五見
Readings
Pinyin: wǔjiàn
Wade-Giles: wu-chien
Hangul: 오견
Korean MC: ogyeon
Korean MR: ogyŏn
Katakana: ゴケン
Hepburn: goken
ngũ kiến
five views
- Five kinds of mistaken perception, also written as 五惡見. (Skt. pañca-dṛṣṭi, pañca-dṛṣṭayaḥ, pañca dṛṣṭayaḥ; Tib. lta ba lnga). These are:
- Entifying view — reifying view, or identity-view. The attached view of the reality of the inherent existence of one's own self, coupled with the belief in the objects in one's surrounding world as real entities (satkāya-dṛṣṭi). Expressed as 我見, 身見 and 有身見. This view is thought to operate at the level of both the mano and manas consciousnesses (i.e. both consciously and subconsciously) whereas the remaining four views operate at the level of the mano — thus, at the level of conscious awareness.
- extreme view — 邊見 (邊執見), which is attachment to the positions of either eternalism or nihilism (antaparigraha-dṛṣṭi).
- erroneous view — 邪見, wherein one does not properly acknowledge the relationship of
cause and effect (mithyā-dṛṣṭi).
- view of attachment to views — 見取見, i.e. holding rigidly to one opinion over all others. (dṛṣṭi-parāmarśa-dṛṣṭi).
- view of rigid attachment to the precepts — 戒禁取見. The view that the austerities, moral practices and vows of non-Buddhist schools can lead one to the truth (śīla-vrata-parāmarśa-dṛṣṭi).
Also known as 五利使. Also see 見. 〔成唯識論 T 1585.31.32a20〕
[resp. Charles Muller; source(s): Nakamura, YBh-Ind, Hirakawa, JEBD, Yokoi, Iwanami]
- cinq opinions (erronées) [resp. Paul Swanson]
Dictionary References:
Bukkyō jiten (Ui), 268
Bulgyo sajeon, 602a
Zengaku daijiten (Komazawa U.), 338b
Iwanami bukkyō jiten, 266
Japanese-English Buddhist Dictionary (Daitō shuppansha), 83b/92
Japanese-English Zen Buddhist Dictionary (Yokoi), 167
Bukkyōgo daijiten (Nakamura), 358d
Fo Guang Dictionary, 1099
Ding Fubao
Buddhist Chinese-Sanskrit Dictionary (Hirakawa), 0088
Bukkyō daijiten (Mochizuki), (v.1-6)1169c,923b
Bukkyō daijiten (Oda), 408-1*523-3
Sanskrit-Tibetan Index for the Yogâcārabhūmi-śāstra (Yokoyama and Hirosawa)
(Soothill's) Dictionary of Chinese Buddhist Terms, 126
Copyright © 2010 -- Charles Muller
generated: 2014-01-06