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1. 'Road', 'path'; for instance in dukkhanirodha-gāminī-patipadā,
'the road leading to the extinction of suffering' (= 4th Noble Truth); majjhima-patipadā,
'the Middle Way'.
2. 'Progress' (see also the foll. article). There are 4 modes
of progress to deliverance: (1) painful progress with slow comprehension (dukkhā
patipadā dandhābhiññā), (2) painful progress with quick comprehension,
(3) pleasant progress with slow comprehension, (4) pleasant progress with quick
comprehension. In A. IV, 162 it is said:
(1) "Some person possesses by nature excessive greed,
excessive hate, excessive delusion, and thereby he often feels pain and sorrow;
and also the 5 mental abilities, as faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration
and wisdom (s. indriya 15-19) are dull in him; and by reason thereof he
reaches only slowly the immediacy (ānantariya, q.v) to the cessation of
all fermentations.
(2) Some person possesses by nature excessive greed, etc.,
but the 5 mental abilities are sharp in him and by reason thereof he reaches
quickly the immediacy to the cessation of all fermentations ....
(3) "Some person possesses by nature no excessive greed,
etc., but the 5 mental abilities are dull in him, and by reason thereof he
reaches slowly the immediacy to the cessation of all fermentations ....
(4) 'Some person possessess by nature no excessive greed,
etc., and the mental abilities are sharp in him, and by reason thereof he
reaches quickly the immediacy to the cessation of all fermentations ....
See A. IV, 162, 163, 166-169; Dhs. 176ff; Atthasālini
Tr. I, 243; 11, 291, 317.

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