Six causes of destructive emotions: Difference between revisions

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According to [[Asanga]]’s ''[[Bodhisattva Bhumis]]'' there are six causes of [[destructive emotions]] (Tib. ཉོན་མོངས་པ་སྐྱེ་བའི་རྒྱུ་དྲུག་ , ''nyönmongpa kyewé gyu druk''; [[Wyl.]] ''nyon mongs pa skye ba’i rgyu drug''). They are:
According to [[Asanga]]’s ''[[Bodhisattva Bhumis]]'' there are '''six causes of [[destructive emotions]]''' (Tib. ཉོན་མོངས་པ་སྐྱེ་བའི་རྒྱུ་དྲུག་ , ''nyönmongpa kyewé gyu druk'', [[Wyl.]] ''nyon mongs pa skye ba’i rgyu drug''). They are:


#The basis (Tib. རྟེན་, ''ten''; Wyl. ''rten'') refers to the latent [[habitual tendencies]] stored in the [[all-ground consciousness]].
#The basis (Tib. རྟེན་, ''ten''; Wyl. ''rten'') refers to the latent [[habitual tendencies]] stored in the [[all-ground consciousness]].
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#Attention (Tib. ཡིད་ལ་བྱེད་པ་, ''yi la jepa''; Wyl. ''yid la byed pa'') refers to incorrect attention that gives rise to [[four misapprehensions]].
#Attention (Tib. ཡིད་ལ་བྱེད་པ་, ''yi la jepa''; Wyl. ''yid la byed pa'') refers to incorrect attention that gives rise to [[four misapprehensions]].


[[Category: Destructive Emotions]]
[[Category: Enumerations]]
[[Category: Enumerations]]
[[Category: 06-Six]]]
[[Category: 06-Six]]]

Revision as of 15:40, 13 February 2018

According to Asanga’s Bodhisattva Bhumis there are six causes of destructive emotions (Tib. ཉོན་མོངས་པ་སྐྱེ་བའི་རྒྱུ་དྲུག་ , nyönmongpa kyewé gyu druk, Wyl. nyon mongs pa skye ba’i rgyu drug). They are:

  1. The basis (Tib. རྟེན་, ten; Wyl. rten) refers to the latent habitual tendencies stored in the all-ground consciousness.
  2. The object (Tib. དམིགས་པ་, mikpa; Wyl. dmigs pa), refers to the appearance of objects conducive to the arising of a destructive emotion.
  3. Social context (Tib. འདུ་འཛིན་, du dzin; Wyl. 'du 'dzin), refers to the influence of bad friends and foolish people.
  4. Explanation (Tib. བཤད་པ་, shepa; Wyl. bshad pa) refers to listening to wrong teachings.
  5. Habituation (Tib. གོམས་པ་, gompa; Wyl. goms pa) refers to the process of becoming accustomed to past destructive emotions.
  6. Attention (Tib. ཡིད་ལ་བྱེད་པ་, yi la jepa; Wyl. yid la byed pa) refers to incorrect attention that gives rise to four misapprehensions.]