![]() | This article contains
too many or overly lengthy quotations. (July 2016) |
Translations of Anapatrapya | |
---|---|
English | lack of propriety disregard shamelessness |
Sanskrit | anapatrapya, anapatrāpya |
Pali | anottappa |
Chinese | 無愧 |
Tibetan | ཁྲེལ་མེད་པ། ( Wylie: khrel med pa; THL: trel mepa) |
Glossary of Buddhism |
Anapatrapya (Sanskrit; Pali: anottappa; Tibetan phonetic: trel mepa) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "lack of propriety", "disregard", etc. In the Theravada tradition, anottappa is defined as the absence of dread on account of misconduct. [1] In the Mahayana tradition, anapatrapya is defined as engaging in non-virtue without inhibition on account of others. [2] [3]
Anapatrapya (Pali: anottappa) is identified as:
In the Visuddhimagga (XIV, 160), anottappa (shamelessness) is defined together with ahirika (consciencelessness) as follows:
Nina van Gorkom explains:
The Abhidharma-samuccaya states:
Mipham Rinpoche states:
Alexander Berzin explains:
![]() | This article contains
too many or overly lengthy quotations. (July 2016) |
Translations of Anapatrapya | |
---|---|
English | lack of propriety disregard shamelessness |
Sanskrit | anapatrapya, anapatrāpya |
Pali | anottappa |
Chinese | 無愧 |
Tibetan | ཁྲེལ་མེད་པ། ( Wylie: khrel med pa; THL: trel mepa) |
Glossary of Buddhism |
Anapatrapya (Sanskrit; Pali: anottappa; Tibetan phonetic: trel mepa) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "lack of propriety", "disregard", etc. In the Theravada tradition, anottappa is defined as the absence of dread on account of misconduct. [1] In the Mahayana tradition, anapatrapya is defined as engaging in non-virtue without inhibition on account of others. [2] [3]
Anapatrapya (Pali: anottappa) is identified as:
In the Visuddhimagga (XIV, 160), anottappa (shamelessness) is defined together with ahirika (consciencelessness) as follows:
Nina van Gorkom explains:
The Abhidharma-samuccaya states:
Mipham Rinpoche states:
Alexander Berzin explains: