補充課程
Supplementary Studies
Comparative and contextual studies drawn from related traditions — Southeast Asian ritual arts, Himalayan Vajrayāna, Pali language of the Theravāda Tipiṭaka, and beyond — explored within the framework of the Chinese Five Arts lineage.
Thai Wicha Studies
泰式威查術
18 artsExplore the magical arts of Thai Wicha — Metta Mahaniyom, Maha Amnaj, Kong Grapan, Serm Duang, healing arts, exorcism, yantra, and more. Studied as comparative material within the Five Arts tradition.
Ruesi Hermit Sages
仙人聖傳
9 sage profilesStudy the divine hermit sages (ฤาษี) of the Thai-Brahminic tradition — the eternal teachers of healing arts, Wicha, Yantra science, and spiritual cultivation. Parallel to the Chinese Xianshi (仙師) lineage.
Tibetan Buddhism
藏傳佛教
49 entriesSix major schools (Nyingma, Kagyu, Sakya, Gelug, Jonang, Bön), mantras and dhāraṇī (Om Mani Padme Hum, Vajrasattva 100-Syllable, Great White Umbrella, and more), and the lineage masters who shaped the tradition.
Pali Language Study
巴利語學習
92 wordsLearn Pali — the sacred language of the Theravāda Tipiṭaka. Browse vocabulary from the Nikāyas with grammar notes, canonical examples, and an interactive flashcard study mode to build your reading fluency.
Thai Brahmanism
泰式婆羅門教
18 entriesExplore the Hindu-Buddhist syncretic tradition of Thailand — the Brahmanical devas (Brahma, Ganesha, Vishnu, Shiva and more), royal Brahmin ceremonies, the sacred thread ritual, the Swing Ceremony, and more.
Energetic Studies
氣脈研究
25 mapsStudy the comparative energetic body - Chakras, Dantians, Nadis, meridians, Prana, Qi, and Akashic concepts - as a bridge between Indian and Chinese internal maps.
Why Supplementary Studies?
The Liuren Fajiao tradition does not exist in isolation. Southern Chinese folk magic shares deep historical connections with Southeast Asian ritual traditions through centuries of trade and cultural exchange, and with Himalayan Vajrayāna Buddhism through the Silk Road and shared cosmological frameworks (Qi / Prana, Dantian / Chakra, inner alchemy / Dzogchen). Pali — the language of the Theravāda Tipiṭaka — unlocks the original Dhamma texts that underpin much of Southeast Asian Buddhist practice. These supplementary modules allow practitioners to understand those connections, identify shared principles, and deepen their overall Five Arts practice through comparative study.