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At first glance, this figure appears to be a Buddha, but the seven-hooded serpent ("naga") above his head identifies him as Nagarjuna, a second-century philosopher from southern India who came to be known as a second Buddha. According to tradition, Nagarjuna retrieved a sacred "Perfection of Wisdom" text from the underwater kingdom of the serpent king, to whom the Buddha had entrusted it. A prominent teacher, Nagarjuna holds his hands in the gesture of teaching known as "dharmachakra mudra": Using the thumb and index finger of each hand to form a "wheel" ("chakra") symbolic of Buddhist doctrine ("dharma"), he propagates the Buddhist teachings by setting that wheel in motion.In later centuries, other philosophers and teachers named Nagarjuna rose to prominence. Tibetan Buddhist tradition conflated them with the second-century Nagarjuna, who is considered to be a "mahasiddha," a "great perfected one" whose superior wisdom endows him with extraordinary powers. The inscription on the base of this sculpture calls Nagarjuna by his Tibetan name, Ludrub, and states that it was made by the sculptor Tsapa Namgyal for an unnamed senior monk.
Page data
- Page
- 3
- Source index
- 0
- Type
- photo
- Media ID
- c6519af50fe6b29b
- Size
- unknown
Document data
- ID
- 29013
- Core
- obj
- Type
- object
DTO data
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"title": "Buddhist Teacher and Philosopher Nagarjuna",
"description": "At first glance, this figure appears to be a Buddha, but the seven-hooded serpent (\"naga\") above his head identifies him as Nagarjuna, a second-century philosopher from southern India who came to be known as a second Buddha. According to tradition, Nagarjuna retrieved a sacred \"Perfection of Wisdom\" text from the underwater kingdom of the serpent king, to whom the Buddha had entrusted it. A prominent teacher, Nagarjuna holds his hands in the gesture of teaching known as \"dharmachakra mudra\": Using the thumb and index finger of each hand to form a \"wheel\" (\"chakra\") symbolic of Buddhist doctrine (\"dharma\"), he propagates the Buddhist teachings by setting that wheel in motion.In later centuries, other philosophers and teachers named Nagarjuna rose to prominence. Tibetan Buddhist tradition conflated them with the second-century Nagarjuna, who is considered to be a \"mahasiddha,\" a \"great perfected one\" whose superior wisdom endows him with extraordinary powers. The inscription on the base of this sculpture calls Nagarjuna by his Tibetan name, Ludrub, and states that it was made by the sculptor Tsapa Namgyal for an unnamed senior monk.",
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Context sent to Scholar
Document identity
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Document source metadata
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"contentType": "object",
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"description": "At first glance, this figure appears to be a Buddha, but the seven-hooded serpent (\"naga\") above his head identifies him as Nagarjuna, a second-century philosopher from southern India who came to be known as a second Buddha. According to tradition, Nagarjuna retrieved a sacred \"Perfection of Wisdom\" text from the underwater kingdom of the serpent king, to whom the Buddha had entrusted it. A prominent teacher, Nagarjuna holds his hands in the gesture of teaching known as \"dharmachakra mudra\": Using the thumb and index finger of each hand to form a \"wheel\" (\"chakra\") symbolic of Buddhist doctrine (\"dharma\"), he propagates the Buddhist teachings by setting that wheel in motion.In later centuries, other philosophers and teachers named Nagarjuna rose to prominence. Tibetan Buddhist tradition conflated them with the second-century Nagarjuna, who is considered to be a \"mahasiddha,\" a \"great perfected one\" whose superior wisdom endows him with extraordinary powers. The inscription on the base of this sculpture calls Nagarjuna by his Tibetan name, Ludrub, and states that it was made by the sculptor Tsapa Namgyal for an unnamed senior monk.",
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Document source extras
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Page context
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