Brahmavihara
| Part of a series on | 
| Buddhism | 
|---|
| Translations of Brahmavihāra | |
|---|---|
| English | four divine abodes | 
| Pali | cattāri brahmavihārā | 
| Burmese | ဗြဟ္မဝိဟာရတရားလေးပါး | 
| Chinese | 四無量心 (Pinyin: sì wúliàng xīn) | 
| Japanese | 四無量心 (Rōmaji: shimuryōshin) | 
| Khmer | ព្រហ្មវិហារ (UNGEGN: prôhmâvĭhar) | 
| Korean | 사무량심 (RR: samulyangsim) | 
| Lao | ພົມວິຫານ (phomwihan) | 
| Sinhala | සතර බ්රහ්ම විහරණ (sathara brahma viharana) | 
| Tibetan | ཚངས་པའི་གནས་བཞི་ (tshangs pa'i gnas bzhi) | 
| Tagalog | Blahmabihala | 
| Thai | พรหมวิหาร (RTGS: phrom wihan) | 
| Vietnamese | Tứ vô lượng tâm Bốn Phạm trú | 
| Glossary of Buddhism | |
The brahmavihārā (sublime attitudes, lit. "abodes of Brahma") is a series of four Buddhist virtues and the meditation practices made to cultivate them. They are also known as the four immeasurables (Pāli: appamaññā) or four infinite minds (Chinese: 四無量心). The brahmavihārā are:
- loving-kindness or benevolence (mettā)
- compassion (karuṇā)
- empathetic joy (muditā)
- equanimity (upekkhā)
According to the Metta Sutta, cultivation of the four immeasurables has the power to cause the practitioner to be reborn into a "Brahma realm" (Pāli: Brahmaloka).