SN 47.5 Akusalarāsi: A Heap of the Unskillful (standard 4sp🐘 formula) (translation style SP-FLUENT by frankk ) 5. Akusalarāsisutta 5. A Heap of the Unskillful Sāvatthinidānaṃ. At Sāvatthī. Tatra kho bhagavā etadavoca: There the Buddha said: “‘akusalarāsī’ti, bhikkhave, vadamāno pañca nīvaraṇe sammā vadamāno vadeyya. “Rightly speaking, monks, you’d call these five hindrances a ‘heap of the unskillful’. Kevalo hāyaṃ, bhikkhave, akusalarāsi, yadidaṃ—pañca nīvaraṇā. For these five hindrances are entirely a heap of the unskillful. Katame pañca? What five? Kāmacchandanīvaraṇaṃ, byāpādanīvaraṇaṃ, thinamiddhanīvaraṇaṃ, uddhaccakukkuccanīvaraṇaṃ, vicikicchānīvaraṇaṃ. The hindrances of sensual desire, ill will, dullness and drowsiness, restlessness and remorse, and doubt. ‘Akusalarāsī’ti, bhikkhave, vadamāno ime pañca nīvaraṇe sammā vadamāno vadeyya. Rightly speaking, you’d call these five hindrances a ‘heap of the unskillful’. Kevalo hāyaṃ, bhikkhave, akusalarāsi, yadi...
Sujato's Jhāna related suttas in SN translation notes as of 2026-march 22 SN 21.1 why is the bar for noble silence second jhāna and not first jhāna? Here, Sujato only notes that vitakka and vicāra are absent from 2nd jhāna. He makes no mention of why first jhāna is not noble silence. Is "placing the mind and keeping it connected" (to a white kasina) noisy? Can the mind reading devas and monastics who have mind reading psychic power hear the squeaky noises from these redefined "jhāna" meditators grabbing at a kasina? Does that make a squeaky noise? What makes Sujato's first "jhāna" be considered "noisy" and not "noble silence"? If first jhāna is indeed as Sujato, Brahm, Vism., redefine the term, which is a frozen disembodied stupor where the body sense faculties are shut off, verbal thought is not possible, the mind is glued to a visual kasina, Then why is first jhāna not "noble silence"? Maybe it's because Sujato...