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Page xxx
... though it seems likely , from the passages quoted , that they were Buddhist thinkers of an earlier age but of a later date than that of our Manual , inasmuch as one of the citations shows that the " Door - theory " of cognition was ...
... though it seems likely , from the passages quoted , that they were Buddhist thinkers of an earlier age but of a later date than that of our Manual , inasmuch as one of the citations shows that the " Door - theory " of cognition was ...
Page xlv
Every act of cognition , of coming - to - know anything , is reducible to this compound function of discerning the particular and of assimilating it into something relatively general . And this process , in its most abstract terms ...
Every act of cognition , of coming - to - know anything , is reducible to this compound function of discerning the particular and of assimilating it into something relatively general . And this process , in its most abstract terms ...
Page xlviii
... of consciousness , or subjective experience that is , to " the skandhas of feeling , perception , 1 Cf. the writer's art . " Logic " ( Buddhist ) : Ency . Religion and Ethics . synergies , and cognition " --as well as to " xlviii.
... of consciousness , or subjective experience that is , to " the skandhas of feeling , perception , 1 Cf. the writer's art . " Logic " ( Buddhist ) : Ency . Religion and Ethics . synergies , and cognition " --as well as to " xlviii.
Page xlix
synergies , and cognition " --as well as to " unconditioned element " . ( The skandhas are also ( The skandhas are also " elements " —that is , irreducible but phenomenal factors ( see p . 129 , n . 1 ) , real although phenomenal.1 ...
synergies , and cognition " --as well as to " unconditioned element " . ( The skandhas are also ( The skandhas are also " elements " —that is , irreducible but phenomenal factors ( see p . 129 , n . 1 ) , real although phenomenal.1 ...
Page lxi
The whole working out of his theory is an attempt to translate in terms of a detailed and consecutive physiological process the primitive , naïve view of cognition . " Theory of this calibre was , in Greece , divided between impact ...
The whole working out of his theory is an attempt to translate in terms of a detailed and consecutive physiological process the primitive , naïve view of cognition . " Theory of this calibre was , in Greece , divided between impact ...
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abides absence accompanied according aloof Answer applied arisen arises aspect associated attain attention balance belong bodily body Book born Buddhaghosa Buddhist called causally cause CHAPTER cognition concentration concept condition connexion consciousness Continue cultivates derived described desire dullness ease effect element ends energy enters ethical evil existence external factors faculty feeling Fetters five Formless four four skandhas given going grasped hate Higher Ideal ideas impinge included indeterminate indifference insight intuition Jhāna karma kinds knowledge latter Manual material means mental mind modes moral namely nutriment object occasion omitted opinion Path perception phenomena present progress psychological question reference relating rendered respectively result root self-collectedness sense sensuous shape sight skandhas sound sphere sustained Sutta synergies taken tangible taste term theory things thought unconditioned universe views visible vision visual volition wrong zest
Popular passages
Page 303 - What is it to have the doors of the faculties guarded ? When a certain individual sees an object with the eye he is not entranced with the general appearance or the details of it.
Page xxxix - I know a man in Christ who fourteen years ago was caught up to the third heaven — whether in the body or out of the body I do not know, God knows.
Page 307 - ... offering. There is neither fruit nor result of good or evil deeds. There is no such thing as this world or the next. There is neither father nor mother, nor beings springing into life without them. There are in the world no recluses or...
Page xxiv - Whether the Buddhist might find it so or not, there is for him at all events a strong and ancient association of ideas attaching to the title Dhamma-Sangani which for us is entirely nonexistent. I have therefore let go the letter, in order to indicate what appears to me the real import of the work. Namely, that it is, in the first place, a manual or text-book, and not a treatise or disquisition, elaborated and rendered attractive and edifying after the manner of most of the Sutta Pitaka. And then,...
Page 241 - The coincidence, however, is extremely doubtful. The Pali even leaves it vague as to whether the concomitant cause is the cause of the state in question; sometimes, indeed, this is evidently not the case. Eg, in § 1077 'dulness' is a hetu-dhammo, but not therefore the cause of the concomitant states, lust and hate. The compilers were, as usual, more interested in the psychology than in the logic of the matter, and were inquiring into the factors in cases of mental association. Those states, to wit,...
Page liii - I will begin by placing faculties in a class by themselves: they are powers in us, and in all other things, by which we do as we do. Sight and hearing, for example, I should call faculties. Have I clearly explained the class which I mean? Yes, I quite understand. Then let me tell you my view about them. I do not see them, and therefore the distinctions of figure...
Page 226 - (2 Cor. x. 5). All such thoughts or 'states' are insignificant (paritta) as compared with the one great object of devotion — the Path, the Fruit, Nirvana. Even to contemplate the progress of others in the Path, or to have seen the Tathagata work a double miracle, is not precious to the student as is his own discernment and realization of what the Path means to him.
Page 45 - Herein, O bhikkhus, a brother, aloof from sensuous appetites, aloof from evil ideas, enters into and abides in the First Jhana, wherein there is cogitation and deliberation, which is born of solitude and is full of joy and ease. Suppressing cogitation and deliberation, he enters into and abides in the Second Jhana, which is self-evoked, born of concentration, full of joy and ease, in that, set free from cogitation and deliberation...
Page xx - I will set forth,• rejoicing in what I reveal, the explanation of the meaning of that Abhidhamma as it was chanted forth by Maha Kassapa and the rest (at the first Council), and re-chanted later (at the second Council) by the Arahats, and by Mahinda brought to this wondrous isle and turned into the language of the dwellers therein. Rejecting now the tongue of the men of...
Page lxxv - Buddha, 1 i., p. 122, n. Dr. Neumann renders it by Jlort, following Childers. It is worthy of note that, in connexion with the heresy of identifying the self with the physical organism generally (below, p. 259), the Cy. makes no allusion to heart, or other part of the rupam, in connexion with views (2) or (4). These apparently resembled Augustine's belief: the soul is wholly present both in the entire body and in each part of it. With regard to view (3), is it possible that Plotinus heard it at Alexandria,...