- In the Buddha’s Words
 - Cover
 - Title Page
 - Contents
 - Foreword
 - Preface
 - List of Abbreviations
 - Key to the Pronunciation of Pāli
 - Detailed List of Contents
 - General Introduction
 - I. The Human Condition
 - Introduction
 - 1. Old Age, Illness, and Death
- (1) Aging and Death
 - (2) The Simile of the Mountain
 - (3) The Divine Messengers
 - 2. The Tribulations of Unreflective Living
 - (1) The Dart of Painful Feeling
 - (2) The Vicissitudes of Life
 - (3) Anxiety Due to Change
 - 3. A World in Turmoil
 - (1) The Origin of Conflict
 - (2) Why Do Beings Live in Hate?
 - (3) The Dark Chain of Causation
 - (4) The Roots of Violence and Oppression
 - 4. Without Discoverable Beginning
 - (1) Grass and Sticks
 - (2) Balls of Clay
 - (3) The Mountain
 - (4) The River Ganges
 - (5) Dog on a Leash
 
 - II. The Bringer of Light
 - III. Approaching the Dhamma
 - IV. The Happiness Visible in This Present Life
 - Introduction
 - 1. Upholding the Dhamma in Society
- (1) The King of the Dhamma
 - (2) Worshipping the Six Directions
 - 2. The Family
 - (1) Parents and Children
 - (a) Respect for Parents
 - (b) Repaying One’s Parents
 - (2) Husbands and Wives
 - (a) Different Kinds of Marriages
 - (b) How to Be United in Future Lives
 - (c) Seven Kinds of Wives
 - 3. Present Welfare, Future Welfare
 - 4. Right Livelihood
 - (1) Avoiding Wrong Livelihood
 - (2) The Proper Use of Wealth
 - (3) A Family Man’s Happiness
 - 5. The Woman of the Home
 - 6. The Community
 - (1) Six Roots of Dispute
 - (2) Six Principles of Cordiality
 - (3) Purification Is for All Four Castes
 - (4) Seven Principles of Social Stability
 - (5) The Wheel-Turning Monarch
 - (6) Bringing Tranquillity to the Land
 
 - V. The Way to a Fortunate Rebirth
 - Introduction
 - 1. The Law of Kamma
- (1) Four Kinds of Kamma
 - (2) Why Beings Fare as They Do After Death
 - (3) Kamma and Its Fruits
 - 2. Merit: The Key to Good Fortune
 - (1) Meritorious Deeds
 - (2) Three Bases of Merit
 - (3) The Best Kinds of Confidence
 - 3. Giving
 - (1) If People Knew the Result of Giving
 - (2) Reasons for Giving
 - (3) The Gift of Food
 - (4) A Superior Person’s Gifts
 - (5) Mutual Support
 - (6) Rebirth on Account of Giving
 - 4. Moral Discipline
 - (1) The Five Precepts
 - (2) The Uposatha Observance
 - 5. Meditation
 - (1) The Development of Loving-Kindness
 - (2) The Four Divine Abodes
 - (3) Insight Surpasses All
 
 - VI. Deepening One’s Perspective on the World
 - Introduction
 - 1. Four Wonderful Things
- 2. Gratification, Danger, and Escape
 - (1) Before My Enlightenment
 - (2) I Set Out Seeking
 - (3) If There Were No Gratification
 - 3. Properly Appraising Objects of Attachment
 - 4. The Pitfalls in Sensual Pleasures
 - (1) Cutting Off All Affairs
 - (2) The Fever of Sensual Pleasures
 - 5. Life is Short and Fleeting
 - 6. Four Summaries of the Dhamma
 - 7. The Danger in Views
 - (1) A Miscellany on Wrong View
 - (2) The Blind Men and the Elephant
 - (3) Held by Two Kinds of Views
 - 8. From the Divine Realms to the Infernal
 - 9. The Perils of Saṃsāra
 - (1) The Stream of Tears
 - (2) The Stream of Blood
 
 - VII. The Path to Liberation
 - VIII. Mastering the Mind
 - Introduction
 - 1. The Mind Is the Key
- 2. Developing a Pair of Skills
 - (1) Serenity and Insight
 - (2) Four Ways to Arahantship
 - (3) Four Kinds of Persons
 - 3. The Hindrances to Mental Development
 - 4. The Refinement of the Mind
 - 5. The Removal of Distracting Thoughts
 - 6. The Mind of Loving-Kindness
 - 7. The Six Recollections
 - 8. The Four Establishments of Mindfulness
 - 9. Mindfulness of Breathing
 - 10. The Achievement of Mastery
 
 - IX. Shining the Light of Wisdom
 - Introduction
 - 1. Images of Wisdom
- (1) Wisdom as a Light
 - (2) Wisdom as a Knife
 - 2. The Conditions for Wisdom
 - 3. A Discourse on Right View
 - 4. The Domain of Wisdom
 - (1) By Way of the Five Aggregates
 - (a) Phases of the Aggregates
 - (b) A Catechism on the Aggregates
 - (c) The Characteristic of Nonself
 - (d) Impermanent, Suffering, Nonself
 - (e) A Lump of Foam
 - (2) By Way of the Six Sense Bases
 - (a) Full Understanding
 - (b) Burning
 - (c) Suitable for Attaining Nibbāna
 - (d) Empty Is the World
 - (e) Consciousness Too Is Nonself
 - (3) By Way of the Elements
 - (a) The Eighteen Elements
 - (b) The Four Elements
 - (c) The Six Elements
 - (4) By Way of Dependent Origination
 - (a) What Is Dependent Origination?
 - (b) The Stableness of the Dhamma
 - (c) Forty-Four Cases of Knowledge
 - (d) A Teaching by the Middle
 - (e) The Continuance of Consciousness
 - (f) The Origin and Passing of the World
 - (5) By Way of the Four Noble Truths
 - (a) The Truths of All Buddhas
 - (b) These Four Truths Are Actual
 - (c) A Handful of Leaves
 - (d) Because of Not Understanding
 - (e) The Precipice
 - (f) Making the Breakthrough
 - (g) The Destruction of the Taints
 - 5. The Goal of Wisdom
 - (1) What is Nibbāna?
 - (2) Thirty-Three Synonyms for Nibbāna
 - (3) There Is That Base
 - (4) The Unborn
 - (5) The Two Nibbāna Elements
 - (6) The Fire and the Ocean
 
 - X. The Planes of Realization
 - Introduction
 - 1. The Field of Merit for the World
- (1) Eight Persons Worthy of Gifts
 - (2) Differentiation by Faculties
 - (3) In the Dhamma Well Expounded
 - (4) The Completeness of the Teaching
 - (5) Seven Kinds of Noble Persons
 - 2. Stream-Entry
 - (1) The Four Factors Leading to Stream-Entry
 - (2) Entering the Fixed Course of Rightness
 - (3) The Breakthrough to the Dhamma
 - (4) The Four Factors of a Stream-Enterer
 - (5) Better than Sovereignty over the Earth
 - 3. Nonreturning
 - (1) Abandoning the Five Lower Fetters
 - (2) Four Kinds of Persons
 - (3) Six Things that Partake of True Knowledge
 - (4) Five Kinds of Nonreturners
 - 4. The Arahant
 - (1) Removing the Residual Conceit “I Am”
 - (2) The Trainee and the Arahant
 - (3) A Monk Whose Crossbar Has Been Lifted
 - (4) Nine Things an Arahant Cannot Do
 - (5) A Mind Unshaken
 - (6) The Ten Powers of an Arahant Monk
 - (7) The Sage at Peace
 - (8) Happy Indeed Are the Arahants
 - 5. The Tathāgata
 - (1) The Buddha and the Arahant
 - (2) For the Welfare of Many
 - (3) Sāriputta’s Lofty Utterance
 - (4) The Powers and Grounds of Self-Confidence
 - (5) The Manifestation of Great Light
 - (6) The Man Desiring Our Good
 - (7) The Lion
 - (8) Why Is He Called the Tathāgata?
 
 - Notes
 - Table of Sources
 - Glossary
 - Bibliography
 - Index of Subjects
 - Index of Proper Names
 - Index of Similes
 - Index of Selected Pāli Sutta Titles
 - Index of Pāli Terms Discussed in the Notes
 - About the Author
 - Also Available from Wisdom Publications
 - Copyright
 
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