asavas
Asavas, or āsavā in Pali, are a category of mental tendencies described in early Buddhist texts as outflows or inflows that fuel craving, ignorance, and wrong views. The term literally means an “outflow” or “drain,” signaling that these dispositions flow through a practitioner’s mind and sustain cyclic existence (samsara). In Theravāda Abhidhamma and related commentaries, the āsavā are regarded as latent tendencies rooted in the three poisons (greed, hatred, delusion) and other distortions, which condition clinging and rebirth.
Most commonly, five āsavā are identified:
- kama-āsava (outflow of sense-desire)
- bhava-āsava (outflow of becoming or clinging to existence)
- ditthā-āsava (outflow of wrong views)
- vicikicchā-āsava (outflow of skeptical doubt)
- avijjā-āsava (outflow of ignorance)
These outflows are said to arise with contact and craving and to perpetuate unwise reliance on ordinary
Practice aims to weaken and eventually extinguish the āsavā. In Theravāda interpretation, the complete eradication of
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