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Tripitaka
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Tripitaka

The canonical texts of Theravāda Buddhism, divided into three parts: the Vinaya-pitaka, containing the rules governing the monastic community; the Sūtra-pitaka, a collection of scriptures recording the teachings of the Buddha; and Abhidharma-pitaka, a collection of Buddhist philosophical writings.

The texts were established at group councils of the Sangha (monastic orders), the first being held within months of the Buddha's death. A senior monk would ask a series of questions to which the assembled monks, sometimes numbering thousands, would reply by reciting the appropriate portion of the canon. The Buddha's teachings were preserved and passed on in this way for about 400 years, until Theravāda monks wrote them down in Pali script in the 1st century AD.

The Tripitaka was possibly named after the pitaka (baskets) used to hold the set of palm leaves on which the texts were written.



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The importance of this Council lies in the fact that the Tipitaka, the Pali Canon, which had been transmitted orally from the time of the Buddha was written down in books for the first time.
That is, what if the final judgment on the authority of any sacred text--the Bible, the Qur'an, the Tipitaka, the Bhagavad-Gita--is its demonstrable capacity to transform the way those who confess its truths live?
Chico) analyzes the development of writing and its complex relationship to the oral tradition during the 15th century in the kingdom of Lan Na in northern Thailand as one part of the story of the transmission of the Tipitaka and related Pali texts of Buddhist literature, a story that now includes compact disks.
 
 
 
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