TY - JOUR AU - Phrakru Sumetpatumaphon, PY - 2021/06/17 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - 4 Dhãtu and the Meditation Practice in Buddhism JF - Academic MCU Buriram Journal JA - ambj VL - 6 IS - 1 SE - Academic Articles DO - UR - https://so06.tci-thaijo.org/index.php/ambj/article/view/247521 SP - 311-322 AB - <p>&nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; The four Dhãtu are earth, water, fire, and wind. Earth is hard and soft, water is flowing and holding, fire is hot and cold, the wind is moving and intense. Meditation Practice in Buddhism is, in the principle, the four Dhãtu are considered by the consciousness that the body is not an animal, a person, I, and you, which are impermanent, suffering, and non-self. Dhãtu is essential to living things, without the four Dhãtu - earth, water, fire, and wind - life could not exist. The determination of four Dhãtu is the mood while practicing the meditation in the four postures: standing, walking, sitting, and lying when the practitioner hits the 42 figures i.e. hair, hair, nails, teeth, skin, ligaments, bones, etc. should be determined as “touching”. Considering the four Dhãtu is one of the methods of meditation practice in Buddhism, the consideration of the four Dhãtu with wisdom as the subject that determines the arising and falling will help the practitioners attain the path and fruit of Nibbana. The merits of consideration of the four Dhãtu Tu are: seeing non-self, being a very intelligent person, etc.</p> ER -