Toh 297
The Sūtra “Multitude of Constituents”
ཁམས་མང་པོ་པ་ཞེས་བྱ་བའི་མདོ།
Bahudhātukasūtra
khams mang po pa zhes bya ba’i mdo
Translator: Translated by the Āli Kāli Translation Group under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
Read time: 20 min
Version: v1.1.1
The KangyurDiscoursesGeneral Sūtra Section
Summary
In this short discourse, also found in a similar form in the Pali canon, the Buddha gives a teaching to Ānanda in which he confirms the suggestion that all negative experiences arise from being foolish, not from being learned, and goes on to summarize for Ānanda what distinguishes a learned person from a foolish one. The learned person, he says, is learned in the constituents, in the sense fields, in dependent origination, and in knowing what is possible and impossible. He then elaborates briefly on each.