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Adarsana
Adarsana refers to the real non-seeing of objects which already exist; it refers to the ignorance of factual existence of things. This term figures prominently in the Yoga school of thought, and in Jain philosophy. ==Meaning== Adarsana or ''adarshan'' in Sanskrit as an adjective means latent or invisible, and as a noun it means non-vision, disregard, non-appearance, neglect, latent condition disappearance, not-seeing. It also means ''agyan'' and ''avidya''. Vaidyanath Shastri citing Sl. 2.25 and Sl. 3.55 of Vyasa Bhashya writes that by understanding the non-seeing of objects that exist one understands the seeing of those objects and comes to know about the reality of them. ''Darsana'' means seeing. Therefore, Panini, in his Ashtadhyayi (Sutra 1.1.60 and 61), has given its meaning as - disappearance, invisibility, elision of an object, which fact is denoted by ''luk'', ''shlu'' and ''lup''; ''lup'' refers to real non-seeing which already exists. In other words, Adarsana refers to the ignorance of factual existence of things. In Ayurveda, the term, ''adarsana'', means visual errors and blindness that results in not seeing the objects that already exist. In the Puranas, ''Adarsana'' is the mind-born mother it is so said because the act of seeing and the act of not seeing or non-seeing is an activity of the mind.
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Adarsana」の詳細全文を読む
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