| Dhyana | |
|---|---|
| Sanskrit Name | |
| Romanization | Dhyāna |
| Devanāgarī | ध्यान |
| Pali Name | |
| Romanization | Jhāna |
| Devanāgarī | झान |
| Sinhala | ඣාන |
| Chinese Name | |
| Hanyu Pinyin | Chán |
| Wade-Giles | Ch'an |
| Cantonese IPA | sɪm4 |
| Cantonese Jyutping | sim |
| Hanzi | 禪 |
| Jiantizi | 禅 |
| Korean Name | |
| Revised Romanization | Seon |
| McCune-Reischauer | Sŏn |
| Hangul | 선 |
| Hanja | 禪 |
| Japanese Name | |
| Romaji | Zen |
| Kanji | 禅 |
| Vietnamese Name | |
| Quốc ngữ | Thiền |
Dhyāna in Sanskrit or Jhāna in Pāli refers to a type or aspect of meditation. It is a key concept in Hinduism and Buddhism. Equivalent terms are "Zen" in Japanese and "Chán" in modern Chinese.
There are four deeper states of Buddhist meditation called the immaterial attainments; sometimes these are referred to as Jhānas, but the word Jhāna is never used to describe them in the oldest Buddhist texts.
In East Asia, several schools of Buddhism were founded that focused on dhyāna, under the names Chan, Zen, and Seon. According to tradition, Bodhidharma brought Dhyāna to the Shaolin temple in China, where it came to be transliterated as "chan" ("seon" in Korea, and then "zen" in Japan).
Jhānas are normally described by the way of the mental factors which are present in these states
1. Movement of the mind onto the object, Vitakka (Sanskrit: Vitarka)
2. Retention of the mind on the object, Vicāra
3. Joy, Pīti (Sanskrit: Prīti)
4. Happiness, Sukha
5. One-pointedness, Ekaggatā (Sanskrit: Ekāgratā)
6. Equanimity, Upekkhā (Sanskrit: Upekṣā)
Traditionally, this fourth Jhāna is seen as the beginning of attaining psychic powers.
Buddhist meditation | Meditation | Zen
ذيانا | Dhjána | Dhyana | Dhyāna | Dhyana | Dhyana | Dhyana | Thiền