Goenka vs Daniel's idea of vipassana practice

Jake Evan Harrell, modifié il y a 12 années at 22/02/12 22:21
Created 12 années ago at 22/02/12 22:21

Goenka vs Daniel's idea of vipassana practice

Publications: 3 Date d'inscription: 22/02/12 Publications Récentes
Goenka talks about vipassana practice only beginning when you can feel the subtle sensations on the body and then not react understanding their impermanence. This seems to be quite different than Ingram's point of view of it not mattering what you are able to observe as long as you note the 3 characteristics. How important is it to feel subtle sensations? Im interested in peoples point of view of the two schools of thought and if they can be reconciled. Are they really that different?
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Bagpuss The Gnome, modifié il y a 12 années at 23/02/12 01:34
Created 12 années ago at 23/02/12 01:34

RE: Goenka vs Daniel's idea of vipassana practice

Publications: 704 Date d'inscription: 02/11/11 Publications Récentes
Hi, welcome to the DhO

I don't think there's really a difference. It all points in the same direction. Daniel talks about the pre-vipassana stages (1-3) in MCTB and Goenka's assertion about sensations and reaction may well correspond directly to that, though he doesn't subscribe to the same map theory.

It doesn't matter though. It's all the same.
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Dauphin Supple Chirp, modifié il y a 12 années at 23/02/12 13:49
Created 12 années ago at 23/02/12 13:49

RE: Goenka vs Daniel's idea of vipassana practice

Publications: 154 Date d'inscription: 15/03/11 Publications Récentes
I'd say you can get just as enlightened from gross sensations as from subtle ones. In the beginning, it's more about finding a rhythm. Once you get to the 11th ñāṇa, the difference won't matter anymore.

Fil d'Ariane