What is this?

The Pali Canon is the earliest surviving written body of Buddhist scripture consisting of 45 volumes that were collected and codified in the 1st century BCE. It represents the authentic teachings of the historical Buddha, Siddhartha Gautama, passed down orally in an ancient Indian language known as Pali. This body of text is shared by the Theravada and several Chinese schools of Buddhism and is used as the foundation for scriptural authority in the Vinaya and Abhidhamma traditions.

See also: dependent origination, insight meditation, universal truth, relative truth, noble truth

The Image of Ethics (Part 4) - (In Psyche's Orchard) 1 mention

Dharma(s) Discovered and Created (Part 3) - (Four Circles, Four Parables of Stone and Light) 1 mention

Practising with the Three Characteristics - (Meditation on Emptiness) 1 mention

The Freedom of No-thing-ness - (Meditation on Emptiness) 1 mention

Integrity and the Poetics of Unknowing - (Meditation on Emptiness) 1 mention

The Theatre of Selves (Part One) - (November Solitary) 1 mention

A Sacred Universe: Insight, Theophany, Cosmopoesis (Part 2) - (Path of the Imaginal) 1 mention

A Sacred Universe: Insight, Theophany, Cosmopoesis (Part 4) - (Path of the Imaginal) 1 mention