![]() | This article contains
too many or overly lengthy quotations. (July 2016) |
Translations of Auddhatya | |
---|---|
English | excitement restlessness ebulience flightiness of mind |
Sanskrit | auddhatya |
Pali | uddhacca |
Burmese | ဥဒ္ဓစ္စ |
Chinese | 掉擧 |
Khmer | ឧទ្ធច្ចៈ ( UNGEGN: udthorch-chak) |
Tibetan | རྒོད་པ། ( Wylie: rgod pa; THL: göpa) |
Vietnamese | Trạo cử |
Glossary of Buddhism |
Auddhatya (Sanskrit; Pali: uddhacca; Tibetan phonetic: göpa ) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "excitement", "restlessness", etc. In the Theravada tradition, uddhacca is defined as a mental factor that is characterized by disquietude, like water whipped by the wind. [1] In the Mahayana tradition, auddhatya is defined as a mental factor that causes our mind to fly off from an object and recollect something else. [2] [3]
Auddhatya is identified as:
Bhikkhu Bodhi states:
In the Visuddhimagga (II, Part IX, Chapter I, 250) gives the following definition of uddhacca:
Nina van Gorkom explains:
The Abhidharma-samuccaya states:
Mipham Rinpoche states:
Alexander Berzin explains:
B. Allan Wallace states:
Mahayana tradition:
Theravada tradition:
![]() | This article contains
too many or overly lengthy quotations. (July 2016) |
Translations of Auddhatya | |
---|---|
English | excitement restlessness ebulience flightiness of mind |
Sanskrit | auddhatya |
Pali | uddhacca |
Burmese | ဥဒ္ဓစ္စ |
Chinese | 掉擧 |
Khmer | ឧទ្ធច្ចៈ ( UNGEGN: udthorch-chak) |
Tibetan | རྒོད་པ། ( Wylie: rgod pa; THL: göpa) |
Vietnamese | Trạo cử |
Glossary of Buddhism |
Auddhatya (Sanskrit; Pali: uddhacca; Tibetan phonetic: göpa ) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "excitement", "restlessness", etc. In the Theravada tradition, uddhacca is defined as a mental factor that is characterized by disquietude, like water whipped by the wind. [1] In the Mahayana tradition, auddhatya is defined as a mental factor that causes our mind to fly off from an object and recollect something else. [2] [3]
Auddhatya is identified as:
Bhikkhu Bodhi states:
In the Visuddhimagga (II, Part IX, Chapter I, 250) gives the following definition of uddhacca:
Nina van Gorkom explains:
The Abhidharma-samuccaya states:
Mipham Rinpoche states:
Alexander Berzin explains:
B. Allan Wallace states:
Mahayana tradition:
Theravada tradition: