vipassana - definition. What is vipassana
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IN BUDDHISM, A QUALITY OF MIND CULTIVATED VIA SPECIFIC MEDITATION TECHNIQUES
Vipassanā; Insight meditation; Insight Meditation; Shamatha; Vipassana jhanas; Vipassana Knowledges; Vipasana; Calm abiding; Vipashyana; Special insight; Samatha Meditation; Vipasannā; Shinay meditation; Shinay; Vipassana; Vipasanna; Śamatha; Vipaśyanā; Vipassana meditation; Samatha meditation; Vidarshana; Vipssana; Vipasshana; Insight-practice; Calm abiding mediation; Vipassana (Insight); Vapassana; Vappasana; Samatha

vipassana         
[v?'pas?n?]
¦ noun (in Theravada Buddhism) meditation involving concentration on the body, or the insight which this provides.
Origin
Pali, lit. 'inward vision'.
Vipassanā         
Vipassanā (Pāli) or vipaśyanā (Sanskrit) literally "special, super (Vi), seeing (Passanā)", is a Buddhist term that is often translated as "insight". The Pali Canon describes it as one of two qualities of mind which is developed in bhāvanā, the training of the mind, the other being samatha (mind calming).
Vipassanā-ñāṇa         
Vipassanā ñanas; Vipassana-nana
The Vipassanā-ñāṇas (Pali, Sanskrit: Vipaśyanā-jñāna) or insight knowledges are various stages that a practitioner of Buddhist Vipassanā ("insight", "clear-seeing") meditation is said to pass through on the way to nibbana.Mahasi Sayadaw, the Progress of insight This "progress of insight" (Visuddhiñana-katha) is outlined in various traditional Theravada Buddhist commentary texts such as the Patisambhidamagga, the Vimuttimagga and the Visuddhimagga.

ويكيبيديا

Samatha-vipassana

Samatha (Pāli; Sinhala: සමථ; Chinese: ; pinyin: zhǐ), "calm," "serenity," "tranquillity of awareness," and vipassanā (Pāli; Sinhala විදර්ශනා (Vidarshana); Sanskrit vipaśyanā), literally "special, super (vi-), seeing (-passanā)", are two qualities of the mind developed in tandem in Buddhist practice. In the Pali Canon and the Āgama they are not specific practices, but elements of "a single path," and "fulfilled" with the development (bhāvanā) of sati ("mindfulness") and jhana/dhyana ("meditation") and other path-factors. While jhana/dhyana has a central role in the Buddhist path, vipassanā is hardly mentioned separately, but mostly described along with samatha.

The Abhidhamma Pitaka and the commentaries describe samatha and vipassanā as two separate techniques, taking samatha to mean concentration-meditation, and vipassana as a practice to gain insight. In the Theravada-tradition, vipassanā is defined as a practice that seeks "insight into the true nature of reality", defined as anicca "impermanence", dukkha "suffering, unsatisfactoriness", anattā "non-self", the three marks of existence. In the Mahayana-traditions vipassanā is defined as insight into śūnyatā "emptiness" and Buddha-nature.

In modern Theravada, the relation between samatha and vipassanā is a matter of dispute. Meditation-practice was reinvented in the Theravada tradition in the 18th-20th century, based on contemporary readings of the Satipaṭṭhāna sutta, the Visuddhimagga, and other texts, centering on vipassana and 'dry insight' and downplaying samatha. Vipassana became of central importance in the 20th century Vipassanā movement favoring vipassanā over samatha. Some critics point out that both are necessary elements of the Buddhist training, while other critics argue that dhyana is not a single-pointed concentration exercise.

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. Doing Time, Doing Vipassana (Not rated) Directors÷ Eliona Ariel, Ayelet Menahemi.
2. If in the era of Ariel Sharon our leaders discovered the magical qualities of the tantra, with the slogan "restraint is strength," now they seem to have discovered Vipassana meditation, in which strength lies in silence.