1. Human development
  2. Indeterminate consciousness in the fine-material sphere - resultant (Buddhism)

Indeterminate consciousness in the fine-material sphere - resultant (Buddhism)

  • Indeterminate consciousness in the form-realm - resultant

Description

As in the profitable sphere, these are associated with the jhana factors, that is: (i) with applied thought or inception of thought; sustained thought; happiness, joy or zest; bliss or ease; and concentration. (ii) with sustained thought; happiness, joy or zest; bliss or ease; and concentration. (iii) with happiness, joy or zest; bliss or ease; and concentration. (iv) with bliss or ease and concentration, happiness having faded away. (v) with concentration and equanimity. But whereas with the profitable consciousnesses these occurred in a cognitive series through right attainment, here it is by birth, through rebirth-linking (reconception), life-continuum and death.

All five give rise to materiality but not to postures or to intimation.

Context

In Hinayana Buddhism, 89 consciousnesses are enumerated in aggregate (khanda). Of these, 21 are profitable or moral, 12 are unprofitable or immoral and 56 are indeterminate (resultant or functional). The unprofitable all arise in the sphere of sense and desire, whereas profitable and indeterminate arise in sense, fine-material, immaterial and supramundane spheres.

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Metadata

Database
Human development
Type
(M) Modes of awareness
Content quality
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Language
English
Last update
Dec 3, 2024