In the Dependent Origination formula, shouldn't perception precede craving instead of feeling?
In the paticcasamuppada's formulation of the twelve nidanas, vedana precedes tanha.
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and psychological -and involuntary- response
(felt as a pleasent, unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha, because there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
If read in this fashion, shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Thanks in beforehand.
pratityasamutpada craving perception
add a comment |
In the paticcasamuppada's formulation of the twelve nidanas, vedana precedes tanha.
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and psychological -and involuntary- response
(felt as a pleasent, unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha, because there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
If read in this fashion, shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Thanks in beforehand.
pratityasamutpada craving perception
add a comment |
In the paticcasamuppada's formulation of the twelve nidanas, vedana precedes tanha.
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and psychological -and involuntary- response
(felt as a pleasent, unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha, because there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
If read in this fashion, shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Thanks in beforehand.
pratityasamutpada craving perception
In the paticcasamuppada's formulation of the twelve nidanas, vedana precedes tanha.
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and psychological -and involuntary- response
(felt as a pleasent, unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha, because there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
If read in this fashion, shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Thanks in beforehand.
pratityasamutpada craving perception
pratityasamutpada craving perception
asked Dec 3 '18 at 10:42
Brian Díaz FloresBrian Díaz Flores
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In paticcasamuppada, shouldn't sañña precede tanha, instead of vedana?
It should and it does: vedana => sañña => vitakka => papanca.
From Madhupindika Sutta (MN 18):
With contact as a requisite condition, there is feeling (vedana). What one feels, one perceives (sañña). What one perceives, one thinks (vitakka) about. What one thinks about, one objectifies (papanca).
To clarify terms, vedana is the qualitative component of the experience of subjective contact with a subjectively delineated (mental representation of) object: "this object feels right" / "this object feels wrong" / "this object feels neither right nor wrong".
Sañña is recognition/classification/delineation of a (subjective notion of) object by the raw features (signs) available to direct observation. While described as a single step, in actuality it is a chain of inferences that evaluates the signs, puts forward hypotheses about the perceived entity and feeds back to seeking more signs to confirm the hypothesis. At the advanced phases of the inference chain, sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization".
Vitakka (in this context) is pondering or mulling over. It is bringing the attention again and again to a given idea.
Papanca is entering a relationship of "pursuer & pursued" (or acquirer and acquired) with regard to an object. It is objectifying something and making it one's goal (-- and implicitly, making oneself an agent of pursuit. This is out of scope for this question but this is exactly how bhava or "becoming a personal form of existence" comes to fruition).
So, first we delineate an object, then we attribute pleasant experience to a contact with the object, then we conceptualize this experience of contact and the resulting feeling and make it into a target we'd like to acquire.
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
|
show 4 more comments
Vedana and Sanna are conjoined not disjoint.
When it says Vedan it implies there is Sanna as well.
=============
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness, friend: Are these qualities conjoined or disjoined? Is it possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them?"
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness are conjoined, friend, not disjoined. It is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them. For what one feels, that one perceives. What one perceives, that one cognizes. Therefore these qualities are conjoined, not disjoined, and it is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
add a comment |
shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Vedana & sanna are co-joined (MN 43). They are the mind conditioner (citta sankhara - MN 44).
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and
psychological -and involuntary- response (felt as a pleasent,
unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by
itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha,
Vedana alone is enough to give rise to craving. Surely the immediate taste of certain foods is sufficient to give rise to craving. Or surely the sight of certain forms is sufficient to give rise to attraction (which is craving). For example, surely there are all sorts of chemical, hormones & neurological design that gives rise to sexual attraction on a non-verbal or non-thinking level.
there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that
could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or
neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
Sanna is not evaluation. Nor is sanna "like & dislike". "Like" & "dislike" are craving; even attachment (abhinandi; found in the definition of the 2nd noble truth). Evaluation of "good" & "bad" are views & opinions attachment (diṭṭhupādānaṃ). Ideas such as "beautiful" are called "themes" ("nimitta"). MN 38 says "delight (nandi) in feelings is attachment".
Engaged as he is in favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels—whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—he
delights in that feeling, welcomes it, and remains holding to it. As
he does so, delight arises in him. Now delight in feelings is
clinging. With his clinging as condition, being comes to be; with
being as condition, birth; with birth as condition, ageing and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come to be. Such is the
origin of this whole mass of suffering.
Having thus abandoned favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he
does not delight in that feeling, welcome it, or remain holding to it.
As he does not do so, delight in feelings ceases in him. With the
cessation of his delight comes cessation of clinging; with the
cessation of clinging, cessation of being; with the cessation of
being, cessation of birth; with the cessation of birth, ageing and
death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair cease. Such is
the cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
MN 38
add a comment |
In terms of sankharas, Sanna and vedanna are citta sankharas and as usual, sankharas stems from ignorance (like asavas) and the rest of what is conditioned stems from contact and dukkha form craving.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.011.than.html
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.36.015.wood.pts.htm
Since sanna and vedana are citta sankharas, qualifying them of physiological is not a good idea. Same thing with trying to separate them. TYpically, the higher realm have vedana and sanna, without having the 4 elements, meaning without rupa.
Ignorance and contact are the two main conditions that must be stopped. Craving conditions dukkha.
Most of the stuff in the dependent origination depends on contact, more than ignorance and craving.
You say that vedana cannot lead to tanha, by using some proof by contradiction and the concept of necessity. On the contrary. Vedana like you know is typically pleasant, non-pleasant and nor pleasant nor dis-pleasant [typically in 4th jhana]. SO that's the ideal basis for craving to pop up. Once there is a pleasant vedana, there is typically delight,and anybody wants more pleasant vedana.
"Brethren, if there were not this satisfaction which comes from
scents, beings would not lust after scents.
But inasmuch as there is satisfaction in scents, therefore beings lust
after scents.
If misery, Brethren, pertained not to scents, beings would not be
repelled by scents.
But inasmuch as there is misery in scents, beings are repelled by
scents.
If there were no way of escape from scents, beings could not escape
from scents.
But inasmuch as there is a way of escape from scents, beings do escape
from scents.
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.35.018.wood.pts.htm#p1
the buddha even says how to see the 3 vedanas, in order to progress on the path
One who has seen the pleasant as painful And the painful as a dart,
Seen as impermanent the peaceful feeling Neither painful nor pleasant:
He is a bhikkhu who sees rightly, One who fully understands feelings.
But vedana is conditioned by contact, not by craving,
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.023.than.html
and once there is vedena, there is craving, and craving is the ''patipada[=path] to vedana''.
Just like the noble path is the cessation of dukkha, the opposite of noble path that is tanha is the path to contact, which is the condition for the arising of vedana [you do not need to do anything than craving more to get more vedana through contact]. craving as a path is really a super simple path: the path is just craving.
On the contrary, the opposite of craving-as-path has plenty of branches, from right discernment to the stilling of the Sankharas to their destruction.
Puthujjanas who love the idea that there can be perception without vedana are the rationalists. They love to call such a fantasy ''the objective perception'' and they always say that vedana pollutes the knowledge, the perception and the reality [puthujjanas who are rationalist say that the reality is the objects living in a world devoid of humans]. Those people say that the pinnacle of being a human is to be a free thinker, meaning a thinker who is not influenced by other humans, nor swayed by emotions, devoid of biases.
Of course, the dhamma has nothing to do, nor by goals nor methods, with the moronic fantasy of the rationalists.
If you want to know more, there is a whole vagga on khandas, on nidana, on Salayatana and there is a whole Samyutta on vedana
http://obo.genaud.net/backmatter/indexes/sutta/sn/idx_samyutta_nikaya.htm
Typically this stuff is what the sutta in Saɱyutta Nikāya are about. Sadly, not many monks talk about them in a systematic manner. Bikkhu bodhi has done MN and is in the middle of AN right now, so it will be at least one year before he finishes AN, and perhaps he will do DN or Kn before SN.
Another famous bikkhu did an exposition on SN, but also MN, KN and DN, Bhante Dhammavuddho
https://www.youtube.com/user/vbgnet98/playlists?disable_polymer=1
you can get the records of his readings here
http://www.vbgnet.org/resource-audio.asp?page=7&cbbAuthor=&cbbLanguage=2143&cbbSortBy=Title&btnSubmit=Go
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
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In paticcasamuppada, shouldn't sañña precede tanha, instead of vedana?
It should and it does: vedana => sañña => vitakka => papanca.
From Madhupindika Sutta (MN 18):
With contact as a requisite condition, there is feeling (vedana). What one feels, one perceives (sañña). What one perceives, one thinks (vitakka) about. What one thinks about, one objectifies (papanca).
To clarify terms, vedana is the qualitative component of the experience of subjective contact with a subjectively delineated (mental representation of) object: "this object feels right" / "this object feels wrong" / "this object feels neither right nor wrong".
Sañña is recognition/classification/delineation of a (subjective notion of) object by the raw features (signs) available to direct observation. While described as a single step, in actuality it is a chain of inferences that evaluates the signs, puts forward hypotheses about the perceived entity and feeds back to seeking more signs to confirm the hypothesis. At the advanced phases of the inference chain, sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization".
Vitakka (in this context) is pondering or mulling over. It is bringing the attention again and again to a given idea.
Papanca is entering a relationship of "pursuer & pursued" (or acquirer and acquired) with regard to an object. It is objectifying something and making it one's goal (-- and implicitly, making oneself an agent of pursuit. This is out of scope for this question but this is exactly how bhava or "becoming a personal form of existence" comes to fruition).
So, first we delineate an object, then we attribute pleasant experience to a contact with the object, then we conceptualize this experience of contact and the resulting feeling and make it into a target we'd like to acquire.
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
|
show 4 more comments
In paticcasamuppada, shouldn't sañña precede tanha, instead of vedana?
It should and it does: vedana => sañña => vitakka => papanca.
From Madhupindika Sutta (MN 18):
With contact as a requisite condition, there is feeling (vedana). What one feels, one perceives (sañña). What one perceives, one thinks (vitakka) about. What one thinks about, one objectifies (papanca).
To clarify terms, vedana is the qualitative component of the experience of subjective contact with a subjectively delineated (mental representation of) object: "this object feels right" / "this object feels wrong" / "this object feels neither right nor wrong".
Sañña is recognition/classification/delineation of a (subjective notion of) object by the raw features (signs) available to direct observation. While described as a single step, in actuality it is a chain of inferences that evaluates the signs, puts forward hypotheses about the perceived entity and feeds back to seeking more signs to confirm the hypothesis. At the advanced phases of the inference chain, sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization".
Vitakka (in this context) is pondering or mulling over. It is bringing the attention again and again to a given idea.
Papanca is entering a relationship of "pursuer & pursued" (or acquirer and acquired) with regard to an object. It is objectifying something and making it one's goal (-- and implicitly, making oneself an agent of pursuit. This is out of scope for this question but this is exactly how bhava or "becoming a personal form of existence" comes to fruition).
So, first we delineate an object, then we attribute pleasant experience to a contact with the object, then we conceptualize this experience of contact and the resulting feeling and make it into a target we'd like to acquire.
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
|
show 4 more comments
In paticcasamuppada, shouldn't sañña precede tanha, instead of vedana?
It should and it does: vedana => sañña => vitakka => papanca.
From Madhupindika Sutta (MN 18):
With contact as a requisite condition, there is feeling (vedana). What one feels, one perceives (sañña). What one perceives, one thinks (vitakka) about. What one thinks about, one objectifies (papanca).
To clarify terms, vedana is the qualitative component of the experience of subjective contact with a subjectively delineated (mental representation of) object: "this object feels right" / "this object feels wrong" / "this object feels neither right nor wrong".
Sañña is recognition/classification/delineation of a (subjective notion of) object by the raw features (signs) available to direct observation. While described as a single step, in actuality it is a chain of inferences that evaluates the signs, puts forward hypotheses about the perceived entity and feeds back to seeking more signs to confirm the hypothesis. At the advanced phases of the inference chain, sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization".
Vitakka (in this context) is pondering or mulling over. It is bringing the attention again and again to a given idea.
Papanca is entering a relationship of "pursuer & pursued" (or acquirer and acquired) with regard to an object. It is objectifying something and making it one's goal (-- and implicitly, making oneself an agent of pursuit. This is out of scope for this question but this is exactly how bhava or "becoming a personal form of existence" comes to fruition).
So, first we delineate an object, then we attribute pleasant experience to a contact with the object, then we conceptualize this experience of contact and the resulting feeling and make it into a target we'd like to acquire.
In paticcasamuppada, shouldn't sañña precede tanha, instead of vedana?
It should and it does: vedana => sañña => vitakka => papanca.
From Madhupindika Sutta (MN 18):
With contact as a requisite condition, there is feeling (vedana). What one feels, one perceives (sañña). What one perceives, one thinks (vitakka) about. What one thinks about, one objectifies (papanca).
To clarify terms, vedana is the qualitative component of the experience of subjective contact with a subjectively delineated (mental representation of) object: "this object feels right" / "this object feels wrong" / "this object feels neither right nor wrong".
Sañña is recognition/classification/delineation of a (subjective notion of) object by the raw features (signs) available to direct observation. While described as a single step, in actuality it is a chain of inferences that evaluates the signs, puts forward hypotheses about the perceived entity and feeds back to seeking more signs to confirm the hypothesis. At the advanced phases of the inference chain, sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization".
Vitakka (in this context) is pondering or mulling over. It is bringing the attention again and again to a given idea.
Papanca is entering a relationship of "pursuer & pursued" (or acquirer and acquired) with regard to an object. It is objectifying something and making it one's goal (-- and implicitly, making oneself an agent of pursuit. This is out of scope for this question but this is exactly how bhava or "becoming a personal form of existence" comes to fruition).
So, first we delineate an object, then we attribute pleasant experience to a contact with the object, then we conceptualize this experience of contact and the resulting feeling and make it into a target we'd like to acquire.
edited Dec 3 '18 at 20:05
answered Dec 3 '18 at 15:10
Andrei Volkov♦Andrei Volkov
37.3k330107
37.3k330107
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
|
show 4 more comments
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
I marked this down. It is just personal ideas and unrelated to Buddhism. This poster needs to provide references for their answers and ideas; such as "sañña reaches a level of abstraction when it can be described as "conceptualization" or sanna is "hypotheses". Also it is "vicara" that is commonly referred to as "pondering over" rather than "vitakka". Also. i have never read a sutta saying vedana is the feeling of "right" & 'wrong". The last paragraph sounds very mixed up and the whole answer seems to keep referring to "self agency" doing things.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:20
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
At least as I understood it, I think Andrei said "right" and "wrong" in the sense of sensorial quality, not in a value-oriented or ethicalwise manner.
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:24
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
I meant dukkha vedana, sukha vedana, and adukkhamasukha vedana. I prefer "feels painfully wrong" as a more idiomatic rendering of dukkha these days and "feels nice and right" as translation for sukha.
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:27
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Saṃjñā translated as "conceptualization" is standard in Mahayana Yogacara texts. As is explanation of saṃjñā as recognition/inference based on nimitta (sign,mark).
– Andrei Volkov♦
Dec 3 '18 at 20:29
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
Yes, standard in Mahayana Yogacara (lol).... I covered the things you wrote in my answer, such as "nimitta". "Nimitta" (such as the idea of "beautiful") is not "sanna". It is a different level of abstraction. The idea of :beautiful" is related to lust rather than to sanna. This said, I won't claim to be an expert. It very subtle.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 20:38
|
show 4 more comments
Vedana and Sanna are conjoined not disjoint.
When it says Vedan it implies there is Sanna as well.
=============
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness, friend: Are these qualities conjoined or disjoined? Is it possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them?"
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness are conjoined, friend, not disjoined. It is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them. For what one feels, that one perceives. What one perceives, that one cognizes. Therefore these qualities are conjoined, not disjoined, and it is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
add a comment |
Vedana and Sanna are conjoined not disjoint.
When it says Vedan it implies there is Sanna as well.
=============
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness, friend: Are these qualities conjoined or disjoined? Is it possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them?"
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness are conjoined, friend, not disjoined. It is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them. For what one feels, that one perceives. What one perceives, that one cognizes. Therefore these qualities are conjoined, not disjoined, and it is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
add a comment |
Vedana and Sanna are conjoined not disjoint.
When it says Vedan it implies there is Sanna as well.
=============
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness, friend: Are these qualities conjoined or disjoined? Is it possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them?"
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness are conjoined, friend, not disjoined. It is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them. For what one feels, that one perceives. What one perceives, that one cognizes. Therefore these qualities are conjoined, not disjoined, and it is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
Vedana and Sanna are conjoined not disjoint.
When it says Vedan it implies there is Sanna as well.
=============
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness, friend: Are these qualities conjoined or disjoined? Is it possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them?"
"Feeling, perception, & consciousness are conjoined, friend, not disjoined. It is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them. For what one feels, that one perceives. What one perceives, that one cognizes. Therefore these qualities are conjoined, not disjoined, and it is not possible, having separated them one from another, to delineate the difference among them."
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
answered Dec 3 '18 at 10:48
SarathWSarathW
2,520214
2,520214
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
add a comment |
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
I didn't know that sutta. Thanks for the info. But going beyond the suttas: how do we explained the state of mind when conceptualization stops, but sensations are still present? Do the suttas speak of such a state?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:25
1
1
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
conceptualization is not sanna. Contact is a condition for feeling. What you feel (vedeti), you perceive (sañjānāti). What you perceive, you think about (vitakketi). What you think about, you proliferate (papañceti). phassapaccayā vedanā, yaṃ vedeti taṃ sañjānāti, yaṃ sañjānāti taṃ vitakketi, yaṃ vitakketi taṃ papañceti suttacentral.net/mn18/en/sujato
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:48
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
Or MN 1 - Having perceived (sañjānāti) earth as earth, he conceives himself (maññati) as earth, he conceives himself in earth, he conceives himself apart from earth, he conceives earth to be ‘mine,’ he delights in earth. Why is that? Because he has not fully understood it, I say. suttacentral.net/mn1/en/bodhi
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 3 '18 at 11:52
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
To Dhammadhatu: My knowledge of the sutta is almost non-existent, so my only sources are from anywhere else but the suttas. In the wiki entry about sañña, it is explained that the function of sañña is to noting, characterize and distinguish objects from other objects. That's what I understand as conceptualization: to distinguish things between each othe by assigning and describing their corresponding features (either verbally or by non-verbal recognition). en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saṃjñā
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 11:58
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
I found another source that defines sañña as "label, recognition or interpretation". accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html#s
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 12:14
add a comment |
shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Vedana & sanna are co-joined (MN 43). They are the mind conditioner (citta sankhara - MN 44).
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and
psychological -and involuntary- response (felt as a pleasent,
unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by
itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha,
Vedana alone is enough to give rise to craving. Surely the immediate taste of certain foods is sufficient to give rise to craving. Or surely the sight of certain forms is sufficient to give rise to attraction (which is craving). For example, surely there are all sorts of chemical, hormones & neurological design that gives rise to sexual attraction on a non-verbal or non-thinking level.
there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that
could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or
neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
Sanna is not evaluation. Nor is sanna "like & dislike". "Like" & "dislike" are craving; even attachment (abhinandi; found in the definition of the 2nd noble truth). Evaluation of "good" & "bad" are views & opinions attachment (diṭṭhupādānaṃ). Ideas such as "beautiful" are called "themes" ("nimitta"). MN 38 says "delight (nandi) in feelings is attachment".
Engaged as he is in favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels—whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—he
delights in that feeling, welcomes it, and remains holding to it. As
he does so, delight arises in him. Now delight in feelings is
clinging. With his clinging as condition, being comes to be; with
being as condition, birth; with birth as condition, ageing and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come to be. Such is the
origin of this whole mass of suffering.
Having thus abandoned favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he
does not delight in that feeling, welcome it, or remain holding to it.
As he does not do so, delight in feelings ceases in him. With the
cessation of his delight comes cessation of clinging; with the
cessation of clinging, cessation of being; with the cessation of
being, cessation of birth; with the cessation of birth, ageing and
death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair cease. Such is
the cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
MN 38
add a comment |
shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Vedana & sanna are co-joined (MN 43). They are the mind conditioner (citta sankhara - MN 44).
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and
psychological -and involuntary- response (felt as a pleasent,
unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by
itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha,
Vedana alone is enough to give rise to craving. Surely the immediate taste of certain foods is sufficient to give rise to craving. Or surely the sight of certain forms is sufficient to give rise to attraction (which is craving). For example, surely there are all sorts of chemical, hormones & neurological design that gives rise to sexual attraction on a non-verbal or non-thinking level.
there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that
could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or
neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
Sanna is not evaluation. Nor is sanna "like & dislike". "Like" & "dislike" are craving; even attachment (abhinandi; found in the definition of the 2nd noble truth). Evaluation of "good" & "bad" are views & opinions attachment (diṭṭhupādānaṃ). Ideas such as "beautiful" are called "themes" ("nimitta"). MN 38 says "delight (nandi) in feelings is attachment".
Engaged as he is in favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels—whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—he
delights in that feeling, welcomes it, and remains holding to it. As
he does so, delight arises in him. Now delight in feelings is
clinging. With his clinging as condition, being comes to be; with
being as condition, birth; with birth as condition, ageing and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come to be. Such is the
origin of this whole mass of suffering.
Having thus abandoned favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he
does not delight in that feeling, welcome it, or remain holding to it.
As he does not do so, delight in feelings ceases in him. With the
cessation of his delight comes cessation of clinging; with the
cessation of clinging, cessation of being; with the cessation of
being, cessation of birth; with the cessation of birth, ageing and
death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair cease. Such is
the cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
MN 38
add a comment |
shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Vedana & sanna are co-joined (MN 43). They are the mind conditioner (citta sankhara - MN 44).
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and
psychological -and involuntary- response (felt as a pleasent,
unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by
itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha,
Vedana alone is enough to give rise to craving. Surely the immediate taste of certain foods is sufficient to give rise to craving. Or surely the sight of certain forms is sufficient to give rise to attraction (which is craving). For example, surely there are all sorts of chemical, hormones & neurological design that gives rise to sexual attraction on a non-verbal or non-thinking level.
there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that
could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or
neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
Sanna is not evaluation. Nor is sanna "like & dislike". "Like" & "dislike" are craving; even attachment (abhinandi; found in the definition of the 2nd noble truth). Evaluation of "good" & "bad" are views & opinions attachment (diṭṭhupādānaṃ). Ideas such as "beautiful" are called "themes" ("nimitta"). MN 38 says "delight (nandi) in feelings is attachment".
Engaged as he is in favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels—whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—he
delights in that feeling, welcomes it, and remains holding to it. As
he does so, delight arises in him. Now delight in feelings is
clinging. With his clinging as condition, being comes to be; with
being as condition, birth; with birth as condition, ageing and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come to be. Such is the
origin of this whole mass of suffering.
Having thus abandoned favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he
does not delight in that feeling, welcome it, or remain holding to it.
As he does not do so, delight in feelings ceases in him. With the
cessation of his delight comes cessation of clinging; with the
cessation of clinging, cessation of being; with the cessation of
being, cessation of birth; with the cessation of birth, ageing and
death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair cease. Such is
the cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
MN 38
shouldn't be sañña placed between vedana and tanha?
Vedana & sanna are co-joined (MN 43). They are the mind conditioner (citta sankhara - MN 44).
As far as I currently understand, vedana is just the physiological and
psychological -and involuntary- response (felt as a pleasent,
unpleasent or neutral sensation) to an specific stimulus. Vedana by
itself shouldn't be an enough condition to give rise to tanha,
Vedana alone is enough to give rise to craving. Surely the immediate taste of certain foods is sufficient to give rise to craving. Or surely the sight of certain forms is sufficient to give rise to attraction (which is craving). For example, surely there are all sorts of chemical, hormones & neurological design that gives rise to sexual attraction on a non-verbal or non-thinking level.
there's no necessarily an evaluation (sañña) of that feeling that
could lead to the rise of a preference (like, dislike or
neither-like-nor-dislike), and consequently, to the rise of tanha.
Sanna is not evaluation. Nor is sanna "like & dislike". "Like" & "dislike" are craving; even attachment (abhinandi; found in the definition of the 2nd noble truth). Evaluation of "good" & "bad" are views & opinions attachment (diṭṭhupādānaṃ). Ideas such as "beautiful" are called "themes" ("nimitta"). MN 38 says "delight (nandi) in feelings is attachment".
Engaged as he is in favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels—whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant—he
delights in that feeling, welcomes it, and remains holding to it. As
he does so, delight arises in him. Now delight in feelings is
clinging. With his clinging as condition, being comes to be; with
being as condition, birth; with birth as condition, ageing and death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair come to be. Such is the
origin of this whole mass of suffering.
Having thus abandoned favouring and opposing, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he
does not delight in that feeling, welcome it, or remain holding to it.
As he does not do so, delight in feelings ceases in him. With the
cessation of his delight comes cessation of clinging; with the
cessation of clinging, cessation of being; with the cessation of
being, cessation of birth; with the cessation of birth, ageing and
death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair cease. Such is
the cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
MN 38
edited Dec 3 '18 at 12:01
answered Dec 3 '18 at 11:33
DhammadhatuDhammadhatu
24.1k11044
24.1k11044
add a comment |
add a comment |
In terms of sankharas, Sanna and vedanna are citta sankharas and as usual, sankharas stems from ignorance (like asavas) and the rest of what is conditioned stems from contact and dukkha form craving.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.011.than.html
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.36.015.wood.pts.htm
Since sanna and vedana are citta sankharas, qualifying them of physiological is not a good idea. Same thing with trying to separate them. TYpically, the higher realm have vedana and sanna, without having the 4 elements, meaning without rupa.
Ignorance and contact are the two main conditions that must be stopped. Craving conditions dukkha.
Most of the stuff in the dependent origination depends on contact, more than ignorance and craving.
You say that vedana cannot lead to tanha, by using some proof by contradiction and the concept of necessity. On the contrary. Vedana like you know is typically pleasant, non-pleasant and nor pleasant nor dis-pleasant [typically in 4th jhana]. SO that's the ideal basis for craving to pop up. Once there is a pleasant vedana, there is typically delight,and anybody wants more pleasant vedana.
"Brethren, if there were not this satisfaction which comes from
scents, beings would not lust after scents.
But inasmuch as there is satisfaction in scents, therefore beings lust
after scents.
If misery, Brethren, pertained not to scents, beings would not be
repelled by scents.
But inasmuch as there is misery in scents, beings are repelled by
scents.
If there were no way of escape from scents, beings could not escape
from scents.
But inasmuch as there is a way of escape from scents, beings do escape
from scents.
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.35.018.wood.pts.htm#p1
the buddha even says how to see the 3 vedanas, in order to progress on the path
One who has seen the pleasant as painful And the painful as a dart,
Seen as impermanent the peaceful feeling Neither painful nor pleasant:
He is a bhikkhu who sees rightly, One who fully understands feelings.
But vedana is conditioned by contact, not by craving,
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.023.than.html
and once there is vedena, there is craving, and craving is the ''patipada[=path] to vedana''.
Just like the noble path is the cessation of dukkha, the opposite of noble path that is tanha is the path to contact, which is the condition for the arising of vedana [you do not need to do anything than craving more to get more vedana through contact]. craving as a path is really a super simple path: the path is just craving.
On the contrary, the opposite of craving-as-path has plenty of branches, from right discernment to the stilling of the Sankharas to their destruction.
Puthujjanas who love the idea that there can be perception without vedana are the rationalists. They love to call such a fantasy ''the objective perception'' and they always say that vedana pollutes the knowledge, the perception and the reality [puthujjanas who are rationalist say that the reality is the objects living in a world devoid of humans]. Those people say that the pinnacle of being a human is to be a free thinker, meaning a thinker who is not influenced by other humans, nor swayed by emotions, devoid of biases.
Of course, the dhamma has nothing to do, nor by goals nor methods, with the moronic fantasy of the rationalists.
If you want to know more, there is a whole vagga on khandas, on nidana, on Salayatana and there is a whole Samyutta on vedana
http://obo.genaud.net/backmatter/indexes/sutta/sn/idx_samyutta_nikaya.htm
Typically this stuff is what the sutta in Saɱyutta Nikāya are about. Sadly, not many monks talk about them in a systematic manner. Bikkhu bodhi has done MN and is in the middle of AN right now, so it will be at least one year before he finishes AN, and perhaps he will do DN or Kn before SN.
Another famous bikkhu did an exposition on SN, but also MN, KN and DN, Bhante Dhammavuddho
https://www.youtube.com/user/vbgnet98/playlists?disable_polymer=1
you can get the records of his readings here
http://www.vbgnet.org/resource-audio.asp?page=7&cbbAuthor=&cbbLanguage=2143&cbbSortBy=Title&btnSubmit=Go
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
add a comment |
In terms of sankharas, Sanna and vedanna are citta sankharas and as usual, sankharas stems from ignorance (like asavas) and the rest of what is conditioned stems from contact and dukkha form craving.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.011.than.html
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.36.015.wood.pts.htm
Since sanna and vedana are citta sankharas, qualifying them of physiological is not a good idea. Same thing with trying to separate them. TYpically, the higher realm have vedana and sanna, without having the 4 elements, meaning without rupa.
Ignorance and contact are the two main conditions that must be stopped. Craving conditions dukkha.
Most of the stuff in the dependent origination depends on contact, more than ignorance and craving.
You say that vedana cannot lead to tanha, by using some proof by contradiction and the concept of necessity. On the contrary. Vedana like you know is typically pleasant, non-pleasant and nor pleasant nor dis-pleasant [typically in 4th jhana]. SO that's the ideal basis for craving to pop up. Once there is a pleasant vedana, there is typically delight,and anybody wants more pleasant vedana.
"Brethren, if there were not this satisfaction which comes from
scents, beings would not lust after scents.
But inasmuch as there is satisfaction in scents, therefore beings lust
after scents.
If misery, Brethren, pertained not to scents, beings would not be
repelled by scents.
But inasmuch as there is misery in scents, beings are repelled by
scents.
If there were no way of escape from scents, beings could not escape
from scents.
But inasmuch as there is a way of escape from scents, beings do escape
from scents.
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.35.018.wood.pts.htm#p1
the buddha even says how to see the 3 vedanas, in order to progress on the path
One who has seen the pleasant as painful And the painful as a dart,
Seen as impermanent the peaceful feeling Neither painful nor pleasant:
He is a bhikkhu who sees rightly, One who fully understands feelings.
But vedana is conditioned by contact, not by craving,
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.023.than.html
and once there is vedena, there is craving, and craving is the ''patipada[=path] to vedana''.
Just like the noble path is the cessation of dukkha, the opposite of noble path that is tanha is the path to contact, which is the condition for the arising of vedana [you do not need to do anything than craving more to get more vedana through contact]. craving as a path is really a super simple path: the path is just craving.
On the contrary, the opposite of craving-as-path has plenty of branches, from right discernment to the stilling of the Sankharas to their destruction.
Puthujjanas who love the idea that there can be perception without vedana are the rationalists. They love to call such a fantasy ''the objective perception'' and they always say that vedana pollutes the knowledge, the perception and the reality [puthujjanas who are rationalist say that the reality is the objects living in a world devoid of humans]. Those people say that the pinnacle of being a human is to be a free thinker, meaning a thinker who is not influenced by other humans, nor swayed by emotions, devoid of biases.
Of course, the dhamma has nothing to do, nor by goals nor methods, with the moronic fantasy of the rationalists.
If you want to know more, there is a whole vagga on khandas, on nidana, on Salayatana and there is a whole Samyutta on vedana
http://obo.genaud.net/backmatter/indexes/sutta/sn/idx_samyutta_nikaya.htm
Typically this stuff is what the sutta in Saɱyutta Nikāya are about. Sadly, not many monks talk about them in a systematic manner. Bikkhu bodhi has done MN and is in the middle of AN right now, so it will be at least one year before he finishes AN, and perhaps he will do DN or Kn before SN.
Another famous bikkhu did an exposition on SN, but also MN, KN and DN, Bhante Dhammavuddho
https://www.youtube.com/user/vbgnet98/playlists?disable_polymer=1
you can get the records of his readings here
http://www.vbgnet.org/resource-audio.asp?page=7&cbbAuthor=&cbbLanguage=2143&cbbSortBy=Title&btnSubmit=Go
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
add a comment |
In terms of sankharas, Sanna and vedanna are citta sankharas and as usual, sankharas stems from ignorance (like asavas) and the rest of what is conditioned stems from contact and dukkha form craving.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.011.than.html
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.36.015.wood.pts.htm
Since sanna and vedana are citta sankharas, qualifying them of physiological is not a good idea. Same thing with trying to separate them. TYpically, the higher realm have vedana and sanna, without having the 4 elements, meaning without rupa.
Ignorance and contact are the two main conditions that must be stopped. Craving conditions dukkha.
Most of the stuff in the dependent origination depends on contact, more than ignorance and craving.
You say that vedana cannot lead to tanha, by using some proof by contradiction and the concept of necessity. On the contrary. Vedana like you know is typically pleasant, non-pleasant and nor pleasant nor dis-pleasant [typically in 4th jhana]. SO that's the ideal basis for craving to pop up. Once there is a pleasant vedana, there is typically delight,and anybody wants more pleasant vedana.
"Brethren, if there were not this satisfaction which comes from
scents, beings would not lust after scents.
But inasmuch as there is satisfaction in scents, therefore beings lust
after scents.
If misery, Brethren, pertained not to scents, beings would not be
repelled by scents.
But inasmuch as there is misery in scents, beings are repelled by
scents.
If there were no way of escape from scents, beings could not escape
from scents.
But inasmuch as there is a way of escape from scents, beings do escape
from scents.
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.35.018.wood.pts.htm#p1
the buddha even says how to see the 3 vedanas, in order to progress on the path
One who has seen the pleasant as painful And the painful as a dart,
Seen as impermanent the peaceful feeling Neither painful nor pleasant:
He is a bhikkhu who sees rightly, One who fully understands feelings.
But vedana is conditioned by contact, not by craving,
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.023.than.html
and once there is vedena, there is craving, and craving is the ''patipada[=path] to vedana''.
Just like the noble path is the cessation of dukkha, the opposite of noble path that is tanha is the path to contact, which is the condition for the arising of vedana [you do not need to do anything than craving more to get more vedana through contact]. craving as a path is really a super simple path: the path is just craving.
On the contrary, the opposite of craving-as-path has plenty of branches, from right discernment to the stilling of the Sankharas to their destruction.
Puthujjanas who love the idea that there can be perception without vedana are the rationalists. They love to call such a fantasy ''the objective perception'' and they always say that vedana pollutes the knowledge, the perception and the reality [puthujjanas who are rationalist say that the reality is the objects living in a world devoid of humans]. Those people say that the pinnacle of being a human is to be a free thinker, meaning a thinker who is not influenced by other humans, nor swayed by emotions, devoid of biases.
Of course, the dhamma has nothing to do, nor by goals nor methods, with the moronic fantasy of the rationalists.
If you want to know more, there is a whole vagga on khandas, on nidana, on Salayatana and there is a whole Samyutta on vedana
http://obo.genaud.net/backmatter/indexes/sutta/sn/idx_samyutta_nikaya.htm
Typically this stuff is what the sutta in Saɱyutta Nikāya are about. Sadly, not many monks talk about them in a systematic manner. Bikkhu bodhi has done MN and is in the middle of AN right now, so it will be at least one year before he finishes AN, and perhaps he will do DN or Kn before SN.
Another famous bikkhu did an exposition on SN, but also MN, KN and DN, Bhante Dhammavuddho
https://www.youtube.com/user/vbgnet98/playlists?disable_polymer=1
you can get the records of his readings here
http://www.vbgnet.org/resource-audio.asp?page=7&cbbAuthor=&cbbLanguage=2143&cbbSortBy=Title&btnSubmit=Go
In terms of sankharas, Sanna and vedanna are citta sankharas and as usual, sankharas stems from ignorance (like asavas) and the rest of what is conditioned stems from contact and dukkha form craving.
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.011.than.html
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.36.015.wood.pts.htm
Since sanna and vedana are citta sankharas, qualifying them of physiological is not a good idea. Same thing with trying to separate them. TYpically, the higher realm have vedana and sanna, without having the 4 elements, meaning without rupa.
Ignorance and contact are the two main conditions that must be stopped. Craving conditions dukkha.
Most of the stuff in the dependent origination depends on contact, more than ignorance and craving.
You say that vedana cannot lead to tanha, by using some proof by contradiction and the concept of necessity. On the contrary. Vedana like you know is typically pleasant, non-pleasant and nor pleasant nor dis-pleasant [typically in 4th jhana]. SO that's the ideal basis for craving to pop up. Once there is a pleasant vedana, there is typically delight,and anybody wants more pleasant vedana.
"Brethren, if there were not this satisfaction which comes from
scents, beings would not lust after scents.
But inasmuch as there is satisfaction in scents, therefore beings lust
after scents.
If misery, Brethren, pertained not to scents, beings would not be
repelled by scents.
But inasmuch as there is misery in scents, beings are repelled by
scents.
If there were no way of escape from scents, beings could not escape
from scents.
But inasmuch as there is a way of escape from scents, beings do escape
from scents.
http://obo.genaud.net/dhamma-vinaya/pts/sn/04_salv/sn04.35.018.wood.pts.htm#p1
the buddha even says how to see the 3 vedanas, in order to progress on the path
One who has seen the pleasant as painful And the painful as a dart,
Seen as impermanent the peaceful feeling Neither painful nor pleasant:
He is a bhikkhu who sees rightly, One who fully understands feelings.
But vedana is conditioned by contact, not by craving,
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.023.than.html
and once there is vedena, there is craving, and craving is the ''patipada[=path] to vedana''.
Just like the noble path is the cessation of dukkha, the opposite of noble path that is tanha is the path to contact, which is the condition for the arising of vedana [you do not need to do anything than craving more to get more vedana through contact]. craving as a path is really a super simple path: the path is just craving.
On the contrary, the opposite of craving-as-path has plenty of branches, from right discernment to the stilling of the Sankharas to their destruction.
Puthujjanas who love the idea that there can be perception without vedana are the rationalists. They love to call such a fantasy ''the objective perception'' and they always say that vedana pollutes the knowledge, the perception and the reality [puthujjanas who are rationalist say that the reality is the objects living in a world devoid of humans]. Those people say that the pinnacle of being a human is to be a free thinker, meaning a thinker who is not influenced by other humans, nor swayed by emotions, devoid of biases.
Of course, the dhamma has nothing to do, nor by goals nor methods, with the moronic fantasy of the rationalists.
If you want to know more, there is a whole vagga on khandas, on nidana, on Salayatana and there is a whole Samyutta on vedana
http://obo.genaud.net/backmatter/indexes/sutta/sn/idx_samyutta_nikaya.htm
Typically this stuff is what the sutta in Saɱyutta Nikāya are about. Sadly, not many monks talk about them in a systematic manner. Bikkhu bodhi has done MN and is in the middle of AN right now, so it will be at least one year before he finishes AN, and perhaps he will do DN or Kn before SN.
Another famous bikkhu did an exposition on SN, but also MN, KN and DN, Bhante Dhammavuddho
https://www.youtube.com/user/vbgnet98/playlists?disable_polymer=1
you can get the records of his readings here
http://www.vbgnet.org/resource-audio.asp?page=7&cbbAuthor=&cbbLanguage=2143&cbbSortBy=Title&btnSubmit=Go
answered Dec 3 '18 at 15:47
Veiculo longoVeiculo longo
5312
5312
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
add a comment |
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Thanks for your time! I'm kind of confused. In the Sallatha Sutta, Buddha explained that both worldlings and noble ones experience vedana in its trifold modality (pleasent, unpleasent and neutral), the difference being the way "their" minds reacted to such feelings. accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn36/sn36.006.nypo.html
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 3 '18 at 20:35
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
Vedana & sanna are not citta and they are not sankhara khandha. The term "citta sankhara" means vedana & sanna condition the citta. For example, pleasant feeling causes lust to arise; unpleasant feeling causes anger to arise. Therefore a physical feeling, such as pain from a broken leg, is a citta sankhara because it can make the citta become angry.
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:17
1
1
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Yes, "their" minds reacted to such feelings. The mind is "citta". The reaction is "sankhara". This is the meaning of "citta sankhara", namely, feeling & perception can cause the mind to react to them. Feeling & perception are "provokers" of the "mind", which is "citta sankhara".
– Dhammadhatu
Dec 4 '18 at 0:20
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
Thanks for your time! This is exactly the root of my confusion. In the ariyas' minds there's the unpleasent feeling (in the case of a painful stimulus), but the subsequent anger does not arise. Where's the perception in this specific scenario? Why in this case the citta sankharas do not produce a citta?
– Brian Díaz Flores
Dec 4 '18 at 1:19
add a comment |
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StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown