Five object-determining mental states: Difference between revisions
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<noinclude>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: | <noinclude>The '''five object-determining mental states''' (Skt. ''viṣayaniyata''; Tib. [[ཡུལ་ངེས་ལྔ་]], ''yul ngé nga'', [[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: | ||
</noinclude>#[[Interest]] (Skt. ''chanda''; Tib. [[འདུན་པ་]]) | </noinclude>#[[Interest]] (Skt. ''chanda''; Tib. [[འདུན་པ་]]) |
Revision as of 06:21, 4 January 2018
The five object-determining mental states (Skt. viṣayaniyata; Tib. ཡུལ་ངེས་ལྔ་, yul ngé nga, 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་)
- Appreciation (Skt. adhimokṣa; Tib. མོས་པ་)
- Mindfulness (Skt. smṛti; Tib. དྲན་པ་)
- Concentration (Skt. samādhi; Tib. ཏིང་འཛིན་)
- Intelligence (Skt. prajñā; Tib. ཤེས་རབ་)
Alternative Translations
- five object-determining factors