Five object-determining mental states: Difference between revisions
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#[[Concentration]] (Skt. ''samādhi''; Tib. [[ཏིང་འཛིན་]], Wyl. ''ting ‘dzin'') | #[[Concentration]] (Skt. ''samādhi''; Tib. [[ཏིང་འཛིན་]], Wyl. ''ting ‘dzin'') | ||
#[[Intelligence]] (Skt. ''prajñā''; Tib. [[ཤེས་རབ་]], Wyl. ''shes rab'') <noinclude> | #[[Intelligence]] (Skt. ''prajñā''; Tib. [[ཤེས་རབ་]], Wyl. ''shes rab'') <noinclude> | ||
[[Category:Abhidharma]] | [[Category:Abhidharma]] | ||
[[Category:Fifty-one mental states]] | |||
[[Category:Enumerations]] | [[Category:Enumerations]] | ||
[[Category:05-Five]] | [[Category:05-Five]] | ||
</noinclude> | </noinclude> |
Revision as of 22:32, 20 June 2016
The five object-determining mental states (Skt. viṣayaniyata; Tib. ཡུལ་ངེས་ལྔ་, Wyl. yul nges lnga) are a set of mental factors among the fifty-one mental states, so-called because they determine the coming into contact of the mind and objects. They are:
- Interest (Skt. chanda; Tib. འདུན་པ་, Wyl. ‘dun pa)
- Appreciation (Skt. adhimokṣa; Tib. མོས་པ་, Wyl. mos pa)
- Mindfulness (Skt. smṛti; Tib. དྲན་པ་, Wyl. dran pa)
- Concentration (Skt. samādhi; Tib. ཏིང་འཛིན་, Wyl. ting ‘dzin)
- Intelligence (Skt. prajñā; Tib. ཤེས་རབ་, Wyl. shes rab)