According to monastic disciplinary texts, Buddhist monastic members are prohibited from accepting “gold and silver,” and arguably, by extension, any type of money. This rule has given rise to much debate, in the past as well as in the present, particularly between Mahāyāna and Theravāda Buddhist communities. The article explores the results of my multiple-case qualitative study of eleven monastic institutions in Taiwan and Mainland China, and reveals a hitherto under-theorized conflict between Vinaya rules and the bodhisattva ideal, as well as a diversity of opinions on the applicability of the rule against money handling as it has been shaped by socio-cultural contexts, including nuns’ adaptation to the laity’s ethos
This article centers on the relationship of rules (nīti) to the monastic form of life of contemporar...
International audienceHow have Buddhist nuns in Myanmar engaged themselves in monastic relationships...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (<i>nīti</i>) to the monastic form of ...
According to monastic disciplinary texts, Buddhist monastic members are prohibited from accepting “g...
Reprinted in Humanistic Buddhism: Journal, Arts, and Culture 11 (September 2017):178-213
In Buddhism, monastic disciplinary texts embody the ideal of how followers should regulate their dai...
Vinaya rules embody the ideal of how ordained Buddhists should regulate their daily lives, and monas...
According to tradition, Mahaprajapati, the Buddha's aunt and stepmother, when allowed to join the Bu...
According to tradition, when the Buddha's aunt and stepmother Mahaprajapati was allowed to join the ...
Andrew Steel (andrew.steel@bobcats.gcsu.edu) Supervisor/Mentor: Matthew Milligan (matthew.milligan...
When discussing Buddhism under People’s Republic of China (PRC) government supervision, some scholar...
Bodhisattva ideas have steadily developed since medieval times, to become key characteristics of Chi...
Buddhist monastic institutions have endured for centuries, supported by donations from the lay commu...
Scholarly focus on the political relationship between monasteries and the state has obscured other d...
"The Monastery Rules discusses the position of monks and monasteries in pre-1950s Tibetan Buddhist s...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (nīti) to the monastic form of life of contemporar...
International audienceHow have Buddhist nuns in Myanmar engaged themselves in monastic relationships...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (<i>nīti</i>) to the monastic form of ...
According to monastic disciplinary texts, Buddhist monastic members are prohibited from accepting “g...
Reprinted in Humanistic Buddhism: Journal, Arts, and Culture 11 (September 2017):178-213
In Buddhism, monastic disciplinary texts embody the ideal of how followers should regulate their dai...
Vinaya rules embody the ideal of how ordained Buddhists should regulate their daily lives, and monas...
According to tradition, Mahaprajapati, the Buddha's aunt and stepmother, when allowed to join the Bu...
According to tradition, when the Buddha's aunt and stepmother Mahaprajapati was allowed to join the ...
Andrew Steel (andrew.steel@bobcats.gcsu.edu) Supervisor/Mentor: Matthew Milligan (matthew.milligan...
When discussing Buddhism under People’s Republic of China (PRC) government supervision, some scholar...
Bodhisattva ideas have steadily developed since medieval times, to become key characteristics of Chi...
Buddhist monastic institutions have endured for centuries, supported by donations from the lay commu...
Scholarly focus on the political relationship between monasteries and the state has obscured other d...
"The Monastery Rules discusses the position of monks and monasteries in pre-1950s Tibetan Buddhist s...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (nīti) to the monastic form of life of contemporar...
International audienceHow have Buddhist nuns in Myanmar engaged themselves in monastic relationships...
This article centers on the relationship of rules (<i>nīti</i>) to the monastic form of ...