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- The word of The Buddha
- An Outline of the teachings of the Buddha in the words of the
Pali canon
- Compiled, translated, and explained by
Nyanatiloka
Right Understanding (Sammaa-di.t.thi)
D.24
What, now, is Right Understanding?
Understanding The Four Truths
1. To understand suffering; 2. to understand the origin of suffering;
3. to understand the extinction of suffering; 4. to understand the path that leads to the
extinction of suffering. This is called Right Understanding.
Understanding Merit And Demerit
M. 9
Again, when the noble disciple understands what is karmically
wholesome, and the root of wholesome karma, what is karmically unwholesome, and the root
of unwholesome karma, then he has Right Understanding.
What, now is `karmically unwholesome' (akusala)?
1. |
Destruction of living beings is karmically unwholesome
|
|
Bodily Action
(kaaya-kamma)
|
2.
|
Stealing is karmically unwholesome
|
3.
|
Unlawful sexual intercourse is karmically unwholesome
|
4.
|
Lying is karmically unwholesome
|
|
Verbal Action
(vacii-kamma)
|
5.
|
Tale-bearing is karmically unwholesome
|
6.
|
Harsh language is karmically unwholesome
|
7.
|
Frivolous talk is karmically unwholesome
|
8.
|
Covetousness is karmically unwholesome
|
|
Mental Action
(mano-kamma)
|
9.
|
Ill-will is karmically unwholesome
|
10.
|
Wrong views are karmically unwholesome.
|
These ten are called `Evil Courses of Action' (akusala-kammapatha).
And what are the roots of unwholesome karma? Greed (lobha) is a root of
unwholesome karma; Hatred (dosa) is a root of unwholesome karma; Delusion (moha) is a root
of unwholesome karma.
Therefore, I say, these demeritorious actions are of three kinds:
either due to greed, or due to hatred, or due to delusion.
As `karmically unwholesome' (a-kusala) is considered every volitional act of body,
speech, or mind, which is rooted in greed, hatred, or delusion. It is regarded as akusala,
i.e. unwholesome or unskillful, as it produces evil and painful results in this or some
future existence. The state of will or volition is really that which counts as action
(kamma). It may manifest itself as action of the body, or speech; if it does not manifest
itself outwardly, it is counted as mental action.
The state of greed (lobha), as also that of hatred (dosa), is always accompanied by
ignorance (or delusion; moha), this latter being the primary root of all evil. Greed and
hatred, however, cannot co-exist in one and the same moment of consciousness.
What, now, is `karmically wholesome' (kusala)?
1. |
To abstain from killing is karmically wholesome
|
|
Bodily Action
(kaaya-kamma)
|
2.
|
To abstain from stealing is karmically wholesome
|
3.
|
To abstain from unlawful sexual intercourse is karmically wholesome
|
4.
|
To abstain from lying is karmically wholesome
|
|
Verbal Action
(vacii-kamma)
|
5.
|
To abstain from tale-bearing is karmically wholesome
|
6.
|
To abstain from harsh language is karmically wholesome
|
7.
|
To abstain from frivolous talk is karmically wholesome
|
8.
|
Absence of covetousness is karmically wholesome
|
|
Mental Action
(mano-kamma)
|
9.
|
Absence of ill-will is karmically wholesome
|
10.
|
Right understanding is karmically wholesome
|
These ten are called `Good Courses of Action' (kusala-kamma-patha).
And what are the roots of wholesome karma? Absence of greed (a-lobha =
unselfishness) is a root of wholesome karma; absence of hatred (a-dosa = kindness) is a
root of wholesome karma; absence of delusion (a-moha = wisdom) is a root of wholesome
karma.
Understanding The Three Characteristics
(ti-lakkha.na)
SS. XXII. 51
Again, when one understands that corporeality, feeling, perception,
mental formations and consciousness are transient (subject to suffering, and without a
self), also in that case one possesses Right Understanding.
Unprofitable Questions
M. 63
Should any one say that he does not wish to lead the holy life under
the Blessed One, unless the Blessed One first tells him whether the world is eternal or
temporal, finite or infinite: whether the life-principle is identical with the body, or
something different; whether the Perfect One continues after death, etc.-such a one would
die ere the Perfect One could tell him all this.
It is as if a man were pierced by a poisoned arrow and his friends,
companions or near relations should send for a surgeon; but that man should say: `I will
not have this arrow pulled out, until I know, who the man is that has wounded me: whether
he is a noble man, a priest, a tradesman, or a servant'; or: `what his name is, and to
what family he belongs'; or: `whether he is tall, or short, or of medium height'. Truly,
such a man would die ere he could adequately learn all this.
Snp. 592
Therefore, the man who seeks his own welfare, should pull out this
arrow-this arrow of lamentation, pain, and sorrow.
M. 63
For, whether the theory exists, or whether it does not exist, that the
world is eternal, or temporal, or finite or infinite-yet certainly, there exists birth,
there exists decay, there exist death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair, the
extinction of which, attainable even in this present life, I make known unto you.
Five Fetters (Sa.myojana)
M. 64
Suppose for instance, that there is an unlearned worldling, void of
regard for holy men, ignorant of the teaching of holy men, untrained in the noble
doctrine. And his heart is possessed and overcome by Self-illusion, by Scepticism, by
Attachment to mere Rule and Ritual, by Sensual Lust, and by Ill-will; and how to free
himself from these things, he does not in reality know.
Self-Illusion (sakkaaya-di.t.thi) may reveal itself as:
1. `Eternalism': bhava- or sassata-di.t.thi, lit. `Eternity-Belief', i.e. the belief
that one's Ego, Self or Soul exists independently of the material body, and continues even
after the dissolution of the latter.
2. `Annihilationism': vibhava- or ucchcda-di.t.thi, lit. `Annihilation-Belief', i.e.
the materialistic belief that this present life constitutes the Ego, and hence that it is
annihilated at the death of the material body.
For the ten `Fetters' (samyojana), see "The
Ten Fetters" on page  32.
Unwise Considerations
M. 2
Not knowing what is worthy of consideration, and what is unworthy of
consideration, he considers the unworthy, and not the worthy.
And unwisely he considers thus: `Have I been in the past? Or, have I
not been in the past? What have I been in the past? How have I been in the past? From what
state into what state did I change in the past?
Shall I be in the future? Or, shall I not be in the future? What shall
I be in the future? How shall I be in the future? From what state into what state shall I
change in the future?'
And the present also fills him with doubt; `Am I? Or, am I not? What am
I? How am I? This being, whence has it come? Whither will it go?'
The Six Views About The Self
And with such unwise considerations, he adopts one or other of the six
views, and it becomes his conviction and firm belief: `I have a Self', or: `I have no
Self', or: `With the Self I perceive the Self', or: `With that which is no Self, I
perceive the Self'; or: `With the Self I perceive that which is no Self'. Or, he adopts
the following view: `This my Self, which can think and feel, and which, now here, now
there, experiences the fruit of good and evil deeds: this my Self is permanent, stable,
eternal, not subject to change, and will thus eternally remain the same'.
M. 22
If there really existed the Self, there would also exist something
which belonged to the Self. As, however, in truth and reality neither the Self, nor
anything belonging to the Self, can be found, is it not therefore really an utter fools'
doctrine to say: `This is the world, this am I; after death I shall be permanent,
persisting, and eternal'?
M. 2
These are called mere views, a thicket of views, a puppet-show of
views, a toil of views, a snare of views; and ensnared in the fetter of views the ignorant
worldling will not be freed from rebirth, from decay, and from death, from sorrow, pain,
grief and despair; he will not be freed, I say, from suffering.
Wise Considerations
The learned and noble disciple, however, who has regard for holy men,
knows the teaching of holy men, is well trained in the noble doctrine; he understands what
is worthy of consideration, and what is unworthy. And knowing this, he considers the
worthy, and not the unworthy. What suffering is, he wisely considers; what the origin of
suffering is, he wisely considers; what the extinction of suffering is, he wisely
considers; what the path is that leads to the extinction of suffering, he wisely
considers.
The Sotapanna or `Stream-Enterer'
And by thus considering, three fetters vanish, namely; Self-illusion,
Scepticism, and Attachment to mere Rule and Ritual.
M. 22
But those disciples, in whom these three fetters have vanished, they
all have `entered the Stream' (sotaapanna).
Dhp. 178
- More than any earthly power,
- More than all the joys of heaven,
- More than rule o'er all the world,
- Is the Entrance to the Stream.
The Ten Fetters (Sa.myojana)
There are ten `Fetters'-samyojana-by which beings are bound to the wheel of existence.
They are:
- Self-Illusion (sakkaaya-di.t.thi)
- Scepticism (vicikicchaa)
- Attachment to mere Rule and Ritual (siilabbata-paraamaasa)
- Sensual Lust (kaamaraaga)
- Ill-Will (vyaapaada)
- Craving for Fine-Material Existence (ruupa-raaga)
- Craving for Immaterial Existence (aruupa-raaga)
- Conceit (maana)
- Restlessness (uddhacca)
- Ignorance (avijjaa).
The Noble Ones (Ariya-puggala)
One who is freed from the first three Fetters is called a `Stream - Enterer' (in Pali:
Sotaapanna) i.e. one who has entered the stream leading to Nibbaana. He has unshakable
faith in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha, and is incapable of breaking the five Moral
Precepts. He will be reborn seven times, at the utmost, and not in a state lower than the
human world.
One who has overcome the fourth and the fifth Fetters in their grosser form, is called
a Sakadaagaami, lit. `Once-Returner' i.e. he will be reborn only once more in the Sensuous
Sphere (kaama-loka), and thereafter reach Holiness.
An Anaagaami, lit. `Non-Returner', is wholly freed from the first five Fetters which
bind one to rebirth in the Sensuous Sphere; after death, while living in the Fine-Material
Sphere (ruupa-loka), he will reach the goal.
An Arahat, i.e. the perfectly `Holy One', is freed from all the ten Fetters.
Each of the aforementioned four stages of Holiness consists of the `Path' (magga) and
the `Fruition', e.g. `Path of Stream Entry' (sotaapatti-magga) and `Fruition of Stream
Entry' (sotaapatti-phala). Accordingly there are eight types, or four pairs, of `Noble
Individuals' (ariya-puggala).
The `Path' consists of the single moment of entering the respective attainment. By
`Fruition' are meant those moments of consciousness which follow immediately thereafter as
the result of the `Path', and which under certain circumstances, may repeat innumerable
times during life-time.
For further details, see B. Dict.: ariya-puggala, sotaapanna,etc.
-
Mundane and Supermundane Understanding
- M.117
Therefore, I say, Right Understanding is of two kinds:
1. The view that alms and offerings are not useless; that there is fruit
and result, both of good and bad actions; that there are such things as this life, and the
next life; that father and mother, as also spontaneously born beings (in the heavenly
worlds), are no mere words; that there are in the world monks and priests, who are
spotless and perfect, who can explain this life and the next life, which they themselves
have understood: this is called the `Mundane Right Understanding'
(lokiya-sammaa-di.t.thi), which yields worldly fruits and brings good results.
2. But whatsoever there is of wisdom, of penetration, of right
understanding conjoined with the `Path' (of the Sotaapanna, Sakadaagaami, Anaagaami, or
Arahat)-the mind being turned away from the world and conjoined with the path, the holy
path being pursued: this is called the `Supermundane Right Understanding'
(lokuttara-sammaa-di.t.thi), which is not of the world, but is supermundane and conjoined
with the path.
Thus, there are two kinds of the Eightfold Path:
1. The `mundane' (lokiya), practised by the `Worldling' (puthujjana), i.e. by all those
who have not yet reached the first stage of Holiness; 2. The `supermundane' (lokuttara)
practised by the `Noble Ones' (ariya-puggala).
-
Conjoined With Other Steps
- Now, in understanding wrong understanding as wrong and right
understanding as right, one practises `Right Understanding' (1st factor); and in making
efforts to overcome wrong understanding, and to arouse right understanding, one practises
`Right Effort' (6th factor); and in overcoming wrong understanding with attentive mind,
and dwelling with attentive mind in the possession of right understanding one practises
`Right Mindfulness' (7th factor). Hence, there are three things that accompany and follow
upon right understanding, namely: Right Understanding, Right Effort, and Right
Mindfulness.
-
Free from All Theories
- M. 72
Now, if any one should put the question, whether I admit any theory at
all, he should be answered thus: The Perfect One is free from any theory, for the Perfect
One has understood what corporeality is, and how it arises and passes away. He has
understood what feeling is, and how it arises and passes away. He has understood what
perception is, and how it arises and passes away. He has understood what the mental
formations are, and how they arise and pass away. He has understood what consciousness is,
and how it arises and passes away. Therefore I say, the Perfect One has won complete
deliverance through the extinction, fading-away, disappearance, rejection, and getting rid
of all opinions and conjectures, of all inclination to the vain-glory of `I' and `mine'.
The Three Characteristics
- A. III. 134
Whether Perfect Ones (Buddhas) appear in the world, or whether Perfect
Ones do not appear in the world, it still remains a firm condition, an immutable fact and
fixed law: that all formations are impermanent (anicca), that all formations are subject
to suffering (dukkha); that everything is without a Self (an-attaa).
In Pali: sabbe sankhaaraa aniccaa, sabbe sankhaaraa dukkhaa, sabbe dhammaa anattaa.
The word `sankhaaraa' (formations) comprises here all things that are conditioned or
`formed' (sankhata-dhamma), i.e. all possible physical and mental constituents of
existence. The word `dhamma', however, has a still wider application and is all-embracing,
as it comprises also the so-called Unconditioned (`unformed', asankhata), i.e. Nibbaana.
For this reason, it would be wrong to say that all dhammas are impermanent and subject
to change, for the Nibbaana-dhamma is permanent and free from change. And for the same
reason, it is correct to say that not only all the sankhaaras (=sankhata-dhamma), but that
all the dhammas (including the asankhata-dhamma) lack an Ego (an-attaa).
- S. XXII. 94
A corporeal phenomenon, a feeling, a perception, a mental formation, a
consciousness, which is permanent and persistent, eternal and not subject to change, such
a thing the wise men in this world do not recognize; and I also say that there is no such
thing.
A. I. 15
And it is impossible that a being possessed of right understanding
should regard anything as the Self.
Views and Discussions About the Ego
- D. 15
Now, if someone should say that feeling is his Self, he should be
answered thus: `There are three kinds of feeling: pleasurable, painful, and indifferent
feeling. Which of these three feelings do you consider as your Self?' Because, at the
moment of experiencing one of these feelings, one does not experience the other two. These
three kinds of feeling are impermanent, of dependent origin, are subject to decay and
dissolution, to fading-away and extinction. Whosoever, in experiencing one of these
feelings, thinks that this is his Self, must after the extinction of that feeling, admit
that his Self has become dissolved. And thus he will consider his Self already in this
present life as impermanent, mixed up with pleasure and pain, subject to arising and
passing away.
If any one should say that feeling is not his Ego, and that his Self is
inaccessible to feeling, he should be asked thus: `Now, where there is no feeling, is it
then possible to say: "This am I?"
Or, another might say: `Feeling, indeed, is not my Self, but it also is
untrue that my Self is inaccessible to feeling, for it is my Self that feels, my Self that
has the faculty of feeling'. Such a one should be answered thus: `Suppose that feeling
should become altogether totally extinguished; now, if after the extinction of feeling, no
feeling whatever exists there, is it then possible to say: "This am I'?"
M. 148
To say that the mind, or the mind-objects, or the mind-consciousness,
constitute the Self, such an assertion is unfounded. For an arising and a passing away is
seen there; and seeing the arising and passing away of these things, one would come to the
conclusion that one's Self arises and passes away.
S. XII. 62
1t would be better for the unlearned worldling to regard his body, built
up of the four elements, as his Self, rather than his mind. For it is evident that the
body may last for a year, for two years, for three, four, five, or ten years, or even for
a hundred years and more; but that which is called thought, or mind, or consciousness,
arises continuously, during day and night, as one thing, and passes away as another thing.
S. XXII. 59
Therefore, whatsoever there is of corporeality, of feeling, of
perception, of mental formations, of consciousness whether past, present or future, one's
own or external, gross or subtle, lofty or low, far or near: of this one should understand
according to reality and true wisdom: `This does not belong to me; this am I not; this is
not my Self.'
To show the impersonality and utter emptiness of existence, Visuddhi-Magga XVI quotes
the following verse:
- Mere suffering exists, no sufferer is found,
- The deed is, but no doer of the deed is there.
- Nirvaana is, but not the man that enters it.
- The path is, but no traveller on it is seen'.
Past, Present and Future
- D. 9
If now, any one should ask: `Have you been in the past, and is it untrue
that you have not been? Will you be in the future, and is it untrue that you will not be?
Are you, and is it untrue that you are not?' - you may reply that you have been in the
past, and that it is untrue that you have not been; that you will be in the future, and
that it is untrue that you will not be; that you are, and that it is untrue that you are
not.
In the past only that past existence was real, but unreal the future and
present existence. In the future only the future existence will be real, but unreal the
past and the present existence. Now only the present existence is real, but unreal, the
past and future existence.
M. 28
Verily, he who perceives the `Dependent Origination'
(pa.ticca-samuppaada), perceives the truth; and he who perceives the truth, perceives the
Dependent Origination.
D. 8
For just as from the cow comes milk, from milk curd, from curd butter,
from butter ghee, from ghee the skim of ghee; and when it is milk, it is not counted as
curd, or butter, or ghee, or skim of ghee, but only as milk; and when it is curd, it is
only counted as curd: just so was my past existence at that time real, but unreal the
future and present existence; and my future existence will be at that time real, but
unreal the past and present existence; and my present existence is now real, but unreal
the past and future existence. All these are merely popular designations and expressions,
mere conventional terms of speaking, mere popular notions. The Perfect One indeed makes
use of these, without however clinging to them.
S. XLIV 4
Thus, he who does not understand corporeality, feeling, perception,
mental formations and consciousness according to reality (i.e. as void of a personality,
or Ego) nor understands their arising, their extinction, and the way to their extinction,
he is liable to believe, either that the Perfect One continues after death, or that he
does not continue after death, and so forth.
The Two Extremes (Annihilation and Eternity
Belief) and the Middle Doctrine
- S. XII. 25
Truly, if one holds the view that the vital principle (jiva; `Soul') is
identical with this body, in that case a holy life is not possible; and if one holds the
view that the vital principle is something quite different from the body, in that case
also a holy life is not possible. Both these two extremes the Perfect One has avoided, and
he has shown the Middle Doctrine, which says:
Dependent Origination (Pa.ticca-samuppaada)
- S. XII. 1
On Ignorance (avijjaa) depend the `Karma-formations' (sankhaaraa).
On the Karma-formations depends `Consciousness' (viññaa.na; starting
with rebirth-consciousness in the womb of the mother).
On Consciousness depends the `Mental and Physical Existence'
(naama-ruupa).
On the mental and physical existence depend the `Six Sense-Organs'
(sa.l-aayatana).
On the six sense-organs depends `Sensorial Impression' (phassa).
On sensorial impression depends `Feeling' (vedanaa).
On feeling depends `Craving' (ta.nhaa).
On craving depends `Clinging' (upaadaana).
On clinging depends the `Process of Becoming' (bhava).
On the process of becoming (here: kamma-bhava, or karma-process) depends
`Rebirth' (jaati).
On rebirth depend `Decay and Death' (jaraa-marana), sorrow, lamentation,
pain, grief and despair.
Thus arises this whole mass of suffering. This is called the noble truth
of the origin of suffering.
"No god, no Brahma can be called
The maker of this wheel of life:
Empty phenomena roll on,
Dependent on conditions all."
(Quoted in Visuddhi-Magga XIX).
S. XII. 51
A disciple, however, in whom Ignorance (avijjaa) has disappeared and
wisdom arisen, such a disciple heaps up neither meritorious, nor demeritorious, nor
imperturbable Karma-formations.
The term sankhaaraa has been rendered here by `Karma Formations' because, in the
context of the Dependent Origination, it refers to karmically wholesome and unwholesome
volition (cetanaa), or volitional activity, in short, Karma.
The threefold division of it, given in the preceding passage, comprises karmic activity
in all spheres of existence, or planes of consciousness. The `meritorious
karma-formations' extend also to the Fine-Material Sphere (ruupaavacara), while the
`imperturbable karma-formations' (aneñjaabhisankhaaraa) refer only to the Immaterial
Sphere (aruupaavacara).
- S. XII. 1
Thus, through the entire fading away and extinction of this `Ignorance',
the `Karma-formations' are extinguished. Through the extinction of Karma-formations,
`Consciousness' (rebirth) is extinguished. Through the extinction of consciousness, the
`Mental and Physical Existence' is extinguished. Through the extinction of the mental and
physical existence, the `Six Sense-Organs' are extinguished. Through the extinction of the
six sense-organs, `Sensorial Impression' is extinguished. Through the extinction of
sensorial impression, `Feeling' is extinguished. Through the extinction of feeling,
`Craving' is extinguished. Through the extinction of craving, `Clinging' is extinguished.
Through the extinction of clinging, the `Process of Becoming' is extinguished. Through the
extinction of the process of becoming, `Rebirth' is extinguished. Through the extinction
of rebirth, `Decay and Death', sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are
extinguished. Thus takes place the extinction of this whole mass of suffering. This is
called the noble truth of the extinction of suffering.
Rebirth-Producing Karma
- M. 43
Truly, because beings, obstructed by ignorance (avijjaa) and ensnared by
craving (tanhaa) seek ever fresh delight, now here, now there, therefore fresh rebirth
continually comes to be.
A. III. 33
And the action (kamma) that is done out of greed, hatred and delusion
(lobha, dosa, moha), that springs from them, has its source and origin in them: this
action ripens wherever one is reborn, and wherever this action ripens there one
experiences the fruits of this action, be it in this life, or the next life, or in some
future life.
Cessation of Karma
- M. 43
However, through the fading away of ignorance, through the arising of
wisdom, through the extinction of craving, no future rebirth takes place again.
A. III. 33
For the actions which are not done out of greed, hatred and delusion,
which have not sprung from them, which have not their source and origin in them: such
actions, through the absence of greed, hatred and delusion, are abandoned, rooted out,
like a palm-tree torn out of the soil, destroyed, and not able to spring up again.
A. VIII. 12
In this respect one may rightly say of me: that I teach annihilation,
that I propound my doctrine for the purpose of annihilation, and that I herein train my
disciples; for certainly I do teach annihilation-the annihilation, namely, of greed,
hatred and delusion, as well as of the manifold evil and unwholesome things.
The Pa.ticca Samuppaada, lit, the Dependent Origination, is the doctrine of the
conditionality of all physical and mental phenomena, a doctrine which, together with that
of Impersonality (anattaa), forms the indispensable condition for the real understanding
and realization of the Buddha's teaching. It shows that the various physical and mental
life-processes, conventionally called personality, man, animal, etc., are not a mere play
of blind chance, but the outcome of causes and conditions. Above all, the
Pa.ticca-Samuppaada explains how the arising of rebirth and suffering is dependent upon
conditions; and, in its second part, it shows how, through the removal of these
conditions, all suffering must disappear. Hence, the Pa.ticca-Samuppaada serves to
elucidate the second and the third Noble Truths, by explaining them from their very
foundations upwards, and giving them a fixed philosophical form.
The following diagram shows at a glance how the twelve links of the formula extend over
three consecutive existences, past, present, and future:
Past Existence |
 1. Ignorance (avijjaa)
|
Karma Process (kamma-bhava) 5 causes: 1, 2, 8, 9, 10
|
 2. Karma-Formations (sankhaaraa)
|
Present Existence
|
 3. Consciousness (viññaa.na)
|
Rebirth-Process (upapatti-bhava) 5 results: 3-7
|
 4. Mental and Physical Existence (naamaruupa)
|
 5. 6 Sense Organs (sa.l-aayatana)
|
 6. Sense-Impression (phassa)
|
 7. Feeling (vedanaa)
|
 8. Craving (ta.nha)
|
Karma Process (kamma-bhava) 5 causes: 1, 2, 8, 9, 10
|
 9. Clinging (upaadaana)
|
10. Process of Existence (bhava)
|
Future Existence
|
11. Rebirth (jaati)
|
Rebirth-Process (upapatti-bhava) 5 results: 3-7
|
12. Decay and Death (jaraa-marana)
|
The links 1-2, together with 8-10, represent the Karma-Process, containing the five
karmic causes of rebirth.
The links 3-7, together with 11-12, represent the Rebirth-Process, containing the five
Karma-Results.
Accordingly it is said in the Patisambhidaa-Magga:
- Five causes were there in past,
- Five fruits we find in present life.
- Five causes do we now produce,
- Five fruits we reap in future life.
- (Quoted in Vis. Magga XVII)
For a full explanation see Fund. III and B. Dict.
Preface and Introduction
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