Citta is the luminous, knowing aspect of consciousness that forms the foundation of all mental experience in Abhidharma psychology.
In Abhidharma philosophy, citta (consciousness) is understood as the primary mental phenomenon—luminous, cognizant, and momentary. Patanjali's Yoga Sutras share this emphasis on understanding the mind's intrinsic nature as the gateway to transformation. Abhidharma psychology breaks consciousness into distinct moments, each arising and passing with impermanence, revealing how the mind constructs reality through continuous streams of awareness. By investigating citta directly through meditation, practitioners recognize that consciousness itself is neither inherently stable nor the self. This insight dismantles ignorance about mental processes, the root of suffering in Buddhist psychology. Understanding citta's true nature—transient, interdependent, and empty of fixed identity—becomes the foundation for psychological freedom. Patanjali's emphasis on observing the mind aligns with Abhidharma's meticulous analysis of how mental states arise, persist, and dissolve moment by moment.
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