Cankí, with a large company of brahmins, visits the Buddha at Opasáda and finds him conversing with some eminent and aged brahmins. A young brahmin, called Kápathika, frequently interrupts the conversation and is rebuked by the Buddha. Cankí tells the Buddha that the youth is a very clever scholar and obtains for him a chance of questioning the Buddha. The Buddha declares that the brahmin pretensions to possess the sole truth are vain, and goes on to explain how a man can come to have faith in truth, then gain enlightenment with regard to it, and finally attain the truth itself by means of practice and development. At the end of the discourse Kápathika declares himself a follower of the Buddha. M.ii.164ff


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