Upādāna

Upādāna ( pali / sanskr. Appropriation, mention ) is a Buddhist term for the process of capturing the transitory. It's about the 'why ' of desire ( tanha ), the ausprägenden consciousness of " I and mine ", all the thoughts, ideas, concepts and ideas. Upādāna is part of the twelve-membered chain of dependent origination. The Germans have become common as a translation, the terms adherence or attachment.

There are, according to the Buddhist tradition four basic forms of attachment:

The adherent beings cling to objects, views and their own opinions and thereby bind from a Buddhist perspective on the painful cycle of birth and death ( samsara ). Adhesion arises from the three mental poisons: greed, hatred and delusion. Since all phenomena are impermanent and unsatisfactory (see three characteristics of existence ), one creates to additional suffering, when you can not let go. Because the objects of clinging will pass away, are unsatisfactory and add to the actual pain even the pain of disappointment added.

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