The Brahmaviharas
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The four altruistic emotions:
- benevolence (mettā)
- compassion (karuṇā)
- empathetic joy (muditā)
- equanimity (upekkhā)
Caution! Under Construction
Please be aware that this tag is still under construction and as such is missing information and may be changed or removed at any time. For all the content under consideration for this tag, see the “The Brahmaviharas” folder on Google Drive.
Table of Contents
Books (8)
Canonical Works (22)
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… it is impossible that they should teach the path to that which they neither know nor see
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⭐ Recommended
… how is the liberation of the mind by lovingkindness developed? What does it have as its destination, its culmination, its fruit, its final goal?
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A spiritual practice doesn’t come with external trappings, but with sincere inner change.
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I have been aware of loving-kindness,
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… you can expect eleven benefits when the heart’s release by love has been cultivated, developed, and practiced, made a vehicle and a basis, kept up, consolidated, and properly implemented.
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Firstly, a person meditates spreading a heart full of love to one direction, and to the second, and to the third, and to the fourth…
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Readings (5)
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Besides being a prominent motivation for the delivery of a teaching, compassion regularly features in descriptions of meditation practice in the early discourses
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In healthy adults, we found that compassion training increased altruistic redistribution of funds to a victim encountered outside of the training context. Furthermore, increased altruistic behavior after compassion training was associated with altered activation in brain regions implicated in social cognition and emotion regulation, including the inferior parietal cortex and dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), and in DLPFC connectivity with the nucleus accumbens.
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Audio/Video (6)
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A conversation about what compassion means across the Buddhist traditions.
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