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Wouters (1988), Alfons, The Chester Beatty Codex AC 1499, a Graeco-Latin lexicon on the Pauline Epistles, and a Greek grammar, Peeters, ISBN 978-90-6831-124-2 Dickey (2019), Emily A Re-Examination of New Testament Papyrus P99 (Vetus Latina AN glo Paul), New Testament Studies.
Prajñā involves the precise and analytical discernment of dharmas (phenomenal factors) as expounded in Buddhist teachings. This wisdom allows practitioners to distinguish between virtues and flaws, thereby dispelling doubt and fostering clarity. [16] Prajñā is also one of the five spiritual faculties (pañcendriya) and powers (pañcabala).
Viveka (Sanskrit: विवेक, romanized: viveka) is a Sanskrit and Pali term translated into English as discernment or discrimination. Viveka means to know what is essence and what is not essence (saar and asaar), duty and non-duty properly. [1]
Wisdom/Discernment (paññā bala) In the Abbidhamma-tradition, the five strengths are regarded as antidotes to ill will ( vyapada ), sloth and torpor ( styana-middha ), heedlessness ( apramada ) or sensual desire ( kamacchanda ), distraction or restlessness and worry ( auddhatya-kaukrtya ), and skeptical doubt ( vicikitsa ).
In Christianity, the word may have several meanings.Discernment can describe the process of determining God's desire in a situation or for one's life, or identifying the true nature of a thing, such as discerning whether a thing is good, evil, or may even transcend such a limiting notion of duality. [4]
In the Pali canon's Sutta Pitaka, this is the second of the Seven Factors of Awakening (satta bojjha ṅ gā).It is preceded by the establishment of mindfulness (sati) and applied with energy/effort Together, mindfulness, discernment and effort calm the mind, and give way to the onset of the jhanas, which are characterised by the remaining four factors of awakening, namely rapture ...
Throughout Pali literature, viññā ṇ a [1] can be found as one of a handful of synonyms for the mental force that animates the otherwise inert material body. [11] In a number of Pali texts though, the term has a more nuanced and context-specific (or "technical") meaning.
'Crest-jewel of discernment') is a philosophical treatise within the Advaita Vedanta tradition of Hinduism, traditionally attributed to the Vedāntic philosopher Adi Shankara, [2] though this attribution has been questioned and mostly rejected by scholarship.