Jalan Tengah: Perbedaan antara revisi

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Pada dasarnya, Jalan Tengah (Sansekerta:madhyamā-pratipad; Pali: majjhimā paṭipadā<ref name="Kohn (1991)">Kohn (1991), p. 143. Also see the Pali version of the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta (available on-line at SLTP, n.d.-b, sutta 12.2.1) where the phrase majjhimā patipadā is repeatedly used.</ref>) adalah ajaran Agama Buddha akan ketidak-kerasan.<ref name="Kohn (1991)"></ref>
 
Lebih jelas, dalam Kitab Suci Pali Ajaran Theravada, Jalan Tengah menjelaskan jalur menuju Nirwana yang ditempuh Sang Buddha yang lebih sederhana mengenai kegemaran hawa nafsu, penyiksaan diri dan menuju kepada pelaksanaan kebijaksanaa, pengembahanga moral dan mental. Dalam beberapa sutta lain baik dalam Ajaran Theravada, Mahayana dan Vajrayana, Jalan Tengah menunjuk kepada sebuah konsep, seperti yang dituliskan dalam Kitab Suci, akan pengetahuan langsung yang melampaui suatu pemahaman yang sepertinya berlawanan dengan pendapat mengenai keberadaan.<ref>{{en}}David Kalupahana, Mulamadhyamakakarika of Nagarjuna. Motilal Banarsidass, 2006, page 1. "Two aspects of the Buddha's teachings, the philosophical and the practical, which are mutually dependent, are clearly enunciated in two discourses, the Kaccaayanagotta-sutta and the Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta, both of which are held in high esteem by almost all schools of Buddhism in spite of their sectarian rivalries. The Kaccaayanagotta-sutta, quoted by almost all the major schools of Buddhism, deals with the philosophical "middle path", placed against the backdrop of two absolutistic theories in Indian philosophy, namely, permanent existence (atthitaa) propounded in the early Upanishads and nihilistic non-existence (natthitaa) suggested by the Materialists."</ref>
 
In general, the Middle Way or Middle Path (Sanskrit: madhyamā-pratipad; Pali: majjhimā paṭipadā)[1] is the Buddhist practice of non-extremism.[2]
 
More specifically, in Theravada Buddhism's Pali Canon, the Middle Way crystallizes the Buddha's Nirvana-bound path of moderation away from the extremes of sensual indulgence and self-mortification and toward the practice of wisdom, morality and mental cultivation. In later Theravada texts as well as in Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism, the Middle Way refers to the concept, enunciated in the Canon, of direct knowledge that transcends seemingly antithetical claims about existence.[3]
 
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