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Noble Eightfold Path
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====Concentration==== In the Theravada tradition, ''samadhi'' is interpreted as concentration on a meditation object. [[Buddhagosa]] defines samadhi as "the centering of consciousness and consciousness concomitants evenly and rightly on a single object...the state in virtue of which consciousness and its concomitants remain evenly and rightly on a single object, undistracted and unscattered."<ref>Visudimagga 84β85{{full citation needed|date=September 2016}}</ref> According to Henepola Gunaratana, in the suttas samadhi is defined as one-pointedness of mind (''Cittass'ekaggatΔ'').<ref>Henepola Gunaratana (1995), The Jhanas in Theravada Buddhist Meditation</ref> According to [[Bhikkhu Bodhi]], the right concentration factor is reaching a one-pointedness of mind and unifying all mental factors, but it is not the same as "a gourmet sitting down to a meal, or a soldier on the battlefield" who also experience one-pointed concentration.<!-- invalid{{Sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2010|pp=97β110}}--> The difference is that the latter have a one-pointed object in focus with complete awareness directed to that object β the meal or the target, respectively. In contrast, right concentration meditative factor in Buddhism is a state of awareness without any object or subject, and ultimately unto no-thingness and emptiness, as articulated in apophatic discourse. <!-- invalid{{Sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2010|pp=97β110}}-->
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