Rupajhana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Buddhism


History of Buddhism
Dharmic religions
Timeline of Buddhism
Buddhist councils

Foundations
Four Noble Truths
Noble Eightfold Path
The Five Precepts
Nirvāna · Three Jewels

Key Concepts
Three marks of existence
Skandha · Cosmology · Dharma
Samsara · Rebirth · Shunyata
Pratitya-samutpada · Karma

Major Figures
Gautama Buddha
Nagarjuna · Dogen
Buddha's Disciples · Family

Practices and Attainment
Buddhahood · Bodhisattva
Four Stages of Enlightenment
Paramis · Meditation · Laity

Buddhism by Region
Southeast Asia · East Asia
Tibet · India · Western

Schools of Buddhism
Theravāda · Mahāyāna
Vajrayāna · Early schools

Texts
Pali Canon
Pali Suttas · Mahayana Sutras
Vinaya · Abhidhamma

Comparative Studies
Culture · List of Topics
Portal: Buddhism
Image:Dharma_wheel_1.png

This box: view  talk  edit

In Buddhism, rūpajhānas (Sanskrit: rūpadhyāna "form meditation") are successive levels of meditation in which the mind is focused on a material object: it is a word used in Pāli scriptures. Each higher level is harder to reach than the previous one. It is distinguished from arūpajhāna (Skt: arūpadhyāna "formless meditation") which is meditation focused on immaterial objects.

There are eight jhānas in total, out of which the first four are rūpajhānas. All four rūpajhānas are characterized by ekaggatā (Skt: ekāgratā) which means one-pointedness, i.e. the mind focuses singularly on the material object during meditation.

The four rūpajhānas are:

  1. paṭhama-jhāna (Skt: prathamadhyāna)
  2. dutiya-jhāna (Skt: dvitīyadhyāna),
  3. tatiya-jhāna (Skt: tṛtīyadhyāna)
  4. catuttha-jhāna (Skt: caturthadhyāna)

See right concentration.

These first four jhānas can be characterized by certain factors called jhānaṅga (Skt: dhyānāṅga) whose presence or absence in each rūpajhāna is summarized in the following table:

jhāna vitakka
& vicāra
pīti sukha ekaggatā upekkhā
paṭhama-jhāna * * * *
dutiya-jhāna * * *
tatiya-jhāna * *
catuttha-jhāna * *

The jhānaṅga have the following meanings: vitakka means the noticing of the object of meditation, vicāra means the experiencing of the object, pīti means rapture, sukha means joy, ekaggatā means one-pointedness of concentration, upekkhā means equanimity.

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

In other languages