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1. In an ethical sense, it means:
'repugnance', grudge, resentment, anger, and is a synonym of vyāpāda, 'ill-will'
(s. nīvarana) and dosa, 'hate' (s. mūla). It is one of
the proclivities (anusaya, q.v.).
2. '(Sense-) reaction'. Applied to five-sense cognition, p.
occurs in the following contexts:
(a) as patigha-saññā, 'perception of
sense-reaction', said to be absent in the immaterial absorptions (s. jhāna
5). Alternative renderings: resistance-perception, reflex-perception;
(b) as patigha-samphassa, '(mental) contact caused
by 5fold sensorial reaction' (D. 15); s. phassa;
(c) as sappatigha-rūpa, 'reacting materiality', and appatigha,
'not reacting', which is an Abhidhammic classification of materiality,
occurring in Dhs. 659, 1050. Sappatigha are called the physical
sense-organs as reacting (or responding) to sense stimuli; and also the physical
sense-objects as impinging (or making an impact) on the sense-organs. All other
materiality is appatigha, non-reacting and non-impinging. These 2 terms
have been variously rendered as resistant and not, responding and not, with and
without impact.

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