rowyourboat wrote:i agree with the reductor. It seems to be a almost a form of yonisomanasikara- putting everything into categories- or seeing reality through these categories and seeing that there is nothing beyond them. Then letting go of the categories (dhamma as in teachings of the buddha) as well.

kidd wrote:Is knowing a state of mind? Is understanding a state of mind?
zavk wrote:I was just listening to a dhamma talk by Joseph Goldstein. When talking about dhammanupassana, he mentioned that even though the word 'dhamma' is difficult to translate we could, in the context of the satipatthana, think of it as 'categories of experience'.
I find this interesting because I've always thought of 'dhamma' as 'mental objects'. But 'categories of experience' seem to put a different spin on the issue. I'm still reflecting on this but I wonder what you think?
TheDhamma wrote:The way it is used in the Satipatthana Sutta sounds more like Dhamma in the sense of the concepts and teachings of Buddha.
retrofuturist wrote:Really? I think the examples you give in your opening post in this topic are simply frames of reference by which to classify and be mindful of mental objects.
retrofuturist wrote:Greetings TheDhamma,
I think the distinction is... is it mindfulness of the Dhamma, or is it is mindfulness of mental objects?
The Dhamma is the framework, and the mental objects are the observable reality.
The dhamma (mental objects) are observed using the Dhamma.
If it did mean Dhamma (capital D), then all four frames of reference could justifiably be called Dhammanupassana, since they all involve using mindfulness based on the Dhamma... but they're not all called Dhammanupassana... only this one.
Metta,
Retro.
tiltbillings wrote:What do you mean by Dhamma (capital D)?retrofuturist wrote:Greetings TheDhamma,
I think the distinction is... is it mindfulness of the Dhamma, or is it is mindfulness of mental objects?
The Dhamma is the framework, and the mental objects are the observable reality.
The dhamma (mental objects) are observed using the Dhamma.
If it did mean Dhamma (capital D), then all four frames of reference could justifiably be called Dhammanupassana, since they all involve using mindfulness based on the Dhamma... but they're not all called Dhammanupassana... only this one.
Metta,
Retro.

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