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Retreat Dharma Talks

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General area for talks without a retreat

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2011-10-04 You Are What You Are Looking For 45:55
Howard Cohn
2011-10-05 Understanding Aversion 46:57
Mark Nunberg
Dharma Talk
2011-10-05 Awakening Joy: Dharma Practice as a Path of Happiness 64:59
James Baraz
Please note that first three minutes of the recording are silent.
2011-10-09 Rebel Dharma 34:12
Jason Murphy
2011-10-11 Wise Speech 13:35
Mary Grace Orr
2011-10-11 Satipatthana Sutta, Fourth Foundation: The Spirit of Questioning 56:21
Rodney Smith
Questions are the life's blood of the dharma. If we are willing to follow wherever the question takes us, then the question will take us out of our beliefs and opinions into something new and unexplored. Something will end in us and will not arise again in the same way.
In collection: The Satipatthana Sutta
2011-10-11 Forgiveness 43:38
Howard Cohn
2011-10-12 Subtle is Significant 56:00
Mark Nunberg
Dharma Talk
2011-10-14 Bhikkhuni Pioneers 35:39
Ayya Medhanandi
Ayya Medhanandi offers a historical perspective on the bhikkhuni tradition as well as insights on how to live with compassion in the world. She describes how the monastic communal experience provides abundant opportunities for the exploration of personal and collective aspirations to fulfill the goals of the Eightfold Noble Path and end suffering.
2011-10-16 Mindfulness According to Early Buddhist Sources 2:37:12
Bhikkhu Analayo
"The aim of my presentation will be to investigate what mindfulness practice is about according to the early Buddhist discourses. These discourses have been preserved in the Pali Nikayas, in the Chinese Agamas, and at times also in Sanskrit fragments and sutra quotations preserved in Tibetan. From a historical viewpoint, these discourses represent the earliest layer of Buddhist textual material and thus take us back as close as possible to the original instructions delivered by the Buddha. In these texts, we find two basic expositions: 1) the fourfold establishment of mindfulness taught in general; 2) the threefold establishment of mindfulness associated with the Buddha himself. First, I will examine the fourfold establishment of mindfulness, based on the way it is depicted in the different extant versions of the Discourse on Mindfulness and the Discourse on Mindfulness of Breathing. Then, I will compare these to the threefold establishment of mindfulness. Through such comparison, I hope to arrive at key aspects of Buddhist mindfulness practice according to the earliest available textual sources at our disposition."
Attached Files:
  • Mindfulness According to Early Buddhist Sources by Bhikkhu Analayo (PDF)
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