What the Buddha Taught
What the Buddha Taught, by Theravadin Walpola Rahula, is a widely used introductory book on Buddhism. Using quotes from the suttas, Rahula gives his personal interpretation of what he regards to be Buddhism's essential teachings, including the Four Noble Truths, the Buddhist mind, the Noble Eightfold Path, meditation and mental development, and the world today.
Background and reception
Rahula's book is an example of "Protestant Buddhism," the Sinhalese version of Buddhist modernism. Due to its rational presentation of Buddhism, which suited western expectations, What the Buddha Taught is a widely read and highly influential introduction to Buddhist thought.A French translation was published in 1961. Walpola Rahula himself translated his book into French, encouraged by the orientalist Paul Demiéville, professor at the Collège de France.
Following in Paul Demiéville's footsteps, the work was very well received by specialists in Buddhology such as André Bareau, also a professor at the Collège de France and at the École pratique des hautes études, who wrote in a review:
The "most important and controversial problems in Buddhist studies" to which A. Bareau alludes to are probably those relating to the "Protestant Buddhism" mentioned above.
This work contributed to the discovery of Buddhism in France
Contents
The book is divided in 8 chapters, completed by 10 selected suttas and 4 sections: Abbreviations, Selected Bibliography, Glossary, Index. There are 25 illustrations.- Chapter I: The Buddhist Attitude of Mind
- Chapter II: The First Noble Truth: Dukkha
- Chapter III: The Second Noble Truth: Samudaya: The Arising of Dukkha
- Chapter IV: The Third Noble Truth: Nirodha: The Cessation of Dukkha
- Chapter V: The Fourth Noble Truth: Magga: The Path
- Chapter VI: The Doctrine of Non-Soul: Anatta
- Chapter VII:Meditation or Mental Culture: Bhāvanā
- Chapter VIII: What the Buddha Taught and the World Today
- Setting in Motion the Wheel of Truth.
- The Fire Sermon.
- Universal Love.
- Blessings.
- Getting rid of All Cares and Troubles.
- The Parable of the Piece of Cloth.
- Advice to Sigāla
- The Words of Truth (Dhammapada
- The Last Words of the Buddha (from the Mahāparinibbāna Sutta
- Abbreviations, Selected Bibliography, Glossary, Index and 25 illustrations.
Publication data
- Original edition:- Second edition:, Grove Press, New York City, 1974, 151 pages,.
Translations
Few works on Buddhism published in the 1950s continue to be regularly reissued and translated, more than sixty years after their first edition. "What the Buddha Taught" is one of these exceptions. This seems to mean that it is still relevant.The book has been translated into multiple languages including :French : Reprint: 1974, 1978, 2009, 2014.
Also available on Internet Archive: . German :, second edition in 2023.Greek : Italian :
- '''Spanish :'''