"Greed" refers to the psychological activities trapped in the realm of color, sound, fragrance, taste and touching five desires. Buddhism believes that "greed" is the enemy of Buddhist practice and the root of all troubles, so greed is listed as one of the fundamental troubles.
Take "greed" together with "anger" and "delusion" as "three poisons" harmful to the practice of all beings.
Anger, also known as anger and resentment, refers to hatred, resentment and psychological harm to others. Buddhism believes that resenting others or other things against one's will will make all beings feel hot and restless.
It is very harmful to the practice of Buddhism and Taoism, so Buddhism regards anger as the enemy of practice Resentment is the heaviest and most responsible of the three poisons, and it is also the most intractable of all kinds of heart diseases.
"Insanity" is also called "ignorance", which means that the mind is dark and ignorant. Idiom is the basis of all troubles, so it naturally becomes one of the fundamental troubles. Moreover, it works with other fundamental concerns.
The purpose of Buddhist practice is to eliminate ignorance.
Extended data:
Buddhist ethics is the theory of Buddhist moral theory, moral concept, moral norms and moral practice. An important part of Buddhist teachings is mainly embodied in Buddhist precepts and rules.
His thoughts were gradually formed during the development and evolution of Buddhism. Early Buddhism paid attention to individual liberation, so its ethical thoughts and moral norms focused on individual physical and mental cultivation, with five commandments (no killing, no stealing, no fornication, no lying, no drinking).
Ten virtues (no killing, no stealing, no lewdness, no lying, no tongue-tied, no foul mouth, no rhetoric, no greed, no grudges, no Jaken) are the basic moral beliefs, and seeking for Arahant grosvenor is the highest moral ideal.
Baidu encyclopedia-three precepts