Auddhatya
| Translations of Auddhatya | |
|---|---|
| English | excitement restlessness ebulience flightiness of mind |
| Sanskrit | auddhatya |
| Pali | uddhacca |
| Burmese | ဥဒ္ဓစ္စ |
| Chinese | 掉擧 |
| Indonesian | kebingungan; kegelisahan |
| Khmer | ឧទ្ធច្ចៈ (UNGEGN: udthorch-chak) |
| Tibetan | རྒོད་པ། (Wylie: rgod pa; THL: göpa) |
| Vietnamese | Trạo cử Điệu cử Phóng dật |
| Glossary of Buddhism | |
| Part of Theravāda Abhidhamma |
| 52 Cetasikas |
|---|
| Theravāda Buddhism |
Auddhatya (Sanskrit; Pali: uddhacca; Tibetan phonetic: göpa ) is a Buddhist term that is translated as "excitement", "restlessness", etc. In the Theravada tradition, uddhacca is defined as a mental factor that is characterized by disquietude, like water whipped by the wind. In the Mahayana tradition, auddhatya is defined as a mental factor that causes our mind to fly off from an object and recollect something else.
Auddhatya is identified as:
- One of the fourteen unwholesome mental factors within the Theravada Abhidharma teachings
- One of the twenty secondary unwholesome factors within the Mahayana Abhidharma teachings
- One of the five hindrances to meditation (in combination with kukkucca)
- One of the five faults or obstacles to shamatha meditation within the Mahayana teachings.
- One of the ten fetters in the Theravada tradition