Difference between revisions of "Vibhanga Sutta"
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− | [[Vibhanga Sutta]]: An Analysis | + | {{Centre|{{Big2x|[[Vibhanga Sutta]]: An Analysis <br/> |
− | + | (of the [[Feeling]] [[Faculties]])}}<br/> | |
− | (of the [[Feeling]] [[Faculties]]) | + | translated from the [[Pali]] by <br/> |
− | + | [[Thanissaro Bhikkhu]]}}<br/><br/> | |
− | translated from the [[Pali]] by | ||
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− | [[Thanissaro Bhikkhu]] | ||
"[[Monks]], there are these [[five faculties]]. Which five? The [[pleasure]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}, the [[pain]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}, the happiness-faculty, the distress-faculty, the [[equanimity]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}. | "[[Monks]], there are these [[five faculties]]. Which five? The [[pleasure]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}, the [[pain]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}, the happiness-faculty, the distress-faculty, the [[equanimity]]-{{Wiki|faculty}}. |
Latest revision as of 16:20, 3 April 2014
Vibhanga Sutta: An Analysis
(of the Feeling Faculties)
translated from the Pali by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
"Monks, there are these five faculties. Which five? The pleasure-faculty, the pain-faculty, the happiness-faculty, the distress-faculty, the equanimity-faculty.
"And what is the pleasure-faculty? Any physical pleasure, physical comfort born of body-contact to be experienced as pleasure & comfort. That is called the pleasure-faculty.
"And what is the pain-faculty? Any physical pain, physical discomfort born of body-contact to be experienced as pain & discomfort. That is called the pain-faculty.
"And what is the happiness-faculty? Any mental pleasure, mental comfort born of intellect-contact to be experienced as pleasure & comfort. That is called the happiness-faculty.
"And what is the distress-faculty? Any mental pain, mental discomfort born of intellect-contact to be experienced as pain & discomfort. That is called the distress-faculty.
"And what is the equanimity-faculty? Anything, physical or mental, to be experienced as neither comfort nor discomfort. That is called the equanimity-faculty.
"With regard to this, the pleasure-faculty & happiness-faculty are to be seen as a feeling of pleasure. The pain-faculty & distress-faculty are to be seen as a feeling of pain. The equanimity-faculty is to be seen as a feeling of neither pleasure nor pain. Thus, by this exposition, the five are three; and the three, five."