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Theravada Exegetes on the Impulsion Stage (Javanavāra)

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dc.contributor.author Welitota, Ashoka
dc.date.accessioned 2015-01-16T04:41:14Z
dc.date.available 2015-01-16T04:41:14Z
dc.date.issued 2015-01-16T04:41:14Z
dc.identifier.citation Welitota, A. (2015). Theravada Exegetes on the Impulsion Stage (Javanavāra). Proceedings of 10th National Conference on Buddhist Studies of Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Nugegoda, 01.
dc.identifier.issn 2235-901X
dc.identifier.uri http://dr.lib.sjp.ac.lk/handle/123456789/1617
dc.description.abstract The impulsion stage (javanavāra) occurs in between the determining stage (votthapanavāra) and the registration stage (tadārammaṇavāra) of the cognitive process (cittavīthi). It runs for seven thought-moments (cittakkhaṇa) in general. It is in this stage, one feels the taste of the sense object (javanasseva pana ārammaṇarasānubhavanaṃ) that has impinged on the sensitivity of a sense organ. Hence, this stage is compared to a man, who is tasting a mango fruit. The Sumaṅgalavilāsinī and the Sammohavinodanī, commenting on impulsion (javana), state that “looking ahead and looking aside because of lust, hatred, and delusion governed by thought 'This is a woman, this is a man'” (Bhikkhu Bodhi, 1989, p. 117) does not occur in the first moment of impulsion, in the second moment of impulsion, or even in the seventh moment of impulsion. However, the Elder Tipiṭaka Cūlābhaya, as recorded in the Sammohavinodanī, was of the opinion that impulsion (javana) lusts for the agreeable and hates the same agreeable, and lusts for the disagreeable and hates the same disagreeable because of the perversion of perception (saññāvipallāsa).What a comparison of the cited exegetical accounts shows is that they do not agree with each another. This disagreement has led the modern scholars to state that the Abhidhamma scholars in ancient Sri Lanka debated on issue of the "affective-cognitive aspect of javana." (Sarachchandra, E.R., 2009, p. 56) This scholarly view on the disagreement under examination give rise to two important questions. One of them is that why Abhidhamma scholars do not agree with each other when they elucidate the 'affective-cognitive' aspect of the impulsion stage (javanavāra), and the other, to what extent they differ from one another. Therefore, the present paper examine these two questions focusing its attention on the exegetical accounts related to the impulsion stage (javanavāra) of the cognitive process (cittavīthi). en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Nugegoda.
dc.subject Theravada en_US
dc.subject Impulsion stage en_US
dc.subject Sumaṅgalavilāsinī en_US
dc.title Theravada Exegetes on the Impulsion Stage (Javanavāra) en_US
dc.type Article en_US
dc.date.published 2015-01-03


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