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  1. Majjhima Nikāya (Pāḷi Majjhima = “Menengah”) merupakan kumpulan khotbah-khotbah menengah (panjangnya) dalam Sutta Piṭaka yang merupakan bagian dari teks Kanon Pāḷi Tipitaka yang digunakan oleh sekte Theravāda. Majjhima Nikāya ini terdiri dari 152 khotbah yang diberikan oleh Sang Buddha dan murid utamanya.

    • MN 1: Mulapariyaya Sutta — The Root Sequence {M i 1} [Thanissaro]. In this difficult but important sutta the Buddha reviews in depth one of the most fundamental principles of Buddhist thought and practice: namely, that there is no thing — not even Nibbana itself — that can rightly be regarded as the source from which all phenomena and experience emerge.
    • MN 2: Sabbasava Sutta — Discourse on All Āsavas/All the Fermentations {M i 6} [Burma Piṭaka Assn. | Thanissaro]. The Buddha teaches seven methods for eliminating from the mind the deeply rooted defilements (sensuality, becoming, views, and ignorance) that obstruct the realization of Awakening.
    • MN 4: Bhaya-bherava Sutta — Fear & Terror {M i 16} [Thanissaro]. What would it take to live in solitude in the wilderness, completely free of fear? The Buddha explains.
    • MN 5: Anaṅgaṇa Sutta — Unblemished {M i 24} [Thanissaro]. Ven. Sāriputta explains the blemishes of the mind: the influences of evil, unskillful wishes.
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  3. MN 1 Mūlapariyāya Sutta | The Root Sequence — The Majjhima Nikāya opens with one of the few suttas where his listeners did NOT delight in his words. In it, the Buddha dismisses the tendency—common both in his time and in ours—to posit a metaphysical principle from which the universe emanates.

    • Mulapariyaya Sutta (MN 1) -- The Root Sequence. In this difficult but important sutta the Buddha reviews in depth one of the most fundamental principles of Buddhist thought and practice: namely, that there is no thing -- not even Nibbana itself -- that can rightly be regarded as the source from which all phenomena and experience emerge.
    • Sabbasava Sutta (MN 2) -- All the Fermentations. The Buddha teaches seven methods for eliminating the deeply-rooted defilements in the mind (sensuality, becoming, views, and ignorance) that obstruct the realization of Awakening.
    • Bhaya-bherava Sutta (MN 4) -- Fear & Terror. What does it take to be able to live in solitude in the wilderness, completely free of fear? The Buddha explains.
    • Vatthupama Sutta (MN 7) -- The Simile of the Cloth [Nyanaponika Thera, tr.]. With a simple simile the Buddha illustrates the difference between a defiled mind and a pure mind.
  4. Majjhima Nikaya. The Majjhima Nikaya, or Middle Length Discourses, is a division of the Sutta Pitaka. They are discourses that are… well… of a middling length. There are 152 discourses contained within this division, either by the Buddha himself or from some of his chief disciples.

  5. Majjhima Nikaya, translated by Bhikkhu Ñanamoli and Bhikkhu Bodhi (Boston: Wisdom Publications, 1995).[1] The Introduction to that book contains an extraordinary synopsis of the Buddha's teachings in general, and of their expression in the Majjhima in particular. A fine anthology of selected suttas is Handful of Leaves (Vol. 1), by

  6. Majjhima Nikaya. The Majjhima Nikaya is the second book in the Sutta Pitaka, the first division of the Tipitaka, the sacred scriptures of Buddhism . The 152 discourses or suttas in this book are of medium length and hence its name. The discourses take various forms and cover a wide range of subjects. Some are dialogues and debates, others are ...

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