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{{About|the primordial state in Tibetan Buddhism and Bön|the monastery|Dzogchen Monastery}} {{Short description|Tradition of teachings in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism}}
{{About|the primordial state and related practices in Tibetan Buddhism and Bön|the monastery|Dzogchen Monastery}}
{{Tibetan-Chinese-box|t=རྫོགས་ཆེན་|w=rdzogs chen<br>(rdzogs pa chen po)|ipa={{IPA-bo|tsɔktɕʰẽ|}}|z=Zogqên|thdl=Dzokchen|e=Dzogchen|tc=大究竟、<br>大圓滿、<br>大成就|s=大究竟、<br>大圆满、<br>大成就|p=dàjiūjìng,<br>dàyuánmǎn,<br>dàchéngjiù|}}
] letter A inside a rainbow ] is a common symbol of Dzogchen.{{sfnp|Achard|2015}} ] is also a common symbol for non-arising in Mahayana Buddhism. ]]
According to ] and ], '''Dzogchen''' is the natural, primordial state or natural condition of the mind, and a body of teachings and meditation practices aimed at realizing that condition. Dzogchen, or "Great Perfection", is a central teaching of the ] school also practiced by adherents of other Tibetan Buddhist sects. According to Dzogchen literature, Dzogchen is the highest and most definitive path to enlightenment.<ref>Keown, Damien. (2003). ''A Dictionary of Buddhism'', p. 82. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860560-9.</ref>
{{Tibetan-Chinese-box|t=རྫོགས་ཆེན་|w=rdzogs chen<br />(rdzogs pa chen po)|ipa={{IPA|bo|tsɔktɕʰẽ|}}|z=Zogqên|thdl=Dzokchen|e=Dzogchen|tc=大究竟、<br />{{linktext|大圓滿}}、<br />大成就|s=大究竟、<br />{{linktext|大圆满}}、<br />大成就|p=dàjiūjìng,<br />dàyuánmǎn,<br />dàchéngjiù|}}

From the perspective of Dzogchen, the ultimate nature of all sentient beings is said to be pure, all-encompassing, primordial awareness or naturally occurring timeless awareness. This "intrinsic awareness" has no form of its own and yet is capable of ], experiencing, reflecting, or expressing all form. It does so without being affected by those forms in any ultimate, permanent way. This pristine awareness is what Dzogchenpas refer to as ]. The analogy given by Dzogchen masters is that one's nature is like a mirror which reflects with complete openness but is not affected by the reflections, or like a ] that takes on the colour of the material on which it is placed without itself being changed. Having distinguished rigpa from mind, one is not distracted by the mind, i.e. one does not let thoughts lead oneself. This allows thoughts to naturally self-liberate without avoidance.

There is a fairly wide consensus among lamas of both the Nyingma and ] schools that the end state of dzogchen and ] are the same.<ref name="Reginald Ray 2001, page 304">Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, page 304.</ref> The ] teachings on ] are fundamental to and thoroughly compatible with Dzogchen practices.<ref name="B. Alan Wallace 2005, page 203">B. Alan Wallace, ''Genuine Happiness.'' John Wiley and Sons, 2005, page 203.</ref> Essence Mahamudra is viewed as being the same as Dzogchen, except the former doesn't include ].<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, page 303.</ref>

{{Tibetan Buddhism}} {{Tibetan Buddhism}}
{{Bon}}


'''Dzogchen''' ({{bo|t=རྫོགས་ཆེན་|w=rdzogs chen}} 'Great Completion' or 'Great Perfection'), also known as ''atiyoga'' (]), is a tradition of teachings in ] and ] aimed at discovering and continuing in the ultimate ] of existence.{{sfnp|Pettit|1999|p=4}} The goal of Dzogchen is knowledge of this basis; this knowledge is called {{translit|bo|]}} (]: {{translit|sa|]}}). There are spiritual practices taught in various Dzogchen systems for discovering {{translit|bo|rigpa}}.
==Nomenclature and etymology==
The word ''Dzogchen'' has been translated variously as Great Perfection, Great Completeness, Total Completeness, and Supercompleteness. These terms also convey the idea that our nature as intrinsic awareness has many qualities that make it perfect. These include indestructibility, incorruptible purity, non-discriminating openness, flawless clarity, profound simplicity, all-pervading presence and equality within all beings (i.e., the quality, quantity and functionality of this awareness is exactly the same in every being in the universe). It is said that the impressive personal qualities of the fully enlightened ] derived from the fact that he was fully aligned with this already-existing primordial nature. Descriptions of a buddha as ] and ] refer to their ultimate nature as this awareness. The Tibetan term ''dzogchen'' is a sometimes said to be a rendering of the Sanskrit term ''mahāsandhi'',<ref>''Dzogchen: The Heart Essence of the Great Perfection'' by the <nowiki></nowiki> Dalai Lama, Snow Lion, 2004. ISBN 1559392193. pg 208</ref> and is also used to render the Sanskrit term ''ati yoga'' (primordial yoga).<ref>Keown, Damien. (2003). ''A Dictionary of Buddhism'', p. 24. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-860560-9.</ref>


Dzogchen emerged during the first dissemination of ] in ], around the 7th to 9th centuries CE. While it is considered a Tibetan development by some scholars, it draws upon key ideas from Indian sources. The earliest Dzogchen texts appeared in the 9th century, attributed to Indian masters. These texts, known as the Eighteen Great Scriptures, form the "Mind Series" and are attributed to figures like ] and ]. Early Dzogchen was marked by a departure from normative ] practices, focusing instead on simple calming contemplations leading to a direct immersion in awareness. During the Tibetan renaissance era (10th to early 12th century), Dzogchen underwent significant development, incorporating new practices and teachings from India. This period saw the emergence of new Dzogchen traditions like the "Instruction Class series" and the "Seminal Heart" ({{bo|t=སྙིང་ཐིག་|w=snying thig}}).
A homonymous term ''dzogchen'' designates a ] practice and body of teachings aimed at helping an individual to recognize the Dzogchen state, to become sure about it, and to develop the capacity to maintain the state continually.


Dzogchen is classified into three series: the Semdé (Mind Series, {{bo|t=སེམས་སྡེ་|w=sems sde}}), Longdé (Space Series, {{bo|t=ཀློང་སྡེ་|w=klong sde}}), and Menngaggidé (Instruction Series, {{bo|t=མན་ངག་གི་སྡེ་|w=man ngag gi sde}}). The Dzogchen path comprises the Base, the Path, and the Fruit. The Base represents the original state of existence, characterized by ] (''stong pa nyid''), clarity (''lhun grub'', associated with ]), and ]ate energy (''snying rje''). The Path involves gaining a direct understanding of the mind's pure nature through meditation and specific Dzogchen methods. The Fruit is the realization of one's true nature, leading to complete ] awareness and the dissolution of dualities.
Pettit (1999: p.&nbsp;4) identifies the various contextual usages and implications of the term "Dzogchen" (Wylie: ''rdzogs chen'') that are often conflated and mentions ], ] and ]:
<blockquote>
"Great Perfection" variously indicates the texts (''āgama, lung'') and oral instructions (''upadeśa, man ngag'') that indicate the nature of enlightened wisdom (''rdzogs chen gyi gzhung dang man ngag''), the verbal conventions of those texts (''rdzogs chen gyi chos skad''), the yogis who meditate according to those texts and instructions (''rdzogs chen gyi rnal <nowiki>'</nowiki>byor pa''), a famous monastery where the Great Perfection was practiced by monks and yogis (''rdzogs chen dgon sde''), and the philosophical system (''siddhānta, grub mtha<nowiki>'</nowiki>'') or vision (''darśana, lta ba'') of the Great Perfection."<ref>Pettit, John Whitney (1999). ''Mipham's beacon of certainty: illuminating the view of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection''. Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-157-2 (alk. paper) p.4</ref>
</blockquote>


Dzogchen practitioners aim for self-liberation ({{bo|t=རང་གྲོལ་|w=rang grol}}), where all experiences are integrated with awareness of one's true nature. This process may culminate in the attainment of a rainbow body at the moment of death, symbolizing full ]. Critics point to tensions between gradual and simultaneous practice within Dzogchen traditions, but practitioners argue these approaches cater to different levels of ability and understanding. Overall, Dzogchen offers a direct path to realizing the innate wisdom and compassion of the mind.
===Maha Ati===
'''Maha Ati''' is a term coined by ]{{Citation needed|date=June 2008}}, a master of the ] and ] lineages of Tibetan ]. He generally preferred to introduce Sanskrit rather than Tibetan terms to his students, and felt "Maha Ati" was the closest equivalent for "Dzogpa Chenpo," although he acknowledged it was an unorthodox choice. In an indication of its pedigree as a back-formation, the coinage does not follow the ] rules; if it did, it would properly be ''mahāti''.


== History ==
==Esoteric transmission==
{{main|History of Dzogchen}}
The Dzogchen teachings are the highest of the nine ], (Tibetan ''theg pa'', vehicle) of the Nyingma (Wylie: ''rnying ma'') school of Tibetan Buddhism and the Tibetan Bön (Wylie: ''bon'') tradition. Many lamas, particularly of the ] and ] schools, regard them as the most profound teachings altogether.<ref>''Dzogchen: The Heart Essence of the Great Perfection'' by the Dalai Lama, trans. by Thupten Jinpa & Richard Barron, fore. by Sogyal Rinpoche, ed. by Patrick Gaffney. Snow Lion. 1559392193</ref>
Dzogchen arose in the era of the ] (7th to 9th centuries CE) during the ] and continued during the ] (9th to 11th centuries). American Tibetologist ] argues that Dzogchen is likely a Tibetan Buddhist development.{{sfnp|Irons|2008|p=168}}{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} However, numerous ideas key to Dzogchen (like ] and ]) can be found in Indian sources, like the ], ] literature and other ] sources like the '']''.{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}}{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=40}} Furthermore, scholars like ] see Dzogchen as having arisen out of tantric Buddhist ] practices.{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}}


The earliest Dzogchen sources appeared in the first half of the 9th century, with a series of short texts attributed to Indian saints.{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}}{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=4}} The most of important of these are the "Eighteen Great Scriptures", which are today known as the ] and are attributed to Indian masters like ], ] and ]''.{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}}''{{sfnp|Germano|1994|p=234-235}} The later Semdé compilation tantra titled the ''All-Creating King (], kun byed rgyal po)'' is one of the most important and widely quoted of all Dzogchen scriptures.{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}}
The instructions that point to the Dzogchen state are sometimes described as a set of "inner" or "heart" (Wylie: ''snying thig'') teachings. Tibetan Buddhist ascetics consider that the state pointed to by these teachings is very difficult to describe, and can only be discovered through the ] and ] by an authentic ] Master.<ref>], ''Essence of the Tree Statements: Based on an Oral Advice given by Khyenrab Chökyi Özer'', pp.39-57, 66-70</ref>


Germano sees the early Dzogchen of the Tibetan Empire period as characterized by the rejection of normative ] practice. Germano calls the early Dzogchen traditions "pristine Great Perfection" since it is marked "by the absence of presentations of detailed ritual and contemplative technique" as well as a lack of funerary, charnel ground and death imagery found in some Buddhist tantras.{{sfnp|Germano|2005b}} According to Germano, instead of tantric ] methods, early Dzogchen mainly focused on simple calming (]) contemplations leading to a "technique free immersion in the bare immediacy of one's own deepest levels of awareness".{{sfnp|Germano|1994}} Similarly, Christopher Hatchell explains that since for early Dzogchen "all beings and all appearances are themselves the singular enlightened gnosis of the buddha All Good (Samantabhadra, ''Kuntu Zangpo'')", there is nothing to do but to recognize this inherent awakened mind, relax and let go.{{sfnp|Hatchell|2014|p=52}}
Although Dzogchen cannot be separated by the Buddhist or Bön tradition, very often teachers emphasize the non religious character of Dzogchen. However, the Buddhist or Bön traditional framework is never negated. ] says that, as our primordial nature, Dzogchen has existed since the beginning of time and is pointed to by various masters throughout the Universe.<ref>Norbu (1999)</ref>


During the ] (10th century to the early 12th century) many new Vajrayāna texts, teachings and practices were introduced from India.{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}}{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}} At this time, the ] school and its Dzogchen traditions reinvented themselves, producing many new scriptures and developing new practices influenced by the Sarma traditions.{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} These new influences were absorbed into Dzogchen through the practice of finding ] that were discovered by "treasure revealers" ('']'').{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546}} These tantric elements included ] practices, visionary practices like ], and a focus on death-motifs and practices (such as funerary and relic rituals, ] teachings, ], etc).{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2546-2547}}{{sfnp|Hatchell|2014|p=9-10}}
==Background==
According to one tradition, the first master of the Buddhist Dzogchen lineage in our world was ] (Wylie: ''dga' rab rdo rje'', Sanskrit *''prahevajra'') from ] (Wylie:. ''o rgyan'').


These new methods and teachings were part of several new traditions such as the "Secret Cycle" (''gsang skor''),{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2547}} "Ultra Pith" (''yang tig''),{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2547}} "Brahmin's tradition" (''bram ze'i lugs''),{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2547}} the "] Series,"{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} and especially the "Instruction Class series" ('']''),{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} which culminated in the "Seminal Heart" (''snying thig''), which emerged in the late 11th and early 12th century. The most influential texts in this period are ] (''rgyud bcu bdun'').{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}}{{sfnp|Stewart MacKenzie|2014}} The most important scholarly figure in the systematization of these new traditions was ] (1308–1364).{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=9}}
===Indian originators===
From Garab Dorje, Dzogchen is said to have been passed down as listed following. Often, practitioners are said to have lived for hundreds of years, and there are inconsistencies in the lifespan dates given, making it impossible to construct a sensible timeline.


Later figures who also revealed important treasure text cycles include ], (1326–1386, who revealed the '']''), ] (1337–1409), ] (1730–1798), who revealed the influential '']'' and ] (1835–1904).{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2548}}
# ] (Tib. ''Garab Dorje'', Wylie: ''dga' rab rdo rje'') 184 BCE to 57 CE
# ] (Tib. ''Jampal Shenyen'', Wylie: '' 'jam dpal bshes gnyen'') 2nd century BCE (elder contemporary of Prahevajra)
# ] (Tib. ''Palgyi Senge'', Wylie: '' dpal gyi senge'') 3rd century CE (500 years before Vimalamitra)<ref>''The Tantra that Reveals the Intrinsic Buddha Mind'', translated in :- Erik Pema Kunsang (translator) : ''Wellsprings of the Great Perfection''. Rangjung Yeshe Publications, Hong Kong, 2006. p. 215</ref>
# ] (Tib. ''Pema Jungne'' or ''Guru Rinpoche'') fl. mid-8th CE
# ] (Tib. ''Drime Shenyen'', Wylie: ''dri med bshes gnyen'') fl. late 8th CE
# ] (Tib. ''Nampar Nangdze Lotsawa'', Wylie: ''rnam par snang mdzad lo tsa ba'' ) fl. late 8th CE


==Etymology and concepts==
===In Tibet===
''Dzogchen'' is composed of two terms:{{sfnp|van Schaik|2011b}}
Padmasambhava (Tib. ''Pema Jugne'' or ''Guru Rinpoche'', Wylie: ''padma 'byung gnas'', ''gu ru rin po che'') is considered the source of the Buddhist Dzogchen teachings in Tibet (Tib. ''bod''), which are the heart of the Nyingma (Wylie: ''rnying ma'') tradition, with which they are primarily associated. Dzogchen has also been practiced in the ] (Wylie: ''bka' brgyud'') lineage, beginning with ] (Wylie: ''mi la ras pa'') and most notably by the Third ], ] (Wylie:. ''rang byung rdo rje''). The ], ], and ] (present) ]s (Wylie: ''ta la'i bla ma'') are also noted Dzogchen masters, although their adoption of the practice of Dzogchen has been a source of controversy among more conservative members of the ] (Wylie: ''dge lugs'') tradition.<ref>"The Shugden Affair: Origins of a Controversy (Part I)" by Georges Dreyfus. Official website of the Office of His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama.<sup></sup></ref>
* ''rdzogs'' – perfection, completion
* ''chen'' – great


According to the ], the term ''dzogchen'' may be a rendering of the ] term ''mahāsandhi''.{{sfnp|Dalai Lama|2004|p=208}}
In the Bön religion, three separate Dzogchen traditions are attested and continue to be practiced: A-tri (Wylie: ''a khrid''), Dzogchen (Wylie: ''rdzogs chen'', here referring narrowly to the specific lineage within the Bön tradition), and Shang Shung Nyen Gyu (Wylie: ''zhang zhung snyan rgyud''). All are traced back to the founder of Bön, ] (Wylie: ''ston pa gshen rab mi bo che'').


The term initially referred to the "highest perfection" of Vajrayāna ]. Specifically, it refers to the stage after the deity visualisation has been dissolved and one rests in the natural state of the innately ].{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} According to ], in the 8th-century tantra ''Sarvabuddhasamāyoga,'' the term refers to "a realization of the nature of reality" which arises through the practice of tantric ] practices which produce bliss.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2011b}}
==Concepts==
In the 10th and 11th centuries, when ''Dzogchen'' emerged as a separate vehicle to liberation in the ] tradition,{{sfnp|van Schaik|2011b}} the term was used synonymously with the Sanskrit term ''ati yoga'' (primordial yoga).{{sfnp|Keown|2003|p=24}}
The essence of the Dzogchen teaching is the direct transmission of knowledge from master to disciple. ] epitomized the Dzogchen teaching in three principles, known as the Three Statements of Garab Dorje (Tsik Sum Né Dek):


===''Rigpa'' (knowledge) and ''ma rigpa'' (delusion)===
#Direct introduction to one's own nature (Tib. ''ngo rang thog tu sprod pa'')
]
#Not remaining in doubt concerning this unique state (Tib. ''thag gcig thog tu bcad pa'')
{{main|Rigpa}}
#Continuing to remain in this state (Tib. ''gdeng grol thog tu bca' pa'')
'']'' (Sanskrit: ''vidyā'', "knowledge") is a central concept in Dzogchen. According to Ācārya Malcolm Smith:


{{blockquote|A text from the ''Heart Essence of Vimalamitra'' called the ''Lamp Summarizing Vidyā'' (''Rig pa bsdus pa’i sgronma'') defines vidyā in the following way: "...vidyā is knowing, clear, and unchanging" In Sanskrit, the term vidyā and all its cognates imply consciousness, knowing, knowledge, science, intelligence, and so on. Simply put, vidyā means unconfused knowledge of the basis that is its own state.{{sfnp|Smith|2016|p=12}} }}
In accordance with these three statements, Garab Dorje's direct disciple Manjushrimitra (Tib. '''jam dpal bshes gnyen'') classified all the Dzogchen teachings transmitted by his master into three series:


''Ma rigpa'' (]) is the opposite of ''rigpa'' or knowledge. ''Ma rigpa'' is ignorance, delusion, or unawareness, the failure to recognize the nature of the basis. An important theme in Dzogchen texts is explaining how ignorance arises from the basis or ], which is associated with ''ye shes'' or pristine consciousness.{{sfnp|Smith|2016|p=14}} Automatically arising unawareness (''lhan skyes ma rig pa'') exists because the basis has a natural cognitive potentiality which gives rise to appearances. This is the ground for ] and ].{{sfnp|Smith|2016|pp=15-16}}
# ] (Wylie: ''sems sde''; Skt: ''cittavarga''), the series of Mind, that focuses on the introduction to one's own primordial state;
#] (Wylie: ''klong sde''; Skt: ''abhyantaravarga''), the series of Space, that focuses on developing the capacity to gain familiarity with the state and remove doubts; and
# ] (Wylie: ''man ngag sde'', Skt: ''upadeshavarga''), the series of secret Oral Instructions, focusing on the practices in which one engages after gaining confidence in knowledge of the state.


=== Traditional exegesis ===
Tulku Urgyen explains what is meant by "gaining confidence in liberation": "The third analogy of the liberation of thoughts is described as being like a thief entering an empty house. This is called stability or perfection in training. A thief entering an empty house does not gain anything, and the house does not lose anything. All thought activity is naturally liberated without any harm or benefit whatsoever. This is the meaning of gaining confidence in liberation."<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, page 314.</ref>
'']'' (''Dorje Sempa Nyinggi Melong'', ''rdo rje sems dpa' snying gi me long''), a major ], explains the term ''Dzog'' (Perfection) as follows:


{{blockquote|Because '']'' is perfect wisdom in the realm beyond effort, it is perfection. Because meditation is perfect stainless wisdom in the realm beyond concepts, it is perfection. Because behavior is perfect universal wisdom in the realm beyond correction, it is perfection. Because view is perfect non-conceptual wisdom in the realm beyond achievement, it is perfection. Because fruit is the perfect twenty-five wisdoms in the realm beyond frame of reference, it is perfection.{{sfnp|Valby|2016|p=49}}}}
The Dzogchen teachings focus on three terms: View, Meditation, and Action. To see directly the absolute state of our mind is the ''View''; the way of stabilizing that View and making it an unbroken experience is ''Meditation''; and integrating that View into our daily life is what is meant by ''Action''.


''The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva'' explains that Dzogchen is "great" because:{{sfnp|Valby|2016|p=50}}
Dzogchen is one of several approaches to ].


* It is the pinnacle of all vehicles, views, meditations, behaviors, goals.
This open awareness of Dzogchen, or ] (also comparable to the ]), is said to lie at the heart of all things and indeed of all Dzogchen practice and is nothing less than "... primordial wisdom's recognition of itself as unbounded wholeness... the incorruptible mindnature." <ref>Klein, Wangyal, ''Unbounded Wholeness'', Oxford University Press, 2006, p. v</ref> This reflexive awareness of Enlightenment is said to be inherent within all beings, but not to be attainable by thought.<ref>Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p. vi.</ref> Namkhai Norbu points out that Dzogchen "refers to the true primordial state of every individual and not to any transcendent reality."<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, page 297.</ref> In discussing the Nyingma text, the ] Tantra (''kunjed gyalpo'' = 'the all-creating king', synoymous with ] Buddha<ref>Chogyal Namkhai Norbu, Adriano Clemente, ''The Supreme Source: The Fundamental Tantra of the Dzogchen Semde Kunjed Gyalpo'', Snow Lion, New York, 1999, p. 14</ref>), Namkhai Norbu explains that Kunjed Gyalpo is in fact "beyond" the dualism inherent in the notion of an 'individual'. He writes:
* It is "never moving from the natural state."
<blockquote>
* It functions "without obstacles in the realm beyond change."
The transmission of knowledge comes from the state of ] that has never been stained and has never been hindered. This is Adibuddha, or "primordial Buddha", Kunjed Gyalpo... The state of Kunjed Gyalpo is knowledge, and in knowledge there is not even the concept of "one and two", otherwise we have already entered into dualism. Also, the concept of "individual" presupposes dualistic vision. But Samantabhadra is beyond all this...<ref>Chogyal Namkhai Norbu, Adriano Clemente, ''The Supreme Source: The Fundamental Tantra of the Dzogchen Semde Kunjed Gyalpo'', Snow Lion Publications, New York, 1999, p. 235</ref>
* It manifests "beyond concepts in the realm beyond attachment."
</blockquote>
* It manifests "without attachment in the realm beyond desire"
* It manifests "in great bliss in the realm beyond speech."
* It is "the source that pervades pure enlightenment."
* It is "non-substantial ''rigpa'' beyond action and effort."
* It remains "in equality without moving from the realm of total bliss" and "without moving from the essential meaning."
* It exists "everywhere without being a dimension of grasping."
* It is "the essence of everything without being established with words and syllables."


==Three series==
Klein and Wangyal comment on the ultimate "one taste" and dynamic stillness of the Dzogchen state:
The Three Series of Dzogchen ({{bo|t=རྫོགས་ཆེན་སྡེ་གསུམ་|w=rdzogs chen sde gsum}}) are a traditional ] classification which divides the teachings of the ] school's Dzogchen tradition into three series, divisions or sections. These three are: the '']'' ('Mind Series'), the '']'' ('Space Series') and the '']'' ('Instruction Series').<!-- these should be summarized briefly below --> Traditional accounts of the ] school attribute this schema to the Indian master ] (c. 8th century).{{sfnp|Dudjom Rinpoche|1991|loc=vol. 1, pp. 493–498}}


According to modern ], this ] schema actually developed in the literature of the Instruction Series (c. 11th century onwards) as a way to distinguish and categorize the various Dzogchen teachings at the time.{{sfnp|Germano|1994}}{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=8}} According to Instruction Series texts, the Mind Series is based on understanding that one's own mind is the basis of all appearances and that this basis, called mind itself, is empty and luminous. The Space series meanwhile is focused on ] (Skt. ''śūnyatā,'' T. ''stong-pa nyid''). Finally, the Instruction Series itself is seen as the most direct kind of realization, without the need to meditate on emptiness or mind.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=8}} Over time, the Instruction Series came to dominate the Dzogchen tradition and it remains the series that is most widely practiced and taught while the other two series are rarely practiced today (with the exception of a few masters like ]).{{sfnp|Germano|1994}}{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=8}}
<blockquote>... cause and effect, sentient beings and Buddhas, subjects and objects, path and goal are ultimately revealed to be of one taste: movement from one to the other is no movement at all, really, but a dynamic stillness."<ref>Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p. 48</ref></blockquote>


According to ], the three series are three modes of presenting and introducing the state of Dzogchen. Norbu states that Mennagde is a more direct form of introduction, Longde is closely associated with symbolic forms of introducing Dzogchen and Semde is more focused on oral forms of introduction.{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|pp=43-44}} Germano writes that the Mind Series serves as a classification for the earlier texts and forms of Dzogchen "prior to the development of the Seminal Heart movements" which focused on meditations based on tantric understandings of ] (''byang chub kyi sems'').{{sfnp|Germano|1994|p=288}} This referred to the ultimate nature of the mind, which is empty (''stong pa''), luminous ('''od gsal ba''), and pure.{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014|p={{page needed|date=January 2022}}}} According to Germano, the Space and Instruction Series are associated with later (historical) developments of Dzogchen "which increasingly experimented with re-incorporating ] centered on the body and vision, as well as the consequent philosophical shifts his became interwoven with."{{sfnp|Germano|1994|p=288}}
There can be found within Dzogchen a sense of Reality as limitless wholeness, a multiplicity which is yet all of one "taste", which is a borderless wholeness. According to Lopon Tenzin Namdak, it is unconditioned and permanent, changeless, not originated from causes and conditions, blissful, and the base or support of numerous exalted qualities.<ref>Klein, Wangyal, 2006, pp. 68-69</ref> "It is at once base, path, and fruit".<ref name="Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p. 118">Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p. 118</ref> "That reality, unbounded wholeness, is naturally complete." <ref name="Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p. 118"/> Also: "...the essence and base of self-arisen wisdom is the allbase, that primordial open awareness is the base, and that recognition of this base is not separate from the primordial wisdom itself. ...that open awareness is itself authentic and its authenticity is a function of it being aware of, or recognizing itself as, the base. ...The reflexively self-aware primordial wisdom is itself open awareness (''rigpa''), inalienably one with unbounded wholeness."<ref>Klein and Wangyal, 2006, p.109</ref>


==Base, Path, and Fruit==
In dzogchen teachings, the buddha-nature is viewed as the basis of all worlds and phenomena, in the sense that the idea of "beings" and "worlds" only arises when one, out of ignorance, ignores the mind's essential condition, manufactures reference points, and clings to them as if they are real.<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, pages 308-309.</ref>
], a Tibetan symbol which can symbolize various triple part ideas, such as the ground, path and fruit]]
In Dzogchen, there are three central aspects: the ''Base'', the ''Path'' and the ''Fruit''. The ''Base'' represents the original, unchanging state of existence, characterized by emptiness, clarity, and compassionate energy.


The ''Path'' comprises three key elements: view, practice, and conduct. The view focuses on gaining a direct understanding of the pure nature of the mind. Practice involves meditation techniques and specific Dzogchen methods. Conduct means integrating these practices into daily life.
===Opposing views===
The views of the Dzogchen school are not endorsed by all Tibetan Buddhists. In fact, ] ] contrasts his own view that primordial wisdom does not arise from causes with that of ], who states that without consciousness, there is no understanding.<ref>Klein and Wangyal, page 107.</ref> Some critics claim that the views of the Dzogchen school of philosophy conflict with those of ] and to the views of other prominent Buddhist thinkers such as the logician ].<ref>Klein and Wangyal, page 45, see also page 135.</ref> However, ] and ] argue that the views of the Dzogchen school are in fact in accord with the view of Madhyamaka.<ref>''Mipham's Beacon of Certainty: Illuminating the View of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection Studies in Indian and Tibetan Buddhism''</ref>{{Clarify|date=February 2009}} Dzogchen meditative techniques are, however, consistent with Madhyamaka.<ref name="B. Alan Wallace 2005, page 203"/>


The ''Fruit'' represents the ultimate goal – realizing one's true nature and achieving Buddhahood. This involves discovering the inherent state of the base and integrating all experiences with one's awareness of it. Ultimately, it leads to complete non-dual awareness, transcending egoic limitations, and dissolving dualities.
Germano (1992: p.&nbsp;4) conveys how Longchenpa codified the now normalized, institutionalized and orthodox view of the Nyingma Dzochenpa from its foundations of Madhyamaka, ] (]), ], ], ] (specifically ]) traditions, holds that:
<blockquote>"...one can profitably interpret the overall system of thought as a very innovative reinterpretation of the mainstream exoteric Indian Buddhist schools of "the Middle Way" (Madhyamika) and "Mind Only" (Cittamatra) that not only revives the themes of the so-called "Buddha-nature" or "enlightened nucleus of realized-energy" (Tathagagarbha) literature in a much more sophisticated form, but also takes the tantric discourse and transforms it into a model for a new understanding of philosophical thought and literary expression totally eliminating the boundaries between exoteric philosophy (emphasizing analytical logic) and esoteric tantras (emphasizing contemplation and "aesthetic" issues)."<ref name="vajrayana.faithweb.com">Germano, David Francis (1992). "Poetic thought, the intelligent Universe, and the mystery of self: The Tantric synthesis of ''rDzogs Chen'' in fourteenth century Tibet." The University of Wisconsin, Madison. Doctoral thesis. Source: (accessed: Friday December 18, 2009)</ref></blockquote>


===Logic and the syllogism=== === The Base or Ground ===
] with his consort Samantabhadri. These images are said to symbolize the union of space (emptiness, the female aspect) and clarity - awareness (male).{{sfnp|Nyoshul Khenpo|2016}}]]
Dzogchen, though a learned and literate tradition de-emphasizes and deconstructs the importance of conceptuality, scholasticism and rhetoric even though it has its own sophisticated technical language, treasury of poetic song and literary masterpieces, educational ] and modalities to convey its philosophical constructions and philosophical liberations. This tension is evident and to be seen in how the traditions of ], Bon Logic and the ] are engaged in markedly different ways in the lineages of Dzogchen.
{{main article|Ground (Dzogchen)}}


A key concept in Dzogchen is the "base", "ground", or "primordial state" (Tibetan: ''gzhi'', Sanskrit: ''āśraya''{{sfnp|Dudjom Rinpoche|1991|p=354}}), also called the general ground (''spyi gzhi'') or the original ground (''gdod ma'i gzhi'').{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=52}} The basis is the original state "before realization produced ''buddha''s and nonrealization produced sentient beings". It is atemporal and unchanging and yet it is "noetically potent", giving rise to mind (''sems,'' Skt. '']''), consciousness (''shes pa,'' Skt. '']''), delusion (''ma rig pa,'' Skt. '']'') and knowledge ('']'', Skt. ''vidyā'').{{sfnp|Smith|2016|pp=12–13}} Furthermore, Hatchell notes that the Dzogchen tradition portrays ultimate reality as something which is "beyond the concepts of one and many."{{sfnp|Hatchell|2014|p=56}}
Germano (1992: p.&nbsp;4) in his ] supervised by the ] and ], ] (b. 1923) discusses the typical view of the Dzogchen tradition towards the "syllogism" and by implication Buddhist Logic:
<blockquote>"The tradition is especially striking in its implicit development of a model of rigorous philosophical thought that refuses to be reduced to syllogistic reasoning (though utilizing it as a secondary hermeneutical tool) or dismissed as mere "aesthetics" as it treats Buddhist Tantra as a serious philosophical innovation that must be utilized to reinterpret previous traditional scholasticism, in stark contrast to extend traditional scholastic methodologies into Tantra, and deny the revolution of "poetic thought" they may embody."<ref name="vajrayana.faithweb.com"/></blockquote>


===Three aspects of energy=== ====Three qualities====
According to the Dzogchen-teachings, the ''Ground'' or ] has three qualities:{{sfnp|Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche|2001|p=44}}{{sfnp|Pettit|1999|p=78-79}}
]]]
* ''ngo bo'', "essence", oneness or emptiness ({{bo|w=ngo bo stong pa}}),
Sentient beings have their energy manifested in three aspects:
* ''rang bzhin'', "nature", luminosity, lucidity or clarity (as in the ] of the ]) ({{bo|w=rang bzhin gsal ba}}),
* ''thugs rje'', "power", universal ] ({{bo|w=thugs rje kun khyab}}), unobstructed ({{bo|w=ma 'gags pa}}).


] points out that this ''Ground'' is both a static potential and a dynamic unfolding. They give a ] translation, to avoid any essentialist associations, since
# "dang" (Wylie: '''')
{{blockquote|''ngo-bo'' (facticity) has nothing to do with nor can even be reduced to the (essentialist) categories of substance and quality; ''rang-bzhin'' (actuality) remains open-dimensional, rather than being or turning into a rigid essence despite its being what it is; and that ''thugs-rje'' (resonance) is an atemporal sensitivity and response, rather than a distinct and narrowly circumscribed operation.{{sfnp|Goodman|Davidson|1992|p=14}}}}
# "rolpa" (Wylie: '''')
# '"tsal" (Wylie: '''')


The 19th–20th-century Tibetan Buddhist scholar, Shechen Gyaltsap Gyurme Pema Namgyal, sees the Buddha-nature as ultimate truth,{{sfnp|Rabjam|2007|p=21}} nirvana, which is constituted of profundity, primordial peace and radiance:
Energy of an individual on the ''dang'' level is essentially infinite and formless.
{{blockquote|Buddha-nature is immaculate. It is profound, serene, unfabricated suchness, an uncompounded expanse of luminosity; nonarising, unceasing, primordial peace, spontaneously present nirvana.{{sfnp|Rabjam|2007|p=4}} }}


==== Direct introduction ====
In the form of ''rolpa'', energy forms appear as though seen with "the eye of the mind". Many practices of ] and yangthig work on the basis of functioning of the rolpa aspect
{{main|Esoteric transmission}}
of individual's energy. It is also the original source of the ] deities visualized in Buddhist ] transformational practices and of manifestations of 100 peaceful and wrathful deities in ] and ] practices.
Direct introduction is called the "Empowerment of Awareness" ({{bo|w=rig pa'i rtsal dbang}}, pronounced "rigpay sall wahng"), a technical term employed within the Dzogchen lineages for a particular lineage of empowerment propagated by ]. This empowerment consists of the direct introduction of the student to the intrinsic nature of their own mind-essence, ], by their empowering master.{{sfnp|Anon|2005}}


==== Pointing-out instruction ====
''Tsal'' is the manifestation of the energy of the individual him or herself, as apparently an "external" world.<ref>Norbu (1999), pp. 99, 100, 101</ref> The mind of a sentient being is also tsal energy when it is "contaminated" by the karmic "winds" (Tibetan: '']'').{{Citation needed|date=February 2007}} Certain practices stop the karmic winds of the body and therefore allow the energy of tsal to be experienced by itself.
{{main|Pointing-out instruction}}
In Dzogchen tradition, pointing-out instruction ({{bo|t=ངོ་སྤྲོད་ཀྱི་གདམས་པ་|w=ngo sprod kyi gdams pa|s=ngo-trö kyi dam-pa}}) is also referred to as "pointing out the nature of mind" ({{bo|t=སེམས་ཀྱི་ངོ་སྤྲོད་|w=sems kyi ngo sprod|s=sem kyi ngo-trö}}), "pointing out transmission", or "introduction to the nature of mind".{{sfnp|Hayward|2008|p=106}} The pointing-out instruction (''ngo sprod'') is an introduction to the ].


===The Path===
The interplay of these energies explain the "]" or "]" (Tibetan: '''') phenomenon, the logistics of the ] doctrine, the ] ], ] visions, ] (Tibetan: ''''), ] and the logistics of the doctrine of '']'', they also explain the "play" (Sanskrit: '']''; Tibetan: '''') of the ] (Tibetan: ) and the arising of a ']' '''without''' a ] or a ] that is the particular "view" (Tibetan: '''') and hallmark of Buddhism.
There are three major divisions of the Dzogchen path, known as the "Three Dharmas of the Path."{{sfnp|Norbu|2012}} These are ''tawa'', ''gompa'', and ''chöpa''. Namkhai Norbu translates these three terms as 'view,' 'practice,' and 'conduct.'{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|loc=ch. 7, pp. 109-148}}


===External world versus continuum=== ====Garab Dorje's three statements====
] (c. 665), an Indian sage purportedly from ]. He is traditionally held to be the first human teacher of Dzogchen.]]
According to Dzogchen teachings, energy of an individual is essentially totally formless and free from any ]. However, ], contained in the ] of the individual's ] (Sanskrit: ''citta santana''; Tibetan: ''sems rgyud'') give rise to two kinds of forms:
] (c. 665) epitomized the Dzogchen teaching in three principles, known as "Striking the Vital Point in Three Statements" (''Tsik Sum Né Dek''), said to be his last words. They give in short the development a student has to undergo:{{sfnp|Dudjom Rinpoche|2009}}{{sfnp|Patrul Rinpoche|2008}}


Garab Dorje's three statements were integrated into the ''Nyingthig'' traditions, the most popular of which in the '']'' by ] (1730–1798).{{sfnp|Buswell|Lopez|2014}} The statements are:
* forms that the individual experiences as his or her body, voice and mind and
* forms that the individual experiences as an external environment.


# '''Introducing directly the face of rigpa itself''' (''ngo rang tok tu tré''). Dudjom Rinpoche states this refers to: "Introducing directly the face of the naked mind as the rigpa itself, the innate primordial wisdom."
It is maintained that there is nothing external or separate from the individual. What appears as a world of apparently external phenomena, is the energy of the individual him/her self. Everything that manifests in the individual's field of experience is a ] (Sanskrit: ''santana''; Tibetan: ''rgyud''). This is the ] that is discovered in the Dzogchen practice.<ref>Norbu (1999), pp. 99, 101</ref>
# '''Deciding upon one thing and one thing only''' (''tak chik tok tu ché''). Dudjom states: "Because all phenomena, whatever manifests, whether saṃsāra or nirvāṇa, are none other than the rigpa’s own play, there is complete and direct decision that there is nothing other than the abiding of the continual flow of rigpa."
# '''Confidence directly in the liberation of rising thoughts''' (''deng drol tok tu cha''). Dudjom comments: "In the recognition of ''namtok'' , whatever arises, whether gross or subtle, there is direct confidence in the simultaneity of the arising and dissolution in the expanse of dharmakāya, which is the unity of rigpa and ''śūnyatā''."


====View====
===Causality and interdependent origination===
{{main|View (Dzogchen)}}
In Dzogchen teachings the ] and any kind of ] is considered illusory: "(One says), 'All these (configurations of events and meanings) come about and disappear according to dependent origination.' But, like a burnt seed, since a nonexistent (result) does not come about from a nonexistent (cause), cause and effect do not exist.
]


] Dzogchen texts use unique terminology to describe the Dzogchen view (Tib. ''tawa''). Some of these terms deal with the different elements and features of the mind and are drawn from classic Buddhist thought. The generic term for consciousness is ''shes pa'' (''Skt. ]''), and includes the six sense consciousnesses. ], impure and dualistic forms of consciousness are generally referred to with terms such as ''sems'' (''citta,'' mind), ''yid'' ('']'') and ''blo'' (''buddhi''). On the other hand, ] or ] forms of consciousness are described with terms such as ''ye shes'' ('']'', 'pristine consciousness') and ''shes rab'' (], wisdom).{{sfnp|Smith|2016|p=12-14}} According to ], two significant terms used in Dzogchen literature is the ground (''gzhi'') and gnosis (''rig pa''), which represent the "] and ] aspects of the nirvanic state" respectively.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=52}}
"Being obsessed with entities, one's experiencing itself , which discriminates each cause and effect, appears as if it were cause and condition." <ref>from byang chub sems bsgom pa by ]. ''Primordial experience''. An Introduction to rDzogs-chen Meditation, pp.&nbsp;60, 61</ref>


Nyingma Dzogchen literature also describes nirvana as the "expanse" or "space" (''klong'' or ''dbyings'') or the "expanse of Dharma" (''chos dbyings'', Sanskrit: '']''). The term '']'' (Dharma body) is also often associated with these terms in Dzogchen,{{sfnp|Germano|1994}} as explained by ]:
This corresponds to the assertion in the ] (Sanskrit: Prajñāpāramitā Hridaya Sūtra), that there is no karma, no law of cause and effect. The assertion was made by ] ] in a teaching for the great ] ], given before multitude of beings, on request of Buddha ]. After the teaching Buddha Shakyamuni greatly praised the wisdom of Avalokiteshvara's words and the beings present rejoiced.<ref>Norbu (1999), p. 42</ref>


{{blockquote|Dharmakaya is like space. You cannot say there is any limit to space in any direction. No matter how far you go, you never reach a point where space stops and that is the end of space. Space is infinite in all directions; so is dharmakaya. Dharmakaya is all-pervasive and totally infinite, beyond any confines or limitations. This is so for the dharmakaya of all buddhas. There is no individual dharmakaya for each buddha, as there is no individual space for each country.{{sfnp|Kunsang|2012|p=3}} }}
===Guardians===
All teachings have energies that have special relationships with them. These energies are guardians of the teachings. The energies are iconographically depicted as they were perceived by yogis who had contact with them. The ]s most associated with Dzogchen are ] in the Nyingma and ] in the Bön tradition. The iconographic forms were shaped by perceptions and also by the culture of those who saw the original manifestation and by the development of the tradition. However the guardians are not merely symbols. The pictures show actual beings.<ref name="Norbu 1999, p. 129">Norbu (1999), p. 129</ref>


The Dzogchen ] of the ] (''man ngag sde'') is classically explained through the ]. These can be found in the ''String of Pearls Tantra'' (''Mu tig phreng ba''),{{sfnp|Smith|2016|p=9}} the ''Great Commentary by Vimalamitra'' as well as in ]'s ''Treasury of Word and Meaning'' (''Tsik Dön Dzö).''{{sfnp|Germano|1994}}
===Well-being and health===
Dzogchen teachings maintain that the quality of people's lives is best when the internal ]s are balanced.<ref>Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche (2002), p. 21</ref> The body is healthy when the elements are balanced.<ref></ref> They see the best way to balance the elements as abiding in the natural state.<ref>] (2002), p. 121</ref>


==Practice== ==== Practice ====
{{main|Practice (Dzogchen)}}
Up to and including tregchöd (see below), Dzogchen meditative practices are parallel to and often identical with ].<ref name="Reginald Ray 2001, page 304"/>
] mural depicting Dzogchen ] practices such as ] which work with the ] channels]]
]
]'' practice of ].]]


Dzogchen practice (''gompa'') relies on the Dzogchen view which is a "direct, non-dual, non-conceptual knowledge" of the pure nature.{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=110}} This is achieved through one's relationship with a ] or ] who introduces one to our own primordial state and provides instruction on how to practice. This "direct introduction" and transmission from a Dzogchen master is considered absolutely essential.{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=112-116}}
] ] and other teachers provide different practical sets of instructions for the practice of Dzogchen. The central practice of Dzogchen teaching is Dzogchen 'contemplation' (Tib. ''ting nge 'dzin'') which is rendered in English as "The View". "The View" when stabilized or unbroken, is the ] perception of the Dzogchenpa, or Dzogchen practitioner. That is, a continuous 'contemplation' through all activity, waking and sleeping as a lived experience. According to some Dzogchenpa (in particular, ]), Dzogchen is a 'practice', rather than a 'doctrine' or 'religion', and does not require the practitioner (Sanskrit: '']'') to be anywhere special; in fact, to be normally active while in a state of primordial or natural awareness is the ultimate practice of Dzogchen.


The Dzogchen tradition contains numerous systems of practices, including various forms of meditation, tantric yogas and unique Dzogchen methods.{{sfnp|Germano|2005|p=2547, 2548}} The earliest form of Dzogchen practice (the ''Semde'', "Mind" series) generally emphasized non-symbolic "formless" practices (as opposed to ]).{{sfnp|Germano|1994|p=225-226}}
Having distinguished rigpa from sems,<ref>http://earlytibet.com/about/hashang-mahayana Accessed June 23, 2010</ref> silent and prolonged meditation (Tib. ''sgom pa'') is also used to allow the obscurations (Sanskrit: '']'') of the mind to dissipate like clouds dissolving to reveal the empty, luminous sky. Through meditation, it is possible to remove the conditioning of our ] (Sanskrit: '']'') and to glimpse and work to stabilize rigpa.


Later developments led to the main Dzogchen practices becoming more infused with various ] and tantric methods like deity yoga, semdzin (holding the mind), rushen (separating samsara and nirvana), and ] (''lhagthong''), which are all seen as skillful means to achieve the basic state of contemplation of the primordially pure state.{{sfnp|Germano|1994}}{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=114}}{{sfnp|Achard|2015}}
===Tregchöd and thödgal===
Once the state of non-dual contemplation has been arrived at, one has to continue in it. This continuation has two levels of practice: ] and ] (also sometimes spelled thogal). These are main practices presented in the ] series (Oral Instruction Series) of the dzogchen teachings.<ref name="Norbu 1999, p. 129"/>


The key Dzogchen meditation methods, which are unique to the tradition are '']'' ("cutting tension") and '']'', along with unique Dzogchen teachings on awakening in the '']'' (intermediate state between death and ]).{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=98-99}} In ''trekchö,'' one first identifies the innate pure awareness, and then sustains recognition of it in all activities.{{sfnp|Dahl|2009|p=255}}{{sfnp|Stewart MacKenzie|2014}} In ''tögal'' ("crossing over"), a yogi works with various gazes and postures which lead to various forms of visions (in ] or through ]).{{sfnp|Smith|2016|p=26}}{{sfnp|Reynolds|2005}}{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=101}}
In both the Bön and Buddhist Dzogchen traditions, ] is considered to be an important part of tregchöd.<ref>] (2002), p. 130</ref>


The most comprehensive study of sky-gazing meditation, known as '']'' or '']'', has been written by Flavio A. Geisshuesler. Although the term ''thod rgal'' is generally translated as "Direct Transcendence" or "Leap Over," Geisshuesler argues that the expression really means "Skullward Leap" as it consists of the Tibetan words ''thod'' ("above," "over," but also "head wrapper," "turban," "skull") and ''rgal'' ("to leap over").<ref name="Geisshuesler">{{cite book | last=Geisshuesler | first=Flavio | title=Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism | date=2024 | isbn=978-1-350-42881-2 | location=London | publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing}}</ref>{{rp|9}} In the larger Tibetan cultural area, it is the most elevated part of the human body—the skull or, its extension in the form of a turban-like headdress—that allows the religious practitioner to gain access to the source of vitality located in the heavens. Both the head and the headdress have deep resonances with animals—particularly deer and sheep—which are central for the sky-gazing practice because of their ability to ascend and descend vertically to move in between various realms of existence.<ref name="Geisshuesler"/>
Thödgal represents more a fruition than a practice itself. There are methods prepared in the event of a psychotic break to bring the practitioner back to sanity.<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, pages 318-319.</ref>


====Conduct====
In contrast to other kinds of tantric practices, there is no intentional visualization; rather, imagery appears spontaneously using secondary conditions such as darkness or light. Eventually a practitioner has experiences which are viewed as knowing the subtle energies of one's being. These have the qualities of earth, water, fire, air and space (see ]). Throughout the retreat, a practitioner is believed to be approaching an experience which is entirely unconditioned.<ref>Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, pages 319-322.</ref>
{{further|Chöd|Ngagpa}}
Norbu notes that "Tantric practices may be used as secondary practices by the practitioner of Dzogchen, alongside the principal practice of contemplation." Similarly, physical yoga (Tib. '']'') may also be used as supporting practices.{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=118-119}}
{{expand section|date=September 2021}}


=== The Fruit ===
Thödgal relies on esoteric anatomy including the avadhuti (also known as the center channel or sushumna in Hindu parlance) and heart chakra. Along with the fact that Dzogchen is based on a class of literature called the tantras, this indicates why Dzogchen is considered a tantric system as opposed to sutra systems such as Zen. This is not to say that Dzogchen is a part of general Vajrayana. Vajrayana is a path of transformation. Dzogchen, an independent vehicle in its own right, is a path of self-liberation.<ref>Chogyal Namkhai Norbu, ''Dzogchen Teachings''. Snow Lion 2006, page 43.</ref>
====Self-liberation====
According to Namkhai Norbu, in Dzogchen, "to become realized simply means to discover and manifest that which from the very beginning has been our own true condition: the Zhi (gzhi) or Base."{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=149}} Since the basis, the path of practice and the fruit or result of practice are non-dual from the ultimate perspective, in Dzogchen understands the path as not separate from the result or fruit of the path (i.e. ]). Once a Dzogchen practitioner has recognized their true nature (and "do not remain in doubt" regarding this), the path consists of the integration (''sewa'') of all experiences in their life with the state of rigpa. All these experiences are self-liberated through this integration or mixing.{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=150}}


This process is often explained through three "liberations" or capacities of a Dzogchen practitioner:{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=150-152}}
===Rigpa and Rainbow Body===
*'''Cherdrol''' ("one observes and it liberates") - This is when an ordinary appearance occurs and one sees its true nature, which leads to its self-liberation. It is compared to how a drop of dew evaporates when the sunlight shines on it.
] has three wisdoms, two of which are kadag and lhun grub. Kadag (primordial purity) is the Dzogchen view of ]. Lhun grub (natural formation) is the Dzogchen view of ]. Throughout Mahayana, emptiness and dependent origination are two sides of the same coin. The lhun grub aspect has to do with esoteric practices, such as (but not limited to) ], that self-liberate the dependently originated human body into the ] (rainbow body phenomenon).<ref>Dalai Lama. (2004). ''Dzogchen'', pg. 32. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 13 978-1-55939-219-8.</ref> The symbol of Dzogchen is a Tibetan A wrapped in a thigle (see picture to the right). The A represents kadag while the thigle represents lhun grub. The third wisdom, thugs rje (compassion), is the inseparability of the previous two wisdoms.
*'''Shardrol''' ("as soon as it arises it liberates itself") - This occurs when any sense contact or passion arises self-liberates automatically and effortlessly. This is compared to how snow melts immediately on falling into the sea.
*'''Rangdrol''' ("of itself it liberates itself"), according to Norbu, this is "completely non-dual and all-at-once, instantaneous self-liberation. Here the illusory separation of subject and object collapses of itself, and one's habitual vision, the limited cage, the trap of ego, opens out into the spacious vision of what is".{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p=152}} The ] used here is a snake effortlessly unwinding its own body.


Advanced Dzogchen practitioners are also said to sometimes manifest supranormal knowledge (Skt. ''abhijñā,'' Tib. ''mngon shes''), such as ] and ].{{sfnp|Norbu|2000|p= 153-154}}
In Dzogchen, the fundamental point of the natural state is to distinguish rigpa from sems (mind). The distinguishing of rigpa and sems from each other is emphasized by ] and goes back to the ].<ref>http://earlytibet.com/about/hashang-mahayana Accessed June 29, 2010</ref>


==== Rainbow body ====
]
] depicting Padmasambhava's rainbow body.]]
The ultimate fruition of the thodgal practices is a body of pure light, called a ] (] 'ja' lus, pronounced Jalü.)<ref name="Reginald Ray 2001, page 323">Reginald Ray, ''Secret of the Vajra World''. Shambhala 2001, page 323.</ref> If the four visions of thogal are not completed before death, then at death, from the point of view of an external observer, the following happens: the corpse does not start to decompose, but starts to shrink until it disappears. Usually fingernails, toenails and hair are left behind<ref>Norbu (1999), pp. 158-161</ref> (see e.g. ], ], ].) The attainment of the rainbow body is typically accompanied by the appearance of lights and rainbows.<ref name="Reginald Ray 2001, page 323"/>
''Tögal'' practice may lead to full ] and the self-liberation of the human body into a ]{{refn|Wylie: 'ja' lus, pronounced Jalü|group=note}} at the moment of death,{{sfnp|Dalai Lama|2004|p=204}} when all fixation and grasping has been exhausted.{{sfnp|Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche|1994|p=233}} Tibetan Buddhism holds that the rainbow body is a nonmaterial ] with the ability to exist and abide wherever and whenever as pointed by one's compassion.{{sfnp|Dudjom Rinpoche|2005|p=296}}{{sfnp|Ricard|2001|p=153}} It is a manifestation of the ] and its attainment is said to be accompanied by the appearance of lights and rainbows.{{sfnp|Ray|2001|page=323}}{{sfnp|Ricard|2001|p=153}}


Some exceptional practitioners such as ] and ] are held to have realized the ] (] 'pho ba chen po, pronounced Phowa Chenpo). The practitioner self-liberates the human body into the ] while alive. Having completed the four visions before death, the individual does not die at all, but his or her physical body gradually disappears for an external observer,<ref>Norbu (1999), p. 162</ref> while being able to exist and abide wherever and whenever as pointed by one's compassion. Some exceptional practitioners are held to have realized a higher type of rainbow body without dying (these include the 24 ] masters from the oral tradition of ], ], ], and ]). Having completed the four visions before death, the individual focuses on the lights that surround the fingers. His or her physical body self-liberates into a nonmaterial body of light with the ability to exist and abide wherever and whenever as pointed by one's compassion.{{sfnp|Ricard|2001|p=153}}


==Critique==
====Dzogchenpa samaya: a practiceless practice of abiding or contemplation====
=== Simultaneous and gradual practice ===
Capriles (2003: p.&nbsp;180) openly quotes ] in the subtle but very important distinction of the activity of meditation from the effortless abiding of Dzogchen contemplation:
As noted by van Schaik, there is a tension in the ] tradition of Dzogchen between methods which emphasize gradual practice and attainments, and methods which emphasize primordial liberation, simultaneous enlightenment, and non-activity. This seeming contradiction is explained by authors of the tradition as being related to the different levels of ability of different practitioners.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=115}}
<blockquote>
] relates that once someone asked the famous Dzogchen Master, Yungtön Dorje Pel, what his practice consisted of, and he replied with the negative “mepa” or “there isn’t.” Then his startled questioner asked again, “Then you don’t meditate?,” to which the Master replied, “And when am I ever distracted?” This is the essence of ''samaya'' in Dzogchen teaching: not to meditate or to practice something with the mind and yet never to be distracted, for one remains uninterruptedly in the self-perfection of the single state of rigpa or Truth.<ref>Capriles, Elías (2003). ''Buddhism and Dzogchen: The Doctrine of the Buddha and the Supreme Vehicle of Tibetan Buddhism. Part One Buddhism: A Dzogchen Outlook''. Source: (accessed: Saturday, August 23, 2008) p.180</ref>
</blockquote>


For example, the works of Jigme Lingpa contain criticisms of methods which rely on cause and effect as well as methods that rely on intellectual analysis. Since Buddhahood is uncaused and transcendent of the intellect, these contrived and conceptual meditations are contrasted with "effortless" and "instantaneous" approaches in the works of Jigme Lingpa, who writes that as soon as a thought arises, it is to be seen nakedly, without analysis or examination.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=71-75 }} Similarly, a common theme of Dzogchen literature is the elevation of Dzogchen above all other "lower" (''<nowiki/>'og ma'') vehicles and a criticism of these lower vehicles which are seen as inferior (''dman pa'') approaches.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=76-77}}
In this denotation, dzogchen is a verb, and denotes the perfect process in the grammatical sense or alternately an ], wherein the great continuum of 'one taste' (Wylie: ''ro gcig'') or as Capriles renders it "single state" is the effortless 'contemplating' or abiding in the view of non-distraction from ].


In spite of these critiques, Dzogchen cycles like Jigme Lingpa's '']'' do contain numerous practices which are not instantaneous or effortless, such as tantric Mahayoga practice like ] and preliminary methods such as ] (which are equated with the ]).{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=94-95}} Furthermore, Jigme Lingpa and Longchenpa also criticize those who teach the simultaneous method to everyone and teach them to dispense with all other methods at once.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=93-94}}
====Apperception====
']'<ref name="Pettit 1999 129">{{cite book
| last = Pettit
| first = John Whitney
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| title = Mipham's Beacon of Certainty: Illuminating the View of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection
| publisher = Wisdom Publications
| year = 1999
| location = Boston
| url =
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 0861711572
| pages = 129}}</ref> (Sanskrit: svasaṃvedana/svasaṃvitti; Wylie: rang rig)<ref name="Paul Williams 1998">] (1998, 2000). ''The Reflexive Nature of Awareness: A Tibetan Madhyamaka Defence''. Delhi, India: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers. ISBN 978-0700710300, p.xi</ref> is understood variously in different ], ], and practice ]. These cosmetic differences are resolved in the practice of '] ]' (Wylie: 'jog pa).<ref>{{cite book
| last = Pettit
| first = John Whitney
| authorlink =
| coauthors =
| title = Mipham's Beacon of Certainty: Illuminating the View of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection
| publisher = Wisdom Publications
| year = 1999
| location = Boston
| url =
| doi =
| id =
| isbn = 0861711572
| pages = 126}}</ref> For it is in the direct experience and associated literatures of the deep contemplative traditions of Himalayan Buddhism (], ]ese Buddhism, ]ese Buddhism, etc.) and ], particularly Dzogchen and Mahamudra, that apperception is key, e.g. ''']''' (Tibetan: ''mun mtshams''<ref name="Allione, Tsultrim 2007">Allione, Tsultrim (2000). ''Women of Wisdom''. (Includes transcribed interview with ]) Source: (accessed: November 15, 2007)</ref>).


In response to the idea that the gradualist teachings found in the Longchen Nyingtik texts contradict the Dzogchen view of primordial liberation, Jigme Lingpa states:
In the language of ], 'rang rig' (Wylie) is 'nges de shin'<ref>Jacques, Guillaume (2008). ''Zhang-zhung and Qiangic languages''. National Museum of Ethnology, Osaka. Source: (accessed: Sunday April 12, 2009), p.6</ref> where 'shin' equates to 'shes pa'. The Zhangzhung lexical item 'shin' is found in many compounds (Martin, 2004: p.&nbsp;158<ref>Martin, Dan 2004. ''Zhang-zhung dictionary''. electronic publication.</ref>) where it means: 'to know' and 'knowledge' to both nominal and verbal/process oriented ]s.


{{blockquote|This is not correct because ] using his skill in means, taught according to the categories of best, middling, and worst faculties, subdivided into the nine levels from sravaka to atiyoga. Although the Great Perfection is the path for those of the sharpest faculties, entrants are not composed exclusively of those types. With this in mind, having ascertained the features of the middling and inferior faculties of awareness holders, the tradition was established in this way.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=116}} }}
Pettit (1999: p.&nbsp;129) holds that 'apperception' (Wylie: rang rig) is key to ]'s (1846–1912) system of epistemology and hermeneutics discussed in the DRG<ref>DRG = Mipham's 'Don rnam par nges pa'i shes rab ral gri' (Wylie) a text within 'lHag bsam bstan pa'i ryal mtshan, 1984' (Wylie)</ref> and in Mipham's ''Commentary'' to the Ninth Chapter of the '']''.<ref name="Pettit 1999 129"/>


This division of practices according to level of ability is also found in Longchenpa's ''Tegchö Dzö.''{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=117}} However, as van Schaik notes, "the system should not be taken too literally. It is likely that all three types of instruction contained in the threefold structure of YL would be given to any one person."{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=117}} Therefore, though the instructions would be given to all student types, the actual capacity of the practitioner would determine how they would attain awakening (through Dzogchen meditation, in the bardo of death, or through transference of consciousness). Jigme Lingpa also believed that students of the superior faculties were extremely rare.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=117}} He held that for most people, a gradual path of training is what is needed to reach realization.{{sfnp|van Schaik|2004b|p=122}}
], ], ], ] and ] (2005: p.&nbsp;480) define 'intrinsic awareness' which is a rendering of the Tibetan Wylie 'rang-rig' and the Sanskrit 'svasaṃvitti' or 'svasaṃvedana' according to the precedent established in Indian Buddhist ] and in the writings of the lauded ]s '']'' and '']'' that this technical:
<blockquote>...term ''svasaṃvedana'' refers to the apperceptive or reflexive faculty of consciousness, for which reason it is sometimes rendered as 'reflexive awareness' or 'apperceptive awareness'. However, in the view of the Great Perfection (''rdzog-pa chen-po'') and in the context of the present work <nowiki>]<nowiki>]</nowiki>, the same term refers to the fundamental innate mind in its natural state of spontaneity and purity, beyond the alternating states of motion and rest and the subject-object dichotomy. It is therefore rendered here as 'intrinsic awareness'. As such, intrinsic awareness gives the meditator access to pristine cognition ]''] or the buddha-mind ]''] itself, and it stands in direct contrast to fundamental ignorance ('' avidyā''), which is the primary cause of rebirth in cyclic existence (<nowiki>],<nowiki>]</nowiki> samsara). The direct introduction to intrinsic awareness is a distinctive teaching within the Nyingma school.... This practice is a central component of the Esoteric Instruction Class ( upadeśa'']]) of Atiyoga, where it is known as Cutting Through Resistance ('']'').<ref>Padmasambhava (composed), Karma Linga (revealed), Gyurme Dorje (translated), Graham Coleman (Editor) and Thupten Jinpa (Associate) (2006). ''The Tibetan Book of the Dead: The Great Liberation by Hearing in the Intermediate States''. London, England: Penguin Books Ltd. ISBN 978-0-140-45529-8. p.480</ref></blockquote>

Williams, ''et al.'' (2000, 2002: p.&nbsp;264) conveys an epistemological commonality held by ] and ] which holds that all is ] ]:
<blockquote>
There is also an epistemological argument found in thinkers like Dharmakirti and Santaraksita. How does consciousness know ‘external’ physical objects, when consciousness itself is of a completely different order from matter? Consciousness has a reflexive quality of knowing (svasamvedana), while matter has no such reflexivity. Clearly only things of the same basic order of reality can contact each other. Thus either all must be matter, or all must be consciousness. But if all were matter then there would be no experience at all. Since there patently is experience, all must be consciousness.<ref>Williams, Paul with Anthony Tribe (2000, 2002). ''Buddhist Thought: A complete introduction to the Indian tradition.'' Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2002.</ref>
</blockquote>

==Texts==
Dzogchen instructions are found in some ] texts, as it may simply have been the associated ] practice. However, the majority of the Dzogchen corpus comprises the ] texts, the ] tantras, and the ] termas.

] (Tib. bsam gtan mig sgron) is a Tibetan text of historical importance for the historical relationship of Dzogchen and ] as well identifying the view of its author, ].

] of Dzogchen ]-varga.

These Seventeen Tantra amongst other Dzogchen texts are included in the various divergences and holdings of the numerous extant ] editions.

==Reality vs dreams==
{{cquote|The real sky is (knowing) that samsara and nirvana are merely an illusory display.|||]|''Quintessential Instructions of Mind'', p. 117}}

According to contemporary teacher ], in Dzogchen the perceived reality is considered to be unreal. All appearances perceived during the whole life of an individual through all senses, including sounds, smells, tastes and tactile sensations in their totality are like a big ]. It is claimed that on careful examination the dream of life and regular nightly dreams are not very different, and that in their essential nature there is no difference between them.

The non-essential difference between our dreaming state and our ordinary waking experience is that the latter is more concrete and linked with our attachment; the dreaming is slightly detached.

Also according to this teaching, there is a correspondence between the states of sleep and dream and our experiences when we die. After experiences in an intermediate state (bardo) an individual comes out of it, a new karmic illusion is created and another existence begins. This is how ] happens.

One aim of dream practice is to realize during a dream that one is dreaming. One can then dream with ]ity and do all sorts of things, such as go to different places, talk to people, fly and so forth. It is also possible to do different yogic practices while dreaming (usually such yogic practices one does in waking state). In this way the yogi can have a very strong experience and with this comes understanding of the dream-like nature of daily life. This is very relevant to diminishing attachments, because they are based on strong beliefs that life's perceptions and objects are real and, as a consequence, important. If one really understands what Buddha Shakyamuni meant when he said that everything is unreal or of the nature of ], then one can diminish attachments and tensions.

The teacher gives advice, that the realization that the life is only a big dream can help us finally liberate ourselves from the chains of emotions, attachments, and ego and then we have the possibility of ultimately becoming enlightened.<ref>Norbu (1992), pp. 42, 46, 48, 96, 105</ref>

{{See also|Lucid dreaming}}

==Dzogchen monastery & Dzogchen Rinpoche==
One of the traditional centers for the practice of Dzogchen is ], headed by ], brother of ], the author of the best-selling book '']''.

==Yarchen monastery and Achuk Rinpoche==
Yarchen monastery lies west of ] in ] province in China, on the border to Tibet. It is reported to have 10,000 monks and nuns.<ref>http://www.chinatrekking.com/destinations/sichuan/yarchen-monastery</ref> The abbot, ] is one of the most senior ] masters in Tibet and practices mainly Dzogchen.


==See also== ==See also==
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==Footnotes==
{{Reflist}}


==References== ==References==
===Notes===
* Capriles, Elías. ''Buddhism and Dzogchen. Part 1 - Buddhism: a Dzogchen Outlook.'' Published on the web at
{{reflist|group=note}}
* ] (1991). ''The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism, Vol. 1''. Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-087-8

* Karmey, Samten G. (1975). ''A General Introduction to the History and Doctrines of Bon''. Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko, No. 33, pp.&nbsp;171–218. Tokyo. (Especially Chapter 9 on rDzogs-chen on pp.&nbsp;213–215.
===Citations===
* Klein, Dr. Anne Carolyn, Wangyal, Geshe Tenzin Rinpoche,'' Unbounded Wholeness'', Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2006
{{reflist|25em}}
* ] (1999). ''The Crystal and The Way of Light: Sutra, Tantra and Dzogchen''. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-135-9

* ] (1992). ''Dream Yoga and the Practice Of Natural Light'' editor Michael Katz. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-007-7
===Works cited===
* ] (2000). ''Dzogchen: The Self-perfected State''. Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-057-3
====Dzogchen texts====
* ], ''Essence of the Tree Statements: Based on an Oral Advice given by Khyenrab Chökyi Özer'', ''''
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
* Pettit, John Whitney (1999). ''Mipham's beacon of certainty: illuminating the view of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection''. Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-157-2 (alk. paper)
* {{Citation | last=Anyen Rinpoche |title=The Union of Dzogchen and Bodhichitta |date=2006 |publisher=Snow Lion |isbn=978-1559392488 |edition=First}}
* ] (1996). ''The Golden Letters: The Tibetan Teachings of Garab Dorje, First Dzogchen Master.'' Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-050-6
* {{Citation |author=Bru-sgom Rgyal-ba-gʼyung-drung |translator=Per Kvaerne and Thupten K. Rikey |year=1996 |title=The Stages of A-khrid Meditation: Dzogchen Practice of the Bon Tradition |publisher=Library of Tibetan Works and Archives}}
* ] (2005). ''The Oral Tradition from Zhang-Zhung: An Introduction to the Bonpo Dzogchen Teachings of the Oral Tradition from Zhang-Zhung Known as the Zhang-zhung snyan-rgyud''. Vajra Publications. ISBN 99946-644-4-1
* {{Citation | last1 =Klein | first1 =Anne Carolyn | last2 =Wangyal | first2 =Geshe Tenzin Rinpoche | year =2006 | title =Unbounded Wholeness | publisher =Oxford University Press}}
* ] (1992). ''The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying''. Random House. ISBN 0-06-250793-1
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* ] (2007). ''Natural Radiance: Awakening to Your Great Perfection''. Sounds True. ISBN 1591796121
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* ] (1977). ''Time, Space, and Knowledge: A New Vision of Reality.'' Berkeley, CA: Dharma Publishing. ISBN 0-913546-08-9
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* ] (2002). ''Healing with Form, Energy, and Light''. Ithaca, New York: Snow Lion Publications. ISBN 1-55939-176-6
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* ] and ](2006). ''Unbounded Wholeness: Dzogchen, Bon and the Logic of the Nonconceptual.'' Oxford University. ISBN 0-19517-850-5
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{{refend}}

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* {{Citation | last =Tsoknyi Rinpoche | year =2004 | chapter =Introduction | editor-last =Schmidt | editor-first =Marcia Binder | title =Dzogchen Essentials: The Path That Clarifies Confusion | publisher =Rangjung Yeshe Publications}}
* {{citation |author-link=Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche |author=Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche |year=2006 |title=Repeating the Words of the Buddha |publisher=Rangjung Yeshe Publications |isbn=978-9627341598}}
{{refend}}

====Western academic sources====
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
* {{Citation |first=Jean-Luc |last=Achard |title=The View of spyi-ti yoga |journal=Revue d'Études Tibétaines |publisher=CNRS |year=2015 |pages=1–20}} ⟨⟩
* {{Citation |last=Anspal |first=Sten |title=Lost in Space: Tibetan formulations of the rDzogs-chen klong-sde |journal=Acta Orientalia |year=2005 |volume=I |number=17 |page=193}}
* {{Citation | editor-last1 =Buswell | editor-first1 =Robert | editor-last2 =Lopez | editor-first2 =Donald S. Jr. | year =2014 | title =The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism | publisher =Princeton University Press}}
* {{Citation | last =Davidson | first =Ronald M. | year =2005 | title =Tibetan Renaissance | publisher =Columbia University Press}}
* {{Citation | last1 =Gyatso | first1 =Janet | year =2006 |title =A Partial Genealogy of the Lifestory of Ye shes mtsho rgyal | journal =The Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies | issue =2 | url =http://www.thlib.org/collections/texts/jiats/#!jiats=/02/gyatsoj/}}
* {{Citation | last =Germano | first =David F. | date =Winter 1994 | title =Architecture and Absence in the Secret Tantric History of rDzogs Chen | journal =The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies | volume =17 | issue =2 | pages =203–335 | url =https://journals.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/index.php/jiabs/article/view/8826/2733}}
* {{Citation |first=David Francis |last=Germano |year=1994b |title=Poetic Thought, the Intelligent Universe, and the Mystery of Self: The Tantric Synthesis of Rdzogs Chen in Fourteenth Century Tibet |volume=1}}
* {{Citation |last=Germano |first=David |year=1997 |chapter=The Elements, Insanity, and Lettered Subjectivity |editor-last=Lopez |editor-first=Donald Jr. |title=The Religions of Tibet in Practice |publisher=Princeton University Press}}
* {{Citation | last1 =Germano | first1 =David | last2 =Gyatso | first2 =Janet | year =2001 | chapter =Longchenpa and the Possession of the Dakinis | editor-last =White | editor-first =David Gordon | title =Tantra in Practice | publisher =Motilal Banarsidass Publ.}}
* {{Citation | last =Germano | first =David | year =2005 | chapter =Dzogchen | editor-last =Jones | editor-first =Lindsay | title =Macmillan Encyclopedia of Religion. Vol.4: Dacian Riders – Esther | publisher =MacMillan Reference USA}}
* {{Citation |last=Germano |first=David |title=The Funerary Transformation of the Great Perfection (Rdzogs chen) |journal=Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies |number=1 |date=October 2005b |pages=1–54}}
* {{Citation | last1 =Germano | first1 =David F. | author-link1 =David Germano | last2 =Waldron | first2 =William S. | year =2006 | chapter=A Comparison of Alaya-vijñāna in Yogacara and Dzogchen | editor1-first =D. K. | editor1-last =Nauriyal | editor2-first =Michael S. | editor2-last =Drummond | editor3-first =Y. B. | editor3-last= Lal | title =Buddhist Thought and Applied Psychological Research: Transcending the boundaries | publisher =Routledge | location =Abingdon, Oxon. | pages =36–68 | chapter-url =http://www.middlebury.edu/media/view/440167/original/waldron_germano_comparison_of_alaya-vijnana_in_yogacara_and_dzogchen.pdf|isbn=978-0415374316}}
* {{Citation | last1 =Goodman | first1 =Steven D. | last2 =Davidson | first2 =Ronald M. | year =1992 | title =Tibetan Buddhism: reason and revelation | publisher =SUNY Press | isbn =0-7914-0785-3}}
* {{Citation |last=Hatchell |first=Christopher |year=2014 |title=Naked Seeing The Great Perfection, the Wheel of Time, and Visionary Buddhism in Renaissance Tibet |publisher=Oxford University Press}}
* {{cite book |last=Hayward |first=Jeremy |year=2008 |title=Warrior-King of Shambhala: Remembering Chögyam Trungpa |place=Boston |publisher=Wisdom Publications |isbn=978-0-86171-546-6}}
* {{Citation |last=Higgins |first=David |year=2013 |title=The Philosophical Foundations of Classical RDzogs Chen in Tibet: Investigating the Distinction Between Dualistic Mind (sems) and Primordial Knowing (ye Shes)|publisher=Arbeitskreis für Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien, Universität Wien}}
* {{citation |last=Higgins |first=David |url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rec3.12004/abstract |title=An Introduction to the Tibetan Dzogchen (Great Perfection) Philosophy of Mind |journal=Religion Compass |volume=6 |number=10 |pages=441–450 |date=October 2012 |doi=10.1111/rec3.12004}}
* {{Citation |last=Hirschberg |first=Daniel |date=2013 |title=Nyangrel Nyima Ozer| language=en |work=The Treasury of Lives |url=http://www.treasuryoflives.org/biographies/view/Nyangrel-Nyima-Ozer/5999 |access-date=2017-07-18}}
* {{Citation | last =Ingram|first =Catherine|title=The Secret Teachings of Tibet: An Interview with American Lama Sura Das|journal=Yoga Journal|date=1983|issue=109|pages=61–65, 122–123|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aukDAAAAMBAJ&q=dzogchen+secret&pg=PA64}}
* {{Citation | last =Irons | first =Edward A. | year =2008 | chapter =Dzogchen | editor-last =Irons | editor-first =Edward A. | title =Encyclopedia of Buddhism | publisher =Facts On File, Inc. An imprint of Infobase Publishing}}
* {{Citation |last=Karmay |first=Samten G. |year=1975 |title=A General Introduction to the History and Doctrines of Bon |journal=Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko |number=33 |pages=171–218 |location=Tokyo}}
* {{Citation | last =Karmay | first =Samten Gyaltsen | year =1998 | title =The Great Perfection (rdzogs chen). A Philosophical and Meditative Teaching of Tibetan Buddhism | publisher =Brill}}
* {{Citation | last =Keown | first =Damien | year =2003 | title =A Dictionary of Buddhism | publisher =Oxford University Press | isbn =978-0-19-860560-7}}
* {{Citation |last=Krasser |first=Helmut |year=1997 |title=Tibetan Studies |location=Austria |publisher=Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften}}
*{{cite journal |url=https://tricycle.org/magazine/the-religions-tibet-practice/ |first=John |last=Pettit |title=Review of ''The Religions of Tibet in Practice'' |journal=] |date=Winter 1997}}
* {{Citation | last =Pettit | first =John Whitney | year =1999 | title =Mipham's beacon of certainty: illuminating the view of Dzogchen, the Great Perfection | place =Boston | publisher =Wisdom Publications | isbn =978-0-86171-157-4}}
* {{Citation | editor-last1 = Schaeffer | editor-first1 =Kurtis R. | editor-last2 =Kapstein | editor-first2 =Matthew | editor-last3 =Tuttle | editor-first3 =Gray | year =2013 | title =Sources of Tibetan Tradition | publisher =Columbia University Press}}
* {{Citation |editor-last=Schmidt |editor-first=Marcia Binder |year=2002 |title=The Dzogchen Primer: Embracing The Spiritual Path According To The Great Perfection |location=London |publisher=Shambhala Publications, Inc. |isbn=1-57062-829-7}}
* {{Citation |last=Smith |first=Malcolm |year=2016 |title=Buddhahood in This Life: The Great Commentary by Vimalamitra |publisher=Simon and Schuster}}
* {{Citation |last=Stearns |first=Cyrus |year=1999 |title=The Buddha from Dolpo: A Study of the Life and Thought of the Tibetan Master Dolpopa Sherab Gyaltsen |publisher=State University of New York Press}} {{ISBN|0-7914-4191-1}} (hc); {{ISBN|0-7914-4192-X}} (pbk).
* {{Citation | last =Tiso | first =Francis T. | year =2016 | title = Rainbow Body and Resurrection: Spiritual Attainment, the Dissolution of the Material Body, and the Case of Khenpo a Chö| publisher =North Atlantic Books}}
* {{Citation | last =van Schaik | first =Sam |year =2004a | title =The early Days of the Great Perfection | journal =Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies |volume=27 |issue=1 |pages=165–206 | url =http://earlytibet.files.wordpress.com/2007/06/vanschaik_2004.pdf}}
* {{Citation | last =van Schaik | first =Sam | year =2004b | title =Approaching the Great Perfection: Simultaneous and Gradual Methods of Dzogchen Practice in the Longchen Nyingtig | publisher =Wisdom Publications}}
* {{Citation | last =van Schaik | first =Sam | year =2011a | title =Tibet A History | publisher =Yale University Press}}
{{refend}}

====Web sources====
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
*{{cite web |url=http://studybuddhism.com/en/advanced-studies/vajrayana/dzogchen-advanced/the-major-facets-of-dzogchen |first=Alexander |last=Berzin |title=The Major Facets of Dzogchen |year=n.d. |website=StudyBuddhism.com}}
*{{Cite web |last=Dudjom Rinpoche |first=Kyabje |date=2009 |title=Summary of Striking the Vital Point in Three Statements |url=https://www.lotsawahouse.org/tibetan-masters/dudjom-rinpoche/summary-hitting-essence-three-words |access-date=August 14, 2020 |website=Lotsawa House}}
*{{cite web |author=Patrul Rinpoche |date=2008 |title=The Special Teaching of the Wise and Glorious King |url=https://www.lotsawahouse.org/tibetan-masters/patrul-rinpoche/tsik-sum-nedek-commentary |access-date=2020-08-14 |website=Lotsawa House}}
*{{cite web |url=http://www.atikosha.org/2012/09/a-preliminary-note-on-vimalamitras.html |first=Malcolm |last=Smith |title=A Preliminary Note on Vimalamitra's Aural Lineage |date=September 26, 2012 |website=Atikosha.org}}
*{{cite web |url=http://earlytibet.com/2011/08/03/early-dzogchen-iv/ |first=Sam |last=van Schaik |author-link=Sam van Schaik |title=Early Dzogchen IV: the role of Atiyoga |date=August 3, 2011b |website=EarlyTibet.com}}
{{refend}}

==Further reading==
{{refbegin|30em|indent=yes}}
*{{cite book |author=Dudjom Lingpa |title=Buddhahood Without Meditation, A Visionary Account known as Refining Apparent Phenomena |publisher=Padma Publishing |place=Junction City, CA |year=1994 |isbn=1-881847-07-1 |ref=none}}
*{{cite web |author=Dudjom Rinpoche |url=http://www.abuddhistlibrary.com/Buddhism/A%20-%20Tibetan%20Buddhism/Authors/Dudjom%20Rinpoche/The%20Dzogchen%20View%20of%20Tantra/Dzogchen%20View%20of%20Tantric%20Ngondro.htm |title=Dzogchen View of Tantric Ngondro: A Teaching by His Holiness Dudjom Rinpoche |year=1979 |website=ABuddhistLibrary.com |access-date=2021-06-03 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |last1=Gyatso |first1=Janet |title=Apparitions of the Self, the Secret Autobiographies of a Tibetan Visionary |date=1999 |place=New Jersey |publisher=Princeton University Press |isbn=0-691-01110-9 |ref=none}}
*{{cite journal |last=Higgins |first=David |url=http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/rec3.12004/abstract |title=An Introduction to the Tibetan Dzogchen (Great Perfection) Philosophy of Mind |journal=Religion Compass |volume=6 |number=10 |pages=441–450 |date=October 2012 |doi=10.1111/rec3.12004 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Longchen Rabjam |author-link=Longchenpa |title=The Practice of Dzogchen |publisher=Snow Lion Publications |place=Ithaca, NY |year=1996 |isbn=1-55939-054-9 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Longchen Rabjam |title=The Precious Treasury of the Way of Abiding |publisher=Padma Publishing |place=Junction City, CA |year=1998 |isbn=1-881847-09-8 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Longchen Rabjam |title=You Are the Eyes of the World |publisher=Snow Lion Publications |place=Ithaca, NY |year=2000 |isbn=1-55939-140-5 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Longchen Rabjam |title=The Precious Treasury of the Basic Space of Phenomena |publisher=Padma Publishing |place=Junction City, CA |year=2001 |isbn=1-881847-32-2 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Longchen Rabjam |title=A Treasure Trove of Scriptural Transmission, a Commentary on The Precious Treasury of the Basic Space of Phenomena |publisher=Padma Publishing |place=Junction City |year=2001 |isbn=1-881847-30-6 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Manjushrimitra |title=Primordial Experience, An Introduction to Dzogchen Meditation |publisher=Shambhala Publications |place=Boston & London |year=2001 |isbn=1-57062-898-X |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author1=Nudan Dorje |first2=James |last2=Low |title=Being Right Here: A Dzogchen Treasure Text of Nuden Dorje entitled The Mirror of Clear Meaning |publisher=Snow Lion Publications |place=Ithaca, NY |year=2004 |isbn=1-55939-208-8 |ref=none}}
*{{cite book |author=Padmasambhava |author-link=Padmasambhava |title=Advice from the Lotus-Born |publisher=Rangjung Yeshe Publications |place=Hong Kong |year=1994 |isbn=962-7341-20-7 |ref=none}}
*{{cite journal |last=Pollock |first=Neal J. |title=Practices Supporting Dzogchen – The Great Perfection Of Tibetan Buddhism |journal=The Rose+Croix Journal |year=2005 |volume=2 |pages=41–62 |url=https://a5947b7a68866658557b-3dcd537c8623ccbbbabdc4b69c0bc78e.ssl.cf5.rackcdn.com/vol2_41_62_pollock.pdf |ref=none}}
{{refend}}


==External links== ==External links==
* (by Alexander Berzin)
* - at Rangjung Yeshi Wiki
*
*
*, focusing on Padmasambhava's writings.
*{{dmoz|Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Buddhism/Lineages/Tibetan/Meditation/Dzogchen}}
*
*
*
*
* - at Rigpa Wiki


{{Buddhism topics}} {{Buddhism topics}}


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Latest revision as of 16:20, 16 January 2025

Tradition of teachings in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism This article is about the primordial state and related practices in Tibetan Buddhism and Bön. For the monastery, see Dzogchen Monastery.
A white Tibetan letter A inside a rainbow thigle is a common symbol of Dzogchen. The Sanskrit letter A is also a common symbol for non-arising in Mahayana Buddhism.
Dzogchen
Tibetan name
Tibetan རྫོགས་ཆེན་
Transcriptions
Wylierdzogs chen
(rdzogs pa chen po)
THLDzokchen
Tibetan PinyinZogqên
Lhasa IPA[tsɔktɕʰẽ]
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese大究竟、
大圓滿
大成就
Simplified Chinese大究竟、
大圆满
大成就
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyindàjiūjìng,
dàyuánmǎn,
dàchéngjiù
Part of a series on
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Major monasteries
Institutional roles
Festivals
Texts
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History and overview
Part of a series on
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Philosophy
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Leaders
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Institutions
Related religions

Dzogchen (Tibetan: རྫོགས་ཆེན་, Wylie: rdzogs chen 'Great Completion' or 'Great Perfection'), also known as atiyoga (utmost yoga), is a tradition of teachings in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism and Bön aimed at discovering and continuing in the ultimate ground of existence. The goal of Dzogchen is knowledge of this basis; this knowledge is called rigpa (Sanskrit: vidyā). There are spiritual practices taught in various Dzogchen systems for discovering rigpa.

Dzogchen emerged during the first dissemination of Buddhism in Tibet, around the 7th to 9th centuries CE. While it is considered a Tibetan development by some scholars, it draws upon key ideas from Indian sources. The earliest Dzogchen texts appeared in the 9th century, attributed to Indian masters. These texts, known as the Eighteen Great Scriptures, form the "Mind Series" and are attributed to figures like Śrī Siṅgha and Vimalamitra. Early Dzogchen was marked by a departure from normative Vajrayāna practices, focusing instead on simple calming contemplations leading to a direct immersion in awareness. During the Tibetan renaissance era (10th to early 12th century), Dzogchen underwent significant development, incorporating new practices and teachings from India. This period saw the emergence of new Dzogchen traditions like the "Instruction Class series" and the "Seminal Heart" (Tibetan: སྙིང་ཐིག་, Wylie: snying thig).

Dzogchen is classified into three series: the Semdé (Mind Series, Tibetan: སེམས་སྡེ་, Wylie: sems sde), Longdé (Space Series, Tibetan: ཀློང་སྡེ་, Wylie: klong sde), and Menngaggidé (Instruction Series, Tibetan: མན་ངག་གི་སྡེ་, Wylie: man ngag gi sde). The Dzogchen path comprises the Base, the Path, and the Fruit. The Base represents the original state of existence, characterized by emptiness (stong pa nyid), clarity (lhun grub, associated with luminous clarity), and compassionate energy (snying rje). The Path involves gaining a direct understanding of the mind's pure nature through meditation and specific Dzogchen methods. The Fruit is the realization of one's true nature, leading to complete non-dual awareness and the dissolution of dualities.

Dzogchen practitioners aim for self-liberation (Tibetan: རང་གྲོལ་, Wylie: rang grol), where all experiences are integrated with awareness of one's true nature. This process may culminate in the attainment of a rainbow body at the moment of death, symbolizing full Buddhahood. Critics point to tensions between gradual and simultaneous practice within Dzogchen traditions, but practitioners argue these approaches cater to different levels of ability and understanding. Overall, Dzogchen offers a direct path to realizing the innate wisdom and compassion of the mind.

History

Main article: History of Dzogchen

Dzogchen arose in the era of the first dissemination of Buddhism in Tibet (7th to 9th centuries CE) during the Tibetan Empire and continued during the Era of Fragmentation (9th to 11th centuries). American Tibetologist David Germano argues that Dzogchen is likely a Tibetan Buddhist development. However, numerous ideas key to Dzogchen (like emptiness and luminosity) can be found in Indian sources, like the Buddhist tantras, buddha-nature literature and other Mahāyāna sources like the Laṅkāvatāra Sūtra. Furthermore, scholars like Sam van Schaik see Dzogchen as having arisen out of tantric Buddhist completion stage practices.

The earliest Dzogchen sources appeared in the first half of the 9th century, with a series of short texts attributed to Indian saints. The most of important of these are the "Eighteen Great Scriptures", which are today known as the "Mind Series" (Semdé) and are attributed to Indian masters like Śrī Siṅgha, Vairotsana and Vimalamitra. The later Semdé compilation tantra titled the All-Creating King (Kunjed Gyalpo, kun byed rgyal po) is one of the most important and widely quoted of all Dzogchen scriptures.

Germano sees the early Dzogchen of the Tibetan Empire period as characterized by the rejection of normative Vajrayana practice. Germano calls the early Dzogchen traditions "pristine Great Perfection" since it is marked "by the absence of presentations of detailed ritual and contemplative technique" as well as a lack of funerary, charnel ground and death imagery found in some Buddhist tantras. According to Germano, instead of tantric deity yoga methods, early Dzogchen mainly focused on simple calming (śamatha) contemplations leading to a "technique free immersion in the bare immediacy of one's own deepest levels of awareness". Similarly, Christopher Hatchell explains that since for early Dzogchen "all beings and all appearances are themselves the singular enlightened gnosis of the buddha All Good (Samantabhadra, Kuntu Zangpo)", there is nothing to do but to recognize this inherent awakened mind, relax and let go.

During the Tibetan renaissance era (10th century to the early 12th century) many new Vajrayāna texts, teachings and practices were introduced from India. At this time, the Nyingma school and its Dzogchen traditions reinvented themselves, producing many new scriptures and developing new practices influenced by the Sarma traditions. These new influences were absorbed into Dzogchen through the practice of finding treasure texts (terma) that were discovered by "treasure revealers" (tertons). These tantric elements included subtle body practices, visionary practices like dark retreat, and a focus on death-motifs and practices (such as funerary and relic rituals, bardo teachings, phowa, etc).

These new methods and teachings were part of several new traditions such as the "Secret Cycle" (gsang skor), "Ultra Pith" (yang tig), "Brahmin's tradition" (bram ze'i lugs), the "Space Class Series," and especially the "Instruction Class series" (Menngagde), which culminated in the "Seminal Heart" (snying thig), which emerged in the late 11th and early 12th century. The most influential texts in this period are Seventeen Tantras (rgyud bcu bdun). The most important scholarly figure in the systematization of these new traditions was Longchenpa Rabjampa (1308–1364).

Later figures who also revealed important treasure text cycles include Karma Lingpa, (1326–1386, who revealed the bar-do thos-grol), Rigdzin Gödem (1337–1409), Jigme Lingpa (1730–1798), who revealed the influential Longchen Nyingthig and Dudjom Lingpa (1835–1904).

Etymology and concepts

Dzogchen is composed of two terms:

  • rdzogs – perfection, completion
  • chen – great

According to the fourteenth Dalai Lama, the term dzogchen may be a rendering of the Sanskrit term mahāsandhi.

The term initially referred to the "highest perfection" of Vajrayāna deity yoga. Specifically, it refers to the stage after the deity visualisation has been dissolved and one rests in the natural state of the innately luminous and pure mind. According to Sam van Schaik, in the 8th-century tantra Sarvabuddhasamāyoga, the term refers to "a realization of the nature of reality" which arises through the practice of tantric anuyoga practices which produce bliss. In the 10th and 11th centuries, when Dzogchen emerged as a separate vehicle to liberation in the Nyingma tradition, the term was used synonymously with the Sanskrit term ati yoga (primordial yoga).

Rigpa (knowledge) and ma rigpa (delusion)

A widespread simile for ignorance is the obscuration of the sun by clouds
Main article: Rigpa

Rigpa (Sanskrit: vidyā, "knowledge") is a central concept in Dzogchen. According to Ācārya Malcolm Smith:

A text from the Heart Essence of Vimalamitra called the Lamp Summarizing Vidyā (Rig pa bsdus pa’i sgronma) defines vidyā in the following way: "...vidyā is knowing, clear, and unchanging" In Sanskrit, the term vidyā and all its cognates imply consciousness, knowing, knowledge, science, intelligence, and so on. Simply put, vidyā means unconfused knowledge of the basis that is its own state.

Ma rigpa (avidyā) is the opposite of rigpa or knowledge. Ma rigpa is ignorance, delusion, or unawareness, the failure to recognize the nature of the basis. An important theme in Dzogchen texts is explaining how ignorance arises from the basis or dharmatā, which is associated with ye shes or pristine consciousness. Automatically arising unawareness (lhan skyes ma rig pa) exists because the basis has a natural cognitive potentiality which gives rise to appearances. This is the ground for saṁsāra and nirvāṇa.

Traditional exegesis

The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva (Dorje Sempa Nyinggi Melong, rdo rje sems dpa' snying gi me long), a major Dzogchen tantra, explains the term Dzog (Perfection) as follows:

Because rigpa is perfect wisdom in the realm beyond effort, it is perfection. Because meditation is perfect stainless wisdom in the realm beyond concepts, it is perfection. Because behavior is perfect universal wisdom in the realm beyond correction, it is perfection. Because view is perfect non-conceptual wisdom in the realm beyond achievement, it is perfection. Because fruit is the perfect twenty-five wisdoms in the realm beyond frame of reference, it is perfection.

The Mirror of the Heart of Vajrasattva explains that Dzogchen is "great" because:

  • It is the pinnacle of all vehicles, views, meditations, behaviors, goals.
  • It is "never moving from the natural state."
  • It functions "without obstacles in the realm beyond change."
  • It manifests "beyond concepts in the realm beyond attachment."
  • It manifests "without attachment in the realm beyond desire"
  • It manifests "in great bliss in the realm beyond speech."
  • It is "the source that pervades pure enlightenment."
  • It is "non-substantial rigpa beyond action and effort."
  • It remains "in equality without moving from the realm of total bliss" and "without moving from the essential meaning."
  • It exists "everywhere without being a dimension of grasping."
  • It is "the essence of everything without being established with words and syllables."

Three series

The Three Series of Dzogchen (Tibetan: རྫོགས་ཆེན་སྡེ་གསུམ་, Wylie: rdzogs chen sde gsum) are a traditional Tibetan Buddhist classification which divides the teachings of the Nyingma school's Dzogchen tradition into three series, divisions or sections. These three are: the Semde ('Mind Series'), the Longdé ('Space Series') and the Menngagde ('Instruction Series'). Traditional accounts of the Nyingma school attribute this schema to the Indian master Mañjuśrīmitra (c. 8th century).

According to modern Tibetologists, this doxographic schema actually developed in the literature of the Instruction Series (c. 11th century onwards) as a way to distinguish and categorize the various Dzogchen teachings at the time. According to Instruction Series texts, the Mind Series is based on understanding that one's own mind is the basis of all appearances and that this basis, called mind itself, is empty and luminous. The Space series meanwhile is focused on emptiness (Skt. śūnyatā, T. stong-pa nyid). Finally, the Instruction Series itself is seen as the most direct kind of realization, without the need to meditate on emptiness or mind. Over time, the Instruction Series came to dominate the Dzogchen tradition and it remains the series that is most widely practiced and taught while the other two series are rarely practiced today (with the exception of a few masters like Namkhai Norbu).

According to Namkhai Norbu, the three series are three modes of presenting and introducing the state of Dzogchen. Norbu states that Mennagde is a more direct form of introduction, Longde is closely associated with symbolic forms of introducing Dzogchen and Semde is more focused on oral forms of introduction. Germano writes that the Mind Series serves as a classification for the earlier texts and forms of Dzogchen "prior to the development of the Seminal Heart movements" which focused on meditations based on tantric understandings of bodhicitta (byang chub kyi sems). This referred to the ultimate nature of the mind, which is empty (stong pa), luminous ('od gsal ba), and pure. According to Germano, the Space and Instruction Series are associated with later (historical) developments of Dzogchen "which increasingly experimented with re-incorporating tantric contemplative techniques centered on the body and vision, as well as the consequent philosophical shifts his became interwoven with."

Base, Path, and Fruit

A gankyil, a Tibetan symbol which can symbolize various triple part ideas, such as the ground, path and fruit

In Dzogchen, there are three central aspects: the Base, the Path and the Fruit. The Base represents the original, unchanging state of existence, characterized by emptiness, clarity, and compassionate energy.

The Path comprises three key elements: view, practice, and conduct. The view focuses on gaining a direct understanding of the pure nature of the mind. Practice involves meditation techniques and specific Dzogchen methods. Conduct means integrating these practices into daily life.

The Fruit represents the ultimate goal – realizing one's true nature and achieving Buddhahood. This involves discovering the inherent state of the base and integrating all experiences with one's awareness of it. Ultimately, it leads to complete non-dual awareness, transcending egoic limitations, and dissolving dualities.

The Base or Ground

An image of the Primordial Buddha Samantabhadra with his consort Samantabhadri. These images are said to symbolize the union of space (emptiness, the female aspect) and clarity - awareness (male).
Main article: Ground (Dzogchen)

A key concept in Dzogchen is the "base", "ground", or "primordial state" (Tibetan: gzhi, Sanskrit: āśraya), also called the general ground (spyi gzhi) or the original ground (gdod ma'i gzhi). The basis is the original state "before realization produced buddhas and nonrealization produced sentient beings". It is atemporal and unchanging and yet it is "noetically potent", giving rise to mind (sems, Skt. citta), consciousness (shes pa, Skt. vijñāna), delusion (ma rig pa, Skt. avidyā) and knowledge (rigpa, Skt. vidyā). Furthermore, Hatchell notes that the Dzogchen tradition portrays ultimate reality as something which is "beyond the concepts of one and many."

Three qualities

According to the Dzogchen-teachings, the Ground or Buddha-nature has three qualities:

Herbert V. Guenther points out that this Ground is both a static potential and a dynamic unfolding. They give a process-orientated translation, to avoid any essentialist associations, since

ngo-bo (facticity) has nothing to do with nor can even be reduced to the (essentialist) categories of substance and quality; rang-bzhin (actuality) remains open-dimensional, rather than being or turning into a rigid essence despite its being what it is; and that thugs-rje (resonance) is an atemporal sensitivity and response, rather than a distinct and narrowly circumscribed operation.

The 19th–20th-century Tibetan Buddhist scholar, Shechen Gyaltsap Gyurme Pema Namgyal, sees the Buddha-nature as ultimate truth, nirvana, which is constituted of profundity, primordial peace and radiance:

Buddha-nature is immaculate. It is profound, serene, unfabricated suchness, an uncompounded expanse of luminosity; nonarising, unceasing, primordial peace, spontaneously present nirvana.

Direct introduction

Main article: Esoteric transmission

Direct introduction is called the "Empowerment of Awareness" (Wylie: rig pa'i rtsal dbang, pronounced "rigpay sall wahng"), a technical term employed within the Dzogchen lineages for a particular lineage of empowerment propagated by Jigme Lingpa. This empowerment consists of the direct introduction of the student to the intrinsic nature of their own mind-essence, rigpa, by their empowering master.

Pointing-out instruction

Main article: Pointing-out instruction

In Dzogchen tradition, pointing-out instruction (Tibetan: ངོ་སྤྲོད་ཀྱི་གདམས་པ་, Wylie: ngo sprod kyi gdams pa, THL: ngo-trö kyi dam-pa) is also referred to as "pointing out the nature of mind" (Tibetan: སེམས་ཀྱི་ངོ་སྤྲོད་, Wylie: sems kyi ngo sprod, THL: sem kyi ngo-trö), "pointing out transmission", or "introduction to the nature of mind". The pointing-out instruction (ngo sprod) is an introduction to the nature of mind.

The Path

There are three major divisions of the Dzogchen path, known as the "Three Dharmas of the Path." These are tawa, gompa, and chöpa. Namkhai Norbu translates these three terms as 'view,' 'practice,' and 'conduct.'

Garab Dorje's three statements

Garab Dorje (c. 665), an Indian sage purportedly from Oddiyana. He is traditionally held to be the first human teacher of Dzogchen.

Garab Dorje (c. 665) epitomized the Dzogchen teaching in three principles, known as "Striking the Vital Point in Three Statements" (Tsik Sum Né Dek), said to be his last words. They give in short the development a student has to undergo:

Garab Dorje's three statements were integrated into the Nyingthig traditions, the most popular of which in the Longchen Nyingthig by Jigme Lingpa (1730–1798). The statements are:

  1. Introducing directly the face of rigpa itself (ngo rang tok tu tré). Dudjom Rinpoche states this refers to: "Introducing directly the face of the naked mind as the rigpa itself, the innate primordial wisdom."
  2. Deciding upon one thing and one thing only (tak chik tok tu ché). Dudjom states: "Because all phenomena, whatever manifests, whether saṃsāra or nirvāṇa, are none other than the rigpa’s own play, there is complete and direct decision that there is nothing other than the abiding of the continual flow of rigpa."
  3. Confidence directly in the liberation of rising thoughts (deng drol tok tu cha). Dudjom comments: "In the recognition of namtok , whatever arises, whether gross or subtle, there is direct confidence in the simultaneity of the arising and dissolution in the expanse of dharmakāya, which is the unity of rigpa and śūnyatā."

View

Main article: View (Dzogchen)
The metaphors of sky and spaciousness are often used to describe the nature of mind in Dzogchen.

Nyingma Dzogchen texts use unique terminology to describe the Dzogchen view (Tib. tawa). Some of these terms deal with the different elements and features of the mind and are drawn from classic Buddhist thought. The generic term for consciousness is shes pa (Skt. vijñāna), and includes the six sense consciousnesses. Worldly, impure and dualistic forms of consciousness are generally referred to with terms such as sems (citta, mind), yid (mānas) and blo (buddhi). On the other hand, nirvanic or liberated forms of consciousness are described with terms such as ye shes (jñāna, 'pristine consciousness') and shes rab (prajñā, wisdom). According to Sam van Schaik, two significant terms used in Dzogchen literature is the ground (gzhi) and gnosis (rig pa), which represent the "ontological and gnoseological aspects of the nirvanic state" respectively.

Nyingma Dzogchen literature also describes nirvana as the "expanse" or "space" (klong or dbyings) or the "expanse of Dharma" (chos dbyings, Sanskrit: Dharmadhatu). The term Dharmakaya (Dharma body) is also often associated with these terms in Dzogchen, as explained by Tulku Urgyen:

Dharmakaya is like space. You cannot say there is any limit to space in any direction. No matter how far you go, you never reach a point where space stops and that is the end of space. Space is infinite in all directions; so is dharmakaya. Dharmakaya is all-pervasive and totally infinite, beyond any confines or limitations. This is so for the dharmakaya of all buddhas. There is no individual dharmakaya for each buddha, as there is no individual space for each country.

The Dzogchen View of the secret instruction series (man ngag sde) is classically explained through the eleven vajra topics. These can be found in the String of Pearls Tantra (Mu tig phreng ba), the Great Commentary by Vimalamitra as well as in Longchenpa's Treasury of Word and Meaning (Tsik Dön Dzö).

Practice

Main article: Practice (Dzogchen)
Lukhang Temple mural depicting Dzogchen anuyoga practices such as tummo which work with the subtle body channels
Yogis meditating on the letter A inside a thigle (circular rainbow), Lukhang Temple
Lukhang Temple mural depicting the visionary tögal practice of sky gazing.

Dzogchen practice (gompa) relies on the Dzogchen view which is a "direct, non-dual, non-conceptual knowledge" of the pure nature. This is achieved through one's relationship with a guru or lama who introduces one to our own primordial state and provides instruction on how to practice. This "direct introduction" and transmission from a Dzogchen master is considered absolutely essential.

The Dzogchen tradition contains numerous systems of practices, including various forms of meditation, tantric yogas and unique Dzogchen methods. The earliest form of Dzogchen practice (the Semde, "Mind" series) generally emphasized non-symbolic "formless" practices (as opposed to tantric deity yoga).

Later developments led to the main Dzogchen practices becoming more infused with various preliminary and tantric methods like deity yoga, semdzin (holding the mind), rushen (separating samsara and nirvana), and vipasyana (lhagthong), which are all seen as skillful means to achieve the basic state of contemplation of the primordially pure state.

The key Dzogchen meditation methods, which are unique to the tradition are trekchö ("cutting tension") and tögal, along with unique Dzogchen teachings on awakening in the bardo (intermediate state between death and rebirth). In trekchö, one first identifies the innate pure awareness, and then sustains recognition of it in all activities. In tögal ("crossing over"), a yogi works with various gazes and postures which lead to various forms of visions (in dark retreat or through sky gazing).

The most comprehensive study of sky-gazing meditation, known as tögal or thod rgal, has been written by Flavio A. Geisshuesler. Although the term thod rgal is generally translated as "Direct Transcendence" or "Leap Over," Geisshuesler argues that the expression really means "Skullward Leap" as it consists of the Tibetan words thod ("above," "over," but also "head wrapper," "turban," "skull") and rgal ("to leap over"). In the larger Tibetan cultural area, it is the most elevated part of the human body—the skull or, its extension in the form of a turban-like headdress—that allows the religious practitioner to gain access to the source of vitality located in the heavens. Both the head and the headdress have deep resonances with animals—particularly deer and sheep—which are central for the sky-gazing practice because of their ability to ascend and descend vertically to move in between various realms of existence.

Conduct

Further information: Chöd and Ngagpa

Norbu notes that "Tantric practices may be used as secondary practices by the practitioner of Dzogchen, alongside the principal practice of contemplation." Similarly, physical yoga (Tib. trulkhor) may also be used as supporting practices.

This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (September 2021)

The Fruit

Self-liberation

According to Namkhai Norbu, in Dzogchen, "to become realized simply means to discover and manifest that which from the very beginning has been our own true condition: the Zhi (gzhi) or Base." Since the basis, the path of practice and the fruit or result of practice are non-dual from the ultimate perspective, in Dzogchen understands the path as not separate from the result or fruit of the path (i.e. Buddhahood). Once a Dzogchen practitioner has recognized their true nature (and "do not remain in doubt" regarding this), the path consists of the integration (sewa) of all experiences in their life with the state of rigpa. All these experiences are self-liberated through this integration or mixing.

This process is often explained through three "liberations" or capacities of a Dzogchen practitioner:

  • Cherdrol ("one observes and it liberates") - This is when an ordinary appearance occurs and one sees its true nature, which leads to its self-liberation. It is compared to how a drop of dew evaporates when the sunlight shines on it.
  • Shardrol ("as soon as it arises it liberates itself") - This occurs when any sense contact or passion arises self-liberates automatically and effortlessly. This is compared to how snow melts immediately on falling into the sea.
  • Rangdrol ("of itself it liberates itself"), according to Norbu, this is "completely non-dual and all-at-once, instantaneous self-liberation. Here the illusory separation of subject and object collapses of itself, and one's habitual vision, the limited cage, the trap of ego, opens out into the spacious vision of what is". The simile used here is a snake effortlessly unwinding its own body.

Advanced Dzogchen practitioners are also said to sometimes manifest supranormal knowledge (Skt. abhijñā, Tib. mngon shes), such as clairvoyance and telepathy.

Rainbow body

19th century thangka depicting Padmasambhava's rainbow body.

Tögal practice may lead to full Buddhahood and the self-liberation of the human body into a rainbow body at the moment of death, when all fixation and grasping has been exhausted. Tibetan Buddhism holds that the rainbow body is a nonmaterial body of light with the ability to exist and abide wherever and whenever as pointed by one's compassion. It is a manifestation of the sambhogakāya and its attainment is said to be accompanied by the appearance of lights and rainbows.

Some exceptional practitioners are held to have realized a higher type of rainbow body without dying (these include the 24 Bön masters from the oral tradition of Zhang Zhung, Tapihritsa, Padmasambhava, and Vimalamitra). Having completed the four visions before death, the individual focuses on the lights that surround the fingers. His or her physical body self-liberates into a nonmaterial body of light with the ability to exist and abide wherever and whenever as pointed by one's compassion.

Critique

Simultaneous and gradual practice

As noted by van Schaik, there is a tension in the Longchen Nyingtik tradition of Dzogchen between methods which emphasize gradual practice and attainments, and methods which emphasize primordial liberation, simultaneous enlightenment, and non-activity. This seeming contradiction is explained by authors of the tradition as being related to the different levels of ability of different practitioners.

For example, the works of Jigme Lingpa contain criticisms of methods which rely on cause and effect as well as methods that rely on intellectual analysis. Since Buddhahood is uncaused and transcendent of the intellect, these contrived and conceptual meditations are contrasted with "effortless" and "instantaneous" approaches in the works of Jigme Lingpa, who writes that as soon as a thought arises, it is to be seen nakedly, without analysis or examination. Similarly, a common theme of Dzogchen literature is the elevation of Dzogchen above all other "lower" ('og ma) vehicles and a criticism of these lower vehicles which are seen as inferior (dman pa) approaches.

In spite of these critiques, Dzogchen cycles like Jigme Lingpa's Longchen Nyingthig do contain numerous practices which are not instantaneous or effortless, such as tantric Mahayoga practice like deity yoga and preliminary methods such as ngondro (which are equated with the path of accumulation). Furthermore, Jigme Lingpa and Longchenpa also criticize those who teach the simultaneous method to everyone and teach them to dispense with all other methods at once.

In response to the idea that the gradualist teachings found in the Longchen Nyingtik texts contradict the Dzogchen view of primordial liberation, Jigme Lingpa states:

This is not correct because Vajradhara using his skill in means, taught according to the categories of best, middling, and worst faculties, subdivided into the nine levels from sravaka to atiyoga. Although the Great Perfection is the path for those of the sharpest faculties, entrants are not composed exclusively of those types. With this in mind, having ascertained the features of the middling and inferior faculties of awareness holders, the tradition was established in this way.

This division of practices according to level of ability is also found in Longchenpa's Tegchö Dzö. However, as van Schaik notes, "the system should not be taken too literally. It is likely that all three types of instruction contained in the threefold structure of YL would be given to any one person." Therefore, though the instructions would be given to all student types, the actual capacity of the practitioner would determine how they would attain awakening (through Dzogchen meditation, in the bardo of death, or through transference of consciousness). Jigme Lingpa also believed that students of the superior faculties were extremely rare. He held that for most people, a gradual path of training is what is needed to reach realization.

See also

Teachers
 
Terms

References

Notes

  1. Wylie: 'ja' lus, pronounced Jalü

Citations

  1. ^ Achard (2015).
  2. Pettit (1999), p. 4.
  3. Irons (2008), p. 168.
  4. ^ Buswell & Lopez (2014).
  5. ^ Germano (2005), p. 2546.
  6. van Schaik (2004b), p. 40.
  7. van Schaik (2004b), p. 4.
  8. Germano (1994), p. 234-235.
  9. Germano (2005b).
  10. ^ Germano (1994).
  11. Hatchell (2014), p. 52.
  12. Germano (2005), p. 2546-2547.
  13. Hatchell (2014), p. 9-10.
  14. ^ Germano (2005), p. 2547.
  15. ^ Stewart MacKenzie (2014).
  16. van Schaik (2004b), p. 9.
  17. Germano (2005), p. 2548.
  18. ^ van Schaik (2011b).
  19. Dalai Lama (2004), p. 208.
  20. Keown (2003), p. 24.
  21. Smith (2016), p. 12.
  22. Smith (2016), p. 14.
  23. Smith (2016), pp. 15–16.
  24. Valby (2016), p. 49.
  25. Valby (2016), p. 50.
  26. Dudjom Rinpoche (1991), vol. 1, pp. 493–498.
  27. ^ van Schaik (2004b), p. 8.
  28. Norbu (2000), pp. 43–44.
  29. ^ Germano (1994), p. 288.
  30. Buswell & Lopez (2014), p. .
  31. Nyoshul Khenpo (2016).
  32. Dudjom Rinpoche (1991), p. 354.
  33. ^ van Schaik (2004b), p. 52.
  34. Smith (2016), pp. 12–13.
  35. Hatchell (2014), p. 56.
  36. Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche (2001), p. 44.
  37. Pettit (1999), p. 78-79.
  38. Goodman & Davidson (1992), p. 14.
  39. Rabjam (2007), p. 21.
  40. Rabjam (2007), p. 4.
  41. Anon (2005).
  42. Hayward (2008), p. 106.
  43. Norbu (2012).
  44. Norbu (2000), ch. 7, pp. 109-148.
  45. Dudjom Rinpoche (2009).
  46. Patrul Rinpoche (2008).
  47. Smith (2016), p. 12-14.
  48. Kunsang (2012), p. 3.
  49. Smith (2016), p. 9.
  50. Norbu (2000), p. 110.
  51. Norbu (2000), p. 112-116.
  52. Germano (2005), p. 2547, 2548.
  53. Germano (1994), p. 225-226.
  54. Norbu (2000), p. 114.
  55. van Schaik (2004b), p. 98-99.
  56. Dahl (2009), p. 255.
  57. Smith (2016), p. 26.
  58. Reynolds (2005).
  59. van Schaik (2004b), p. 101.
  60. ^ Geisshuesler, Flavio (2024). Tibetan Sky-Gazing Meditation and the Pre-History of Great Perfection Buddhism. London: Bloomsbury Publishing. ISBN 978-1-350-42881-2.
  61. Norbu (2000), p. 118-119.
  62. Norbu (2000), p. 149.
  63. Norbu (2000), p. 150.
  64. Norbu (2000), p. 150-152.
  65. Norbu (2000), p. 152.
  66. Norbu (2000), p. 153-154.
  67. Dalai Lama (2004), p. 204.
  68. Chökyi Nyima Rinpoche (1994), p. 233.
  69. Dudjom Rinpoche (2005), p. 296.
  70. ^ Ricard (2001), p. 153.
  71. Ray (2001), p. 323.
  72. van Schaik (2004b), p. 115.
  73. van Schaik (2004b), p. 71-75.
  74. van Schaik (2004b), p. 76-77.
  75. van Schaik (2004b), p. 94-95.
  76. van Schaik (2004b), p. 93-94.
  77. van Schaik (2004b), p. 116.
  78. ^ van Schaik (2004b), p. 117.
  79. van Schaik (2004b), p. 122.

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Western academic sources

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  • van Schaik, Sam (2011a), Tibet A History, Yale University Press

Web sources

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