- Ornament of Abhidharma
 - Cover Page
 - Title Page
 - Message from the Dalai Lama
 - Special Acknowledgments
 - Publisher’s Acknowledgment
 - Contents
 - General Editor’s Preface
 - Translator’s Introduction
 - Technical Note
 - Ornament of Abhidharma: A Commentary on the Verses of the Abhidharmakośa
 - Part I. Elements
 - 2. Conditioned Phenomena
 - 3. The Nature of the Five Aggregates
 - 4. Aggregates, Bases, and Elements
 - 5. Categories of Elements
- Five that are demonstrable and so on (29–31)
 - The investigative and analytical (32–33)
 - Five possessing a focal object and so on (34–36)
 - Three types of derivation (37)
 - Five such as substantial existence (38–39)
 - Objects to be eliminated by the path of seeing (40)
 - View and nonview (41–47)
 - Three, such as those known by two and so on (48)
 
 - Part II. Faculties
 - 6. The Nature of the Faculties
 - 7. The Generation of Conditioned Phenomena
 - 8. The Generation of Mental factors
- How nonphysical states arise (23):
 - Definition of minds and mental factors
 - Substantial versus nominal
 - The presentation of realms and levels
 - Which mental factors occur in the retinue of which consciousness
 - The meaning of the term
 - Determinate mental factors (24–27):
 - Universal mental states
 - Virtuous mental states
 - Afflicted mental states
 - Nonvirtuous mental states
 - Specific-afflicted mental states
 - Indeterminate mental factors (28–31)
 - Differentiating similar mental factors (32–34)
 
 - 9. Fourteen nonassociated formative factors
- Overview (35–36)
 - Obtainment (37–39)
 - Nonobtainment (39–40)
 - Homogeneity (41)
 - The state of nondiscernment (41)
 - The meditative attainment of nondiscernment (42)
 - The meditative attainment of cessation (43–44)
 - The faculty of lifeforce (45)
 - The four characteristics (45–47)
 - Collection of nouns, predicated phrases, and letters (47–48)
 
 - 10. Causes, Results, and Conditions
- The six causes (49–55):
 - Active cause
 - Coemergent cause
 - Homogeneous cause
 - Concomitant cause
 - Omnipresent cause
 - Cause of karmic maturation
 - The five results (55–61):
 - The four conditions (61–66):
 - Objective condition
 - Dominant condition
 - Causal condition
 - Immediately preceding condition
 - Desire-realm minds and form-realm minds (67–68)
 - Formless-realm minds and uncontaminated minds (68–71)
 - Twenty minds (71–73)
 
 - Part III. Cosmology
 - 11. Classification and Attributes of Sentient Beings
 - 12. Birth of Sentient Beings
 - 13. Twelve Links of Dependent Origination
- Existence of sentient beings (18–19)
 - Dependent origination in three phases (20–25)
 - How the twelve links are subsumed in the three afflicted states (26)
 - Classification of cause and effect (26–27)
 - Explaining the meaning of the sūtras (28)
 - Continuous dependent origination (28–36)
 - Metaphors for the links (36–37)
 
 - 14. Birth, Food, and Death
 - 15. The Physical Cosmos
 - 16. The Domains of Sentient Beings
 - 17. Units of Measurement and Other Matters
 - Part IV. Karma
 - 18. The Theory of Action
 - 19. Detailed Classification of Indicative Form
 - 20. Elaboration of Karma Found in the Sūtras: Part 1
- Classification in three divisions (45–48)
 - Karma to be experienced (49–59)
 - Classification in four, such as white and black (59–63)
 - Silence and purification (64)
 - Positive and negative action (65–66)
 - Ten virtuous and ten nonvirtuous actions (66–86):
 - Indicative and nonindicative form
 - Motivation
 - Basis
 - Nature of action
 - The number of karmic paths that arise simultaneously with intention
 - How they are possessed
 - Results
 - Karma and its results (87–94)
 - Appropriate and inappropriate karma (94)
 - Projecting karma and completing karma (95)
 
 - 21. Elaboration of Karma Found in the Sūtras: Part 2
- The three obscurations (96–97)
 - The five heinous acts (98–105)
 - The five near-heinous acts (106–12)
 - Merit, action, and basis (112–25):
 - The outcome of generosity
 - How to give
 - Excellent fields of generosity
 - Heavy and light karma
 - The basis of merit and action
 - The giving of Dharma
 - Twelve branches of scripture
 - The three conducive factors (125)
 - The three karmas engaged by cognition (126–27)
 
 - Part V. Negative Tendencies
 - 22. The Nature of Negative Tendencies
 - 23. The Typology of Negative Tendencies
- Pervasive and nonpervasive negative tendencies (12–13)
 - Those focusing on the contaminated and uncontaminated (14–16)
 - How they increase (17–18)
 - Those that are nonvirtuous or neutral (19)
 - The roots of nonvirtuous and neutral states (20–22)
 - How one possesses them (23–28)
 - How phenomena {and minds} become their objects (29–32)
 - The sequence of their arising (32–33)
 - Causes giving rise to them (34)
 
 - 24. The Taxonomy of the Contaminants and So On in the Sūtras
 - 25. How Negative Tendencies Are Eliminated
 - Part VI. Paths and Beings
 - 26. The Four Noble Truths
 - 27. The Stages of Realization
 - 28. Classifications of Ārya Beings
 - 29. Specific Attributes of Ārya Beings
- Specific level and path (45–49)
 - Specific elimination and nonarising (50)
 - Specific principle of result (51–53)
 - The wheel of Dharma (54)
 - Specific realm and classification (55–57)
 - Specific type and degeneration (57–58)
 - Specific upgrade of intellectual faculty (58–62)
 - Sevenfold classification of ārya beings (63–64)
 - Twofold classification of ārya beings (64–65)
 
 - 30. The Path of Realization
 - Part VII. Epistemology
 - 31. Perseverance, Knowledge, and View
- Distinguishing perserverance, knowledge, and view (1)
 - The nature and types of knowledge (2–7)
 - Set number (8–9)
 - Aspects of knowledge (10–14)
 - Levels and the basis of knowledge (14–15)
 - Knowledge as foundations of mindfulness (16)
 - Focal objects of knowledge (16–18)
 - How knowledge is possessed (19)
 - How knowledge is obtained (20–27)
 
 - 32. The Unique Qualities of a Buddha
 - 33. Shared Qualities of a Buddha
 - Part VIII. Meditative Attainment
 - 34. Absorptions and Formless States
- Definitions of the absorptions and formless-realm states (1–4)
 - Classification of the absorptions and formless-realm states (5–6)
 - Branches of the absorptions and formless-realm states (7–13)
 - How the absorptions and formless states are obtained (14)
 - Specific attributes (15–21)
 - Access to higher levels (22–23)
 - Classifications of concentration (23–28)
 
 - 35. Qualities and Attributes of Concentration
 - 36. Conclusion: The Purpose of Engaging in Virtue
 - Appendixes
 - Notes
 - Sanskrit–English Glossary
 - Bibliography
 - Index
 - About the Contributors
 - The Institute of Tibetan Classics
 - The Library of Tibetan Classics
 - Become a Benefactor of the Library of Tibetan Classics
 - Copyright
 
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