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Five skandhas

Translations of
skandha
English aggregate, mass, heap
Pali खन्ध (khandha)
Sanskrit स्कन्ध (skandha)
Bengali স্কন্ধ (skandha)
Burmese ခန္ဓာ (ငါးပါး)။
(IPA: [kʰàɴdà])
Chinese (T) / (S)
(Pinyinyùn)
Japanese
(rōmaji: go'un)
Khmer
Korean
(RR: on)
Shan ၶၼ်ႇထႃႇ
([khan2 thaa2])
Tibetan ཕུང་པོ་ལྔ་
(phung po lnga)
Thai
Vietnamese
Glossary of Buddhism

Skandhas (Sanskrit) or khandhas (Pāḷi) means "heaps, aggregates, collections, groupings". In Buddhism, it refers to the five aggregates concept that asserts five elements constitute and completely explain a sentient being’s mental and physical existence. The five aggregates or heaps are: form (or matter or body) (rupa), sensations (or feelings, received from form) (vedana), perceptions (samjna), mental activity or formations (sankhara), and consciousness (vijnana).

The skandhas explain what is a "being or individual", and the skandhas theory complements the anatta doctrine of Buddhism which asserts that all things and beings are without self. The anatta and "five aggregates" doctrines are part of the liberating knowledge in Buddhism, wherein one realizes that there is no-self, a being is five aggregates, each of which are "not I, and not my self", and each of the skandha is empty, without substance.

In the Theravada tradition, suffering arises when one identifies with or clings to an aggregate. This suffering is extinguished by relinquishing attachments to aggregates. The Mahayana tradition asserts that the nature of all aggregates as intrinsically empty of independent existence. The use of the skandhas concept to explain the self is a concept unique to Buddhism among major Indian religions. It is not shared by Hinduism and Jainism, which believe that a living being has a soul, a metaphysical self.

Skandha (स्कन्ध) is a Sanskrit word that means "multitude, quantity, aggregate", generally in the context of body, trunk, stem, empirically observed gross object or anything of bulk verifiable with senses. The term appears in the Vedic literature. The Pali equivalent is Khandha (sometimes spelled Kkhanda). The word Khandha appears extensively in the Pali canon, where state Rhys Davids and William Stede, it means "bulk of the body, aggregate, heap, material collected into bulk" in one context, "all that is comprised under, groupings" in some contexts, and particularly as "the elements or substrata of sensory existence, sensorial aggregates which condition the appearance of life in any form".


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