Earliest sources (བཻ་རོ་ཙ་ན་, Sanskrit: Vairocana), an 8th-century Tibetan translator of Semde texts. He traveled and studied in India, Nepal and China, and was ordained by
Shantarakshita. The Dzogchen texts which are today classified as "Semde" include the earliest Dzogchen sources currently known. These are generally short texts which appeared in the ninth century and are attributed to early transmission figures like
Garab Dorje (seventh century?),
Śrīsiṁha (eighth century),
Vairotsana (8th century) and
Vimalamitra (eighth-ninth century). These teachings were influenced by tantric sources like the
Guhyagarbha tantra as well as by
Yogacara "mind-only" and
buddha-nature literature. Various scholars have shown that early Dzogchen teachings developed out of the teachings of the
Mahayoga tantras like the
Guhyagarbha. Scholars like
Samten Karmay and Karen Liljenberg have also argued that other traditions like
tantric Shaivism and
Chan Buddhism may have had some influence on this early Dzogchen literature. Jean-luc Achard has noted some similarities between Dzogchen practices and the teachings of the Shaiva
Vijñānabhairava tantra. Regarding Chan, Liljenberg notes that various documents form Dunhuang indicate that some Dzogchen practitioners were syncretizing Dzogchen with Chan and other early Dzogchen works show that other people disagreed with this trend. This is also supported by the work of the Tibetan scholar
Nubchen Sanggye Yeshe. Nubchen attempts to argue for the difference between the two teachings and the superiority of Dzogchen, but he also agrees that much of their terminology is similar. Furthermore, the biography of several Dzogchen masters depict them as traveling to China (Vairotsana) or even having transmitted Chan lineages (Aro Yeshe). Liljenberg writes that the main themes of the five early translations include
non-duality (gnyis med), universal equality (mnyam nyid), "non-action" (bya med), "not seeking (rtsol med) the enlightened state", and the fact that there is "no need for meditation or gradual practices to purify or improve oneself" since "there is no path to follow, as the "destination" of enlightenment is already reached, and primordially-immanent." According to the
Tibetologist David Germano, early Dzogchen "Semde" texts ignore or deny the validity and relevance of
Vajrayana tantric practices and rituals in favor of terse poetic descriptions and direct experience of the awakened mind (bodhicitta). As such, he calls these works "pristine Great Perfection", and contrasts them with the later texts of the "Funerary Great Perfection" which embrace the taboo tantric imagery of violence, sex and death. Germano writes that these early sources "are marked by the absence of presentations of detailed
ritual and contemplative technique," and by the lack of the "funerary Buddhism" of the
anuttarayogatantras (including any discussion of
charnel ground imagery, death motifs, bodily relics, funerary rituals, and
bardo teachings) as well as
tantric sexual motifs and practices. Some Semde texts, like the
Kunjed Gyalpo, even deny the validity and relevance of key elements of
tantric buddhism (such as
mandalas, empowerment, stages of practice, etc.). As Liljenberg notes, the
Total Space of Vajrasattva (rdo rje sems dpa’ nam mkha' che) calls tantric practice "a childish pursuit" (''byis pa'i spyod yul'').
Sam van Schaik also writes that "later developments in the Great Perfection brought far more complex doctrines and practices, but the early mind series texts stayed close to one central theme: the immediate presence of the enlightened mind, and the consequent use- lessness of any practice that is aimed at creating, cultivating or uncovering the enlightened state." However, not all early Dzogchen sources reject tantric ritual, some of them, like
Padmasambhava's Garland of Views, present Dzogchen within the framework of tantric Mahayoga. As such, it is likely there was a spectrum of early Dzogchen methodologies, some more tantric than others. While the terms "Mind Section" (Tib.
sems sde) and "Mind Orientation" (Tib.
sems phyogs) are not attested prior to the 11th century (and are thus not found in the earliest Dzogchen texts), they are used by Tibetan and Western scholars retroactively to refer to a class of texts. The most important of these are the "Eighteen Great Scriptures" (
Lung-chen bco-brgyad), which came to be called "mind series" (
sems de) texts at a later date
. Five of these texts, the "five early translations" (
snga ’gyur nga), are perhaps the earliest of these, and are attributed to the monk Vairotsana of Pagor. Manuscripts of some of these texts have been found in the
Dunhuang caves. They include
The Cuckoo of Awareness (''Rig pa'i khu byug
), The Small Hidden Grain
(gSangs rgyas sbas pa
), Questions and Answers of Vajrasattva
and Gold Refined from Ore
(rdo la gser zhun
). According to Liljenberg, Gold Refined from Ore'' may be the earliest of these and could indeed have been written in India. Sam van Schaik notes that some of the earliest datable Dzogchen texts are
The Meditation on the Awakened Mind by
Mañjuśrīmitra (which is listed in a 9th century catalogue called the Denkarma) and various short texts which are quoted by
Nubchen Sangye Yeshe's late 9th century
Lamp for the Eyes of Contemplation (Samten Migdrön). Nubchen's
Lamp itself is a very important commentarial source for early "Semde" Dzogchen, as it quotes numerous early sources, and is also one of the earliest texts which claim that Dzogchen is a distinct vehicle of spiritual practice (
yana). The
Lamp also lists the “twenty or eighteen minor texts on the mind” (which refers to the eighteen great scriptures), indicating that even as early as the 9th century, these works were beginning to be considered as a group. Another important source for early Dzogchen Semde ideas is the work of gNyan dPal dbyangs (c. 8-9th century), especially his
rDo rje sems dpa’ zhus lan (
Vajrasattva Questions and Answers) manuscripts of which have been found in Dunhuang and his
sGron ma drug (
Six Lamps)
, which are widely quoted by Nubchen.
Later developments The
Kun byed rgyal po (
All Creating King), which is historically the most important Semde text in Nyingma, is a slightly later composite text possibly dating from the late 10th or the early 11th century which contains within it various short early Semde texts like the
Cuckoo of Rigpa. By the 11th century these traditions developed in different systems such as the Kham, the Rong and the Nyang systems, which according to Ronald Davidson "are represented by texts surviving from the thirteenth to sixteenth centuries"). The Kham system was founded by the
Kham yogi
Aro Yeshe Jungne (''a ro ye shes 'byun gnas
, 10th century). This lineage unified the teachings of Dzogchen and the Chan lineage of Heshang Moheyan what was called "the Mental Position system" (A-ro lugs''). The Rong lineage is associated with
Rongzom. During the 13th century, Semde lineages and traditions became less popular and were slowly outcompeted by the much more popular Intimate Instruction (
Mennagde) systems of Dzogchen, especially the
Seminal Heart (
Nying-thig) tradition. These new Dzogchen teachings had begun to appear in the
Renaissance period (11th–12th century) and are associated with
treasure revealers like Chetsün Sengé Wangchuk and
Zhangton Tashi Dorje (1097–1127) who claimed they had discovered texts that had been hidden by figures like
Vimalamitra. In the new Mennagde systems, early Dzogchen teachings were first given the classification of "Semde" and were subordinated to the teachings of the Seminal Heart tradition. According to Instruction Series texts, the Mind Series is based on understanding that one's own mind is the basis of all appearances and that this basis, called mind itself, is empty and
luminous. According to the modern Dzogchen teacher
Namkhai Norbu, the three series are three modes of presenting and introducing the state of Dzogchen. Norbu states that Mennagde is a more direct form of introduction, Longde is closely associated with symbolic forms of introducing Dzogchen, and Semde is more focused on oral forms of introduction. ==Teachings==