Abstract

The subject of the paper is the moral aspect of interpretations of dejectedness (daurmanasya) and insanity (cittavikṣepa-unmāda) in the treatises Abhidharmakośa-bhāṣya by Vasubandhu (4-5th centuries) and Sphuṭārtha-abhidharmakośa-vyākhyā by Yaśomitra (8th century). Buddhist interpretation of these phenomena is based on the canonical postulate that only corporeal suffering is a karmic retribution (vipāka-phala). Dejectedness is treated by Buddhist exegetics as a peculiar trait of imagination (kalpanā) manifesting in the moment of mental construction of evil projective situations. Dejectedness can be good (kuśala) and evil (akuśala) dependent on personal moral position. Good dejectedness is repentance (kaukṛtya) for an undone good deed or sin done. Opposite to it is evil dejectedness. Insanity is treated as destruction of predicative (abhinirūpana) and mnestic (anusmaraṇa) functions of consciousness. This mental suffering is determined by karma in cases when attempts to destroy others consciousness had place in the past. Karmic retribution in these cases is corporeal suffering, or disbalance of gross elements, and insanity is the consequence of this disbalance.

Highlights

  • The subject of the paper is the moral aspect of interpretations of dejectedness (daurmanasya

  • Buddhist interpretation of these phenomena is based on the canonical postulate that only corporeal suffering is a karmic retribution

  • Dejectedness is treated by Buddhist exegetics as a peculiar trait

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Summary

Introduction

Соответственно этому ментальное страдание определяется как avipāka — то, что не есть ретрибуция по своей природе. Но в отличие от прочих способностей и, в частности, от способности испытывать физическое неприятное чувствование (duюkha-vedanā) она определяется как то, что [возникает] не благодаря созреванию [кармы]» [4. Что согласно буддийским представлениям сознание, пребывающее в эмпирическом (неизмененном) состоянии, определяется как несконцетрированное (asamāhita).

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