Buddhism is nothing but the NOBLE TRUTH.
What
is Buddhism? This question has puzzled many people who often inquire if Buddhism
is a philosophy, a religion, or a way of life. The simple answer is that Buddhism
is too vast and too profound to be neatly placed in any single category. Of course,
Buddhism includes philosophy and religion and a way of life. But Buddhism goes
beyond these categories.
The categories or labels given to Buddhism are like
signboards to let the people know what is being presented. If we compare Buddhism
to a medicine shop, it will be clear that the signboard on the medicine shop will
not cure a person of his sickness. If the medicine is effective, then you can
use it to heal yourself without being concerned as to the signboard that merely
gives a label for the medicine. Likewise, if the Teaching of the Buddha is effective,
then use it and do not be concerned about the label or signboard. Do not try to
slip Buddhism into any single category or limit it under any signboard.
Different
people live at different times and in different places have given different labels
and interpretations to Buddhism. To some people, Buddhism might appear to be only
a mass of superstitious practices. To another group of people, Buddhism might
be a convenient label to be used for temporal gains. To another group, it is old
fashioned. To yet another group, Buddhism will have significance as a system of
thought for intellectuals only. To some others, it is a scientific discovery.
To the pious and devout Buddhist, Buddhism means his entire life, the fulfillment
of all he holds near and dear to him.
Some intellectuals see Buddhism as a
product of its Indian environment or as an outgrowth of another kind of Indian
religious teaching. Buddhism is nothing but the Noble Truth. It is an intellectual
approach to reality. The Buddha's realization of universal problems did not come
through a purely intellectual or rational process but through mental development
and purification. The intellectual stance reminiscent of the scientific attitude,
surely makes the Buddha absolutely unique among religious teachers of all time.
Of course, the high standard of intellectual inquiry and ethical endeavor prevailing
at the time in India were prime conditions for the re-emergence of the light of
the Dhamma from the darkness of oblivion. Thousands of years of religious and
philosophical development had left on the intellectual soil of India a rich and
fertile deposit of ideas and ideals which formed the best possible environment
into which the seed of the Dhamma could fall. Greece, China, Egypt and Babylonia,
for all their loftiness of thought, had not attained the same quality of vision
as the forest and mountain-dwelling sages of India. The germ of Enlightenment
which had been borne, like a winged seed from distant fields, from worlds in space
and time infinitely remote from ours _ this very germ of Enlightenment found growth
and development in the north-eastern corner of India. This very germ of Enlightenment
found its full expression in the experience of the man, Gautama Buddha. The fountainhead
of all Buddhism is this experience which is called 'Enlightenment'. With this
experience of Enlightenment, the Buddha began His Teaching not with any dogmatic
beliefs or mysteries, but with a valid, universal experience, which He gave to
the world as universal truth. Therefore, the real definition of Buddhism is NOBLE
TRUTH. Remember that the Buddha did not teach from theories. He always taught
from a practical standpoint based on His understanding, His Enlightenment, and
His realization of the Truth.
Buddhism began with the Truth embodied over
2500 years ago in the person of Gautama, the Buddha. When the Buddha introduced
His teachings, His intention was not to develop the concept of self in man's mind
and create more ambition for eternal life and sense pleasure. Rather, His intention
was to point out the futility of the worldly life and to show the correct, practical
Path to salvation that He discovered.
The original Teachings of the Buddha
disclosed the true nature of life and the world. However, a distinction must be
made between the Buddha's original Teaching (often called the Dhamma or the Buddha
Word) and the religion that developed based on His Teachings.
The Teachings
of the Buddha not only started a religion, but inspired the blossoming of a whole
civilization. These Teachings became a great civilizing force that moved through
the history of many a culture and nation. Indeed, Buddhism has become one of the
greatest civilizations that the world has ever known. It has a wonderful history
of achievement in the fields of literature, art, philosophy, psychology, ethics,
architecture and culture. In the course of centuries, countless social educational
institutions were established in the various nations that were dedicated to the
Buddha's Teaching. The history of Buddhism was written in golden letters of brotherhood
and goodwill. The religious beliefs and practices turned into a rational, scientific
and practical religious way of life for spiritual development from the day the
Buddha preached His Teaching and realized the real purpose and meaning of a life
and a religion.
The Ultimate Truth
The
Ultimate Truth can be found in the Teaching of the Buddhism.
Buddhism recognizes
two kinds of Truth. The apparent conventional truth and the real or ultimate Truth.
The ultimate Truth can be realized only through meditation, and not theorizing
or speculating.
The Buddha's Teaching is the Ultimate Truth of the world.
Buddhism, however, is not a revealed or an organized religion. It is the first
example of the purely scientific approach applied to questions concerning the
ultimate nature of existence. This timeless Teaching was discovered by the Buddha
Himself without the help of any divine agency. This same teaching is strong enough
to face any challenge without changing the basic principles of the doctrine. Any
religion that is forced to change or adjust its original Teachings to suit the
modern world, is a religion that has no firm foundation and no ultimate truth
in it. Buddhism can maintain the Truth of the original Teaching of the Master
even under the difficult conditions prevailing in the modern world. The Buddha
did not introduce certain personal or worldly practices which have no connection
with morality or religious observances. To the Buddha, such practices have no
religious value. We must make the distinction between what the Buddha taught and
what people preach and practise in the name of Buddhism.
Every religion consists
of not only the teachings of the founder of that religion but also the rites and
ceremonies which have grown up around the basic core of the teachings. These rituals
and ceremonies have their origins in the cultural practices of the people who
accepted the religion. Usually the founders of the great religions do not lay
down precise rules about the rituals to be observed. But religious leaders who
come after them formalize the religion and set up exacting codes of behavior which
the followers are not allowed to deviated from.
Even the religion which we
call 'Buddhism' is very different in its external practices from what the Buddha
and His early followers carried out. Centuries of cultural and environmental influence
have made Burmese, Thai, Chinese, Tibetan, Sri Lankan and Japanese Buddhism different.
But these practices are not in conflict, because the Buddha taught that while
the Truth remains absolute, the physical manifestation of this truth can differ
according to the way of life of those who profess it.
A few hundred years
after His passing away, the disciples of the Buddha organized a religion around
the Teachings of the Master. While organizing the religion, they incorporated,
among other concepts and beliefs, various types of miracles, mysticism, fortune-telling,
charms, talismans, mantras, prayers and many rites and rituals that were not found
in the original Teaching. When these extraneous religious beliefs and practices
were introduced, many people neglected to develop the most important practices
found in the original Teaching; self-discipline, self-restraint, cultivation of
morality and spiritual development. Instead of practicing the original Teaching,
they gave more of their attention and effort to self-protection from evil spirits
and sought after prosperity or good luck. Gradually, people began to lose interest
in the original Teachings and became more interested in discovering ways and means
of getting rid of the so-called misfortunes or bad influences of stars, black
magic, and sickness. In this manner, through time the religious practices and
beliefs degenerated, being confined to worldly pursuits. Even today, many people
believe that they can get rid of their difficulties through the influence of external
powers. People still cling to this belief: hence they neglect to cultivate the
strength of their will-power, intelligence, understanding and other related human
qualities. In other words, people started to abuse their human intelligence by
following those beliefs and practices in the name of Buddhism. They also polluted
the purity of the Buddha's message.
Thus the modern religion we see in many
countries is the product of normal human beings living in a country and adjusting
to various social and cultural environments. However, Buddhism as a religion did
not begin as a superworldly system that came down from heaven. Rather it was born
and evolved through a long historical process. In its process of evolution, many
people slowly moved away from the original Teachings of the founder and started
different new schools or sects. All the other existing religions also face the
same situation.
One should not come to a hasty conclusion either by judging
the validity of a religion or by condemning the religion simply by observing what
people perform through their blind faith in the name of that religion. To understand
the real nature of a religion one must study and investigate the original Teachings
of the founder of that religion.
In the face of the profusion of ideas and
practices which were later developments, it is useful for us to return to the
positive and timeless Dhamma taught by the Buddha. Whatever people believe and
practise in the name of Buddhism the basic Teachings of the Buddha still exist
in the original Buddhist texts.
Two Main Schools of Buddhism
The real
followers of the Buddha can practise this religion without adhering to any school
or sect.
A few hundred years after the Buddha's passing away, there arose
eighteen different schools or sects all of which claimed to represent the original
Teachings of the Buddha. The differences between these schools were basically
due to various interpretations of the Teachings of the Buddha. Over a period of
time, these schools gradually merged into two main schools: Theravada and Mahayana.
Today, a majority of the followers of Buddhism are divided into these two schools.
Basically Mahayana Buddhism grew out of the Buddha's teaching that each individual
carries within himself the potential for Buddhahood. Theravadins say that this
potential can be realized through individual effort. Mahayanists, on the other
hand, believe that they can seek salvation through the intervention of other superior
beings called Bodhisattas. According to them, Bodhisattas are future Buddhas who,
out of compassion for their fellow human beings, have delayed their own attainment
of Buddhahood until they have helped others towards liberation. In spite of this
basic difference, however, it must be stressed that doctrinally there is absolutely
no disagreement concerning the Dhamma as contained in the sacred Tripitaka texts.
Because Buddhists have been encouraged by the Master to carefully inquire after
the truth, they have been free to interpret the scriptures according to their
understanding. But above all, both Mahayana and Theravada are one in their reverence
for the Buddha.(For a short, excellent exposition on this topic, read Dr. W. Rahula,
'Theravada and Mahayana Buddhism' published by The Buddhist Missionary Society.)
The areas of agreement between the two schools are as follows:
Both accept
Sakyamuni Buddha as the Teacher.
The Four Noble Truths are exactly the same
in both schools.
The Eightfold Path is exactly the same in both schools.
The
Pattica-Samuppada or teaching on Dependent Origination is the same in both schools.
Both
reject the idea of a supreme being who created and governed this world.
Both
accept Anicca, Dukkha, Anatta and Sila, Samadhi, Panna without any difference.
Some
people are of the view that Theravada is selfish because it teaches that people
should seek their own salvation. But how can a selfish person gain Enlightenment?
Both schools accept the three Yana or Bodhi and consider the Bodhisatta Ideal
as the highest. The Mahayana has created many mystical Bodhisattas, while the
Theravada believes that a Bodhisatta is a man amongst us who devotes his entire
life for the attainment of perfection, and ultimately becomes a fully Enlightened
Buddha for the well-being and happiness of the world.
The terms Hinayana (Small
Vehicle) and Mahayana(Great Vehicle)are not known in the Theravada Pali literature.
They are not found in the Pali Canon (Tripitaka)
or in the Commentaries on
the Tripitaka.
Theravada Buddhists follow orthodox religious traditions that
had prevailed in India two thousand five hundred years ago. They perform their
religious services in the Pali language. They also expect to attain the final
goal (Nibbana) by becoming a Supreme Enlightened Buddha, Pacceka Buddha, or an
Arahant (the highest stage of sainthood). The Majority of them prefer the Arahantahood.
Buddhists in Sri Lanka, Burma, and Thailand belong to this school. Mahayanists
have changed the old religious customs. Their practices are in accordance with
the customs and traditions of the countries where they live. Mahayanists perform
their religious services in their mother tongue. They expect to attain the final
goal (Nibbana) by becoming Buddhas. Hence, they honor both the Buddha and Bodhisatta
(one who is destined to be a Buddha with the same respect. Buddhists in China,
Japan and Korea belong to this school. Most of those in Tibet and Mongolia follow
another school of Buddhism which is known as Vajrayana. Buddhist scholars believe
that this school inclines more towards the Mahayana sect.
It is universally
accepted by scholars that the terms Hinayana and Mahayana are later invention.
Historically speaking, the Theravada already existed long before these terms came
into being. That Theravada, considered to be the original teaching of the Buddha,
was introduced to Sri Lanka and established there in the 3rd century B.C., during
the time of Emperor Asoka of India. At that time there was nothing called Mahayana.
Mahayana as such appeared much later, about the beginning of the Christian
era. Buddhism that went to Sri Lanka, with its Tripitaka and Commentaries, in
the 3rd Century B.C., remained there intact as Theravada, and did not come into
the scene of the Hinayana-Mahayana dispute that developed later in India. It seems
therefore not legitimate to include Theravada in either of these two categories.
However, after the inauguration of the World Fellowship of Buddhists in 1950,
well-informed people, both in the East and in the West, use the term Theravada,
and not the term Hinayana, with reference to Buddhism prevalent in South-east
Asian countries. There are still outmoded people who use the term Hinayana. In
fact, the Samdhi Nirmorcana Sutra (a Mahayana Sutra) clearly says that the Sravakayana?
Theravadaand the Mahayana constitute one Yana (ekayana) and that they are not
two different and distinct 'vehicles'. Although different schools of Buddhism
held different opinions on the teaching of the Buddha, they never had any violence
or blood shed for more than two thousands years. This is the uniqueness of Buddhist
tolerance.
Chapter 5 Basic Doctrines
Tri-Pitaka (or Tipitaka)
Tripitaka is the collection of the teachings of
the Buddha over 45 years in the Pali language, and it consists of Sutta---conventionalteaching,
Vinaya ---disciplinary code, and Abhidhamma---moral psychology.
The Tripitaka
was compiled and arranged in its present form by those Arahants who had immediate
contact with the Master Himself.
The Buddha has passed away, but the sublime
Dhamma which He unreservedly bequeathed to humanity still exists in its pristine
purity.
Although the Master has left no written records of His Teachings,
His distinguished disciples preserved them by committing to memory and transmitting
them orally from generation to generation.
Immediately after the final passing
away of the Buddha, 500 distinguished Arahants held a convention known as the
First Buddhist Council to rehearse the Doctrine taught by the Buddha. Venerable
Ananda, the faithful attendant of the Buddha who had the special privilege of
hearing all the discourses the Buddha ever uttered, recited the Dhamma, whilst
the Venerable Upali recited the Vinaya, the rules of conduct for the Sangha.
One
hundred years after the First Buddhist Council, during King Kalasoka, some disciples
saw the need to change certain minor rules. The orthodox monk said that nothing
should be changed while the others insisted on modifying some disciplinary rules(Vinaya).
Finally, the formation of different schools of Buddhism germinated after this
council. And in the Second Council, only matters pertaining to the Vinaya were
discussed and no controversy about the Dhamma was reported.
In the 3rd Century
B.C. during the time of Emperor Asoka, the Third Council was held to discuss the
differences of opinion held by the Sangha community. At this Council the differences
were not confined to the Vinaya but were also connected with the Dhamma. At the
end of this Council, the President of the Council, Ven. Moggaliputta Tissa, compiled
a book called Kathavatthu refuting the heretical, false views and theories held
by some disciples. The teaching approved and accepted by this Council was known
as Theravada. The Abhidhamma Pitaka was held in Sri Lanka in 80 B.C. is known
as the 4th Council under the patronage of the pious King Vattagamini Abbaya. It
was at this time in Sri Lanka that the Tripitaka was first committed to writing.
The Tripitaka consists of three sections of the Buddha's Teachings. They are
the Discipline(Vinaya Pitaka), the Discourse(Sutta Pitaka), and Ultimate Doctrine
(Abhidhamma Pitaka).
The Vinaya Pitaka mainly deals with the rules and regulations
of the Order of monks (Bhikkhus) and nuns (Bhikkhunis). It describes in detail
the gradual development of the Sasana(Dispensation). It also gives an account
of the life and ministry of the Buddha. Indirectly it reveals some useful information
about ancient history, Indian customs, arts, sciences, etc.
For nearly twenty
years since His Enlightenment, the Buddha did not lay down rules for the control
of the Sangha. Later, as the occasion arose, the Buddha promulgated rules for
the future discipline of the Sangha.
This Pitaka consists of the five following
books:---
Parajika Pali (Major Offences)
Pacittiya Pali (Minor Offences)
Mahavagga
Pali (Greater Section)
Cullavagga Pali (Smaller Section)
Parivara Pali (Epitome
of the Vinaya)
Sutta Pitaka
The
Sutta Pitaka consists chiefly of discourses delivered by the Buddha Himself on
various occasions. There are also a few discourses delivered by some of His distinguished
disciples, such as the Venerable Sariputta, Ananda, Moggallana, etc., included
in it. It is like a book of prescriptions, as the sermons embodied therein were
expounded to suit the different occasions and the temperaments of various persons.
There may be seemingly contradictory statements, but they should not be misconstrued
as they were opportunely uttered by the Buddha to suit a particular purpose.
This
Pitaka is divided into five Nikayas or collections, viz:--
Digha Nikaya (Collection
of Long Discourses)
Majjhima Nikaya (Collection of Middle-length Discourses)
Samyutta
Nikaya (Collection of Kindred Sayings)
Anguttara Nikaya (Collection of Discourses
arranged in accordance with number)
Khuddaka Nikaya(Smaller Collection)
The
fifth is subdivided into fifteen books:---
Khuddaka Patha (Shorter Texts)
Dhammapada
(The Way of Truth)
Udana (Heartfelt sayings or Paeons of Joy)
Iti Vuttaka
('Thus said" Discourses)
Sutta Nipata (Collected Discourses)
Vimana
Vatthu (Stories of Celestial Mansions)
Peta Vatthu (Stories of Petas)
Theragatha
(Psalms of the Brethren)
Therigatha (Psalms of the Sisters)
Jataka (Birth
Stories)
Niddesa (Expositions)
Patisambhida (Analytical Knowledge)
Apadana
(Lives of Saints)
Buddhavamsa (The History of Buddha)
Cariya Pitaka (Modes
of Conduct)
Abhidhamma Pitaka
The
Abhidhamma is, to a deep thinker, the most important and interesting, as it contains
the profound philosophy of the Buddha's teaching in contrast to the illuminating
but simpler discourses in the Sutta Pitaka.
In the Sutta Pitaka one often
finds references to individual, being, etc., but in the Abhidhamma, instead of
such conventional terms, we meet with ultimate terms, such as aggregates, mind,
matter, etc.
In the Sutta is found the Vohara Desana (Conventional Teaching),
whilst in the Abhidhamma is found the Paramattha Desana (Ultimate Doctrine).
In
the Abhidhamma everything is analysed and explained in detail, and as such it
is called analytical doctrine (Vibhajja Vada).
Four ultimate things (Paramattha)
are enumerated in the Abhidhamma. They are Citta, (Consciousness), Cetasika (Mental
concomitants), Rupa (Matter) and Nibbana.
The so-called being is microscopically
analysed and its component parts are minutely described. Finally the ultimate
goal and the method to achieve it is explained with all necessary details.
The
Abhidhamma Pitaka is composed of the following works:--
Dhamma-Sangani (Enumeration
of Phenomena)
Vibhanga (The Book of the Treatises)
Katha Vatthu (Point of
Controversy)
Puggala Pannatti (Description of Individuals)
Dhatu Katha (Discussion
with reference to Elements)
Yamaka (The Book of Pairs)
Patthana (The Book
of Relations)
According to another classification, mentioned by the Buddha
Himself, the whole Teachings is ninefold, namely ---1. Sutta, 2. Geyya, 3. Veyyakarama,
4. Gatha, 5. Udana, 6. Itivuttaka, 7. Jataka, 8. Abbhutadhamma, 9. Vedalla.
Sutta?These
are the short, medium, and long discourses expounded by the Buddha on various
occasions, such as Mangala Sutta (Discourse on Blessings), Ratana Sutta (The Jewel
Discourse) Metta Sutta(Discourse on Goodwill), etc. According to the Commentary
the whole Vinaya Pitaka is also included in this division.
Geyya _These are
discourses mixed with Gathas or verses, such as the Sagathavagga of the Samyutta
Nikaya.
Veyyakarana --- Lit. exposition. The whole Abhidhamma Pitaka, discourses
without verses, and everything that is not included in the remaining eight divisions
belong to this class.
Gatha --- These include verses found in the Dhammapada
(Way of Truth), Theragatha (Psalms of the Brethren). Therigatha (Psalms of the
Sisters), and those isolated verses which are not classed amongst the Sutta.
Udana
_These are the 'Paeons of Joy' found in the Udana, one of the divisions of the
Khuddaka Nikaya.
Itivuttaka _ These are the 112 discourses which commence with
the phrases _ 'Thus the Blessed One has Said'. Itivuttaka is one of the fifteen
books that comprise the Khuddaka Nikaya.
Jataka _ These are the 547 birth-stories
related by the Buddha in connection with His previous births.
Abbhutadhamma
_ These are the few discourses that deal with wonderful and marvelous things,
as for example the Accariya-Abbhutadhamma Sutta of the Majjhima Nikaya (No. 123).
Vedalla
_ These are the pleasurable discourses, such as Chulla Vedalla, Maha Vedalla (M.N.
Nos 43,44), Samma Ditthi Sutta (M.N.No.9), etc. In some of these discourses, the
answers give to certain questions were put with a feeling of joy.
What
is Abhidhamma?
Abhidhamma is the analytical doctrine of mental faculties and
elements.
The Abhidhamma Pitaka contains the profound moral psychology and
philosophy of the Buddha's teaching, in contrast to the simpler discourses in
the Sutta Pitaka.
The knowledge gained from the sutta can certainly help us
in overcoming our difficulties, as well as in developing our moral conduct and
training the mind. Having such knowledge will enable one to lead a life which
is peaceful, respectable, harmless and noble. By listening to the discourses,
we develop understanding of the Dhamma and can mould our daily lives accordingly.
The concepts behind certain words and terms used in the Sutta Pitaka are, however,
subject to changes and should be interpreted within the context of the social
environment prevailing at the Buddha's time. The concepts used in the sutta are
like the conventional words and terms lay people use to express scientific subjects.
While concepts in the sutta are to be understood in the conventional sense, those
used in the Abhidhamma must be understood in the ultimate sense. The concepts
expressed in the Abhidhamma are like the precise scientific words and terms used
by scientists to prevent misinterpretations.
It is only in the Abhidhamma that
explanations are given on how and at which mental beats a person can create good
and bad karmic thoughts, according to his desires and other mental states. Clear
explanations of the nature of the different mental faculties and precise analytical
interpretations of the elements can be found in this important collection of discourses.
Understanding
the Dhamma through the knowledge gained from the sutta is like the knowledge acquired
from studying the prescripti0ons for different types of sicknesses. Such knowledge
when applied can certainly help to cure certain types of sicknesses. On the other
hand, a qualified physician, with his precise knowledge, can diagnose a wider
range of sicknesses and discover their causes. This specialized knowledge puts
him in a better position to prescribe more effective remedies. Similarly, a person
who has studied the Abhidhamma can better understand the nature of the mind and
analyse the mental attitudes which cause a human being to commit mistakes and
develop the will to avoid evil.
The Abhidhamma teaches that the egoistic beliefs
and other concepts such as 'I', "you", 'man' and 'the world', which
we use in daily conversation, do not adequately describe the real nature of existence.
The conventional concepts do not reflect the fleeting nature of pleasures, uncertainties,
impermanence of every component thing, and the conflict among the elements and
energies intrinsic in all animate or inanimate things. The Abhidhamma doctrine
gives a clear exposition of the ultimate nature of man and brings the analysis
of the human condition further than other studies known to man.
The Abhidhamma
deals with realities existing in the ultimate sense, or paramattha dhamma in Pali.
There are four such realities:
Citta, mind or consciousness, defined as 'that
which knows or experiences' an object. Citta occurs as distinct momentary states
of consciousness.
Cetasika, the mental factors that arise and occur along with
the citta.
Rupa, physical phenomenon or material form.
Nibbana, the unconditioned
state of bliss which is the final goal.
Citta, the cetasika, and rupa are conditioned
realities. They arise because of conditions sustaining them cease to continue
to do so. They are impermanent states. Nibbana, on the other hand, is an unconditioned
reality. It does not arise and, therefore, does not fall away. These four realities
can be experienced regardless of the names we may choose to give them. Other than
these realities, everything _ be it within ourselves or without, whether in the
past, present or future, whether coarse or subtle, low or lofty, far or near _
is a concept and not an ultimate reality.
Citta, cetisaka(?), and Nibbana
are also called nama. Nibbana is an unconditioned nama. The two conditioned nama,
that is, cita and cetasika, together with rupa (form), make up psychophysical
organisms, including human beings. Both mind and matter, or nama-rupa, are analysed
in Abhidhamma as though under a microscope. Events connected with the process
of birth and death are explained in detail. The Abhidhamma clarifies intricate
points of the Dhamma and enables the arising of an understanding of reality, thereby
setting forth in clear terms the Path of Emancipation. The realization we gain
from the Abhidhamma with regard to our lives and the world is not in a conventional
sense, but absolute reality.
The clear exposition of thought processes in
Abhidhamma cannot be found in any other psychological treatise either in the east
or west. Consciousness is defined, while thoughts are analysed and classified
mainly from an ethical standpoint. The composition of each type of consciousness
is set forth in detail. The fact that consciousness flows like a steam, a view
propounded by psychologists like William James, becomes extremely clear to one
who understands the Abhidhamma. In addition, a student of Abhidhamma can fully
comprehend the Anatta (No-soul) doctrine, which is important both from a philosophical
and ethical standpoint.
The Abhidhamma explains the process of rebirth in
various planes after the occurrence of death without anything to pass from one
life to another. This explanation provides support to the doctrine of Kamma and
Rebirth. It also gives a wealth of details about the mind, as well as the units
of mental and material forces, properties of matter, sources of matter, relationship
of mind and matter.
In the Abhidhamattha Sangaha, a manual of Abhidhamma,
there is a brief exposition of the 'Law of Dependent Origination", followed
by a descriptive account of the Causal Relations which finds no parallel in any
other study of the human condition anywhere else in the world. Because of its
analytics and profound expositions, the Abhidhamma is not a subject of fleeting
interest designed for the superficial reader.
To what extent can we compare
modern psychology with the analysis provided in the Abhidhamma? Modern psychology,
limited as it is, comes within the scope of Abhidhamma in so far as it deals with
the mind---with thoughts, thought processes, and mental states. The difference
lies in the fact that Abhidhamma does not accept the concept of a psyche or a
soul.
The analysis of the nature of the mind given in the Abhidhamma is not
available through any other source.. Even modern psychologists are very much in
the dark with regards to subjects like mental impulses or mental beats (Javana
Citta) as discussed in the Abhidhamma. Dr. Graham Howe, an eminent Harley Street
psychologist, wrote in his book, the Invisible Anatomy:
'In the course of
their work many psychologists have found, as the pioneer work of C.G. Jung has
shown, that we are near to [the] Buddha. To read a little Buddhism is to realize
that the Buddhists knew two thousand five hundred years ago far more about our
modern problems of psychology than they have yet been given credit for. They studied
these problems long ago, and found the answers too. We are now rediscovering the
Ancient Wisdom of the East.'
Some scholars assert that the Abhidhamma is not
the teaching of the Buddha, but it grew out of the commentaries on the basic teachings
of the Buddha. These commentaries are said to be the work of great scholar monks.
Tradition, however, attributes the nucleus of the Abhidhamma to the Buddha Himself.
Commentators state that the Buddha, as a mark of gratitude to His mother who
was born as a deva in a celestial plane, preached the Abhidhamma to His mother
together with other devas continuously for three months. The principal topics
(matika) of the advanced teaching, such as moral states (kusala dhamma) and immoral
states (akusala dhamma), were then repeated by the Buddha to Venerable Sariputta
Thera, who subsequently elaborated them and later compiled them into six books.
From ancient times there were controversies as to whether the Abhidhamma was
really taught by the Buddha. While this discussion may be interesting for academic
purposes, what is important is for us to experience and understand the realities
described in the Abhidhamma. One will realize for oneself that such profound and
consistently verifiable truths can only emanate from a supremely enlightened source
_ from a Buddha. Much of what is contained in the Abhidhamma is also found in
the Sutta Pitaka. Such a statement, of course, cannot be supported by evidence.
According to the Theravada tradition, the essence, fundamentals and framework
of the Abhidhamma are ascribed to the Buddha, although the tabulations and classifications
may have been the work of later disciples. What is important is the essence. It
is this that we would try to experience for ourselves. The Buddha Himself clearly
took this stand of using the knowledge of the Abhidhamma to clarify many existing
psychological, metaphysical and philosophical problems. Mere intellectual quibbling
about whether the Buddha taught the Abhidhamma or not will not help us to understand
reality.
The question is also raised whether the Abhidhamma is essential for
Dhamma practice. The answer to this will depend on the individual who undertakes
the practice. People vary in their levels of understanding, their temperaments
and spiritual development. Ideally, all the different spiritual faculties should
be harmonized, but some people are quite contented with devotional practices based
on faith, while others are keen on developing penetrative insight. The Abhidhamma
is most useful to those who want to understand the Dhamma in greater depth and
detail. It aids the development of insight into the three characteristics of existence?impermanence,
unsatisfactoriness, and non-self. It is useful not only for the periods devoted
to formal meditation, but also during the rest of the day when we are engaged
in various mundane chores. We derive great benefit from the study of the Abhidhamma
when we experience absolute reality. In addition, a comprehensive knowledge of
the Abhidhamma is useful for those engaged in teaching and explaining the Dhamma.
In fact the real meaning of the most important Buddhist terminologies such as
Dhamma, Kamma, Samsara, Sankhara, Paticca Samuppada and Nibbana cannot be understood
without a knowledge of Abhidhamma.
Mind and Matter(Nama-Rupa)
"What
is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind."
According to Buddhism,
life is a combination of mind (nama) and matter (rupa). Mind consists of the combination
of sensations, perceptions, volitional activities and consciousness. Matter consists
of the combination of the four elements of solidity, fluidity, motion and heat.
Life
is the co-existence of mind and matter. Decay is the lack of co-ordination of
mind and matter. Death is the separation of mind and matter. Rebirth is the recombination
of mind and matter. After the passing away of the physical body (matter), the
mental forces (mind) recombine and assume a new combination in a different material
form and condition another existence.
The relation of mind to matter is like
the relation of a battery to an engine of a motor car. The battery helps to start
the engine. The engine helps to charge the battery. The combination helps to run
the motor car. In the same manner, matter helps the mind to function and the mind
helps to set matter in motion.
Buddhism teaches that life is not the property
of matter alone, and that the life-process continues or flows as a result of cause
and effect. The mental and material elements that compose sentient beings from
amoebae to elephant and also to man, existed previously in other forms.
Although
some people hold the view that life originates in matter alone, the greatest scientists
have accepted that mind precedes matter in order for life to originate. In Buddhism,
this concept is called 'relinking consciousness'.
Each of us, in the ultimate
sense, is mind and matter, a compound of mental and material phenomena, and nothing
more. Apart from these realities that go to form the nama-rupa compound, there
is no self, or soul. The mind part of the compound is what experiences an object.
The matter part does not experience anything. When the body is injured, it is
not the body that feels the pain, but the mental side. When are hungry it is not
the stomach that feels the hunger but again the mind and its factors, makes the
body digest the food. Thus neither the nama nor the rupa has any efficient power
of its own. One is dependent on the other; one supports the other. Both mind and
matter arise because of conditions and perish immediately, and this is happening
every moment of our lives. By studying and experiencing these realities we will
get insight into: (1)what we truly are; (2)what we find around us; (3)how and
why we react to what is within and around us; and (4)what we should aspire to
reach as a spiritual goal.
To gain insight into the nature of the psycho-physical
life is to realize that life is an illusion, a mirage or a bubble, a mere process
of becoming and dissolving, or arising and passing away. Whatever exists, arises
from causes and conditions.
Four
Noble Truths
Why are we here? Why are we not happy with our lives? What is
the cause of our unsatisfactoriness? How can we see the end of unsatisfactoriness
and experience eternal peace?
The Buddha's Teaching is based on the Four Noble
Truths. To realize these Truths is to realize and penetrate into the true nature
of existence, including the full knowledge of oneself. When we recognize that
all phenomenal things are transitory, are subject to suffering and are void of
any essential reality, we will be convinced that true and enduring happiness cannot
be found in material possessions and worldly achievement, that true happiness
must be sought only through mental purity and the cultivation of wisdom.
The
Four Noble Truths are a very important aspect of the teaching of the Buddha. The
Buddha has said that it is because we fail to understand the Four Noble Truths
that we have continued to go round in the cycle of birth and death. In the very
first sermons of the Buddha, the Dhammachakka Sutta, which He gave to the five
monks at the Deer park in Sarnath was on the Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold
Path. What are the Four Noble Truths? They are as follows:
The Noble Truth
of Dukkha
The Noble Truth of the Cause of Dukkha
The Noble Truth of the
End of Dukkha
The Noble Truth of the path leading to the End of Dukkha
There
are many ways of understanding the Pali word 'Dukkha'. It has generally been translated
as 'suffering' or 'unsatisfactoriness', but this term as used in the Four Noble
Truths has a deeper and wider meaning. Dukkha contains not only the ordinary meaning
of suffering, but also includes deeper ideas such as imperfection, pain, impermanence,
disharmony, discomfort, irritation, or awareness of incompleteness and insufficiency.
By all means, Dukkha includes physical and mental suffering: birth, decay, disease,
death, to be united with the unpleasant, to be separated from the pleasant, not
to get what one desires. However, many people do not realize that even during
the moments of joy and happiness, there is Dukkha because these moments are all
impermanent states and will pass away when conditions change. Therefore, the truth
of Dukkha encompasses the whole of existence, in our happiness and sorrow, in
every aspect of our lives. As long as we live, we are very profoundly subjected
to this truth.
Some people may have the impression that viewing life in terms
of Dukkha is a rather pessimistic way of looking at life. This is not a pessimistic
but a realistic way of looking at life. If one is suffering from a disease and
refuses to recognize the fact that one is ill, and as a result of which refuses
to seek for treatment, we will not consider such a mental attitude as being optimistic,
but merely as being foolish. Therefore, by being both optimistic or pessimistic,
one does not really understand the nature of life, and is therefore unable to
tackle life's problems in the right perspective. The Four Noble Truths begin with
the recognition of Dukkha and then proceed to analyse its cause and find its cure.
Had the Buddha stopped at the Truth of Dukkha, then one may say Buddhism has identified
the problem but has not given the cure; if such is the case, then the human situation
is hopeless. However, not only is the Truth of Dukkha recognized, the Buddha proceeded
to analyze its cause and the way to cure it. How can Buddhism be considered to
be pessimistic if the cure to the problem is known? In fact, it is a teaching
which is filled with hope.
In addition, even though Dukkha is a noble truth,
it does not mean that there is no happiness, enjoyment and pleasure in life. There
is, and the Buddha has taught various methods with which we can gain more happiness
in our daily life. However, in the final analysis, the fact remains that the pleasure
or happiness which we experience in life is impermanent. We may enjoy a happy
situation, or the good company of someone we love, or we enjoy youth and health.
Sooner or later, when these states change we experience suffering. Therefore,
while there is every reason to feel glad when one experiences happiness, one should
not cling to these happy states or be side-tracked and forget about working one's
way to complete Liberation.
If we wish to cure ourselves from suffering, we
must first identify its cause. According to the Buddha, craving or desire (tanha
or raga) is the cause of suffering. This is the Second Noble Truth. People crave
for pleasant experiences, crave for material things, crave for eternal life, and
when disappointed, crave for eternal death. They are not only attached to sensual
pleasures, wealth and power, but also to ideas, views, opinions, concepts, beliefs.
And craving is linked to ignorance, that is, not seeing things as they really
are, or failing to understand the reality of experience and life. Under the delusion
of Self and not realizing Anatta (non-Self), a person clings to things which are
impermanent, changeable, perishable. The failure to satisfy one's desires through
these things causes disappointments and suffering.
The Danger of Selfish Desire
Craving
is a fire which burns in all beings: every activity is motivated by desire. They
range from the simple physical desire of animals to the complex and often artificially
stimulated desires of the civilized man. To satisfy desire, animals prey upon
one another, and human beings fight, kill, cheat, lie and perform various forms
of unwholesome deeds. Craving is a powerful mental force present in all forms
of life, and is the chief cause of the ills in life. It is this craving that leads
to repeated births in the cycle of existence.
Once we have realized the cause
of suffering, we are in the position to put an end to suffering. So, how do we
put an end to suffering? Eliminate it at its root by the removal of craving in
the mind. This is the Third Noble Truth. The state where craving ceases is known
as Nibbana. The word Nibbana is composed of 'ni' and 'vana', meaning the departure
from or end of craving. This is a state which is free from suffering and rounds
of rebirth. This is a state which is not subjected to the laws of birth, decay
and death. This state is so sublime that no human language can express it. Nibbana
is Unborn, Unoriginated, Uncreated, Unformed. If there were not this Unborn, this
Unoriginated, this Uncreated, this Unformed, then escape from the conditioned
world is not possible.
Nibbana is beyond logic and reasoning. We may engage
in highly speculative discussions regarding Nibbana or ultimate reality, but this
is not the way to really understand it. To understand and realize the truth of
Nibbana, it is necessary for us to walk the Eightfold Path, and to train and purify
ourselves with diligence and patience. Through spiritual development and maturity,
we will be able to realize the Third Noble Truth.
The Noble Eightfold Path
is the Fourth Noble Truth which leads to Nibbana. It is a way of life consisting
of eight factors. By walking on this Path, it will be possible for us to see an
end to suffering. Because Buddhism is a logical and consistent teaching embracing
every aspect of life, this noble Path also serves as the finest possible code
for leading a happy life. Its practice brings benefits to oneself and other, and
it is not a Path to be practised by those who call themselves Buddhists alone,
but by each and every understanding person, irrespective of his religious beliefs.
The
Noble Eightfold Path?The Middle Way
This is the Path for leading a religious
life without going to extremes.
An outstanding aspect of the Buddha's Teaching
is the adoption of the Eightfold Path is the Middle Path. The Buddha advised His
followers to follow this Path so as to avoid the extremes of sensual pleasures
and self-mortification. The Middle Path is a righteous way of life which does
not advocate the acceptance of decrees given by someone outside oneself. A person
practises the Middle Path, the guide for moral conduct, not out of fear of nay
supernatural agency, but out of the intrinsic value in following such an action.
He chooses this self-imposed discipline for a definite end in view: self-purification.
The
Middle Path is a planned course of inward culture and progress. A person can make
real progress in righteousness and insight by following this Path, and not by
engaging in external worship and prayers. According to the Buddha, anyone who
lives in accordance with the Dhamma will be guided and protected by that very
Law. When a person lives according to Dhamma, he will also be living in harmony
with the universal law.
Every Buddhist is encouraged to mould his life according
to the Noble Eightfold Path as taught by the Buddha. He who adjusts his life according
to this noble way of living will be free from miseries and calamities both in
this life-time and hereafter. He will also be able to develop his mind by restraining
from evil and observing morality.
The Eightfold Path can be compared to a road
map. Just as a traveler will need a map to lead him to his destination, we all
need the Eightfold Path which shows us how to attain Nibbana, the final goal of
human life. To attain the final goal, there are three aspects of the Eightfold
path to be developed by the devotee. He has to develop Sila(Morality), Samadhi(Mental
Culture) and Panna (Wisdom). While the three must be developed simultaneously,
the intensity with which any one area is to be practised varies according to a
person's own spiritual development. A devotee must first develop his morality,
that is, his actions should bring good to other living beings. He does this by
faithfully adhering to the precepts of abstaining from killing, slandering, stealing,
becoming intoxicated or being lustful. As he develops his morality, his mind will
become more easily controlled, enabling him to develop his powers of concentration.
Finally, with the development of concentration, wisdom will arise.
Gradual
Development
With His infinite wisdom, the Buddha knew that not all humans have
the same ability to reach spiritual maturity at once. So He expounded the Noble
Eightfold Path for the gradual development of the spiritual way of life in a practical
way. He knew that not all people can become perfect in one lifetime. He said that
Sila, Samadhi, and Panna, must and can be developed over many lifetimes with diligent
effort. This path finally leads to the attainment of ultimate peace where there
is no more unsatisfactoriness.
Righteous Life
The Eightfold path consists
of the following eight factors:
Right Speech
Sila Right Action Morality
Right
Livelihood
Right Effort
Samadhi Right Mindfulness Mental culture
Right
Concentration
Right Understanding
Panna Right Thoughts Wisdom
What is
Right Understanding? It is explained as having the knowledge of the Four Noble
Truths. In other words, it is the understanding of things as they really are.
Right Understanding also means that one understands the nature of what are wholesome
kamma(merits) and unwholesome kamma(demerits), and how they may be performed with
the body, speech and mind. By understanding kamma, a person will learn to avoid
evil and do good, thereby creating favorable outcomes in his life. When a person
has Right Understanding, he also understands the Three Characteristics of Life
(that all compounded things are transient, subject to suffering, and without a
Self) and understands the Law of Dependent Origination. A person with complete
Right Understanding is one who is free from ignorance, and by the nature of that
enlightenment removes the roots of evil from his mind and becomes liberated. A
lofty aim of a practising Buddhist is to cultivate Wisdom and gain Right Understanding
about himself, life and all phenomena.
When a person has Right Understanding,
he or she develops Right Thought as well. This factor is sometimes known as 'Right
Resolution', 'Right Aspirations" and 'Right Ideas'. It refers to the mental
state which eliminates wrong ideas or notions and promotes the other moral factors
to be directed to Nibbana. This factor serves a double purpose of eliminating
evil thoughts and developing pure thoughts. Right Thought is important because
it is one's thoughts which either purify or defile a person.
There are three
aspects to Right Thought. First, a person should maintaining an attitude of detachment
from worldly pleasures rather than being selfishly attached to them. He should
be selfless in his thoughts and think of the welfare of others. Second, he should
maintain loving-kindness, goodwill and benevolence in his mind, which is opposed
to hatred, ill-will or aversion. Third, he should act with thoughts of harmlessness
or compassion to all beings, which is opposed to cruelty and lack of consideration
for others. As a person progresses along the spiritual path, his thoughts will
become increasingly benevolent, harmless, selfless, and filled with love and compassion.
Right
Understanding and Right Thought, which are Wisdom factors, will lead to good,
moral conduct. There are three factors under moral conduct: Right Speech, Right
Action and Right Livelihood. Right Speech involves respect for truth and respect
for the welfare for others. It means to avoid lying, to avoid backbiting or slander,
to avoid harsh speech, and to avoid idle talk. We have often underestimated the
power of speech and tend to use little control over our speech faculty. But we
have all been hurt by someone's words at some time of our life, and similarly
we have been encouraged by the words of another. It is said that a harsh word
can wound more deeply than weapons, where as a gentle word can change the heart
and mind of the most hardened criminal. So to develop a harmonious society, we
should cultivate and use our speech positively. We speak words which are truthful,
bring harmony, kind and meaningful. The Buddha once said 'pleasant speech is sweet
as honey, truthful speech is beautiful like a flower, and wrong speech is unwholesome
like filth'.
The next factor under good, moral conduct is Right Action. Right
Action entails respect for life, respect for property, and respect for personal
relationships. It corresponds to the first three of the Five Precepts to be practised
by every Buddhist, that is, dear to all, and all tremble at punishment, all fear
death and value life. Hence, we should abstain from taking a life which we ourselves
cannot give and we should not harm other sentient beings. Respect for property
means that we should not take what is not given, by stealing, cheating, or force.
Respect for personal relationship means that we should not commit adultery and
avoid sexual misconducts, which is important for maintaining the love and trust
of those we love as well as making our society a better place to live in.
Right
Livelihood is a factor under moral conduct which refers to how we earn our living
in society. It is an extension of the two other factors of Right Speech and Right
Action which refer to the respect for truth, life, property and personal relationships.
Right
Livelihood means that we should earn a living without violating these principles
of a moral conduct. Buddhists are discouraged from being engaged in the following
five kinds of livelihood: trading in human beings, trading in weapons, trading
in flesh, trading in intoxicating drinks and drugs, and trading in poison. Some
people may say that they have to do such a business for their living and, therefore,
it is not wrong for them to do so. But this argument is entirely baseless. If
it were valid, then thieves, murderers, gangsters, thugs, smugglers and swindlers
can also just as easily say that they are also doing such unrighteous acts only
for their living and, therefore, there is nothing wrong with their way of life.
Some
people believe that fishing and hunting animals for pleasure and slaughtering
animals for food are not against the Buddhist precepts. This is another misconception
that arises owing to a lack of knowledge in Dhamma. All these are not decent actions
and bring suffering to other beings. But in all these actions, the one who is
harmed most of all is the one who performs these unwholesome actions. Maintaining
a life through wrong means is not in accordance with the Buddha's teaching. The
Buddha once said, 'Though one should live a hundred years immorally and unrestrained,
yet it would indeed be better to live one day virtuously and meditatively.' (Dhammapada
103) It is better to die as a cultured and respected person than to live as a
wicked person.
The remaining three factors of the Noble Eightfold Path are
factors for the development of wisdom through the purification of the mind. They
are Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Concentration. These factors, when
practised, enable a person to strengthen and gain control over the mind, thereby
ensuring that his actions will continue to be good and that his mind is being
prepared to realize the Truth, which will open the door to Freedom, to Enlightenment.
Right
Effort means that we cultivate a positive attitude and have enthusiasm in the
things we do, whether in our career, in our study, or in our practice of the Dhamma.
With such a sustained enthusiasm and cheerful determination, we can succeed in
the things we do. There are four aspects of Right Effort, two of which refer to
evil and the other two to good. First, is the effort to reject evil that has already
arisen; and second, the effort to prevent the arising of evil. Third, is the effort
to develop unarisen good, and fourth, the effort to maintain the good which has
arisen. By applying Right Effort in our lives, we can reduce and eventually eliminate
the number of unwholesome mental states and increase and firmly establish wholesome
thoughts as a natural part of our mind.
Right Effort is closely associated
with Right Mindfulness. The practice of mindfulness is important in Buddhism.
The Buddha said that mindfulness is the one way to achieve the end of suffering.
Mindfulness can be developed by being constantly aware of four particular aspects.
These are the application of mindfulness with regard to the body (body postures,
breathing so forth), feelings (whether pleasant, unpleasant or neutrally); mind(whether
the mind is greedy or not, angry, dispersed or deluded or not); and mind objects
(whether there are mental hindrances to concentration, the Four Noble Truths,
and so on). Mindfulness is essential even in our daily life in which we act in
full awareness of our actions, feelings and thoughts as well as that of our environment.
The mind should always be clear and attentive rather than distracted and clouded.
Whereas
Right Mindfulness is directing our attention to our body, feelings, mind, or mental
object or being sensitive to others, in other words, putting our attention to
where we choose to, Right Concentration is the sustained application of that attention
on the object without the mind being distracted. Concentration is the practice
of developing one-pointedness of the mind on one single object, either physical
or mental. The mind is totally absorbed in the object without distractions, wavering,
anxiety or drowsiness. Through practice under an experienced teacher, Right Concentration
brings two benefits. Firstly, it leads to mental and physical well-being, comfort,
joy, calm, tranquillity. Secondly, it turns the mind into an instrument capable
of seeing things as they truly are, and prepares the mind to attain wisdom.
The
Noble Eightfold Path is the fourth important truth taught by the Buddha. As a
competent spiritual physician, the Buddha has identified a disease that afflicts
all forms of life, and this is Dukkha or unsatisfactoriness. He then diagnosed
the cause of the unsatisfactoriness to be selfish greed and craving. He discovered
that there is a cure for the disease, Nibbana, the state where all unsatisfactoriness
ceases. And the prescription is the Noble Eightfold Path. When a competent doctor
treats a patient for a serious illness, his prescription is not only for physical
treatment, but it is also psychological. The Noble Eightfold path, the path leading
to the end of suffering, is an integrated therapy designed to cure the disease
of Samsara through the cultivation of moral speech and action, the development
of the mind, and the complete transformation of one's level of understanding and
quality of thought. It shows the way to gain spiritual maturity and be released
completely from suffering.
Everything
is Changeable
What exists is changeable and what is not changeable does not
exist.
Looking at life, we notice how it changes and how it continually moves
between extremes and contrasts. We notice rise and fall, success and failure,
loss and gain; we experience honor and contempt, praise and blame; and we feel
how our hearts respond to all that happiness and sorrow, delight and despair,
disappointment and satisfaction, fear and hope. These mighty waves of emotion
carry us up, fling us down, and no sooner we find some rest, then we are carried
by the power of a new wave again. How can we expect a footing on the crest of
the waves? Where shall we erect the building of our life in the midst of this
ever-restless ocean of existence?
This is a world where any little joy that
is allotted to beings is secured only after many disappointments, failures and
defeats. This is a world where scanty joy grows amidst sickness, desperation and
death. This is a world where beings who a short while ago were connected with
us by sympathetic joy are at the next moment in want of our compassion. Such a
world as this needs equanimity. This is the nature of the world where we live
with our intimate friends and the next day they become our enemies to harm us.
The
Buddha described the world as an unending flux of becoming. All is changeable,
continuous transformation, ceaseless mutation, and a moving stream. Everything
exists from moment to moment. Everything is a recurring rotation of coming into
being and then passing out of existence. Everything is moving from birth to death.
The matter or material forms in which life does or does not express itself, are
also a continuous movement or change towards decay. This teaching of the impermanent
nature of everything is one of the main pivots of Buddhism. Nothing on earth partakes
of the character of absolute reality. That there will be no death of what is born
is impossible. Whatever is subject to origination is subject also to destruction.
Change is the very constituent of reality.
In accepting the law of impermanence
or change, the Buddha denies the existence of eternal substance. Matter and spirit
are false abstractions that, in reality, are only changing factors (Dhamma) which
are connected and which arise in functional dependence on each other.
Today,
scientists have accepted the law of change that was discovered by the Buddha.
Scientists postulate that there is nothing substantial, solid and tangible in
the world. Everything is a vortex of energy, never remaining the same for two
consecutive moments. The whole wide world is caught up in this whirl and vortex
of change. One of the theories postulated by scientists is the prospect of the
ultimate coldness following upon the death or destruction of the sun. Buddhists
are not dismayed by this prospect. The Buddha taught that universes or world cycles
arise and pass away in endless succession, just as the lives of individuals do.
Our world will most certainly come to an end. It has happened before with previous
worlds and it will happen again.
'The world is a passing phenomenon. We all
belong to the world of time. Every written word, every carved stone, every painted
picture, the structure of civilization, every generation of man, vanishes away
like the leaves and flowers of forgotten summers. What exists is changeable and
what is not changeable does not exist.'
Thus all gods and human beings and
animals and material forms?everything in this universe?is subject to the law of
impermanence. Buddhism teaches us:
'The body like a lump of foam;
The feelings
like a water bubble;
Perception like a mirage;
Volitional activities like
a plantain tree;
And Consciousness like jugglery.'(Samyutta Nikaya)
What
is Kamma?
Kamma is an impersonal, natural law that operates in accordance with
our actions. It is a law in itself and does not have any lawgiver. Kamma operates
in its own field without the intervention of an external, independent, ruling
agent.
Kamma or karma can be put in the simple language of the child: do good
and good will come to you, now, and hereafter. Do bad and bad will come to you,
now, and hereafter.
In the language of the harvest, kamma can be explained
in this way: if you sow good seeds, you will reap a good harvest. If you sow bad
seeds, you will reap a bad harvest.
In the language of science, kamma is called
the law of cause and effect: every cause has an effect. Another name for this
is the law of moral causation. Moral causation works in the moral realm just as
the physical law of action and reaction works in the physical realm.
In the
Dhammapada, kamma is explained in this manner: the mind is the chief (forerunner)
of all good and bad states. If you speak or act with a good or bad mind, then
happiness or unhappiness follows you just as the wheel follows the hoof of the
ox or like your shadow which never leaves you.
Kamma is simply action. Within
animate organisms there is a power or force which is given different names such
as instinctive tendencies, consciousness, etc. This innate propensity forces every
conscious being to move. He moves mentally or physically. His motion is action.
The repetition of actions is habit and habit becomes his character. In Buddhism,
this process is called kamma.
In its ultimate sense, kamma means both good
and bad, mental action or volition. 'Kamma is volition,'says the Buddha. Thus
kamma is not an entity but a process, action, energy and force. Some interpret
this force as 'action-influence,' It is our own doings reacting on ourselves.
The pain and happiness man experiences are the result of his own deeds, words
and thoughts reacting on themselves. Our deeds, words and thoughts produce our
prosperity and failure, our happiness and misery.
Kamma is an impersonal, natural
law that operates strictly in accordance with our actions. It is law in itself
and does not have any lawgiver. Kamma operates in its own field without the intervention
of an external, independent ruling agency. Since there is no hidden agent directing
or administering rewards and punishments, Buddhists do not rely on prayer to some
supernatural forces to influence karmic results. According to the Buddha, kamma
is neither predestination nor some sort of determinism imposed on us by some mysterious,
unknown powers or forces to which we must helplessly submit ourselves.
Buddhists
believe that man will reap what he has sown; we are the result of what we were,
and we will be the result of what we are. In other words, man is not one who will
absolutely remain to be what he was, and he will not continue to remain as what
he is. This simply means that kamma is not complete determinism. The Buddha pointed
out that if everything is determined, then there would be no free will and no
moral or spiritual life. We would merely be the slaves of our past. On the other
hand, if everything is undetermined, then there can be no cultivation of moral
and spiritual growth. Therefore, the Buddha accepted neither strict determinism
nor strict undeterminism.
Misconceptions regarding Kamma
The misinterpretation
or irrational views on kamma are stated in the Anguttara Nikaya which suggests
that the wise will investigate and abandon the following views:
the belief
that everything is a result of acts in previous lives;
the belief that all
is the result of creation by a Supreme Ruler; and
the belief that everything
arises without reason or cause.
If a person becomes a murderer, a thief, or
an adulterer, and, if his actions are due to past actions, or caused by creation
of a Supreme Ruler, or if that happened by mere chance, then this person would
not be held responsible for his evil action.
Yet another misconception about
kamma is that it operates only for certain people according to their faiths. But
the fate of a man in his next life does not in the least depend on what particular
religion he chooses. Whatever may be his religion, man's fate depends entirely
on his deeds by body, speech and thought. It does not matter what religious label
he himself holds, he is bound to be happy world in his next life so long as he
does good deeds and leads an unblemished life. He is bound to be born to lead
a wretched life if he commits evil and harbors wicked thoughts in his mind. Therefore,
Buddhists do not proclaim that they are the only blessed people who can go to
heaven after their death. Whatever the religion he professes, man's kammic thought
alone determines his own destiny both in this life and in the next. The teaching
of kamma does not indicate a post-mortem justice. The Buddha did not teach this
law of kamma to protect the rich and to comfort the poor by promising illusory
happiness in an after life.
According to Buddhism kamma explains the inequalities
that exist among mankind. These inequalities are due not only to heredity, environment
and nature but also to kamma or the results of our own actions. Indeed kamma is
one of the factors which are responsible for the success and the failure of our
life.
Since kamma is an invisible force, we cannot see it working with our
physical eyes. To understand how kamma works, we can compare it to seeds: the
results of kamma are stored in the subconscious mind in the same way as the leaves,
flowers, fruits and trunk of a tree are stored in its seed. Under favorable conditions,
the fruits of kamma will be produced just as with moisture and light, the leaves
and trunk of a tree will sprout from its tiny seed.
The working of kamma can
also be compared to a bank account: a person who is virtuous, charitable and benevolent
in his present life is like a person who is adding to his good kamma. This accrued
good kamma can be used by him to ensure a trouble-free life. But he must replace
what he takes or else one day his account will be exhausted and he will be bankrupt.
Then whom will he be able to blame for his miserable state? He can blame neither
others nor fate. He alone is responsible. Thus a good Buddhist cannot be an escapist.
He has to face life as it is and not run away from it. The kammic force cannot
be controlled by inactivity. Vigorous activity for good is indispensable for one's
own happiness. Escapism is the resort of the weak, and an escapist cannot escape
the effects of the kammic law.
The Buddha says, 'There is no place to hide
in order to escape from kammic results.' (Dhammapada 127).
Our Own Experience
To understand
the law of kamma is to realize that we ourselves are responsible for our own happiness
and our own misery. We are the architects of our kamma. Buddhism explains that
man has every possibility to mould his own kamma and thereby influence the direction
of his life. On the other hand, a man is not a complete prisoner of his own actions;
he is not a slave of his kamma. Nor is man a mere machine that automatically release
instinctive forces that enslave him. Nor is man a mere product of nature. Man
has within himself the strength and the ability to change his kamma. His mind
is mightier than his kamma and so the law of kamma can be made to serve him. Man
does not have to give up his hope and effort in order to surrender himself to
his own kammic force. To off-set the reaction of his bad kamma that he has accumulated
previously, he has to do more meritorious deeds and to purify his mind rather
than by praying, worshipping, performing rites or torturing his physical body
in order to overcome his kammic effects. Therefore, man can overcome the effect
of his evil deeds if he acts wisely by leading noble life.
Man must use the
material with which he is endowed to promote his ideal. The cards in the game
of life are within us. We do not select them. They are traced to our past kamma;
but we can call as we please, do what suits us and as we play, we either gain
or lose.
Kamma is equated to the action of men. This action also creates some
karmic results. But each and every action carried out without any purposeful intention,
cannot become a Kusala-Kamma(skillful action) or Akusala-Kamma(unskillful action).
That is why the Buddha interprets kamma as volitional activities. That means,
whatever good and bad deeds we commit ourselves without any purposeful intention,
are not strong enough to be carried forward to our next life. However, ignorance
of the nature of the good and bad effect of the kamma is not an excuse to justify
or avoid the karmic results if they were committed intentionally. A small child
or an ignorant man may commit many evil deeds. Since they commit such deeds with
intention to harm or injure, it is difficult to say that they are free from the
karmic results. If that child touches a burning iron-rod the heat element does
not spare the child without burning his fingers. The karmic energy also works
exactly in the same manner. Karmic energy is unbiased, it is like energy of gravity.
The radical transformations in the characters of Angulimala and Asoka illustrate
man's potential to gain control over his kammic force.
Angulimala was a highway
robber who murdered more than a thousand of his fellow men. Can we judge him by
his external actions? For within his lifetime, he became an Arahanta and thus
redeemed his past misdeeds.
Asoka, the Indian Emperor, killed thousands and
thousands to fight his wars and to expand his empire. Yet after winning the battle,
he completely reformed himself and changed his career to such an extent that today,
'Amidst the tens of thousands of names of monarchs that crowd the columns of history,
their majesties and royal highnesses and the like, the name of Asoka shines and
shines almost alone, as a star,' says a well-known world historian H.G. Well.
Other Factors Which Support Kamma
Although Buddhism
says that man can eventually control his karmic force, it does not state that
everything is due to kamma. Buddhism does not ignore the role played by other
forces of nature. According to Buddhism there are five orders or processes of
natural laws(niyama) which operate in the physical and mental worlds:
seasonal
laws(utu niyama) physical inorganic order e.g., seasonal phenomena of winds and
rains, etc.
the biological laws (bija niyama) relating to seasonal changes
etc.,
the kammic law (kamma niyama) relating to moral causation or the order
of act and result,
natural phenomena (Dhamma niyama) relating to electrical
forces, movement of tides etc., and
psychological laws (citta niyama) which
govern the processes of consciousness.
Thus kamma is considered only as one
of the five natural laws that account for the diversity in this world.
Can
Kamma Be Changed?
Kamma
is often influenced by circumstances: beneficent and malevolent forces act to
counter and to support this self-operating law. These other forces that either
aid or hinder this kamma are birth, time or conditions, appearances, and effort.
A favorable birth (gati sampatti) or an unfavorable birth (vipatti) can develop
or hinder the fruition of kamma. For instance, if a person is born to a noble
family or in a state of happiness, his fortunate birth will provide an easy opportunity
for his good kamma to operate. An unintelligent person who, by some good kamma,
is born in a royal family, will, on account of his noble parentage be honored
by the people. If the same person were to have a less fortunate birth, he would
not be similarly treated.
Good appearance (upadhi sampatti) and poor appearance
(upadhi vipatti)are two other factors that hinder or favor the working of kamma.
If by some good kamma, a person obtains a good birth, but is born deformed by
some bad kamma, then he will not be able to fully enjoy the beneficial results
of his good kamma. Even a legitimate heir to a throne may not perhaps be raised
to that high position if he happens to be physically or mentally deformed. Beauty,
on the other hand, will be an asset to the possessor. A good-looking son of poor
parents may attract the attention of others and may be able to distinguish himself
through their influence. Also, we can find cases of people from poor, obscure
family backgrounds who rise to fame and popularity as film actors or actresses
or beauty queens.
Time and occasion are other factors that influence the working
of kamma. In the time of famine or during the time of war, all people without
exception are forced to suffer the same fate. Here the unfavorable conditions
open up possibilities for evil kamma to operate. The favorable conditions, on
the other hand, will prevent the operation of bad kamma.
Effort or intelligence
is perhaps the most important of all the factors that affect the working of kamma.
Without effort, both worldly and spiritual progress is impossible. If a person
makes no effort to cure himself of a disease or to save himself from his difficulties,
or to strive with diligence for his progress, then his evil kamma will find a
suitable opportunity to produce its due effects. However, if he endeavours to
surmount his difficulties, his good kamma will come to help him. When shipwrecked
in a deep sea, the Bodhisatta during one of his previous births, made an effort
to save himself and his old mother, while the others prayed to the gods and left
their fate in the hands of these gods. The result was that the Bodhisatta escaped
while the others were drowned.
Thus the working of kamma is aided or obstructed
by birth, beauty and ugliness, time and personal effort or intelligence. However,
man can overcome immediate karmic effects by adopting certain methods. Yet, he
is not free from such karmic effects if he remains within this Samsara?cycle of
birth and death. Whenever opportunities arise the same karmic effects that he
overcame, can affect him again. This is the uncertainty of worldly life. Even
the Buddha and Arahantas were affected by certain kammas, although they were in
their final birth.
The time factor is another important aspect of the karmic
energy for people to experience the good and bad effects. People experience certain
karmic effects only within this lifetime while certain karmic effects become effective
immediately hereafter the next birth. And certain other karmic effects follow
the doers as long as they remain in this wheel of existence until they stop their
rebirth after attaining Nibbana. The main reason for this difference is owing
to mental impulsion (Javana Citta) of the people at the time when a thought arises
in the mind to do good or bad.
Impartial Energy
Those who do not
believe that there is an energy known as kamma should understand that this karmic
energy is not a by-product of any particular religion although Hinduism, Buddhism
and Jainism acknowledge and explain the nature of this energy. This is an existing
universal law which has no religious label. All those who violate this law, have
to face the consequences irrespective of their religious beliefs, and those who
live in accordance with this law experience peace and happiness in their life.
Therefore, this karmic law is unbiased to each and every person, whether they
believe it or not; whether, they have a religion or not. It is like any other
existing universal law. Please remember that kamma is not the exclusive property
of Buddhism.
If we understand kamma as a force or a form of energy, then
we can discern no beginning. To ask where is the beginning of kamma is like asking
where is the beginning of electricity. Kamma like electricity does not begin.
It comes into being under certain conditions. Conventionally we say that the origin
of kamma is volition but this is as much conventional as saying that the origin
of a river is a mountain top.
Like the waves of the ocean that flow into one
another , one unit of consciousness flows into another and this merging of one
thought consciousness into another is called the working of karma. In short, every
living being, according to Buddhism, is an electricity current of life that operates
on the automatic switch of kamma.
Kamma being a form of energy is not found
anywhere in this fleeting consciousness or body. Just as mangoes are not stored
anywhere in the mango tree but, dependent on certain conditions, they spring into
being, so does kamma. Kamma is like wind or fire. It is not stored up anywhere
in the Universe but comes into being under certain conditions.
Rebirth
Unsatisfied
desire for existence and sensual pleasures is the cause of rebirth.
Buddhists
regard the doctrine of rebirth not as a mere theory but as a verifiable fact.
The belief in rebirth forms a fundamental tenet of Buddhism. However, the belief
in rebirth is not confined to Buddhist; it is also found in other countries, in
other religions, and even among free thinkers. Pythagoras could remember his previous
birth. Plato could remember a number of his previous lives. According to Plato,
man can be reborn only up to ten times. Plato also believed in the possibility
of rebirth in the animal kingdom. Among the ancient people in Egypt and China,
a common belief was that only well-known personalities like emperors and kings
have rebirths. A well-known Christian authority named Origen, who lived in 185-254
A.D., believed in rebirth. According to him, there is no eternal suffering in
a hell. Gorana Bruno, who lived in the sixteenth century, believed that the soul
of every man and animal transmigrates from one being to another. In 1788, a well-known
philosopher, Kant, criticized eternal punishment. Kant also believed in the possibility
of rebirth in other celestial bodies. Schopenhauer(1788-1860), another great philosopher,
said that where the will to live existed there must be of necessity life. The
will to live manifests itself successively in ever new forms. The Buddha explained
this 'will to exist' as the craving for existence.
It is possible but not
very easy for us to actually verify our past lives. The nature of mind is such
that it does not allow most people the recollection of their previous lives. Our
minds are overpowered by the five hindrances: sensual desire, ill-will, sloth,
restlessness and doubt. Because of these hindrances, our vision is earth-bound
and hence we cannot visualize rebirths. Just as a mirror does not reflect an image
when it is covered with dirt, so the mind does not allow most people the recollection
of previous lives. We cannot see the stars during daytime, not because they are
not there in the sky, but because they are outshone by the sunlight. Similarly,
we cannot remember our past lives because our mind at present is always over-burdened
with many thoughts in the present, day-to-day events and mundane circumstances.
A consideration of the shortness of our life-span on earth will help us to
reflect on rebirth. If we consider life and its ultimate meaning and goal, and
all the varied experience possible for man, we must conclude that in a single
life there is not enough time for man to carry out all that is intended by nature,
to say nothing about what man himself desires to do. The scale of experience is
enormous. There is a vast range of powers latent in man which we see and can even
develop if the opportunity is presented to us. This especially true today if special
investigation is made. We find ourselves with high aspirations but with no time
to attain them. Meanwhile, the great troop of passions and desires, selfish motives
and ambitions, make war within us and with others. These forces pursue each other
to the time of our death. All these forces must be tried, conquered, subdued and
used. One life is just not enough for all this. To say that we must have but one
life here with such possibilities put before us and impossible to develop is to
make the universe and life a huge and cruel joke.
The Buddha doctrine of rebirth
should be differentiated from the teachings of transmigration and reincarnation
of other religions. Buddhism denies the existence of a permanent, god-created
soul or an unchanging entity that transmigrates from one life to another.
Just
as relative identity is made possible by causal continuity without a Self or Soul,
so death can issue in rebirth without a transmigrating Soul. In a single life,
each thought-moment flashes in and out of being, giving rise to its successor
with its perishing. Strictly speaking, this momentary rise and fall of every thought
is a birth and death. Thus even in a single life we undergo countless births and
deaths every second. But because the mental process continues with the support
of a single physical body, we regard the mind-body continuum as constituting a
single life.
What we ordinarily mean by death is the cessation of the body's
vital functions. When the physical body loses its vitality it can no longer support
the current of consciousness, the mental side of the process. But as long as there
is a clinging to life, a desire to go on existing, the current of consciousness
does not come to a stop with the body's loss of life. Rather, when death takes
place, when the body dies away, the mental current, driven by the thirst for more
existence, will spring up again with the support of a new physical body, one which
has just come into being through the meeting of sperm and egg. Thus, rebirth takes
place immediately after death. The steam of memory may be interrupted and the
sense of identity transferred to the new situation, but the entire accumulation
of experience and disposition has been transmitted to the newborn being, and the
cycle of becoming begins to revolve for still another term.
For Buddhism,
therefore, death does not spell either the entrance to eternal life or complete
annihilation. It is, rather, the portal to a new rebirth which will be followed
by more growth, decay, and then till another death.
At the last moment, no
renewed physical functioning occurs in a dying man's mind. This is just like a
motorist releasing the accelerator before stopping, so that no more pulling power
is given to the engine. Similarly, no more material qualities of Kamma arise.
Buddhists do not maintain that the present life is the only life between two
eternities of misery and happiness; nor do they believe angels will carry them
to heaven and leave them there for all eternity. They believe that this present
life is only one of the indefinite numbers of states of being and that this earthly
life is but one episode among many others. They believe that all beings will be
reborn somewhere for a limited period of time as long as their good and bad Kamma
remains in the subconscious mind in the form of mental energy. The interpretation
of the subconscious mind in the Buddhist context should not be confused with that
given by modern psychologists since the concepts are not exactly synonymous.
What
is the cause of rebirth? The Buddha taught that ignorance produces desires. Unsatisfied
desire is the cause of rebirth. When all unsatisfied desire is extinguished, then
rebirth ceases. To stop rebirth is to extinguish all desires. To extinguish desire,
it is necessary to destroy ignorance. When ignorance is destroyed, the worthlessness
of every such rebirth, is perceived, as well as the paramount need to adopt a
course of life by which the desire for such repeated births can be abolished.
Ignorance also begets the illusive and illogical idea that there is only one
existence for man, and the other illusion that this one life is followed by states
of eternal pleasure or torment.
The Buddha taught that ignorance can be dispelled
and sorrow removed by realization of the Four Noble Truths, and not through any
other source. To disperse all ignorance, one must persevere in the practice of
an all-embracing altruism in conduct, intelligence and wisdom. One must also destroy
all desire for the lower, personal pleasures and selfish desire.
How does
rebirth take place? When this physical body is no more capable of functioning,
energies do not die with it, but continue to take some other shape or form, which
we call another life. The kammic force manifesting itself in the form of a human
being can also manifest itself in the form of an animal. This can happen if man
has no chance to develop his positive kammic forces. This force, called craving,
desire, volition, thirst to live, does not end with the non-functioning of the
body but continues to manifest itself in another form, producing re-existence
which is called rebirth.
Today, there are people in various countries who
have spontaneously developed memory of their past births. The experiences of these
people have been well-documented in newspapers and periodicals. Some of these
people never accepted that there was such a thing as rebirth until memory fragments
of their previous lives came to them. Much of the information they revealed about
their past lives has been investigated and found to be valid.
Through hypnotism,
some people have managed to reveal information of previous lives. Certain hypnotic
states that penetrate into the subconscious mind make the recalling of past lives
possible.
Rebirth or becoming again and again is a natural occurrence not
created by any particular religion or god. Belief in rebirth or disbelief does
not make any difference to the process of rebirth or avoiding rebirth. Rebirth
takes place as long as craving for existence and craving for sensual pleasures
or attachment exist in the mind. Those strong mental forces prevail in each and
every living being in this universe. Those who hope and pray that they be not
born again must understand that their wishes will not materialize until they make
earnest efforts to eradicate their craving and attachment. Having seen and experienced
the uncertainty and unsatisfactoriness of life under worldly conditions, wise
people try to rid themselves of these repeated births and deaths by following
the correct path. Those who cannot reduce their craving and attachment must be
prepared to face all unsatisfactory and uncertain situations associated with rebirth
and becoming again and again.
Is
Rebirth Simultaneous?
Another difficult thing to understand about rebirth is
whether the occurrence of rebirth is simultaneous or not. This is a controversial
issue even amongst prominent Buddhist Scholars. According to Abhidhamma, rebirth
(conception) takes place immediately after the death of a being without any intermediate
state. At the same time, some others believe that a person, after his death, would
evolve into a spirit form for a certain number of days before rebirth takes place.
Another interpretation regarding the same belief is that it is not the spirit,
but the deceased person's consciousness or mental energy remaining in space, supported
by his own mental energies of craving and attachment. However, sooner or later
rebirth must take place. The spirits (petas), who are beings born in spirit forms,
are unfortunate living beings and their lives in the spirit form is not permanent.
It is also a form of rebirth which is temporary.
Another concept that many
people cannot understand is that in the process of rebirth a man can be reborn
as an animal and an animal can be reborn as a man. The animal nature of the man's
mind and the animal way of life adopted by him can condition him to be born as
an animal. The condition and behavior of the mind is responsible for the next
existence. On the other hand, a person who is born in animal form, owing to certain
mental abuses during a previous birth, could be reborn as a human being, if that
animal has not committed any serious evil acts. It is a well-known fact that some
animals are very intelligent and understanding. This is a clear evidence to prove
that they are tending towards the human life. A person who is born as an animal
can again be born as a human being when the bad kamma which conditioned his birth
as an animal is expended and the good kamma which was stored becomes dominant.
Dying Moment
In the dying man's consciousness, there are
three types of consciousness (Vinnana) functioning at the moment of death :rebirth-linking
consciousness (patisandhi-citta), the current of passive consciousness or the
current of life-continuum (bhavanga) and consciousness disconnecting the present
life (cuti-citta). At the last moment of a man's present life the (patisandhi-citta)
or rebirth-linking consciousness arises, having the three signs as its objects.
The patisandhi-citta remains in the course of cognition for five faint thought-moments
Javana and then sinks down into bhavanga. At the end of bhavanga the cuti-citta
arises, disconnecting the present life and sinks down into bhavanga. At this very
moment comes the end of the present life. At the end of that bhavanga another
patisandhi-citta rises up in the next life and from this very moment the new life
begins. This is the process of death and rebirth according to Buddhism, and only
in Buddhism is the process of these natural phenomena found explained in minute
detail.
A Buddhist faces death not as a crisis in life but as a normal
event, for he knows that whoever is born must suffer, 'decay', and ultimately
die. Or, as someone so aptly puts it, 'Everyone is born with the certificate of
death at his birth.' If we could all look at death such an intelligent and rational
way, we would not cling to life so tenaciously.
'Ayamantima jatinatthidani
punabbhavo"
This is my final birth and there is no more rebirth for me.(Dhamma
Cakka Sutta).
Nibbana
Nibbana
is the highest bliss, a supramundane state of eternal happiness. The happiness
of Nibbana cannot be experienced by indulging the senses but calming them.
Nibbana
is the final goal of Buddhism. What is Nibbana then? It is not easy to know what
Nibbana really is; it is easier to know what Nibbana is not.
Nibbana is not
nothingness or extinction. Would the Buddha leave his family and kingdom and preach
for 45 years, all for nothingness?
Nibbana is not a paradise. Several centuries
after the Buddha, some of the Buddhist sects began to introduce Nibbana as a paradise.
Their purpose of equating Nibbana with a heavenly world was to convince the less-intellectually-gifted
and to attract them to the teachings of the sect. Striving for Nibbana came to
mean looking for a nice place where everything is beautiful and where everyone
is eternally happy. This might be a very comfortable folktale, but it is not the
Nibbana that the Buddha experienced and introduced. During His time the Buddha
did not deny the idea of paradise as it was presented in the early Indian religions.
But the Buddha knew that this paradise was within Samsara and the final liberation
was beyond it. The Buddha could see that the Path to Nibbana led beyond the heavens.
If Nibbana is not a place, where is Nibbana then? Nibbana exists just as fire
exists. However, there is no storage place for fire or for Nibbana. But when you
rub pieces of wood together, then the friction and heat are the proper conditions
for fire to arise. Likewise, when the nature in man's mind is such that he is
free from all defilements, then Nibbanic bliss will appear.
You can experience
Nibbana. Until you experience the supreme state of Nibbanic bliss, you can only
speculate as to what it really is. For those who insist on the theory, the texts
offer some help. The texts suggest that Nibbana is a supra-mundane state of unalloyed
happiness.
By itself, Nibbana is quite unexplainable and quite undefinable.
As darkness can be explained only by its opposite, light, and as calm can only
be explained by its opposite, motion, so likewise Nibbana, as a state equated
to the extinction of all suffering can be explained by its opposite?the suffering
that is being endured in Samsara. As darkness prevails wherever there is no light,
as calm prevails wherever there is no motion, so likewise Nibbana is everywhere
where suffering and change and impurity do not prevail.
A sufferer who scratches
his sores can experience a temporary relief. This temporary relief will aggravate
the wounds and cause the disease to be enhanced. The joy of the final cure can
hardly be compared to the fleeting relief obtained from the scratching. Likewise,
satisfying the craving for sense-desires brings only temporary gratification or
happiness which prolongs the stay in Samsara. The cure for the samsaric disease
is Nibbana. Nibbana is an end of the cravings which cause all the sufferings of
birth, old age, disease, death, grief, lamentation and despair. The joy of Nibbanic
cure can hardly be compared to the temporary Samsaric pleasure gained through
fulfilling the sense desires.
It is dangerous to speculate on what Nibbana
is; it is better to know how to prepare the conditions necessary for Nibbana,
how to attain the inner peace and clarity of vision that leads to Nibbana. Follow
the Buddha's advice: put His Teachings into practice. Get rid of all your defilements
which are rooted in greed, hatred, and delusion. Purify yourself of all desires
and realize absolute selflessness. Lead a life of right moral conduct and from
all selfishness and illusion. Then, Nibbana is gained and experienced.
Nibbana and Samsara
A well-known
Mahayana Buddhist scholar, Nagarjuna, says that Samsara and Nibbana are one. This
interpretation can easily be misunderstood by others. However to state that the
concept of Samsara and Nibbana are the same is to say that there is no difference
in voidness of component things and the unconditioned state of Nibbana. In accordance
with the Pali Tipitaka, Samsara is described as the unbroken continuation of the
five aggregates, four elements and twelve bases or sources of mental processes
whereas Nibbana is described as the extinction of those relative physical and
mental sources.
However, it is admitted that those who gain Nibbanic bliss,
can experience it during their existence in Samsara. In any case, after their
death, the link with those elements will be eliminated, for the simple reason
that Nibbana is unconditioned, not relative or interdependent. If there is to
be anything at all after Nibbana, it would have to be 'Absolute Truth'.
You
must learn to be detached from all worldly things. If there is any attachment
to anyone or to anything or if there is any aversion to anyone or anything, you
will never attain Nibbana, for Nibbana is beyond all opposites of attachment and
aversion, likes and dislikes.
When that ultimate state is attained, you will
fully understand this worldly life for which you now crave. This world will cease
to be an object of your desire. You will realize the sorrow and impermanence and
impersonality of all that lives and that does not live. By depending on teachers
or holy books without using your own effort in the right manner, it is difficult
to gain realization of Nibbana. Your dreams will vanish. No castles will be built
in the air. The tempest will be ended. Life's struggles will be over. Nature's
process will have ceased. All your worries, miseries, responsibilities, disturbances,
burdens, physical and mental ailments and emotions will vanish after attaining
this most blissful state of Nibbana.
To say that Nibbana is nothingness simply
because one cannot perceive it with the five senses, is as illogical as to say
that light does not exist simply because the blind do not see it.
Nibbana
is attainable inthis present life. Buddhism does not state that its ultimate goal
could be reached only in life beyond. When Nibbana is realized in this life with
the body remaining it is called Sopadisesa Nibbana. When an Arahant attains Pari
Nibbana, after the dissolution of the body, without any reminder of physical existence,
it is called Anupadisesa Nibbana.
Law of Dependent Origination
"No
God, no Brahma can be found
No matter of this wheel of life
Just bare
phenomena roll
Depend on conditions all.(Visuddhi Magga)"
The Law
of Dependent Origination is one of the most important teachings of the Buddha,
and it is also very profound. The Buddha has often expressed His experience of
Enlightenment in one of two ways, either in terms of having understood the Four
Noble Truths, or in terms of having understood the nature of the dependent origination.
However, more people have heard about the Four Noble Truths and can discuss it
than the Law of Dependent Origination, which is just as important.
Although
the actual insight into dependent origination arises with spiritual maturity,
it is still possible for us to understand the principle involved. The basis of
dependent origination is that life or the world is built on a set of relations,
in which the arising and cessation of factors depend on some other factors which
condition them. This principle can be given in a short formula of four lines:
When this is, that is
This arising, that arises
When this is not, that
is not
This ceasing, that ceases.
On
this principle of interdependence and relativity rests the arising, continuity
and cessation of existence. This principle is known as the Law of Dependent Origination
in Pali, Paticca-samuppada. This law emphasizes an important principle that all
phenomena in this universe are relative, conditioned states and do not arise independently
of supportive conditions. A phenomenon arises because of a combination of conditions
which are present to support its arising. And the phenomenon will cease when the
conditions and components supporting its arising change and no longer sustain
it. The presence of these supportive conditions, in turn, depend on other factors
for their arising, sustenance and disappearance.
The Law of Dependence Origination
is a realistic way of understanding the universe and is the Buddhist equivalent
of Einstein's Theory of Relativity. The fact that everything is nothing more than
a set of relations is consistent with the modern scientific view of the material
world. Since everything is conditioned, relative, and interdependent, there is
nothing in this world which could be regarded as a permanent entity, variously
regarded as an ego or an eternal soul, which many people believe in.
The phenomenal
world is built on a set of relations, but is this the way we would normally understand
the world to be? We create fictions of its permanency in our minds because of
our desires. It is almost natural for human beings to cling to what they consider
as beautiful or desirable, and to reject what is ugly or undesirable. Being subjected
to the forces of greed and hatred, they are misled by delusion, clouded by the
illusion of the permanency of the object they cling to or reject. Therefore, it
is hard for us to realize that the world is like a bubble or mirage, and is not
the kind of reality we believe it to be. We do not realize that it is unreal in
actuality. It is like a ball of fire, which when whirled around rapidly, can for
a time, create the illusion of a circle.
The fundamental principle at work
in dependent origination is that of cause and effect. In dependent origination,
what actually takes place in the causal process is described in detail. To illustrate
the nature of dependent origination of the things around us, let us consider an
oil lamp. The flame in an oil lamp burns dependent upon the oil and the wick.
When the oil and the wick are present, the flame in an oil lamp burns. If either
of these is absent, the flame will cease to burn. This example illustrates the
principle of dependent origination with respect to a flame in an oil lamp. Or
in an example of a plant, it is dependent upon the seed, earth, moisture, air
and sunlight for the plant to grow. All these phenomena arise dependent upon a
number of causal factors, and not independently. This is the principle of dependent
origination.
In the Dhamma, we are interested to know how the principle of
dependent origination is applied to the problem of suffering and rebirth. The
issue is how dependent origination can explain why we are still going round in
Samsara, or explain the problem of suffering and how we can be free from suffering.
It is not meant to be a description of the origin or evolution of the universe.
Therefore, one must not be mistaken into assuming that ignorance, the first factor
mentioned in the dependent origination, is the first cause. Since everything arises
because of some preceding causes, there can be no first cause.
According to
the Law of Dependent Origination, there are twelve factors which account for the
continuity of existence birth after birth. The factors are as follows:
Through
ignorance are conditioned volitional actions or kamma-formations.
Through volitional
actions is conditioned consciousness.
Through consciousness are conditioned
mental and physical phenomena.
Through mental and physical phenomena are conditioned
the six faculties(i.e., five physical sense-organs and mind).
Through the six
faculties is conditioned (sensorial and mental) contact.
Through (sensorial
and mental)contact is conditioned sensation.
Through sensation is conditioned
desire, 'thirst".
Through desire ('thirst') is conditioned clinging.
Through
clinging is conditioned the process of becoming.
Through the process of becoming
is conditioned birth.
through birth are conditioned decay, death, sorrow, lamentation,
pain, grief and despair.
This is how life arises, exists and continues, and
how suffering arises. These factors may be understood as sequentially spanning
over a period of three life-times; the past life, the present life, and the future
life. In the dependent origination, ignorance and mental formation belong to the
past life, and represent the conditions that are responsible for the occurrence
of this life. The following factors, namely, consciousness, mental and physical
phenomena, the six senses, contact, sensation, desire, clinging and becoming,
are factors involved in the present life. The last two factors, birth and decay
and death, belong to the future life.
In this law, the first factor of Ignorance
gives rise to Volitional Activities (or kamma). Ignorance means not knowing or
understanding the true nature of our existence. Through Ignorance, good or evil
deeds are performed which will lead a person to be reborn. Rebirth can occur in
various planes of existence: the human world, the celestial or higher planes,
or even suffering planes depending of the quality of a person's kamma. When a
person dies, his Volitional Activities will condition the arising of Consciousness,
in this case to mean the re-linking Consciousness which arises as the first spark
of a new life in the process of re-becoming.
Once the re-linking Consciousness
has taken place, life starts once again. Dependent on the Consciousness, there
arise Mind and Matter, that is, a new 'being' is born. Because there are Mind
and Matter, there arise the six Sense-organs (the sixth sense is the mind itself).
With the arising of the Sense-organs, there arises Contact. Contact with what?
Contact with sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile objects, and mental objects.
These sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile objects, and mental objects
can be beautiful, pleasing and enticing. On the other hand, they can be ugly and
distasteful. Therefore, dependent on Contact arises Sensations: feelings that
are pleasant, unpleasant or neutral. Because of these feelings, the laws of attraction
(greed)and repulsion (aversion) are now set in motion. Beings are naturally attracted
to pleasant objects and repelled by unpleasant objects. As a result of Sensation,
Desire arises. A person desires and thirsts for forms that are beautiful and enticing;
sounds that are beautiful and enticing; tastes, smells, touch, and objects which
the mind regards as beautiful and enticing. From these Desires, he develops very
strong Clinging to the beautiful object (or strongly rejects the repulsive object).
Now because of this Clinging and attachment, the next life is conditioned and
there arises Becoming. In other words, the processes of Becoming are set in motion
by Clinging.
The next link in this chain of Dependent Origination is that
Becoming conditions the arising of Birth. And finally, dependence on Birth arise
Decay and Death, followed by Sorrow, Lamentation, Pain, Grief and Despair.
The
process can be ceased if the formula is taken in the reverse order: Through the
complete cessation of ignorance(through the cultivation of Insight), volitional
activities or kamma-formations cease; through the cessation of volitional activities,
consciousness ceases; ? through the cessation of birth, the other factors of decay,
death, sorrow, etc., cease. Therefore, one can be free from the rounds of rebirth
through the eradication of ignorance.
To re-iterate what was mentioned earlier,
this doctrine of Dependent Origination merely explains the processes of Birth
and Death, and is not a theory of the evolution of the world. It deals with the
Cause of re-birth and Suffering, but in no way attempts to show the absolute Origin
of Life. Ignorance in Dependent Origination is the ignorance of the Four Noble
Truths. It is very important for us to understand the Four Noble Truths because
it is the ignorance of these Truths that has trapped us all in the endless cycle
of birth and death.
According to the Buddha, while He was speaking to Ananda:
It is by their not being able to comprehend the Dependent Origination, that people
are entangled like a ball of cotton, and not being able to see the Truth, are
always afflicted by Sorrow, --born often into conditions that are dismal and dreary,
where confusion and prolonged suffering prevail. And, they do not know how to
disentangle themselves to get out.
Eternalism and Nihilism
The Buddha
rejected both extremes of eternalism and nihilism.
To develop Right View
or Perfect View, we must first be aware of two views which are considered imperfect
or wrong.
The first view is eternalism. This doctrine or belief is concerned
with eternal life or with eternal things. Before the Buddha's time, it was taught
that there is an abiding entity which could exist forever, and that man can live
the eternal life by preserving the eternal soul in order to be in union with Supreme
Being. In Buddhism, this teaching is called sassata ditthi ----the view of eternalists.
Such views still exist even in the modern world owing to man's craving for eternity.
Why did the Buddha deny the teaching of eternalism? Because when we understand
the things of this world as they truly are, we cannot find anything which is permanent
or which exists forever. Things change and continue to do so according to the
changing conditions on which they depend. When we analyse things into their elements
or into reality, we cannot find any abiding entity, any everlasting thing. This
is why the eternalist view is considered wrong or false.
The second false
view is nihilism or the view held by the nihilists who claim that there is no
life after death. This view belongs to a materialistic philosophy which refuses
to accept knowledge of mental conditionality. To subscribe to a philosophy of
materialism is to understand life only partially. Nihilism ignores the side of
life which is concerned with mental conditionality. If one claims that after the
passing away or ceasing of a life, it does not come to be again, the continuity
of mental conditions is denied. To understand life, we must consider all conditions,
both mental and material. When we understand mental and material conditions, we
cannot say that there is no life after death and that there is no further becoming
after passing away. This nihilist view of existence is considered false because
it is based on incomplete understanding of reality. That is why nihilism was also
rejected by the Buddha. The teaching of kamma is enough to prove that the Buddha
did not teach annihilation after death; Buddhism accepts 'survival' not in the
sense of an eternal soul, but in the sense of a renewed becoming.
Throughout
the Buddha's long period of teaching the Dhamma to His followers, He actively
discouraged speculative arguments. During the 5th century B.C. India was a veritable
hive of intellectual activity where scholars, yogis, philosophers, kings and even
ordinary householders were constantly engaged in the philosophical arguments pertaining
to human existence. Some of these were either ridiculously trivial or totally
irrelevant. Some people wasted valuable time arguing at great length about all
manner of subjects. They were far more concerned about proving their powers in
mental gymnastics than seeking genuine solutions to the problems that beset humanity.
(In the 18th century Jonathan Swift satirized a similar pastime in England when
he showed the Lilliputians in 'Gulliver's Travels' waging a war to decide whether
an egg should be broken on its sharp end or its broad end).
The Buddha also
refused to get involved in speculations regarding the universe. He stated very
clearly that the problem facing mankind is not in his past or his future but in
the immediate present. Knowledge about Eternalism or Nihilism can in no way help
man to break the present fetters which bind him to existence and which are the
source of all his feelings of discontent which arise from his inability to completely
satisfy his cravings. The Buddha stated that before one can begin to tread the
path which leads to Nibbana one must have Right View. Only when one knows clearly
what one is seeking will one be able to attain it.
Can the First Cause be Known?
It is
rather difficult for us to understand how the world came into existence without
a first cause. But it is very much more difficult to understand how that first
cause came into existence at the beginning.
According to the Buddha, it is
inconceivable to find a first cause for life or anything else. For in common experience,
the cause becomes the effect and the effect becomes the cause. In the circle of
cause and effect, a first cause is incomprehensible. With regard to the origin
of life, the Buddha declares, 'Without cognizable end is this recurrent wandering
in Samsara(cycle of birth and death). Beings are obstructed by ignorance and fettered
by craving. A first beginning of these beings is not to be perceived. (Anamatagga
Samyutta in Samyutta Nikaya). This life-steam flows on ad infinitum, as long as
it is fed by the muddy waters of ignorance and craving. When these two are cut
off, only then does the life-steam cease to flow, only then does rebirth come
to an end.
It is difficult to conceive an end of space. It is difficult to
conceive an eternal duration of what we call time. But it is more difficult for
us to understand how this world came into existence with a first cause. And it
is more difficult to understand how that first cause came into existence at the
beginning. For if the first cause can exist though uncreated, there is no reason
why the other phenomena of the universe must not exist without having also been
created.
As to the question how all beings came into existence without a first
cause, the Buddhist's reply is that there is no answer because the question itself
is merely a product of man's limited comprehension. If we can understand the nature
of time and relativity, we must see that there could not have been any beginning.
It can only be pointed out that all the usual answers to the question are fundamentally
defective. If it is assumed that for a thing to exist, it must have had a creator
who existed before it, it follows logically that the creator himself must have
had a creator, and so on back to infinity. On the other hand, if the creator could
exist without a prior cause in the form of another creator, the whole argument
falls to the ground. The theory of a creator does not solve any problems, it only
complicates the existing ones.
Thus Buddhism does not pay much attention to
theories and beliefs about the origin of the world. Whether the world was created
by a god or it came into existence by itself makes little difference to Buddhist.
Whether the world is finite or infinite also makes little difference to Buddhists.
Instead of following this line of theoretical speculations, the Buddha advises
people to work hard to find their own salvation.
Scientists have discovered
many causes which are responsible for the existence of life, plants, planets,
elements and other energies. But it is impossible for anyone to find out any particular
first cause for their existence. If they go on searching for the first cause of
any existing life or thing, they point certain causes as the main cause but that
never becomes the first cause. In the process of searching for the first cause
one after the other, they will come back to the place where they were. This is
because, cause becomes the effect and the next moment that effect becomes the
cause to produce another effect. That is what the Buddha say, 'It is incomprehensible
and the universe is beginningless.'
Is there an Eternal Soul?
Belief
in an eternal soul is a misconception of the human consciousness.
Soul-Theories
With regard to the soul theory, there are
three kinds of teachers in the world:
The first teacher teaches the existence
of an eternal ego-entity that outlasts death: He is the eternalist.
The second
teacher teaches a temporary ego-entity which becomes annihilated at death: He
is the materialist.
The third teacher teaches neither an eternal nor a temporary
ego-entity: He is the Buddha.
The Buddha teaches that what we call ego, self,
soul, personality, etc., are merely conventional terms that do not refer to any
real, independent entity. According to Buddhism there is no reason to believe
that there is an eternal soul that comes from heaven or that is created by itself
and that will transmigrate or proceed straight away either to heaven or hell after
death. Buddhists cannot accept that there is anything either in this world or
any other world that is eternal or unchangeable. We only cling to ourselves and
hope to find something immortal. We are like children who wish to clasp a rainbow.
To children, a rainbow is something vivid and real; but the grown-ups know that
it is merely an illusion caused by certain rays of light and drops of water. The
light is only a series of waves or undulations that have no more reality than
the rainbow itself.
Man has done well without discovering the soul. He shows
no signs of fatigue or degeneration for not having encountered any soul. No man
has produced anything to promote mankind by postulating a soul and its imaginary
working. Searching for a soul in man is like searching for something in a dark
empty room. But the poor man will never realize that what he is searching for
is not in the room. It is very difficult to make such a person understand the
futility of his search.
Those who believe in the existence of a soul are not
in a position to explain what and where it is. The Buddha's advice is not to waste
our time over this unnecessary speculation and devote our time to strive for our
salvation. When we have attained perfection then we will be able to realize whether
there is a soul or not. A wandering ascetic named Vacchagotta asked the Buddha
whether there was an Atman (self) or not. The story is as follows:
Vacchagotta
comes to the Buddha and asks:
'Venerable Gotama, is there an Atman ?
The
Buddha is silent.
'Then Venerable Gotama, is there no Atman?
Again the Buddha
is silent.
Vacchagotta gets up and goes away.
After the ascetic has left,
Ananda asks the Buddha why He did not answer Vacchagotta's question. The Buddha
explains His position:
'Ananda, when asked by Vacchagotta, the Wanderer: 'Is
there a Self?, if I had answered: 'There is a Self'. Then, Ananda, that would
be siding with those recluses and brahmanas who hold the eternalist theory (sassata-vada).'
'And Ananda, when asked by the Wanderer: 'Is there no Self?, if I had answered:
'There is no Self', then that would be siding with those recluses and brahmanas
who hold the annihilationist theory( uccedavada)'.
'Again, Ananda, when asked
by Vacchagotta: 'Is there a Self? If I had answered: 'There is a Self', would
that be in accordance with my knowledge that all dhammas are without Self?
'Surely
not, Sir.'
'And again, Ananda, when asked by the Wanderer: 'Is there no Self?',
if I had answered: 'There is no Self', then that would have created a greater
confusion in the already confused Vacchagotta. For he would have thought: Formerly
indeed I had an Atman(Self), but now I haven't got one.' (Samyutta Nikaya).
The
Buddha regarded soul-speculation as useless and illusory. He once said, 'Only
through ignorance and delusion do men indulge in the dream that their souls are
separate and self-existing entities. Their heart still clings to Self. They are
anxious about heaven and they seek the pleasure of Self in heaven. Thus they cannot
see the bliss of righteousness and the immortality of truth.' Selfish ideas appear
in man's mind due to his conception of Self and craving for existence.
Anatta: The Teaching of No-Soul
The Buddha
countered all soul-theory and soul-speculation with His Anatta doctrine. Anatta
is translated under various labels: No-soul, No-self, egolessness, and soullessness.
To understand the Anatta doctrine, one must understand that the eternal soul
theory _ 'I have a soul' _ and the material theory _ 'I have no soul' _are both
obstacles to self-realization or salvation. They arise from the misconception
'I AM'. Hence, to understand the Anatta doctrine, one must not cling to any opinion
or views on soul-theory; rather, one must try to see things objectively as they
are and without any mental projections. One must learn to see the so-called 'I'
or Sour or Self for what it really is : merely a combination of changing forces.
This requires some analytical explanation.
The Buddha taught that what we
conceive as something eternal within us, is merely a combination of physical and
mental aggregates or forces (pancakkhandha), made up of body or matter (rupakkhandha),
sensation (vedanakkhandha), perception (sannakkhandha), mental formations (samkharakkhandha)
and consciousness (vinnanakkhandha). These forces are working together in a flux
of momentary change; they are never the same for two consecutive moments. They
are the component forces of the psycho-physical life. When the Buddha analyzed
the psycho-physical life, He found only these five aggregates or forces. He did
not find any eternal soul. However, many people still have the misconception that
the soul is the consciousness. The Buddha declared in unequivocal terms that consciousness
depends on matter, sensation, perception and mental formations and that is cannot
exist independently of them.
The Buddha said, 'The body, O monks, is not the
Self. Sensation is not the Self. Perception is not the Self. The mental constructions
are not the Self. And neither is consciousness the Self. Perceiving this, O monks,
the disciple sets no value on the body, or on sensation, or on perception, or
on mental constructions, or on consciousness. Setting no value of them, he becomes
free of passions and he is liberated. The knowledge of liberation arises there
within him. And then he knows that he has done what has to be done, that he has
lived the holy life, that he is no longer becoming this or that, that his rebirth
is destroyed.' (Anatta-Lakkhana Sutta).
The Anatta doctrine of the Buddha
is over 2500 years old. Today the thought current of the modern scientific world
is flowing towards the Buddha's Teaching of Anatta or No-Soul. In the eyes of
the modern scientists, man is merely a bundle of ever-changing sensations. Modern
physicists say that the apparently solid universe is not, in reality, composed
of solid substance at all, but actually a flux of energy. The modern physicist
sees the whole universe as a process of transformation of various forces of which
man is a mere part. The Buddha was the first to realize this.
A prominent
author, W.S. Wily, once said, 'The existence of the immortal in man is becoming
increasingly discredited under the influence of the dominant schools of modern
thought.' The belief in the immortality of the soul is a dogma that is contradicted
by the most solid, empirical truth.
The mere belief in an immortal soul, or
the conviction that something in us survives death, does not make us immortal
unless we know what it is that survives and that we are capable of identifying
ourselves with it. Most human beings choose death instead of immortality by identifying
themselves with that which is perishable and impermanent by clinging stubbornly
to the body or the momentary elements of the present personality, which they mistake
for the soul or the essential form of life.
About those researches of modern
scientists who are now more inclined to assert that the so-called 'Soul' is no
more than a bundle of sensations, emotions, sentiments, all relating to the physical
experiences, Prof. James says that the term 'Soul' is a mere figure of speech
to which no reality corresponds.
It is the same Anatta doctrine of the Buddha
that was introduced in the Mahayana school of Buddhism as Sunyata or voidness.
Although this concept was elaborated by a great Mahayana scholar, Nagarjuna, by
giving various interpretations, there is no extraordinary concept in Sunyata far
different from the Buddha's original doctrine of Anatta.
The belief in soul
or Self and the Creator God, is so strongly rooted in the minds of many people
that they cannot imagine why the Buddha did not accept these two issues which
are indispensable to many religions. In fact some people got a shock or became
nervous and tried to show their emotion when they heard that the Buddha rejected
these two concepts. That is the main reason why to many unbiased scholars and
psychologists Buddhism stands unique when compared to all the other religions.
At the same time, some other scholars who appreciate the various other aspects
of Buddhism thought that Buddhism would be enriched by deliberately re-interpreting
the Buddha word 'Atta' in order to introduce the concept of Soul and Self into
Buddhism. The Buddha was aware of this unsatisfactoriness of man and the conceptual
upheaval regarding this belief.
All conditioned things are impermanent,
All
conditioned things are Dukka?Suffering,
All conditioned or unconditioned things
are
soulless or selfless. (Dhammapada 277, 278, 279)
There is a parable in our
Buddh