Progressive application: Difference between revisions
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'''Progressive Application''' ([[ | '''Progressive Application''' (Skt. ''anupūrvaprayoga''; [[Wyl.]] ''mthar gyis pa’i sbyor ba'') is the sixth of the [[eight topics]] of the ''[[Abhisamayalankara]]''. | ||
==Definition== | ==Definition== | ||
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It is present mainly as an object of study and reflection from the [[path of accumulation]] onwards. The application produced through meditation is present from the stage of warmth [on the path of joining] until the end of the tenth bhumi. | It is present mainly as an object of study and reflection from the [[path of accumulation]] onwards. The application produced through meditation is present from the stage of warmth [on the path of joining] until the end of the tenth bhumi. | ||
[[Category:Abhisamayalankara]] | [[Category:Abhisamayalankara]] |
Revision as of 08:28, 12 November 2010
Progressive Application (Skt. anupūrvaprayoga; Wyl. mthar gyis pa’i sbyor ba) is the sixth of the eight topics of the Abhisamayalankara.
Definition
Progressive application is defined as the bodhisattvas’ yoga in which one meditates on the aspects of the threefold knowledge sequentially in order to stabilize the realization in which the knowledge aspects of the threefold knowledge arise all at once.
Subdivisions
There are thirteen subdivisions: the progressive applications of the six transcendent perfections, the six recollections and essential unreality.
Parameters
It is present mainly as an object of study and reflection from the path of accumulation onwards. The application produced through meditation is present from the stage of warmth [on the path of joining] until the end of the tenth bhumi.