Property:PosAllBuddhaNote

From Buddha-Nature
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A
He uses it as a support for his position on a single vehicle and describe it is a disposition which is a causal potential for buddhahood.  +
B
D
G
"Gyeltsap thus shows that ultimately both buddhas and sentient beings share the same suchness of mind which is the ultimate nature of mind that is free from natural defilements. Because of this he argues that all sentient beings have tathāgata-essence, and it is through this that he establishes the connection between tathāgata-essence and the concept of one-vehicle, the notion that ultimately there is only the final goal of buddhahood."  +
K
In the sense that all beings have the potential to achieve Buddhahood.  +
"Rangjung Dorjé says in accordance with RGV I.27-28 that only the dharmakāya of all buddhas truly abides in sentient beings. The form kāyas are then explained as the outflow of the Dharma teachings on the level of the fruit, which corresponds to the pertinent passages in the first and third chapters of the ''Ratnagotravibhāga''."  +
L
It exists in sentient beings, though it is very difficult to perceive due to being hindered by adventitious stains, which are explained in detail in the long quote in [[Mathes, K.]], [[A Direct Path to the Buddha Within]], p. 100.  +
R
He accepts a pure nature that is the five wisdom's which are possessed, but obscured in sentient beings, but in terms of buddha-nature as a seed, only bodhisattvas have it.  +
Sentient beings are endowed with the naturally abiding gotra, but not the dharmakāya.  +
S
There is some discrepancy between Sapen's use of the term tathāgata-essence and buddha-nature and other thinkers that use these terms synonymously. In Sapen's view, sentient beings do not possess the former, but do possess a more general form of the latter. So while the answer is a qualified "no" in terms of the more general debate on this issue and the way others have addressed it and asserted Sapen's position, strictly speaking from Sapen's view the answer could more accurately be a qualified "yes" as he does state all beings have a basic "inherent" buddha-nature, though this does not correspond to an essence that is endowed with enlightened qualities. The tricky issue being the equivalency of these terms tathāgata-essence and buddha-nature and the perception of the Sakya position by later authors.  +
T
*"Rinchen Yeshé quotes from these last-wheel sutras to show that the tathāgata-essence endowed with the marks and signs of a buddha (''sangs rgyas kyi mtshan dang dpe byad'') naturally exists in all sentient beings." *"Therefore, for Rinchen Yeshé, buddha-nature is not simply a causal potential to achieve enlightenment; rather it is endowed with an inherent enlightened entity that is naturally free from all delusions, but temporarily covered by adventitious defilements."   +

In sum, the ''Mahāparinirvāṇasūtra'' discusses three very different meanings of all sentient beings’ possessing buddha nature—(1) all are endowed with an intrinsic pure nature of which they will become fully aware once what obscures it has been removed, (2) all possess a seed or potential for buddhahood, which will grow into its full fruition in the future once all necessary conditions are present, and (3) the mahāyāna path to buddhahood is open for all, and its result is definite if one follows this path....The sūtra even says that if one regards the expression "possessing buddha nature" to mean "possessing it at present," it must then be said that sentient beings do not possess buddha nature. - ''[[When the Clouds Part]]''  +
Sentient beings are endowed with the naturally abiding gotra, but not the dharmakāya.  +
Yes, but only based on the indivisibility of suchness. In other words, buddhas and sentient beings are the same in their ultimate nature.  +
"Gyeltsap thus shows that ultimately both buddhas and sentient beings share the same suchness of mind which is the ultimate nature of mind that is free from natural defilements. Because of this he argues that all sentient beings have tathāgata-essence, and it is through this that he establishes the connection between tathāgata-essence and the concept of one-vehicle, the notion that ultimately there is only the final goal of buddhahood."  +
Śākya Chokden's general position is that only those beings on the Bodhisattva stage level and above have buddha-nature but equating Buddha-Nature with Mahāmudrā, he seems to accept all beings have Buddha-Nature in this text.  +
Śākya Chokden's general position, although no explicit in this text, is that only those beings on the Bodhisattva stage level and above have buddha-nature.  +
Śākya Chokden's general position is that only those beings on the Bodhisattva stage level and above have buddha-nature.  +