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1. Tanhā Sutta. On the one hundred and
eight thoughts of craving - thirty-six each, of the past, the present, and the
future - which, like a net, snares one, clings to one, etc. A.ii.211f.
2. Tanhā Sutta. The four causes of the
arising of craving in a monk - robes, food, lodging, success or failure in
undertakings. A.ii.10.
3. Tanhā Sutta. The nine evil things
which have their ultimate origin in tanhā. A.iv.400f.
4. Tanhā Sutta. Both craving and the
emancipation there from, through knowledge, are nourished and fulfilled by
something, and this something may finally be reduced to association with the bad
and the good respectively. A.v.116ff.
5. Tanhā Sutta. Preached in answer to a
question by a deva. It is craving, above all things, which brings everything
beneath its sway. S. i.39.
6. Tanhā Sutta. Preached to Rāhula, as
question and answer. Craving for objects of sense is fleeting, and leads,
therefore, to unhappiness. S. ii.248, 251.
7. Tanhā Sutta. Craving for body is
impermanent; likewise craving for sounds, scents, savours, etc. S. iii.227.
8. Tanhā Sutta. The arising of craving
for body and for things is the beginning of decay and death, its cessation,
their cessation. S. iii.230.
9. Tanhā Sutta. Desire and lust for
visible shape, etc; these are a corruption of the heart. S. iii.234.
10. Tanhā Sutta. A discussion between
Sāriputta and Jambukhādaka on the three kinds of craving - for sense-delight,
for becoming, for not-becoming. S. iv.257.
11. Tanhā Sutta. The Noble Eightfold
Path must be followed in order to get rid of the three kinds of craving.
S.v.57f.

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