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Great Madhyamaka by Taranatha

In Tibet, the Great Madhyamaka, which is Yogacara Madhyamaka, is known as Shentong. It was
elucidated in the scriptures of Maitreya, Asanga, Vasubandhu and Dignaga. It was also profoundly
illuminated in Nagarjuna's Praise to Dharmadhatu. Shentong was the viewpoint of both masters, Nagarjuna
and Asanga.

According to Shentong, all the following are regarded as compounded and transient and thereby unreal: the
three uncompounded dharmas, regarded as unconditioned by all schools up to and including Cittamatra, but
which are actually imputed and insubstantial; all basic samsaric dharmas such as external objects, the eight
types of consciousness, and the fifty one dharmas of mental events; and everything included in the path and
result, such as all newly arisen aspects within the fruition of Buddhahood and whatever appears to those yet
to be tamed. From the vantage point of ultimate truth, whatever appears as sight and sound, all the
phenomena within dharma and dharmata, everything included in subject and object, are compounded and
transient and thereby unreal.

The ultimate truth is dharmadhatu and self-luminous awareness, which is non-dual pristine wisdom. This is
called uncompounded dharmata. When examined by reason, nothing but this can be established as true.
However, in the Rangtong way of comparing it to space, it is insubstantial; for that reason, they assert that
it is not ultimate truth.

The Shentong school is faultless, endowed with all good qualities

All Mahayanists accept Mahayana sutras as the words of the Buddha. However, Cittamatrins hold four
sutras – Sandhinirmocana, Lankavatara, Ghanavyuha and Avatamsaka – as definitive and the rest of them
as provisional. The founders of this school are the five hundred masters of the early Mahayana. The holders
of the general Madhyamaka consider the Third Turning sutras as provisional and the Prajnaparamita sutras
of the Second Turning as ultimate. The real founders of this school are Buddhapalita and so on as
mentioned above. Their followers claim that the eight proponents of the 'free of inherent nature,' like
Rahulabhadrika, and Nagarjuna adhered to their view alone.

The Great Madhyamaka bases its view on the sutras of all Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma. The
view that establishes ultimate dharmata as true is presented in a general way in the following scriptures:
Katyayana Sutra, Sunyata Nama Mahasutra and many other sutras from the First Turning; the Maitreya
Pariprcchanama Sutra, the Prajnaparamita in five hundred stanzas, and many other sutras from the Second
Turning; and also many sutras from the Third Turning including the four important ones mentioned above.

The most definitive presentation of this subject is found in the Tathatagatagarbha Sutra, Mahabheriharaka
Sutra, Angulimala Sutra, Srimaladevi Sutra, Mahaparinirvana Sutra, Ratnamega Sutra, Prasanta Viniscaya
Sutra and so forth. Based on these sutras, the subtle and distinct view reveals pure dharmadhatu as buddha-
nature. In a subtle and distinctive way, these secretly whispered teachings describe pure dharmadhatu,
buddha-nature, dharmakaya – permanent and unchanging – with all the ultimate qualities of the Buddha,
primordially and naturally present.

Arya Maitreya was the author who elucidated the meaning of the sutras through his literature. In the
Abhisamayalankara, he gave a brief and general explanation. In the Mahayana Sutralankara, Madhyanta-
vibhanga and Dharmata-vibhanga, he clearly explained this view in detail. The extraordinary and most
subtle view of these essential sutras is presented in the Uttaratantra. Asanga and Vasubandhu wrote
commentaries on these texts. In Asanga’s commentary on the Uttaratantra, this extraordinary view is utterly
clear and elaborate. In their entirety, the commentaries of these two brothers are clearly Shentong
Madhyamaka. In Vasubandhu’s commentary on the Prajnaparamita in 20,000 stanzas and his commentary
on the Dharmata-vibhanga, the Shentong view is extensive and exceedingly clear. His disciples, Dignaga
and Sthiramati, and many other good students in his lineages taught widely the doctrine of general
Shentong. The subtle Shentong, since it is difficult to fathom, was spread by ear to ear transmission only to
the best students.

Later, there emerged many in India who confused the Shentong Madhyamaka and Cittamatra schools. For
that reason, the majority of Tibetans misunderstood them as the same. In Tibet, a variety of scholars
translated these texts, but translators like Zugawe Dorje and Tsen Khawoche, who were within Maitrya’s
meditative lineage, held the pure view. The omniscient Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen spread the lion’s roar of
the distinctive and profound Shentong across the land.

The Madhyanta-vibhaga says:


Impure perception exists;
That does not have both.
Emptiness is there,
And that is also there.
It is not emptiness
Nor non-emptiness;
In that way everything is explained.
It is, it is not, it is –
That is the Middle Way.
While defining the relative truth, impure perception which gives rise to appearance exists on a relative
level. Subjective and objective appearances which are manifested to that are just imputations of the mind.
For that reason, these are not real, even at the level of relative truth. Therefore, relative truth is freed from
both extremes. By accepting that conceptual mind only exists on a relative level, one is freed from the
extreme of nihilism. By transcending the imputed subjective and objective poles, one is freed from the
extreme of eternalism.

The primordial wisdom of emptiness is free of contrivance. It is truly and naturally present within our
impure perception and consciousness. When dharmata is covered, obscured consciousness remains as
temporary and removable, and the defilements are unreal. Therefore, it is said that ultimate truth is also
freed from both extremes.

Because emptiness is truly established and all dharmas – like concepts within the range of subject and
object – are unreal, ultimate truth is beyond the extremes of 'is' and 'is not,' eternalism and nihilism.
Therefore, subjective and objective duality of the relative level are only deluded appearance. Because
nothing is independently established, it is empty of self-nature. When divided into self and other, it is not
possible to be another's nature. Therefore, it is never non-emptiness. The nature of primordial wisdom is
ever-present and never changes. For that reason, it is not empty of its nature; it is permanent.

Generally, if it is empty and emptiness, it need not be empty of its own nature. Primordial wisdom is empty
of all contrivance and dualism which is other than its own nature. That is why it is empty.

Three Natures

The three natures are the imaginary, the dependent, and the perfected.

Whatever is grasped by mental designation is the imaginary nature. Non-entities and the appearances of
objects arising in the mind are imaginary. The relationship between name and object, such as grasping the
name as the object or mistaking the object as the name, are also imaginary. Outer, inner, fringe and center,
big and small, good and bad, space and time, and so on, whatever is grasped by thought is imaginary in
nature.

The dependent nature is simply consciousness which arises as subjective and objective poles, based on the
habitual tendencies of ignorance.

The perfected nature is self-aware, self-luminous, and free from contrivance. The synonyms of the
perfected nature are dharmata, dharmadhatu, suchness, and ultimate truth.

The dependent and imaginary natures are equally false and relative. However, it is necessary to separate
them into individual categories. The imaginary nature does not exist even on a relative level. The
dependent nature exists on a relative level. The perfected nature does not exist on a relative level, yet it
truly exists on an ultimate level. Therefore, imaginary nature exists by designation, and the dependent
nature exists as tangible. The perfected nature does not exist in either of these two ways, rather it exists in
an uncontrived way.

The imaginary nature is non-existent emptiness. The dependent nature is existent emptiness. The perfected
nature is ultimate emptiness.

Lord Maitreya said:


If one understands non-existent emptiness
And likewise existent emptiness
As well as ultimate emptiness,
It is said that one understands emptiness.

The imaginary nature has no characteristics.


The dependent nature has no arising.
The perfected nature ultimately has no nature.
These are the three non-natures.
All phenomena are revealed to be without nature
By establishing the non-natures of the three natures.
According to this system, all phenomena are permeated by emptiness and free of inherent nature; therefore,
all phenomena are empty and non-empty. This is the Shentong view. And Shentongpas are the real
exponents of 'free of inherent nature.' The Rangtong masters, like Bhavaviveka and Buddhapalita and
others, are considered the main teachers of the 'free of inherent nature,' based solely on popular belief.

Is the perfected nature real? Does it arise, dwell, or cease? Does it come or go? Is it changeable? Is it space
or time? Is it one or many? It is none of these. If all of those qualities are present, then the perfected nature
would not be real. The perfected nature is unborn, non-dwelling, and unceasing. It does not come or go. It
is not one or many. It has no cause and no fruition. Within itself, it is free of the characteristics, the
qualities, and basis. It is beyond all space and time. Within itself, it is free of all relative phenomena. It is
indivisible because it cannot be separated into distinct parts. Because it is the nature of all phenomena, it is
ever-present and all pervasive.

The Meaning of the Great Madhyamaka

Secondly, we will discuss the meaning of the Great Madhyamaka.

The Sutralankara states:


In all suchness there is no differentiation.
The Tatagatha itself is purified;
All beings have the essence of that.
Suchness and the Tathagata are of the same stuff which is called buddha-nature. The meaning of
Tathagatagarbha, Sugatagarbha, and the essence of the Buddha is the same. That abides equally in the
Buddha, in all phenomena, and in all sentient beings. In sentient beings, buddha-nature is present as a seed.
In the Buddhas, buddha-nature is completely actualized. The ultimate Buddha is the same as the seed in the
mindstream of sentient beings. Therefore, all sentient beings have buddha-nature.

The buddha-nature that is in sentient beings is called gotra and dhatu. If the buddha-nature in the Buddha is
not like a seed and buddha-nature in beings is like a seed, are these not two different things? No. Buddha is
suchness itself. Even when we talk about Buddhas as people, to them buddha-nature is not hidden and has
become actualized. And when we talk about a seed, it gives a meaning of something hidden inside and
therefore does not apply to the Buddhas. Although that suchness of the Buddhas always abides in sentient
beings, because beings do not see it, it can be described as hidden or as a seed. When the seed is described
as unchanging, then it can be said that Buddhas also have the seed of buddha-nature. For that reason
buddha-nature is free from both entity and non-entity; that is why it is truly unconditioned and ultimately
uncompounded.

In the most profound and subtle understanding, there is no dispute that the dharmadhatu of the Buddha is
naturally present with all the qualities of the Buddha. That is inseparable from the dharmadhatu of sentient
beings; therefore what is wrong if we say that buddha-nature, which is in sentient beings, is also present
with all the qualities of the Buddha.

The Uttaratantra states:


Luminosity is uncreated, inseparable and all-pervasive. Its limitless qualities are more numerous than the
grains of sand on the banks of the Ganges.
Thus, if the seed of the Buddha is present with all the unconditioned qualities, it has all the qualities of the
ultimate Buddha.

The wisdom of all-pervading space (dharmadhatu) entails only ultimate truth. Although the other four
wisdoms are mainly ultimate because of primordial nature, they have certain aspects which are newly
attained through the practice of the path and which are relative. The ten powers and the four fearlessnesses
are similar. Physical qualities such as the major and minor marks, and the sixty attributes of speech, are
relative and absolute in equal aspects. The svabhavikakaya is nothing but ultimate truth. The dharmakaya is
predominately ultimate. As long as we do not differentiate real and imputed, sambhogakaya and
nirmanakaya are relative and absolute in equal aspects. What appears to others as Buddha activity is
relative. The potency and power of wisdom are absolute. The ultimate aspect of the kayas, wisdoms,
qualities and activities is primordially present in buddha-nature. When an individual becomes enlightened,
these are not newly attained; they are just freed from the stains that obscure them. Whatever is newly
attained is the relative aspect. The ultimate aspect of the qualities of past and future Buddhas are the same
nature. The relative aspect of those are also the same after one attains enlightenment, but at the time of
enlightenment they are different. Therefore, it is impossible to say that the nature of relative qualities is the
same or different.

What is newly attained, or generated by practicing the path, is called the ‘generated result;’ it is not real.
The ‘liberated result’ occurs just by removing obscurations from the primordially abiding Buddha. It is not
really cause and effect. It is just called 'liberated cause' of the path as a description. The liberated result is
explained in the Abhidharma: “When intellect is exhausted, that is freedom.” This is not the cessation of all
mental activity. In the Dharanisvaraja Sutra it says, “It is primordially exhausted, therefore it is called
cessation.” This is the ultimate liberated result and the truth of cessation. If you ask: is removing
obscurations the same meaning as ‘exhaustion of intellect’? The answer is no. From the vantage point of
dharmadhatu obscurations are not removed; removing is from the individual point of view. One may
sometimes use the term ‘exhaustion of intellect’ to refer to the time of enlightenment, but actually there is
nothing to exhaust. Dharmadhatu is primordially pure because it has never been stained; for that reason
cessation is not newly created by mind. Buddha-nature which is non-dual wisdom permeates all phenomena
equally. It is ornamented with all the ultimate qualities of the Buddha. The great perfected nature is
unchanging and free from all contrivances; it is endowed with all aspects of wisdom. This is the only
unmistaken reality. The wisdom of the noble ones is undiluted and truly established by experience. Since it
is unchanging, it is permanent, stable, and enduring.

Buddha-nature and its qualities such as the marks and signs were taught in the tantras of the Secret
Mantrayana in their entirety. Whatever is called relative, dualistic, and diluted appearance, or in short, all
phenomena of sight and sound, can not stain the perfected nature. The perfected nature does not exist
separately as untarnished dharmadhatu but really abides in relative truth. The imaginary nature is just
diluted appearance. Since reality is like the hare’s horns, it is unstained because there is nothing to be
stained. Buddha-nature, the perfected nature, is never empty of itself. All that is other and relative is
primordially empty. Ultimate truth, the perfected nature, is shentong ‘empty of other’ not rangtong ‘empty
of itself.' What is relative is empty of other-nature as well as empty of self- nature. What is ultimate is
empty only of other nature. This way of teaching is called Shentong Madhyamaka.

In order to overcome the attachment to worldly dharmas, we practice the renunciation of suffering and
impermanence. To renounce selfishness one should bring bodhicitta into the mindstream. In order to
renounce gross attachments to relative phenomena, we meditate on understanding relative truth as unreal.
In order to renounce subtle attachments we meditate on non-thought by dissolving relative thoughts into
space. Through practice we will gradually see the face of buddha-nature, which is non-thought. Whatever
path we practice, the purpose is to see the perfected nature.

Refuting Criticism

Now, we will refute the criticisms by others of Shentong Madhyamaka. Although criticisms are addressed
in detail in The Ornament of Shentong Madhyamaka, here I include an abbreviated version. Others quote
the Lankavatara Sutra to say, “If buddha-nature has all the marks and signs, how is it different from the
‘soul,' or Atman, of non-buddhists? In reply the Buddha said, “It is not the same because of emptiness.”
Others interpret the sutras to say that buddha-nature is unreal; if it had marks and signs it would be
analogous to non-buddhist traditions. Buddha-nature, they say, is insubstantial like space. To them we
reply: to think everything which is empty is untrue, insubstantial and non-existent is a fault of attachment to
your own inadequate doctrine.

The reason buddha-nature is not analogous to non-buddhist traditions is this: the sutras say the marks are
empty, but they do not say that they are not present. To say that buddha-nature with its radiant, perfected
marks and signs is provisional is nothing more than deception. Anyone who criticizes the proponents of
‘the permanent nature’ as non-buddhist likewise reject the Tatagathagharba sutras. It is also incorrect to say
that the meaning of permanence refers to continuity. The continuum-permanence is even in samsara and
duality. If permanence referred to continuity, then all compounded things would be permanent.

If you think that first it was defiled and later it became pure, it follows that it is impermanent. From the
vantage point of dharmata, first it was not impure, later it did not become pure. Whether it seems defiled or
pure depends on the individual’s mind-stream. Just because individuals change their perspective, it is
wrong to conclude that dharmata is changed.

If people find it unreasonable that sentient beings have the Buddha’s wisdom in their mind-stream, they are
contradicting the Buddha’s direct statement “The Buddha’s wisdom resides in the multitude of sentient
beings.” They also say: it is incorrect that sentient beings have the Buddha’s qualities, because if sentient
beings have the ten powers of wisdom in their mind-stream, then they should have the full power of
discrimination. What they say is not correct, because we do not assert that everything in the mind-stream of
sentient beings is Buddha. If buddha-nature and its qualities, remaining in the mind-stream of sentient
beings, makes sentient beings omniscient, then the Buddha sitting on his throne, would also make the
throne omniscient. Of course the eight consciousnesses, in the mind-stream of sentient beings, are not
Buddha. The Buddha which remains in the mind-stream of sentient beings is not there as something within
something else on a relative level. It remains there as its nature on an ultimate level.

Let’s briefly review the Three Turnings of the Wheel of Dharma. First is the Turning of the Four Noble
Truths. Second is the Turning of Emptiness. The Third is the Turning of Full Revelation. The First Turning
consists of the sutras taught to the Shravakas, or the sutras of the Hinayana. The Second Turning consists of
the root sutras of the Mahayana, but certain points are not fully revealed. The Third Turning is like the
commentary of the Second where the most definitive teachings are fully revealed.

Each of three natures – imaginary, dependent, and perfected – have two aspects. The imaginary nature
consists of the subjective and objective imaginary natures. The dependent nature consists of the impure and
pure dependent nature. The perfected nature consists of the unchanging nature and the unmistaken nature.

The actual imaginary nature is the objective aspect. The actual perfected nature is the unchanging aspect
and not the unmistaken aspect, though they are the same nature. The unmistaken aspect of perfected nature
is included in the pure dependent nature. The subjective part of the imaginary nature and the dependent
nature are identical. If examined by reason, the actual dependent nature is included in the imaginary nature
but its natural state is the perfected nature. Therefore, all phenomena are included in the perfected and
imaginary natures. All phenomena of samsara and nirvana are classified into the three natures or the two
truths, relative consciousness and ultimate wisdom. Relative perception of form, sound, touch, and smell
and so forth is unreal. The natural state of the sights and sounds are within the aspect of primordial wisdom.
Therefore, they are real. In this way there is no contradiction between relative and ultimate truth.

As requested by some interested students, this was spoken by Taranatha at the hermitage of Cholong
Changtse, the North Peak of the Dharma Valley.

May it be Auspicious!

Translated by the Tibetan IV class at The Naropa University under the guidance of Ringu Tulku. May 1,
1999

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