The Tibetan term, bcud len, "imbibing the essence juice", is considered an equivalent for the Sanskrit term, rasāyana. But in Tibetan Buddhist ritual manuals, both terms occur, apparently with slightly different connotations. Practices classified as bcud len are frequently relatively short, and seem primarily designed for the use of individual yogis, usually as a subsidiary practice to complement their main tantric meditation. The production of bcud len pills which are said to sustain, rejuvenate and extend the life of the body, or even to bring immortality, is often an integral part of the practice. The term, rasāyana, is used in Tibetan transliteration (ra sā ya na), not as a title or classification for a specific ritual practice or recipe for pills, but rather to refer to the processes of alchemical transformation of substances within complex ritual "medicinal accomplishment" (sman sgrub) performances which are generally communal. In this case too, pills are produced, of the broader "sacred elixir dharma medicine" (dam rdzas bdud rtsi chos sman) type. This paper will consider a range of the practices, and of substances used in the sacred medicinal compounds.
...MoreArticle Dagmar Wujastyk; Suzanne Newcombe; Christèle Barois (2017) Transmutations: Rejuvenation, Longevity, and Immortality Practices in South and Inner Asia:. History of Science in South Asia.
Article
Donatella Rossi;
(2018)
Faith or Fate? The Path Towards Immortality According to the Tantric Traditions of Tibet
(/isis/citation/CBB601902513/)
Article
Anna Sehnalova;
(2017)
Tibetan Bonpo Mendrup: The Precious Formula’s Transmission
(/isis/citation/CBB502904878/)
Article
Barbara Gerke;
(2017)
Tibetan Precious Pills as Therapeutics and Rejuvenating Longevity Tonics
(/isis/citation/CBB764899831/)
Article
Ilona Barbara Kędzia;
(2017)
Mastering Deathlessness:
(/isis/citation/CBB323792796/)
Article
Dagmar Wujastyk;
Suzanne Newcombe;
Christèle Barois;
(2017)
Transmutations: Rejuvenation, Longevity, and Immortality Practices in South and Inner Asia:
(/isis/citation/CBB028748638/)
Article
Ariane Dröscher;
(2018)
Senescenza, rigenerazione e immortalità: Giuseppe Levi e il fenomeno vitale
(/isis/citation/CBB318884233/)
Article
Wujastyk, Dagmar;
(2013)
Perfect Medicine: Mercury in Sanskrit Medical Literature
(/isis/citation/CBB001510474/)
Article
Matthias Heiduk;
(2018)
A Quest for Longevity? A New Approach to the Earliest Testimonies of Medieval Alchemy
(/isis/citation/CBB144475736/)
Book
Luca Tonetti;
(2022)
L'arte di prolungare la vita: Medici, filosofi e alchimisti alla ricerca della longevità
(/isis/citation/CBB707366985/)
Article
Chiara Crisciani;
(2018)
Death as a Destiny and the Hope of Long Life in the Latin Middle Ages
(/isis/citation/CBB657013511/)
Article
Dagmar Wujastyk;
(2017)
Acts of Improvement:
(/isis/citation/CBB199300900/)
Article
Czaja, Olaf;
(2013)
On the History of Refining Mercury in Tibetan Medicine
(/isis/citation/CBB001510476/)
Article
Cuomu, Mingji;
(2011)
Sexual Differentiation in Tibetan Medical and Buddhist Perspectives
(/isis/citation/CBB001450724/)
Book
Benecke, Mark;
(2002)
The Dream of Eternal Life: Biomedicine, Aging, and Immortality
(/isis/citation/CBB000201296/)
Article
Han, Jishao;
(2009)
Exploration in Alchemy of Western Han Dynasty
(/isis/citation/CBB000933764/)
Article
Didier Kahn;
(2018)
Quintessence and the Prolongation of Life in the Works of Paracelsus
(/isis/citation/CBB983986033/)
Article
Simioli, Carmen;
(2013)
Alchemical Gold and the Pursuit of the Mercurial Elixir: An Analysis of Two Alchemical Treatises from the Tibetan Buddhist Canon
(/isis/citation/CBB001510475/)
Article
José Manuel García Valverde;
(2017)
Una respuesta española al debate sobre la inmortalidad del alma en el siglo XVI: la "Antoniana Margarita" de Gómez Pereira
(/isis/citation/CBB561936301/)
Article
Podgorny, Irina;
(2011)
Modern Embalming, Circulation of Fluids, and the Voyage through the Human Arterial System: Carl L. Barnes and the Culture of Immortality in America
(/isis/citation/CBB001024826/)
Article
Stephan Kloos;
(2017)
The Politics of Preservation and Loss: Tibetan Medical Knowledge in Exile
(/isis/citation/CBB454138073/)
Be the first to comment!