Tsongkhapa’s Praise for Dependent Relativity

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“In this elegant text, the Ven. Geshe Graham Woodhouse translates Tsongkhapa’s jewel-like masterpiece. The radiance of Tsongkhapa’s poetry is refracted and enhanced by the brilliant and lucid commentary of the late Gen Losang Gyatso.”—Dr. Jay Garfield, Dorris Silbert Professor in Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at Smith College

TSONGKHAPA’S PRAISE FOR DEPENDENT RELATIVITY

Tsongkhapa Lobsang Gyatso Geshe Graham Woodhouse

Tsongkhapa (1357–1419), the author of The Great Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment and the teacher of the First Dalai Lama, is renowned as one of the greatest scholar-saints that Tibet has ever produced. He composed his poetic Praise for Dependent Relativity the very morning that he abandoned confusion and attained the final view, the clear realization of emptiness that is the essence of wisdom. English monk Graham Woodhouse, a longtime student of Buddhism, was living near the Dalai Lama’s residence in northern India when he translated Tsongkhapa’s celebrated text, and he conveys for modern readers the explanation of it he received from his teacher, the late Venerable Lobsang Gyatso.


Read Tsongkhapa’s biography at the Treasury of Lives.

book information
  • Paperback
  • 144 pages, 6.00 x 9.00 inches
  • $16.95
  • ISBN 9780861712649
  • ebook
  • 144 pages
  • $12.99
  • ISBN 9780861717217
about the author
Tsongkhapa’s Praise for Dependent Relativity

Tsongkhapa Losang Dragpa (1357–1419) was one of the finest scholar-practitioners in Tibetan Buddhism. Renowned for both his written works and his meditative accomplishments, he founded the Gelug school, which produced the lineage of the Dalai Lamas.

Other books by Tsongkhapa:
Great Treatise on the Stages of Mantra (Sngags rim chen mo)
The Middle-Length Treatise on the Stages of the Path to Enlightenment
Illuminating the Intent
Brilliantly Illuminating Lamp of the Five Stages
Illumination of the Hidden Meaning, Vol. 2
Illumination of the Hidden Meaning, Vol. 1
The Splendor of an Autumn Moon
Tantric Ethics
A Lamp to Illuminate the Five Stages

Tsongkhapa’s Praise for Dependent Relativity

Lobsang Gyatso was born in 1928 in a small village in eastern Tibet. He became a monk at the age of eleven and in 1945 traveled to central Tibet to study at Drepung Monastery. Fleeing Tibet in 1959, he eventually setlled in Dharamsala, India, where he went on to found in 1974 the Institute of Buddhist Dialectics, which he guided until his death in Februrary 1997.

Tsongkhapa’s Praise for Dependent Relativity

A British monk, Graham Woodhouse is one of the very few Westerners trained in the traditional Tibetan way as a geshe. A graduate of the Institute of Buddhist Dialectics in Dharamsala, he has deep knowledge of the texts, skill in translating, and an ability to convey the subtleties of Buddhist thought in lucid English. Geshe Graham Woodhouse lives in London, United Kingdom.

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