Compassion View in explorer

11 discourses
Mental quality of wise empathy in response to suffering, which counters qualities of harm or cruelty.
Also known as: benevolence, concern, sympathy, kindness towards those who are suffering
Pāli: karuṇā

The Buddha describes the six releases of mind, through 1) loving-kindness, 2) compassion, 3) appreciative joy, 4) equanimity, 5) the signless, and 6) the uprooting of the conceit “I am" - that assuredly lead to freedom from 1) ill will, 2) cruelty, 3) dissatisfaction, 4) passion, 5) following after signs, and 6) the conceit “I am" when developed and cultivated to fulfillment.

Through a parable of an acrobat and his apprentice, the Buddha teaches that protecting oneself through mindfulness also protects others, and vice versa. Self-discipline through mindfulness leads to communal safety, while patience and compassion for others strengthens one’s own path. True protection begins with personal responsibility in Dhamma.

The Buddha uses the simile of a defiled cloth to explain how the mind can be similarly defiled by various impurities, and how it can be purified by abandoning them. And it is through this very practice that one arrives at unshakeable faith in the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Saṅgha. The Buddha also addresses a brahmin in verses who believes in purification by bathing in river.

The Buddha explains to Jīvaka the circumstances in which meat may be consumed and the demerit of slaughtering living beings for the Tathāgata or his disciples.

The Buddha instructs Rāhula on how to regard the five aggregates as not-self which he immediately applies to practice. The Buddha then teaches Rāhula on how to meditate on the elements, the divine abodes, unattractiveness, impermanence, and mindfulness of breathing to abandon unwholesome mental qualities and cultivate wholesome mental qualities.

The young brahmin Subha questions the Buddha about whether householders or renunciants are superior and what brings the greatest merit. The Buddha explains that he evaluates actions with discernment, and then teaches the path to companionship with Brahmā through cultivation of the qualities of loving-kindness, compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity.

The Buddha uses similes to illustrate the benefits of developing loving-kindess. The liberation of mind by loving-kindness surpasses all other forms of merit-making associated with acquisitions by far.

Where children honor their mother and father, those families are said to dwell with Brahmā.

The Buddha describes the unique qualities of the Tathāgata, the Arahant, the perfectly Awakened One.

When a brahmin assumes that the Buddha’s serene faculties and radiant appearance must result from enjoying the finest worldly luxuries, the Buddha explains the true “luxurious and lofty beds” he attains—the heavenly bed, through abiding in the jhānas; the brahmic bed, through the boundless cultivation of loving-kindness, compassion, appreciative joy, and equanimity; and the noble bed, through the complete abandonment of passion, aversion, and illusion.

The venerable Nandaka teaches Sāḷha and his friend about how to independently verify the unwholesome and wholesome mental qualities.

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