religionis doctor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Butta[1] (PaliceSiddhattha Gotama Buddha, SanscriticeSiddhārthaGautamaBuddha[2]), nonnumquam et Gautama Buddha, fuit doctor spiritualis ex subcontinente Indico, in cuius doctrinis Buddhismus conditus est.[3]Nomen enim buddhae, quod 'expergefactus e somno' vel per translationem 'eruditus' valet[4], in quolibet aevo datum est primi entitatis excitati?. Butta enim, quem supremum habent plurimi commentarii Buddhistici omnium buddharum aevi nostri, titulum Śākyamuni (Palice Sakyamunī) sustinet, hoc est 'sapiens Śākyarum'. Invenit autem viam mediam, quae extremam religionumSramanaasceticismum emendavit.[5]
Butta est prima in Buddhismo persona, et fabulae de eius vita, acroasibus, regulisque monasticis a Buddhistis creduntur congestas fuisse et a sectatoribus memoria custoditas. Variae doctrinarum congeries ei tributae, traditione orali transmissae, primum, circa quadringentos annos post, litteris mandatae sunt.
Antiquissima eius mentio litteris Graecis inventa est in Clementis AlexandriniMiscellaneis 1.15.71.6, ubi legitur: εἰσὶ δὲ τῶν Ἰνδῶν οἱ τοῖς Βούττα πειθόμενοι παραγγέλμασιν. ('sunt apud Indos qui Buttae praecepta sequuntur'). De qua re vide Georgios T. Halkias, "When the Greeks Converted the Buddha: Asymmetrical Transfers of Knowledge in Indo-Greek Cultures," in Religions and Trade: Religious Formation, Transformation and Cross-Cultural Exchange between East and West, ed. Peter Wick et Volker Rabens (2014), pp.65-116: p. 93, n. 83.
Turner,Sir Ralph Lilley(1962–1985)."buddha 9276".A comparative dictionary of the Indo-Aryan languages. Londinii: Oxford University Press.Digital Dictionaries of South Asia, University of Chicago.p.525
Vide consensum in commentationibus a maioribus eruditis scriptis in The Date of the Historical Śākyamuni Buddha, ed. A. K. Narain (Novi Dellii: B. R. Publishing Corporation, 2003), ISBN 81-7646-353-1.
"As is now almost universally accepted by informed Indological scholarship, a re-examination of early Buddhist historical material . . . necessitates a redating of the Buddha's death to between 411 and 400 BCE" —Paul Dundas, The Jains, ed. 2a., (Routledge, 2001), p. 24.