The Book of the Six Fields of the Senses receives its name from the homonymous saṁyutta with which it begins and is the dominant one in terms of its length and doctrinal weight.
This saṁyutta makes a functional analysis of all the processes involved with the relationship with the exterior, where it is shown that none of them is controlled. For example, with respect to sight, for example, the objective, that which is seen is not controlled...
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Philosophy