The antonym of secular desire: all four are empty.
Usage: subject-predicate type; As predicate and object; With a derogatory connotation. ?
Interpretation: "In Buddhist terms, everything in the world is empty."
Extended data:
Different schools describe the content of secular desires;
According to the Book of Rites, the seven emotions refer to joy, anger, sorrow, fear, love, evil and desire; According to Confucianism, they are joy, anger, sorrow, fear, love, evil and desire; According to Buddhism, they are joy, anger, worry, fear, love, hate and desire; The doctor's seven emotions are joy, anger and sorrow.
Six desires refer to the desires of life, death, ears, eyes, mouth and nose mentioned in Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals. Buddhism regards them as lust, appearance, dignity and posture, speech and voice, fluency and human desire, while others say they are desire for survival, thirst for knowledge, desire for expression, desire for expression, desire for comfort and lust.
Lu's Spring and Autumn Annals. Guisheng first put forward the concept of six desires: "The so-called whole life is suitable for all six desires." Gao You, a philosopher in the Eastern Han Dynasty, commented on this: "Six desires, life, death, ears, eyes, mouth and nose." Later generations summarized the six desires as: seeing desire (vision), hearing desire (hearing), smelling desire (smell), tasting desire (taste), touching desire (touch) and desire.
According to the theory of great wisdom, the six desires refer to lust, appearance, dignity and posture, speech and sound, tact and human desire, which basically defines the six desires of the laity to the opposite sex, which is what modern people often call "lust".