Siddhānta (
Tibetan:
grub mtha') is a genre of
Buddhist literature, which is quite common in
Tibetan Buddhism. This genre has its antecedents in Pali suttas such as the
Tevijja sutta and the
Brahmajala sutta. These early Buddhist sources discuss the various worldviews of
brahmins,
sramanas and
ascetics during the Buddha's time. Buddhist scholastic literature later expanded the discussion to numerous other Buddhist and non-Buddhist views. Indian works which discuss various competing doctrines include the
Kathavatthu, the
Mahavibhasa,
Bhaviveka's Blaze of Reasoning and
Shantaraksita's Tattvasamgraha. During the 18th century, Thuken Losang Chökyi Nyima (1737–1802), a student of Changkya, wrote
Crystal Mirror of Philosophical Systems. According to Roger R. Jackson, this text is "arguably the widest-ranging account of religious philosophies ever written in pre-modern Tibet." This work discusses all schools of Tibetan Buddhism,
Chinese Buddhism and
Chinese religions as well as
Indian,
Mongolian and
Khotanese religious systems. The term
Siddhānta is also used in a different way by some Buddhist treatises like the
Da zhidu lun. In this text (and in the Chinese
Tiantai school), the term
Siddhāntas refers to four pedagogical principles used by the Buddha to teach others. According to David W. Chappell, the Four Siddhāntas are: (1) First of all, the Buddha used ordinary or mundane modes of expression, (2) then he individualized his teaching and adapted it to the capacities of his listeners, (3) he further altered it in order to respond to and diagnose the spiritual defects of his hearers, and (4) finally all his teaching was based on the perfect and highest wisdom. The first three are conditioned and finite, whereas the last is inconceivable and ineffable. ==Jain philosophical studies==