https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ej0_39J4yts Explained
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0h3j9TgGsb8
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBN858UjE44 독송
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3no7ZHmXy60 설명
The five aggregates 오온 (Pali: pañca khandha, Sanskrit: pañca-skandha) are the five elements of Buddhism that constitute all things that are born, die, and change, namely all conditioned dharmas: form (色,색), feeling (受,수), perception (想,상), mental formation (行,행), and consciousness (識,식).They are also called the aggregate of form (色蘊,색온: body, matter), the aggregate of feeling (受蘊,수온:지각,느낌), the aggregate of thought (想蘊,상온:표상,생각), the aggregate of volition (行蘊,행온:desire, volition,욕구,의지), and the aggregate of consciousness (識蘊,식온:mind,consciousness).
The Five Aggregates Theory (五蘊說) is originally a view that the existence of an individual human being is supported and formed by a collection of these five conditioned dharmas (有爲法,유위법). Thinking about or meditating on the Five Aggregates Theory is to realize that an individual being (I, 我) is broken down into these five collective elements, and when we say "I", we are ultimately referring to one or more of these five collective elements, and that outside of these five collective elements, there is nothing that can be called "I", and to overcome the wrong view of the self by awakening to the principle of anatta (無我).
The five aggregates apply to both conditioned and unconditioned states. The five aggregates that apply to conditioned states are called the five aggregates of grasping (五取蘊,5취온), or the five aggregates of feeling (五受陰,5수음), or the aggregate of pure great suffering (純大苦聚,순대고취: the great aggregate of pure suffering, the aggregate of pure great suffering). The five aggregates that apply to unconditioned states are called the five unconditioned aggregates (五無漏蘊,5무루온).The five unconditioned states, or the five aggregates that apply to unconditioned states, are conditioned and unconditioned, and this is the path of the Four Noble Truths, that is, the Fourth (도제,道諦) of the Four Noble Truths, the path leading to nirvana (enlightenment).
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