住地
Readings
Pinyin: zhùdì
Wade-Giles: chu-ti
Hangul: 주지
Korean MC: juji
Korean MR: chuji
Katakana: ジュウジ
Hepburn: jūji
trụ địa
entrenchment
- Also interpreted as underlying basis; ground, or seed. A basis for the manifestation of mental phenomena. A level of mind which serves as the ground for the production of ignorance and afflictions. A kind of "seed" for ignorance and afflictions. Also defined as afflictions in a latent, or unarisen state 住地煩惱, in contrast to "active" afflictions 起煩惱. Derived from an explication of the nature of affliction given in the Śrīmālā-sūtra, the system of the entrenchments can be seen as the Tathāgatagarbha text-family's systematic treatment of the structure of mental disturbances in their afflictive and cognitive aspects that would be a counterpart to the system defined in texts of Yogâcāra pedigree, such as the Cheng wei shi lun and Yogâcārabhūmi. The Śrīmālā-sūtra says:
言地者 本爲末依 名之爲住 本能生末 目之爲地。
〔勝鬘經, T 353.12.220c〕 This system of entrenchments was extensively adopted by Zhiyi 智顗 in the development of his Tiantai system. The notion is explored in detail in juxtaposition with Yogâcāra notions of latent affliction in Wonhyo's System of the Two Hindrances 二障義 at HBJ 1.801a. See also 四住地, 五住地, 無明住地, 見一處住地, etc. which are various categorizations of the above. (Skt. vāsa-bhūmi, adhimukti-caryā-bhūmi, bhūmi, bhūmy-ākramaṇa, *vihāra-bhūmi)
[resp. Charles Muller; source(s): Nakamura, YBh-Ind, Hirakawa]
- Abiding in the grounds, as one of the three aspects of each ground. See 入住出三心. [resp. Charles Muller; source(s): Nakamura]
Dictionary References:
Bukkyō jiten (Ui), 521
Bukkyōgo daijiten (Nakamura), 664d
Ding Fubao
Buddhist Chinese-Sanskrit Dictionary (Hirakawa), 0111
Bukkyō daijiten (Oda), 1227-3
Sanskrit-Tibetan Index for the Yogâcārabhūmi-śāstra (Yokoyama and Hirosawa)
Copyright © 2010 -- Charles Muller
generated: 2013-08-02