roadrunner
SENIOR MEMBER
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2007
- Messages
- 5,696
- Reaction score
- 0
Wrong, Kushans complied many of the already existing pratices of Mahayana Buddhism in the 4th council. They contributed, but did not found the philosophy behind it. And is not labeled as the beginning of the Mahayana sect. Its foundations was laid a long time ago. Mahayana even the name is older then the Kushans themselves.
You can know start calling everthing I posted as "pan Indian Hindutva textbook knowledge".
Post #173 is enough.
Mahayan Buddhism was formalized at the 4th Council.
Before this there wasn't any Mahayan Buddhism as far as history can show.
They used the Buddhism that had developed in Gandhara to formalize the Mahayan sect.
So Mahayan Buddhism was founded by a Gandharan not an Indian.
You're going to reply, but Mahayan Buddhism existed before this because someone took the ideas at the 4th Council and grouped them all together. They probably did this, but that was not Mahayan Buddhism, just elements of what would become Mahayan Buddhism.
Anyway, it's likely all these ideas developed in gandhara and not India since the epicentre of Buddhist culture had shifted to Gandhara well before Mahayan Buddhism was declared in the 1st century CE.