Questions of King Milinda
by Nāgasena
Sign in to rate and like this sacred text
💬 Interact with this Sacred Text
Ask questions about the teachings, explore concepts, or seek wisdom from this ancient text. Our AI will search through the content to provide thoughtful answers.
Ask me anything about "Questions of King Milinda"
Try these questions:
📚 Related Sacred Texts
The Dhammapada
by Unknown
The Dhammapada is a slim treasury of Buddhist verse, where the Buddha speaks in crisp couplets that turn the mind toward clarity and freedom. Each chapter gathers images of flowers, elephants, flames, and flowing water to teach how thought shapes world, how restraint ripens into peace, and how compassion loosens the knot of suffering. It is not a story but a path in distilled lines, urging attention, right speech, and the cooling of anger and craving. Read it for guidance you can carry like a small lamp in the palm, steady enough to light the next step.
Translations Of The Heart Sutra
by Various
Translations Of The Heart Sutra gathers multiple renderings of Buddhism’s most distilled teaching, letting you hear the famous declaration form is emptiness and emptiness is form in varied voices. Read side by side, the versions reveal how tone, rhythm, and word choice shape the sutra’s sweeping negations of self, suffering, and attainment. The result is a turning jewel effect that is both scholarly and contemplative, helpful for students and newcomers who want nuance without losing the pulse of practice. You will notice how translators handle the five heaps, the play of dharmas, and the closing mantra, and feel the text open like a clear sky.
Siddhartha
by Herman Hesse
Siddhartha follows a gifted Brahman’s son who abandons inherited answers to seek his own awakening. He studies with ascetics, listens to Gotama, tastes the sweetness and ache of the world through love and commerce, then breaks under the weight of craving. By a wide river and a quiet ferryman he learns to listen, to hear the Om that holds joy and sorrow in one timeless flow. Hesse offers a serene tale where wisdom grows not from doctrine but from lived experience. If you are drawn to meditative journeys, luminous imagery, and gentle insights into unity and self, this short novel invites you to linger.
Lankavatara Sutra
by Unknown
The Lankavatara Sutra opens in a jewel bright palace above the ocean, where the Buddha speaks to Mahamati about the world as a mirror of mind. Part travelogue of the spirit, part manual for awakening, it teaches that things arise from consciousness and fall away when we see through habitual naming. Its heart is a turnabout in the deepest storehouse of awareness, a direct knowing beyond words and debate, ripening into compassion for all beings. Readers curious about Zen roots, Yogacara vision, and the mystery of suchness will find a challenging yet luminous guide, inviting meditation more than argument, experience more than belief.
Diamond Sutra
by Unknown
Among the earliest printed books, the Diamond Sutra opens in a quiet grove near Sravasti, where the Buddha and the monk Subhuti trace a path that slices through appearances like a jewel cutting glass. Through spare question and response, it teaches the bodhisattva’s art of giving without clinging, seeing no fixed self, person, being, or span of life. Words are used to loosen our grip on words, until all phenomena are recognized as dream and dew and lightning. A brief narrative that invites practice as much as thought, it frees compassion to move unbound.