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    Saṃjñā is frequently referenced as a cause of attachment ... — Carmelics
    Home/Moral Responsibility
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    Supports→Apperception (saṃjñā) and consciousness (vijñāna) are not clearly dissociated in canonical Buddhist literature.

    Saṃjñā is frequently referenced as a cause of attachment to agreeable physical objects and mental states.

    Consciousness & MindMoral Responsibility
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    Moral ResponsibilityConsciousness & Mind

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    Apperception (saṃjñā) and consciousness (vijñāna) are not clearly dissociated in...Apperception is contrasted with wisdom, suggesting it denotes awareness bearing ...Canonical literature treats consciousness (vijñāna) as a synonym of apperception...

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    Now, in the canonical literature consciousness (vijñāna) is treated as a synonym of apperception (saṃjñā) [see Sutta Nipata, 538, 806]. This lack of clear dissociation between apperception, understood here as the empirical apprehension of phenomena, and consciousness as the apprehending faculty, is made obvious by frequent references to saṃjñā as being the cause of attachment to agreeable physical objects and mental states. Furthermore, apperception is often contrasted with wisdom thus

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