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Bodhipakkhiyadhamma : ウィキペディア英語版
Bodhipakkhiyādhammā

In Buddhism, ''bodhipakkhiyā dhammā'' (Pali; variant spellings include ''bodhipakkhikā dhammā'' and ''bodhapakkhiyā dhammā'';〔For the various Pali spellings, see Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 491, under the entries for "bodha" and "bodhi." In this article, the variants are listed from most frequently used to least, deduced from Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25) and other sources.〕 Skt.: ''bodhipaka dharma'') are qualities (''dhammā'') conducive or related to (''pakkhiya'') awakening (''bodhi'').
In the Pali commentaries, the term ''bodhipakkhiyā dhammā'' is used to refer to seven sets of such qualities regularly mentioned by the Buddha throughout the Pali Canon. Within these seven sets of Enlightenment qualities, there is a total of thirty-seven individual qualities (''sattatisa bodhipakkhiyā dhammā'').〔
These seven sets of qualities are recognized by both Theravadan and Mahayanan Buddhists as complementary facets of the Buddhist Path to Enlightenment.
== Seven sets of thirty-seven qualities ==

In the Pali Canon's ''Bhāvanānuyutta sutta'' ("Mental Development Discourse,"〔The Pali word translated here as "development" is ''bhāvanā''. Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999), p. 305 ''n''. 20 note: "The term '''bhāvanā''' (lit.:making become), usually translated as 'meditation,' is not restricted to methodical exercises in mental concentration but comprises the entire field of mental training." For elaboration on this point, compare the Wikipedia articles Buddhist meditation (regarding "mediation" and "mental concentration") and Threefold training (regarding "mental training").〕 AN 7.67), the Buddha is recorded as saying:
:'Monks, although a monk who does not apply himself to the meditative development of his mind may wish, "Oh, that my mind might be free from the taints by non-clinging!", yet his mind will not be freed. For what reason? "Because he has not developed his mind," one has to say. Not developed it in what? In the four foundations of mindfulness, the four right kinds of striving, the four bases of success, the five spiritual faculties, the five spiritual powers, the seven factors of enlightenment and the Noble Eightfold Path.'〔Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999), pp. 192-3. Regarding the ordering of the seven sets, Bodhi (2000), pp. 1486-87, notes:
:"The presentation of the seven sets in a graded sequence might convey the impression that they constitute seven successive stages of practice. This, however, would be a misinterpretation. Close consideration of the series would show that the seven sets are ranked in a numerically ascending order, from four to eight, which means that their arrangement is purely pedagogic and implies nothing about a later set being more advanced than the earlier sets.... By presenting the course of practice from different angles, in different keys, and with different degrees of detail, the texts are able to finely modulate the practice of the path to suit the diverse needs of the people to be trained...."〕
Elsewhere in the Canon,〔For instance, these thirty-seven qualities are enumerated in SN 43.12 "The Unconditioned" (Bodhi, 2000, pp. 1374-78), where each quality is deemed "the path leading to the unconditioned" ('), which is in turn defined as the destruction of lust, hatred and delusion (').〕 and in numerous places in the āgamas of other early schools,〔(Sarvāstivāda Buddhist scholasticism, Part 2, Volume 11 ), by Charles Willemen, Bart Dessein, Collett Cox Brill Academic Publishers: 1997. ISBN 90-04-10231-0 pg 11〕 these seven sets of thirty-seven qualities conducive to Enlightenment are enumerated as:

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