bold = Main text
Chapter, § grey = Comment text
1 11 (4) | Proliferation (papañca), according to Comy., generally
2 14, TrInt| this case is a habit called papañca. Unfortunately, none of
3 14, TrInt| definition of what the word papañca means, so it's hard to find
4 14, TrInt| a clear analysis of how papañca arises, how it leads to
5 14, TrInt| processes that give rise to papañca and lead from papañca to
6 14, TrInt| to papañca and lead from papañca to conflict. Because the
7 14, TrInt| perceptions & categories of papañca > thinking > desire > dear-&-
8 14, TrInt| perception > the categories of papañca ~perception > name & form >
9 14, TrInt| perceptions & categories of papañca ~In this last case, however,
10 14, TrInt| Through the process of papañca, the agent then becomes
11 14, TrInt| perceptions & categories of papañca assail him/her with regard
12 14, TrInt| root of the categories of papañca is the perception, "I am
13 14, TrInt| who are also engaging in papañca. This is how inner complications
14 14, TrInt| provides the basis for papañca. ~In following this program,
15 14, TrInt| perceptions and categories of papañca, and in this way the vicious
16 14, TrInt| cycle by which thinking and papañca keep feeding each other
17 14, TrInt| papañcize what is free from papañca. However, this sphere is
18 14, TrInt| the mind -- the basis for papañca is gradually undercut, and
19 14, TrInt| along the way. ~Translating papañca: As one writer has noted,
20 14, TrInt| writer has noted, the word papañca has had a wide variety of
21 14, TrInt| Pali Commentaries define papañca as covering three types
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