Sleep (Buddhism)
Sleep (遗 眠, sanskrit: anuśaya, anusaya, Tibetan: bag la nyal, rgyas par 'gyur ba, English: disposition) is an element of the following group, group or system. ▪ It is one of the different names of the basic defilement when we divide all the defilements into the basic defilements that occur along with the mind and the defilements that occur along the defilement defects. ▪ In the theory of lightness, the state of the seed of the defilement is called sleep (眠 眠) and the current state of defilement, the defilement of the present state (勢 位) is called the) (纏). ▪ In the Buddhist philosophy of Buddhism, Buddhism refers to the seeds of defilement, especially root defilings. In other words, it refers to the latent potential of latency in the 8th Aryan style. According to the book "Yugasa Jiron," Volume 89 of the Daehang Buddhism, all the anguish including sleep (fundamental defilement) has the nature of the coat, that is, the nature of the intertwining, It is a coat. In other words, it shows the properties of the membrane.