Views of Chinese pilgrims The Chinese monk
Yijing, who visited India in the 7th century, distinguished Mahāyāna from Hīnayāna as follows: In the 7th century, the Chinese Buddhist monk
Xuanzang describes the concurrent existence of the
Mahāvihara and the
Abhayagiri vihāra in Sri Lanka. He refers to the monks of the Mahāvihara as the "Hīnayāna Sthaviras" and the monks of Abhayagiri vihāra as the "Mahāyāna Sthaviras". Xuanzang further writes, "The Mahāvihāravāsins reject the Mahāyāna and practice the Hīnayāna, while the Abhayagirivihāravāsins study both Hīnayāna and Mahāyāna teachings and propagate the
Tripiṭaka."
Philosophical differences Mahayanists were primarily in philosophical dialectic with the
Vaibhāṣika school of
Sarvāstivāda, which had by far the most "comprehensive edifice of doctrinal systematics" of the nikāya schools. With this in mind it is sometimes argued that the Theravada would not have been considered a "Hinayana" school by Mahayanists because, unlike the now-extinct
Sarvastivada school, the primary object of Mahayana criticism, the Theravada school does not claim the existence of independent
dharmas; in this it maintains the attitude of
early Buddhism. Additionally, the concept of the bodhisattva as one who puts off enlightenment rather than reaching awakening as soon as possible, has no roots in Theravada—or Sarvastivada—textual or cultural contexts. Aside from the Theravada schools being geographically distant from the Mahayana, the Hinayana distinction is used in reference to certain views and practices that had become found within the Mahayana tradition itself. Theravada, as well as Mahayana schools stress the urgency of one's own awakening in order to end suffering. Some contemporary Theravadin figures have thus indicated a sympathetic stance toward the Mahayana philosophy found in the
Heart Sutra and the
Mūlamadhyamakakārikā. The Mahayanists were bothered by the substantialist thought of the Sarvāstivādins and
Sautrāntikins, and in emphasizing the doctrine of
śūnyatā,
David Kalupahana holds that they endeavored to preserve the early teaching. The Theravadins too refuted the Sarvāstivādins and Sautrāntikins (and followers of other schools) on the grounds that their theories were in conflict with the non-substantialism of the canon. The Theravada arguments are preserved in the
Kathavatthu.
Opinions of scholars Some western scholars still regard the Theravada school to be one of the Hinayana schools referred to in Mahayana literature, or regard Hinayana as a synonym for Theravada. These scholars understand the term to refer to schools of Buddhism that did not accept the teachings of the
Mahāyāna sūtras as authentic teachings of the Buddha. At the same time, scholars have objected to the pejorative connotation of the term Hinayana and some scholars do not use it for any school.
Robert Thurman writes, "'Nikaya Buddhism' is a coinage of Professor
Masatoshi Nagatomi of
Harvard University, who suggested it to me as a usage for the eighteen schools of Indian Buddhism to avoid the term 'Hinayana Buddhism,' which is found offensive by some members of the Theravada tradition." Thurman explains his own use of the term when he writes: Within Mahayana Buddhism, there were a variety of interpretations as to whom or to what the term
Hinayana referred.
Kalu Rinpoche stated the "lesser" or "greater" designation "did not refer to economic or social status, but concerned the spiritual capacities of the practitioner". Rinpoche states: ==Notes==