Saṃyutta Nikāya
					4. Saḷāyatana Vagga
					36. Vedanā Saṃyutta
					3. Aṭṭha-Sata-Pariyāya Vagga
					The Book of the Kindred Sayings
					4. The Book Called the Saḷāyatana-Vagga
					Containing Kindred Sayings on the 'Six-Fold Sphere' of Sense and Other Subjects
					36. Kindred Sayings about Feeling
					3. The Method of the Hundred and Eight
					Sutta 27
Dutiya Samaṇa-Brāhmaṇā Suttaṃ
Recluses and Brahmins (ii)
Translated by F. L. Woodward
					Edited by Mrs. Rhys Davids
Copyright The Pali Text Society
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The Exalted One once addressed the brethren, saying:
"Brethren."
"Lord," responded those brethren to the Exalted One.
The Exalted One thus spake:
"There are these three feelings, brethren.
What three?
Pleasant feeling,
					painful feeling,
					neutral feeling.
Whatsoever recluses or brahmins
					understand not as they really are
					the arising,
					the destruction,
					the satisfaction
					and misery of,
					the escape from,
					these three feelings,
					those recluses or those brahmins are approved
					neither among recluses as recluses,
					nor among brahmins as brahmins,
					nor have those venerable ones
					even in this present life
					understood of themselves,
					nor realized
					what is the good
					of being either recluse or brahmin,
					nor lived in the attainment thereof.
But those recluses and brahmins
					who have understood as they really are
					the arising,
					the destruction,
					the satisfaction
					and misery of,
					the escape from,
					these three feelings,
					those recluses or those brahmins are approved
					both among recluses as recluses,
					and among brahmins as brahmins,
					and those venerable ones
					even in this present life
					have understood of themselves,
					and realized
					what is the good
					of being either recluse or brahmin,
					and lived in the attainment thereof."