དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི། | Glossary of Terms
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དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི་པ།
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- ཡང་དག་པའི་དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- yang dag pa’i dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi pa
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
- catvāri samyaksmṛtyupasthānāni
- catvāri smṛtyupasthāna
- catvāri smṛtyupasthānāni
- catuhsmṛtyupasthāna
- catuḥ-smṛtyupasthāna
- Term
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི་པ།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi pa
- catvāri smṛtyupasthānāni
The meditative application of awareness to the body, perception, mind, and dharmas; part of the thirty-seven aspects of awakening.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
The four applications of mindfulness are (1) the application of mindfulness which observes the physical body; (2) the application of mindfulness which observes feelings; (3) the application of mindfulness which observes the mind; and (4) the application of mindfulness which observes phenomena. In the present sūtra, an explanation focused mainly on the first of the four is found at the beginning of chapter 9. See UT22084-026-001-1604.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
The application of mindfulness to the body, the application of mindfulness to feeling, the application of mindfulness to mind, and the application of mindfulness to dharmas.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
- 四念處
A fundamental practice of Buddhist meditation: the close application of mindfulness to the body, feelings, mind, and phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥ-smṛtyupasthāna
Application of mindfulness with respect to the body, feelings, mind, and phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri samyaksmṛtyupasthānāni
Recollection of the nature of the body, feelings, the mind, and dharmas.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the (1) body, (2) feelings, (3) mind, and (4) mental phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- ཡང་དག་པའི་དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- yang dag pa’i dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the body, feelings, mind, and phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catuhsmṛtyupasthāna
- 四念處
Four contemplations on: (1) the body, (2) feelings, (3) mind, and (4) mental objects. These four contemplations are part of the thirty-seven factors of awakening.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuhsmṛtyupasthāna
A meditation in which (in the most basic form in which it is taught) one sees the body as impure, feeling as painful, mind as transient, and things as without self.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the body, feelings, the mind, and phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri smṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the body, feelings, the mind, and phenomena. These four are part of the thirty-seven factors of awakening.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri smṛtyupasthānāni
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the body, mindfulness of sensations or feelings, mindfulness of the mind, and mindfulness of phenomena. These relate to a form of meditation in which one sees the body as impure, sensations as painful, the mind as transient, and phenomena as without self.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Often called “four types of mindfulness”; they refer to mindfulness of the body, bodily sensations, thoughts, and phenomena.
- four applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
The application of mindfulness to the body, the application of mindfulness to feeling, the application of mindfulness to mind, and the application of mindfulness to dharmas.
- four foundations of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna AS
Using the body to cultivate mindfulness by observing the body, using feelings to cultivate mindfulness by observing feelings, using the mind to cultivate mindfulness by observing the mind, and using phenomena to cultivate mindfulness by observing phenomena. Part of the thirty-seven elements that are conducive to awakening.
- four foundations of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri smṛtyupasthānāni
- four placements of mindfulness
- ཡང་དག་པའི་དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- yang dag pa’i dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri samyaksmṛtyupasthānāni
Mindfulness of the body, feelings, the mind, and dharmas.
- four placements of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
Mindfulness of the body, mindfulness of feelings, mindfulness of the mind, and mindfulness of dharmas, the last understood variously as either all dharmas or a specific list of dharmas.
- four bases of mindfulness
- ཡང་དག་པའི་དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་བཞག་པ་བཞི།
- yang dag pa’i dran pa nye bar bzhag pa bzhi
- catvāri samyaksmṛtyupasthānāni
- 四念住
Mindfulness of the body, feelings, the mind, and phenomena.
- four close applications of mindfulness
- དྲན་པ་ཉེ་བར་གཞག་པ་བཞི།
- dran pa nye bar gzhag pa bzhi
- catuḥsmṛtyupasthāna
A fundamental practice of Buddhist meditation: close application of mindfulness to the body, close application of mindfulness to feelings, close application of mindfulness to mind, and close application of mindfulness to phenomena.