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Yana (Buddhism)



 
 
Yana (Sanskrit
Sanskrit

Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Aryan language, one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism and Buddhism, and one of the 22 official languages of India....
 and Pali
Páli

P?li is a village in Gyor-Moson-Sopron county, Hungary.External links...
: "vehicle") refers to a mode or method of spiritual practice in Buddhism
Buddhism

Buddhism is a family of beliefs and practices considered by most to be a religionand is based on the teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as "The Buddha" , who was born in what is today Nepal....
, and in particular to divisions of various schools of Buddhism
Schools of Buddhism

Schools of Buddhism are classified in various ways. Normal English-language usage divides Buddhism into Theravada and Mahayana. The most common classification among scholars is threefold, with Mahayana split into East Asian and Vajrayana, or Tibetan Buddhism ....
 according to their type of practice. Yana are understood in the tradition as pedagogical device and not as absolute designations and are sacred to Saraswati
Saraswati

Hindus believe that Saraswati is the Devi of knowledge, music and the arts. Saraswati has been identified with the Vedic period Saraswati River....
, Goddess of Learning.

orm, yana is a neuter action noun (comparable to an English gerund
Gerund

In linguistics, ?gerund? is a term used to refer to various non-finite verb in various languages:* As applied to English language, it refers to what might be called a verb's action noun, which is one of the uses of the -ing form....
) derived from the Sanskrit root ya- meaning "go" or "move", using any means of locomotion, by land or sea.






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Yana (Sanskrit
Sanskrit

Sanskrit is a historical Indo-Aryan language, one of the liturgical languages of Hinduism and Buddhism, and one of the 22 official languages of India....
 and Pali
Páli

P?li is a village in Gyor-Moson-Sopron county, Hungary.External links...
: "vehicle") refers to a mode or method of spiritual practice in Buddhism
Buddhism

Buddhism is a family of beliefs and practices considered by most to be a religionand is based on the teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as "The Buddha" , who was born in what is today Nepal....
, and in particular to divisions of various schools of Buddhism
Schools of Buddhism

Schools of Buddhism are classified in various ways. Normal English-language usage divides Buddhism into Theravada and Mahayana. The most common classification among scholars is threefold, with Mahayana split into East Asian and Vajrayana, or Tibetan Buddhism ....
 according to their type of practice. Yana are understood in the tradition as pedagogical device and not as absolute designations and are sacred to Saraswati
Saraswati

Hindus believe that Saraswati is the Devi of knowledge, music and the arts. Saraswati has been identified with the Vedic period Saraswati River....
, Goddess of Learning.

Nomenclature, etymology and orthography

In form, yana is a neuter action noun (comparable to an English gerund
Gerund

In linguistics, ?gerund? is a term used to refer to various non-finite verb in various languages:* As applied to English language, it refers to what might be called a verb's action noun, which is one of the uses of the -ing form....
) derived from the Sanskrit root ya- meaning "go" or "move", using any means of locomotion, by land or sea. Hence it may be translated "going", "moving", "marching, a march", "riding, a ride", "travelling, travel", "journey" and so on.

The word came to be extended to refer to any means used to ease or speed travel: hence such meanings as "vehicle", "carriage", "vessel", "wagon", "ship", and so on, depending on context. "Vehicle" is often used as a preferred translation as the word that provides the least in the way of presuppositions about the mode of travel.

In spiritual uses, the word yana acquires many metaphorical meanings, discussed below.

Teaching story and metaphor

In the Mahaparinibbana Sutta
Mahaparinibbana Sutta

For the Mahayana Mahaparinirvana Sutra see Nirvana Sutra.----The Mahaparinibbana Sutta is a Buddhist sutra in the Digha Nikaya of the Tripitaka....
 (1.33-34), Shakyamuni Buddha relates a profound teaching story on 'vehicles' of conveyance utilizing the sacred river Ganges, all of which may be engaged as a metaphor
Metaphor

Metaphor is language that directly compares seemingly unrelated subjects. It is a figure of speech that compares two or more things without using the words "like" or "as." More generally, a metaphor describes a first subject as being or equal to a second object in some way....
 for "yana" and a gradual or direct path:
1.33 And then the Lord came to the River Ganges. And just then, the river was so full that a crow could drink out of it. And some people were looking for a boat, and some were looking for a raft, and some were binding together a raft of reeds to get to the other side. But the Lord, as swiftly as a strong man might stretch out his flexed arm or flex it again, vanished from this side of the Ganges and reappeared with his order of monks on the other shore.
1.34 And the Lord saw those people who were looking for a boat, looking for a raft, and binding together a raft of reeds to get to the other side. And seeing their intentions, he uttered this verse on the spot: 'When they want to cross the sea, the lake or pond, People make a bridge or raft - the wise have crossed already.'


These two verses are meant to teach that all vehicles, teachings and doctrine are skillful means (Skt.upaya
Upaya

Upaya is a term in Mahayana Buddhism which comes from the word upavi and refers to something which goes or brings you up to something . The term is often used with kaushalya ; upaya-kaushalya means roughly "skill in means"....
).

Thuyathadi

Introduction and qualification of the term yana

The Bodhipathapradipa
Bodhipathapradipa

Bodhipathapradipa is a Buddhist text composed in Sanskrit by the teacher Atisha and widely considered his magnum opus. The text reconciles the doctrines of many various Buddhist schools and philosophies, and is notable for the introduction of the three levels of spiritual aspiration: lesser, middling and superior....
 of Atisha
Atisha

Atisa Dipankara Shrijnana was a Buddhism teacher from the Pala Empire who, along with Konchog Gyalpo and Marpa Lotsawa, was one of the major figures in the establishment of the Sarma lineages in Tibet after the repression of Buddhism by King Langdarma ....
 (980-1054 CE), quoted in Gampopa
Gampopa

Gampopa "the man from Gampo" ? who was equally well known in Tibet as Sonam Rinchen , Dagpo Lhaje , Nyamed Dakpo Rinpoche , and Da'od Zhonnu , ? established...
's (1079-1153 CE) Jewel Ornament of Liberation rendered into English by Günther, makes reference to people of three capacities:
Man is to be known in three ways:
As inferior, mediocre and excellent.


He who by any means whatsoever
Provides for the pleasures of Sa?sara
For himself alone,
Is called an inferior man.


He who turns his back to the pleasures of the world
And abstains from evil deeds,
But provides only for his own peace,
Is called a mediocre man.


He who seriously wants to dispel
All the misery of others,
Because in the stream of his own being he has understood the nature of misery,
Is an excellent man.


Yana is determined by capacity and propensity of the "precious human body" wrought by merit
Merit (Buddhism)

Merit is a concept in Buddhism, and particularly in Theravada Buddhism. Merit can be gained in a number of ways. It is merit that accumulates as a result of good deeds, acts or thoughts and that carries over to later in life or to a person's next birth....
, not by a specific teaching or lineage, as Gampopa states:
Therefore, because of the difficulty of its attainment, of the uneasiness of its breaking down, and of its great usefulness, we should think of the body as a boat and by its means escape from the ocean of Sa?sara. As is written:
Standing in the boat of the human body,
You should cross the great flood of misery.
Since later this boat is difficult to get,
Do not sleep now, you fool.


Empowerment
Empowerment

Empowerment refers to increasing the Spirituality, Politics, social or Economics strength of individuals and communities. It often involves the empowered developing confidence in their own capacities....
, initiation
Initiation

Initiation is a rite of passage ceremony marking entrance or acceptance into a group or society. It could also be a formal admission to adulthood in a community or one of its formal components....
, intention and endeavour may leaven capacity and propensity as may a grace
Grace

Grace may refer to:...
ful benediction
Benediction

A benediction is a short invocation for divine help, blessing and guidance, usually at the end of worship service....
 of a person (in the sense of mindstream
Mindstream

Mindstream is a compound term composed of mind and stream used to translate a term from Buddhist philosophy.The mindstream doctrine, like most Buddhist doctrines, is not homogeneous and shows historical development, different applications according to context and varied definitions employed by different Buddhist traditions....
), object or place endowed or invested with holiness
Holiness

Holiness is a synonym for sanctity, the state of being holy or sacred.Holiness means to be set apartHoliness may also refer to:* Holiness movement, a specific tradition within evangelical Christianity...
. In the teaching story abovementioned, Shakyamuni Buddhi and his sangha traverse the continuum directly in the body of their own experience rather than constructing a gradual vehicle for passage.

Usage

In Buddhism
Buddhism

Buddhism is a family of beliefs and practices considered by most to be a religionand is based on the teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as "The Buddha" , who was born in what is today Nepal....
 and Hinduism
Hinduism

'Hinduism' is the predominant religion of the Indian subcontinent. Hinduism is often referred to as , a Sanskrit phrase meaning "the eternal dharma", by its practitioners....
, both yana and marga
Four Noble Truths

The Four Noble Truths are one of the most fundamental Buddhism teachings. In broad terms, these truths relate to suffering's nature, origin, cessation and the path leading to the cessation....
 (road or path) are metaphor
Metaphor

Metaphor is language that directly compares seemingly unrelated subjects. It is a figure of speech that compares two or more things without using the words "like" or "as." More generally, a metaphor describes a first subject as being or equal to a second object in some way....
 depicting spiritual practice as a path or journey. Ancient texts in both religions discuss doctrines and practices associated with various yanas. In Buddhism, yana often expands the metaphor of the spiritual path with the idea of various vehicles that convey a person along that path. The yana / marga metaphor pervasive within Buddhism and other traditions is an analogue to the Chinese metaphor of the Tao
Tao

Tao is a concept found in Taoism, Confucianism, and more generally in ancient Chinese philosophy. While the character itself translates as 'way', 'path', or 'route', or sometimes more loosely as 'doctrine' or 'principle', it is used philosophically to signify the fundamental or true nature of the world....
: The Tao though is the Way as the endgoal and not just the art of wayfinding. The dialogic spiritual traditions of Indian and Chinese culture hold common cultural meme
Meme

A meme is a unit or element of culture ideas, symbols or practices; such units or elements transmit from one mind to another through speech, gestures, rituals, or other imitable phenomena....
s.

Vedic
Vedas

The Vedas are a large body of texts originating in History of India. They form the oldest layer of Sanskrit literature and the oldest Hindu scripture of Hinduism....
 origins of -yana as a spiritual journey

The use of yana to use as a name or to refer to a spiritual journey may date to the , possibly composed circa 1500 BCE, whose 10th Mandala makes several references to devayana, (translators usually render this as the "path of the gods" or similar) and one reference to ("path of the fathers"). The first verse of the 's burial hymn (10.18) translates approximately as "O Death, take the other path, which is distinct from the way of the gods" (). The "other path" is the , referred to in hymn 10.2 and alluded to in 10.14 and 10.16.

The devayana and evolved from the ancient Rig Vedic concern for immortality
Immortality

Immortality is the concept of life in a body or soul for an infinite or inconceivably vast length of time.As immortality is the negation of mortality?not dying or not being subject to death?it has been a subject of fascination to human since at least the beginning of history....
 to the classical Hindu concern with ending
Samsara

'Samsara' or refers to the cycle of reincarnation or rebirth in Hinduism, Buddhism, Jainism, Sikhism and other related religions.According to these religions, one's karma "account balance" at the time of death is inherited via the state at which a person is reborn....
 existence. The , which comment on the Vedas
Vedas

The Vedas are a large body of texts originating in History of India. They form the oldest layer of Sanskrit literature and the oldest Hindu scripture of Hinduism....
, make further reference to devayana and . Among other distinctions, the pitryana was said to refer the religious practices of villagers, and the devayana was said to refer to the practices of recluses living in the forest. The (II.iv.11 and IV.v.12) also makes reference to ekayana
Ekayana

Ekayana is a Sanskrit word that can mean "one path" or "one vehicle". The word took on special significance as a metaphor for a spriritual journey in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad ....
, notably in the phrase , where ekayanam connotes
Connotation

Connotation is a Subjectivity culture and/or emotional coloration in addition to the explicit or denotation Meaning of any specific word or phrase in a...
 "destination". The phrase translates approximately to "the one destination of the Vedas is the spirit of the word", in the same sense that a river's destination is the ocean.

Yana in the Pali Canon
Pali Canon

The Pali Canon is the standard collection of scriptures in the Theravada Buddhism tradition, as preserved in the Pali. It is the only completely surviving Early Buddhist schools canon, and one of the first to be written down....

Yana is one of ten suggested gifts (dana
Dana (Buddhism)

Dana is a Sanskrit and Pali term meaning "generosity" or "giving". In Buddhism, it also refers to the practice of cultivating generosity. Ultimately, the practice culminates in one of the Perfections : the Perfection of Giving ....
) that a lay person can appropriately give a monk or recluse, in the sense of providing a vehicle or transportation (e.g., see DN 7.33/PTS: A iv 59 and DN 10.177/PTS: A v 269).

The earliest explicit Buddhist use of -yana in a metaphorical sense of a journey to awakening
Bodhi

Bodhi is both the Pali and Sanskrit word traditionally translated into English language as "enlightenment." The word "Buddhahood" means "one who has achieved bodhi." Bodhi is also frequently translated as "awakening."...
 may be the term dhammayanam, "dharma
Dharma

The term , is an Indian Indian philosophy and Indian religions term, that means one's righteous duty or any virtuous path in the common sense of the term....
 chariot" (SN IV.4), where the vehicle itself serves as an extended metaphor for the Eightfold Path
Noble Eightfold Path

The Noble Eightfold Path is one of the principal Dharma of Gautama Buddha, who described it as the way leading to the cessation of suffering and the achievement of self-awakening....
. Various parts of the chariot represent aspects of the Path (magga), e.g. axles represent meditation, the charioteer represents mindfulness, and so on.

Thus, metaphorical usage of yana in the sense of a vehicle (as distinct from a path) emerged from a Buddhist context, and it did so relatively early in the evolution of Buddhism. Nevertheless, while the Pali Canon are very rich in images of wheels (cakka) and paths (magga) as metaphors for the journey to awakening, the Pali Canon rarely uses the term yana for that purpose.

Enumeration of yanas in Mahayana
Mahayana

Mahayana is one of the two main existing schools of Buddhism and a term for classification of Buddhist philosophy and practice. It was History of Buddhism in India....
 texts

Mahayana texts are very rich in images of vehicles that serve in metaphors for journeys to awakening.

The three carts of expedient means: the parable of the burning house

The tradition of Mahayana
Mahayana

Mahayana is one of the two main existing schools of Buddhism and a term for classification of Buddhist philosophy and practice. It was History of Buddhism in India....
 texts employing the image of different types of vehicles and conveyances as salient metaphor for the journey of novice to the awakening of adept may have begun with the Lotus Sutra
Lotus Sutra

The Lotus Sutra or Sutra on the White Sacred lotus of the Sublime Dharma is one of the most popular and influential Mahayana sutras in Asia and the basis on which the Tien Tai and Nichiren Buddhism sects of Buddhism were established....
. The Lotus Sutra holds a parable of a devoted father with three small children entranced in childhood play within the family home, oblivious that tongues of flame are ravenously engulfing the house. The father entices the children from the burning home with the half-truth guilded promise of special carts for each of them. The carts though are only an expedient means for luring the children from the house, somewhat like the advice to women to scream "fire, fire", when being raped to secure the attention and action of the self-concerned passersby.

Kato et. al. (1975, 2004: p.89) render thus into English a tract of the Saddharma Pu??arika pertaining to the cart of expedient means and the parable of the burning house:
"Sariputra! Even as that elder, though with power in body and arms, yet does not use it but only by diligent tact resoutely saves [his] children from the calamity of the burning house and then gives each of them great carts made of precious things, so it is with the Tathagata; though he has power and fearlessness, he does not use them, but only by his wise tact does he remove and save all living creatures from the burning house of the triple world, preaching the three vehicles: the sravaka, pratyekabuddha, and Buddha vehicle.


In the parable, the carts are explicitly identified as corresponding to the three types of Buddha: the goat-cart represents the practices leading to the attainment of Sravaka
Sravaka

Sravaka or Shravaka or Savaka means "a hearer" or, more generally, "disciple."This term is used by both Buddhists and Jains. In Jainism, a shravaka is any lay Jain....
buddhahood; the deer-cart, Pratyekabuddhahood; and the bullock-cart, Samyaksambuddhahood. The sutra goes on to say these that the teachings of the three vehicles are merely expedient means (upaya
Upaya

Upaya is a term in Mahayana Buddhism which comes from the word upavi and refers to something which goes or brings you up to something . The term is often used with kaushalya ; upaya-kaushalya means roughly "skill in means"....
). Their purpose is to direct people toward ekayana, the one vehicle, depicted in the parable as a jeweled cart driven by a white ox.

The relationship of Dharma (Law) and Yana

Tamura et.al. (1975, 2004: pp. 14-15) render a section of the Sutra of Innumerable Meanings (Wu-liang-i ching) that relates the relationship of the Law (Dharma) and various teachings as fundamentally determined by the audience and context:
      "Good sons! The Law is like water that washes off dirt. As a well, a pond, a stream, a river, a valley stream, a ditch, or a great sea, each alike effectively washes off all kinds of dirt, so the Law-water effectively washes off the dirt of all delusions of living beings.
      "Good sons! The nature of water is one, but a stream, a river, a well, a pond, a valley stream, a ditch, and a great sea are different from one another. The nature of the Law is like this. There is equality and no differentiation in washing off the dirt of delusions, but the three laws, the four merits, and the two ways§ are not one and the same.
      "Good sons! Though each washes equally as water, a well is not a pond, a pond is not a stream or a river, nor is a valley stream or a ditch a sea. As the Tathagata, the world's hero, is free in the Law, all the laws preached by him are also like this. Though preaching at the beginning, in the middle, and at the end all alike effectively wash off the delusions of living beings, the beginning is not the middle, and the middle is not the end. Preaching at the beginning, in the middle, and at the end are the same in expression but different from one another in meaning.


§ The three laws are the Four Noble Truths, the Twelve Causes, and the Six Paramitas...; the four merits are srota-apanna, sak?dagamin, anagamin, and arhat...; and the two ways the Great-vehicle, or Mahayana, and the lesser vehicle, or Hinayana.

Ekayana (one yana)


Mahayana texts such as the Lotus Sutra
Lotus Sutra

The Lotus Sutra or Sutra on the White Sacred lotus of the Sublime Dharma is one of the most popular and influential Mahayana sutras in Asia and the basis on which the Tien Tai and Nichiren Buddhism sects of Buddhism were established....
 and the Avatamsaka Sutra
Avatamsaka Sutra

The is one of the most influential Mahayana Sutras of East Asian Buddhism. The title is rendered in English as Flower Garland Sutra, Flower Adornment Sutra, or Flowers Ornament Scripture....
 sought to unite all the different teachings into a single great way. These texts serve as the inspiration for using the term Ekayana
Ekayana

Ekayana is a Sanskrit word that can mean "one path" or "one vehicle". The word took on special significance as a metaphor for a spriritual journey in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad ....
 in the sense of "one vehicle". This "one vehicle" became a key aspect of the doctrines and practices of Tiantai
Tiantai

Tiantai is one of the important sects of Buddhism in China, Korea and Japan, also called the Lotus School because of its emphasis on the Lotus Sutra....
 and Tendai
Tendai

is a Japanese school of Mahayana Buddhism, a descendant of the China Tiantai or Lotus Sutra school.David W. Chappell frames the relevance of Tendai for a universal Buddhism:...
 Buddhist sects, which subsequently influenced Chán
Chan

Chan may refer to:...
 and Zen
Zen

Zen is a school of Mahayana Buddhism, referred to in Chinese as Ch?n. Ch?n is itself derived from the Sanskrit Dhyana, which means "meditation" ....
 doctrines and practices. In Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
, the one-vehicle teaching of the Lotus Sutra also inspired the formation of the Nichiren
Nichiren

Nichiren was a Buddhism monk who lived during the Kamakura period in Japan. Nichiren taught devotion to the Lotus Sutra, Namu Myoho Renge Kyo, as the exclusive means to attain enlightenment and the chanting of "Namu Myoho Renge Kyo" as the essential practice of the teaching....
 sect.

Saddharmapundarika Sutra
The stupid and those of little wit,
Those tied to externals,
And the proud cannot believe this Truth.
But now I gladly and with boldness
In the midst of (you) Bodhisattvas,
Straightway put aside expediency
And only proclaim the Supreme Way.
It was as expedient means
That I expounded a Three-Vehicle Law.
Let all be free of doubt and perplexity.
World-Honoured Ones, without exception,
Teach this Way: the One Buddha-yana.
(For) all Buddhas take the one vow:
'The Buddha-way which I walk,
I will universally cause all the living
To attain this same Way with me.'
Though Buddhas in future ages
Proclaim hundreds, thousands, kotis,
Of countless ways into the doctrine,
In reality there is but the One-Vehicle.


Two yanas

Traditionally, the two vehicles in Mahayana
Mahayana

Mahayana is one of the two main existing schools of Buddhism and a term for classification of Buddhist philosophy and practice. It was History of Buddhism in India....
 Buddhism
Buddhism

Buddhism is a family of beliefs and practices considered by most to be a religionand is based on the teachings attributed to Siddhartha Gautama, commonly known as "The Buddha" , who was born in what is today Nepal....
 consist of Sravakayana
Shravakayana

Sravakayana is one of the three Yana known to Mahayana. It translates literally as the "vehicle of hearers [i.e. disciples]". The term is used by some Mahayana Buddhism to describe one hypothetical path to enlightenment....
 and Pratekyabuddhayana. These in turn refer to doctrines and practices that supposedly aim at becoming two of the three types of Buddha. Mahayana Buddhists take a vow to become the third type, namely bodhisattvas. Therefore Mahayana Buddhist texts sometimes use terms like "followers of the two vehicles" to refer to Buddhists who do not accept the Mahayana sutras.

Some Mahayana sutras consider that the two vehicles together comprise the Hinayana
Hinayana

Hinayana is a Sanskrit and Pali term literally meaning:, "the low vehicle", "the inferior vehicle", or "the deficient vehicle", where "vehicle" means "a way of going to enlightenment"....
 – literally, inferior vehicle; sometimes, small vehicle. Modern texts sometimes refer to Mahayana and Hinayana as "two vehicles". But referring to an "inferior vehicle" is often felt to be disrespectful to those Buddhists who do not consider the Mahayana sutras to be the word of the historical Buddha. More commonly, Theravada
Theravada

Theravada...
 refers to most non-Mahayana Buddhists in today's world.

Three yanas

Mahayana Buddhists often express two different schemata of three yanas. First, here are three paths to liberation that culminate as one of the three types of Buddha:

  • Sravakayana
    Shravakayana

    Sravakayana is one of the three Yana known to Mahayana. It translates literally as the "vehicle of hearers [i.e. disciples]". The term is used by some Mahayana Buddhism to describe one hypothetical path to enlightenment....
    : The Hearer vehicle: A path that meets the goals of a Sravakabuddha, who achieves liberation after listening to the teachings of a Bodhisattva Buddha. If no Bodhisattva is present in the world, Sravakabuddhas do not discover the Dharma for themselves.


  • Pratyekayana or Pratyekabuddhayana: The individual vehicle: A Solitary Buddha (Pratyekabuddha
    Pratyekabuddha

    A Pratyekabuddha or Paccekabuddha , literally "a lone Buddhahood" , "a buddha on their own" or "a private buddha", is one of Three types of Buddha of bodhi beings according to some schools of Buddhism....
    ) achieves liberation, but does not teach other beings. Pratyekabuddhas do not depend on a teacher and can discover the dharma even if they do not encounter a Bodhisattva. They are sometimes said to remain silent and solitary.


  • Bodhisattva
    Bodhisattva

    In the Buddhist context, a bodhisattva means either "enlightened existence " or "enlightenment-being" or, given the variant Sanskrit spelling satva rather than sattva, "heroic-minded one for enlightenment "....
    yana: The Samyaksambuddha attains liberation and wishes to benefit as many beings as possible. In order to aid others, they vow to remain in the world, and defer their chance to end the cycle of rebirth
    Rebirth (Buddhism)

    Rebirth in Buddhism is the doctrine that the Consciousness of a person , upon the death or dissolution of the aggregates which make up that person, becomes one of the contributing causes for the arising of a new group of skandhas which may again be conventionally considered a person or individual....
    .


A second classification came into use with the rise of the Vajrayana, which created a hierarchy of the teachings with the Vajrayana
Vajrayana

Vajrayana Buddhism is also known as Tantric Buddhism, Tantrayana, Mantranaya, Mantrayana, Secret Mantra, Esoteric Buddhism and the Diamond Vehicle ....
 being the highest path. The Vajrayana itself became multilayered especially in Tibetan Buddhism
Tibetan Buddhism

Tibetan Buddhism is the body of Buddhism religious doctrine and institutions characteristic of Tibet and certain regions of the Himalayas, including northern Nepal, Bhutan, and India ....
.

  • Hinayana
  • Mahayana
  • Vajrayana


Four yanas

Mahayana Buddhists sometimes refer to four yanas that subsume the two different schemes of the three yanas:
  • Sravaka
    Sravaka

    Sravaka or Shravaka or Savaka means "a hearer" or, more generally, "disciple."This term is used by both Buddhists and Jains. In Jainism, a shravaka is any lay Jain....
    yana
  • Pratyekayana
  • Mahayana
    Mahayana

    Mahayana is one of the two main existing schools of Buddhism and a term for classification of Buddhist philosophy and practice. It was History of Buddhism in India....
  • Vajrayana
    Vajrayana

    Vajrayana Buddhism is also known as Tantric Buddhism, Tantrayana, Mantranaya, Mantrayana, Secret Mantra, Esoteric Buddhism and the Diamond Vehicle ....


Five yanas

This is a Mahayana list which is found in East Asian Buddhism.
  • - the human vehicle. This is the very beginning of the spiritual path
  • Devayana - the practice of ethics and meditation
  • Sravakayana - the practice of renunciation and the Four Noble Truths
    Four Noble Truths

    The Four Noble Truths are one of the most fundamental Buddhism teachings. In broad terms, these truths relate to suffering's nature, origin, cessation and the path leading to the cessation....
  • Pratyekayana - practice concerned with dependent arising (pratitya-samutpada
    Pratitya-samutpada

    The doctrine of pratityasamutpada , often translated as "dependent arising," is an important part of Buddhist Phenomenology and, some argue, metaphysics....
    )
  • Bodhisattvayana - practice of the Six Perfections
    Six Perfections

    Six Perfections may refer to:* The Six Paramita, a Mahayana Buddhist term for "The Six Perfections".* Six Perfections , Thoroughbred racehorse...


Six yanas

The five yanas plus the Vajrayana
Vajrayana

Vajrayana Buddhism is also known as Tantric Buddhism, Tantrayana, Mantranaya, Mantrayana, Secret Mantra, Esoteric Buddhism and the Diamond Vehicle ....
. This schema is associated with Shingon Buddhism
Shingon Buddhism

Shingon Buddhism is a major school of Japanese Buddhism, and is the other branch of Vajrayana Buddhism besides Tibetan Buddhism. It is often called "Japanese Esoteric Buddhism"....
 in Japan
Japan

Japan is an island country in East Asia. Located in the Pacific Ocean, it lies to the east of the Sea of Japan, People's Republic of China, North Korea, South Korea and Russia, stretching from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north to the East China Sea and Taiwan in the south....
. It was invented by Kukai
Kukai

Kukai , also known posthumously as , 774–835, was a Japanese people bhikshu, scholar, poet, and artist, founder of the Shingon or "True Word" school of Buddhism....
 in order to help to differentiate the Vajrayana teachings that he imported from China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
 in the early 9th century. Kukai wanted to show that the new teachings were entirely new.

Nine yanas

The Nyingma
Nyingma

The Nyingma tradition is the oldest of the four major schools of Tibetan Buddhism . "Nyingma" literally means "ancient," and is often referred to as the "school of the ancient translations" or the "old school" because it is founded on the first translations of Buddhist scriptures from Sanskrit into Tibetan language, in the eighth century....
 school of Tibetan Buddhism
Tibetan Buddhism

Tibetan Buddhism is the body of Buddhism religious doctrine and institutions characteristic of Tibet and certain regions of the Himalayas, including northern Nepal, Bhutan, and India ....
 has nine yana
Yana

Things and people known as Yana include:* Yana Gupta, an Indian model.* Yana , a Buddhist term .* Yana River, a river in eastern Russia.* Yana, Sierra Leone, a town in western Africa....
s, a list made by combining the first type of three yanas, and adding the six classes of tantras
Tantras

Tantras refers to numerous and varied scriptures pertaining to any of several esoteric traditions rooted in Hindu and Buddhist philosophy. Although Buddhist and Hindu Tantra have many similarities from the outside, they do have some clear distinctions....
.
  • Hinayana
    • Sravakayana
    • Pratyekayana
  • Mahayana consisting of:
    • Bodhisattvayana
    • Vajrayana, consisting of:
      • Outer Tantras
        • Kriyatantra
        • Upatantra (Tibetan
          Tibetan language

          The Tibetan languages are a cluster of mutually unintelligible Tibeto-Burman languages spoken primarily by Tibetan peoples who live across a wide area of eastern Central Asia bordering South Asia, including the Tibetan Plateau and the northern Indian subcontinent in Baltistan, Ladakh, Nepal, Sikkim, and Bhutan....
           spyod rgyud) ‘practice tantra’ and the Ubhayatantra (gnyis ka’i rgyud), ‘dual tantra’, because it practices the view of the next vehicle, Yogatantra, together with the action of the former.
        • Yogatantra
      • Inner Tantras
        • Mahayoga
          Mahayoga

          Mahayoga is the designation of the first of the three Inner Tantras according to the Yana #The nine yanas of practice used by the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
        • Anuyoga
          Anuyoga

          Anuyoga is the designation of the second of the three Inner Tantras according to the Yana #The nine yanas of practice used by the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
        • Atiyoga (also Dzogchen
          Dzogchen

          According to some schools of Tibetan Buddhism and B?n, Dzogchen is the natural, primordial state or natural condition of every Sentient beings , including every human being....
          )


Twelve yanas

Another schema associated with Mahayana and Vajrayana sources:

  1. Sravakayana
    Shravakayana

    Sravakayana is one of the three Yana known to Mahayana. It translates literally as the "vehicle of hearers [i.e. disciples]". The term is used by some Mahayana Buddhism to describe one hypothetical path to enlightenment....
  2. Pratyekabuddha
    Pratyekabuddha

    A Pratyekabuddha or Paccekabuddha , literally "a lone Buddhahood" , "a buddha on their own" or "a private buddha", is one of Three types of Buddha of bodhi beings according to some schools of Buddhism....
    yana
  3. Bodhisattva
    Bodhisattva

    In the Buddhist context, a bodhisattva means either "enlightened existence " or "enlightenment-being" or, given the variant Sanskrit spelling satva rather than sattva, "heroic-minded one for enlightenment "....
    yana
  4. Kriyayoga
  5. Charyayoga (or Upayoga)
  6. Yogatantra
  7. Mahayoga
    Mahayoga

    Mahayoga is the designation of the first of the three Inner Tantras according to the Yana #The nine yanas of practice used by the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
  8. Anuyoga
    Anuyoga

    Anuyoga is the designation of the second of the three Inner Tantras according to the Yana #The nine yanas of practice used by the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
  9. Atiyoga
  10. Semde
    Semde

    Semde translated as "mind division", "mind series" or "mind school" is the name of one of three scriptural and lineage divisions within Atiyoga, Dzogchen or the Great Perfection which is itself the pinnacle of the Yana #The nine yanas of practice according to the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
  11. Longde
    Longde

    Longde is the name of one of three scriptural divisions within Atiyoga, also known as Dzogchen or the Great Perfection which is itself the pinnacle of the Yana #The nine yanas of practice according to the Nyingma school of Tibetan Buddhism....
  12. Mengagde


See also

  • Navayana
    Navayana

    Navayana is a proposed name for one of the versions of Buddhism in the West....
  • Vahana
    Vahana

    V?hana or a Hindu vehicle, sometimes called a mount, is an animal, mythical entity or chimera closely associated with a particular deity in Hindu mythology....


External links

  • in Pali, Samyutta Nikaya IV.4 (scroll to middle of page, or Find... the word dhammayànaü)
  • (scroll downto the 5th entry) Partial translation of Samyutta Nikaya IV.4
  • Enter yaana in the search box
  • . Enter yana in the search box
  • , Chipstead, Pali Text Society, 1921-1925,
  • by Alak Zenkar Rinpoche