I thought I'd make some changes to "Right Mindfulness" in our interpretation of the N8P which I base on the Mahasatipatthana Sutta, DN 22.
Old version:
7. Right Mindfulness and self-awareness (samma-sati) – The Four Foundations of Mindfulness:
1) Mindful contemplation of the body (kaya)
2) Mindful contemplation of feeling-sensations (vedana) -- pleasant, unpleasant, neutral (the triggers for the three unwholesome roots)
3) Mindful contemplation of mind-states (citta) moods - the Six Unwholesome and Wholesome Roots: greed, aversion, and delusion, and their opposites: generosity, loving-kindness, wisdom
4) Mindful contemplation/Investigation of the dhammas (dhammas) - The Five Categories of Dhammas: the Five Hindrances, the Five Aggregates, the Six-sense Bases, the Seven Factors of Enlightenment, the Four Noble Truths
New version:
7. Right Mindfulness and self-awareness (samma-sati) – The Four Foundations of Mindfulness:
1) mindful contemplation of the body (kaya)
2) mindful contemplation of sensations (vedana) - pleasant, unpleasant, neutral (the triggers for greed, aversion and delusion)
3) mindful contemplation of mind states/moods (citta) - greed, aversion, delusion, and their opposites: non-greed, non-aversion, non-delusion
4) mindful contemplation/investigation of the Five Dhammas (dhammas):
The Five Hindrances - to be abandoned
The Five Clinging Aggregates - seen as arising and passing away; that they are impermanent, suffering & non-self
The Six-sense Bases - awareness of any fetter generated by them; that they are impermanent, suffering & non-self
The Seven Factors of Enlightenment - to be developed
The Four Noble Truths - to be utterly understood
I hope everyone agrees.