Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/sutra/level4_deepening_understanding_path/mind_mental_factors/mind_mental_factors_51.html> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 9 of
9
with 100 triples per page.
- mind_mental_factors_51.html accessdate "2013-02-14".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html first "Alexander".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html isCitedBy Eight_Consciousnesses.
- mind_mental_factors_51.html last "Berzin".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html location "Berlin, Germany; June 2002; revised July, 2006".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html publisher "The Berzin Archives".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html quote "Unlike the Western view of consciousness as a general faculty that can be aware of all sensory and mental objects, Buddhism differentiates six types of consciousness, each of which is specific to one sensory field or to the mental field. A primary consciousness cognizes merely the essential nature of an object, which means the category of phenomenon to which something belongs. For example, eye consciousness cognizes a sight as merely a sight. The Chittamatra schools add two more types of primary consciousness to make their list of an eightfold network of primary consciousnesses : deluded awareness , alayavijnana . Alayavijnana is an individual consciousness, not a universal one, underlying all moments of cognition. It cognizes the same objects as the cognitions it underlies, but is a nondetermining cognition of what appears to it and lacks clarity of its objects. It carries karmic legacies and the mental impressions of memories, in the sense that both are nonstatic abstractions imputed on the alayavijnana. The continuity of an individual alayavijnana ceases with the attainment of enlightenment.".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html title "Mind and Mental Factors: the Fifty-one Types of Subsidiary Awareness".
- mind_mental_factors_51.html url "http://www.berzinarchives.com/web/en/archives/sutra/level4_deepening_understanding_path/mind_mental_factors/mind_mental_factors_51.html".