Vinnana And Nama-Rupa
The
doctrine says that vinnana gives rise to nama-rupa. This means that with the arising
of rebirth consciousness there also arise mind and body. Rebirth consciousness
is invariably coupled with feeling (vedana), perception (sanna), contact (phassa),
volition (cetana), mental advertance (manasikara) and other elements of mind relating
to the objects of death-bed visions of a person. Every citta is bound up with
these mental elements. The high (tihetu) rebirth of some Brahmas, devas and human
beings also, involve the three noble predispositions of alobha, adosa and amoha;
some devas and human beings have only alobha and adosa while the earth-bound devas
and human beings with defective organs are totally devoid of noble predispositions.
Their rebirth is a good ahetu-birth as distinct from the evil ahetu-rebirth of
the denizens of the lower worlds who are also devoid of good inborn tendencies.
Rebirth
may assume one of the three forms: rebirth in the mother's womb, rebirth generated
in putridity (samsedaja) and rebirth as sudden and spontaneous emergence of the
full-fledged physical body (opapatika). Rebirth in the mother's womb is of two
kinds, viz., viviparous as in the case of human beings and quadrupeds emerging
from the wombs with umbilical cords and oviparous as in the case of birds coming
out of eggs. These living beings may differ in origin as they do in size and gestation
or incubation period. We will leave it at that and now go on with the human rebirth
as described in the commentaries.
With the arising of rebirth consciousness
there occur simultaneously three kammaja-rupakalapa or thirty rupas. These are
rupas that have their origin in kamma, viz., ten kaya-rupas, ten bhava-rupas and
ten vatthu-rupas. The nine rupas, to wit, the solid, fluid, heat, motion, colour,
smell, taste, nutriment and life together with the kayapasada (body-essence),
rupa form the ten kaya-rupas; bhava-rupa and the solid, etc., form the group of
ten bhava-rupas. Bhava-rupa means two germinal rupas, one of manhood and the other
for womanhood. With the maturation of these rupas the mental and physical characteristics
of man and woman become differentiated, as is evident in the case of those who
have undergone sex changes.
In the time of the Buddha Soreyya, the son of a
merchant, instantly turned into a woman for having wronged Mahakaccayana thera.
All masculine features disappeared and gave way to those of the fair sex. He even
gave birth to two children. It was only when he begged for forgiveness that he
again became a man. Later on, he joined the holy order and died as an Arahat.
It is somewhat like the case of a man who develops canine mentality after having
been bitten by a rabid dog. The sex freak who is neither a male nor a female has
no bhava-rupa. He has only ten kaya-rupas and ten vatthu-rupas. Vatthu-rupas are
the physical bases of rebirth, subconscious, death and other cittas. So at the
moment of conception there is already the physical basis for rebirth consciousness.
The three kalapas or thirty rupas form the kalala which, according to ancient
Buddhist books, mark the beginning of life.
This embryonic rupa has the size
of a little drop of butter-oil scum on a fine woollen thread. It is so small that
it is invisible to the naked eye. It does not exist by itself. We should assume
that it arises from the fusion of the semen (sukka) and blood (sanita) of the
parents. If we reject this view, it will be hard to explain the child's resemblance
to his parents in physical appearance. It is also said in the suttas that the
physical body is the product of the four primary elements and the parent's semen.
Moreover, the pitaka specifies three conditions necessary for conception, viz.,
the parents' intercourse, the menstrual discharge of the mother and the presence
of something qualified to become an embryo. Thus, it is clear that according to
the scriptures, the embryonic kalala has its origin in the fusion of parents'
semen and blood.
The semen and blood dissociated from the parents are utuja
(temperature-based) rupa but it is quite possible for utuja-rupa to assimilate
kammaja (kamma-based) rupa. Modern doctors excise a lump of unhealthy tissue from
the human body and replace it with healthy tissue. The graft is utuja-rupa when
cut out from the body but, as it becomes one whole with the natural tissues there
appears kayapasada or kammaja-rupa. There are also cases of transplanting a goat's
intestine or a human eye in place of diseased organs. No doubt these transplants
develop kammaja-rupas in the form of kayapasada and cakkhupasada. Likewise, we
should assume that the three kammajakalapas are fused with utuja-rupas of semen
and blood detached from parents.
According to Western biologists, it is the
fusion of the mother's ovum and the father's spermatoza that gradually develops
and becomes a child. The original embryo is so small that it cannot be seen with
the naked eye. The findings of these scientists fairly agree with what the Buddhist
books say about conception. Without the help of microscope or other instruments,
but purely by means of his intellect, the Buddha knew how life begins with three
kalapas or thirty rupas as kalala on the basis of parents' semen and blood. This
was the Buddha's teaching 2500 years ago and it was only during the last 300 years
that Western scientists discovered the facts about conception after long investigation
with microscopes. Their discoveries bear testimony to the Buddha's infinite intelligence.
However, they are as yet unable to reveal the genesis of thirty rupas probably
because the extremely subtle kammaja-rupas defy microscopic investigation.
Thus,
the cetasika and kammaja-rupa are the nama-rupas born of rebirth consciousness.
The kammaja-rupas are renewed at every thought-moment as are the utuja-rupas due
to heat. From the arising of the first bhavanga-citta there also occur cittaja-rupa
(consciousness-based) rupas at the moment of the arising of citta. But, cittas
which make us barely aware of seeing, etc., cannot cause rupa. So cittaja-rupas
do not arise at the moment of the arising of the bare cittas. Thus, with the arising
of the rebirth citta, there develop in due course all other kinds of citta, that
is, cetasikas, e.g., feeling, etc., as well as all kinds of rupa, to wit, kammaja,
utuja and cittaja-rupas. After a week, the kalala becomes turbid froth (abbuda)
which turns into a lump of flesh after a week. This hardens into //ghana// in
another week and in the fifth week there develops //pasakha// with four knobs
for hands and legs and one big knob for head.
The Buddhist books do not describe
in detail the development after the fifth week, but say that after 77 days the
four pasada-rupas for seeing, hearing, smelling, and tasting appear as do the
ahara-rupas, the product of the nutriment in the mother's body. It is also said
that the embryo has toe-nails, finger-nails, etc. The books do not go into further
details as it is not necessary for the yogis to know them. Such knowledge is beneficial
only to doctors.
//Upapata// Rebirth
For heavenly beings like catumaharaja
and others, as soon as the rebirth-citta arises, there also arise 70 rupas or
seven different kalapas, viz., cakkhu, sota, ghana, jiva, kayabhava and vatthudasaka.
Kalapas of the same kind are innumerable according to the size of the deva's eyes,
ears, etc. There are no dasaka-kalapas, that is, ghana, jiva, kaya and bhava in
the three first jhanic abodes, the three second jhanic abodes, the three third
jhanic abodes, the vehapphala and suddhavasa abodes. The three dasakarupa-kalapas
(cakkhu, sota and vatthu-dasaka) and one navaka-kalapa or a total of four different
kalapas or 39 rupas arise simultaneously with rebirth-citta. Of these four kalapas,
jivitanavaka-kalapa takes on the nature of kayadasaka. The body of the Brahma
is pervaded by jivita and nine rupas as is the deva's body by kayadasaka-kalapa.
Asannasatta Brahmas have no citta from the moment of rebirth. They have only jivitanavaka-kalapa
which assume Brahmanic form. Being devoid of citta and cittaja-rupa, such a Brahma
knows nothing and makes no movement. He is like a wooden statue. More wonderful
than these Brahmas are arupa Brahmas who having no rupa live in arupa (immaterial)
worlds for thousands of world-systems through the successive renewal of mind and
its elements. These accounts do not admit of scientific investigation and they
concern only the Buddha and holy men with psychic powers.
The denizens of hell
and the petas who are forever burning and starving cannot be conceived in wombs
nor can they arise from putrid matter. Because of their evil kamma they come into
being by materialization. Like the aforementioned devas they develop seven kalapas
or 70 rupas simultaneously. They usually do not have defective vision, hearing,
etc., since they are doomed to suffering through sense-contact with evil objects.
Sansedaja
Beings
As the sansedaja beings are said to have their origin in putrid matter,
they are likely to develop gradually. But, the Buddhist books refer to their full-fledged
materialization if they do not have defective visions, etc. We cannot say which
is true, development or materialization, as the kammaja-rupas cannot be subjected
to scientific inquiry and so for the time being it is better to accept the view
as stated in the scriptures. The development of kammaja and other rupas in sansedaja
and upapata rebirths are generally like that in gabbhaseyyaka (womb) rebirth.
The only difference is that in the case of the former beings, aharaja-rupas arise
from the time they eat food or swallow their saliva.
Vithi-Cittas
Vithi-cittas
differ in kind from bhavanga-cittas. Bhavanga-citta resembles rebirth-citta in
respect of objects and process. It is the stream of consciousness that follows
rebirth-citta, having its root in kamma. It is focused on one of the three objects
viz., kamma, kammanimitta or gatinimitta of the previous existence. It is not
concerned with the objects in present life. It is the kind of mental state that
we have when sound asleep. But there occur certain changes when we see, hear,
smell, eat, have bodily contact or think and these changes in mental phenomena
are called six vithi-cittas.
Suppose the visual form is reflected on the sensitive
rupa of the eye (cakkhupasada), these rupas, each lasting only 17 thought-moments,
are renewed ceaselessly together with the visual objects and their mental images.
A group of eye-rupas and a group of visual objects occur simultaneously. But,
a rupa is not powerful at the moment of arising and so there is no contact between
the eye and its object during the moment of bhavanga-citta. In other words, there
is no reflection of the visual object on the eye. The bhavanga that passes away
before such reflection is called atitabhavanga. Then another bhavanga-citta arises
and reflection occurs. As a result, the bhavanga-citta is disrupted. Its attentiveness
to its accustomed object wanes and it begins to consider the visual object. This
is termed bhavangacalana or bhavanga in motion. Then another bhavanga takes its
place but, it is so weak that with its cessation, the bhavanga stream is cut off.
The mind becomes curious about the visual form that the eye sees. This inquiring
mind is called avajjana-citta and there are five kinds of such cittas corresponding
to five sense-organs. There follows the eye consciousness, and after its cessation,
there arises the citta which receives and attends to the visual object.
Bhavanga
is the resultant citta that stems from sankhara, as are eye-citta and the receiving
citta. They are called vipaka (resultant) cittas. There are two kinds of vipaka-cittas,
viz., good and bad according to good and bad sankhara. On the other hand avajjana-citta
(mental advertance) is ethically neither good nor bad; it is not a vipaka-citta
either. It is termed kiriya-citta which means mere action without any kammic effect,
the kind of citta that is usually attributed to Arahats.
After the mind has
received the visual object, it inquires about its quality, whether it is good,
bad, etc., (santirana-citta). Then, there follows decision (vutthocitta), that
it is good, etc. This leads to javana which means seven impulse moments flashing
seven times in succession. Javana occurs very quickly. It has speed and impetus
that are absent in other factors of the consciousness process. It is associated
with powerful mental factors which may be good or bad such as lobha or alobha.
No wonder that evil minds rush towards their objects speedily. Thus, greed makes
us inclined to scramble for the desired object and seize it by force, and anger
arouses in us the desire to rush and destroy its object blindly. Doubt, restlessness
and ignorance, too, speedily associate themselves with their respective objects.
The same may be said of good mental factors. Because of their frantic and impulsive
nature, the sensual desires are also called kamajavana. After the seven impulse
moments, there follow two tadarammana-citta moments. This citta is concerned with
the object of javana and thus its function is to fulfil the lingering desire of
its predecessor.
In the consciousness process the eye-vinnana is dependent
on eye organ (cakkhu-pasada) that arises together with atitabhavanga. Other vinnanas
are dependent on the heart (hadaya-vatthu) rupa that arises along with other cittas.
The 14 cittas from avajjana to the second tadarammana are focused only on present
objects. So these 14 cittas are vithi-cittas that differ in kind from bhavanga-cittas.
In other words, they are active cittas. After the cessation of second tadarammana-citta
that marks the end of the consciousness process, the mental life reverts to the
subconsciousness (bhavanga) state that is something like sleep.
An analogy
may throw some light on the process (vithi) of consciousness. A man is sleeping
under a mango tree. A mango falls and he wakes up. Picking up the fruit, the man
examines it. He smells it and knowing that it is ripe, he eats it. Then he thinks
over its taste and falls asleep again. Here the bhavanga state with kamma, kamma-nimitta
and gatinimitta as its objects is like the state of being asleep. Waking up with
a start due to the fall of the mango may be like the rising and passing away of
bhavanga-citta. Reflection after awaking is avajjana. Seeing the visual object
is seeing the fruit. Santirana-citta is involved when the man examines the fruit.
To conclude that it is ripe is vuttho-citta. Javana is like eating the fruit and
tadarammana is like thinking over its taste. Reverting to bhavanga state is like
falling asleep again.
If the visible object is not very clear, it appears on
the eye-organ after the arising of atitabhavanga twice or thrice. In case of such
objects the vithi process does not last till the emergence of tadarammana but
ends in javana and sinks into bhavanga state.
If the visible object is still
weaker, it is reflected only after the arising of atitabhavanga from five to nine
times. The vithi process does not reach javana, but ends after vuttho arises twice
or thrice. The vithi that thus ends in vuttho is of great importance in the practice
of vipassana. For the yogi who practises constant mindfulness does not seek or
attend to defiling sense-objects. So reflection is slow, avajjana is weak, eye-consciousness
is not clear, reception is not proper, inquiry is not effective and decision is
indefinite. So after reflecting twice or thrice the mind relapses into bhavanga
state. The object is not clear enough to defile the mind and the yogi becomes
aware of anicca, dukkha and anatta of the phenomena. There is only bare awareness
of seeing and the vithi process is wholly free from defilements.
The vithi
process that we have outlined above for the eye equally applies to the ear, nose,
tongue and body.
Manodvara Vithi
The mind vithi is of three kinds according
to the javana involved, viz., kammajavana, jhanajavana and maggaphalajavana. Here,
what matters is vithi with kammajavana. While the bhavanga stream is flowing,
there appear mental images of the sense-objects that one has experienced or, sometimes,
those which one has not experienced. Then bhavanga is disturbed and next time
it is cut off. This is followed by reflection which is somewhat like vuttho (decision)
in the five sense-organs. Like vuttho, reflection (avajjana) leads to javana,
giving rise to agreeable or disagreeable emotions such as fear, anger, confusion,
devotion, awe, pity and so forth. The impulses arising at the five sense-organs
are weak and they neither lead to good or bad rebirth nor produce much other effects.
But the impulses in the mind are potent enough to determine the quality of rebirth
and all other kammic results. So it is necessary to guard and control these impulses.
After seven impulse-moments followed by two tadarammana-moments the mind sinks
into bhavanga state.
Thus, the vithi process at manodvara involves one avajjana-moment,
seven javana-moments and two tadarammana-moments. In the case of dim and indistinct
objects, the mind skips tadarammana, passes through javana and reverts to bhavanga.
If the object is very weak, the mind does not attain even javana but has two or
three avajjana-moments. This is natural if we bear in mind the way we have to
focus on mind-objects in vipassana practice. The only resultant citta in this
mano-vithi is tadarammana, the other two being kiriya-citta, the citta that does
not stem from sankhara.
Follow-Up Vithi
The mind vithi may involve the review
of the sense-objects after rising from bhavanga state in the wake of the vithi
rooted in the respective sense-organs. Up to this vithi the mind has, as its object,
only rupa in its ultimate sense (paramattharupa). It is not concerned with the
conventional modes of usage, e.g. man, woman, etc. So at this moment the yogi
is not misled by appearances for he is aware of ultimate reality. He should try
to contemplate immediately after seeing, etc. We, therefore, stress the importance
of immediate and present moment as the yogi's focus of attention.
If after
this kind of manovithi the yogi is unmindful, there arises another manovithi in
connection with the visual object, etc. Then the sense-object becomes a specific
object of attention in terms of conventional shape and form. This vithi is open
to strong but unwholesome impulses. It gives way to another manovithi where the
attention is focused on conventional designations such as man, woman, etc., thereby
making it more susceptible to stronger evil impulses.
In the face of a strange,
unfamiliar object, the vithi-process involves three stages, viz., seeing, reflection
and cognizance of the form and substance in conventional terms. The vithi stops
short of cognizing the conventional names. In the case of vithi that arises in
connection with a conventional term, it involves hearing, reflection and cognizance
of the conventional term, and awareness of the relevant form and substance.
From
Vinnana Arises Nama-Rupa
Because of rebirth consciousness there arise mental
phenomena associated with it such as feeling, remembering, perception, reflection,
etc., together with the three kalapas or thirty rupas. After the cessation of
rebirth consciousness, cetasikas (mental factors) arise in the wake of every activity
of vinnana and so do rupas conditioned by citta, kamma, utu (heat) and ahara (nutriment).
There
is no doubt, about the close connection between citta and cetasika. When citta
is active we feel, we remember, we think, there arise greed, anger, faith and
so forth. Equally obvious are the physical phenomena that stem from cittas. We
stand, sit, go or do anything that we wish to do. According to the commentary,
this obvious fact gives ground for our knowledge that the rebirth consciousness
at the moment of conception leads to three kalapas or thirty rupas. In fact, the
arising of rebirth consciousness and rupa at the moment of conception takes place
in a split second and as such it is invisible even to the divine eye. The divine
eye may see what happens shortly before death and after rebirth, but it is only
the Buddha's omniscience that sees death-citta and rebirth-citta directly. But,
from what we know about the cause of physical phenomena, we can infer the arising
of rupa from the rebirth-citta at the moment of conception.
Some physical phenomena
have their origin not in citta but in kamma, utu (heat) and material food, but
without citta they will have no life. A corpse is lifeless although it is composed
of utuja-rupas. It is because of the contribution of citta that the rupas based
on kamma, utu and nutriment exist and form a continuous stream of life. Once death
supervenes, cutting off the stream of consciousness, the cetasikas and living
rupas cease to exist. Hence, the teaching that nama-rupa is conditioned of vinnana.
Because
of sankhara (good or bad kamma) there is an uninterrupted flow of vinnana in the
new existence. Coupled with every citta is nama-rupa which arises ceaselessly.
The duration of nama-rupa depends on citta. If citta lasts an hour, so does nama-rupa.
If the stream of citta, flows for 100 years, we say that the life of nama-rupa
is 100 years. In short, we should understand that life is only the continuum of
ceaseless causal relationships between nama-rupa and vinnana.
To sum up what
we have said so far. Avijja causes sankhara. Because of the ignorance of the four
noble truths people exert effort (sankhara) to be happy. They think that they
will be happy if they get what they want. But, the objects of their desire are
impermanent and so they lead to suffering. Not knowing the truth about dukkha,
they think, speak and do things for their welfare in the present life and hereafter.
These kammic actions lead to rebirth consciousness in the lower or the higher
worlds. Beginning with this rebirth consciousness, there is a stream of citta
that flows continuously until death, and the nature of this mental life is determined
by kamma. The physical body too is conditioned by kamma as well as by citta, utu
(heat) and nutriment.
The physical phenomena as conditioned by citta are obvious
for all our bodily and verbal actions such as moving, speaking, etc., are rooted
in citta. The yogi has to practise mindfulness on the basis of these cittajarupas
and it is important to know them empirically for himself. Hence, the Buddha's
teaching in Mahasatipatthana sutta: "The bhikkhu knows that he walks when
he walks and that he stands when he stands." According to the commentary,
if we know experientially the dependence of cittajarupa on citta, we can know
by inference the contribution of vinnana to kammajarupa, cittajarupa, utujarupa
and aharajarupa. Hence, the teaching of Paticcasamuppada: Conditioned by vinnana,
there arises nama-rupa.
The yogi cannot know empirically the rebirth-citta
or for that matter any other citta in the past in its ultimate sense. All that
he can know is the reality about consciousness as it is functioning at present
and he can know this only if he is always mindful. If he focuses on present vinnana,
he comes to know nama-rupa fairly well. For, if he notes "seeing, seeing"
and knows the eye-consciousness, he also knows the nama-rupa that is bound up
with it. Here, by eye-consciousness we mean not only the eye-vinnana but the whole
mental process of seeing (cakkhudvara-vithi). The yogi notes it as a whole and
not by piecemeal. Moreover, the vithi appears to the yogi as a single unit of
consciousness. This way of introspection is in accord with Patisambhidamagga which
says: "The citta that focuses on rupa arises and passes away. The yogi then
contemplates the dissolution of the citta that has watched the dissolution of
the rupa."
In other words, when the rupa is manifest, the citta watches
it; but since the citta has attained bhanga insight, it too sees impermanence
in the rupa and dissolves away. The dissolving vipassana citta itself becomes
the object of contemplation. This vipassana citta is not a simple citta; it is
composed of at least avajjana and seven impulse moments. But, these eight cittas
cannot be watched one by one; the whole vithi is to be the object of attention.
Here,
the eye-consciousness means the whole mental process (vithi) of seeing and it
includes good or bad kamma and impulses. So attentiveness to it leads to awareness
of vedana (feeling), sanna (perception), phassa (contact), manasikara (reflection),
cetana (volition) and so forth. But, cetana is more apparent in connection with
thinking. Thus, it comes into full play when at night we think of what we have
to do the next day. It urges and agitates us and its function is unmistakable.
The yogi who constantly watches his nama-rupa is aware of cetana in action whenever
he speaks or moves any part of his body. For example, if while practising mindfulness,
you feel an itch you wish to get rid of, you note the desire and you feel as if
you are being urged to remove the itch. It is cetana which urges you to do and
so it is manifest in your everyday action, speech and thinking.
In short, if
you know the eye-consciousness through contemplation, you know the nama (mental)
khandhas that are born of it as well as the rupas of the whole body that form
its basis. This is in accordance with the teaching: "From vinnana there arises
nama-rupa."
The same may be said of the consciousness in connection with
hearing, etc., awareness of vinnana means awareness of all the nama-rupa that
are bound up with it. The awareness of contact is based on pleasant and unpleasant
sensations when these sensations are manifest; it is based on contact when motion
and rigidity are manifest; when you note the desire to bend the arm, you know
the volition (cetana) behind it.
When you contemplate the vinnana which thinks,
you know the nama-rupa that is coupled with it. When you find yourself committing
something to memory, you know sanna; when you note your intention to do or speak
something, you become aware of cetana; when you note your desire for something,
you know that it is your lobha. When you note your irritation, you know that it
is dosa; you know moha when you note your view of a being in terms of a permanent
and happy individual. You know alobha when you know the lack of desire in you.
Moreover, your intention to do or say something is followed by bodily behaviour
or verbal expression and so through contemplation, you become aware of vinnana-citta
as the cause of rupas in the body.
Vinnana and nama-rupa are interdependent.
Just as vinnana gives rise to nama-rupa, so also nama-rupa leads to vinnana. Nama-rupa
contributes to vinnana by way of simultaneous arising (sahajatapaccaya) foundation
(nissayapaccaya) and so forth. It is only through the contribution of all cetasikas
collectively or the body (rupa) as the physical basis, etc., that vinnana comes
into being.
Mahapadana sutta tells us how the bodhisatta reflected on dependent
origination just before he attained enlightenment. He found nama-rupa, six bases
of mental activity, impression, feeling, craving, clinging and becoming (bhava)
to be the links in the chain of causation leading to old age and death. Then it
occurs to him that nama-rupa is conditioned by vinnana and vice-versa. The sutta
ascribes this statement about the correlation between vinnana and nama-rupa to
Vipassi bodhisatta, but we should understand that it is a fact discovered by all
bodhisattas before they attained supreme enlightenment.
Although vinnana and
nama-rupa are interdependent, the former is the determining factor and, hence,
it is described as the cause of nama-rupa. In fact, when vinnana arises because
of sankhara, its concomitant cetasikas as well as the rupas resulting from sankhara
come into being at the same time. So vinnanas and nama-rupas arise together from
the moment of rebirth. Moreover, vinnana and nama-rupa include the six ayatana
(the six bases or sense-organs) as well as phassa (sense-contact) and vedana (feeling).
But since vinnana is the cause of nama-rupa and nama-rupa the cause of salayatana
and so forth, the Buddha says: Vinnana paccaya nama-rupa, etc., to distinguish
between cause and effect. Likewise a verse in the Dhammapada describes the mind
(mano or vinnana) as leading the cetasikas: manopubbangama dhamma; if a person
acts or speaks with an evil mind, suffering follows him as a result, just as the
wheels of a cart follow the ox which draws it.
In point of fact citta and cetasikas
arise together but, because of its predominant role, citta is described as leading
the latter. If a man's mind is evil, he does evil deeds, utters evil words and
harbours evil thoughts. These three kinds of kammas are sankharas born of ignorance.
They become potential for evil kammic effect. Every deed, speech or thought is
accompanied by seven impulse-moments that flash forth several times. If the first
impulse-moments are favourable, the kamma is productive in the present life; otherwise
it becomes sterile. If one of the seven impulse-moments is favourable, it gives
rise to kammic images or visions of afterlife on death-bed and produces kammic
effect in the next life. Otherwise, it is sterile. As for the other five impulse-moments,
they produce kammic effect from the third existence till the last existence (the
existence when Nibbana is to be attained) under favourable circumstances. It becomes
sterile only after the attainment of Nibbana.
Before the attainment of Nibbana
its potential remains intact for innumerable lifetimes, ready to bear fruit when
circumstances permit. It bears fruit in terms of suffering, both mental and physical,
in the lower worlds. If by virtue of good kamma the person is reborn in the human
world, he will be dogged by evil kamma and suffer regardless of his station in
life.
The Story Of Cakkhupala Thera
The Dhammapada verse that we have referred
to was uttered by the Buddha in connection with the story of Cakkhupala thera.
The thera was a physician in one of his previous lives. He cured a blind woman
and restored her sight. The woman had promised to serve him as his slave should
she recover her sight. But, she did not keep her promise and lied that she was
worse off than before. Seeing her trick, the physician gave her an eye-lotion
that destroyed her eyes completely. For his evil kamma the man suffered in many
lives and in his last existence he became Cakkhupala thera. He practised meditation
as instructed by the Buddha with 60 other monks at a forest retreat. He never
lay down while meditating and soon he had an eye-infection. He refused to lie
down to apply the eye-lotion and so the doctor gave up the attempt to cure him.
Reminding himself of certain death, the thera redoubled his effort and at midnight
he became blind and attained Arahatship.
To an ordinary observer, the thera's
blindness may appear to be the price that he had to pay for the over-exertion
of his energy. But the main cause was the evil deed he had committed in his previous
life as a doctor. Even if he had not practised meditation, he might have become
blind somehow or other. But the attainment of Arahatship was an immense benefit
that accrued to him from his overzealous and strenuous exertion.
There are
two lessons that we can learn from the story of Cakkhupala thera. As an energetic
monk, he continued to practise vipassana after he became an Arahat. As he paced
on the ground while meditating, the insects that lay in his path were trampled
to death. When the matter was brought to the notice of the Buddha, the Lord said
that since the thera had no intention to kill the insects, he was free from any
moral responsibility for their destruction.
So we should note that causing
death without cetana or volition is not a kammic act and that the body of an Arahat
has weight if he has no psychic power or, if despite his iddhi he walks without
exercising it to control his weight. Some Buddhists have doubt about their moral
purity when they cook vegetables or drink water that harbours microbes. They should,
of course, remove living beings that they can see. But, they need not have qualms
about the destruction of creatures that may be accidentally connected with their
actions. Some Jains are said to feel guilty over the death of insects that rush
against a burning lamp. Theirs is an extreme view and cetana (volition) as the
keystone of moral problems in the context of kammic law is borne out by Moggaliputtatissa
thera's verdict in his reply to king Asoka.
The Thera's Verdict
When king
Asoka supported the Buddhadhamma lavishly, some heretics joined the Buddhist sangha
for material benefits. The true bhikkhus refused to have anything to do with the
bogus monks and for seven years the uposatha service fell into abeyance at the
Asokarama monastery in Pataliputta city. So king Asoka sent a minister to see
to it that the bhikkhus perform the uposatha service. But the bhikkhus refused
to comply with the king's wish. They said that the uposatha service was to be
performed only by the assembly of true bhikkhus. If there happened to be a morally
impure monk in the assembly, he had to be admonished and penalized for any infraction
of Vinaya rules. The Sangha held the service only when there was reason to believe
in the purity of every member; and they did not meet for the service together
with non-bhikkhus. If they did so, they would be guilty of a serious offence.
The
minister regarded this reply as defiance of the king's order and put the good
monks to the sword. The king's younger brother, Tissa thera, escaped death because
the minister recognized him just in time. On hearing the news the king was greatly
shocked and he asked Moggaliputtatissa thera whether he was kammically responsible
for the death of the bhikkhus. The thera asked him whether he had intended to
have the monks killed. When the king replied that he had no such intention, the
thera said that he was free from kammic responsibility. The thera gave this verdict
on the basis of the Buddha's saying, "Cetana (volitional act) is that which
I call kamma." He also cited Titthira jataka in which the bodhisatta, who
was then a rishi, emphasized the primacy of cetana in the operation of the kammic
law.
The story of Cakkhupala thera also shows that an Arahat who has no psychic
power has body-weight like ordinary people. This is evident in the death of insects
that were trampled by the thera. During the last 15 years Burma has produced some
holy men who are reputed to be Arahats. Some women have reportedly tested their
holiness by having flowers on their hands trodden by the holy men's feet. It is
said that the flowers were not crushed and the hands not hurt. But an Arahat who
has no psychic power or who does not use it cannot avoid crushing a thing if he
treads directly on it.
The reliable test of arahatship is to see whether or
not a person who claims or is credited with it has craving, love of pleasure,
attachment, anger, depression, fear, anxiety, restlessness, the tendency to speak
ill of others, the habit of laughing loudly, irreverence to the memory of the
Buddha and so forth. If he has these moral weaknesses, he is certainly not free
from greed, anger and ignorance. If a thorough inquiry does not reveal any sign
of these weaknesses, we may assume that he possesses the admirable attributes
of an Arahat or at least the qualities of a holy man who is close to arahatship.
Pure
Thought And Happiness
Just as an evil thought is followed by suffering, so
also pure thought is followed by happiness. Those who think, speak and act with
pure thought build up good kamma sankhara. Good kammas invariably lead to happiness
in the present life and hereafter. This was emphasized by the Buddha in the story
of Matthakundali.
Matthakundali was the son of a brahmin who never gave alms.
When he became severely ill, his father left him to his fate as he did not want
to spend any money for his cure. He removed his dying son outside the house to
prevent those who came to inquire after the patient from seeing his possessions.
On
that very day at dawn the Buddha saw the dying boy with his divine eye. He knew
how it would benefit many people spiritually if the boy saw him before his death.
So, while going round for the collection of food with other bhikkhus, the Lord
passed by the brahmin's house. At the sight of the Lord, the boy was filled with
deep devotion and shortly after the Lord's departure he died and landed in Tavatimsa
heaven.
Reviewing his past, he saw how devotion to the Buddha had led him to
the deva-world and he saw too, his father mourning at the cemetery. As he wished
to teach his father a lesson, he came to the cemetery and posing as a boy who
resembled Matthakundali, he started crying. Questioned by the old brahmin, he
said that he needed a pair of wheels for his golden chariot and that he wanted
the wheels to be made of the sun and the moon. The brahmin pointed out the futility
of his desire but the boy said that the objects of his desire were visible whereas
the brahmin was mourning for his dead son who could be seen no longer. He asked
who was more foolish, he or the brahmin. This brought the brahmin to his senses.
The deva revealed his identity and told him how adoration of the Buddha on his
death-bed had benefited him. He urged his father to seek refuge in the Buddha,
the Dhamma and the Sangha and observe the five precepts.
The brahmin invited
the Buddha and the bhikkhus to morning meal at his house. There were present believers
and non-believers alike at the feast. After the feast, the brahmin asked the Lord
whether there was anybody who had never heard the Dhamma, never offered food to
the bhikkhus and never kept sabbath and yet attained the deva-world through his
devotion to the Buddha. The Lord replied that there were many such people. At
that moment Matthakundali deva arrived with his mansion. He told the Lord how
his devotion on his death-bed had landed him in heaven. All the people were much
impressed by the power of faith in the Buddha that had so immensely benefited
the young man who did not care much for deeds before his death. Then the Buddha
uttered the verse: "Manopubbangama dhamma..." that we have explained
before.
According to the Dhammapada commentary, the brahmin and the deva attained
the first stage on the holy path after hearing the verse. It is worthy of note
that it was just the mere thought about the Buddha that led to the young man's
rebirth in the deva-world. He did not seem to have any hope or desire for Nibbana.
His rebirth as a deva was indeed devoid of intelligence but hearing a verse made
him a sotapanna. These two verses from Dhammapada echo the Paticcasamuppada teaching
that vinnana is conditioned by sankhara. For the verses say that happiness or
misery arises from kamma sankhara, and in fact sukha or dukkha occurs together
with vinnana. Again, vinnana implies the associated mental factors and its physical
basis viz., rupa. Hence, the teaching that vinnana conditions nama-rupa.
Nama-Rupa
and Salayatana
Nama-rupa conditions salayatana. This is very profound and hard
to understand. Here nama-rupa means the three cetasika khandhas while rupa refers
to the four primary elements, the six physical rupas, jivita (life), rupa and
nutriment (ahara-rupa).
Nama-rupa leads to salayatana or five physical sense-organs,
viz., eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and consciousness. These ayatanas are the doors
(avara) that lead to vithi process. In the immaterial world every citta-unit throughout
the whole life is born of associated cetasika, but for ordinary persons this will
remain bookish knowledge as it is to be understood only by Ariyas in the immaterial
world.
Further, in any existence like human life that has both nama and rupa,
every vipaka-citta that arises from the time of conception is also due to associated
cetasika. Vipaka-citta means the kind of citta that barely sees, barely hears,
etc., the pleasant or unpleasant objects. Here, the seeing citta cannot arise
by itself for it pre-supposes manasikara that considers the visual object, phassa
that contacts the object and cetana that strives to see it. The seeing citta can
arise only when these concomitant cetasikas arise, collectively at the same time.
This is conascence condition called sahajata accaya in Pali. Thus, a load that
can be raised only by four men working together will not move up if the team leader
tries to move it alone. Likewise, although vinnana is the mainspring of mental
life it counts for little by itself. It can function only together with other
mental factors.
Moreover, these associate cetasikas contribute to the five
physical ayatanas, viz., eye, ear, etc., by conascence at the moment of rebirth.
Of course at the time of conception there is only kaya or rupa. But in other kinds
of rebirth that do not involve the mother's womb, there may be all the five ayatanas
at the beginning. The conditioning of the ayatanas by vinnana and cetasikas at
the moment of conception is hard to understand but we have to accept on the authority
of the Buddha. At other times, vipaka as well as the non-vipaka cittas help to
maintain the ayatanas. This is understandable since it is impossible for matter
to exist without mind.
Rupa And Ayatana
The rebirth consciousness arises
on the basis of the heart (hadaya-vatthu). The mind ayatana has its basis in the
eye, ear, etc. Thought and consciousness too have heart as their physical basis.
All the secondary physical phenomena such as the eye, visual object, etc., depend
on the four primary elements, viz., pathavi, apo (solidity, motion), etc. The
five pasada-rupa, i.e. eye, ear, etc., are rooted in the primary elements and
their kamma-based rupas in jivita (life-force) rupa. The five ayatana-rupas too
depend on nutriment (ahara-rupa).
To sum up, citta-vinnana is conditioned by
at least three mental factors, viz., manasikara, phassa and cetana. Sometimes
there arise repeatedly greed, craving, anger, illusion, pride, doubt, restlessness,
worry, envy, ill-will, anxiety, fear and so forth. All these mental states arise
because of unwholesome cetasikas. Similarly, there often occur faith, piety, moral
sense, non-attachment, compassion, sympathetic joy (mudita), appreciation of the
law of kamma, reflection on anicca, dukkha, anatta, and so forth. These mental
states arise from wholesome cetasikas. Thus, the yogi realizes the dependence
of vinnana on wholesome or unwholesome cetasikas, the eye-consciousness on the
eye. So it is clear that the manayatana is dependent on nama-rupa.
The mind
is also vital to the existence of living matter. So the five ayatanas that produce
sense-organs are dependent on the mind. The sensitive sense-organs (pasada) cannot
exist without their gross physical bases just as the reflecting mirror cannot
exist without the gross matter of glass. So the eye presupposes the gross matter
of solidity (pathavi), cohesion (apo), heat (tejo) and tenseness (vayo); in short,
the ability to see depends on the gross physical body of the eye. The same may
be said of the ability to hear, the ability to smell, etc. Further, we can maintain
life uninterrupted only because of life-force (jivita-rupa) and nutriment. All
these facts show how the five ayatana-rupas originate with nama-rupa.
The sixth
ayatana viz., manayatana comprising thought, reflection, intention, etc., depends
on wholesome or unwholesome mental states such as greed, faith and mental factors
such as phassa (contact) as well as on its physical bases. It arises from its
root viz., bhavanga which in turn forms the basis for the mind-process (manodvara-vithi).
SUMMARY
To
recapitulate: Seeing involves sensitive eye-organ and consciousness. The eye-organ
depends on consciousness, life-force, nutriment and physical base. The eye-consciousness
depends on the eye-organ and the three mental factors of reflection, striving
and contact. In short, the eye as well as the eye-consciousness depend on nama-rupa
and the same may be said of other five ayatanas.
A thorough knowledge of the
origin of the six ayatanas on the basis of nama-rupa is possible only for bodhisattas.
Among the Buddha's disciples, even Sariputta and Moggallana did not seem to understand
it comprehensively before they attained sotapanna. For, it is said that the ascetic
Upatissa who was later to become Sariputta thera attained the first stage on the
holy path on hearing the verse uttered by Assaji thera.
The verse, ascribed
to the Buddha, says that all phenomena (dhammas) are the effects of certain other
phenomena which are the causes. The Buddha points out these causes and there is
the cessation of the effects together with the causes. Upatissa and his friend
Kolita are said to have attained sotapanna after hearing this verse, but they
could not have reflected deeply on the dependent origination in such a short space
of time. One may fairly understand the Buddha's teaching on the doctrine according
to one's intellectual capacity but, it is impossible to grasp all of it fully.
The
commentary explains the verse in the context of the four noble truths, "All
the dhammas is the effect" refers to the truth of suffering as having its
origin in craving. The cause in the gatha means craving as the cause of dukkha.
So the gatha epitomises the truth about suffering and its cause.
In those days
there were many views about the soul (atta) viz., that the soul was immortal and
passed onto another abode after death, that it was annihilated after the final
dissolution of the body, that it was created by God, that it was infinite and
so forth. The gatha recognizes only the existence of the cause and effect and
denied the immortality or annihilation of the soul and this teaching afforded
the two ascetics a special insight into the nature of life.
Visuddhimagga Mahatika
identifies this gatha with the teaching on Paticcasamuppada. It refers to a sutta
in Samyuttanikaya which says, "If this cause arises, then that effect follows.
If this cause ceases, then that effect is also ended. So avijja causes sankhara,
etc., so there is suffering. With the cessation of avijja there follows the cessation
of sankhara and so on until suffering becomes extinct." According to the
Mahatika, the substance of this teaching is implicit in the aforementioned gatha,
in regard to both the arising (anuloma) and cessation (patiloma) of dukkha.
Mahayana
pitaka describes this gatha as a sutta that sums up the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada.
Any writing of the gatha is said to be beneficial if it is enshrined in a cetiya
(pagoda). No wonder that many of these writings are found in very ancient pagodas.
Both
views in the commentary and Mahatika are plausible. For the first two noble truths
imply Paticcasamuppada in respect of the arising of dukkha and its cause while
the other two noble truths imply the doctrine in respect of the cessation of dukkha.
To
sum up the causes and effects in the chain of causation: In the past life of a
person, ignorance leads to acts, speech and thoughts and these sankharas give
rise to vinnana. Then there are five effects in the present life, viz., vinnana,
nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana These effects in turn become causes or in
other words, they sow the seeds for future life, viz., craving, clinging and becoming
(tanha, upadana and jati). As a result there are old age, death, grief and suffering
in store for the future life.
Paticcasamuppada is profound and this is borne
out by the Buddha's saying to Ananda. Ananda reflected on the doctrine from the
beginning to the end and vice versa. To him it was very clear and it presented
no difficulty. He approached the Buddha and said, "Lord, this Paticcasamuppada
is indeed very profound. But, for me it seems so easy to understand." The
Buddha chided him, saying, "You should not say like that, Ananda."
According
to the commentary, the Buddha's words imply a compliment as well as a reproach
to Ananda. The Buddha meant to say in effect, "Ananda, you are highly intelligent
and so it is easy for you to understand the doctrine, but do not think that it
may be equally easy for other people to understand it."
Ananda's ability
to understand the doctrine was due to four factors, viz., the parami (perfections)
which he had acquired in his previous lives, the instructions of his teachers,
his wide knowledge and his attainment of the first stage on the holy path.
Long,
long ago, Ananda was prince Sumana, the brother of Padumuttara Buddha. As a provincial
governor, he subdued an uprising successfully. The king was much pleased and told
him to ask for any boon he desired. The prince asked for permission to serve the
Buddha for three months during the lent. The king did not wish to grant this boon
and so he said evasively that it was indeed hard to know the Buddha's mind, that
he could do nothing if the Lord was reluctant to go to the prince's abode.
On
the advice of the bhikkhus, the prince requested a thera named Sumana to arrange
for an interview with the Buddha. When he met the Buddha, he told the Lord how
Sumana thera had done a thing that was beyond the power of other bhikkhus. He
asked what kind of good deeds a man should do to be so intimate with the Lord.
The Buddha said that he could become like Sumana by practising dana and sila.
The prince requested the Lord to spend the lent in his city as he wished to do
good deeds so that he might become a specially privileged thera like Sumana in
the holy order of a future Buddha. Seeing that his visit there might benefit all
and sundry, the Buddha said, "Sumana, the Buddha loves solitude," a
saying that meant tacit acceptance of the invitation.
The prince then ordered
over one hundred monasteries to be built along the route where the Buddha and
the Sangha might rest comfortably at night. He bought a park and turned it into
a magnificent monastery as well as other dwellings for the Buddha and numerous
monks.
Then when all was ready, he sent word to his father and invited the
Buddha to come to his city. The prince and his people welcomed the Buddha and
his followers, and honouring them with flowers and scents, led them to the monastery.
There the prince formally donated the monastery and the park to the Buddha.
After
performing this act of dana the prince summoned his wives and ministers and said,
"The Buddha has come here out of compassion for us. The Buddhas do not care
for material welfare. They care only for the practice of the Dhamma. I wish to
honour the Buddha with practice so that he may be well pleased. I will observe
the ten precepts and stay at the residence of the Buddha. You must feed and serve
all the Arahats every day during the rains-retreat as I have done today."
The
Buddha's Emphasis On Practice
Incidentally there is a story illustrative of
the importance the Buddha attached to the practice of the Dhamma. One day, the
Buddha came out of the Jetavana monastery with the bhikkhus to go on tour. King
Kosala, the merchant Anathapindika and other lay disciples requested the Buddha
not to go on tour, but it was in vain. The merchant was unhappy because he would
not be able to hear the Buddha's teaching or to make offerings to the Lord and
the bhikkhus. His slave girl, Punna by name, said that she would ask the Buddha
to come back. The merchant promised to free her from bondage if she could make
the Buddha return to the monastery.
Then Punna followed the Buddha quickly
and implored the Lord to come back. The Buddha asked her what she could do for
him. She replied that she had nothing to offer, but that she would take refuge
in the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha and observe the five precepts if the
Lord spent the lent in Savatthi city. Saying, "Sadhu - well said", the
Buddha blessed her and returned to Jetavana monastery.
The news spread and
the merchant set Punna free and adopted her as his daughter. She was now free
to do what she liked, free to shape her own destiny. For this reason and by virtue
of her parami (kammic potential) in her previous lives, she joined the holy order.
She practised vipassana and when she developed insight into the impermanence of
nama-rupa, the Buddha exhorted her thus: "My daughter, just as the moon is
full and complete on the fifteenth day, so also you should practise vipassana
to the end. When your vipassana insight is complete, you will attain the end of
suffering."
After hearing this exhortation, Punna theri attained the last
stage on the holy path and became an Arahat. The Buddha had of course foreseen
Punna's destiny and it was his concern for her spiritual welfare that prompted
him to cancel the projected tour and turn back in response to her appeal. This
is an example of the high regard for the practice of dhamma that Gotama Buddha
had in common with other Buddhas.
So the prince observed the ten precepts and
dwelt at the residence of the Buddha. He spent his time near Sumana thera, the
special attendant and watched him serve the needs of the Buddha in a very intimate
manner. Shortly before the end of the lent, he returned home, donated lavishly
to the Sangha and, in his prayer to the Buddha, he affirmed his desire to become
an intimate attendant of a future Buddha. The Buddha blessed him and the prince
developed paramis tor innumerable lifetimes. The jatakas refer to many lives which
he devoted to perfecting himself in collaboration with bodhisatta Gotama. Sometimes
the bodhisatta was king and he was the king's minister or the bodhisatta was a
human being and he happened to be a deva or Sakka. But their positions were often
reversed. In some jatakas they were brothers.
Thus they developed paramis close
together through their long samsaric journey and in his last existence Ananda
was the nephew of king Suddhodana. After spending the first lent near Benares,
the Buddha went to Rajagaha and from there he proceeded to Kapilavatthu at the
invitation of his father. When he left his native place, Ananda and some Sakyan
princes followed the Buddha and joined the holy order.
The parami (perfections)
which Ananda had acquired through many lifetimes made it possible for him to understand
easily Paticcasamuppada that has baffled so many people. Moreover, Ananda had
received instructions from teachers. He had not only lived with his teachers but
also learned and inquired about the meanings of the doctrine and memorized them.
This kind of learning helped him to understand Paticcasamuppada. In fact, he attained
the first stage of the holy path after having heard the sermon of the noted preacher,
Punna thera. Ananda paid a high tribute to Punna for his illuminating discourse.
The substance of the discourse is as follows.
"Self-conceit arises from
attachment to the body, feeling, memory, kamma-formations (sankhara) and consciousness.
It cannot arise without the five khandhas any more than the reflection of a man's
face can appear in the absence of a mirror. The body, feeling, etc., are not permanent.
Since they are not permanent, you should contemplate and realize that none of
the five khandhas, whether in the past, present or future, internal or external,
gross or subtle, good or bad, distant or near is yours, is you or is your ego."
"The
well-informed disciple of the Buddha who thus contemplates and realizes truth
is disillusioned with the five khandhas. He becomes detached and free. He knows
that his mind is free, that he has done what is to be done, that he has nothing
else to do for his freedom."
This was what Punna preached to Ananda. As
sotapanna, Ananda realized the cause-and-effect relationships of Paticcasamuppada.
He had this insight when he practised vipassana. He knew that illusion, attachment,
obsession, effort, rebirth, consciousness, etc., form the links in the chain of
causation. Here, illusion or ignorance is avijja, attachment is tanha, obsession
is upadana, effort is kamma. So when it is said that kamma leads to rebirth, we
should understand that rebirth is also conditioned by upadana, etc. So the past
involves avijja, tanha, upadana and kamma as causes. The yogi who realizes this
through contemplation of nama-rupa is free from all doubts which we cannot remove
merely through learning and reflection.
As the best-informed disciple of the
Buddha, Ananda also gained recognition of the Teacher in matters of knowledge.
He usually accompanied the Buddha on preaching tour and memorized all the discourses.
He could repeat a discourse verbatim after he had once heard it. As for the Buddha's
talks given in his absence, he learnt from others and memorized them. The dhammas
which he had thus learnt by heart are said to number eighty four thousand.
Ananda
was well-known for his retentive memory and the commentary on Mahavedalla sutta
says that he could memorize hundreds of gathas in a short space of time. What
with his wide knowledge of the teachings of the Buddha and his chief disciples,
it is no wonder that the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada did not present much difficulty
to him. Even today, given a thorough knowledge of the Pitaka, a man may understand
the cause-and-effect relationship in the doctrine.
The Abstruseness Of The
Doctrine
Nevertheless, the doctrine is abstruse in terms of effects, causes,
teaching, and empirical knowledge (pativedha).
In the first place it is very
hard to understand sankhara, etc., as the results of avijja and other causes for
most people mistake the suffering of nama-rupa for happiness. This is avijja and
they do not know it as an illusion. They believe that it is their ego-entities
that think, they do not know sankhara (effort) as an effect of avijja, but they
think it is they themselves who make the effort. So it is hard to see good or
bad deeds (kamma) as the effects of ignorance. More difficult to understand is
the causal relation between this sankhara of the previous life and the rebirth
consciousness of the present existence. Likewise, it is hard to understand that
nama-rupa, salayatana, etc., are conditioned by vinnana, etc.
Equally incomprehensible
are the causes involved in dependent origination for people believe that they
shape their own destiny. Some say that they are created by God or Brahma while
some insist that everything happens by chance. Most of them do not see avijja,
etc., as the mainspring of their existence.
Again, some teachings of the Buddha
on the doctrine begin with avijja and end with death. Some are set forth in reverse
order. Some begin with the middle links in the chain and proceed to the beginning
or to the end. These various versions of the doctrine add to the difficulty of
understanding it.
In order to gain an insight into the doctrine, one has to
practise vipassana and realize the facts of causal relationship empirically. This
vipassana approach to the study of Paticcasamuppada is by no means easy for the
method must be right and one will have to practise it steadily and thoroughly.
In
spite of these difficulties, the doctrine seemed clear to Ananda because of his
unusual qualifications, So the Buddha's words "Do not say like this, Ananda"
may be an implicit compliment to him, but according to the commentary, the Buddha's
saying may be an indirect reproach to him. It may mean in effect, "Ananda,
you say that Paticcasamuppada is easy to understand. Then why did you become a
sotapanna only after hearing my teaching? Why have you not attained any stage
higher than the first stage on the path? You should think of your shortcomings.
You are my disciple with average, limited intelligence and what you say does not
agree with my words. It is a saying that should not have been uttered by a close
disciple like you. I have had to develop intelligence for aeons to know this doctrine
and so you should not speak lightly of it."
Thus, after chiding Ananda
implicity by a few words, the Buddha stressed the profundity of Paticcasamuppada.
"Profound, Ananda, is this dependent origination and profound does it appear.
It is through not understanding and not penetrating this law that this world of
living beings resemble a tangled ball of thread, a bird's thicket of sedge or
reed, and that man does not escape from the lower states of existence, from the
course of suffering, from the round of rebirths."
In other words, this
law concerning the conditioning of vinnana, nama-rupa, etc., by avijja, sankhara,
etc., is very profound. So people do not know that there are only cause-and-effect
relationships and that there is no permanent being. They believe that a living
being exists in a permanent form from the time of inception; that there is a permanent
entity behind the being that develops and grows up. Some hold that this core or
soul of the being has many previous lives. All these illusions are due to ignorance
of the reality underlying the dependent origination.
A living being's acts,
words and thoughts are clearly due to ignorance of the four noble truths and dependent
origination. Undeniably, good acts bear good fruits, bad acts bear bad fruits
and everyone fares according to his deeds. So ignorance leads to kammas or sankharas
which in turn give rise to rebirth, consciousness, etc. This fact is clear to
an intelligent person.
Because of their inability to understand dependent origination,
living beings remain mired in the round of rebirths, wandering ceaselessly from
one existence to another. By and large, they land in the lower worlds and pass
on to the deva-realms only occasionally by virtue of their good kamma. When the
good kammic effects run out, they revert to the lower worlds.
It is hard for
the denizens of the lower worlds to pass on to the human or deva worlds for attainment
of the higher planes of existence is possible only when a dying person has memories
or visions of his good deeds and a good act is simply unthinkable among the lower
forms of life. Animals kill one another and the law of the jungle prevails in
their world, leaving no room for love, pity and other spiritual values. They usually
die stricken with pain and fear. So a lower being is very likely to be reborn
in the lower worlds.
Because of the ignorance of dependent origination a living
being is unable to free himself from the round of rebirth. He is like an ox yoked
to the mortar. No matter how long it goes round and round, the animal cannot leave
the strictly limited area of its mobility. Likewise, the ignorant person is mired
in the life-cycle (samsara) which largely means confinement in the nether worlds
and for aeons he remains subject to rebirth.
Understanding of Paticcasamuppada
is as vital to spiritual liberation as the understanding of the four noble truths.
In fact, the four noble truths are synonymous with the dependent origination.
The object of vipassana practice is to gain insight both intellectually and empirically
into these teachings, but these teachings are deep and hard to understand. Even
in vipassana practice it is not easy to have clear ideas about avijja, sankhara,
etc.
The Buddha reflected on Paticcasamuppada before and shortly after his
attainment of supreme enlightenment. For seven days the Buddha was absorbed in
the peace of liberation (vimuttisukha) and on the seventh day at night, he contemplated
Paticcasamuppada in terms of conditioning (paccaya) or cause-and-effect relationship.
Having
dealt with the first links in the chain of causal sequence, we will now proceed
to phassa that is conditioned by salayatana. Salayatana means the six sense-organs
and the six sense-objects, viz., visual form, sound, smell, taste, tactile object
and mind-object. The contact between a sense organ and the corresponding sense-object
is called phassa. It is an intangible phenomenon of mental life but it shows itself
clearly when the object has an unmistakable impact on the mind. For example, we
are shocked when we see someone being ill-treated. It makes us tremble when we
see a man whose life is hanging by a thread on the top of a tree. Seeing a ghost
will send the shivers, down the spine. Hearing or reading an interesting story
often leaves some impressions that may remain indelible for a long time. All these
show what it means when there is phassa or the impact of a sense-object on the
mind of a person.
The impact is occasionally very violent and gives rise to
violent emotions and outbursts of passion, anger, etc. According to the commentary
on Anguttara Nikaya, in the time of the ancient Sinhalese King Dutthagamani, a
young monk happened to see a girl. The girl looked at him too and both of them
were so much consumed with a burning desire that they died. Again an elderly monk
became insane after looking unmindfully at the queen of King Mahanaga.
In Mudulakkhana
jataka, the bodhisatta was a rishi (recluse) who went to the king's palace to
have his meal. He went there by air as he had psychic powers. When the rishi appeared
suddenly, the queen rose to her feet in a hurry and her garment slipped. The queen's
seductive pose instantly aroused the long-dormant sexual desire of the rishi.
He could not eat any food. His psychic powers having vanished, he walked back
to his abode and there he lay, afflicted with the fires of lust and passion.
On
learning what had happened, the king offered the queen to the rishi as he was
confident of the holy man's ability to recover his higher self eventually. He
secretly instructed the queen to do her best for the welfare of the rishi.
Taking
the queen, the rishi left the king's palace. Once outside the gate the queen told
him to go back and ask the king for a house. He was offered an old house but there
he had to fetch a hatchet and a basket for the disposal of excreta and filth.
Again and again, he had to go and ask the king for other things that he needed.
Going to and fro and doing all household chores at the bidding of the queen, the
rishi was dead tired but he did not come to his senses as he was still dominated
by lust and passion.
After having done everything that he was told to do, he
sat down near the queen to take a rest. Then she pulled his moustache with a jerk
and said, "Are you not aware of your being a samana (ascetic) whose object
is to do away with passions and desires? Are you so much out of your senses?"
This awakened the rishi to a sense of his blind folly and ignorance. After handing
back the queen to the king, he went to the Himalayan forest, practised vipassana
and recovered his psychic power. On his death he attained the Brahma world.
The
moral is that even a person of spiritual calibre like a bodhisatta could not escape
the fires of defilements. The rishi might have casually seen the queen before
but the impact was not violent enough to jolt his emotional life. It was the clear,
vivid impressions of the queen's physical appearance that harassed and engulfed
him with the fires of lust and passion for many days.
In Ummadanti jataka,
King Sivi became almost crazy after seeing Ummadanti, the wife of his commander-in-chief.
The woman was so famous for her beauty that the king sent his brahmin advisers
to see whether she had the qualities of a noble lady. But at the sight of the
woman they were so much bewitched by her beauty that they lost self-control and
made a mess of the feast given by their host. Disgusted by their disorderly behaviour,
Ummadanti had them hustled out of the house. Thereupon, the disgruntled brahmins
reported to the king that she was not qualified to be a queen. The king lost interest
in her and she became the wife of the supreme commander. She was, however, determined
to make things even with the king and so when he went round the city during a
festival she showed her beauty and charms to the best of her ability.
The king
was half beside himself with infatuation for the woman. Unable to sleep, he raved
about her and gave vent to his blind passion in a gatha which says that if he
were granted a boon by the king of devas, he would ask for an opportunity to sleep
one or two nights with Ummadanti. The impact of a sense-object depends largely
on the nature of the impression conveyed by the object. If the impression is vague
and dim, it produces only mild feeling and craving, but much vedana, tanha, etc.,
follow in the wake of clear and vivid impressions.
The impact may also lead
to outburst of temper. We show anger at the sight of an offensive object, and
we fear a frightful object. Unpleasant words are irritating to us. Pride wells
up in us when we think of something that boosts our ego. We hold wrong views when
we toy with the idea of soul or with a teaching that makes a farce of kamma and
its fruit. Objects of envy make us envious, and objects which we wish to possess
exclusively make us miserly. These are instances of phassa that fuel unwholesome
kammas.
Wholesome kammas too arise from phassa. Objects of devotion arouse
faith, those whom we should forgive or tolerate help to foster forbearance, and
contemplation of the Buddha and the Arahats make us mindful, kindly and so forth.
So Patisambhidamagga says: "Conditioned by phassa, there arise fifty cetasikas
(mental factors)." It attributes feeling, perception and kamma-formations
to phassa.
We see because of phassa and this phassa occurs because of the eye,
the visual object and the visual consciousness. The Buddha's teaching makes a
distinction between the visual consciousness and the visual object. Ordinary people
tend to confuse the former with the latter, but the Buddha stated clearly that
visual consciousness arises from the eye and the visual object, and that phassa
means the conjunction of the eye, the visual object and the visual consciousness.
This
is the impact of seeing for which the three ayatanas, viz., the eye, etc., form
the three necessary and sufficient conditions. The nature of impact is realized
empirically by the yogi who practises mindfulness. The yogi notes, "seeing,
seeing" at every moment of seeing and as concentration develops, he comes
to realize that seeing is not uncaused, that it is not made or created by a person;
that it is a psycho-physical phenomenon, having the eye and the visual object
as its cause and the visual consciousness as its effect.
The impact on the
sense-organ leads to feelings that may be pleasant, unpleasant or indifferent
according to the nature of the sense-object. If the object is beautiful, there
arises pleasant feeling; if it is ugly, we have unpleasant feeling. If the object
is neither ugly nor lovely, the feeling is indifferent. This feeling (upekkha
vedana) does not give rise to any comment, whether favourable or unfavourable;
indeed it is not even recognized as a feeling but it is accepted by the ego. In
fact, these three kinds of feelings have nothing to do with the ego or self but
are aspects of the mental process stemming from sense-contact.
To understand
Paticcasamuppada means to be free from scepticism and illusion. Since this freedom
is the essential attribute of the yogi at the first stage on the holy path, it
is important to understand the doctrine. Ignorance of it tends to cause doubts
about the Buddha, the Dhamma and so forth. There are eight kinds of doubts.
(1)
Doubt about the Buddha. This leads the sceptic to raise questions such as "Was
the Buddha really a being who was free from all defilements? Or was he an ordinary
man who commanded the blind faith of his followers?"
(2) Doubt about the
Teaching. "Are there the Path and Nibbana that really ensure the extinction
of craving, hatred and ignorance?"
(3) Doubt about the Sangha. "Are
there Ariyas, the Noble ones who are really free from defilements? Sotapannas
who, having overcome illusion and doubt, will never be reborn in the lower worlds?
Sakadagamis, who do not have much sensual desire and anger? Anagamis, who are
wholly free from sensual desire and anger? Or the Arahats who have freed themselves
from all defilements?"
(4) Doubt about the practice. "Is the practice
of morality or contemplation beneficial and helpful to the higher spiritual progress?"
(5)
Doubt about the past. "Did I exist in the past? Why and how did I exist in
the past? What kind of person was I in my previous life? Did I originate with
the moss or did I come into being spontaneously?"
(6) Doubt about the
future. "Will I exist after my death? What kind of person will I become in
my next life?"
(7) Doubt about both the past and the future. According
to the sub-commentaries, this doubt refers to the present life that is between
the past and the future of a man's life-cycle. This interpretation agrees with
the Pali text of Sutta pitaka which says: "Now there arises doubt as regards
one's self in the present." Such doubt may raise questions such as, "Am
I really myself? Does the ego exist or does it not exist? If the ego exists, what
kind of being is it? Is it big or small? Why or how does the ego exist? Was it
created or did it come into being spontaneously? From where did the ego come and
where will it go after the final dissolution of the body?"
These questions
show that there are five doubts about the past, five doubts about the future and
six doubts about the present. The yogi overcomes all these doubts when he is free
from all illusions about the self or ego (kankhavitarana-visuddhi).
(8) The
last subject that raises much doubt is the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada that emphasizes
the primacy of cause-and-effect relationship in the world of living beings. Is
effort really due to ignorance of the true dhamma? Is rebirth really conditioned
by kamma? Is it a fact that bad kamma is harmful and good kamma beneficial to
a future life? Is there really a cause for every phenomenon? Is everything the
outcome of the combination of atoms and electrons by chance? These doubts centre
on causal links, e.g. avijja, sankhara, etc., and resultant links, e.g. vinnana,
rebirth, etc., in the chain of causal sequence as enunciated in the doctrine of
Paticcasamuppada.
These doubts give rise to wrong views in the long run. The
false beliefs that conflict with the dependent origination are rooted in these
doubts. Speculations on the nature of life that are above one's intellectual level
produce doubts in the beginning but eventually turn the sceptic into one who clings
to illusions. Such scepticism and false views are due to ignorance of Paticcasamuppada.
One who understands the teaching clearly harbours no doubt, let alone illusions.
In
the final analysis, a living being is a compound of causes and effects as are
non-living things like the earth, the sun, tree, etc. The law of causation governs
the universe leaving no room for creation or spontaneous occurrence. Modern science
provides overwhelming evidence for the absolute dependence of the non-living material
world on the interplay of cause and effect. It tends to bear out the truth of
the Buddha's teaching about the conditionality of everything in the world, whether
it be life, mind or matter.
The Buddha laid emphasis on the conditioned nature
of man's internal life. The teaching leaves out of account the external world
of inanimate matter because the material world has no life-cycle and is not subject
to rebirth and suffering. What matters most from the Buddhist point of view is
the living being. If left to itself, the nama-rupa comprising the living being
passes through innumerable lives and, for the most part, the individual suffers
on the lower planes of existence, but if we understand the nama-rupa process and
act wisely, we can make progress gradually on the way to liberation. Even if we
are not yet liberated, we can achieve a better life and fare fairly well in the
round of rebirths. A clear understanding of Paticcasamuppada is vital for it ensures
complete extinction of defilements.
We have described ignorance as the cause
of effort (sankhara) and kammic effort as the cause of rebirth. It is necessary
to say something more about the origin of rebirth consciousness. In a sutta of
Anguttara Nikaya, the Buddha likens the wholesome or unwholesome volitional (cetana)
action (kamma) to a thriving field, consciousness (vinnana) to seeds, and craving
(tanha) to water for irrigating the field. The planting of trees requires fields
and nurseries. Likewise, rebirth consciousness presupposes arable land in the
form of kamma, kamma gives rise to the potential for rebirth and although the
former states of consciousness disappear, the rebirth potential remains bound
up with the psyche. Like a budding plant, it does not materialize as yet but it
is bound to become actual under favourable circumstances, just as a man who has
committed a crime is a potential prisoner or a worker who has distinguished himself
in a state factory is a potential winner of government reward for good service.
Furthermore,
rebirth depends on wholesome or unwholesome consciousness no less than does a
plant depend on seeds for its germination. The good or bad vinnanas arise and
pass away, but they touch off a ceaseless flow of similar states of consciousness.
These
states are the outcome of former kammic vinnanas just like the transformation
of a snake's skin. The most vital of them is the death-bed consciousness centering
on one's kamma or objects associated with it (kammanimitta) or visions of future
life (gatinimitta). This encounter of a dying person with signs and visions is
called upatthanasamangita which means the foreshadowing of the future life as
conditioned by sankhara-kamma. In a sense, it marks the transition from dying
consciousness to rebirth consciousness somewhat similar to the development of
a plant from a seed to a sprout.
A seed needs water to turn into a plant. Without
water or at least moisture from the air, it will remain sterile. In the same way,
although kamma forms the basis for a future life, there is no rebirth in the absence
of craving (tanha). So in the case of Arahats, although there are conditions for
rebirth in terms of vinnana and the kamma that they have done as ordinary persons,
the rebirth consciousness cannot arise because of the extinction of craving.
Tanha
is inherent in non-Arahats and it is most powerful in common people. It makes
the sense-objects pleasant, attractive and desirable. It creates the illusion
of pleasure, happiness and hope. It likes what is good and makes happiness and
prosperity the main object of life for mankind. Tanha motivates the kammic consciousness
which leads to other mental states. On the approach of death, these mental states
give rise to signs and visions. The dying person delights in pleasant visions
and he becomes lively and cheerful. This shows that his kammic seeds are beginning
to sprout. He does not welcome unpleasant visions, but still these visions have
something to do with himself and this self-attachment, too, leads to the germination
of the kammic seed.
Therefore in the case of common people rebirth is conditioned
by three factors, viz., kamma (action), cittavinnana that is linked to kammic
consciousness and tanha. Kamma as the fertile soil for rebirth is evident in death-bed
visions and signs, the germination of the seed is shown by the dying person's
interest in these signs and visions and one's self. So after death there arises
rebirth consciousness as conditioned by the mental state at the last moment of
the previous life.
Rebirth consciousness brings into play nama-rupa, ayatana,
phassa, vedana and their interrelations that concern the whole life. So in a sense,
we may regard it as the seed of present existence. It is inextricably bound up
with nama-rupa. All nama-rupa, whether in or out of the body, is suffering as
they are subject to constant arising and passing away, but ignorance makes us
blind to dukkha, creates illusion and attachment and keeps us engaged in the pursuit
of sense-objects. This preoccupation leads to the renewal of existence.
With
rebirth consciousness as the basis of a new existence, there arise the physical
body as its basis and the concomitant mental factors such as phassa, vedana, etc.
When rebirth consciousness ceases, there follow other mental states in succession
which may touch off good or bad kammas such as greed, anger, contentment, forbearance,
etc. These mental states in turn lead to physical actions such as sitting, standing,
and so forth.
Hence the Buddha's teaching: "Cittena niyate loko..."
a Pali verse which may be freely translated as: "The mind (thought, will,
etc.) leads the world. It draws the world wherever it pleases. The whole world
follows the mind." Here the world (//loka//) refers to the world of living
beings. The mind leads the living beings rightfully or wrongfully. The mind of
a good man who develops faith, morality, etc., will lead him to do good deeds.
It will make him hear the dhamma and practise vipassana. It will land him on the
higher planes of existence or bring him to the goal of Nibbana. On the other hand,
the mind of an evil man will lead him to seek sensual objects and do evil deeds.
After death, it takes him to the lower worlds and makes him subject to much suffering.
This
verse shows that all nama-rupas are dominated by the mind. It accords with the
teaching of Paticcasamuppada that because of vinnana there arise psycho-physical
phenomena such as phassa, etc. We have already given an account of phassa arising
from the eye and now a few words about the phassa of hearing. As in the case of
seeing, hearing also involves three factors, viz., the ear, the sound and the
ear-consciousness.
Hearing is impossible without the ear-organ and the sound.
Scientists say that sound-waves travel at the rate of 1,100 feet per second. This
is the natural speed of sound; the radio broadcast can carry it all over the world
in a moment. When it comes into contact with the ear it is like the reflection
in the mirror and the hearing occurs.
But, it is a mistake to believe that
it is the original owner of the ear who hears. The sensitive organs of the ear
are in a ceaseless flux, the rupas involved are forever arising and passing away.
They are like the ever-changing waters of a flowing stream. It is the contact
of sound-waves with the stream of rupas that sparks the ear-consciousness. The
consciousness occurs only for an instant and vanishes. This is followed by the
citta that continues to focus on the sound, inquire it and decide. Each of these
cittas occurs for a moment and vanishes. Then, there flash forth successively
with much speed seven impulse-moments, after which there occur two thought-moments
that focus on the sound.
Such is then the consciousness-process involved in
hearing. Whenever we hear a sound, the ear-vinnana is renewed on the basis of
the ear and the sound. So the yogi who practises mindfulness realizes that hearing
is conditioned by the ear and the sound, that there is no person or being who
hears. In fact the yogi is more aware of the causal relation in hearing than in
seeing.
Thus, hearing means the conjunction of the ear, the sound and the ear-consciousness.
The impact of the sound is phassa and it is quite clear to the meditating yogi.
Some are so sensitive that when they hear a harsh sound, they feel like being
attacked by a tremendous onrush of it towards the ear. Some may even be startled
by the dropping of a leaf. The impact is evident when out of a variety of sounds
that reach our ears we select and attend to the sound that we wish to hear. As
for loud, harsh and piercing sounds, we cannot avoid hearing them. We may not
look at an unpleasant object, but the sound cannot be so ignored.
We have pleasant
or unpleasant feelings according to the pleasant or unpleasant sounds that we
hear. Songs and sweet voices are welcome to the ear while harsh sounds and abusive
words are odious to us. When we hear ordinary sounds, we have feelings that are
neither pleasant nor unpleasant. In such cases we may not even be aware of our
feeling, the upekkhavedana that is so subtle that it escapes our notice.
True,
the Abhidhamma books deny that we have pleasant or unpleasant feeling when we
have consciousness in connection with the eye, the ear, the nose or the tongue
and describe it only as upekkhavedana. But for the contemplating yogi, it is not
advisable to focus on eye-consciousness, etc. He should contemplate the whole
process of consciousness (vithi) which involves pleasant feeling along with some
thought-moments, e.g. santirana, javana and tadarammana and unpleasant feelings
along with javana or impulse-moments.
Moreover, even though the eye-consciousness,
etc., may be upekkhavedana at the moment of their arising, they will be accompanied
by unpleasant feeling if they happen to be the effects of unwholesome kamma as
is evident in our contact with unpleasant sense-objects that cause painful emotions
such as fear. Loud noise may make us deaf, evil smells may cause headache while
unwholesome food may do harm to our health. Likewise, the upekkhavedana that is
conditioned by the four kinds of pleasant sense-objects implies pleasant feelings.
We enjoy seeing beautiful objects, hearing pleasant sounds, etc. This shows the
pleasant character of upekkhavedana because of its being the product of wholesome
kammas. In this connection the sub-commentary on Visuddhimagga says:
"'The
upekkhavedana which, being the full-blown product of low kamma, is painful and
as such, it is of low character." In other words, the upekkhavedana that
is based on unwholesome kamma may be indifferent and neutral but, since it stems
from evil kamma, it is low just like the flower that blooms in a heap of excreta.
Moreover, although it is not as worse as dukkhavedana, it is unbearable and so
it is low. In fact, the kammic effect of a bad deed is never good or free from
pain and suffering.
Then, elaborating the function of vedana in the chain of
causation, the sub-commentary says: "The upekkhavedana that results from
unwholesome kamma should be described as dukkha since it is undesirable. The upekkhavedana
that has its origin in wholesome kamma should be described as sukha since it is
desirable." It is evident in the pleasant feeling that we have when we hear
a pleasant sound. Sweet words are welcome to the ear while harsh words jar on
it. The nature of some feelings caused by ordinary sounds is not obvious and such
feelings are termed upekkhavedana.
The three kinds of vedana due to hearing
is distinctly familiar to the ever-mindful yogi. He knows that the dukkha or sukhavedana
arises from contact between the sound and the ear; that there is no soul or atta
to be affected by it; that the vedana arises and vanishes instantly, and that
everything is impermanent. As his concentration develops, he becomes aware of
the ceaseless arising and vanishing of all the three kinds of vedana.
Like
hearing, smelling is also conditioned. The smelling consciousness arises from
the contact between the nose and the odour. It is impossible to smell without
the odour or the sensitive part of the nose (ghanapasada). People without sensitive
nose are rare. Once I met a monk who said that he had practically no scent even
when he smelled a handkerchief moistened with perfume. Even when the nose is sensitive
you cannot have any scent if you plug it or if there is nothing to be scented.
The scent is detected only when it is wafted in the air and comes into contact
with the sensitive part of the nose. Ordinary people labour under the delusion
that it is the person or the living being who smells. In fact it is the contact
between the airborne scent and the rupas of the nose in continual flux that causes
smelling consciousness. As in the case of seeing and hearing this ghana-vinnana
is a process that involves advertence (avajjana), impulsion (javana), investigation
and other stages. The crux of the matter is of course the smelling consciousness
which ceaselessly arises and vanishes, depending on the nose and the smell.
We
are all familiar with the offensive smell of something rotten or the fragrance
of a flower. Common people believe that it is they who smell whereas the yogi
knows that it is only a phenomenon arising from the conjunction of the nose, the
odour and consciousness and he comes to realize the ceaseless influx and impermanence
of everything. That is the difference between the yogi and the common people.
Vedana
(feeling) may be agreeable or disagreeable according to the nature of impact (phassa).
Scents of flowers and perfumes cause pleasant feelings whereas the stench of the
decomposing matter is offensive to the nose. The ordinary smells cause neither
pleasant nor unpleasant feelings and this is upekkhavedana; a feeling that is
so subtle that we do not notice it. The yogi notes the smelling consciousness
and becomes aware of the three kinds of feelings, and their arising and dissolution
Consciousness
in eating (jivha-vinnana) arises from contact between the tongue and the food.
Without the tongue or the flavour of food, there can be no consciousness of taste
but, if the tongue is so unhealthy as to lack sensitivity, the food will be tasteless.
Common people believe that it is a living being who eats and enjoys the flavour.
In fact, the rupas forming the sensitive part of the tongue are forever in a flux
and it is from the contact of these rupas and the flavour of food that there arises
consciousness which involves the thought-moments that we have mentioned before.
The events at this stage are so rapid that they seem to form a single thought
moment. This consciousness (jivha-vinnana) changes at every moment, depending
on the tongue and the flavour. It is this citta that knows sweetness, sourness,
bitterness and so forth.
The conjunction of the tongue, the flavour and consciousness
means what in Pali is called phassa. This is familiar to everybody, but common
people think that it is they as living beings who experience the flavour. Only
the yogi who notes all the psycho-physical events that occur while he is eating
knows it as a phenomenon dependent on the tongue, the flavour and consciousness.
Later on, he gains a clear insight into its ceaseless flux and impermanence.
Contact
with flavour is followed by sensations (vedana) that may be good or bad according
to the flavour. Eating good food gives us pleasure, we like it, whereas we complain
of bad food or the bitter taste of some medicine. The feeling that we have when
we eat some food is indifferent. Although this is upekkhavedana, the opportunity
to eat is the outcome of good kamma. Hence, eating such food also has a pleasant
aspect and leads to attachment, but as for the yogi with developed samadhi who
notes the nama-rupa at every moment, he becomes empirically aware of the arising
of all sensations (pleasant, unpleasant or indifferent) and their passing away.
Another
source of contact, feeling, etc., is the sensitive part of the body (kayadvara).
It is said: "Body consciousness arises from the body or tactile organ and
the tactile object. Body-impression (phassa) arises from the conjunction of the
body, the tactile object and tactile consciousness, and the tactile impression
conditions the (tactile) sensations (vedana)."
This needs some elaboration.
Seeing, hearing, smelling and eating - each of these physical events concerns
only its respective organ, viz., the eyes, etc. Consciousness in connection with
them also arises only in a certain part of the head. These psycho-physical events
are restricted in terms of locality and duration. You are conscious of eating
only when you are eating, conscious of hearing only when there is something to
be heard. As for the body-consciousness, it is present in regard to every part
of the body. You have tactile impression somewhere on your body at any time whenever
you think of it. So its sphere is extensive and its duration is long. For the
beginner in vipassana practice, contemplation of tactile impression is most important
and so the yogi should know something about it.
The fine, sensitive matter
(rupa) that can receive the tactile impression pervades the whole body. It exists
in every healthy part of the body and so it can give rise to tactile consciousness
everywhere through contact with an external or internal rupa in the body. These
rupas are impermanent and are in a flux from moment to moment. They are like the
electric energy that passes into the bulb and gives light.
In this state of
ceaseless flux the sensitive body rupa that has not yet passed away collides with
an external or internal rupa, thereby giving rise to body-consciousness. As in
the case of seeing, etc., this consciousness involves a series of thought-moments,
viz., citta that inquires the tactile object, citta that knows, citta that registers
etc., but these cittas arise and vanish so rapidly that the tactile consciousness
appears to involve only a single thought-moment.
Body-consciousness is always
present. It is not apparent when the mind is absorbed in any object other than
the body but, if the attention is directed to the body, there is no doubt about
the tactile impression somewhere as, for example, the contact between the body
and the floor, the body and the clothes, and so forth.
So the yogi who practises
mindfulness in regard to physical contact of his body is aware of its conditionality.
He knows that it is neither uncaused nor created, that it in fact depends on the
conjunction of tactile object and the sensitive rupa in healthy condition. The
object of contact is called photthappha in Pali and it is of three kinds, viz.,
pathavi, tejo and vayo.
Pathavi element has the attribute of hardness and coarseness
and this attribute is to be found if one examines or focuses on a part of the
body that gives a clear impression of contact. Softness too is to be regarded
as pathavi for softness and coarseness do not differ essentially. We call velvet
a smooth object in comparison with many things that are coarser than it but it
appears to be rough when it hits the soft part of the human eye. So softness and
roughness are relative terms that differ only in degree, not in kind. Softness
and smoothness represent solidity that is a mark of pathavi element.
According
to commentaries, solidity as the essence of pathavi element serves as the abode
of other elements that have to depend on it just as all objects have to depend
on earth. For example, rice-powder when mixed with water turns into a lump in
which it may be termed pathavi because of its solidity or its predominantly solid
character. The particles of powder are combined and held together by the water
(apo) element. The lump also contains tejo element that is concerned with heat
or cold, as well as the wind (vayo) element that supports stiffness and expansion.
So this lump of rice powder contains all the four elements, and of these the element
of solidity (pathavi) is the basis of other elements. All the other three elements
are also inherent in the rice powder. Thus, just as rice powder is the support
of water element, etc., so also the earth element is the support of its associated
rupas. This is the function of the earth element.
Thus, to the yogi, the earth-element
appears to be the basis for its co-elements. This is its paccupatthana and so
is of heaviness and lightness. In Dhammasangani, one of the books of Abhidhamma
pitaka and its commentary, the pathavi element is described as heavy and light.
So when you move a thing and feel that it is heavy or light, that feeling or idea
is to be included in the paccupatthana of the pathavi element. The yogi is aware
of the characteristics of pathavi element through its roughness, softness or smoothness.
He is aware of its function when he realizes that it serves as the basis of other
rupas. He is aware of its paccupatthana when he knows that other rupas lie in
the pathavi element, that it bears other rupas, that it is heavy or light. Such
awareness of pathavi element in terms of characteristics (lakkhana), function
(rasa) and paccupatthana means realization of truth and discriminative insight
into the nature of nama-rupa.
As for the common people, contact with pathavi
element is usually understood in terms of hands, legs, clothes, man and so forth.
This way of thinking is wrong, but the yogi knows the truth through the practice
of mindfulness.
Tejo element means heat. It is evident when we change the position
of the body, because we feel heated and pressed in some part of the body. Coldness
too is a kind of weak tejo element. A thing is hot or cold relative to other things.
The shade of a tree may be cool in comparison with the heat of the sun, but it
is hot relative to the interior of a cave or house. The water in the pot is cool
relative to that in the open air but hot when compared to iced water. Hot, warm
and cool are relative terms that mean essentially tejo dhatu (element).
Tejo
or heat is essential to maturation and development. The function of heat is to
make organisms mature and ripe. Old age and decay of trees, buildings, the earth,
rocks, etc., are due to heat of the sun and it is the heat of the physical body
that gives rise to grey hair, decaying teeth, wrinkled skin and other signs of
senility. The greater the heat, the more rapid is the process of maturation. Tejo
element makes the rupas soft and pliant. So as the yogi notes, "hot",
"hot", he realizes its function, viz., to soften and loosen.
When
heat or cold is manifest in the body, the mindful yogi is aware of tejo element
in terms of its characteristics. He knows its function (rasa) when he knows that
it makes things soft and pliant. Thus, the yogi has discriminative insight into
the nature of nama-rupa. He is free from the illusion that common people have
when they think of tejo element in terms of substance and entity such as hand,
man, woman and so forth.
Vayo element has the characteristics of stiffness
and rigidity. If you sit erect and stretch your back and introspect yourself,
you will find rigidity. Again, stretch your arm and fix your mind inside the hand.
You will find stiffness there. So if you sit and note mentally, "sitting",
you become aware of vayo element in terms of its characteristics. You know it
not as ego, as atman, etc., but as stiffness and this insight into the real nature
of vayo is important.
But initially the yogi's insight will not be necessarily
confined to the reality of stiffness. Ideas of substance, self, and so forth,
continue to obtrude upon his mind. For in the beginning, the average person's
concentration is weak and he tends to let his mind wander freely. His mind is
usually dominated by sensual desire and other hindrances (nivarana) that conflict
with tranquillity and insight-knowledge and impede their progress. As a result,
the mind is not confined to the reality of elements. Some teachers would have
us believe that all conventional notions go by the board at the outset, but this
is impossible. It is indeed hard for any beginner to be free from hindrances and
pure in mind and belief. Exceptions may be made in the case of those who heard
the Dhamma right from the Buddha and attained the holy path, but such kind of
attainment is unthinkable for other people.
Vipassana practice does not help
to develop insight in the beginning. While contemplating nama-rupa, the yogi develops
concentration strongly, thereby leaving almost no room for stray thoughts and
keeps himself constantly mindful. It is only at this stage of mental purity that
there arises the insight into the real nature of nama-rupa. Even so, conventional
notions linger before the attainment of insight into the dissolution of all forms
of existence (bhanganana). So it is said in Visuddhimagga that at the earlier
stage of insight (udayabbayanana), the yogi tends to see "the lights, flowers
on the pagoda platform or fishes and turtles in the sea." But later on, both
the nama-rupa objects of contemplation and the contemplating mind are found to
pass away one after another. Conventional ideas of shape, figure, etc., do not
arise any longer. As Visuddhimagga says, "attention is fixed on cessation,
disappearance and dissolution."
Therefore, initially the yogi knows only
the object that he contemplates in the right way. Rigidity (vayo) is evident at
the moment of lifting the foot, etc. To make us aware of this, the Buddha says,
"When he (the yogi) walks, he knows that he is walking." Here, the yogi
is instructed to be aware only of the fact that he is walking; he is not told
to reflect on the vayo or rigidity. This means that names are not relevant, that
what matters most is to see things as they really are, that the yogi can note
them in terms of popular usage. Again, vayo element is manifest in the movement
of any part of the body. Awareness of rigidity in such movement or in the abdominal
rising and falling means awareness of the real marks of vayo element. Looseness
too is a mark of vayo for we speak comparatively when we refer to tightness or
looseness of anything.
It is also the function of vayo element to move, incline,
tilt or displace. The yogi notes the motion of his hands when he bends them and
becomes aware of the true nature of vayo element. He knows it also when he focuses
on walking, etc. At such moments, he does not think of the object as man, woman,
body and so forth. He is aware only of the gradual movement which means the real
nature of vayo element. He is also aware of something pushing or leading another
from one place to the other. Thus, he knows vayo by means of the phenomenon that
appears on his mental horizon. This is awareness by paccupatthana which the scriptures
describe as "Abhinihara paccupatthana" - the phenomena which appears
as leading.
All the three primary elements - pathavi, tejo and vayo are to
be known only by experience. You cannot know them by hearing, etc. You can hear
the sound of something, but you cannot say whether it is coarse or soft, hot or
cold, rigid, stable or moving. Neither will its smell, taste or visual form tell
you anything about its primary quality. Yet, it is a popular belief that we can
identify the primary elements by seeing.
No doubt a rock or a block of iron
apparently gives us the impression of hardness, but this is not due to seeing.
It is merely an inductive generalization based on past experience. What we know
by seeing is only the visual form which sometimes gives a false impression as
is evident when we tread on what we believe to be solid ground and stumble into
a quagmire, or when we get burnt by handling a heated iron bar unknowingly.
Nor
can we know vayo element by seeing for it is an element that we can know only
empirically. We see that an object is moving because we see it here and there,
and the idea of its motion is only an inference from our observation of its displacements.
Yet, when one of the two trains at rest starts moving, the other train appears
to be in motion and to a traveller in a fast moving train, the trees appear to
be running in the opposite direction. These optical illusions bear out the fact
that we cannot rely on our eyes for the truth about motion.
Once, an elderly
layman who was interested in meditation told us about his dialogue with a monk-teacher.
Taking a pillow and shaking it, he asked the monk, "Now, Sir, what dhammas
do you see passing away?"
"Well, I see the vayo element passing away."
"Sir,
you are wrong. What you see with your eyes is only the visual form. If you are
mindful at the moment of seeing, you know only what happens to the visual form.
You cannot know empirically anything about vayo element at the moment of seeing.
Vipassana is a practice that gives priority to what is to be known actually by
introspection. It is only afterwards that other facts are to be noted and realized
by reasoning. It is natural to contemplate each sense-object only through its
respective sense-organ. Vayo is an object that is known only through body-contact.
We can know the motion of vayo if we introspect while walking, bending, etc. Now
without being in contact with vayo, you say that you know its dissolution. What
you say is unnatural and wrong."
There is much truth in my informant's
criticism. Instead of relying on Satipatthana and other suttas for information,
some teachers give purely speculative instructions on the basis of Abhidhamma
books that deal with natural phenomena exclusively. There are yogis who practise
according to these instructions. The practice may benefit them spiritually but
they cannot rely on it for the attainment of real insight and stages on the holy
path. The only exceptions are a few gifted yogis who gain insights through speculative
introspection.
The best thing to do is to follow the Buddha's instruction in
Satipatthana sutta and contemplate the psycho-physical phenomena that arise from
the six senses. This is, as the Buddha says, //eka yano maggo//: "the only
way". In the case of body-sense corresponding to body-consciousness we should
note and recognize the body-impression when we are aware of any body-contact internally
or externally. Otherwise the impression tends to dominate us in conjunction with
avijja and other defilements. We tend to harbour illusions of permanence, happiness
and ego-belief. Thus, through contact, we become attached to certain parts of
the body, we consider them permanent and make distinctions according to our preferences.
If we note every contact and realize their sensory, impermanent, unsatisfactory
and insubstantial nature, there is no attachment and we are on the right path
of vipassana that will certainly lead to enlightenment and Nibbana.
Body-sensitivity
(kayapasada) is a quality that pervades the whole body when it is in a healthy
condition. There are many things such as clothes, air and others that can give
the body tactile impressions. The body, too, possesses many things, e.g. hair,
skin, that lend themselves to contact. Thus, there are always both external and
internal objects of contact for the body-sensitivity. Reflection will point clearly
to the possibility of contact in every part of the body and there is no place,
however small, that does not admit of contact, and this contact gives rise to
body-consciousness.
From the conjunction of the body-sensitivity, object of
contact and body-consciousness, there arises impression (phassa) that is very
obvious. Pleasant impression of contact gives rise to pleasant feeling while unpleasant
impression results in painful feeling. The deeper the impression the more intense
is the feeling.
Relation between
Manodvara And Vinnana, Etc.
Manovinnana that thinks, conceives and cognizes
has its origin in the mind and mind-objects. The mind which forms its basis is
the bhavanga-citta that we have from the moment of conception. It occurs ceaselessly
according to kamma. It is the basis for perception and cognition. When we sleep
or when the mind is otherwise occupied, our mental life is all bhavanga-citta.
It becomes active in the face of mind-objects and there arise intention and cognition.
So we can think and know only on the basis of bhavanga. True, this citta is always
present in the absence of intention and cognition but bhavanga can lead to mental
events only when it is strong.
At times we cannot think because we are drowsy
or our thinking may be futile, in spite of our effort, and this is due to weakness
of bhavanga. Thus, bhavanga by itself serves little purpose. It becomes active
only when it is in contact with a new sense-object. Hence, it is called bhavangacalana,
active bhavanga or bhavanga-paccheda, bhavanga with its stream cut off. This last
bhavanga gives rise to intention and cognition. According to the commentaries,
avajjana (advertence of the mind towards the object) is also to be considered
the basis for mental activity. Avajjana forms the first stage in the consciousness-process.
It arises as the inquiring state of mind in regard to the object. If it is alert
and sharp, it is mindful of all the essential facts and objects.
The good writer
considers the important facts for his book and the good speaker chooses appropriate
words for his speech, thereby making their writings and speeches perfect. Further,
this avajjana leads to good or bad kammic consciousness accordingly as it is bent
on good or bad objectives. It is open to introspection and cognition since we
can know actually that intention and awareness arise from avajjana. So the words:
"mananja - mind as the basis" should be understood as reference also
to avajjana.
Equally vital to mental activity is the mind-object. The object
always arises when we reflect. In the absence of mind-objects mental activity
is impossible. Thus, sometimes we wish to think but have to give up thinking because
we cannot recall the essential facts or objects.
Hence, mental activity depends
on the conjunction of the mind (bhavanga), inquiring mind (avajjana) and the mind-objects.
According
to the commentaries, the heart forms the physical basis of all mental events.
But today Western doctors have removed the diseased heart of a patient and replaced
it with a good substitute. The experiment was not a complete success but the press
reports say that the transplanted heart functioned for a few days. This news may
raise doubts about the role of the heart in the mental life of mankind.
This
question admits of two explanations. Although the heart is removed, its potency
may not become extinct and bhavanga-citta may still linger in its place just like
the tail of a house-lizard that moves after it has been cut off. Moreover, the
bhavanga-citta may become active again when the transplant gets a new lease of
life from the blood of the body, just as the new tissue or new eye ball that is
engrafted has new sensitivity. Or, we can dispose of the question on the basis
of Abhidhamma pitaka, for Patthana, one of the Abhidhamma books, describes the
physical basis of manovinnana (mind) simply as "that physical organ which
conditions the mind as its basis." It does not specifically mention any organ
or part of the body. Thus, according to this canonical book, we may assume that
a certain part of the body is the seat of the mind, perhaps it is a certain part
of the heart or the head. Those who do not wish to locate the mind in the heart
may regard the head as its physical basis.
Here, we must mention the analogy
of the spider and the evolution of mind as set forth in the commentary on Abhidhamma
pitaka. The spider builds a web which is a kind of net for catching flies. It
can do so instinctively in a matter of days after its birth whereas by contrast
even a year-old child can do nothing for himself. The spider waits in the center
of its web, eats up any creature that gets entangled there and returns to its
abode. In the same way, the bhavanga or mano-vinnana has the heart as its abode
and like the threads of the spider's web connecting its abode and its surroundings,
the blood pumped by the heart flows through the blood-vessels and spreads all
over the body. So the visual image in the eye stirs the bhavanga-citta in the
heart and turns it into eye-consciousness and so on through its process (vithi).
It (bhavanga) then turns back to its original seat. The same may be said of sound,
smell, etc., with their respective sense-organs.
It is now clear that bhavanga,
together with its original activity, that is, thinking and knowing, forms the
mainspring of our mental life. When there is a visual object, the eye-consciousness
arises with the eye as its basis and then the manovinnana reflects on it. The
same is true of the ear-consciousness, etc., with the ear, the nose and the tongue
as their bases. As for the body-consciousness, its sphere is extensive as it depends
on the size of the body.
When the sense-objects are not apparent, the mano-vinnana
or the mind that comprises thinking and knowing holds sway over the mental life.
Sometimes we are so much absorbed in thought that we remain unmindful of all sense-objects.
Preoccupation with an important matter may even make us sleepless. We are then
dominated by thoughts that arise ceaselessly one after another on the basis of
mental activity as conditioned by bhavanga, avajjana and mind-objects. To the
yogi who notes every thought as it arises, these thoughts will appear to arise
and vanish separately in fragments.
Every mental event depends on the conjunction
of mind, mind-object and cognition. This is followed by contact with mental images.
These images, which may be real or unreal, existent or non-existent, are present
in imagination whenever we think or intend to do something. This is familiar to
those who have read, for example, the jataka stories. Reading these stories give
rise to mental images of cities and kings that are coloured by Burmese beliefs
and traditions. They are far from historical truth for since the stories have
their origin in India, people and places described in the jatakas must have conformed
to the Indian culture and way of life.
Modern novels evoke images of towns,
villages, men, women, criminals and so forth. The reader knows that all these
are purely fictitious and imaginary and yet while he is reading, they appear as
real and, hence, the delight, sorrow and other emotions that a good story arouses
in him. All this is due to contact with mental images.
As the Buddha says in
Brahmajala sutta, "these teachings and beliefs stem from vivid imagination
that makes them clear and real." In short, vivid imagination is necessary
when we speak, write, hold a belief or think or just let the mind wander freely.
Imagination
leads to feeling. Pleasant images cause pleasant feeling as do, for example, images
related to our past affluence or the prospect of becoming affluent in future.
On the other hand, unpleasant images make us unhappy. To think of the past suffering
is to revive unpleasant memories and equally unpleasant is the anticipation of
the troubles and arisings that might beset us in future. The cause of such unpleasantness
may be purely imaginary as in the case of the people who grieved over the reported
death of a relative only to learn later that he was still alive.
The image
that is neither pleasant nor unpleasant will give rise to neutral (upekkha) feeling.
We are then neither happy nor unhappy. Indeed we have the impression of having
no feeling at all, but this indicates simply the subtle nature of upekkhavedana
which, according to the commentaries., is to be known by the analogy of the tracks
of the deer.
When a deer runs across a large rock, the track is lost since
the animal leaves no footprints on it, but if the footprints are to be found on
both sides of the rock, we conclude that the deer has run across the rock. Likewise,
the yogi is well aware of the pleasant or unpleasant feelings. When he has upekkhavedana
he does not notice it and is mindful only of seeing, hearing and so forth. But
after that, he has again pleasant or unpleasant feeling and so he concludes that
he has had neutral (upekkha) feeling while being mindful of ordinary mental events.
So
the Buddha says: "Conditioned by the mind and mind-object manovinnana arises;
the conjunction of mind, mind-object and manovinnana leads to sense-contact and,
because of sense-contact, there is feeling."
This is purely a process
of cause-and-effect relationship that has nothing to do with a being, ego, creator
or any happening by chance. By the Pali word "dhamma", the teaching
refers to the five sense-objects as well as the imagined objects. The five sense-objects
again become the focus of mental activity. So manovinnana involves all the six
sense-objects, that is, what one has seen, heard, etc., and what one has not seen,
not heard, etc. Every sense-object leads to sense-contact which in turn gives
rise to feeling.
For common people, these mental events are bound up with the
idea of ego, self or atta. Such an idea is an illusion irrelevant to the chain
of causation. This is empirically realized by the mindful yogi. He notes every
mental event, traces its cause and becomes aware of the bhavanga and avajjana
as well as the mind-object. So he knows empirically that every mental event means
only the interrelation of cause and effect, leaving no room for ego, creator or
chance.
He knows too that mental activity leads to sense-contact which in turn
gives rise to feeling. His knowledge is not bookish but empirical. He follows
and notes every mental event. If his mind wanders to his home while he is meditating
at a retreat, he directs his attention to it and there is the contact between
his mind and its object, viz., the image of the house. In the same way, contacts
with Shwedagon pagoda or a foreign country occur when he notes and follows the
corresponding thoughts that distract his mind. This contact with mind-objects
is phassa.
Equally clear to the yogi is the feeling that results from sense-contact.
While practising meditation, he feels delighted when he happens to think of something
that pleases him; sorry when the thought about a sad event occurs to him; inclined
to laugh when he thinks of something ludicrous. So he knows that feeling is merely
the outcome of sense-contact. But the insight of the yogi who notes nama-rupa
at every moment of their arising is deeper than this knowledge of the origin of
feeling. For as he develops concentration and tranquillity (samadhi), he finds
that every object of his introspection as well as its subject, that is, consciousness,
passes away. So he gains a clear insight into the impermanence of all mental events,
viz., thinking, feeling, etc., their unsatisfactoriness and unreliability and
their impersonal and insubstantial character. Such insight means the empirical
realization and appreciation of the Paticcasamuppada or dependent origination.
Recapitulation
In
the first part of the discourse we have explained the links in the chain of causation
up to the vedana (feeling) which arises from phassa (sense-contact). To sum up
what we have said so far.
Avijja is ignorance of the four noble truths. It
makes ordinary people blind to the impermanence and insubstantiality of sense-objects.
So they think, speak and act in the hope of securing happiness in the present
life or hereafter. These deeds in thought, word or bodily actions are either wholesome
or unwholesome and they are also called sankharas (kamma-formation).
The sankharas
give rise to new existence. The dying person has flashbacks of his kammic deeds
and visions of future life that impress him and condition his new consciousness
in a new life. In the absence of any special object that concerns the new consciousness,
the latter occurs repeatedly with the death-bed impression of his previous life
as its object.
This bhavanga-citta becomes active at the moment of seeing,
etc. Then, there arises eye-consciousness that is dependent on the eye and visual
form. It is part of the state of consciousness, that is, the whole mental life
as conditioned by sankhara. What we see, hear, etc., may be pleasant or unpleasant
and the corresponding nature of eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness, etc., is
due to the ethical character of our past deeds, that is the wholesomeness or unwholesomeness
of the kammas in the past existence.
This applies to all of the six types of
consciousness that arise from six sense-objects. The last type of consciousness,
implicit in mental activity comprising thinking, imagining, willing, etc., is
dependent on bhavanga-citta, avajjana-citta (mental advertence), the physical
basis and the mental image. This mental activity (manovinnana) involves seven
thought-moments (javana) and two other thought-moments (tadarammana). Here tadarammana
is the product of good or bad kamma. Javana is not such a product, but in Abhidhamma
it is labelled sankhara-based vinnana in that it arises from bhavanga, the product
of sankhara.
Together with the arising of vinnana, there also arises other
concomitant psycho-physical phenomena (cetasika and rupas). Thus vinnana leads
to nama-rupa, but vinnana is followed also by the six ayatana (sense-organs) and
six phassa (sense-impressions). Phassa means the conjunction of the mind, the
mind-object and the sense-organ. It gives rise to vedana (feeling) which may be
pleasant or unpleasant or neither pleasant nor unpleasant. The last kind of feeling
which is called upekkhavedana, gives us the impression of the absence of any feeling,
but according to Abhidhamma, it is in fact a kind of subtle pleasure that implies
only the absence of unbearable pain.
Vedana Leads To Tanha
Because of pleasant
or unpleasant feeling, there arises tanha. Tanha means perpetual craving or hunger.
It craves for sensual objects that it does not have or it craves for more of the
objects that it already has. It knows no satiety or satisfaction. For all the
sensual objects to gratify it, its hunger is insatiable.
So a deva said that
devas are like petas in that just as the petas are very hungry because of lack
of anything to eat or drink in their realm, so also devas are always hungry although
they indulge in all kinds of sensual pleasure. This sounds quite plausible. For
the life-span of a Tavatimsa deva means millions of years on earth and the life
is still longer in other higher deva-worlds such as Yama, Nimmanarati. Yet, in
spite of their ceaseless and fabulously lifelong enjoyment of pleasure, the devas
are never satisfied because their tanha is insatiable.
The same is true of
human beings. Poor people seek sensual pleasure to the best of their ability.
Of course, because of their poverty, they can never fulfil all their desires but
equally insatiable is the craving of the rich, the high officials and the upper
crust of society. This is due to the nature of tanha. The more it is fed, the
more hungry it becomes and so it is worse among the rich than among the poor,
more oppressive in wealthy countries than in poor countries.
Six Kinds Of Tanha
Tanha
is never tired of seeing pleasant objects, man or woman whom it likes. It seeks
sweet sounds. It hungers for good scent, good food and good drinks. It craves
for tactile sensation and this is surely the worst craving for people who love
sensual pleasure. Tanha also means liking for mind-objects that are impervious
to the eye, the ear and other physical organs. It is the object that we can know
only mentally. According to the scriptures it means the five sensitive (pasada)
rupas, the four subtle elements such as apo, etc., the mental elements (cetasikas)
concepts of forms, qualities, names, etc.
People crave for good pasada-rupas
because they want to see clearly, to hear distinctly, or to have keen sense of
touch. They seek apo elements as they wish to keep their mouth, throat and skin
moist. They delight in the consciousness of their own sex and the opposite and
hence their craving for manhood and womanhood. They want to live long and to move
lightly, and this desire shows their hunger for the fine rupas of jivita and kayalahuta,
etc. Their desire for happiness, good memory and good intelligence points to their
craving for certain mental faculties. Love of one's own physical appearance and
that of the opposite sex as well as the desire for praise and fame again shows
the hunger for concepts.
For six sense-objects there are six kinds of craving.
These six cravings may mean merely the love of sensual pleasure (kamatanha). This
love may be combined with the illusion of permanence (bhavatanha), tanha that
implies the eternity-belief. Craving is also bound up with the belief in annihilation
which makes some people overly attached to sensual pleasure (vibhavatanha). So
there are six cravings (corresponding to six sense-objects) for each of the three
tanhas (kamatanha, bhavatanha and vibhavatanha) or 18 cravings. Each of these
cravings may have internal objects or external objects and this leads to 36 kinds
of craving. Since each craving may relate to the present, past or future, there
are thus a total of 108 kinds of tanha. But all kinds of craving boil down to
three kinds of tanha viz., kama-, bhava- and vibhava-tanhas.
People who are
in contact with unpleasant sense-objects long for pleasant objects. Those who
suffer pain seek freedom from it. In short, according to the commentary, the suffering
person longs for happiness. People seek freedom from pain, poverty and unpleasant
objects and feelings. Absence of suffering means happiness (sukha). We seek freedom
from preoccupation with unpleasant thoughts, from worry about food, clothing and
shelter. But, once a man is well provided with the necessities of life, he tends
to develop other cravings. Says the commentary, "The wealthy man wants to
increase his wealth." For it is in the nature of tanha to be insatiable.
We wish to enjoy the good things of life repeatedly; we wish to increase our possessions.
The more we have, the more we want, and the higher the quality of life is, the
greater is the desire to enhance it. Tanha never comes to an end for it is fuelled
and perpetuated by vedana or feeling.
As regards the tanha associated with
upekkha (neutral) feeling, the commentary describes the concomitant feeling as
pleasant (sukha) because of its poise and subtlety. In the case of our contact
with ordinary sense-objects, neither the pleasant feeling nor unpleasant feeling
is apparent; but since this upekkha feeling is fine and subtle, it is tinged with
(sukha) pleasantness and hence it makes us crave for more definite pleasure. It
leads to discontentment with the ordinary sense-objects and kindles the desire
for better food, better clothes, better sense-contact and better living conditions.
In
short, pleasant sense-objects create attachment and craving for better objects.
Unpleasant objects create the desire to be rid of them. When the sense-objects
produce neither pleasant nor unpleasant feelings, we are still discontented with
our lot and crave for better things. All these show how vedana gives rise to tanha.
Tanha
And Samsara
Simultaneously with the arising of consciousness at the moment
of seeing, etc., there arise nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana. For every
ordinary person who is not yet free from defilements, vedana (feeling) leads to
tanha. Tanha in turn causes upadana (clinging) that makes him do a good or a bad
deed (kammabhava). Under certain conditions, kammabhava gives rise to rebirth
that makes living beings subject to old age, sickness, death, grief and all other
mental and physical sufferings. This is how feelings lead to samsaric dukkha.
Nobody
can prevent the arising of nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana as concomitants
of vinnana. The Buddha and the Arahats, too, have pleasant, unpleasant or neutral
(upekkha) feelings as a result of contact with sense-objects. They feel pain that
arises from physical affliction but they do not suffer mentally; nor do they take
delight in pleasant sensations. So they are free from craving and attachment.
They do not strive for pleasure and happiness and because of their non-kammic
way of life, they do away with rebirth, nama-rupa and other causes of suffering.
This is the extinction of dukkha for the Arahat who is completely free from defilements.
So
it is said, "Due to the complete extinction of tanha that is rooted in pleasant
or unpleasant feeling on the Ariyan path, there arises the extinction of upadana
(clinging)."
Experience of the pleasant or unpleasant feelings make the
non-Arahats crave for the good things of life but it has no effect on the person
who has attained Arahatship after passing through the successive stages on the
holy path. This may sound incredible to the common people but in fact the most
alluring sense-object has no appeal for the Arahat and he takes no interest in
his welfare. He is, therefore, wholly free from craving and attachment and this
means complete extinction of kammic effort, rebirth and its attendant suffering.
So
it is said, "The extinction of upadana leads to the extinction of the cause
of rebirth (kammic effort). The extinction of kammic effort leads to extinction
of rebirth. Extinction of rebirth leads to extinction of old age, death, grief,
etc."
Extinction Of Craving
In short, with the complete extinction
of tanha due to Arahatship, there is the complete extinction of all its consequences
and this means the extinction of suffering. It does not imply the disappearance
of happiness or a living being. It is simply the cessation of the nama-rupa process
that is the source of dukkha.
Just as Arahatship means complete extinction
of craving, the attainment of anagami stage on the path means extinction of sensuous
craving together with rebirth in the sensual world, old age, death, etc. At the
sotapatti stage, the yogi is assured of extinction of all craving that may lead
to the lower worlds or more than seven existences. So he is free from all suffering
of the lower worlds and the suffering for more than seven lifetimes in the sensual
world. Thus implicit in the Paticcasamuppada is the lessening of dukkha with the
weakening of tanha.
Likewise, the vipassana insight ensures the momentary extinction
of tanha. The arising of six sense-objects leads to pleasant or unpleasant feeling
and in the absence of vipassana insight, it finally ends in tanha and its attendant
suffering.
But as for the yogi who practises constant mindfulness and has developed
vipassana insight, he finds only the arising and passing away of all phenomena,
their impermanence, suffering and impersonality. He also finds that the pleasant
or unpleasant feeling arises and passes away instantly. So he does not delight
in the feeling that arises, he does not crave for another feeling; he is free
from all craving.
Extinction of craving on the Ariyan holy path differs from
extinction by vipassana in that in the former case, the extinction is permanent
and it concerns every sense-object whereas in the latter case extinction is neither
permanent nor universal. Tanha is extinct only at the moment of contemplation
and only in respect of the object contemplated. Hence, it is called "tadanga
nibbuti", momentary or partial extinction of defilements.
The yogi who
practises meditation is barely aware of seeing, hearing, etc. This state of bare
awareness leaves no room for tanha and as a result upadana (clinging), kamma,
rebirth, etc., cease to occur. In other words, with the cessation of tanha, the
samsaric cycle is partly cut off and this is called tadanga nibbuti.
The Story
Of Mahatissa Thera
There is the story of Mahatissa thera in Sri Lanka who
overcame tanha through the practice of both samatha and vipassana. One day he
left his forest retreat early in the morning and on the way to Anuradha city for
his begging round, he met a woman who had left her home after quarrelling with
her husband. At the sight of the thera, there arose in her a lustful desire and
she laughed aloud seductively. On looking at her the thera noticed her teeth.
Since he had been contemplating the skeleton, the whole body of the woman appeared
as a heap of bones. He concentrated on this mental image and attained jhana. Then,
after contemplating the image of the skeleton in his jhanic state of mind, he
attained Arahatship.
The thera continued his journey and on the way met the
woman's husband. The man asked him whether he had seen a woman. The thera replied
that he did see something but that he did not know whether it was a man or a woman.
All that he noticed was a skeleton that passed him on the way.
What he actually
saw was the woman's teeth, but his practice of contemplation had turned his impression
of her body into the image of a skeleton. Hence, in his mind there was no room
for lust or any other defilement arising from his sense-contact with the woman.
Then practising vipassana on the basis of his jhanic consciousness, he became
free from defilements and attained Arahatship.
This story might raise doubts
among non-meditating people as regards the arising of the image of a skeleton
at the sight of a person's teeth, but without practice one cannot have any clear
idea of what mind training (bhavana) can accomplish. The mere exercise of concentration
without any training cannot help to create mental images for these depend on steadfast
and prolonged practice of contemplation. Imagination is the power of perception.
Repeated contemplation strengthens perception which then helps create any kind
of image of oneself or other people. This faculty of mind is possible even for
a parrot as is borne out by a story in the commentary on Satipatthana sutta.
Story
Of A Parrot
A dancer put up for the night at the residence of bhikkhunis and
when she went away, she left an intelligent parrot. The bird was cared for by
the novitiates and it was called Buddha-rakkhita. The abbess of the nunnery thought
that it would be good if there was something to contemplate for the bird living
among the spiritual aspirants. So she taught her to contemplate "atthi: skeleton".
One
morning the parrot was swooped up by an eagle. In the wake of the hue and cry
raised by the young nuns, the eagle became frightened and dropped the parrot.
The Abbess asked it what it contemplated when it was seized by the eagle. The
bird replied, "I thought of a skeleton being carried off and I wondered where
it would be scattered." The Abbess said "Well done! This contemplation
will contribute to your liberation from samsaric existence."
A thing that
is repeatedly contemplated will become fixed in the long run. Since even a parrot
can imagine a skeleton, there is no reason why a human being cannot do likewise.
The parrot imagined itself as well as others to be skeletons. Because of this
contemplation, it had no fear, anger or worry when it was taken away by the eagle.
So
Satipatthana bhavana is extolled as a practice that helps to overcome grief and
anxiety and to bring about the extinction of mental and physical suffering. But
there may be many people who are not as wise as the parrot in the story since
they never take interest in the dhamma and contemplate it. The yogi should resolve
to surpass the parrot in the practice of vipassana.
If Mahatissa thera had
failed to regard the laughing woman as a skeleton, he might have become lustful
and fallen a victim to temptation in the solitude of the forest. Even if he had
no sexual desire at that time, any impression of the woman would have laid him
open to temptation at other times. But thanks to his contemplation of the skeleton
in the practice of vipassana, he overcame defilements and achieved final liberation
from samsaric existence. Here, the extinction of tanha through vipassana practice
is called tadanga nibbuti, partial extinction, while extinction through arahatship
is called "total extinction".
Contemplation And Extinction
So
with the total extinction of tanha that results from vedana, there is the extinction
of upadana which means the extinction of all the consequences of craving. Contemplation
of anicca, dukkha and anatta ensures the partial extinction of tanha, upadana,
kamma, rebirth, etc. The object of vipassana practice is to put an end to defilements
and samsaric suffering. So it is a matter of paramount importance that deserves
the attention of everyone who seeks total liberation. Without this practice, pleasant
or unpleasant feeling at every moment of seeing, etc., is bound to lead to craving,
kamma and rebirth.
The consciousness involved in every moment of seeing is
due to avijja and sankhara in the previous existence. Seeing occurs together with
vinnana, nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana. The scriptures treat each of these
dhammas separately in terms of their causal relations, but in fact they do not
arise separately one after another. If vinnana arises from sankhara, it arises
together with its respective nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana. All of these
dhammas are the results of the past kamma sankhara. They are termed vipaka-vatta
which means round or cycle of resultants. The round of defilements viz., ignorance,
craving and clinging produce round of kamma viz., kamma and sankhara which leads
to round of resultants viz., consciousness, nama-rupa, sense-organs, contact,
feeling which again give rise to the round of defilements.
The arising of these
five resultants at the moment of seeing means to most people simply just seeing.
In fact, seeing is the product of vinnana, nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana
as are other psycho-physical events such as hearing, smelling and so forth.
Seeing
involves consciousness together with mental advertence (manasikara), volition
(cetana), etc., plus the eye-organ which comprises the nama-rupa. It also involves
four ayatanas viz., eye sensitivity, visual object, eye consciousness and mental
advertence (dhammayatana). Contact with the visual object is phassa and the pleasantness
or unpleasantness that the object causes is vedana. Hence all the five resultants
are bound up with every moment of seeing. The same may be said of other phenomena
that arise from hearing, smelling and so forth.
Cutting Off At The Foundation
These
five psycho-physical resultants or phenomena occur ceaselessly one after another
and comprise what we call man, deva or living being. These are conventional terms
that refer in fact to the collection of the five nama-rupa elements. There is
no solid, monolithic and permanent being. The only reality is the arising and
passing away of nama-rupa and for the mindful yogi, this insight means the extinction
of craving, clinging, kamma, rebirth, suffering - a chain of consequences that
might result from feeling in the case of common people.
This is the way to
the cessation of the wheel of life (Paticcasamuppada) through the elimination
of its key link viz., tanha as conditioned by feeling. In order to prevent tanha
from arising as the result of vedana, at every moment of seeing the yogi should
focus on every phenomenon that arises from six senses. Here, the most obvious
of these sense contacts is the tactile sensation that concerns gross primary elements
(Mahabhuta) and it is necessary for the beginner to start contemplation with it.
This
way is in accord with the Buddha's teaching in Satipatthana sutta, "Gacchanto
va gacchamiti pajanati: (the yogi) knows that he is walking when he walks."
How does he know it? He knows it as he notes mentally "walking, walking".
He practises mindfulness, too, when he stands, lies, bends his arms, or does anything
else. When there is no bodily action or movement to be noted, he should direct
his attention to the abdominal rising and falling. He should also note any thought,
or mental activity and any feeling that may arise in him. In short, he must be
mindful of all the psycho-physical phenomena that arise from the six senses. As
concentration develops, such mindfulness leads to insight into anicca, dukkha
and anatta, an insight that leaves no room for craving. With the extinction of
craving, there is also an end to clinging, and rebirth with all its attendant
suffering. This is the way to the cessation of samsaric existence or life-cycle
through the elimination of its root cause, namely, craving.
Today, science
and technology have created machines which we cannot run or stop running without
a knowledge of their modus operandi. Those who know the secret can operate them
by manipulating their key plugs. In the same way, the keynote of the life-cycle
as described by the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada is that tanha is caused by vedana,
but this is true only if vedana is coupled with two kinds of latent tendencies
(anusaya) viz., Santananusaya and arammananusaya. The Arahats are free from these
tendencies and so, although they have feelings, their craving is extinct. This
extinction of craving leaves no room for new kamma, neutralizes old kamma, and
there is no more rebirth after their parinibbana.
But ordinary people have
potential defilements which means not the existence of evil desires lying latent
somewhere but only the possibility of their arising under certain circumstances.
Hence, the Pali term santananusaya kilesa for this tendency. This potential kilesa
may become greed, hatred, ignorance and other evils in the case of those who fail
to contemplate the nama-rupas and so become subject to the illusions of permanency,
happiness and ego-entity. This kilesa which may arise from sense-objects in the
absence of vipassana insight is called arammananusaya kilesa.
Kilesa And Unmindfulness
Greed
and anger that arise in connection with what one has seen or heard are the manifestations
of the second kind of latent tendency. The impressions that we retain are those
of permanent, lovely or repulsive beings or things. So recall of those images
gives rise to attachment (lobha), anger (dosa) or illusion of permanency (moha).
Lobha
is another synonym for tanha. It is due to pleasant feeling but it may also arise
when unpleasant feeling makes us crave for pleasant sensations. Ignorance, too,
leads to complacency, attachment and craving. Thus lobha, dosa and moha give rise
to feeling which in turn causes craving with its attendant sufferings of samsaric
existence. It is only the practice in bare awareness of seeing, hearing, etc.,
that rules out the possibility of craving and nostalgia for the pleasant sensations
from the senses. Without this practice, craving dominates us and leads to suffering
in afterlife as well as here and now.
In the Mora jataka, the bodhisatta who
was then a peacock used to utter a gatha when he arose in the morning and when
he went to sleep in the evening. So for 700 years he escaped the trap set by a
hunter. Then the hunter employed a peahen as a decoy and enticed by her, the peacock
forgot to recite the gatha and fell into the trap. In Benares, there was a harpist
called Guttila. He made love to a girl but he was ridiculed and rejected. So at
night he sang a very sweet song and played his harp in front of the girl's house.
Fascinated by the music, the girl rushed out blindly, stumbled and fell to her
death. In the Mora jataka it was the female voice, and here it was the male voice
that brought about suffering and death.
No one can deny that what we hear is
impermanent. Everything that we hear vanishes instantly, yet we enjoy songs and
music because of their apparent continuity. If we note every sound, "hearing,
hearing" mentally, our realization of their impermanence makes it impossible
for our pleasant feelings to become cravings. This means non-arising of upadana
and all its resultant suffering.
Smell is seldom experienced by the yogi. He
must, of course, note it and see that it does not give rise to craving.
Mindfulness
is especially important in eating. The unmindful person delights in eating good
food. He is fond of such pleasure; he craves for it in future and hereafter. This
craving for good food and drinks is powerful. It may lead to an existence that
makes a person subsist on bad food. Thus, according to the Balapandita sutta,
those who do misdeeds for the pleasure of good food are reborn as animals that
eat grass, leaves or human excreta.
Eating bad food also tends to create the
desire for good food. Therefore, it is necessary for the yogi to note everything,
every movement of his hand and mouth and every sensation when he is eating. Through
this practice of mindfulness he becomes aware of the vanishing of his actions,
sensations and feeling. In this way he gains an insight into impermanence of everything,
an insight that leads to the extinction of craving and its attendant suffering.
Thoughts
And Tactile Impressions
Tactile impression is always present all over the
physical body. Thinking, too, is also present all the time except when the yogi
goes to sleep. So thoughts and tactile impressions form the objects of vipassana
practice for most of the time. The yogi contemplates the tactile impressions when
he has nothing else to engage his attention.
He notes his thoughts even though
they happen to be unpleasant and undesirable. The beginner in meditation is often
subject to such distractions, but they usually disappear as he gains practice
and develops concentration. Thoughts about the Dhamma occur to some yogis from
time to time and these should be noted. Introspection of these thoughts also ensures
insight into impermanence and the extinction of suffering.
Here, some may wonder
what this description of vipassana practice has to do with the discourse on Paticcasamuppada.
The doctrine points out the chain of consequences as conditioned by their respective
causes and our object is to show the way to the end of samsaric suffering that
finally results from the interplay of their causes and consequences. So we have
to describe the practice wherever it is relevant. Thus, when it is said that "avijja
leads to sankhara and sankhara to rebirth", we have to show the way to remove
avijja. So also in connection with vinnana, etc., that finally bring about dukkha,
it is necessary to stress the need for removing the link between vedana and tanha,
that is the main cause of dukkha.
Three Kinds Of Craving (Tanha)
If feeling
(vedana) that arises from contact with sense-objects is not rightly contemplated,
it leads to one of the three kinds of craving viz., craving for sensual pleasure,
craving for existence and craving for non-existence.
The first kind of craving
(kamatanha) is focused on sensual objects and it is most prevalent among the living
beings of the sensual world.
The craving for existence (bhavatanha) is bound
up with the eternity-belief (sassata-ditthi). It presupposes the permanence of
a living being and the indestructibility of the ego despite the dissolution of
the physical body. The belief is not deep-rooted among the Buddhists, but non-Buddhists
hold it so firmly that it is a major impediment to their spiritual liberation.
Their craving for existence is evident in their illusion of permanent self and
their love of sensual pleasure.
The craving for non-existence (vibhavatanha)
is born of the annihilation belief (uccheda-ditthi). The belief is not found among
Buddhists and no one is a true Buddhist if he or she holds the belief. The craving
for non-existence means the desire for the automatic cessation of the life-stream
after death as well as the love of pleasure rooted in the materialistic view of
life.
Each of these three cravings stems from the failure to realize anicca,
dukkha and anatta through the introspection of feelings. So in order to forestall
craving and its consequences, namely, rebirth and suffering, the yogi should contemplate
every phenomenon, and try to see everything as it really is.
Tanha Causes Upadana
From
craving there arises clinging (upadana). The Pali term upadana is a compound of
//upa// - intense, extreme, and //adana// - grasp, take, and so it means to grasp
firmly, or intense, obsessive craving. Clinging is of four kinds: (1) clinging
to sensuous objects, (2) clinging to false views, (3) clinging to irrelevant,
non-Ariyan practices as the way to salvation, and (4) clinging to atta or ego-belief.
(1)
Clinging to sensual objects:
Sensual objects excite the desire of all living
beings who are not free from the craving for sensual pleasure. These objects are
five in number viz., visual form, sound, odour, taste and contact.
Visual form
is the object that is pleasant and attractive to the eye. It may possess natural
beauty or it may appear to be beautiful in the eyes of the viewer. Pleasant visual
form, whether real or apparent, is to be found in men, women and consumer goods.
It is the physical appearance of females that attracts the males and vice-versa.
The things that both men and women desire are clothes, jewellery, cars, etc. It
is not merely the form or colour that excites desire. Man and woman are drawn
towards each other not only by the complexion but by the whole body of the opposite
sex, and the same may be said of consumer goods that make people greedy. Form
or colour only serves to introduce or identify the object of desire just as the
cry of an animal helps the hunter to track and find it out.
Sound as the object
of sensual pleasure is represented by the voices of men and women, songs or music.
Some sounds and voices are really sweet while some only appear to be sweet in
our ears. Again, it is not the mere sound that attracts us for when we delight
in hearing a sound or a voice, the whole thing or the being that produces it forms
the focus of our attachment.
Odour as the source of sensual pleasure comprises
all kinds of scents: scent of flavours, powder, fragrant essence. Men and women
apply these odoriferous substances to their bodies and delight in these scents,
and it is not the scents alone but the whole physical body giving out the scent
that attracts people.
The sensual pleasure that we have by eating or drinking
is rooted in food and drinks. The good or pleasant taste may be real or apparent.
For pigs, dogs and other animals, garbage, refuse and filth may be a source of
sensual pleasure. Some people are very fond of bitter or spicy food. Some like
intoxicants. Their pleasure is more apparent than real since normal ordinary people
do not share their tastes. The pleasure of eating is not confined to food; it
centres also on the preparation of food and the man or woman who prepares it.
This is evident in the pleasure of a man who enjoys eating the food prepared by
his wife although her culinary skill may not impress other people.
Another
source of sensual pleasure is the body or tactile impression. Soft and smooth
beds, comfortable clothing, something warm in cold season and something cold in
hot season, the body of the opposite sex - all these form the objects of contact
that create not only the craving for the tactile impression but also the craving
for the whole body of the living or non-living object. The tactile impression
only serves to pave the way for attachment to the whole body.
Bases Of Sensual
Pleasure
Then there are living and non-living objects that form the sources
of sensual pleasure. There are gold, silver, jewellery, rice, cattle, poultry,
vehicles, houses, land, attendants. Men work daily to secure these sources of
pleasure. They seek these things to have good food, good clothes and good houses,
to see movies and so forth.
Sensual desire (tanha) usually leads to intense
craving for sensual objects (kamapadana). When a man starts smoking, he delights
in his new habit but as the habit grows upon him he becomes addicted to it. Thus,
we become excessively fond of certain objects and we feel restless and discomfited
if we do not get them. In this way tanha develops into upadana (clinging, grasping
or infatuation).
Upadana cannot come into being without tanha. The music and
songs of foreigners do not appeal to Burmese ears and so there is no craze for
them among the people. Burmese people do not eat dogs. Dog's flesh is abhorrent
to them and so there can be no upadana in regard to it.
(2) Ditthupadana (Bigotry)
Another
kind of upadana is ditthupadana which means clinging to false views. It covers
all the false views, exclusive of those in the categories of the third and fourth
upadana. So every false belief is to be regarded as upadana. Here we will describe
at length ten false views that have a firm grip on the people.
The first view
is that alms-giving is not a good kammic act, that it means only a waste of money.
This view rejects the sense of values and the fruits of a good act. It has, however,
no basis in fact. The act of dana makes the donor joyful. It benefits the recipient
physically and mentally and it may even help to save the life of a starving man.
The donor is popular and highly esteemed. After his death, he attains the deva-world.
It is hard to convince the sceptic of this post-mortem reward, but these other-worldly
results of kamma come within the purview of Arahats and other holy men with psychic
powers. One of these powers is the ability to see with the divine eye (dibbacakkhu).
This psychic power enables one to see donors prospering in deva-worlds or evil-doing
non-donors suffering in the lower worlds. Such vision can be had even by some
yogis who have not acquired psychic powers but developed much samadhi. Again some
may dismiss these visions as figments of imagination but the agreement of these
accounts about the other worlds lends weight to their credibility.
The second
false view is also a negation of the kammic benefits for alms-giving on a grand
scale.
The third false view rejects the kammic benefits of feeding guests,
giving gifts on new year day and so forth. This view is essentially the same as
the third view. It refers to small acts of dana that were in vogue in ancient
India but were dismissed as futile by heretics.
The fourth view denies the
kammic result of any morally good or evil act. There is a lot of evidence for
the kammic effects of a man's acts in this life, and, as for the other-worldly
result of an act, those with psychic power can testify to it. But people who are
excessively fond of sensual pleasure like to give free rein to their desires.
They frown on moral values and ideas which they regard as a hindrance to their
material progress. So they put forward many arguments to justify their rejection
of the kammic law. In the final analysis all this is due to their excessive love
of sensual pleasure.
The fifth and sixth view deny any respect, honour or support
that we owe to our parents for all their loving care in our childhood. It is said
that a man and his wife get children through sexual intercourse by accident, that
they bring up the children from a sense of responsibility, and so there is no
reason why children should be grateful to their parents. So it is not a good deed
on the part of a man to look after his parents nor is it an evil to wrong them.
It is a terrible view; those who hold it will not be respected by their children.
The
seventh view denies the existence of any world other than the human and the animal
worlds. It also rejects the belief that an animal may be reborn as a human being.
The
eighth view denies rebirth of a human being in deva or animal worlds or in hell.
It preaches annihilation of life after death.
The ninth view denies rebirth
by //opapatika// or spontaneous generation. In other words, it denies the existence
of devas, brahmas, petas, asuras, etc., who appear with their full-fledged bodies
without being conceived in the womb. This view is untenable since encounters with
good or evil spirits are reported from all over the world; there are mediums and
witch-doctors who can invoke spirits; and devas, Brahmas, etc., are sometimes
visible to the yogis who practise vipassana.
The last view is that there is
no ascetic or Brahman who speaks of this world and the other invisible world and
who conforms to his teaching. The view implies that there is no person who can
speak independently of this world and the other world on the basis of his actual
extraordinary experience, that all their teaching is guesswork and speculation,
and so false and evil.
Today this view is echoed by those who scoff at religion.
They reject the existence of Buddhas and Arahats who know the world as it really
is through their own effort. But the logic underlying this view is self-defeating
for by the same kind of reasoning, one can reject the view since those who hold
it also do not know anything about this or the other world really.
As for the
Buddha-dhamma, it rests on extraordinary insight (Sayain abhinna desita). As such
it leads itself to empirical investigation and there is much scientific evidence
for it.
The man who preached the Indian brand of agnosticism in the time of
the Buddha was Ajita. He attacked all religious teaching without qualification
and so it is to be assumed that the arahats and the Buddha, too, were the targets
of his denunciation.
Right Views
All these ten wrong views boil down to
the denial of the law of kamma for the rejection of kamma means rejection of any
benefit accruing from the acts of dana and reference to parents, and other good
deeds, as well as the kammic potential for arahatship or Buddhahood. Likewise,
the ten right views mentioned below are based on the belief in kamma, or moral
retribution.
(1) The first view is that dana is beneficial. One who gives alms
is admired at least by the recipients. They will respect him, praise him and help
him when he is in trouble. He dies calmly with good death-bed visions and after
his death he attains good rebirth in deva-worlds or in human society. His good
rebirth may finally lead to the Ariyan path and Nibbana. It was usually with an
act of dana that the bodhisatta, and others embarked on their long spiritual journey
leading to the goal of Buddhahood, paccekabuddhahood or arahatship.
The kammic
effect of alms-giving is also evident in the material prosperity of some people.
Some people do the same job such as business, farming, etc., but differ in their
accomplishments. Some become prosperous while others make no progress materially.
Some meet with success without working hard while others fail to prosper despite
their hard work. Other things being equal, this disparity in the fortunes of some
persons is no doubt due to dana or lack of dana in a previous life.
(2) and
(3) The man who believes in the law of kamma will have no doubt about the kammic
potency of giving alms lavishly or the small acts of dana such as feeding the
guests, giving presents and so forth.
(4) These three right views are implicit
in the law of kamma or moral retribution. That a man fares according to his good
or bad deeds is an undeniable fact of life. A man who leads a good life in accordance
with the instruction of his parents and teachers is popular, gets help from others
and achieves success, and when he grows up he becomes a prosperous gentleman.
Similarly, because of good kamma in a previous life a man may be born of a good
family and blessed with health, wealth, physical beauty and sincere friends. The
bad effect of evil kamma such as ill-health, poverty, ugliness, etc., are equally
well-known to everybody.
(5) and (6) The belief in kamma also implies a recognition
of our deep gratitude to parents. Parents take care of their children from the
time of their conception. The mother is especially careful about her health, her
food, and movements for the sake of the child in her womb. If she is a good Buddhist,
she keeps sabbath and contemplates the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha in the hope of
influencing her child spiritually. After the birth of the child, the parents have
to attend to his physical needs and educate him, and when he comes of age they
have to give him financial support for a start in life. For these reasons, it
is our bounden duty to revere and care for our parents; and this is a kammic act
that benefits us immensely. At the very least, a man who respects his parents
will be respected by his children while a man who wrongs his parents is very likely
to be disdained by his children.
Seeing The World Beyond
(7), (8) and (9)
The right views about the existence of this world, the invisible world and the
living beings such as the devas who come into existence by spontaneous materialization.
These right views are also implicit in the belief in the law of kamma for the
law of kamma makes it possible for a living being from the animal or deva world
to pass on to human world or vice-versa according to his kamma after death. This
can be demonstrated to a certain extent but the observer will have to possess
psychic powers, vipassana insight or the ability to think rationally.
Through
the practice of samathajhana, a yogi can acquire the power of recalling the past
lives; he can have the divine-eye (dibbacakkhu) that affords him a glimpse into
the physical appearance, etc., of a person who has passed on to a new existence.
This psychic power is also accessible to those who practise vipassana.
Those
who cannot practise samatha or vipassana will have to depend on their power of
reasoning. There are certain persons here and there who can recall their previous
lives, people who are credited with jatissaranana in Buddhist literature. They
describe their past lives as human beings, animals, spirits or ghosts. To the
rational mind, these accounts clearly point to the post-mortem transition from
this world to the other world and vice-versa as well as to the instant materialization
of certain beings.
Here we wish to mention the way of thinking on the issue
of a future life suggested by wise men. Suppose a man accepts the belief in kamma
and life after death while another man rejects the belief. The second man will
not do good deeds such as dana, sila and he will not avoid doing evil. He will
give free rein to his desires. Therefore, he has no virtue that is worthy of respect
and admiration by other people. If contrary to his belief, the law of kamma and
a future life are real, he is bound to land in the lower worlds immediately after
his death and suffer for many lifetimes throughout his samsaric existence.
On
the other hand, the man who believes in kamma and after-life will avoid evil,
do good and so, even if there is no kamma or a future life, he will be extolled
and well-known for his good character. He will rejoice at the contemplation of
his good deeds. As a good citizen, he will lead a peaceful life. These are the
benefits that will certainly accrue to him from his belief in kamma in the present
life. And if life after death is indeed a fact, he is assured of happiness hereafter.
So it is reasonable to accept the belief in after-life since it serves our interests
now or in future in any event. This is the infallible way of thinking that the
Buddha recommends in Apannaka sutta of Majjhima nikaya.
Parami And Kamma
(10)
Faith in the Buddha, the Arahats or holy men who can claim transcendent knowledge
about this and the other worlds and who possess a noble character that lends credence
to their teachings - such faith also presupposes the belief in kamma, for the
spiritual attainment of Arahats and the Buddha rests in part on their parami (perfection)
which does not differ essentially from kamma. Development of parami is a kind
of learning. Just as a child has to learn many things in order to become well-educated,
so also a bodhisatta has to seek knowledge and train himself for the attainment
of his goal.
Some parents and elders take their children to movies and theatres
while others take theirs to pagodas and monasteries. In this way the children
acquire good or bad habits and develop a craving for sensual pleasure or a taste
for the higher things of life. Good habits and good training may be called a kind
of parami. Some children are spontaneously inclined to religious life, some men
and women have immense zeal and energy for the practice of vipassana. Such a child's
unusual interest in religion or a man's unusual love of spiritual life is born
of the parami in a previous life.
Prince Siddhattha became the Buddha through
the gradual development and perfection of parami such as dana, sila, nekkhama
(renunciation) and so forth over aeons spanning innumerable lifetimes. It was
not a matter of easy accomplishment in a single existence. It was this cumulative
kammic potential or parami that helped to strengthen his will when he left his
family and the luxuries of his royal palace in search of enlightenment. Today,
some people speak of their disillusionment with life but it is hard for a man
to renounce all his wealth and become a monk, let alone to think of the kind of
renunciation that distinguished the bodhisatta.
The bodhisatta cultivated other
paramis, too, for the sake of wisdom, at energy fortitude and so forth in way
of his previous lives. As a result in his last existence he reflected and realized
independently the nature of life, its dependent origination, etc. It was his kammic
potential (parami) that finally led to his supreme enlightenment and likewise
it was the parami that contributed to the spiritual attainments of Paccekabuddhas
and Arahats. Hence, the belief in kamma makes it possible for the spiritual aspirant
to become the arahat, Paccekabuddha or the Buddha and one who accepts the belief
has no doubt about the transcendent knowledge of the Buddha and other holy men.
In
short, ditthupadana is generally synonymous with rejection of the law of kamma.
It was not widespread in the time of the Buddha or even about a hundred years
ago but now it is gaining ground, thanks to the books that have criticized the
doctrine of kamma in the name of scientific knowledge. As the scriptures say,
false beliefs are usually rooted in craving and with man's increasing hunger for
material goods, scepticism about kamma is likely to become dominant and it is
up to good people to guard themselves against it.
Apart from the rejection
of kamma, ditthupadana also means strong attachment to all false beliefs e.g.
ego-belief, annihilation-belief, etc. The exceptions are the two false beliefs
covered by silabbatupadana and attavadupadana.
(3) Silabbatupadana (Clinging
To False Practices)
Silabbatupadana is clinging to wrong practices that do
not lead to cessation of suffering. It is the view which identifies the habits
of cows, dogs and other animals with the way to the end of dukkha. It found expression
among some ascetics in the time of the Buddha. Like animals, they lived naked,
ate, defecated and went about on all fours, and slept on the ground. They believed
that such a way of life served to purge them of all evil kamma and forestall new
kammic action, thereby assuring them of an end to suffering and eternal bliss
after death.
To a Buddhist, this kind of belief may sound incredible but some
people's preferences are very odd and they differ in their views and inclinations.
So there came to the Buddha two ascetics, one Punna who lived like an ox and another
Seniya who lived like a dog. They asked the Lord about the benefits of their practice.
The Lord was reluctant to answer but when pressed for his view, he replied that
an ascetic who committed himself wholly to the habits of an ox or a dog would
be reborn as an ox or a dog after death; that it was wrong to believe that such
practices led to the deva-world; and that one who held a wrong belief was likely
to land in hell or in the animal world. Then the Buddha went on to describe (1)
the evil practices that bear evil fruits, (2) the good practices that bear good
fruits, (3) the evil practices mixed with good practices and (4) the practice
of the Ariyan path that leads to the total extinction of good and bad kammas.
On
hearing this sermon Punna became the disciple of the Buddha. Seniya joined the
order and attained Arahatship through the practice of the Dhamma.
The Story
Of Korakhattiya
In the time of the Buddha there was a man named Korakhattiya
who lived like a dog. One day the Buddha passed by him, accompanied by a Licchavi
bhikkhu, Sunakkhatta by name.
Sunakkhatta saw the ascetic moving on all fours
and eating the food on the ground without the help of his hands. The ascetic's
way of life gave the monk the impression of a holy man, nay, an Arahat who had
few desires. In point of fact, the ascetic's mode of life was a kind of silabbatupadana
that would lead him to one of the four lower worlds. It was abhorrent to those
who had high ideals and aspirations. It had appeal for Sunakkhatta only because
of his low tastes and desires. The Licchavi monk was exceptional in this respect.
There were then not as now many people who preferred false views and false practices
that did not accord with the Buddha's teaching. This was probably a hangover from
wrong attachments in their previous lives.
The Buddha divined Sunakkhatta's
thoughts and said, "So you regard that ascetic as an Arahat! I wonder why
you do not feel ashamed of being called the disciple of the Buddha." The
monk then accused the Lord of envying the ascetic's Arahatship. This is of course
the kind of retort that is to be expected from an ignorant man when someone speaks
the truth about his false teacher. The Buddha explained that his object was to
remove the monk's illusions that would do him no good. Then he went on to predict
that after seven days the ascetic would die of indigestion and land in the lowest
Asura world; that his body would be dumped in a certain cemetery; that if the
monk went there and asked about his present abode, the dead body would reveal
it.
The Buddha made this prophecy in order to restore Sunakkhatta's faith in
him. Through the practice of samatha Sunakkhatta had attained jhana and divine
eye. With his divine eye he had seen the gods and goddesses and as he wished to
hear their voices he asked the Buddha about the way to the attainment of divine
ear. But the Lord declined to fulfil his desire because his bad kamma stood in
the way and he would blame the Lord for the non-attainment of divine ear. Nevertheless,
he lost his faith in the Lord because he thought that it was envy that motivated
the Lord to refuse his request. So the Buddha predicted the ascetic's fate to
impress Sunakkhatta and salvage his faith.
Sunakkhatta informed the ascetic
of the Lord's prediction and warned him against overeating. The ascetic fasted
for six days but on the seventh day he could not resist the temptation any longer.
He wolfed down the food provided by a lay follower and died of indigestion that
very night.
His fellow ascetics dragged his dead body to dump it in any place
other than the cemetery specified in the Buddha's prediction. They got to a cemetery
but found it to be the very place they wished to avoid for it had the kind of
grass predicted by the Buddha. They tried to drag the body away but the creeper-rope
snapped and all their efforts to remove it were in vain. So they had to abandon
the corpse there.
Sunakkhatta heard the news but still he hoped to prove the
falsity of the latter part of the Lord's prediction. He went to the cemetery and
rapping the dead man asked about his abode. The corpse arose and after saying
that he was in Kalakamjika asura abode fell back on the ground. Kalakamjika is
the lowest asura abode. Asura is a kind of peta with a monstrous body and a mouth
which is so small that it cannot drink and eat well.
According to the commentary,
it was the Buddha's psychic power that made the dead body possessed by the asura
peta. Given the ability of some sorcerers to raise the dead, there is no need
to have any doubt about the resurrection of the dead ascetic through the psychic
power (iddhi) of the Buddha.
Sunakkhatta came back crestfallen and had to admit
that the Lord's prophecy had come wholly true. Even so, he did not have complete
faith in the Buddha. Later on he left the holy order and disparaged the Lord.
Other
Silabbata Practices
Besides the mode of life of cows and dogs there are other
practices that can be described as silabbata. Some people emulate the elephants,
horses, and so forth. In other words, they worship animals. The commentary refers
to king-worshippers which may mean in Burma people who worship various nats. Nat-worship
among Burmese people is not motivated by the desire for liberation from samsara
(life cycle). It stems from the hope for material benefits here and now and as
such it does not fall within the scope of silabbatupadana, but it is upadana over
the belief that leads some people to make animal sacrifice in their worship of
the nats.
There are also fire-worship, naga-worship, moon-worship, sun-worship,
spirit-worship and so forth. If the object in any kind of worship is to have happiness
or spiritual liberation after death, it is silabbatupadana. In short, all practices
divorced from the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path are labelled
silabbata and attachment to them as the way to salvation is silabbatupadana.
The
yogi who has attained at least the sotapanna stage through the contemplation of
nama-rupa is well aware of the right path to Nibbana and so he has freed himself
from the belief in silabbata. He knows empirically that the way to the end of
suffering is only through the introspection of nama-rupa and the practice of the
Noble Eightfold Path.
For example, if you know from experience how to go from
this meditation centre to Shwedagon pagoda, you will not be misled by anyone who
points out the wrong way. Likewise, the yogi at the sotapanna stage knows the
right way to Nibbana and so he has no illusion about the beliefs and practices
such as belief in God, nat worship or asceticism that pass for the way to salvation.
Those
who do not know the right path are not free from such illusion. They may have
acquired it from their ignorant parents, teachers or friends; or because of their
poor basic knowledge, they might have been misguided by books that advocate false
beliefs and practices. The ordinary man (puthujjana) is ignorant of the right
path to Nibbana and so he will have to reckon with many teachers and practices
through his samsaric existence. If he falls for a false teacher or a false practice,
he is in for a lot of suffering. Thus the practice of austerities will only cause
hardships and pain and the performance of animal sacrifice will certainly lead
to the lower worlds.
It is also upadana over silabbata to believe that rupajhana
or arupajhana means complete salvation. In short, even the moral perfection or
jhanic attainment in the mundane sphere, though commendable, may lead to silabbatupadana
if it is divorced from the holy path of vipassana and regarded as the total liberation.
Udaka sutta of Samyutta nikaya refers to the rishi Udaka, who having attained
the arupa world through his arupajhana declared that he had uprooted the cause
of dukkha and made an end of it. This was also the illusion of another rishi called
Alara. This illusion or upadana led to their good kamma which in turn led to their
rebirth in the arupa worlds.
So in his discourse to Baka brahma, the Buddha
says: "I see the dangers of birth, old age, death, etc., inherent in the
three worlds of sensuality, rupa and arupa. I see those who seek Nibbana still
bound to existence. So I do not approve of any kind of existence. I have repudiated
all attachment to existence."
Like the two rishis, those who do not know
the Buddha's teaching never attain their goal. Although they seek permanent happiness,
they follow the wrong path of silabbata and remain entangled in the samsaric existence
of dukkha. So we can hardly over-emphasize the importance of right effort on the
right path as pointed out by the Buddha.
(4) Attavadupadana (Clinging To Belief
In Soul)
Attavadupadana is a compound of attavada and upadana. Attavada means
belief in soul entity and attavadupadana is attachment to the view that every
person is a living soul.
Attachment to the ego-belief is of two kinds, viz.,
ordinary attachment and deep-rooted attachment. Ordinary attachment that prevails
among ignorant Buddhists is not harmful to progress on the holy path. The belief
is not deeply entrenched because Buddhists accept the Buddha's teaching which
denies the permanent soul and recognizes nama-rupa as the only reality behind
a living being. Intelligent Buddhists are still less vulnerable to the belief.
For they know that seeing, hearing, etc., involve only the sense-organs (eye,
ear, etc.), the corresponding sense-objects (visual form, sound, etc.) and the
corresponding states of consciousness.
But most people are not wholly free
from the ego-belief. Even the yogi who practises vipassana may at times fall for
it and it is likely to attract every man who has not attained the holy path.
In
fact those who taught ego-belief described the ego as the owner of the five khandhas,
as an independent entity, possessing free-will and self-determination. It was
this view of atta (soul) that the Buddha questioned in his dialogue with the wandering
ascetic Saccaka. Said the Buddha, "You say that this physical body is your
atta. Then can you always keep it well, free from anything unpleasant?" Saccaka
had to answer in the negative. Further questioning by the Lord elicited from him
the reply that he had in fact no control over any of the five khandhas.
So
the ancient Buddhist teachers translate "rupam anatta" as "the
physical body is subject to no control", etc. In fact it is the denial of
the "samiatta" or the false view of atta as a controlling entity. Every
ordinary person holds this view and believes in free-will. He can overcome it
completely only through vipassana contemplation.
The attavada teachers also
say that atta exists permanently in the physical body. In other words, it means
the personal identity that is said to persist through the whole existence.
Again,
they say that atta is the subject of all actions, thus identifying it with sankharakkhandha.
It is the illusion that creates the belief: "It is I that see, hear, etc."
They
also say that atta is the living entity that feels; that it is atta that is happy
or unhappy. In other words, they describe atta or soul in terms of vedana or feeling.
Thus,
although the Atmanists (attavadi) insist that atta has nothing to do with the
five khandhas, they credit it with ownership of the body, etc., permanent residence
in the body, subjectivity and feeling: and, hence, in effect they identify it
with the five khandhas. The ego-illusion is rooted in the khandhas and a man can
free himself completely from it only when he becomes aware of the real nature
of khandhas through contemplation.
Of the four upadana, the first upadana (clinging
to sensuality) is the developed form of craving (tanha). The other three upadanas
differ only as regards their objects; basically they all relate to beliefs, viz.,
belief in ego, belief in the efficacy of practices other than those of the Eightfold
Path, and any false belief other than those in the category of the other two upadana.
All false beliefs arise in connection with craving. Men cling to a belief because
they like it. Thus there is no doubt that all the four upadanas stem from craving
and hence the Buddha's teaching: "From tanha there arises upadana."
In
point of fact, craving is the cause and clinging is the effect. Craving for sensual
pleasure, ego-belief, or practices irrelevant to the holy path or other false
beliefs is the cause, and this craving develops into clinging to sensuality, ego-belief,
etc., and thus becomes effects.
Clinging
Leads To Becoming
Upadana leads to bhava (becoming). There are two kinds of
bhava, viz., kammabhava and upapattibhava.
(1) Kammabhava
Kammabhava means
the kamma that leads to rebirth. The Buddha describes it as the punnabhi, apunnabhi
and anenjabhi sankharas that lead to lower sensual world or the higher material
and immaterial worlds. He also identifies kammabhava with all kammas that give
rise to new existence.
Of the three sankharas, punnabhi sankhara comprises
the eight wholesome volitions (cetana) in sensual sphere and five wholesome volitions
in the material (rupa) sphere. Apunnabhi sankhara is the group of twelve unwholesome
volitions. Anenjabhi sankhara means the four wholesome volitions in immaterial
sphere. Also leading to rebirth are the kammas that arise together with the wholesome
volitions in sensual sphere, viz., having no covetous thoughts or designs about
another's possessions, having no design against another person's life and holding
right views. These kammas are implicit in punnabhi sankhara. In short, kammabhava
is the good or bad volition that leads to rebirth.
(2) Upapattibhava
Upapattibhava
is of nine kinds. (1) kammabhava means the nama-rupas of living beings in the
sensual world. In other words, kammabhava refers to existences in the hell and
the worlds of devas, mankind, animals and petas. (2) rupabhava - the khandhas
of brahmas with rupas. (3) arupabhava - namakhandhas of brahmas with no rupas.
(4) sannibhava - nama-rupas of beings with gross perceptions, that is beings in
29 abodes other than asanni nevasanni abodes. (5) asanaribhava - nama-rupa of
asanni-brahmas. (6) Nevasanninasanni - namakhandhas of higher brahmas. (7) ekavokarabhava
- the bhava with only rupakkhandha. (8) catuvokarabhava - the bhava with four
namakhandhas. (9) pancavokarabhava - of bhava with five nama-rupakkhandhas.
In
short, upapattibhava means the nama-rupas of the new existence that results from
kamma. It comprises the vinnana, nama-rupa, salayatana, phassa and vedana.
The
bhava that arises from upadana is basically kammabhava, the other upapattibhava
being merely its by-product.
From contact with six pleasant or unpleasant sense-objects
there arise six pleasant or unpleasant feelings.
Feelings lead to craving and
craving develops into clinging; clinging to sensual objects may become excessive
to the point of craving for union with one's family in a future life or attainment
of Nibbana hand in hand with one's beloved. The excessive degree of a man's upadana
is evident in the story of the merchant Mendaka.
Story Of Mendaka
Mendaka
was a rich merchant in a previous life. In the face of a famine, his stock of
provisions gradually ran out and at last he had to send away his attendants and
was left with his wife, a son, his daughter-in-law and a slave. His wife had cooked
rice that was barely enough for their consumption, and they were about to eat
it when a paccekabuddha appeared to receive food.
At the sight of the paccekabuddha,
the merchant thought of his bad kamma, that is, lack of dana in a previous life
that had now brought about his starvation. He then offered his share of rice to
the paccekabuddha and prayed for abundant supply of food and reunion with the
members of his household in his future lives. His wife too donated her share of
rice and expressed a similar wish in her prayer. The son and his wife followed
suit and prayed in the same vein, that is, for unlimited supply of food and money
as well as reunion with the same wife, husband, parents and slaves.
The prayers
of the merchant and his family clearly point to the powerful influence of upadana
in the sensual sphere and most people today are no less subject to the same kind
of attachment. But more appalling is the upadana of the slave Punna. After offering
his share of rice, he prayed for abundance of food and rebirth as the slave of
the same family! It never occurred to him to pray for rebirth as a king or a merchant;
his attachment to his masters and mistresses was so strong that he wanted only
to be their slave hereafter.
Once there was a village headman who stood well
with Government officials. Those were the days when under British rule most of
the high ranking officials were Englishmen. The headman took much delight in paying
respect to them. He said that he enjoyed saying, Phaya, "Yes, my Lord,"
when he was called by an officer. His attachment was essentially the same as that
of Punna.
The paccekabuddha blessed them and departed. By means of his psychic
power they saw him fly back to the Himalayas and share the food with five hundred
other fellow buddhas.
On that very day, the merchant and his family found their
acts of dana bearing fruit wonderfully. They found the rice pot full of rice.
They ate to their hearts' content, but the pot was always full of rice. They found
their granaries, too, overflowing with grains.
Their prayers were fulfilled
in the lifetime of the Buddha-Gotama for they became members of the same household
in Baddiya, a city of the Magadha country. The news of the fulfilment of their
prayers was so unusual and amazing that the king made an inquiry through a minister
and found that it was indeed true. This story is mentioned in Vinaya pitaka.
Upadana
And Kammabhava
When the sensual desire for an object develops into an intense
craving, a person becomes desperate and tries to secure it by fair means or foul.
Thefts, robberies, frauds, murders and so forth that are rampant nowadays stem
from upadana. Some crimes are rooted in sensual upadana while others arise from
one of the three kinds of illusion based on upadana. People commit crimes not
only because of their unwholesome desire but also because of their blind attachment
to wives, husbands, etc.
The following is a story illustrative of the evil
kammabhava resulting from sensual upadana.
Puppharatta Jataka
Long ago,
there was a poor man in Benares. He had only a suit of thick clothes. He washed
it to wear during the Tazaungdine festival, but his wife disliked the white clothes
and craved for a garment of pink colour. All his efforts to reason with her being
in vain, the man at last sneaked into the royal garden at night to steal the flower
that was to be used for dyeing his wife's garment. He fell into the hands of the
guards and was ordered by the king to be impaled. He suffered terribly with the
crows pecking at his eyes. Yet he murmured that his physical pain was nothing
when compared to the mental suffering that overwhelmed him when he thought of
the non-fulfilment of his wife's desire and his inability to enjoy the festival
together with her. So crying over his ill-luck, he died and landed in hell.
Today,
there may be many people who do evil due to the pressure of those whom they love.
All these evil deeds comprise kammas stemming from upadana and leading to the
lower worlds. So Visuddhimagga says: "Under the influence of sensual upadana,
people do evil in deeds, words and thought because of their craving for sensual
objects in the present life and their desire to preserve the objects in their
possession. Such evil deeds usually lead to the lower worlds."
Right And
Wrong Good Kamma
Some good deeds are right but some are wrong. The so-called
good deeds that some people do are harmful and as such they are evil kammas. For
example, some people believe that it is a good deed to put an end to the suffering
of some animals by cutting short their span of life. Every living being is afraid
to die or suffer pain and it is certainly wrong to cause pain and death to animals.
Some
people also consider it a good deed to bring about the speedy death of a person
who is suffering from an incurable, painful disease. But the patient does not
want to die although he wants to be free from pain. Even if he expresses the desire
to die, it is wrong from the Buddhist point of view to cause the death of a living
being and if one directly or indirectly causes the premature death of a parent
by "mercy killing", it is a grave kammic offence that leads to hell.
"Craving
for the sensual pleasures of the human and deva-worlds, and misled by false teachings,
etc., some people do misdeeds such as killing for the attainment of their object.
But as a result of their evil kamma, they land in the lower worlds after death."
According
to the commentary, misconceptions of those people arise from false teachers, lack
of good kamma in the past and the failure to guard oneself. Reliance on evil teachers
leads to evil kamma, much evil kamma in the previous life makes it easy to acquire
evil views and evil habits, and lack of self-vigilance makes one an easy prey
to temptation.
True religion is called saddhamma "the religion of the
good man". Those who follow the true religion hear good teachings, avoid
evil deeds, evil words and evil thoughts, hold right views about the future life,
kamma and its fruits, etc., cultivate good thoughts and practise dana, sila and
bhavana for their welfare.
The practice of alms-giving, morality and mental
development is true and good dhamma because it is harmless and acceptable to everybody.
Nobody will blame a man who avoids killing, stealing, abusing and other misdeeds.
The good deeds which we do for our welfare here and now or hereafter are wholesome
kammas that stem from upadana in the sensual sphere. These kammas lead to rebirth
in the human or deva worlds. So the Visuddhimagga says: "Those who hear the
true teaching believe in kamma and the efficacy of good deeds as passport to better
life in the sensual worlds of rich men, aristocrats or divine beings. So they
do good deeds under the influence of kamupadana and are reborn in the human and
deva worlds."
Kamma and Rebirth
As it is said, "Bhava paccaya
jati," rebirth occurs in the human and deva worlds or in the lower worlds
because of good or evil kamma-process. So rebirth stems from kammas which result
from clinging (upadana) and craving that is rooted in the contact between the
six sense-objects and the corresponding sense-organs (ayatana).
In other words,
there arise vinnana, nama-rupa, salayatana, phassa and vedana in the present life
as the avijja sankhara, etc., in a previous existence and now on top of that,
tanha and upadana give rise to new kamma, thereby providing the ground for new
rebirth. The situation is like that of a man who has committed a crime while he
is in prison for a previous conviction, or that of a man who has incurred new
debt before he has fully settled his old debt.
Such new kammas accumulate by
the thousands in a single lifetime. Under certain conditions one of these kammas
becomes a death-bed vision and leads to rebirth while other kammas will create
rebirth at other times in the life-cycle. If there are residual kammas from the
previous lives that possess great force, they take precedence over present kamma,
appear as death-bed visions and create rebirth in the lower or higher worlds.
The post-mortem destiny of the person in such cases is determined by the nature
of kamma.
Four Kinds Of Kamma
Kamma is of four kinds, according to the way
in which it bears fruit. (1) //garukamma// - weighty kamma, (2) //bahula or acinnaka
kamma// - habitual kamma, (3) //asanna kamma// - death proximate kamma and (4)
//katatta// kamma - stored-up kamma.
//Garukamma// is killing parents or an
Arahat or causing injury to a Buddha or causing a schism in the Sangha. As for
the good //garukammas//, there are the good kammas of the material and non-material
worlds. The //garukammas// head off the fruition of other kammas and lead to rebirth,
rupa and arupa jhanas among them leading to rupa and arupa rebirth.
The evil
garukammas lead direct to hell after death; hence, the term //pancanantriyakammas//
- the five great evil kammas leading invariably to hell. The man who kills his
father or mother unknowingly or knowingly can never attain jhana or the path and
fruition (maggaphala) in the present life; he is bound to land in hell after his
death. He cannot attain jhana or the path nor can any good kamma save him from
hell. This is evident in the story of Ajatasattu.
Story Of Ajatasattu
Ajatasattu
was the son of Bimbisara, the king of Magadha state, a devoted follower of the
Buddha. Prior to the birth of the prince, the queen had the desire to drink the
blood from the right arm of the king. When the king learnt this, he had the blood
taken out and fulfilled her desire. The soothsayers then predicted that the child
in the queen's womb would become the king's enemy. Hence the name Ajatasattu -
the potential enemy of the father while still in the mother's womb.
The queen
tried to abort the child but as the king's kamma and the child's kamma would have
it otherwise, she did not succeed in her attempt. The king had her pregnancy well
protected and the child was born. When he came of age, he was appointed heir-apparent.
Then
the young prince fell into the clutches of the evil-minded Devadatta who misused
his psychic power for his selfish ends. Turning himself into a boy with a snake
coiled around his waist, he appeared before Ajatasattu and then showed himself
as a bhikkhu. The prince was deeply impressed, and no wonder for people are very
much interested in miracles and they have blind faith in anyone who can perform
them. The prince held Devadatta in high esteem and became his devoted follower.
Then
Devadatta made another move for the success of his evil design. He told the prince
that since people did not live long, he (the prince) should kill his father and
become king while still in the prime of his life; and that he (Devadatta) on his
part would kill the Buddha. The prince failed in his attempt on the life of the
king but when the latter learnt of his desire, he handed over his kingship to
his son.
The transfer of power nonetheless came short of Devadatta's scheme.
On his advice, Ajatasattu imprisoned his father and starved him. The queen was
the only person who was permitted to visit the prison and see the king. She secretly
brought food for the king by various means and at last she was forbidden to visit
the prison. From that day, the king got nothing to eat but still he managed to
keep himself in good physical condition by pacing on the floor. Then by the king's
order, the barbers caused such injury to the feet of his father as to make it
impossible for him to walk. According to the commentary, he was thus injured because
in a previous life he walked with footwear on the platform of a pagoda and trod
with unwashed feet on a mat meant for the bhikkhus.
King Bimbisara died probably
at the age of 67. His son Ajatasattu was not evil-minded at heart. His good nature
was evident in his devotion to the Buddha after he had wronged his father, his
adoration and enshrinement of the Buddha relics and whole-hearted support which
he gave to the First Council. It was his association with the evil teacher that
led him astray to the point of patricide. His life affords us a lesson that we
should specially bear in mind.
On the very day of his father's death, his wife
gave birth to a son. On hearing the news, he became excited and overwhelmed with
great affection for his child. This reminded him of his father and he ordered
the release of the imprisoned king, but it was too late. When later on he learnt
from his mother how much he was loved and cared for by his father in his childhood,
he was seized with remorse. His life became wretched and miserable. He could not
sleep at night, haunted by the visions of hell and smitten by conscience for his
crime against his father, a devout lay disciple of the Buddha at that.
So led
by the physician Jivaka, he went to see the Buddha. At that time the Lord was
surrounded by over a thousand bhikkhus. But as they were in a contemplative mood,
all was quiet with none speaking or making any movement of their hands or feet.
Being deeply impressed, the king said, "May my son Udayabaddha be blessed
with the kind of serenity which these bhikkhus possess!" Perhaps he feared
lest his son should come to know how he seized power and try to follow in his
father's footsteps. But later his fear did become a reality for down to his great
grandson, the sons ascended the throne after killing their fathers.
King Ajatasattu
asked the Buddha about the immediate benefits of the life in the holy order. The
Lord enlarged on the benefits accruing from the holy life - the lay follower's
reverence for the bhikkhu, moral purity, the first jhana and other higher states
of consciousness in the mundane sphere, psychic powers, extinction of defilements
and the attainments of the holy path.
After hearing the sermon, Ajatasattu
formally declared himself a disciple of the Buddha. He would have attained the
first stage on the path but for his patricide. Nevertheless, from that time he
had peace of mind and after his death, he was spared the terrors of Avici hell
that would have been in store for him had he not met the Buddha.
Habitual And
Death-Bed Kammas
The other three weighty kammas, viz., killing an Arahat, causing
injury to the Buddha and wilfully causing a schism in the Sangha are also bound
to drag the offender to hell.
The other type of kamma that bears fruit is habitual
kamma, called //bahula or acinna kamma//. Failure to lead a good moral life may
become habitual if no step is taken to remove it, and it will have evil kammic
effect in a future life. So laymen should live up to the five precepts and in
case of any breach verbally affirm the will to guard one's moral life more vigilantly.
Moral purity is equally vital to the life of a bhikkhu. Failure to make amends
for any deliberate or unintentional violation of a vinaya rule will create habitual
kamma and so the bhikkhu should seek to regain moral purity through confession
and reaffirmation of his will to preserve it.
Alms-giving, reverence for parents
and teachers, contemplation of the Buddha, practice of meditation and so forth,
which one does daily are also habitual kammas that tend to bear immediate fruits.
In
the absence of habitual kamma, what we do at the last moment of our life (//asanna
kamma//: death-bed kamma) produces kammic results. In one Abhidhamma book, it
is described as being more potent than habitual kamma but perhaps this is true
only in exceptional cases. As the commentaries say, the habitual kammas probably
take precedence and bear fruits.
Nevertheless, in the light of stories in ancient
Buddhist literature we can certainly rely on death-bed kamma. A dying man who
had killed people for over 50 years attained the deva-world after offering food
to Sariputta and hearing his discourse. This story finds an echo in the experience
of a. Sinhalese fisherman who landed in the deva world after his encounter with
a thera just before his death.
As productive as the positive death-bed kamma
is its negative counterpart. A Sinhalese layman who practised meditation for many
years was disappointed as he had never seen even the light. He then concluded
that the Buddha's teaching was not the way to liberation and because of this false
view he landed in the peta world after his death.
Failure to encounter the
light, etc., in the practice of meditation may be due to wrong method, wrong effort
or lack of basic potential (parami). In the time of the Buddha, a monk called
Sunakkhatta attained divine eye but not the divine-ear because he did not have
the potential for it and, besides, there was his bad kamma as a hindrance.
So
the yogi need not be disheartened if his practice does not produce the desired
effect. By and large, practice along the right path leads to unusual experiences.
With
tranquillity and purity of mind, the material object of contemplation and the
contemplating consciousness become clearly distinct as do their causal relation
and their ceaseless, rapid arising and dissolution. At that time, the yogi sees
the light but even if he does not see it clearly he experiences joy, ecstasy,
etc., for joy, ecstasy, tranquillity, equanimity, etc., form the links of enlightenment
(//bojjhanga//) that are so vital to the development of vipassana insight. Reflection
on namarupa by itself does not lead to these higher states of consciousness.
In
the absence of habitual or death-bed kamma, there is kattata kamma which means
the kamma that one has done once in a lifetime.
Birth And Suffering
The
role of kamma in the chain of causation is underscored in the teaching sankhara
paccaya vinnanani - "From sankhara there arises rebirth consciousness",
which we have already explained in detail. The dying person is attached to the
signs and visions relating to his kamma and so on his death there follow kamma-based
rupas together with rebirth-consciousness conditioned by his death-bed attachment.
Contact
with the sense-objects gives rise to feeling which in turn produces desire. It
does not matter whether the feeling is pleasant or unpleasant. Pleasant feeling
creates attachment to pleasant objects while unpleasant feeling makes us crave
for pleasant objects. When the desire becomes strong and develops into frantic
craving (upadana), it results in activity or effort for its fulfilment. People
do good or bad deeds which they hope will help to satisfy their needs and desires.
It is this kammabhava rooted in craving that gives rise to rebirth. Rebirth is
bound up with suffering regardless of the world in which it takes place.
There
is no need to dwell on the sufferings in the animal and other lower worlds. Among
human beings, too, suffering is an inescapable fact of life. A man's suffering
begins while he is in the mother's womb. He has to work hard for his living, he
is harassed by bullies and tyrants. Even if he escapes from the dukkha inherent
in the struggle for survival, he will finally have to face old age, sickness and
death. From the time of his conception, man is headed towards these inevitable
evils of life. He is approaching them at every moment. He may live an apparently
care-free, happy life but his namarupas are forever in the process of ageing and
disintegration.
There is an Indian story which stresses the inevitability of
old age, sickness and death. A man being afraid of old age rose into the air with
the elixir of life in his mouth and hid in the sky. Another man hid under the
sea to escape sickness and still another hid in a cave in Himalayas to avoid death.
When their sons searched for them they found that the first man had become old
with all the ugly signs of decrepitude, the second man was sick unto death and
the third man was dead.
Everyone is subject to old age, sickness and death.
Once a man is reborn, there is nothing that will protect him from these evils
of existence. Hence, the Buddha's saying in the Dhammapada that there is no place
in the sky, on land or in the sea, where one can escape death.
Grief And Lamentation
Death
and the other two evils of life are inevitable so long as rebirth takes place
within the framework of disintegrating nama-rupa. Rebirth leads also to grief,
anxiety, lamentations and anguish.
We grieve when a member of the family dies.
The grief is overwhelming when we lose someone, e.g. parents or a husband on whom
we have to depend or someone, e.g. a son or a daughter whom we love dearly. Another
cause for grief is the loss of material possessions through evil-minded officials,
robbers, thieves, destructive fires, floods, cyclones, and hated heirs. Grief
is also caused by the affliction of disease and decline of health. Some sick persons
are so much depressed that their mental states become a hindrance to their recovery.
In the case of morally scrupulous monks and laymen, any damage to moral life gives
rise to anxiety. Thus, the rishi Isisinga suffered terrible anguish when his moral
integrity was undermined by the seduction of a goddess. Anxiety and repentance
also torment those who realize their mistakes after having rejected the right
view in favour of a wrong one under the guidance of a false teacher.
Besides,
there are many other misfortunes in life, e.g. accidents, viz., victimization
by robbers, etc., hardship in earning one's living and, securing the necessities
of life and so forth that occasion grief, anguish and lamentation.
There is
no need to dwell on the physical sufferings in hell and the animal and peta-worlds.
Because of his consciousness, man also suffers anguish whenever he is in contact
with unpleasant sense-objects. As he has thus to suffer mentally into the bargain,
it is for him something like adding insult to injury. This does not apply to the
Arahat or the noble one at the anagami stage, for being free from irritation (dosa)
he remains unperturbed in the face of physical suffering and so does the mindful
yogi who is free from ego-illusion that tends to add to the sense of self-pity.
Hence, the importance of the Buddha's teaching that we should be aware of unpleasant
feeling when we suffer from it.
People are unhappy when they think of the frustrations
and misfortunes that beset them in the past or at present or that may beset them
in future. They feel bitter and upset when they find themselves in distress and
burdened with misfortunes.
All these sufferings are rooted in rebirth. Life
is all suffering without the ego and without anything good even if there were
such ego to enjoy it.
According to the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada, the only
thing that links one existence with another is the cause-and-effect relationship.
From craving, kammic effort, etc., based on ignorance in one existence, there
arise five effects, viz., consciousness, body and mind, sense-organs, contact,
and feeling. These effects begin with rebirth and end in death with old age, anxiety
and other sufferings in between them.
This teaching of the Buddha will not
appeal to common people who harbour illusions of happiness and ego-entity. But
impersonality and suffering are the unmistakable facts of existence and life in
the deva-world is no exception. Some earth-bound devas have to struggle hard for
survival and are more miserable than human beings. They are called //vinipatika//
devas and they comprise ghosts, devils, etc., that belong to lower order of devas.
Some devas in heavens are not happy because they do not have good abodes and enough
attendants. Even Sakka, the king of devas, admitted to the elderly thera Mahakassapa
that he was not very much luminous as his attainment of deva-world was due to
the good kamma which he did long before the proclamation of Buddha-dhamma and
that he had to hide himself when he saw the devas who outshone him as they had
done good kamma in the time of the Buddha.
Thus, Sakka was not always happy
and so were his female attendants who told Mahakassapa that they were wretched
and miserable since they counted for little among the high-ranking queen-goddesses.
Some devas become unhappy on the approach of death that is heralded by the withering
of their bedecked flowers, the sweating from their armpits and other signs of
senility. Some devas die suddenly while indulging in celestial pleasure just like
a man whose life is cut off by stroke. Death may be a matter of seconds like the
extinction of the flame of a candle. This is borne out by the story of Subrahma
deva.
Story Of Subrahma Deva
Subrahma deva was having a good time when his
attendants, the goddesses who were singing and plucking flowers on the tree died
suddenly and landed in hell. Subrahma deva saw them suffering in hell and at the
same time he foresaw that he too would die in a few days and share the fate of
his attendants. Being much frightened, he came to the Buddha and asked the Lord
to show him the place where he could live without fear. The Lord then says that
he sees no way to salvation for every living being other than the practice of
//bojjhanga// dhamma (links of enlightenment such as mindfulness), the //dhutanga//
(ascetic practices) and //sammappadhana// (right exertion), that serve to put
an end to defilements, the control of senses (indriyasamvarasile), the control
that helps to keep off the defilements and Nibbana which means renunciation of
everything.
On hearing this, the deva and his attendants attained the first
stage on the holy path. What we should note here is the sudden death of the goddesses.
The fate of those who thus die suddenly while engaged in the pursuit of pleasure
is indeed terrible for they are likely to land in hell as a result of unwholesome
kammic impulses. If there is any sign that heralds the approach of death, it creates
fear and adds to their suffering.
Suffering that stems from attachment to pleasure
is not confined to the sensual sphere. For it is the lot, too, of the Brahmas
in their immaterial or formless (arupa) world. In the Brahma world there is no
pleasure of sex or any other sensual pleasure. The Brahmas only see, hear or think
and the objects of their seeing, etc., have no sexual overtones. But as Visuddhimagga
says, some people develop a craving for the sensual pleasures of the Brahma world
because they believe either through hearsay or speculation that such pleasures
are superior to those of the human and deva-worlds. It is no other than their
sensual craving that leads to the attainment of rupajhana, arupajhana, samapatti
and finally lands them in the rupa or arupa brahma worlds.
It is not surprising
that some people think or speak of the sensual pleasure in the Brahma world. Those
who are well aware of the true teachings of the Buddha will reject the idea but
it probably appeals to ignorant people. The Indian religious books portray Brahma
with his wife and some regard even Nibbana as a heavenly abode with celestial
mansions where we can dwell with our families and attendants.
Kamaupadana Means
All Kinds Of Excessive Craving
Kamaupadana here means not only the excessive
craving for sensual pleasure. It means also the developed forms of craving for
the material and immaterial (rupa and arupa) worlds. Hence, according to Visuddhimagga,
the yogi can do away with this inordinate craving only at the last stage of the
holy path and it is this craving that lies at the root of every effort to attain
rupa or arupa jhana. For ordinary people such jhana means rupa or arupa kammic
effort based on sensual craving and this leads to rebirth in rupa or arupa world
of Brahmas. From the time of rebirth there arises the ceaseless ageing (jara)
of nama-rupa or either of the two phenomena of life. The senility of the Brahma
is not apparent like that of a human being but still it leads to decay, and when
his course is run, he cannot avoid death.
Being free from hatred, the life
of a Brahma is not subject to grief, worry, anxiety and so forth; and the lack
of physical sensitivity makes him free from physical suffering. He cannot, however,
escape birth, old age and death that are inherent in every kind of existence.
So
escape from old age and death presupposes the effort to rule out the possibility
of rebirth. In order to avoid rebirth, we must seek to avoid wholesome or unwholesome
kamma and negation of kammic existence calls for negation of attachment and craving.
For this purpose, the mental process must end in feeling and stop short of developing
the desire for anything. This denial of desire through the contemplations, anicca,
dukkha and anatta of everything arising from the senses is the only way to avoid
craving, rebirth and other links in the causal sequence that leads to old age
and death. This means the temporary extinction of suffering which the yogi can
overcome once and forever when he develops vipassana insight on the holy path.
Attachment
To Belief As The Cause Of Rebirth
Ditthupadana means the attachment to the
view which rejects future life and kamma. Hence, ucchedaditthi which insists on
annihilation after death is a kind of ditthupadana. A person who holds such a
belief will have no need to do good or avoid evil. He will do nothing for other-worldly
welfare and seek to enjoy life as much as possible by fair means or foul. As he
has no moral scruples, most of his acts are unwholesome kammas that create death-bed
visions and lead him to the lower worlds. This is evident in the story of Nandaka
peta.
Nandaka was a general in the time of king Pingala who ruled Surattha
country that lay north of the present province of Bombay in West India. He clung
to false views e.g. that it was useless to give alms and so forth. After his death
he became a peta on a banyan tree, but when his daughter offered food to a monk
and shared her merit with him, he had an unlimited supply of celestial drinks
and food. He then realized the truth of the kammic law and repented of his adherence
of false views in his previous life. One day, he led king Pingala to his abode
and entertained the king and his followers to a celestial feast. The king was
much surprised and in response to his inquiry, the peta gave an account of his
rebirth in the lower worlds as a kammic result of his false views, immorality
and vehement opposition to alms-giving; and the sudden change of his fortune following
his sharing of merit acquired by his daughter. He also described the suffering
that he would have to undergo after his death, the terrible suffering in hell
that he was to share with those who held wrong views and vilified the holy men
during their earthly existence.
The moral of the story is that attachment to
wrong views (e.g. that an act has no kammic result, etc.) leads to unwholesome
acts and rebirth in the lower worlds.
The commentary also says that clinging
to uccheda (annihilation) belief leads to deva or Brahma worlds if annihilation
is supposed to follow demise on those higher planes of existence, but devas and
Brahmas apparently do not believe in their annihilation after death. By and large,
the belief in annihilation makes people prone to misdeeds.
Kammic deeds may
also be motivated by eternity belief (sassataditthi). The belief creates the illusion
of personal identity, the illusion which makes a man believe that it is his permanent
self that will have to bear the consequences of his good or bad deeds in a future
life. So he devotes himself to what he regards as good deeds. Some of his deeds
may be bad in fact, but in any case his deeds, whether good or bad, that arise
from eternity belief lead to rebirth and suffering.
Still, another mainspring
of kammic deed is superstitious belief. There are many superstitions, for example,
that seeing a man of low class brings about misfortune, that the beehive or a
guana in a house is a sure omen of poverty. Under the influence of such beliefs,
a person may do evil, such as treating an outcaste cruelly or killing the bees.
This is borne out by the Cittasambhuta jataka.
In the jataka the bodhisatta
was a man of low chandala class called Citta. Ananda was then his cousin named
Sambhuta. They made their living by dancing with bamboos. One day, the daughter
of a merchant and the daughter of a high-caste brahmin who were very superstitious
went for a picnic with their attendants. At the sight of the two dancers, they
considered it an ill omen and returned home. Their irate followers then beat the
two men for denying them the pleasure of the picnic.
The two dancers then went
to Taxila and disguised as brahmins, they devoted themselves to learning. Citta
became a student leader by virtue of his intelligence. One day, their teacher
sent them to a place where they were required to recite the brahmanical parittas.
There having got his mouth burnt by drinking hot milk unmindfully, Sambhuta uttered,
"Khalu, Khalu" in his dialect and Citta was so absent-minded as to say,
"niggala, niggala" ("spit out, spit out"); these slips of
the tongue led to their undoing for their high caste brahmin students found out
their secret. They were beaten and expelled from school.
On the advice of their
teacher they became rishis (forest ascetics or hermits). After their death they
passed on to the animal world, first as two deers and as two eagles in their next
existence. Then Citta became the son of the chief Brahmin and remembered his three
previous lives. He led the life of a hermit and attained jhana and psychic powers.
Sambhuta became a king, he remembered his low caste life as a chandala and spent
his time in the pursuit of sensual pleasure.
By means of his psychic power,
Citta knew his brother's spiritual immaturity and after waiting for 50 years he
came to the king's garden. The king recognized the hermit as his brother in a
previous life and was prepared to share royal pleasures with him. But being aware
of the kammic effects of good and bad deeds, the bodhisatta had pledged himself
to a life of self-restraint, renunciation and detachment. He reminded the king
of their close associations in their previous lives, to wit, as low-caste chandalas,
as deers and as birds. His object was to point out the erratic course of kammic
life and to urge the king to become an ascetic for further spiritual progress.
But it was hard for Sambhuta to give up his worldly pleasures. So the bodhisatta
returned to the Himalayas. Then the king became disenchanted with his worldly
pleasures and went to the Himalayas where he was welcomed by the hermit. There,
as a hermit he devoted himself to spiritual exercises and attained jhana and psychic
powers.
Superstition And Evil Rebirth
What we wish to emphasize in this
story is the evil kammas that arise from superstitions. The role of superstition
as the cause of evil deeds is also evident in the story of Koka, the hunter.
In
the time of the Buddha, there was a hunter called Koka in a certain village. One
day he set out with his dogs to hunt in the forest. On the way he met a monk who
was out on his begging round. The hunter considered this encounter an omen that
boded no good. As luck would have it, he did not get any animal for food on that
day. On his return he again met the monk. Now blind with fury and ill-will, he
set his dogs on the monk. The monk had to run and climb up a tree.
He sat on
a branch that was not very high. The hunter poked at the feet of the monk with
the sharp end of an arrow. The latter had to lift his feet one after the other
and at last his robe got loose and slipped down. It fell upon the hunter and seeing
him thus wrapped up in the robe, the dogs mistook him for the monk and attacked
him. Thus, he was killed by his own dogs. Then realizing that they had killed
their master, the dogs ran away.
The monk got down from the tree and reported
the matter to the Buddha. Thereupon, the Lord says, "The foolish man wrongs
a person who has never wronged another. He wrongs a person who is free from defilements,
but his evil deed boomerangs on him just like the particle of dust that returns
to us when we throw it against the wind."
Here, the hunter's terrible
death, his rebirth in the lower worlds and suffering arise from an evil deed that
in turn is rooted in his superstition. Some people get alarmed when an astrologer
says that the position of planets bodes no good for them. So they offer flowers
and candles to the Buddha image, give dana to the monks, hear the sermons and
practise meditation. Some have the parittas recited by monks to stave off the
impending evil that they associate with their unpleasant dreams. Their good deeds
lead to good rebirth, but like the other rebirths that stem from evil deeds, it
too is fraught with suffering.
Some ignorant people do evil to keep off the
misfortunes that might befall them. The jatakas mention the animal sacrifice of
some kings that involves the killing of four goats, four horses, four men and
so forth as propitiatory offerings to gods. On one occasion, this kind of rite
was planned by king Kosala in the time of the Buddha.
The king had taken a
fancy to a married woman and so one day he sent her husband on an errand to a
distant place. Should he fail to accomplish the task entrusted to him and return
to the capital on the same day, he was to be punished. The man carried out the
king's order and returned before sunset, but the city gate was closed and so being
unable to enter the city, he spent the night at Jetavana monastery.
Overwhelmed
with lust and evil desire, the king could hardly sleep in his palace. He heard
the voices of the four men who were suffering in hell for having committed adultery
in their previous lives. It was perhaps by virtue of the Buddha's will and psychic
power that the king heard these voices from hell. The king was frightened and
in the morning, he sought the advice of the Brahmin counsellor. The Brahmin said
that the voices portended imminent misfortune and that in order to stave it off,
the king should sacrifice elephants, horses, etc., each kind of animals numbering
a hundred.
The king made preparations for the animal sacrifice. How cruel is
human nature that dictates the sacrifice of thousands of lives to save one's own
life. Among the potential victims there were human beings, and hearing their cries,
queen Mallika approached the king and asked him to seek the advice of the Buddha.
The
Buddha assured the king that the voices had nothing to do with him. They were
the voices of four young men who, having seduced married women in the time of
Kassapa Buddha, were now suffering in Lohakumbhi hell. They were now repentent
and belatedly trying to express their desire to do good after their release from
hell. The king was very much frightened and vowed never to lust for another man's
wife. He told the Buddha how the previous night had seemed very long because he
could not sleep. The man who had fetched what the king wanted said too that he
had travelled one yojana the previous day. Thereupon, the Buddha uttered the verse:
"To one who cannot sleep, the night seems long; to the weary traveller, a
yojana is a long distance. Similarly, for the foolish man who does not know the
true dhamma, the life-cycle is long."
After hearing this gatha, many people
attained sotapanna and other stages on the holy path. The king ordered the release
of all living beings that were to be sacrificed. But for the Buddha's words, he
would have done unwholesome kammas, and this story shows how superstitious beliefs
lead to evil deeds.
Fanaticism Or Religious Upadana
Good or evil kammas
are also born of religious attachments. By and large, people believe that theirs
is the only true religion, that all other religions are false. So they try to
spread their religion, convert other people by force or otherwise persecute the
non-believers. All these evils had their origin in religious upadana or fanaticism.
Again
kammic deeds may stem from attachment to ideology or views on worldly matters.
Some people seek to impose their creed on other people by every means in their
power; they propagate it in various ways and they discredit or slander or undermine
the unity of those who do not agree with them. All these efforts and activities
form the kammabhava due to upadana.
In short, all obsessions with practices,
and beliefs other than the ego-belief mean excessive attachment to views that
leads to kammic deeds.
Silabbatupadana - Attachment To Wrong Practices
Some
people believe that they can attain salvation through certain practices that have
nothing to do with the Four Noble Truths. Such a belief is called silabbatupadana.
It is silabbatupadana, too, to worship animals, to adopt the animal way of life,
to perform certain rites and ceremonies in the hope of attaining salvation.
According
to Visuddhimagga, some people rely on these practices as the way to salvation
and do kammic deeds that lead to rebirth in the human world, the deva world and
the material (rupa) and immaterial (arupa) worlds.
The Visuddhimagga refers
only to kammas leading to the human and other higher worlds. It makes no mention
of the kammas leading to the lower worlds. It does not follow, however, that silabbatupadana
does not give rise to bad kammas. The commentary does not mention the evil kamma
arising from silabbatupadana only because it is too obvious to need allusion.
It is said in the Kukkuravatika and other suttas that a man is reborn as an ox
or a dog if he lives to the letter like those animals in deed, word or thought
or he is reborn in hell or animal world if he accepts the false belief but does
not practise it fully. Needless to say, the killing of animals as a sacrifice
to gods that arises from this upadana leads to the lower worlds, and so do other
misdeeds resulting from the upadana that is bound up with certain forms of worship,
rites and ceremonies.
In short, every belief in the efficacy of a practice
as an antidote to evil is silabbatupadana. According to the commentaries on Visuddhimagga
it is silabbatupadana even to rely entirely on conventional morality and mundane
jhana as the way to liberation. The arupa jhanas attained by Alara and Udaka originated
in this upadana and so do the deeds of many people that are based on faith in
God. All these upadanas leads to rebirth and suffering.
Attavadupadana - Attachment
To Ego-Belief
The last upadana (attavadupadana) is attachment to ego-belief.
It is the strong conviction about the ego entity, the firm belief that the ego
exists permanently, that it is the agent of every deed, speech and thought.
Few
people are free from this upadana. The average man believes that it is "I"
who sees, hears, moves, etc. This illusion of ego-entity is the mainspring of
self-love and concern about the welfare of one's self. The universality and omnipotence
of self-love are underscored in Queen Mallika's reply to king Kosala.
Mallika
was originally the daughter of a flower vendor. One day she met the Buddha on
the way and offered her food. After eating the food, the Lord told Ananda that
the girl would become the queen of king Kosala. On that very day, king Kosala
who was defeated in the battle, fled on horseback. Utterly exhausted and forlorn,
the king rested in the flower-garden where he was tenderly attended on by Mallika.
Being much pleased, the king took her to the palace and made her his chief queen.
The Buddha's prophecy came true because of her recent good kamma and her good
deed in the past existence.
But Mallika was not as good looking as other lesser
queens. Moreover, as a woman born of a poor family, she felt ill at ease among
the courtiers. So in order to cheer her the king one day asked her whom she loved
most. The answer which he expected was "Your Majesty, I love you most."
He would then tell her that he too, loved her more than anyone else and this demonstration
of his love would, so he thought, increase their intimacy and make her more at
home in the palace.
Nevertheless, as an intelligent woman who had the courage
of conviction, Mallika replied frankly that there was no one whom she loved more
than herself. She asked the king whom he loved most. The king had to admit that
he too loved himself more than anyone else. He reported this dialogue to the Buddha.
Then the Lord said, "There is no one in this world who loves another person
more than himself. Everyone loves himself or herself most. So everyone should
have sympathy and avoid ill-treating another person."
In this saying of
the Buddha, the word "self" or in Pali, atta, does not mean the atta
or atman of the ego-belief. It refers only to self in its conventional sense or
the self that a man speaks of to distinguish his own person from other living
beings. But the ego-belief is also a source of self-love. The more powerful the
belief is, the greater is the love of oneself.
We do not love anyone more than
our own selves. One loves one's wife or husband or child only as a helpmate, an
attendant or a support. Marital or parental love is no more real than love of
precious jewellery. So if a person says that his love of someone is greater than
his love of himself, his words must be taken with a large grain of salt. In cases
of life-and-death crisis, even a mother will not care for her child.
Once a
woman travelling with a caravan across the desert was left behind with her child
as she was asleep when the caravan departed. As the sun rose higher in the sky,
the sands became hotter and she had to place her basket and then her clothes under
her feet. Still the heat became more unbearable till at last she was forced to
put down her child under her body. Hence, the saying that even a mother will sacrifice
her child for self-preservation.
Because of this self-love based on ego-belief,
man seeks his welfare or the welfare of his family by fair means or foul. He does
not hesitate to do evil that serves his interests. But the belief in a permanent
self also leads to good kammas. Some people are motivated by the belief and so
they practise sila, dana, jhana, etc., for their welfare in afterlife. As a result
they land in deva and Brahma worlds, but there they have to face again old age,
death, and other evils of existence.
In short, every effort to seek one's welfare
in the present life or hereafter is rooted in ego-belief. Such kammic effort differs
from that arising from kamupadana only in that its mainspring is obsession with
personal identity whereas in the case of the latter the driving-force is craving
for sensual pleasure. Nevertheless, for those who are strongly attached to ego-belief,
egoism is closely bound up with sensual desire.
As for the Ariyas who are wholly
free from ego-belief, they are motivated only by kamupadana when they do good.
Thus, the dana, sila and bhavana of Anathapindika, Visakha, Mahanama and others
on the holy path may stem from their desire for better life in the human and deva-worlds
or for the attainment of higher stages on the path.
Story Of Ugga
The anagami
Ariyas do good presumably because of their desire for the bliss in material and
immaterial spheres and arahatship. It is, of course, arahatship that can help
remove sensual craving. The desire for arahatship as the motivation for doing
good in the case of anagami yogi is evident in the story of Ugga.
Ugga was
a householder in Vesali city. The Buddha spoke of the eight wonderful attributes
possessed by Ugga. In response to the inquiry by a monk about the Lord's reference
to his attributes, Ugga said that he knew nothing about it but that he had eight
distinctive qualities which were as follows.
l. When he saw the Buddha for
the first time, he concluded decisively that Gotama was the real, all-Enlightened
Buddha.
2. He attained anagami insight into the Four Noble Truths when he heard
the Buddha's discourse. He observed the five precepts that included abstinence
from sexual intercourse.
3. He had four young wives. He told them about his
sexual abstinence and permitted them to return to their parents' homes or to marry
the men of their own choice. At the request of his eldest wife, he willingly performed
the wedding ceremony before giving her away to the man she loved.
4. He had
resolved to spend all his wealth on giving alms to holy men of high moral character.
5.
He approached the bhikkhus respectfully.
6. He heard the bhikkhus' sermon respectfully.
He preached if the bhikkhus did not give a sermon.
7. The devas came to him
and said, "The doctrine of the Buddha is very good." He replied that
the Dhamma was a good doctrine whether or not they said so about it. He did not
feel conceited for his dialogue with the devas.
8. He found himself free from
the first five attachments that lead to the lower, sensual worlds.
One day
Ugga, the householder who possessed these eight qualities and had attained the
anagami stage on the path, offered food and robes which he liked very much to
the Buddha. The Lord commented on the nature of alms-giving as follows:
"One
who offers anything that pleases him or that he prizes highly gets something which
he adores. One who offers to the Ariyan Noble who is of high moral character is
doing an act of dana that it is hard for ordinary people to do and therefore he
gets what he wants very much."
Some years later, Ugga died and passed
on to the Suddhavasa brahma-world. Before long he came and paid respect to the
Buddha. He said that he had attained Arahatship that was indeed the object of
his aspiration when he offered his much beloved food to the Lord in his previous
existence. The Buddha again commented on the nature of kammic benefits of alms-giving
- how the giver got what he prized most if he offered his much-prized object,
how he attained a rare object if he offered rare things, how he attained to a
much extolled stage if he offered much-extolled objects.
The moral of this
story is that one may even attain Arahatship, the summum bonum of the holy life
as the kammic result of giving away one's much prized and precious objects. Ugga's
alms-giving was motivated by the desire for Arahatship and it is this desire,
or kamupadana that formed his driving force. Some people may object to making
the term kamupadana synonymous with the desire for Arahatship and label it rather
kusalachanda (wholesome desire) but then they will have to explain what kind of
upadana it is that gives rise to good acts of Ariya such as dana, sila, etc.
Vipassana
Practice And Upadana
The practice of vipassana, too, is to be attributed to
kamupadana of a person who seeks permanent deliverance from evils of existence.
Ordinary people have to contemplate to be free from the four upadanas while the
Ariyas have to contemplate to overcome kamupadana. Thus, vipassana practice stands
for the conquest of upadana. According to Visuddhimagga and another commentary,
viz., Sammohavinodani, avijja is indirectly the cause of good acts in that one
has to do good for liberation from avijja and it is also said that bhavana or
vipassana practice is one of the good acts in the sensual world which one has
to do for such liberation.
The question then arises as to whether vipassana
practice can lead to rebirth. The commentaries on Anguttara Nikaya and Patthana
point to such a possibility. According to the commentary on Anguttara Nikaya,
the first three right views lead to good rebirth, the last two right views, viz.,
the view that is born of fruition on the path (phala-sammaditthi) and the view
that results from vipassana practice tend to liberate the yogi from life-cycle
(samsara). It says, however, on the authority of a learned thera (Culabhaya) that
the yogi is subject to rebirth for seven times before he attains Arahatship. According
to Patthana, contemplation of appamana (conditions of existence) leads to rebirth
in sensual sphere, and the commentary defines appamana-cetana as maturity (gotrabhu
cetana). Hence, it is reasonable to assume that vipassana practice can give rise
to rebirth before Arahatship is won.
But vipassana can ensure freedom from
samsara through insight into anicca, dukkha and anatta of all sense-objects -
an insight that keeps off the defilement of craving for them. This non-arising
of craving means non-arising of kamma and rebirth. Thus, vipassana insight helps
to offset kamma and its samsaric consequences by tadangapahana (overcoming by
opposite).
Moreover, through inductive generalization, the yogi realizes the
anicca, dukkha and anatta of other phenomena that he has contemplated. Thus, he
keeps off the defilements and their kammic potentials by repression (vikkhambhana
pahana). Then, there follows the Ariyan insight on the path that helps to root
out the defilements. The emergence of this insight may be likened to the signing
of an official letter by the head of a government department. The act of the officer-in-charge
is, in fact, to give the finishing touch to the lot of work done by his subordinates.
We cannot ignore the major contribution of vipassana practice in the pursuit of
spiritual enlightenment any more than we can ignore the work of office staff or
the cumulative effect of repeated use of a saw that makes it finally possible
for the woodcutter to exterminate the tree once and forever. As the sub-commentary
on Visuddhimagga says:
"Transcendent insight on the path helps to stamp
out, root and branch only the defilements which the yogi has done his utmost to
overcome through mundane vipassana insight."
Those who do not contemplate,
labour under the illusion of bliss and ego-entity. The illusion leads to craving,
kammic efforts, rebirth and all the sufferings that are inherent in life-cycle.
Life-Cycle
And Three Time Dimensions
The doctrine of Paticcasamuppada describes twelve
causes and effects viz., (1) ignorance, (2) kamma formations, (3) consciousness,
(4) mind and body, (5) six senses, (6) sense-contact, (7) feeling, (8) craving,
(9) clinging, (10) becoming (bhava), (11) birth (jati), (12) old age and death.
According
to the doctrine, ignorance and craving are the two main sources of suffering.
There are two life-cycles, the anterior life-cycle and the posterior life-cycle.
The anterior life-cycle begins with ignorance as its main source and ends with
feeling, while the posterior life-cycle begins with craving and ends with death.
In the former life-cycle, ignorance (avijja) and kamma formations (sankhara) in
the past life leads to rebirth, while in the latter life-cycle, craving (tanha)
and clinging (upadana) cause rebirth in future. The two life-cycles show how a
man's lifetimes are linked with one another through cause and effect.
Again,
if the doctrine of dependent origination is to be described on time-scale, avijja
and sankhara are two links in the past life, the links from vinnana to kammabhava
concern the present life, while birth, old age and death are the links that future
has in store for us. Thus, the doctrine refers to three time dimensions.
Five
Causes In The Past
The doctrine describes the past cause only in terms of avijja
and sankhara but in point of fact avijja is invariably followed by tanha and upadana
and sankhara too always lead to kammabhava. So Patisambhidamagga comments on the
doctrine as follows.
"Avijja is ignorance that dominates us while doing
a kammic deed. Sankhara means collection and exertion of effort. Tanha is the
craving for the results of an action in the present life and hereafter. Upadana
is obsession with action and its result. Kammabhava is volition. These five factors
in the past constitute the cause of present rebirth."
Thus, we have to
consider all these five links viz., avijja, tanha, upadana, sankhara and kammabhava
if we are to describe the past cause fully. Of these, avijja, tanha and upadana
are labelled kilesavatta (cycle or round of defilements). Sankhara and kammabhava
are called kammavatta (cycle of actions). The commentary makes a distinction between
sankhara and kammabhava, describing the prior effort, planning, etc., preparatory
to an act as sankhara and the volition at the moment of doing the act as kammabhava.
Thus, seeking money, buying things, etc., prior to an act of dana comprise sankhara
while the state of consciousness at the time of offering is kammabhava. Preliminary
activities leading to an act of murder are sankhara while cetana or volition at
the time of killing is kammabhava.
Distinction Between Sankhara And Kammabhava
The
other kind of distinction between sankhara and kammabhava is based on impulse-moments.
It is said that an act of murder or alms-giving involves seven impulse-moments.
The first six impulse-moments are called sankhara while the last is termed kammabhava.
The
third way of making the distinction is to describe volition (cetana) as kammabhava
and other mental states associated with volition as sankhara.
The last method
of classification is helpful when we speak of good deeds in rupa and arupa spheres.
All the three methods apply in the case of good or bad acts in sensual world,
but the first method is most illuminating for those who are not well informed.
Alternatively,
Visuddhimagga attributes rebirth to flash-backs, visions and hallucinations that
hold a dying person's attention at the last moment of his life. So according to
this commentary, kammabhava may be defined as the volition (cetana) that motivated
his good or bad acts in the past and the sankhara as the mental state conditioned
by his death-bed experiences.
Present Effect Due To Past Cause
Thus, owing
to the rounds of defilements and kamma comprising the five causes in the past,
there arises rebirth-consciousness together with mind-body, six bases, impressions
and feeling. These five effects are collectively called vipaka vatta (round of
effects). Because of their ignorance, common people have the illusion of pleasantness
about every sense-object and mind-object. They develop craving, thereby starting
again the vicious cycle of causes and effects that represent their rounds of suffering.
Consciousness,
the six sense bases, etc., arise as the kammic result of past kammas. It is a
matter of cause-and-effect relationship just like all other phenomena. This leaves
no room for ego, God or Prime Mover. The only difference is the moral law governing
this relationship, the nature of feeling, whether pleasant or unpleasant, being
dependent on the good or bad sankhara in the past. In reality there is no person
who has pleasant or unpleasant feeling nor any being who causes him to have such
an experience. Life is only the continuum of consciousness, impression, etc.,
as conditioned by five factors, viz., ignorance, craving, etc.
Knowledge For
Vipassana Practice
Those who have a smattering of Paticcasamuppada or Abhidhamma
say that it is impossible to practise meditation without a knowledge of these
teachings. But, in fact the yogi who practises under the guidance of a learned
teacher need not bother about higher Buddhist philosophy for he can follow the
teacher's instructions if he knows only that life is a mental and physical process
characterized by impermanence, suffering and insubstantiality. The adequacy of
this simple knowledge to meet the intellectual need of the yogi who is bent on
Arahatship is borne out by the Buddha in Culatanha-sankhaya sutta. There the Lord
goes on to talk about vipassana practice. In the sutta, the yogi's understanding
of nama-rupa is termed "abhijanati" which, says the commentary, means
full comprehension and refers to nama-rupa paricchedanana and paccayapariggahanana.
Through
contemplation, the yogi knows all phenomena analytically as anicca, dukkha and
anatta (parijanati). Here, the Pali terms refer to sammasananana and other vipassana
insights.
As regards Paticcasamuppada, a knowledge of the conditionality and
cause-effect relationship in life that rules out a being ego or self is sufficient.
It is not necessary to know the twelve links or the twenty main points of the
doctrine thoroughly. If the practice of vipassana presupposes such a comprehensive
knowledge, it would be unthinkable for a man of low intelligence like, say, thera
Culapanna. The thera's memory was so poor that he could not remember a few gathas
that he had learnt for four months. Nevertheless, he attained Arahatship in a
few hours when he practised contemplation as instructed by the Buddha.
Another
laywoman, Matikamata by name, attained the third stage (anagami) on the holy path
in advance of some bhikkhus who were her meditation teachers. She did not know
much about Abhidhamma and Paticcasamuppada. There were many other yogis like this
woman and Culapanna thera. So it is possible for a yogi to attain the holy path
if he contemplates even though he may not have thoroughly learnt the higher teachings
of the Buddha.
Not to know the real nature of pleasant or unpleasant feeling
is avijja (ignorance). It is tanha to like a sense-object and it is upadana to
have craving for it. To seek the object of one's desire, to do good or evil for
one's happiness or welfare in the present life or hereafter means sankhara and
kammabhava. These five factors are the present causes and they give rise to rebirth
after death. The doctrine of Paticcasamuppada mentions only three causes, viz.,
vedana, tanha and upadana but in reality these three factors imply two other causes,
viz., avijja and sankhara since these two are the mainsprings of tanha and kammabhava
respectively. So Patisambhidamagga describes all these five factors as causes
of rebirth in future.
Removing The Present Causes
Every good or evil act
means the complete conjunction of these five present causes and occasions for
such a conjunction in a single lifetime may number by thousands. Under certain
circumstances these causes may lead to rebirth after death or two or three rebirths
successively. Every existence is bound up with old age, grief, death, etc., and
if we wish to avoid these sufferings, we will have to remove the present causes.
To
this end we should note all physical phenomena, "seeing", "hearing",
etc., at the moment of their arising. With the development of concentration, we
note their instant passing away and become aware of their impermanence, unsatisfactoriness
and unreliability. This awareness helps us to overcome ignorance and illusion
that fuel craving, attachment and kammic effort: we thus keep the five present
causes inoperative and inactive, thereby forestalling rebirth and consequent suffering.
This
method of removing the causes is labelled //tadangapahana// - overcoming some
defilements through contemplation. By this method, the yogi attains //tadanganibbuti//
- partial extinction of defilements through contemplation. Later on, there arises
the insight on the Ariyan path which means the extinction of all sankhara and
the realization of Nibbana (//samucchedapahana//).
The defilements and kammas
are then done away with, once and forever. The yogis who attain sotapatti stage
overcome the defilements and kammas that lead to the lower worlds, and those that
may cause good rebirth for more than seven lifetimes, the yogis at the sakadagami
stage overcome those that may cause more than two rebirths while the yogis at
the anagami stage remove those that lead to rebirth in sensual worlds. Finally,
the yogi who attains arahatta stage eradicates the remaining defilements and kamma.
In other words, he becomes an Arahat, the Noble one who is worthy of honour because
he is wholly free from defilements.
Arahat's Outlook On Life
The arahat
has no illusion about the nature of sense-objects. He is aware of their unwholesomeness
and this means he realizes the truth of dukkha because he is free from ignorance
(avijja). So he has no craving for anything. Inevitably, he has to fill the biological
needs of his physical body such as eating, sleeping, etc., but he regards them
as conditioned (sankhara) dukkha and finds nothing that is pleasant to him.
The
question arises as to whether he should long for speedy death to end such suffering.
But the desire for early death or dissolution of the physical body too is a destructive
desire and the Arahat is free from it. So there is an Arahat's saying in the Theragatha
that he has neither the wish to die nor the wish to live.
The Arahat does not
wish to live a long life for life means largely the burden of suffering inherent
in khandha. Although the burden of khandha needs constant care and attention,
it is not in the least reliable. To many middle-aged or old people, life offers
little more than frustration, disappointment and bitterness. Living conditions
go from bad to worse, physical health declines and there is nothing but complete
disintegration and death that await us. Yet, because of ignorance and attachment
many people take delight in existence. On the other hand, the Arahat is disillusioned
and he finds life dreary and monotonous. Hence, his distaste for life.
But
the Arahat does not prefer death either. For death-wish is an aggressive instinct
which he has also conquered. What he wants is to attain Nibbana, a longing that
is somewhat analogous to that of a worker who wishes to get his daily or monthly
wage.
The worker does not like to face hardship and privations for he has to
work inevitably just to make his living but he does not want to lose his job either.
He wants only money and looks forward to pay-day. Likewise, the Arahat waits for
the moment when he should attain Nibbana without anything left of his body-mind
complex. So when they think of their life-span, the Arahats wonder how long they
will have to bear the burden of nama-rupa khandha. Because of his disillusionment,
the Arahat's life-stream is completely cut off after Nibbana, hence it is called
//anupadisesanibbana//.
Not Annihilation But Extinction Of Suffering
Those
who believe in ego or soul deprecate Nibbana as eternal death of a living being.
In reality, it is the total extinction of suffering that results from the non-recurrence
of psycho-physical phenomena together with their causes viz., kamma and defilements.
So the Buddha points out the cessation of upadana arising from the complete cessation
of craving, the process of becoming (bhava) ceasing to arise due to cessation
of upadana and so on. With the non-arising of rebirth, there is the complete cessation
of old age, death and other kinds of suffering.
Here, the popular view is that
birth, old age and death are evils that afflict living beings but, in point of
fact, these evils characterize only the psycho-physical process and have nothing
to do with a living entity. Since there is no ego or soul, it makes no sense to
speak of the annihilation of a living being with the cessation of rebirth and
suffering.
So those who regard Nibbana as annihilation are not free from the
illusion of ego-entity. To the intelligent Buddhist, Nibbana means only cessation
of suffering. This is evident in the story of bhikkhu Yamaka in the time of the
Buddha.
Story Of Yamaka
Yamaka believed that the Arahat was annihilated
after his death. He clung to his view although other bhikkhus pointed out its
falsity. Then, Sariputta summoned him. Questioned by the elder thera, Yamaka admitted
that all the five khandhas are impermanent and suffering, that it would be a mistake
to regard them as one's possession or self. Sariputta told him to see the five
khandhas as they really are. He would then become disillusioned, detached and
liberated.
While hearing the sermon, Yamaka attained the sotapanna stage. He
was now free from false beliefs. Sariputta then questioned him again. In response
to the thera's questions, Yamaka said that he did not identify the Arahat with
the physical body, the perception, the feeling, conformations (sankhara) or the
consciousness. Nor did he believe that the Arahat existed elsewhere without the
rupa, vedana or any other khandha. Therefore, since the Arahat or a living entity
is not to be found in the five khandhas even before death, it makes no sense to
speak of the Arahat's annihilation after his parinibbana.
Yamaka confessed
his mistaken view. He was now free from it and he knew what to say about the destiny
of the Arahat. If someone were to ask him, "What happens when the Arahat
passes away?", he would answer, "The death of the Arahat means the complete
cessation of suffering inherent in the impermanent five khandhas."
This
statement about the Arahat was confirmed by Sariputta. The thera likened the khandhas
to the murderer who poses as a friend and said that identifying the khandhas with
atta is like welcoming the murderer, etc.
Here, the thera Yamaka at first believed
that the Arahat was annihilated after death, that there was nothing left. This
belief presupposes the illusion of ego-entity and so the annihilation view of
Nibbana is called ucchedaditthi, the view that Nibbana means the negation of atta
after death. When he realized the truth and attained sotapanna, Yamaka said that
the death of the Arahat means the complete extinction of suffering inherent in
the impermanent five khandhas.
To sum up the way to the cessation of suffering,
failure to note seeing, hearing and other psycho-physical phenomena leads to the
arising of avijja, tanha, upadana, kamma, and sankhara that in turn cause birth,
old age and death in future. Mindfulness of all phenomena forestalls the five
present causes viz., avijja, etc., and the five consequences that involve suffering.
Bhikkhuni
Vajira On The Nature Of Khandhas
Moreover, it is the extinction of suffering
that is underscored in the famous saying of bhikkhuni Vajira. While she was sitting
under a tree near Jetavana monastery, Mara appeared and in order to scare and
discomfit her, asked her,"Hey, bhikkhuni! Who created a living being? Where
is the creator? How did a living being originate and how would he come to an end?"
Bhikkhuni
Vajira replied, "O, Mara! What do you think is a living being? Is not your
belief in a living being an illusion? What you regard as a living being is nothing
but a heap of sankhara. No being is to be found in this heap, a living being (sattava)
is merely a term for the collection of five khandhas viz., rupa, vedana, etc.,
just as "chariot" is the term for the combination of wheel, axle, etc.;
there is no being but only the group of five khandhas: That cause suffering -
in fact, it is only suffering (dukkha) that arises, exists and ends. There is
no arising and extinction of anything other than dukkha."
Therefore, a
living being is to be understood only in the popular acceptation of the term.
It does not exist in the absolute sense; there is only the psycho-physical process
which comprises ignorance, craving, attachment, kamma and kammic effort as causes
and consciousness, body-mind, sense bases, impression and feeling as effects.
These effects in turn become causes that give rise to rebirth and suffering.
Four
Layers, Three Links And Twenty Factors
Paticcasamuppada refers to four groups
of factors involved in the chain of causation viz., the first group of causes
in the past, the second group of effects in the present life, the third group
of causes in the present and the last group of effects in the future. The groups
are labelled //sangaha// or //sankhepa// in Pali. They may also be translated
as layers.
There are three links for the four layers - the link between the
past and the present involving sankhara as cause and vinnana as effect, the link
between the present effect and present cause with vedana and tanha as cause and
effect, and the third link between present cause and future with bhava as cause
and jati (birth) as effect.
Then, there are twenty factors (akara) involved
in the psycho-physical process viz., five causes in the past, five effects in
the present, five causes in the present and five effects in the future.
Three
Cycles
Again the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada deals with three cycles or rounds
(vattas) viz., the cycles of defilements, kamma and fruits. The first cycle comprises
ignorance, desire and attachment (upadana), the second (kamma cycle) comprises
kammic effort and kammic existence (bhava), and the third vipaka cycle involves
consciousness, mind-body, sense bases, impression and feeling.
The third vipaka
cycle again leads to the cycle of defilement, the cycle of defilement again gives
rise to kamma cycle and so on, each of the three cycles occurring one after another
ceaselessly in a vicious circle. The three cycles form the samsaric round of suffering.
Samsara means continuum of nama-rupa (psycho-physical) process occurring in terms
of cause-effect relationship.
In order to liberate ourselves from the samsaric
cycle of suffering, we do good deeds. We become familiar with the Buddha's teaching
about the Four Noble Truths. We practise contemplation at the moment of seeing,
hearing, etc. We realize the ceaseless arising and dissolution of psycho-physical
phenomena. This vipassana insight forestalls illusion and frees us from craving
and attachment that leads to rebirth and suffering.
Visuddhimagga describes
the contribution of kamma to the cycle of defilement. A certain yogi sees how
mind-body complex is born of kammic cycle and vipaka (kammic fruits) cycle. He
realizes that there are only kamma and its fruits: As a result of kamma in the
past, there arise nama-rupa in the present life; nama-rupa is the cause of present
kamma; it gives rise to kammic deeds in present life. These kammic deeds lead
to rebirth. In this way there is the arising (becoming) of nama-rupa (being) without
cessation.
Here, the arising or becoming of nama-rupa means the arising of
phenomena from the senses e.g. seeing, hearing, etc. These lead to defilement,
kamma, and rebirth successively. Thus, the nama-rupa process is conditioned by
the cycle of kamma and its fruit. According to Visuddhimagga, this insight-knowledge
means paccayapariggahanana and kankhavitarana visuddhi (Purity of Escape from
all Doubt).
Four Aspects Of Paticcasamuppada
There are four aspects of the
doctrine of Paticcasamuppada that we should bear in mind. The first is the individual
character of the psycho-physical process that comprises the three successive existences.
Although the doctrine stresses the conditionality of all phenomena, it is a mistake
to believe that avijja, tanha and other causes concern one person, while vinnana,
nama-rupa and other causes concern one person, and while vinnana, nama-rupa and
other effects concern another person for this belief implies the total extinction
of a living being after death, the annihilation - view which Buddhism rejects.
In reality, the nama-rupa process is analogous to, say, the evolution of a mango
tree. The mango seed becomes a seedling, the seedling turns into a young plant
and the plant grows into a tree. Here the seed, the young plant and the tree form
a continuous, unbroken line of cause and effect relationship so that strictly
speaking, it is impossible to distinguish between the tree and the plant.
Likewise,
avijja, sankhara, vinnana, etc., occur in unbroken succession in terms of cause
and effect and so it is reasonable to speak of a particular person involved in
the process. It was Devadatta, for example, who committed schism and it is Devadatta
who is now suffering in hell. The merchant Anathapindika did good deeds and it
was he himself who landed in the deva-world after his death.
The False View
Of Sati
This identification of the doer of kammic deed with the bearer of its
fruit makes it possible for us to avoid the annihilation-view. On the other hand,
some people believe in the transmigration of a living being as a whole from one
life to another. This mistaken view called sassataditthi (eternity-belief) was
held by bhikkhu Sati in the time of the Buddha.
It was the Jatakas that led
bhikkhu Sati to this view. He learnt how the Buddha identified himself with the
leading characters in these birth stories. So he reasoned thus: the physical body
of the bodhisatta disintegrated after his death and there was nothing of it that
passed on to his last existence. It was only the consciousness that survived physical
dissolution and that formed the hard core of the bodhisatta's personality in each
of his existence. The same may be said of every other living being. Unlike the
physical body, consciousness is not subject to disintegration. It passes on from
one body to another and exists forever.
But the Jatakas underscore only the
continuity of the cause and effect relationship in terms or the doer of kamma
and the bearer of kammic fruit. They do not imply the transfer of vinnana or any
other attribute intact from one life to another. Everything passes away but because
of the causal connection, we have to assume that the hero of a Jataka story finally
became Prince Siddhattha. So after questioning Sati, the Buddha says that vinnana
is conditioned, that it cannot arise in the absence of its relevant cause.
The
Buddha cites the simile of a fire which is designated according to its origin.
The fire that originates with wood is called wood-fire, that which starts with
grass is called grass-fire and so on. Likewise, consciousness is conditioned by
something and it is labelled according to that which conditions it. Thus, the
consciousness that arises from eye and visual form is called visual consciousness
(cakkhu-vinnana), that which stems from ear and sound is called auditory consciousness
(sota-vinnana) and so forth. In short, the consciousness is specified according
to the sense-object and the sense-organ which together give rise to it. When the
cause of a fire changes so does its designation. A grass-fire becomes a bush-fire
when the fire spreads to the bush. In the same way, consciousness changes its
label according to the sense-object and the sense-organ on which it is dependent.
In the case of the same sense-object and the same sense-organ, too, it is the
new consciousness that occurs at every moment in the mental process. Thus, to
realize the truth about mental process is to be free from annihilation-belief
whereas a false view of it leads to eternity-belief.
Distinctive Character
Of Each Phenomenon
Another aspect of the doctrine is the distinction between
the different phenomena constituting the chain of causation. Thus avijja is a
distinct phenomenon that conditions sankhara; sankhara is another different phenomenon
that leads to rebirth and so on. To differentiate these phenomena is to realize
their cause-and-effect relationship and this realization makes us free from eternity-belief.
It helps us to do away with the illusion of a permanent, unchanging self that
survives death and passes on to another existence.
In fact the eternity-belief
or the annihilation-belief stems from the fact that people tend to over-emphasize
either the connection between the mental states in two successive lives or the
distinction between them. If we unintelligently identify ourselves with the nama-rupa
in the present life and that in the previous life, we will be inclined to the
belief in immortality. On the other hand, if we overstress the dichotomy of the
nama-rupas, we are likely to fall into the trap of annihilation-view. The right
attitude is to recognize the unbroken stream of nama-rupa that flows from one
life to another in terms of cause and effect. This point of view gives us the
impression of the individual character of nama-rupa and, as such, it clarifies
the working out of kamma. It does not, however, imply the transfer of old nama-rupa
or ego. It assumes the cessation of old nama-rupa and the arising of new nama-rupa
in the present life on the basis of past kamma.
This view is crucial in vipassana
practice. To the yogi who contemplates nama-rupa at every moment of their arising,
these two aspects of the doctrine are apparent. He becomes aware of the stream
of cause and effect comprising avijja, tanha, upadana and so forth. He is aware
of the continuity, and the uninterrupted flow of nama-rupa process and, therefore,
he rejects the annihilation view completely.
Furthermore, being aware of the
new phenomenon that arises whenever he contemplates, he discriminates between
the sense-object and his consciousness. Contemplation brings to light feeling,
craving, clinging, effort, consciousness, etc., as distinct phases of the mental
process. And because he is well aware of the arising of new phenomena, he frees
himself from eternity-belief.
Absence Of Effort (Avyapara)
Another aspect
of Paticcasamuppada is the absence of effort (avyapara). Avijja causes sankhara
without striving and sankhara does not strive to create rebirth. Knowledge of
this fact means insight into the non-existence of any agent or being (karaka-puggala)
who hears, sees, etc., and as such it makes us free from ego-belief. But as Visuddhimagga
says, it lends itself to misinterpretation and turns one into a moral sceptic
who accepts determinism and denies moral freedom.
The non-volitional nature
of conditioned psycho-physical phenomena is apparent to the yogi who contemplates
their ceaseless arising and dissolution for he realizes clearly that since nama-rupa
is conditioned, his mind and body do not always act according to his desire.
Relevancy
Of Cause To Effect
The last aspect of Paticcasamuppada is the one-to-one correspondence
between cause and effect (evam dhammata). Every cause leads only to the relevant
effect; it has nothing to do with the irrelevant effect. In other words, every
cause is the sufficient and necessary condition for the corresponding effect.
This fact leaves no room for belief in chance or moral impotency (akiriyaditthi)
but, as Visuddhimagga says, for those who misunderstand it, it provides the basis
for rigid determinism (niyatavada). As for the contemplating yogi, he clearly
sees the relevancy of each effect to its cause and so he has no doubt about their
one-to-one correspondence and the reality of moral freedom.
I have dwelt at
length on noteworthy facts about Paticcasamuppada. These will be clear to the
yogis who consider them on the basis of their experience but as the doctrine is
profound, they will not be able to grasp some facts that are beyond their intellectual
level. It is of course only the omniscient Buddha who knew everything thoroughly.
The yogi should make it a point to know fully as far as possible within the scope
of his intellect. To this end, he should learn from the discourses of bhikkhus,
reflect over what he has learnt and enrich his understanding through the practice
of mindfulness.
Of the three methods of study, the third method (bhavanamaya)
is the most important for the yogi who gains insight-knowledge by this method,
attains the holy path and is liberated from the dangers of the lower worlds.
Conclusion
Now
we will conclude the discourse on Paticcasamuppada with a commentary on Arahant,
the chief attribute of the Buddha.
The formula about the dependent origination
consists of twelve links beginning with ignorance and ending in death. It has
ignorance and craving as two root-causes and two life-cycles. The anterior cycle
begins with ignorance and ends in feeling, while the posterior cycle begins with
craving and ends in death and old age. Since anxiety, grief and the like do not
occur in the Brahma world, they do not necessarily stem from birth (jati) and,
as such, are not counted among the links of the dependent origination.
Furthermore,
the anterior life-cycle explicitly shows only avijja and sankhara; but avijja
implies tanha-upadana and sankhara implies kammabhava. So all these five links
form the past causes, while vinnana, nama-rupa, ayatana, phassa and vedana form
the present effects. These vinnana, etc., are the wholesome or unwholesome kammic
fruits that are clearly experienced at the moment of seeing, etc. The posterior
life-cycle directly concerns tanha, upadana and kammabhava but these three causes
imply avijja and sankhara, and so as in the past avijja, tanha, upadana, sankhara
and kammabhava represent the five present causes that lead to birth, old age and
death in future. These effects are the same as those of vinnana, nama-rupa, etc.
Thus, like the present effects, the future effects are also five in number.
So
there are altogether four groups of layers of five past causes, five present effects,
five present causes and five effects in the future. The layers represent three
causal relations viz., the relation between the past causes and the present effects;
the relation between the present effects and present causes; and the conditionality
of phenomenal existence is evident in these layers or the twenty links of cause
and effect which are termed //akara//. These links may be grouped in terms of
vatta or cycles or rounds of defilements, viz., the cycle of defilements, the
cycle of kamma and the cycle of kammic fruits which we have already explained
before.
Those who have done good kammas pass through human, deva or Brahma
worlds while those who have done evil are doomed to rebirth in the lower worlds.
Living beings confined to life-cycle (samsara) get the chance to do good only
when they have a good teacher. A good teacher is hard to come by and so many people
are largely prone to evil deeds and subject to their kammic effects in terms of
suffering. It is then said that they are overtaken by Nemesis, that they have
to pay for their round of kamma. Once established on the Ariyan path, they cannot
land in hell but as for the cycle of kammic fruits, even the Buddhas and Arahats
are not spared kammic retribution.
Cutting Off The Cycle Of Defilements
If
we wish to end the threefold cycle, we will have to remove its cause viz., the
cycle of defilements. Defilements originate with seeing, hearing, etc., and so
we must practise mindfulness to prevent their arising when we see, hear, etc.
The practice of concentration and mindfulness makes the yogi aware of the impermanence
and insubstantiality of all phenomena. This means he has no more illusion and
is free from the cycle of defilements, kammas and kammic fruits.
Now, to sum
up the way to the total conquest of the threefold cycle of defilement, kammas
and kammic results with reference to the attributes of the Buddha.
Arahan And
The Attributes Of The Buddha
The Buddha's special designation is Arahan and
this word points to the following attributes of the Buddha.
(1) The Buddha
was free from defilements. So were the Arahats but they were not free from the
habits that continued to dominate them even after the attainment of their spiritual
goal. This is evident in the story of thera Pilindavaccha. Pilinda was an Arahat,
beloved of the devas and extolled by the Buddha. Yet he was in the habit of addressing
his fellow bhikkhus or laymen rather rudely. Some bhikkhus complained to the Buddha
about the thera's rudeness. The Buddha attributed this unpleasant habit to his
having spent several lifetimes in the Brahmin families but said that being an
Arahat, the thera was pure and good at heart.
As for the Buddha, from the time
of his attainment of supreme enlightenment, he became free from all the habits
or hangovers of defilements that were carried over from past lives. This distinctive
mark of the Buddha's Arahatship should be borne in mind when we contemplate the
Lord's attributes. The complete extinction of cycles means total liberation from
the three cycles of defilements, kamma and kammic fruits.
(2) The Buddha was
called Arahan because of his conquest of defilements. People fear only the external
enemy such as robbers, snakes, etc. They do not bother about the internal enemy,
that is, defilements that are more terrible. In point of fact, they have to suffer
because of their mind-body complex and defilements. The root-cause is the defilements
that give rise to repeated rebirths and sufferings. The defilements are ten in
number viz., craving, hatred, ignorance, pride, illusion, doubt, lassitude, restlessness,
shamelessness and lack of conscience.
(3) By virtue of his outstanding moral
integrity, wisdom and enlightenment, the Buddha was worthy of reverence and offerings.
People who revered or made offerings to the Buddha have their wishes fulfilled.
(4)
Since he had conquered the defilements completely, the Buddha was pure at heart
whether in public or solitude. Many people play the hypocrite, posing as good
men or women in public but doing evil when there is no-one to see or hear them.
In reality, there is no place where one can do evil secretly. Even though the
evil-doer is not seen by men and gods, he cannot help having qualms of conscience.
His conscience is the most infallible witness to his misdeeds and it forms the
basis for death-bed visions that point to unpleasant life that future has in store
for him.
As for the Buddha, having wholly conquered all the defilements, his
mind was always pure and he had absolutely no desire or intention to do evil either
publicly or secretly.
(5) The Buddha had destroyed the spokes of the wheel
with the sword of the Arahatship. Here, the wheel means the cycle of life as described
in the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada and the sword means the insight-knowledge
of the Arahat. The axle of the wheel represents avijja, the root-cause; the fringe
of the wheel stands for old age and death, while the spokes stand for the middle
links, viz., sankhara, etc. Just as the removal of spokes makes it impossible
for the wheel to move, so also the destruction of the middle links in the chain
of conditioned phenomena means the end of the cycle of life.
Story Of Baka
Brahma
The first thing to do to end the life-cycle is to remove its root-cause
viz., ignorance, for ignorance is invariably followed by sankhara, vinnana, etc.,
down to jaramarana (old age and death). This is true in the sensual worlds as
well as in the material world of Brahmas.
Once there was a great Brahma called
Baka. He outlived many world-systems (kappa); indeed he lived so long that at
last he forgot his previous existences and became convinced of his immortality
without old age or death. The Buddha went to his abode to remove his illusion.
The Brahma welcomed the Lord and bragged about his eternal life. The Buddha said
that his ignorance was appalling in that he denied impermanence, old age and death.
He revealed the good deeds that had led to the Brahma's longevity and it was this
fabulous longevity that had made him oblivious of his previous lives and created
the illusion of his immortality. On hearing this, Baka Brahma had second thoughts
about his omnipotence. Still, he was conceited and in order to show his power,
he tried to vanish out of sight of the Buddha and other Brahmas but it was in
vain. Because of the power of the Lord, he remained visible.
Then the Buddha
uttered the following verse:
Bhavevaham bhayam disva bhavan ja vibhavesinam
bhavam nabhivadim kinci nandincana upadiyim:
I do not extol any existence because
I see danger in it. I have renounced the craving for existence because I am aware
of its evil.
Baka Brahma and other Brahmas had lived so long that they considered
their existence and their abode eternal. Likewise, the evils of life escape the
notice of those who have the blessings of a good life such as health, wealth,
prestige, success and so forth. But life is subject to suffering on all its three
planes: sensual plane, material plane and immaterial plane. A Brahma or a rishi
on the material or immaterial planes of existence may live for aeons but they
too have to die eventually.
Sammasambuddha
It is insight knowledge that
leads to the destruction of ignorance which is the root-cause of suffering. For
the Buddha, this means the attribute of sammasambuddha. Sammasambuddha is one
who knows the Four Noble Truths rightly, thoroughly and independently. Here the
twelve links of Paticcasamuppada may be differentiated in terms of the Four Noble
Truths.
Thus, old age and death together means the first truth of suffering
and rebirth means the truth about the cause of suffering. The cessation of this
cause and this effect means the truth about the cessation (nirodha) and, knowledge
of this cessation means the truth about the path to it (magga).
The same may
be said of rebirth and kammic cause, kammic cause and clinging, clinging and craving,
craving and feeling, feeling and contact, contact and six senses, the senses and
nama-rupa, nama-rupa and consciousness, consciousness and sankhara, and sankhara
and ignorance. In short, what immediately precedes a link is termed its cause
(samudaya) and what immediately follows is called its effect (dukkha sacca). We
can even make ignorance (avijja), the origin of life-cycle, synonymous with truth
about suffering (dukkha sacca); if we regard it as an effect of the attachment
(asava) viz., attachment to sensual pleasure, existence, belief and ignorance.
Here,
the identification of tanha with dukkha may not be acceptable to some people.
But it is reasonable if we remember the fact that all nama-rupa including tanha
means dukkha since it is subject to impermanence. The commentary does not describe
avijja as dukkha, but we can say it is dukkha arising from asava (biases). There
are four asavas that have their sources in sensual craving, attachment to life,
false belief and ignorance. It is a matter of ignorance in the past again giving
rise to ignorance in the present. Hence, the asavas may be regarded as the cause
of avijja.
So having realized the Four Noble Truths and attained Nibbana, through
his own enlightenment, the Buddha earned the unique and glorious title of Sammasambuddha.
He knew that all the phenomena covered by the doctrine of Paticcasamuppada are
the real dukkha and the causes of dukkha. He was disenchanted, had no attachment
and achieved liberation from all fetters. So according to Visuddhimagga, he was
called Arahan because he managed to destroy completely all the supports of the
wheel of life.
The Fame Of The Buddha
The fame of the Buddha pervaded the
whole universe. It spread to all parts of the universe through the inhabitants
of some realms who came to hear the Buddha's sermons or through the sermons which
the Buddha himself gave in some realms or through the former disciples who had
landed in some higher realms after hearing the sermons.
We need not dwell on
the first way in which the fame of the Buddha spread. As regards the other two
ways, in the course of his long wanderings in samsara, the bodhisatta had been
to all the realms except the five suddhavasa realms which are meant only for those
who have attained anagami stage. The bodhisatta usually attains all the four stages
on the path only in his last existence. So the Buddha had never been to suddhavasa
realm before and on one occasion he paid a visit to it by means of his psychic
powers. On arriving there, he received the homage of millions of brahmas, who
told him about the former Buddhas and their landing in suddhavasa realm as the
result of their attainment of anagami stage. Among these brahmas, there were also
those who had practised the dhamma as disciples of Gotama Buddha.
The Buddha
visited all the five suddhavasa realms. It is easy to see how he became famous
in the realms that were the abodes of his former disciples. But the question arises
as to how his fame spread to the formless (arupa) realms. It was not possible
for the formless brahmas to come to the Buddha or for the Buddha to go to them.
Those who practised the Buddha-dhamma in the sensual or the material world, attaining
the first three stages on the path and dying with arupa (formless) jhana might
land in the formless worlds if they so desired. These noble ones were aware of
the sublime attributes of the Buddha and the possibility of attaining new insights
through the practice of mindfulness. So through mindfulness of all mental events,
they finally became Arahats and passed away in vinnanancayatana realm or akincannayatana
realm or the highest realm called Nevasannanasannayatana. In this way, the fame
of the Buddha spread throughout the whole universe.
The Four Noble Truths In
Brief
We have dealt in detail with the Buddha's knowledge of the Four Noble
Truths vis-a-vis his attribute of Sammasambuddha. We will now repeat the four
truths briefly. According to the scriptures, all the nama-rupa in the sensual,
material and immaterial worlds, exclusive of tanha, constitute dukkha. This is
the first truth. Tanha as the cause of dukkha is the second truth. Nibbana as
the cessation of dukkha is the third truth, and the Ariyan path as the way to
cessation is the fourth truth. These Four Noble Truths are realized experientially
by the yogi through the practice of vipassana. From experience he knows that all
that is arising and passing away mean dukkha, attachment to them is the cause,
that cessation of both the dukkha and its cause is Nibbana, and that its attainment
is the path.
Sammasambuddha And Buddhahood
Both of the two Pali terms viz.,
Buddha and Sammasambuddha mean omniscience or knowledge of all the dhammas. This
raises the question of how to make a distinction between the two attributes connected
by the two terms. By the attribute of sammasambuddha, we are to understand that
the bodhisatta attained Buddhahood on the basis of independent reflection, and
effort and the realization of the Four Noble Truths through insight on the path
of Arahatship. Buddhahood means the thorough and exhaustive knowledge of all the
conditioned and the unconditioned dhammas on the basis of the unique attributes
possessed by the Buddha such as omniscience (sabbannutanana), etc.
These unique
attributes of the Buddha consist in knowledge of the Four Noble Truths, four kinds
of analytical knowledge and six kinds of knowledge that are not to be found among
disciples (asadharananana). The six asadharananana are: (1) knowledge of the different
moral and spiritual levels of living beings, (2) knowledge of the desires, inclinations
and latent tendencies (anusaya) of living beings, (3) the power to create super-miracles
(yamakapatihariyanana), (4) infinite compassion for all living beings, (5) omniscience,
and (6) knowledge without any hindrance or obstruction of anything which the Buddha
wants to know and which he brings into the focus of his attention.
Now a few
words about the conditioned (sankhara) and unconditioned (asankhara) dhammas.
The sankharas are the nama-rupa or the five aggregates of khandhas that arise
owing to the harmonious combination of relevant factors. In other words, they
are the phenomena conditioned by favourable circumstances. Thus, sound is produced
when there is friction between two hard objects such as sticks or iron bars. Here
sound is sankhara. As opposed to sankhara is asankhara which has nothing to do
with causes. The only ultimate reality (paramattha) in the category of asankhara
dhammas is Nibbana. Of the non-paramattha asankharas there are many kinds of names
such as names of shapes, figures and so forth.
The Buddha's sabbannutanana
is so called because it encompasses the whole range of conditioned and unconditioned
dhammas. It is also described in terms of the five neyyadhamma viz., the sankhara,
the distinctive qualities of certain rupas (nipphanna), the conditioned characteristics
of nama-rupa, Nibbana and names.
The first two attributes of the Buddha forming
the knowledge of the different spiritual levels, inclinations and latent tendencies
of living beings are labelled Buddha-eye (Buddha-cakkhu). With this all-seeing
eye, the Buddha chose the living beings who ought to be enlightened, and preached
to them the appropriate dhamma at the appropriate moment.
We conclude the discourse
on the Paticcasamuppada with the commentary on the attributes of the Buddha (Arahan)
because we wish to inspire the readers with faith in the Blessed One. We hope
that they will find the source of inspiration too, in the Arahats who also possess
the Arahan attribute. The Arahat is wholly free from defilements, he has destroyed
the framework of life-cycle; there is no secret place where he will do evil and
so he is worthy of honour. These are the qualities that make up his Arahan attribute
although this attribute as possessed by the ordinary Arahat is below the superlative
Arahan attribute of the Buddha.
So you should try to overcome defilements through
mindfulness of the nama-rupa processes that arise at the six sense-doors, destroy
the supports of the wheel of life and keep your mind pure all the time in order
that you may eventually become Arahats and earn the glorious title of Arahan.
SUMMARY
From
the two root-causes referred to in the two noble truths there arise four layers,
three cycles, three connections, twelve links, three time-dimensions, twenty phenomena
and five nama-rupa processes. One who watches these present resultant processes
effectively does not have craving that is rooted in feeling and so he will put
an end to life-cycle completely.
In other words, the yogi watches every psycho-physical
event that occurs at the six senses clearly in terms of its impermanence, unsatisfactoriness
and egolessness.
Through such effective practice of mindfulness, the yogi gains
insight into the nature of the sense-object such as sound, visual form, etc.,
and overcomes the attachment to it by the opposite (tadanga), that is, he overcomes
it by opposing it with the knowledge that undercuts it. The cessation of attachment
rules out the arising of the other phenomena e.g. clinging, process of becoming,
rebirth, etc. After this cessation through vipassana insight, the yogi overcomes
the latent attachment completely through destruction (samuccheda) when he attains
the insight knowledge on the Ariyan path. At this moment the other phenomena e.g.
clinging, etc., also become totally extinct.
There is no teaching which says
that with the extinction of feeling, craving too ceases to exist. This is no wonder
for even the Arahats do not have any control over their feelings that arise from
contact with the six senses.
There are certain psycho-physical phenomena that
have to be watched and noted as they really are i.e. in terms of anicca, dukkha
and anatta if the yogi wants to remove the present causes such as tanha etc.,
the future results and end the cycle of suffering. These phenomena with their
Pali terms are explained below.
(1) Vinnana: consciousness, which is of six
kinds viz., eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness, nose-consciousness, tongue-consciousness,
body-consciousness and mind-consciousness.
(2) Nama: mental factors (cetasikas)
that arise together with consciousness. Rupa: the physical phenomena that arises
together with that consciousness. Nama-rupa may be translated as mind and matter.
(3)
Salayatana: the six bases of mental activity, that is, the six internal bases
comprising the consciousness and the five physical sense-organs viz., eye, ear,
nose, tongue and body and the six external bases viz., visible object, sound,
odour, sap or gustative object, body-impression and mind-object.
(4) Phassa:
contact or impression, which is of six kinds viz., visual impression, impression
of hearing, of smelling, of tasting, bodily impression and mental impression.
(5)
Vedana: feelings which is of three kinds viz., pleasant feeling, unpleasant feeling
and indifferent feeling. We may also distinguish six kinds of feelings: feelings
associated with seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, body-impression and mental
impression.
1. Two root-causes:
Ignorance (avijja) and craving (tanha).
2.
Two truths:
Truth about the cause (craving) and truth about suffering (dukkha).
3.
Four layers:
(1) The layer of the past cause - ignorance, kamma formations
(sankhara), craving, clinging and becoming.
(2) The layer of present result
- consciousness, mind-body complex, six bases of mental activity, impression,
feeling.
(3) The layer of present cause - craving, clinging, kamma, becoming,
ignorance, kamma formations (sankhara).
(4) Future result - birth, old age,
death, consciousness, etc.
4. Three cycles:
(1) The cycle of defilements
- ignorance, craving, clinging.
(2) The cycle of kamma - kamma formations (sankhara),
kamma and becoming.
(3) The cycle of kammic results - consciousness, mind-body
complex, six bases of mental activity, impression, feeling, birth, old age and
death.
5. Three connections:
(1) The connection between the past kamma formations
(sankhara) as the past cause and consciousness as the present result.
(2) The
connection between feeling as the present result and craving as the present cause.
(3)
The connection between becoming as the present cause and birth as the future result.
6.
Twelve links:
(1) ignorance (2) kamma formations (3) consciousness (4) mental
and physical phenomena (5) six bases (6) impression (7) feeling (8) craving (9)
clinging (10) becoming (11) rebirth (12) old age and death
7. Three time-dimensions:
(1)
The infinite past - ignorance and kamma formations.
(2) The infinite present
- consciousness, mind-body complex, six bases, impression, feeling, craving, clinging,
kamma-process.
(3) The infinite future - rebirth, old age and death.
8.
Twenty elements:
(1) Five elements of the causative process in the past existence.
(2)
Five elements of the resultant process in the present existence.
(3) Five elements
of the causative process in the present existence.
(4) Five elements of the
resultant process in the future existence.