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Approaching the Numinous: Rudolf Otto and Tibetan TantraAuthor(s): Donald S. Lopez, Jr.Source: Philosophy East and West , Vol. 29, No. 4 (Oct., 1979), pp. 467-476Published by: University of Hawai'i PressStable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1398815
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Donald S. Lopez, Jr. Approaching the numinous: Rudolf Otto and
Tibetan tantra
In Oriental art there may be no more evocative portrayal of what Rudolf Otto
calls the mysterium tremendum than the wrathful deities of Tibetan Tantric
Buddhism. Fearful in form, wreathed in flames, adorned with garlands of
human heads, and brandishing dagger and skull-cup, their painted images
conjure the feelings of dread and fascination which Otto describes in The Idea
of the Holy. In this seminal work, he sets out to describe the central element
of religious experience such that there is no religion in which it does not live
as the real innermost core, and without it no religion would be worthy of the
name. 1
This article will be an inquiry into whether the holy, described as mys-
terium tremendum, does indeed stand as the core of the tantric path of
Tibetan Buddhism and will be a comparison of the methods of approaching
the holy or numinous as set forth by Otto and Tibetan scholars. The
presentation of tantra given here will follow that of the Gelukba order of
Tibetan Buddhism, relying especially on the writings of Tsong-ka-pa
(1357-1419), its founder.
In The Idea of the Holy Otto rejects the views held by many psychologists,
historians of religion, philosophers, and anthropologists that religion is a
fact in nature and, to be understood, must be seen as a product of the same
laws of nature that determine other natural phenomena. 2 Nor does he see
religion, as does Clifford Geertz, as a system of conceptions formulated by
man in response to ignorance, pain, and injustice.3
Rather, Otto sees religion as a sui generis category, which stands above all
natural processes and whose essence is irreducible and unevolvable. He writes
that if there is any single domain of human experience that presents us with
something unmistakably specific and unique, peculiar to itself, assuredly it is
that of religious life. 4 This essence he calls the numinous, which is the
object of religious experience, and which we cannot but feel 5 for it eludes
the conceptual way of thinking. 6
Throughout Otto draws sharp distinctions between the natural and the
supernatural and between the rational and the nonrational. The numinous
is not a natural phenomenon and our knowledge of it cannot be gained
empirically; instead, it issues from the deepest foundation of cognitive
apprehension that the soul possesses, and though it of course comes into
being in and amid sensory data and empirical material of the natural world
and cannot anticipate or dispense with those, yet it does not arise out of them,
but only by their means. 7 Further, the numinous is nonrational and com-
pletely eludes apprehension in terms of concepts 8 and can only be sugges-
ted by means of the special way in which it is reflected in the mind in terms of
feeling. 9
Donald S. Lopez, Jr. is a doctoral candidate in Buddhist Studies and an instructor in the Department
of Religious Studies, University of Virginia.
Philosophy East and West 29, no. 4 (October, 1979) ( by The University Press of Hawaii. All rights reserved.
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468 Lopez
It is Otto's view that religion cannot be fully understood through reason
and rational thought. To support his claim, he looks not to scripture or
theological treatise, but instead finds his affinity in the words of the mystics,
Weber's religious virtuosos, because they stress the non-rational or supra-
rational elements in religion. 10
The numinous cannot be known through ratiocination; awareness of it
comes only through the feelings it evokes. Consequently, Otto devotes a great
part of The Idea of the Holy to a description of these feelings, the first of
which centers in the subject's sense of creature-consciousness, the emotion of
a creature, submerged and overwhelmed by its own nothingness in contrast to
that which is supreme above all creatures. 1 It is a recognition of one's
insignificance in the face of the absolute, exemplified by Arjuna's response to
the theophany in the eleventh chapter of the Bhagavad-g£ta.
Next Otto considers the experience of the mysterium tremendum, which
carries with it a complex of feelings, with mysterium denoting that which is
hidden and esoteric, that which is beyond conception or understanding,
extraordinary and unfamiliar. 12 Tremendum evokes a peculiar dread of
something uncanny, aweful, weird, eerie, and absolutely unapproachable,
causing the flesh to creep. Throughout his description, Otto stresses that
although these feelings may have analogs among natural moments of
consciousness, there is a qualitative difference between them. For example, he
characterizes the dread of the tremendum as something other than natural
fear, a terror fraught with an inward shuddering such as not even the most
menacing and overpowering created thing can instil. 13
As the object of these feelings, the numinous is endowed with might,
power, transcendence, absolute overpoweringness, majesty, and a plenitude
of being surpassing any created thing. It has urgency, energy, passion, and
emotional temper. Because it is that which is quite beyond the sphere of the
usual, the intelligible, and the familiar, 14 it is called the wholly other
which brings forth feelings of wonder, amazement, and astonishment. The
numinous produces a captivating attraction in one sensitive to it-the
element of fascination. Otto finds these feeling-responses to be common to all
forms of mysticism.
Not only does he enumerate these various reactions to the numinous, he
also emphatically contends that these feelings are the only media through
which the numinous, or reality, can be known. Words, concepts, reasoning,
and rational thought are incapable of producing true experience of the wholly
other, which can only be firmly grasped, thoroughly understood, and
profoundly appreciated, purely in, with, and from the feeling itself. 15
Otto traces these experiences of the numinous to the most primitive
religious consciousness, where the feeling-response was one of daemonic
dread. This crude consciousness of the numinous evolved over the centuries
to a more elevated and noble experience. Throughout this process of religious
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469
evolution, however, the object of these feelings remains the nonrational
numinous, and the element of dread felt by the primitive savage, though
superseded by other responses, does not disappear on the highest level of all,
where the worship of God is at its purest. 16 And although this process of
evolution has occurred in all the great religions, it has reached its culmination
in Christianity, which stands out in complete superiority over its sister
religions. 7 Thus, against all those who would see the rise of religion
emanating from any number of natural factors, Otto holds the numinous to
be the basic factor and basic impulse underlying the entire process of
religious evolution. 18
Although Otto discounts reason as having any relation to the numinous
whatsoever, he discovers a close relationship between the feeling of the
numinous and aesthetic experience. He finds the feelings of the sublime, the
beautiful, and the experience of music to be nonconceptual, nonrational, and
wholly other, much like that of the numinous.
Weber also notes such a similarity between religion and art. However,
Weber observes that for the mystic the indubitable psychological affinity of
profoundly shaking experience in art and religion can only be a symptom of
the diabolical nature of art. 19 The mystic is seeking to transcend all form in
order to achieve union with a reality that is beyond form. Weber perceives a
contradiction between religion and art, with the result that the more religion
has emphasized either the supra-worldliness of its God or the other-
worldliness of salvation, the more harshly has art been refuted. 20
Otto on the other hand, far from refuting art, suggests that aesthetic
feelings reveal the transcendent reality, that in great art the point is reached
at which we may no longer speak of the 'magical,' but rather are confronted
with the numinous itself, with all its impelling power, transcending reason,
expressed in sweeping lines and rhythm. 21
Nonetheless, the numinous is a purely a priori category, underivable and
irreducible. It cannot be explained but only presupposed. This numinous
undergoes a process of development whereby it becomes moralized, gaining
ethical meaning through being endowed with rational qualities of absolute-
ness, completeness, morality, purpose, justice, goodness, and love. The wholly
other numinous, having become completely permeated and saturated by
these rational qualities, becomes what Otto calls the holy. He finds these
rational qualities also to be a priori and not to be 'evolved' from any sort of
sense perception. 22 Further, the connection of the numinous to these ethical
qualities, the relation of the nonrational to the rational, is not to be derived
from reasoning, but is also a priori.23
Finally, our capacity for experience of the numinous is a priori as well. The
object of religious experience is the numinous, of which we are aware through
numinous feelings. Objectively, the numinous seems to act as a stimulus for
these feelings. However, from the subject's side there exists an a priori
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470 Lopez
potency which allows the numinous to be experienced. This Otto calls a
hidden, substantive source, from which the religious ideas and feelings are
formed, which lies in the mind independently of sense-experience. 24 It is a
primal element of our psychical nature that needs to be grasped in its
uniqueness and cannot itself be explained by anything else. 25
Despite philosophical problems that may inhere in such a wholesale
attribution of the a priori category to all things religious,26 it is important to
consider Otto's purpose at this point. The Idea of the Holy is not intended as a
philosophical treatise proving the existence of the numinous; rather it is an
apology for the intuitive element of religious experience. Otto does not intend
to persuade the unconvinced with his arguments. His words are offered only
to kindred spirits, those whose innate capacity for the numinous has been
awakened, for whom he eloquently verbalizes the experience of the holy, the
feeling which remains where the concept fails. 27 At the very outset, Otto
invites the reader to direct his mind to a moment of deeply-felt religious
experience, as little as possible qualified by other forms of consciousness.
Whoever cannot do this, whoever knows no such moments in his experience,
is requested to read no further. 28 It is his purpose then, to suggest this
unnamed Something to the reader as far as we may, so that he may himself
feel it. 29
Thus, having stressed the intuitive aspect of religious experience, having
presented numinous feeling for the sake of awakening that feeling, Otto in the
end makes his appeal to feeling. The numinous is something which the
'natural' man cannot, as such, know or even imagine, 30 and no intellectual,
dialectical dissection or justification of such intuition is possible, nor indeed
should any be attempted, for the essence most peculiar to it would be
destroyed thereby. 31 Rather, the numinous must be directly experienced to
be understood.
Once experienced, there need not be doubt concerning the validity of these
numinous feelings for they are a priori by which Otto means that as soon as
an assertion has been clearly expressed and understood, knowledge of its
truth comes into the mind with the certitude of first-hand insight. 32 In short,
religious experience is autonomous, self-validating, and infallible. When the
numinous feelings that Otto describes are experienced, there is immediate
certainty that this is a realization of the deepest truth; religious experience
represents a perception which provides its own evidence. 33
It is Otto's contention that the numinous and the feelings it evokes are
common to all religions. To test this claim in the case of Tibetan tantra, it is
first necessary to identify the numinous element in Buddhism.
According to the Prasangika-Madhyamika school, the highest system of
tenets in Tibet, every object of knowledge, permanent or impermanent, is a
phenomenon (dharma). Even the highest nature of an object, its emptiness, is
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4 71
a phenomenon. Taking phenomena in this sense, there are no noumena apart
from phenomena in Buddhism, and our inquiry is cut short.
However, if we take the view found in Western metaphysics that pheno-
mena refer to sense objects and that behind the phenomena which present
themselves in everyday experience, there lie realities whose existence and
properties can be established only by the use of the intellect and which can
hence be described as noumena, 34 we then have a distinction between
noumena and phenomena that can be applied to the Prasangika-
Madhyamika view. That is, impermanent things or products (samskrta), the
appearing objects of direct perception (pratyaksa), are phenomena and those
objects which initially must be known through relying on inference (anumdana)
are noumena.35 For the purpose of comparison with Otto, we may consider
only the most important of such objects-emptinesses (sunyatd)-the ul-
timate truths (paramdrthasatya) of the Prasangika-Madhyamika system, the
realization of which leads to liberation from cyclic existence (samsdra). Otto
identifies emptiness as the numinous element in Buddhism, writing that the
'void' [emptiness] of the eastern, like the 'nothing' of the western, mystic is a
numinous ideogram of the 'wholly other.' 36
An emptiness, according to Prasangika, is an object's lack of inherent
existence (svabhava-siddhi); and when it is realized what appears to the mind
is a clear vacuity accompanied by the mere thought, 'These concrete things as
they now appear to our minds do not exist at all.' 37 In the direct realization
of emptiness, the mind and emptiness are said to be mixed like fresh water
poured into fresh water.38
Since Buddhism is an atheistic religion in the sense that it denies the
existence of a preexistent creator deity, the experience of the numinous does
not carry with it the feeling of creature-consciousness which Otto describes.39
Emptiness is a mere negative, a lack of a falsely conceived predicate of
existence.40
Reference is made in Prasafigika to a fear which arises in the practice of
emptiness. It is said that a person with a slight understanding of emptiness
becomes fearful because the phenomenon suddenly appears to his mind as
not existing at all. 41 When emptiness is realized directly, however, all fear is
dispelled because the source of fear-the conception of true existence-has
disappeared. This fear bears little resemblance to the dread and terror that
Otto describes which produces creeping flesh and which never disappears,
even at the highest level of mystical experience.
Emptiness is neither shrouded in mystery, nor is it a numinous ideogram
of the wholly other. 42 An emptiness is not other than the phenomenon it
qualifies in that they are of the same entity. Through the practice of the path,
emptiness can be realized in a direct, nonconceptual, nondualistic experience
free of doubt and mystery.43
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472 Lopez
Otto holds the mysterious to be an essential attribute of religious ex-
perience and for support points to a mode of manifestation that in every
religion occupies a foremost and extraordinary place, 44 namely, miracle.
Although the settings and circumstances of many Buddhist suitras, especially
in the Mahayana, may be termed magical or miraculous, miracles are not a
central teaching technique of Buddha.
Buddhas neither wash sins away with water
Nor remove beings' suffering with their hands
Nor transfer their realizations to others; beings
Are freed through the teaching of the truth, the nature of things.45
Regarding miracles, it is noteworthy to compare the reactions of Christ and
Buddha in a similar situation-being request to restore the life of a dead
child. Christ resurrected Jairus' daughter,46 while Buddha, in the Parable of
the Mustard Seed,47 used the opportunity to teach the mother of the child the
all-pervasive nature of suffering. In both cases, it can be assumed that one
result was that witnesses were inspired to follow the teaching, although the
techniques of the two teachers were quite different.
Weber notes a more general difference in the style of teaching of Buddha as
compared to those of Jesus and Muhammad:
Neither the short parable, the ironic dismissal, or the pathetic penitential
sermon of the Galilean prophet, nor the address resting on visions of the
Arabic holy leader find any sort of parallels to the lectures and conversations
which seem to have constituted the true form of Buddha's activity. They
address themselves purely to the intellect and affected the quiet, sober
judgement detached from all internal excitement; their factual manner
exhausts the topic always in systematic dialectical fashion.48
The emphasis on reason and analysis which Weber observes in the
Theravada sutttas is also an essential element in the tantric path. In Tsofig-
kha-pa's major work on tantra, The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra, he
explains that before beginning practice one must have firm conviction that the
system one has chosen to follow is correct. A choice between two systems is
not an act of partisanship but should be based on reasoned analysis.
Specifically, the scriptures of the two systems are what are to be analysed to
find which does or does not bear the truth; thus, it would not be suitable to
cite them as proof (of their own truth). Only reason distinguishes what is or is
not true. 49
Citation of scripture, mere belief, or respect are not suitable bases for
strong conviction in a system of practice, as is evident in this quotation from
the Buddha:
Monks and scholars should
Well analyze my words,
Like gold (to be tested) through melting, cutting, and polishing,
And then adopt them, but not for the sake of showing me respect.50
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473
Reasoning is also essential to the practice of emptiness, through which the
wisdom is generated which bestows liberation from suffering. According to
Tsong-kha-pa's Ge-lug-pa order, it is a basic tenet of all three Buddhist
vehicles-Hinayana, Perfection, and Mantra (or Tantra)-that direct re-
alization of emptiness is gained through an initial acquaintance with an
inferential realization of emptiness gained through reasoning, the basis of
which is empirical. The fourteenth Dalai Lama, the current leader of the
Gelukba order, states that the generation of a conceptual consciousness
realizing emptiness must depend solely on a correct reasoning.
Fundamentally, therefore, the process traces back solely to a reasoning, which
itself must fundamentally trace back to valid experiences common to our-
selves and others. 51 Such reasonings are those set forth by Nagarjuna in his
Treatise on the Middle Way (Madhyamakasdstra).
According to Ge-lug-pa, the many reasonings presented by Nagarjuna are
explicitly intended for the purpose of destroying the conception of inherent
existence, the root cause of suffering. As far as this false conception forms the
basis of philosophical systems, it can be said that Nagarjuna's arguments
refute the positions of those systems. Nevertheless, the fundamental purpose
of reasoning in Prasafigika-Madhyamika is to generate the wisdom which
eradicates suffering and its causes. Refutations of opposing tenet systems are
subsidiary.
A number of differences are thus evident between Otto and the Buddhist
Ge-lug-pa position regarding the numinous element of religious experience.
Otto's observations are astute when applied to the Abrahamic religions and
theistic Hinduism. Yet the strength of his argument often relies on the
existence of a creator deity endowed with the qualities of transcendence,
majesty, and power, from whom man seeks atonement, which Otto sees as a
longing to transcend this sundering unworthiness, given with the self's
existence as 'creature' and profane natural being. 52
It is difficult to construe a parallel with Buddhism, which lacks such a
creator god of whom we are creatures. The religious impulsion in Buddhism
is not a priori, but a natural reaction to suffering and the practice of a
prescribed set of teachings to escape that suffering, for the sake of oneself in
Hlnayana, for others in Mahayana.53 The dharma is not an end in itself but,
like a raft, is to be discarded upon reaching the further shore.54
According to Malinowski's distinction between magic and religion, one is
then forced to assign Buddhism to the category of magic, which he defines as
a practical art consisting of acts which are only means to a definite end
expected to follow later on 55 and which are not ends in themselves. This is
not to suggest that Buddhism is indeed magic, but rather to point out the
difficulty, also encountered in Otto, in making general statements which are
intended to hold true for all religions.
Returning to Otto, the more important point, however, is his contention
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that reasoning has no part in religious experience, where coercion by proof
and demonstration and the mistaken application of logical and juridical
processes should be excluded. 56 For him, the absolute exceeds our power
to comprehend; the mysterious wholly eludes. 57 The nonconceptual, non-
rational numinous cannot be approached with conceptuality and reason;
mysticism has nothing to do with 'reason' and 'rationality.' 58
According to the Ge-lug-pa position, the direct experience of emptiness, in
both the sutra and tantra systems, is nonconceptual. Yet without relying on
reasoning and analysis, such an experience is impossible. In answer to how
analysis and thought can serve as a cause for nonconceptuality, the fifth Dalai
Lama (1617-1682) cites the Kasyapa Chapter Sutra (Kdayapa-parivarta):
Kashyapa, it is thus: For example, fire arises when the wind rubs two
branches together. Once the fire has arisen, the two branches are burned. Just
so Kashyapa, if you have the correct analytical intellect, a superior's faculty
of wisdom is generated. Through its generation, the correct analytical intellect
is consumed. 59 That is, conceptual thought can lead to experience of the
nonconceptual, that which is beyond thought.
Reasoning alone, however, is not sufficient; the process of insight is not
merely an intellectual exercise. Reasoning is an essential element of wisdom,
the third element in the triad of ethics (sTla), meditative stabilization (sam-
ddhi), and wisdom (prajida), all of which are necessary for realization of
emptiness. For example, a bodhisattva of the suitra system must engage in
limitless forms of the six perfections (paramita)-giving, ethics, patience,
effort, concentration, and wisdom-over many aeons in order to accumulate
the merit which will empower his mind to penetrate emptiness and eventually
overcome all obstructions.60 In the tantra system, a special technique-deity
yoga-is taught which allows this accumulation of merit to proceed more
quickly.61 Thus, the process of reasoning must be conjoined with ethical and
meditative practices to yield realization of emptiness.
Reasoning must be used because emptiness is a hidden phenomenon
(paroksa), unable to appear to direct perception without initially depending
on reasoning.62 For Otto too, the numinous is hidden in the sense that it is
something which has no place in our scheme of reality but belongs to an
absolutely different one, and which at the same time arouses an irrepressible
interest in the mind. 63 For him, reasoning cannot be the key to the
experience of the numinous because our knowledge has certain irremovable
limits. 64
We find then, two different approaches to this hidden numinous, in-
accessible to ordinary sense perception. For the Ge-lug-pas, the process of
reasoning and analysis leads to the experience of reality. For Rudolf Otto,
reasoning must be discarded, for reality-the holy-is only to be known
through feeling.
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4 75
NOTES
1. Rudolf Otto, The Idea of the Holy, trans. John W. Harvey (London: Oxford University
Press, 1976), p. 6.
2. Anthony F. C. Wallace, Religion. An Anthropological View (New York: Random House,
1966), p. vi.
3. Clifford Geertz, Religion as a Cultural System, in Reader in Comparative Religion: An
Anthropological Approach, ed. William A. Lessa and Evon Z. Vogt, 3d ed. (New York: Harper
and Row, 1972), pp. 171-174.
4. Otto, p. 4.
5. Ibid., p. 5.
6. Ibid., p. 2.
7. Ibid., p. 113.
8. Ibid., p. 5.
9. Ibid., p. 12.
10. Ibid., p. 22.
11. Ibid., p. 10.
12. Ibid., p. 13.
13. Ibid., p. 14.
14. Ibid., p. 26.
15. Ibid., p. 34.
16. Ibid., p. 17.
17. Ibid., p. 142.
18. Ibid., p. 15.
19. Max Weber, Religious Rejections of the World and their Directions, in From Max
Weber: Essays in Sociology, ed. and trans. Hans H. Gerth and C. Wright Mills (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1976), p. 342.
20. Ibid., p. 343.
21. Otto, p. 67.
22. Ibid., p. 112.
23. Wach notes that critics have found this to be the weakest element in Otto's presentation.
See Joachim Wach, Types of Religious Experience Christian and Non-Christian (Chicago, Illinois:
University of Chicago Press, 1951), p. 222. For an analysis of this relationship between the
numinous and morality and of the process of schematization whereby the numinous becomes
endowed with rational qualities see John P. Reeder, The Relation of the Moral and the
Numinous in Otto's Notion of the Holy, in Religion and Morality: A Collection of Essays, ed.
Gene Outka and John P. Reeder, Jr. (Garden City, N.Y.: Anchor Books, 1973), pp. 255-292.
24. Ibid., p. 114.
25. Ibid., p. 124.
26. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, s.v. Otto, Rudolf, by William J. Wainwright.
27. Ibid., p. xxi.
28. Ibid., p. 8.
29. Ibid., p. 6.
30. Ibid., p. 51.
31. Ibid., p. 147.
32. Ibid., p. 137.
33. Joachim Wach, Understanding and Believing: Essays by Joachim Wach, edited with an
Introduction by Joseph M. Kitagawa (Boston, Massachusetts: Harper and Row, 1968), p. 8.
34. The Encyclopedia of Philosophy, s.v. Metaphysics, Nature of, by W. H. Walsh.
35. Geshe Lhundup Sopa and Jeffrey Hopkins, Practice and Theory of Tibetan Buddhism
(Rider: London, 1976), p. 134.
36. Otto, p. 30.
37. Tenzin Gyatso, The Buddhism of Tibet and the Key to the Middle Way (New York: Harper
and Row, 1975), p. 77.
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476 Lopez
38. Tsong-ka-pa, Tantra in Tibet: The Great Exposition of Secret Mantra (London: Allen and
Unwin, 1978), p. 191.
39. Ninian Smart criticizes Otto on this point using the example of Theravada Buddhism. See
Ninian Smart, Philosophers and Religious Truth (London: SCM Press Ltd., 1969), p. 113.
40. Tenzin Gyatso, p. 77.
41. Ten-dar-hla-ram-pa (bsTan-dar-lha-ram-pa), A Presentation of the Lack of One and Many,
an Elimination of Error Collected from the Ocean of Good Explanations (Gcig du bral gyi rnam
gzhag legs bshad rgya mtsho las btus pa'i 'khrul spong bdud rtsi'i gzegs ma) (Lhasa: Great Press at
the base of the Potala, Fire Dog Male year of the sixteenth cycle), blockprint of 43 folios, pp.
3a-3b.
42. Otto, p. 30.
43. Tsoiig-kha-pa, pp. 191-192.
44. Otto, p. 63.
45. Kensur Lekden, Meditations of a Tibetan Tantric Abbot, trans. and ed. Jeffrey Hopkins
(Dharamsala, India: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, 1974), p. 109.
46. Mark 5:21-43.
47. Sutta Nipdta, trans. V. Fausb6ll, in Sacred Books of the East (Oxford, 1881), Vol. 10, pt. 2,
pp. 11-15.
48. Max Weber, The Religion of India: The Sociology of Hinduism and Buddhism, trans. and ed.
Hans H. Gerth and Don Martindale (New York: The Free Press, 1967), p. 225.
49. Tsofig-kha-po, p. 87.
50. Tenzin Gyatso, p. 55.
51. Ibid., pp. 55-56.
52. Otto, p. 55.
53. Tenzin Gyatso, pp. 28-29.
54. Middle Length Sayings (Majjhima-Nikdya), trans. I. B. Horner, Pali Text Society
Translation Series, No. 29 (London: The Pali Text Society, 1976), 1:173-74.
55. Bronislaw Malinowski, Magic, Science and Religion and Other Essays (New York: Anchor
Books, 1954), p. 88.
56. Otto, p. 145.
57. Ibid., p. 141.
58. Ibid., p. 4.
59. The Fifth Salai Lama, The Practice of Emptiness, trans. Jeffrey Hopkins (Dharamsala,
India: Library of Tibetan Works and Archives, 1974), p. 21.
60. Na-wang-pel-den (Ngag-dbang-dpal-ldan), Presentation of the Grounds and Paths of the
Four Great Secret Tantra Sets (gSang chen rgyud sde bzhi'i sa lam gyi rnam gzhag rgyud gzhung
gsal byed) (modern blockprint, rGyud smad par khang, date and place of publication not given),
pp. 7a3-8al.
61. Tsoiig-kha-pa, p. 60.
62. Ibid., p. 32.
63. Otto, p. 29.
64. Ibid., p. 59.
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