105:). Kumārajīva's biography for example, describes Nāgārjuna making an elixir of invisibility, and Bus-ton, Taranatha and Xuanzang all recount that he could turn rocks into gold. The most recent comprehensive discussion of the complicated text-historical issues connected with the name Nāgārjuna is given in the
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state. According to some evidences he was working on immortality and knew the extraction of iron and mercury. There is much confusion about this author in the secondary literature. A 1984 study of manuscripts and printed editions connected with the alchemist Nāgārjuna found that his name is
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Because many historical authors have written under the name Nāgārjuna, and many works on medicine and alchemy have been ascribed to this figure, scholars recommend distinguishing the alchemical Nāgārjuna from the second-century
Buddhist philosopher
98:. Manuscript works with the claimed authorship of Nāgārjuna include: Jīvasūtra, Rasavaiśeṣikasūtra, Yogaśataka, Kakṣapuṭa, Yogaratnamālā and several other works (Meulenbeld lists over fifty).
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in his past life. He later travelled to various places in South India and established many laboratories. There are evidences found of his experimental laboratory in village
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32:) is considered one of the most important Buddhism philosophers. In some traditions, the name "Nāgārjuna" is known as an
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sect of
Buddhism, and Nagarjuna the alchemist. Chinese and Tibetan literature suggests Nāgārjuna was born in
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Wujastyk, Dominik (18 July 2013). "An
Alchemical Ghost: The Rasaratnâkara by Nâgârjuna".
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There are conflicting traditions of
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are uniformly ascribed to a different author, Nityanātha Siddha.
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397:. Vol. IA. Groningen: E. Forsten. pp. 363–368.
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