Barre Center for Buddhist Studies

Barre Center for Buddhist Studies

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  • Residential Courses
    • Residential Course Calendar
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      • Dharma and Art: A Practice of Investigating Perception
      • Nalanda Program
    • Everything You Need to Know
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  • Online Programs
    • Entering The Path: An Online Foundations Course in Early Buddhist Study and Practice
    • Dharma and Art: A Practice of Investigating Perception
    • Race and Dharma
    • A Practical Understanding of Attachment to Perception
    • Cancellation Policy
  • Visiting Faculty
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    • Insight Journal
    • Bhikkhu Anālayo Lectures
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Bhikkhu Anālayo Lectures

Spring-Summer 2018 – Nibbāna: The Mind Stilled, Part 2

During the Spring-Summer of 2018 we are continuing with Bhikkhu Analayo’s online lecture series on the  Nibbāna Sermons (12 to 22) by Bhikkhu Ñāṇananda. This offering uses a format similar to previous years. There are no live-teachings. Recorded lectures are posted and students can participate in forums to ask questions and engage in discussion. Registration for this second series of lectures closed on April 30th. At the end of the summer, the series will be made freely available here as last year’s lectures are available below.

Registration for this lecture series includes an optional donation field to support BCBS operations. Please note that this lecture series is freely-offered. Bhikkhu Analayo receives no financial renumeration for his teachings.

For questions related to this lecture series, please email Sebastian Nehrdich at sebastian.nehrdich@studium.uni-hamburg.de. Please allow some time for a reply.

Spring-Summer 2017 – Nibbāna: The Mind Stilled, Part 1

The Numata Center for Buddhist Studies, in cooperation with the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies, offered the first of an online lecture series on the Nibbāna Sermons (1 to 11) by Bhikkhu Ñāṇananda during the spring and summer of 2017.

2017 Nibbāna Lectures

DateVideo Recording LinkAudio Recording LinkScript of the Lecture
21 Aprilvideoaudioscript
28 Aprilvideoaudioscript
5 Mayvideoaudioscript
12 Mayvideoaudioscript
19 Mayvideoaudioscript
2 Junevideoaudioscript
9 Junevideoaudioscript
16 Junevideoaudioscript
23 Junevideoaudioscript
30 Junevideoaudioscript
7 Julyvideoaudioscript

Full Description of Lecture Series

Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda (Sri Lanka, 1940–) is perhaps the foremost English-speaking contemporary Sri Lankan scholar-monk alive, known for having broken new ground in the Sri Lankan monastic intellectual and meditative landscape of the second half of the twentieth into the early twenty-first centuries. His widely acclaimed monograph, Concept and Reality in Early Buddhist Thought, was completed in 1969 and published in 1971, not long after he had renounced a lectureship in Pāli at the University of Peradeniya. Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda’s intellectual profile is perhaps best placed against the background of a burgeoning return to the original texts that has at times been seen as part of the so-called Protestant Buddhism movement in Sri Lanka and elsewhere. In his work text-critical and academic-based methodology converge with traditional meditative training, the life of solitude as a monk in a cave, and a committed teacher’s engagement with younger generations of monastic pupils.

The Nivane Niveema are a series of thirty-three sermons on Nibbāna, originally delivered in Sinhala during the period 1988–1991 and given to the assembly of monks in Nissaraṇa Vanaya, Meethirigala, one of Sri Lanka’s most respected meditation monasteries in the strict forest tradition, established in 1967 by Asoka Weeraratna, the founder of the German Dharmadūta Society and the Berlin Buddhist Vihāra. The sermons appeared in English translation as Nibbāna, The Mind Stilled (7 vols., 2003–2012).

These sermons on Nibbāna are learned pieces of contemplative scholarship on the meditative theme of the Nibbāna-experience itself. The early discourses are sifted and cross-referenced by Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda with a relentless focus on the teachings on Nibbāna found in the Pāli discourses in the form of at times figurative and metaphorical modes of exposition. Later Theravāda tradition understood such expositions as contingent, provisional, conventional, in contrast to the universally valid, categorical, and definitive exposition of the Abhidhamma, considered to be the acme of the Buddha’s word. The status of the commentaries came to be enhanced by the popular belief that their content is ultimately traceable to a miscellany of the Buddha’s own words. Owing to his academic background Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda, unlike the traditional Theravāda scholar, is aware of the historical dimension of this doctrinal development. He sets out to overturn the priorities attached to the later vis-à-vis the earlier textual materials.

Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda’s interpretation has deeply challenged the mainstream authoritative Theravāda exegesis. It has broadly reverberated from the island to the English-speaking global community of Theravāda practitioners. A close reading of Bhikkhu Katukurunde Ñāṇananda’s work will enable participants to access the earliest doctrinal history of Nibbāna with a main focus on the Pāli discourses read through the lenses of a doctrinal and meditative contemporary exegesis that is the result of several important influences that have made themselves felt throughout contemporary Buddhist history – East and West.

Resources

  • Insight Journal
  • Bhikkhu Anālayo Lectures
  • Books

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149 Lockwood Road, Barre, MA 01005
978 355 2347     contact@buddhistinquiry.org

 

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Copyright © 1994-2018 Barre Center for Buddhist Studies
  • Home
  • About Us
    • New and Notable
    • Getting to BCBS
    • Staff
    • Board of Directors
    • IMS
    • Job Openings
    • Mailing List
    • Contact Us
  • Residential Courses
    • Residential Course Calendar
    • Yearlong Programs
      • Dharma and Art: A Practice of Investigating Perception
      • Nalanda Program
    • Everything You Need to Know
    • Typical Course Schedule
    • Self-Study
    • Continuing Education Credits
    • Scholarships
    • Teacher Dāna
  • Online Programs
    • Entering The Path: An Online Foundations Course in Early Buddhist Study and Practice
    • Race and Dharma
    • Dharma and Art: A Practice of Investigating Perception
    • A Practical Understanding of Attachment to Perception
    • Cancellation Policy
  • Visiting Faculty
  • Resources
    • Insight Journal
    • Bhikkhu Anālayo Lectures
    • Books
  • Generosity
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
    • Teacher Dāna
    • Planned Giving
    • Stock Transfers