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2006-02-27 — From the Samyutta Nikaya
2006-02-24 — New transcription of a classic BPS booklet
2006-02-12 — New translations from the Samyutta Nikaya
2006-02-09 — A potent anti-terror weapon for the mind
2006-02-09 — An essay on purifying the heart
2006-02-03 — Some very short suttas on the nature of mind, from the Anguttara Nikaya
2006-02-01 —
A new website takes birth!
This brand-new website offers a library of free audio recordings of English translations of Pali suttas, selected and read aloud by respected Dhamma teachers within the Theravada Buddhist tradition. The suttas in this library were hand-picked by the teachers themselves, which means that, although the collection may be small, it contains of some of the most important suttas in the entire Pali canon.
Whenever you see the SuttaReadings icon
on Access to Insight, you've found a link to the SuttaReadings website. Clicking on that icon from a sutta page (e.g.,
MN 143
) will take you to an audio recording of this sutta being read aloud. If the icon appears next to an author's name (e.g., in the list of
Contributing Authors
), you can click on the icon to learn what sutta readings by that author are available.
I hope you find this new service valuable. Listen well.
2006-01-30 — An essay on desire
2006-01-18 — Reflections on the true nature of the body
One of the most deeply rooted deceptions in the mind is its tendency to identify the body as "self." Recognizing that this seductive but distorted view of reality can be a stubborn impediment to progress in the Dhamma, the Buddha taught his students some practices and reflections specifically designed to undercut this illusion. This book is a marvelous anthology of many of these teachings, taken from the Pali canon and related texts, plus many more from the author's own writings.
Caution: The readings in this book are very powerful, and are probably not suitable for beginning meditators. To paraphrase the author's comments in the Introduction: Meditation on the unattractiveness of the body should be practiced with moderation and care, especially if one has no personal contact with a meditation teacher.
2006-01-10 — New translations from the Anguttara Nikaya