laitimes

Which five aggregates are referred to in Buddhism?

The five aggregates are the five types of color, acceptance, thinking, action, and consciousness. In the five aggregates, except for the first color aggregate, which is a material phenomenon, the other four aggregates are all spiritual phenomena in the five aggregates.

Theory of the Five Aggregates: The Five Aggregates are actually a Buddhist theory of what constitutes the human body and its physical and mental phenomena. The "aggregate" of the five aggregates is a sanskrit transliteration of the meaning of accumulation or harmony. Buddhism holds that everything in the world is made up of the sum of the five aggregates, and that an individual in one's life is also made up of the sum of the five aggregates.

The five aggregates constitute the self of life, and there are many lives in the world, and Buddhism divides these lives into two types: ruthless life and sentient life. (1) Ruthless life: There are physiological phenomena, no mental activity, and no self-grasping, which is called ruthless life. (2) Sentient life: There are physical and spiritual activities, and there are attachments to me and love the self that he clings to, and this sentient life is called sentient beings.

Which five aggregates are referred to in Buddhism?