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Dandapāni meets the
Buddha at the Mahāvana near
Kapilavatthu and questions him as to his tenets. The Buddha explains that his
tenets are such that they avoid all strife and make a man dwell above all
pleasures of sense, etc. Dandapāni shakes his head and walks on, without
comment.
Later in the evening the Buddha visits the Nigrodhārāma
and tells the monks there briefly how to get rid of all obsessions, so that all
evil and wrong states of mind are quelled and pass away entirely. After the
Buddha’s departure the monks seek Mahā Kaccāna and ask him to expound in detail
what the Buddha has told them in brief. Kaccāna explains that where there is eye
and visible form, visual consciousness arises, this begets contact, contact
conditions feeling, what a man feels he perceives, what he perceives he reasons
about, and this leads to obsession. It is the same with the other senses. The
monks report this explanation to the Buddha, who approves of it and praises
Kaccāna's earning and insight. Ananda praises the discourse, comparing it to a
honeyed pill of delicious savour, and the Buddha suggests that the sutta should
be remembered by that name (Madhupindika) (M.i.108-14).
Nāgita was; among those present when the sutta was
preached. He was thereby persuaded to enter the Order, and soon after became an
arahant. ThagA.i.183.

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