Articles by alphabetic order
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
 Ā Ī Ñ Ś Ū Ö Ō
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0


Difference between revisions of "Abhibhavayatana"

From Tibetan Buddhist Encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
 
[[File:Cropped-nmsjmnf21.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Cropped-nmsjmnf21.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
  
'''Abhibhāvayatana''' ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Abhibhvāyatana]], [[Pali]]: [[Abhibhāyatana]]), or [[Abhibhāyatana]] ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Abhibhāyatana]], [[Pali]]: [[Abhibhāyātana]], "control of [[perceptions]]"), is a {{Wiki|concept}} in [[Buddhism]] through which [[Meditation]] is achieved in eight stages by mastering the [[senses]]. During this process, the [[practitioner]] separates himself from the [[physical]] [[World]], frees himself from [[attachments]] to [[physical]] [[forms]], and begins freeing himself from [[pain]] and [[pleasure]] of the material [[World]] tied to [[Suffering]] in [[Buddhism]].
+
]]Abhibhāvayatana\\ ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Abhibhvāyatana]], [[Pali]]: [[Abhibhāyatana]]), or [[Abhibhāyatana]] ([[Sanskrit]]: [[Abhibhāyatana]], [[Pali]]: [[Abhibhāyātana]], "[[control of perceptions]]"), is a {{Wiki|concept}} in [[Buddhism]] through which [[Meditation]] is achieved in eight stages by mastering the [[senses]]. During this process, the [[practitioner]] separates himself from the [[physical World]], frees himself from [[attachments]] to [[physical forms]], and begins freeing himself from [[pain]] and [[pleasure]] of the material [[World]] tied to [[Suffering]] in [[Buddhism]].
  
 
The eight stages of abhibhāvayatana are:
 
The eight stages of abhibhāvayatana are:

Revision as of 09:52, 11 September 2014

Cropped-nmsjmnf21.jpg

]]Abhibhāvayatana\\ (Sanskrit: Abhibhvāyatana, Pali: Abhibhāyatana), or Abhibhāyatana (Sanskrit: Abhibhāyatana, Pali: Abhibhāyātana, "control of perceptions"), is a concept in Buddhism through which Meditation is achieved in eight stages by mastering the senses. During this process, the practitioner separates himself from the physical World, frees himself from attachments to physical forms, and begins freeing himself from pain and pleasure of the material World tied to Suffering in Buddhism.

The eight stages of abhibhāvayatana are:

  1. Mastery of Perception of the Form of one's own Body and limited forms beyond it
  2. Mastery of Perception of the Form of one's own Body, and of forms beyond it
  3. Mastery of Perception of formlessness in relation to one's own Body and limited forms beyond it
  4. Mastery of Perception of formlessness in relation to one's own Body and the whole World beyond it
  5. Mastery of Perception over different forms of Beauty (stages 5–8)

Source

Wikipedia:Abhibhavayatana