The phrase can also be found, for instance, in MN 53. In Ven.
~Naa.namoli & Ven. Bodhi's translation of the Majjhima Nikaaya
(1995/2001, p. 463, para. 17), the phrase and the related words are
translated as: "... he possesses wisdom regarding rise and
disappearance that is noble and penetrative [... ariyaaya
nibbedhikaaya]...." According to the associated end note (#561, p.
1255), the Majjhima Nikaaya A.t.thakathaa (MA) provides this analysis:

"This is the wisdom of insight and of the path, capable of penetrating
the rise and fall of the five aggregates. Path wisdom is called
'penetrative' (nibbedhikaa) because it pierces through and eradicates
the mass of greed, hate, and delusion; insight wisdom is called
penetrative because it pierces though them temporarily and because it
leads to penetration by the path."

Hope this helps. With metta,
Larry

On 9/12/2011 6:49 AM, behappydfgt wrote:
>
> Respected members of the group.
>
> I would like to know more about the meaning of this expression:
>
> udayatthagaaminiyaa paññaaya samannaagato
>
> It appears at AN 8:54 on paññasampaada, I have seen it somwhere else
> but now I cannot recollect properly.
>
> It refers tothe udayabbayañaan·na, or it refers to a reflective
> understanding of impermanence in the world of concepts.
>
> What the commentators said?
>
> Thank you very much for your time and attention,
>
> with metta,
>
>


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