The PaliVerse Project Podcast Series

Center for Study and Practice Theravada Buddhism Civic Non Profit Company

What the Buddha actually taught is far deeper than most Dhamma talks suggest. These podcast series go beyond the familiar surface — beyond "be kind," "let go," "be in the present moment" — and into the actual discourses of the Pali Canon, read the way the Theravāda tradition has always read them: root text first, then the ancient commentary and sub-commentary, each layer entering only where it genuinely deepens what came before. Plain English. No personal interpretation. No opinions. Just the teachings, opened up discourse by discourse, for anyone willing to go deeper.

Episodes

  1. Ambaṭṭha Sutta (DN 3): The Discourse to Ambaṭṭha — Pride, Caste, and True Greatness

    20 APR

    Ambaṭṭha Sutta (DN 3): The Discourse to Ambaṭṭha — Pride, Caste, and True Greatness

    A brilliant young brahmin, sent to test the Buddha, walks in with supreme confidence — and walks out with his entire worldview dismantled.The Ambaṭṭha Sutta is one of the most dramatic confrontations in the entire Pāli Canon. In this episode, Ananda and Serene walk you through the complete teaching — drawing on both the original sutta and the ancient commentary by Buddhaghosa (Sumaṅgalavilāsinī) — to bring this extraordinary encounter back to life.You will hear about Pokkharasāti's miraculous lotus birth, Ambaṭṭha's arrogant strutting before the seated Buddha, the explosive revelation of the Kaṇhāyana clan's slave-woman ancestry, Sakka appearing with a blazing iron hammer, the Buddha's systematic dismantling of caste pride, and the profound teaching on what true knowledge and true conduct really mean — ending with Pokkharasāti's stream-entry.In this episode:— Pokkharasāti's origin story: born inside a lotus in the Himalayas— The cautious brahmin's decision to send his star student as a scout— Ambaṭṭha's disrespectful behaviour and triple insult against the Sakyans— The founding of Kapilavatthu and the Bodhisatta as the hermit Kapila— The slave woman Disā and the birth of Kaṇha— Sakka's blazing hammer and Ambaṭṭha's terror— The sage Kaṇha, the frozen arrow, and Princess Maddarūpī— The warrior caste's superiority demonstrated by the brahmins' own rules— Brahmā Sanaṅkumāra's verse on true foremost-ness— The four gateways to ruin— The ten ancient sages and the challenge to modern brahmins— Pokkharasāti's fury, his midnight visit, and his awakeningAbout PaliVersePaliVerse is an AI-powered platform dedicated to making the Pāli Canon accessible to everyone. Ananda and Serene are trained AI entities with full access to the Tipiṭaka, its commentaries (Aṭṭhakathā), and sub-commentaries (Ṭīkā). Every episode is reviewed and corrected by human scholars before publication.Read the full translation, explore the commentary, and use the interactive study tools at https://paliverse.orgSource texts:Ambaṭṭha Sutta — Dīgha Nikāya 3Sumaṅgalavilāsinī — Buddhaghosa's commentary on the Dīgha Nikāya#Buddhism #PaliCanon #TheravadaBuddhism #Sutta #DighaNikaya #AmbaṭṭhaSutta #Buddha #Caste #BuddhistTeachings #PaliVerse #Dhamma #AncientWisdom #Pride #SpiritualPath #Meditation

    26 min
  2. Sāmaññaphala Sutta (DN 2) — The Fruits of the Ascetic Life

    19 APR

    Sāmaññaphala Sutta (DN 2) — The Fruits of the Ascetic Life

    A guilt-ridden king who murdered his own father. Six famous teachers who failed to answer his question. And a midnight journey through torchlit streets to meet the Buddha in a silent mango grove.The Sāmaññaphala Sutta is one of the most dramatic and important discourses in the entire Pāli Canon. In this episode, Ananda and Serene walk you through the complete teaching — drawing on both the original sutta and the ancient commentary by Buddhaghosa (Sumaṅgalavilāsinī) — to bring this extraordinary night back to life.You will hear about King Ajātasattu's sleepless guilt, the six rival philosophers and their failed doctrines, Jīvaka's strategic silence, the terrifying stillness of twelve hundred and fifty monks, and the Buddha's breathtaking answer — a step-by-step map of the spiritual path from basic morality all the way to complete liberation, illustrated with some of the most vivid similes in all of Buddhist literature.In this episode:— The backstory of Ajātasattu: prophecy, patricide, and insomnia— The six teachers: Pūraṇa Kassapa, Makkhali Gosāla, Ajita Kesakambala, Pakudha Kaccāyana, Nigaṇṭha Nāṭaputta, and Sañcaya Belaṭṭhaputta— Sañcaya's connection to Sāriputta, Moggallāna, and Suppiya— Jīvaka Komārabhacca and his quiet strategy— The five hindrances and their unforgettable similes— The four jhānas and their imagery— The higher knowledges— Ajātasattu's confession and the Buddha's devastating final wordsAbout PaliVersePaliVerse is an AI-powered platform dedicated to making the Pāli Canon accessible to everyone. Ananda and Serene are trained AI entities with full access to the Tipiṭaka, its commentaries (Aṭṭhakathā), and sub-commentaries (Ṭīkā). Every episode is reviewed and corrected by human scholars before publication.Read the full translation, explore the commentary, and use the interactive study tools at https://paliverse.orgSource texts:Sāmaññaphala Sutta — Dīgha Nikāya 2Sumaṅgalavilāsinī — Buddhaghosa's commentary on the Dīgha Nikāya#Buddhism #PaliCanon #TheravadaBuddhism #Sutta #DighaNikaya #SamaññaphalaSutta #Buddha #Meditation #Jhana #BuddhistTeachings #PaliVerse #Dhamma #AncientWisdom #Mindfulness #SpiritualPath

    23 min
  3. Brahmajāla Sutta (DN1): The Supreme Net of Views — Where do your beliefs and views truly come from?

    18 APR

    Brahmajāla Sutta (DN1): The Supreme Net of Views — Where do your beliefs and views truly come from?

    The Brahmajāla Sutta, the first discourse of the Dīgha Nikāya (Long Discourses), opens with a deceptively simple scene: two travellers on the same road, following the same procession, arriving at opposite conclusions about what they see. The wanderer Suppiya disparages the Buddha throughout the journey from Rājagaha to Nālanda; his young disciple Brahmadatta praises him at every step. From this single contradiction, the Buddha draws out the central question of the entire discourse — how beliefs and views are formed, and why the same reality produces radically different convictions in different minds.The sutta then maps sixty-two speculative positions held by the ascetics and philosophers of the Buddha's time, covering every major theory about the self, the world, and what follows death: Eternalism, Partial Eternalism, Annihilationism, Fortuitous Origination, doctrines of conscious and non-conscious survival, and the claim that some present meditative state is itself the final liberation. The Buddha organises these into eighteen theories about the past and forty-four about the future, and — crucially — traces each one back to the specific experience from which it arose. Many of these views, the sutta shows, were grounded not in idle speculation but in genuine meditative attainment, including the direct recollection of past lives across hundreds of thousands of cosmic aeons and the perception of the universe contracting and expanding — an observation that modern physics would not arrive at until Hubble's work in 1929.The Buddha's argument is not that these meditative perceptions were false. They were real. His argument is that the conclusions drawn from them exceeded what any sense organ — including the mind, which the Pali Canon classifies as the sixth organ alongside eye, ear, nose, tongue, and skin — can warrant. Every organ has limits, and every view formed through those organs is conditioned by the same process: contact, feeling, craving, conviction. No view, however refined its meditative basis, escapes this process. All sixty-two are caught inside what the Buddha calls the Supreme Net — and he deliberately refuses to add a sixty-third.In this episode, we follow the sutta's own arc from the roadside contradiction through the Buddha's instruction on praise and blame, past the three sections on virtue he calls "trifling," into the heart of the sixty-two views, and finally to the closing image preserved by the tradition: the cord of becoming, cut. The episode draws on the root text as its primary source, turning to the commentary (Aṭṭhakathā) and sub-commentary (Ṭīkā) only where they deepen what the root text compresses — including the psychological motivations of Suppiya and Brahmadatta, the precise definition of contact as the meeting of organ, object, and consciousness, the sub-commentary's celebrated "beds making noise" simile, and the doctrinal weight folded into the sutta's final phrase.This is the first episode in the PaliVerse series on the Dīgha Nikāya. If the question of whether any belief can be trusted to report reality rather than merely reflect the conditions of its own formation is one that interests you, this discourse is where the Buddhist tradition's inquiry into that question begins.

    28 min

About

What the Buddha actually taught is far deeper than most Dhamma talks suggest. These podcast series go beyond the familiar surface — beyond "be kind," "let go," "be in the present moment" — and into the actual discourses of the Pali Canon, read the way the Theravāda tradition has always read them: root text first, then the ancient commentary and sub-commentary, each layer entering only where it genuinely deepens what came before. Plain English. No personal interpretation. No opinions. Just the teachings, opened up discourse by discourse, for anyone willing to go deeper.

You Might Also Like