the seven emotions and six sensory pleasures
Seven emotions and six desires is a psychological reaction. Generally speaking, seven emotions refer to joy, anger, worry, thinking, sadness, fear, shock, emotional expression or psychological activities; six desires refer to people's physical needs or desires of eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind. Different students have different descriptions of seven emotions and six desires.
Idioms and allusions
According to the book of rites, the seven emotions refer to joy, anger, sadness, fear, love, evil and desire. According to Confucianism, they are joy, anger, sadness, fear, love, evil and desire. According to Buddhism, they are joy, anger, worry, fear, love, hatred and desire, while the seven emotions of doctors are joy, anger, worry, thought, sadness, fear and fear. "Li Yun" in the book of Rites: "what is human relationship? Joy, anger, sorrow, fear, love, evil and desire are all capable of learning In the Three Character Classic: "joy and anger, sorrow and fear. Love, evil and lust are the seven emotions in the theory of traditional Chinese medicine, seven emotions refer to "joy, anger, worry, thinking, sadness, fear and shock". If these seven emotions are over excited, it may lead to imbalance of yin and Yang, insufficiency of Qi and blood and cause various diseases. It is worth pondering that traditional Chinese medicine does not include "desire" in seven emotions. According to Lu's spring and Autumn Annals, the six desires refer to the desires arising from life, death, ears, eyes, mouth and nose. Buddhism believes that they are lust, appearance, dignity, speech and voice, delicacy and mutual desire. There are also sayings that they are desire for survival, desire for knowledge, desire for expression, desire for expression, desire for comfort and desire for love. "Lu Shi Chun Qiu. GUI Sheng" first put forward the concept of six desires: "the so-called whole life, six desires are appropriate." Gao you, a philosopher of the Eastern Han Dynasty, made a comment on this: "the six desires are life, death, ears, eyes, mouth and nose." Later generations summarized the six desires as: seeing desire (vision), hearing desire (hearing), fragrance desire (smell), taste desire (taste), touch desire (touch) and desire. According to the theory of great wisdom, the six desires refer to lust, appearance, dignified posture, speech and voice, delicacy, and mutual desire. Basically, the "six desires" are defined as the six natural desires of the common people for the opposite sex, that is, the "lust" often referred to by modern people.
Discrimination of words
Donate to the three cardinal guides and five constant virtues, eliminate the seven emotions and six desires, and spend half of the money. If you lose the golden bead, pluck a hair, it's related to pain and itching. Qian Yong's Lu Yuan Cong Hua Yi Lun Wu Fu in Qing Dynasty
interpretation
It generally refers to people's happiness, anger, sadness, joy and lust. antonym: everything is empty. "Buddhist term refers to the emptiness of everything in the world." (supplement of modern Chinese dictionary by Commercial Press, May 2002)
Chinese PinYin : qī qíng liù yù
the seven emotions and six sensory pleasures
one 's nostrils were assailed by a strange. yì xiāng pū bí
teach students in accordance with their aptitude. yīn cái shī jiào
the wily hare has three holes to his burrow. jiǎo tù sān xué
hate the wicked and point out only the evil which one has done. wù wù cóng duǎn