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52
THE BOOK OF THE GREAT DECEASE.
CH.
36. With the thought “it is well,” he becomes intent (upon what he sees)—this is the third stage of deliverance.
37. 'By passing quite beyond all idea of form, by putting an end to all idea of resistance, by paying no attention to the idea of distinction, he, thinking “it is all infinite space," reaches (mentally) and remains in the state of mind in which the idea of the infinity of space is the only idea that is presentthis is the fourth stage of deliverance.
38. 'By passing quite beyond all idea of space being the infinite basis, he, thinking “it is all infinite reason," reaches (mentally) and remains in the state of mind to which the infinity of reason is alone present-this is the fifth stage of deliverance.
39. By passing quite beyond the mere consciousness of the infinity of reason, he, thinking "nothing at all exists,” reaches (mentally) and remains in the state of mind to which nothing at all is specially present—this is the sixth stage of deliverance.
40. By passing quite beyond all idea of nothingness he reaches (mentally) and remains in the state of mind to which neither ideas nor the absence of ideas are specially present—this is the seventh stage of deliverance.
41. 'By passing quite beyond the state of “neither ideas nor the absence of ideas” he reaches (mentally) and remains in the state of mind in which both sensations and ideas have ceased to be—this is the eighth stage of deliverance.
42. 'Now these, Ânanda, are the eight stages of deliverance.
43. On one occasion, Ananda, I was resting under the shepherd's Nigrodha tree on the bank of the
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