DHYANA
| 'Dhyana' | |
|---|---|
| 'Sanskrit Name' | |
| Romanization | DhyÄna |
| DevanÄgarÄ« | धà¥à¤¯à¤¾à¤¨ |
| 'Pali Name' | |
| Romanization | JhÄna |
| DevanÄgarÄ« | à¤à¤¾à¤¨ |
| Sinhala | à¶£à·à¶± |
| 'Chinese Name' | |
| Hanyu Pinyin | Chán |
| Wade-Giles | Ch’an |
| Cantonese IPA | sɪm4 |
| Cantonese Jyutping | sim |
| Hanzi | 禪 |
| Jiantizi | 禅 |
| 'Korean Name' | |
| Revised Romanization | Seon |
| McCune-Reischauer | SÅn |
| Hangul | ì„ |
| Hanja | 禪 |
| 'Japanese Name' | |
| Romaji | Zen |
| Kanji | 禅 |
| 'Vietnamese Name' | |
| Quốc ngữ | Thiá»n |
| 'Tibetan Name' | |
| Wylie | bsam gtan (pronounced ''samten'') |
'DhyÄna' in Sanskrit or 'JhÄna' in PÄli refers to a type or aspect of meditation. It is a key concept in Hinduism and Buddhism. Equivalent terms are "Chán" in modern Chinese, "Zen" in Japanese, "Seon" in Korea, and ''Samten'' in Tibetan.
| Contents |
| DhyÄna in Hinduism |
| DhyÄna in Buddhism |
| In the Theravada tradition |
| In Mahayana traditions |
| DhyÄna in Jainism |
| See also |
| Notes |
| Sources |
| External links |
| Buddhist |
| Sufi |
DhyÄna in Hinduism
Main articles: Dhyana in Hinduism
DhyÄna's beginnings are traced to Hinduism, where it is considered to be an instrument to gain self knowledge, separating maya from reality to help attain the ultimate goal of Moksha.
The Bhagavad Gita, thought to have been written some time between 400 and 100 BCE, talks of four branches of yoga:
★ Karma yoga: The yoga of action in the world
★ Jnana yoga: The yoga of Wisdom and intellectual endeavor
★ Bhakti yoga: The yoga of devotion to God
★ Dhyana yoga: The yoga of meditation
Dhyana in Raja Yoga is also found in Patanjali's Yoga Sutras. Depictions of Hindu yogis performing dhyÄna are found in ancient texts and in statues and frescoes of ancient India temples. Kshatriya Siddhartha Gautama studied dhyÄna during his early years away from his kingdom.
DhyÄna in Buddhism
In the Theravada tradition
In the Pali Canon the Buddha describes four progressive states of absorption meditation or jhÄna. The jhÄnas are said by the Buddha to be conducive to detachment but they must not be mistaken for the final goal of nibbana. The jhÄnas are states of meditation where the mind is free from the five hindrances (craving, aversion, sloth, agitation, doubt) and incapable of discursive thinking. The deeper jhÄnas can last for many hours. When a meditator emerges from jhÄna, his/her mind is empowered and able to penetrate into the deepest truths of existence.
There are four deeper states of meditative absorption called the immaterial attainments. Sometimes these are also referred to as the "formless" jhÄnas, or arupajhana (distinguished from the first four jhÄnas, rupajhana). In the Buddhist canonical texts, the word jhÄna is never explicitly used to denote them, but they are always mentioned in sequence after the first four jhÄnas.
JhÄnas are normally described according to the nature of the mental factors which are present in these states
# Movement of the mind onto the object, 'Vitakka' (Sanskrit: 'Vitarka')
# Retention of the mind on the object, 'VicÄra'
# Joy, 'Pīti' (Sanskrit: 'Prīti')
# Happiness, 'Sukha'
# Equanimity, 'UpekkhÄ' (Sanskrit: '')
# One-pointedness, 'EkaggatÄ' (Sanskrit: 'EkÄgratÄ')[1]
; First JhÄna (Vitakka, VicÄra, PÄ«ti, Sukha, EkaggatÄ): The five hindrances have completely disappeared and intense unified bliss remains. Only the subtlest of mental movement remains - perceivable in its absence by those who have entered the second jhÄna. The ability to form unwholesome intentions ceases.
; Second JhÄna (PÄ«ti, Sukha, EkaggatÄ): All mental movement utterly ceases. There is only bliss. The ability to form wholesome intentions cease as well.
; Third JhÄna (Sukha, EkaggatÄ): One half of bliss disappears (joy).
; Fourth JhÄna (UpekkhÄ, EkaggatÄ): The other half of bliss (happiness) disappears, leading to a state with neither pleasure nor pain, which the Buddha said is actually a subtle form of happiness (more sublime than pÄ«ti and sukha). The Buddha described the jhÄnas as "the footsteps of the tathÄgata". The breath is said to cease temporarily in this state.
Traditionally, this fourth jhÄna is seen as the beginning of attaining psychic powers (''abhigna'').[2]
The scriptures state that one should not seek to attain ever higher jhanas but master one first, then move on to the next. 'Mastery of jhana' involves being able to enter a jhana at will, stay as long as one likes, leave at will and experience each of the jhana factors as required. They also seem to suggest that lower jhana factors may manifest themselves in higher jhanas, if the jhanas have not been properly developed. The Buddha is seen to advise his disciples to concentrate and steady the jhana further.
In Mahayana traditions
In the Mahayana tradition, dhyÄna is the fifth of six pÄramitÄs (perfections). It is usually translated as "concentration" or "meditative stability."
In East Asia, several schools of Buddhism were founded that focused on dhyÄna, under the names Chan, Zen, and Seon. According to tradition, Bodhidharma brought DhyÄna to the Shaolin Temple in China, where it came to be transliterated as "chan" ("seon" in Korea, and then "zen" in Japan).
DhyÄna in Jainism
is called Samayika.
See also
★ Rupajhana
★ Arupajhana
★ Samadhi
★ Bhavana
★ Muraqaba
★ Pranava yoga
Notes
1. In the Suttapitaka, right concentration is often referred to as having ''five'' factors, with one-pointedness (''ekaggata'') not being explicitly identified as a factor of jhana attainment (see, for instance, SN 28.1-4, AN 4.41, AN 5.28).
2. For instance in AN 5.28, the Buddha states:
:"When a monk has developed and pursued the five-factored noble right concentration in this way, then whichever of the six higher knowledges he turns his mind to know and realize, he can witness them for himself whenever there is an opening....
:"If he wants, he wields manifold supranormal powers. Having been one he becomes many; having been many he becomes one. He appears. He vanishes. He goes unimpeded through walls, ramparts, and mountains as if through space. He dives in and out of the earth as if it were water. He walks on water without sinking as if it were dry land. Sitting crosslegged he flies through the air like a winged bird. With his hand he touches and strokes even the sun and moon, so mighty and powerful. He exercises influence with his body even as far as the Brahma worlds. He can witness this for himself whenever there is an opening ..." (Thanissaro, 1997.)
Sources
★ Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997). ''Samadhanga Sutta: The Factors of Concentration'' (AN 5.28). Retrieved on 2007-06-05 from "Access to Insight" at: http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/an/an05/an05.028.than.html.
External links
Buddhist
★ "The Jhanas in Theravada Buddhist Meditation," thesis by Ven. Henepola Gunaratana, published by BPS as Wheel 351/353 (1988). (See also ATI version.)
★ "The Jhanas" (Oct. 2005) by Ajahn Brahmavamso
★ "Jhana" (2005), descriptions and similes from the Pali Canon's Anguttara Nikaya and Dhammapada, by John T. Bullitt.
Sufi
★ "A Course of Meditation: First Jhana," by Pir Vilayat Inayat Khan
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