Equanimity: Difference between revisions
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[[Category:Fifty-one mental states]] | [[Category:Fifty-one mental states]] | ||
[[Category:Eleven virtuous states]] | [[Category:Eleven virtuous states]] | ||
[[Category:Four Immeasurables]] | |||
[[Category:Meditation]] | [[Category:Meditation]] | ||
[[Category:Eight antidotes]] | [[Category:Eight antidotes]] |
Revision as of 03:07, 11 February 2019
Equanimity (Skt. upekṣā; Pali upekkhā; Tib. བཏང་སྙོམས་, tang nyom, Wyl. btang snyoms) — one of the fifty-one mental states defined in Abhidharma literature. According to the Compendium of Abhidharma, it belongs to the subgroup of the eleven virtuous states. It is also one of the four immeasurables, and in meditation practice, it is the eighth antidote, which is the antidote to the fifth fault of (over-application). For the later, see the five faults and eight antidotes.
Definitions
In the Khenjuk, Mipham Rinpoche says:
- Tib. བཏང་སྙོམས་ནི་ཆགས་སྡང་གཏི་མུག་མེད་པར་སེམས་རྣལ་དུ་གནས་པ་སྟེ། ཉོན་མོངས་པའི་སྐབས་མི་འབྱེད་པའི་ལས་ཅན་ནོ།
- Equanimity is the mind resting naturally, free from attachment, anger and delusion. Its function is to avoid giving occasion for the destructive emotions to arise. (Rigpa Translations)
- Equanimity is the mind resting naturally, free from attachment, anger and delusion. Its function is to avoid giving occasion for the disturbing emotions [to occur in one's stream-of-being]. (Erik Pema Kunsang)
Alternative Translations
- Evenness (Padmakara Translation Group)