The interpretation of the sunyata concept has given rise to many discussions among scholars. Perhaps it is necessary to study not only the Mulamadhyamakakarika, but also the other works, attributed by Candrakirti to Nagarjuna, in order to determine the place of this concept in Nagarjuna's thought. In any case, one is rather surprised to see L. describe the sunyata as "rien que ce soit (akimcid), 'une simple inexistence' (abhavamatra)" (III, Intr. p. xxxi). L. does not give any references to texts and, as far as I have been able to ascertain, the Mulamadhyamakakarika do not use these terms to characterize sunyata.12 On page 1229 L. quotes a verse from Santideva's Bodhicaryavatara in which the words kimcin nastiti are to be found; however, they do not describe the sunyata. As the commentary explains, the practice of meditating on the idea that "nothing exists" brings about the cessation of all ideas of voidness and existence (cf. Bodhicaryavatarapanjika, ed. L. de La Vallee Poussin, Calcutta, 1901-14, p. 414). As to the expression abhavamatra, this has been discussed by L. in his introduction to his translation of the Vimalakirtinirdesasutra (p. 57; cf. J. May, T'oung Pao, LI, 1964, p. 95), but the cittam acittam of the Prajnaparamitasutra is not identical with the sunyata of the Madhyamaka. It is impossible to discuss fully the many topics treated by L. in his introduction. Two points of minor importance have to be mentioned. On p. xiii L. states that the name Mahayana never occurs in inscriptions, but one finds the expression mahayanikaSakyabhiksu-acaryya in an inscription from East Bengal dated A.D. 507-8 and inscriptions of the Pala period mention mahayana-anuyayin "followers of Mahayana" (cf. Shizutani Masao, Gupta jidai bukkya himei mokuroku, Kyoto, 1968, pp. 12-13, where further bibliographical references are given). On pp. xxxviii-xxxix L. translates a Continued from previous pagesee Hirano Takashi, "Muichu to Butsugo-chu to no ido ni tsuite", Indogaku bukkyogaku kenkyu, III, 1954, pp. 236-8. The biography of Nagarjuna, attributed to Kumarajiva, attributes to him an Akutobhayasastra in 100,000 verses (cf. M. Walleser, "The Life of Nagarjuna from Tibetan and Chinese Sources", Hirth Anniversary Volume, p. 447). L. does not believe that this work is identical with the Akutobhaya (III, Intr. p. lv), but the similarity in name and the fact that this work is said to contain the Chung-lun rather suggest a connexion between the two works. Walleser mentioned the possibility that Pin-lo-chieh's commentary was based upon the Akutobhaya, but ruled it out because, in that case, Kumarajiva would not have mentioned the Akutobhayasastra in the way he did in his biography of Nagarjuna. However, if this biography is not written by Kumarajiva, but reproduces information obtained from Kumarajiva, the mention of an Akutobhayasastra may well indicate a connexion between Pin-lo-chieh's commentary and the Akutobhaya (cf. Walleser, Die Mittlere Lehre des Nagarjuna, Heidelberg, 1912, pp. ix-x). 11 Richard R. Gard's discussion of the authenticity of the Satakasastra is conducted along different lines: "On the authenticity of the Pai-lun and Shih-erh-menlun", Indogaku bukkyogaku kenkyu, II, 1954, pp. 751-42. 12 Candrakirti rejects nihilistic interpretations of sunya, cf. Prasannapada, p. 495. 12-13: yadi tavat sarvam idam sunyam sarvam nastiti parikalpayet tadasya mithyadnstir apadyate; tr. J. May, p. 231: s'il suppose que "le donne empirique tout entier est vide" veut dire "tout est non-etre", il tombe dans la vue fausse par excellence. Page #7 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS III passage from the Hsi-yu-chih as quoted in the Fa-yuan-chu-lin (Taisho 2122). According to L. this passage is taken from Tao-an's Hsi-yu-chih and contains the oldest mention of Nagarjuna. The same passage is quoted in Mochizuki (op. cit., p. 4996a), but he does not attribute this Hsi-yu-chih to Tao-an, because it is well known that the Hsi-yu-chih, quoted in the Fa-yuan-chu-lin, has nothing to do with Tao-an's Hsi-yuchih. Sylvain Levi, who translated several passages of the Hsi-yu-chih from the Fa-yuanchu-lin, has given the following information on this work: "Les memoires de Wang Hiuen-ts'e et de Hiouen-tsang servirent de base a une compilation officielle, le Si-iutchi (appele aussi Si-kouo-tchi) en cent chapitres, soixante de textes, quarante de cartes et dessins, qui fut executee en 666" (JA, 1900, I, p. 298). In this third volume of his translation of the Upadesa L. shows his great knowledge of the Abhidharma literature. As shown in the table on pp. Ixvi-lxvii, chapters XXXIXLII deal with the dharmas of the Way of Nirvana and with the attributes of the Buddha. The systematic nature of these chapters have made it possible for L. to add preliminary notes, in which useful information is given on the dharmas, their treatment in canonical literature, Abhidharma texts and Mahayana texts. One must admire Li's extensive knowledge of the Buddhist literature in Pali, Sanskrit, Tibetan and Chinese. L. gives numerous references to the original sources but mentions only rarely secondary sources in Western languages. It is only by consulting these works that one realizes to what extent L.'s knowledge surpasses that of his predecessors. However, one cannot but regret the fact that L. does not seem to have made great use of the works of Japanese scholars apart from reference works. To mention only one example: chapter XLI of the Upadesa treats in great detail of the eighteen avenikadharma of the Buddhas. L. mentions that the wording of these dharmas is not always the same and that their order varies according to the texts. He refers to many texts but does not indicate in which order they are listed in them (cf. pp. 1626-7). This problem has been examined very carefully by Mizuno Kogen in his study on the classification of the eighteen avenikadharma (cf. Miyamoto Shoson, ed., Daijo bukkyo no seiritsushiteki kenkyu, Tokyo, 1954, pp. 292-302).13 Mizuno points out, for instance, that the same list of dharmas is to be found in two biographies of the Buddha (Taisho 184, p. 47201-10; Taisho 185, p. 478b16-25) and in Dharmaraksa's version of the Lalitavistara (cf. Lamotte, p. 1627). He demonstrates that this list was copied from Taisho 184 by the translator of Taisho 185 which, in its turn, is the source for the list in Dharmaraksa's translation. In such and similar instances references to Japanese publications would have been very welcome. There is much to be learned from the excellent work done by Japanese scholars, just as Japanese scholars can derive much profit from studying the work of Western scholars. Probably, Japanese scholars could considerably facilitate the access to their publications, which are widely scattered in innumerable periodicals, by publishing regularly annotated bibliographies in a Western language. Li's translation of this volume is superior even to that of the two preceding ones. Only rarely would one like to suggest a different rendering, as, for instance, in the following passages: P. 1140: Les etres sont dignes de pitie; je dois les sauver et les attacher au sejour inconditionne (asamskytapada) *An . . ## HE (p. 197014-15). The beings are to be pitied. I must extirpate my attachment to the unconditioned place. Similar instances of the use of chu can be found in Gadjin M. Nagao's Index to the Mahayana-sutralamkara (Tokyo, 1961), Vol. II, p. 232b: 8 k bhoga-sakti; # # # bhavabhirama. P. 1144: les choses qu'ils aiment ou dont ils se detachent sont multiples br br ** of H (198a 14). The things which they like and which they understand are manifold. P. 1211: caravanier (sarthavaha) Ap(206a 16). Charioteer (sarathi). 13 One must add to Mizuno's references to Pali texts the recently published Vimuttimagga (Colombo, 1963, p. 17), a text closely related to Upatisya's Chieh t'o tao lun (Taisho 1648). Some information on this text, mainly on the basis of the Sinhalese introduction, can be found in Mori Sodo, "Shin-shiryo Vimuttimagga", Indogaku bukkyogaku kenkyu, XVII, 1968, pp. 132-3. Page #8 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ II2 REVIEWS AND NOTICES OF BOOKS P. 1263: Le bonheur (sukha) aime par tous les etres est important (guru) ** - * # * (211913). Happiness is liked and esteemed by all beings. P. 1377: Supposons un homme chaussant des sandales: si celles-ci etaient neuves des le premier jour, elles ne vieillirent jamais; apres coup, elles seraient toujours neuves et n'auraient pas de vieillissement. & E. * ici Etike. W: #ff E Hit (222010-12). Suppose that a man puts on sandals. If, on the first day, they were new and without aging, then later they would be always new and would not become old. This is explained in the preceding passage: "tout dharma dont on constate apres coup le caractere de destruction doit evidemment posseder des sa naissance ce caractere de destruction". P. 1511: qui n'a pas encore detruit les impuretes W (235b8). Who has not yet cut off his bonds (samyojana). P. 1601: le Buddha qui a atteint les felicites du Sommet de l'existence (bhavagra) y a renonce #15 #M E ME (245216). The Buddha has given up even the joys of the Summit of existence.-The expression nai chih 75 has presented difficulties to the translator, cf. p. 1691: le present qui ne dure qu'un instant EU # - MELE (254012). The present does not possess duration even during one moment (Vasumitra admits that samskaras possess duration during one instant but not the Sautrantikas, cf. L. de La Vallee Poussin, Melanges chinois et bouddhiques, V, 1937, p. 155); p.'1694: Ainsi des saints comme Avalokitesvara 5 E IL (255a29). Even saints such as Avalokitesvara. P. 1692: Des qu'il se trouverait dans des dispositions mauvaises (dustacitta) et transgresserait ses engagements (sila) anterieurs, ce religieux ne serait plus un bhiksu. # L#BC # # LE FC (255a6-7). If at the present moment [the monk] were in an evil disposition, in the past, too, he would be without morality. He could not be a monk [at all].--The Sarvastivadin argues that, if past and future were non-existent, all three times would be identical. Therefore, if somebody is sinful at the present moment, he is also sinful in the past. Consequently, it is impossible to be a monk. P. 1709: qu'est-ce que la petite bienveillance et la petite compassion? Apres ces petites, pourquoi parler des grandes? tp l i tt t. (256b 18). What are the small benevolence and the small compassion by reason of the smallness of which [the great benevolence and the great compassion] are called great? The Upadesa contains the following quotation from the Kasyapapariprccha: "L'Atman est un extreme, l'Anatman est un autre extreme: eviter ces deux extremes est nomme le Chemin du milieu" (p. 1684). In a note L. refers to Kasyapaparivarta $56 but he has overlooked $57: atmeti kasyapa ayam eko ntah nairatmyam ity ayam dvitiyo ntah yad atmaneratmyayor madhyam tad ... iyam ucyate kasyapa madhyama pratipad dharmanam bhutapratyaveksa. L. believes that the Upadesa quotes the Sutra of Katyayana. The Upadesa contains also a long quotation from Kasyapaparivarta 8882-4 (266c28-267015). Kuno Horyu has drawn attention to the interesting fact that the quotation in the Upadesa contains the beginning of $84, a passage which is missing in the three oldest Chinese translations of the Kasyapaparivarta (Bukkyo kenkyu, II, 3, 1938, p. 95). The publication of the third volume of the translation of the Upadesa is an important milestone in the history of Buddhist studies. To conclude we express the wish that Professor Lamotte may find the courage and energy to continue his admirable work on this important text! J. W. DE JONG