Transcendental Dependent Arising
A Translation and Exposition of the Upanisa
Sutta
By Bhikkhu Bodhi
The Wheel Publication No. 277/278
SL ISSN 0049-7541
Copyright © 1980 Buddhist Publication
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This edition was transcribed from the print edition in
1995 by Greg Smith under the auspices of the Dharma Net Dharma
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Preface
Tucked away in the Samyutta Nikáya among the "connected
sayings on causality" (Nidanasamyutta) is a short
formalized text entitled the Upanisa Sutta, the
"Discourse on Supporting Conditions." Though at first glance
hardly conspicuous among the many interesting Suttas in this
collection, this little discourse turns out upon repeated
examination to be of tremendous doctrinal importance. Its
great significance derives from the striking juxtaposition it
makes of two applications of "dependent arising" (paticcasamuppada),
the principle of conditionality, which lies at the heart of
the Buddha's doctrine. The first application is the usual one,
setting forth the causal sequence responsible for the
origination of samsaric suffering. Apart from a slight change
it is identical with the twelve-factored formulation recurring
throughout the Pali Canon. The change -- the substitution of
"suffering" for "aging-and-death" as the last member of the
series -- becomes the lead for the second application of
dependent arising. This application, occurring only
sporadically in the Pali Canon, allows the same principle of
conditionality to structure the path leading to deliverance
from suffering. It begins with faith, emerging out of the
suffering with which the first series ended, and continues
through to the retrospective knowledge of liberation, which
confirms the destruction of the binding defilements. By
linking the two series into a single sequence, the Sutta
reveals the entire course of man's faring in the world as well
as his treading of the path to its transcendence. It shows,
moreover, that these two dimensions of human experience, the
mundane and the transcendental, the dimensions of world
involvement and world disengagement, are both governed by a
single structural principle, that of dependent arising.
Recognizing this broader range of the principle, the
Nettipakarana, a Pali exegetical treatise, has called the
second application "transcendental dependent arising" (lokuttara-paticcasamuppada).
Despite the great importance of the Upanisa Sutta,
traditional commentators have hardly given the text the
special attention it would seem to deserve. Perhaps the reason
for this is that, its line of approach being peculiar to
itself and a few related texts scattered through the Canon, it
has been overshadowed by the many other Suttas giving the more
usual presentation of doctrine. But whatever the explanation
be, the need has remained for a fuller exploration of the
sutta’s meaning and implications. We have sought to remedy
this deficiency with the following work offering an English
translation of the Upanisa Sutta and an exposition of
its message. The exposition sets out to explore the second,
"transcendental" application of dependent arising, drawing
freely from other parts of the Canon and the commentaries to
fill out the meaning. Since full accounts of the "mundane" or
samsaric side of dependent arising can be readily found
elsewhere, we thought it best to limit our exposition to the
principle's less familiar application. A similar project has
been undertaken by Bhikshus Sangharakshita in his book The
Three Jewels (London, 1967). However, since this work
draws largely from Mahayanist sources to explain the stages in
the series, the need has remained for a treatment, which
elucidates the series entirely from the standpoint of the
Theravada tradition, within which the Sutta is originally
found.
Bhikkhu
Bodhi
Note on References
References to the Digha Nikáya (DN) and the Majjhima Nikáya
(MN) refer to the number of the Sutta. References to the
Samyutta Nikáya (SN) refer to the number of the chapter
followed by the number of the Sutta within that chapter.
References to the Anguttara Nikáya (AN) refer to nipata
(numerical division) followed by the number of the Sutta
within that nipata.
Upanisa Sutta
While staying at Savatthi the Exalted One said:
"The destruction of the cankers, monks, is for one who knows
and sees, I say, not for one who does not know and does not
see. Knowing what, seeing what does the destruction of the
cankers occur? 'Such is material form, such is the arising of
material form, such is the passing away of material form. Such
is feeling ... perception ... mental formations ...
consciousness; such is the arising of consciousness, such is
the passing away of consciousness' -- for one who knows and
sees this, monks, the destruction of the cankers occurs.
"The knowledge of destruction with respect to destruction has
a supporting condition, I say, it does not lack a supporting
condition. And what is the supporting condition for the
knowledge of destruction? 'Emancipation' should be the reply.
"Emancipation, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say,
it does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for emancipation? 'Dispassion' should be
the reply.
"Dispassion, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it
does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for dispassion? 'Disenchantment' should
be the reply.
"Disenchantment, monks, also has a supporting condition, I
say, it does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for disenchantment? 'The knowledge and
vision of things as they really are' should be the reply.
"The knowledge and vision of things as they really are, monks,
also has a supporting condition, I say, it does not lack a
supporting condition. And what is the supporting condition for
the knowledge and vision of things as they really are?
'Concentration' should be the reply.
"Concentration, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say,
it does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for concentration? 'Happiness' should be
the reply.
"Happiness, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it
does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for happiness? 'Tranquility' should be
the reply.
"Tranquility, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say,
it does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for tranquility? 'Rapture' should be the
reply.
"Rapture, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it
does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for rapture? 'Joy' should be the reply.
"Joy, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it does
not lack a supporting condition. And what is the supporting
condition for joy? 'Faith' should be the reply.
"Faith, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it does
not lack a supporting condition. And what is the supporting
condition for faith? 'Suffering' should be the reply.
"Suffering, monks, also has a supporting condition, I say, it
does not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for suffering? 'Birth' should be the
reply.
"And what is the supporting condition for birth?. 'Existence'
should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for existence? 'Clinging'
should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for clinging? 'Craving'
should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for craving? 'Feeling'
should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for feeling? 'Contact'
should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for contact? 'The six-fold
sense base' should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for the six-fold sense base?
'Mentality-materiality' should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for mentality-materiality?
'Consciousness' should be the reply.
"What is the supporting condition for consciousness? 'Kamma
formations' should be the reply.
"Kamma formations, monks, also have a supporting condition, I
say, they do not lack a supporting condition. And what is the
supporting condition for kamma formations? 'Ignorance' should
be the reply.
"Thus, monks, ignorance is the supporting condition for kamma
formations, kamma formations are the supporting condition for
consciousness, consciousness is the supporting condition for
mentality-materiality, mentality-materiality is the supporting
condition for the six-fold sense base, the six-fold sense base
is the supporting condition for contact, contact is the
supporting condition for feeling, feeling is the supporting
condition for craving, craving is the supporting condition for
clinging, clinging is the supporting condition for existence,
existence is the supporting condition for birth, birth is the
supporting condition for suffering, suffering is the
supporting condition for faith, faith is the supporting
condition for joy, joy is the supporting condition for
rapture, rapture is the supporting condition for tranquility,
tranquility is the supporting condition for happiness,
happiness is the supporting condition for concentration,
concentration is the supporting condition for the knowledge
and vision of things as they really are, the knowledge and
vision of things as they really are is the supporting
condition for disenchantment, disenchantment is the supporting
condition for dispassion, dispassion is the supporting
condition for emancipation, and emancipation is the supporting
condition for the knowledge of the destruction (of the
cankers).
"Just as, monks, when rain descends heavily upon some
mountaintop, the water flows down along with the slope, and
fills the clefts, gullies, and creeks; these being filled fill
up the pools; these being filled fill up the ponds; these
being filled fill up the streams; these being filled fill up
the rivers; and the rivers being filled fill up the great
ocean -- in the same way, monks, ignorance is the supporting
condition for kamma formations, kamma formations are the
supporting condition for consciousness, consciousness is the
supporting condition for mentality-materiality,
mentality-materiality is the supporting condition for the
six-fold sense base, the six-fold sense base is the supporting
condition for contact, contact is the supporting condition for
feeling, feeling is the supporting condition for craving,
craving is the supporting condition for clinging, clinging is
the supporting condition for existence, existence is the
supporting condition for birth, birth is the supporting
condition for suffering, suffering is the supporting condition
for faith, faith is the supporting condition for joy, joy is
the supporting condition for rapture, rapture is the
supporting condition for tranquility, tranquility is the
supporting condition for happiness, happiness is the
supporting condition for concentration, concentration is the
supporting condition for the knowledge and vision of things as
they really are, the knowledge and vision of things as they
really are is the supporting condition for disenchantment,
disenchantment is the supporting condition for dispassion,
dispassion is the supporting condition for emancipation, and
emancipation is the supporting condition for the knowledge of
the destruction (of the cankers)."
Transcendental Dependent Arising
An Exposition of the Upanisa Sutta
Dependent arising (paticcasamuppada) is the central
principle of the Buddha's teaching, constituting both the
objective content of its liberating insight and the
germinative source for its vast network of doctrines and
disciplines. As the frame behind the four noble truths, the
key to the perspective of the middle way, and the conduit to
the realization of selflessness, it is the unifying theme
running through the teaching's multifarious expressions,
binding them together as diversified formulations of a single
coherent vision. The earliest Suttas equate dependent arising
with the unique discovery of the Buddha's enlightenment, so
profound and difficult to grasp that he at first hesitated to
announce it to the world. A simple exposition of the principle
sparks off the liberating wisdom in the minds of his foremost
disciples, while skill in explaining its workings is made a
qualification of an adroit expounder of the Dhamma. So crucial
is this principle to the body of the Buddha's doctrine that an
insight into dependent arising is held to be sufficient to
yield an understanding of the entire teaching. In the words of
the Buddha: "He who sees dependent arising sees the Dhamma; he
who sees the Dhamma sees dependent arising." [1]
The Pali texts present dependent arising in a double form. It
appears both as an abstract statement of universal law and as
the particular application of that law to the specific problem
which is the doctrine's focal concern, namely, the problem of
suffering. In its abstract form the principle of dependent
arising is equivalent to the law of the conditioned genesis of
phenomena. It expresses the invariable concomitance between
the arising and ceasing of any given phenomenon and the
functional efficacy of its originative conditions. It’s
phrasing, as terse as any formulation of modern logic, recurs
in the ancient texts thus: "This being, that exists; through
the arising of this that arises. This not being, that does not
exist; through the ceasing of this that ceases."[2]
When applied to the problem of suffering, the abstract
principle becomes encapsulated in a twelve-term formula
disclosing the causal nexus responsible for the origination of
suffering. It begins with ignorance, the primary root of the
series though not a first cause, conditioning the arising of
ethically determinate volitions, which in turn condition the
arising of consciousness, and so on through the salient
occasions of sentient becoming down to their conclusion in old
age and death:
With ignorance as condition, the kamma formations; with
kamma formations as condition consciousness; with
consciousness as condition, mentality-materiality; with
mentality-materiality as condition the six-fold sense
base; with the six-fold sense base as condition, contact;
with contact as condition, feeling; with feeling as
condition, craving; with craving as condition, clinging;
with clinging as condition, existence; with existence as
condition, birth; with birth as condition,
aging-and-death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
despair arise. Such is the origination of this entire mass
of suffering.
-- SN. XII, passim.
The corollary of this formula, which constantly accompanies
it, describes the conditioned cessation of suffering. It shows
how, when ignorance ceases, all the following conditions
successively cease, down to the cessation of the "entire mass
of suffering."
Though the principle of dependent arising is applicable to any
situation where an origination of phenomena takes place, the
Pali Buddhist tradition has focused upon the doctrine almost
exclusively in terms of its twelve-fold formulation. So much
has this been the case that the two have tended to be blankly
identified with each other, dependent arising being equated
simply with the twelve-fold series and the twelve-fold series
being regarded as an exhaustive treatment of dependent
arising. This exclusiveness of emphasis doubtlessly poses a
certain danger of rigidity; but even despite this danger it is
not without its justification. For the aim of the Buddha's
teaching is not abstract and theoretical, but concrete and
soteriological. Its goal is liberation from suffering,
understood in its deepest sense as the un-satisfactoriness of
sentient existence indefinitely repeated in the wheel of
becoming, the cycle of births and deaths, called samsára.
The twelve-term nexus contributes to this liberative thrust by
bringing the principle of dependent arising to bear directly
on the condition, which it is the doctrine's over-riding
concern to ameliorate. If suffering is produced by causes,
these causes and the way they can be stopped must be uncovered
and exposed. The twelve-fold application accomplishes
precisely this. In its positive or direct aspect (anuloma)
it makes known the causal chain behind suffering,
demonstrating how the round of existence arises and turns
through the impulsions of craving, clinging, and karma,
working freely behind the shielding screen of ignorance. In
its negative or reverse side (patiloma) it reveals the
way to the cessation of suffering, showing that when ignorance
is eliminated by the rise of true knowledge all the factors
dependent on ignorance likewise draw to a close.
However, as a consequence of this constriction of attention,
sight has tended to be lost of the broader range of
exemplifications the principle of dependent arising might
have, even within the limits of the soteriological direction
of the teaching. Dependent arising cannot be reduced to any
single one of its applications. Any application is only a
pedagogical device framed from the standpoint of the
teaching's practical orientation. Above and beyond its
specific instances, dependent arising remains an expression of
the invariable structural relatedness of phenomena. It is a
principle to which all phenomena conform by the very nature of
their being, the principle that whatever comes into existence
does so in dependence on conditions. From the perspective this
teaching affords, things are seen to arise, not from some
intrinsic nature of their own, from necessity, chance or
accident, but from their causal correlations with other things
to which they are connected as part of the fixed order
obtaining between phenomena. Each transient entity, emerging
into the present out of the stream of events bearing down from
the past, absorbs into itself the causal influx of the past,
to which it must be responsive. During its phase of presence
it exercises its own distinctive function with the support of
its conditions, expressing thereby its own immediacy of being.
And then, with the completion of its actuality, it is swept
away by the universal impermanence to become itself a
condition determinant of the future.
When this law of inter-connected becoming, of conditionality
and relatedness, is extracted from its usual exemplifications
and explored for further doctrinal bearings, it can be found
to have other ramifications equally relevant to the
realization of the teaching's fundamental aim. One particular
exemplification of dependent arising,; found with minor
variations in a number of Suttas, shows the basic principle to
serve as the scaffolding for the course of spiritual
development issuing in final emancipation.[3] It figures in
these Suttas as the architectonic underlying the gradual
training, governing the process by which one phase of practice
conditions the arising of the following phase all the way from
the commencement of the path to the realization of the
ultimate goal. To be sure, the application of dependent
arising to the achievement of deliverance is already covered
from one angle by the reverse or cessation side of the
twelve-fold formula, according to which the cessation of
ignorance sets off a series of cessations culminating in the
cessation of suffering. Thence in itself such an application
is not a unique feature of these Suttas. What gives these
Suttas their distinctive quality and value is the positive
form in which they cast the sequential pattern of the
liberative venture. Whereas the series of cessations presents
the achievement of liberation logically, in strict doctrinal
terms as the consequence following upon the annulment of
samsaric bondage, the present sequence views the same chain of
events dynamically, from the inner perspective of living
experience.
As living experience, the advance to emancipation cannot be
tied down to a series of mere negations, for such a mode of
treatment omits precisely what is most essential to the
spiritual quest -- the immediacy of inner striving, growth,
and transformation. Parallel to the demolition of old barriers
there occurs, in the quest for deliverance, a widening of
vistas characterized by an evolving sense of maturation,
enrichment, and fulfillment; the departure from bondage,
anxiety, and suffering at the same time means the move towards
freedom and peace. This expansion and enrichment is made
possible by the structure of the gradual training, which is
not so much a succession of discrete steps one following the
other as a locking together of overlapping components in a
union at once augmentative, consummative, and projective. Each
pair of stages intertwines in a mutually vitalizing bond
wherein the lower, antecedent member nurtures its successor by
serving as its generative base, and the higher, consequent
member completes its predecessor by absorbing its energies and
directing them on to the next phase in the series. Each link
thus performs a double function: while rewarding the efforts
expended in the accomplishment of the antecedent stage, it
provides the incentive for the commencement of the consequent
stage. In this way the graduated training unfolds organically
in a fluid progression in which, as the Buddha says, "stage
flows over into stage, stage fulfills stage, for crossing over
from the hither shore to the beyond."[4]
All the factors comprised in this sequence come into being in
strict subjection to the law of conditioned genesis. The
accidental, the compulsory, and the mysterious are equally
excluded by the lawful regularity governing the series. The
stages of the path do not emerge fortuitously or through the
operation of some inscrutable power, but originate
conditionally, appearing spontaneously in the course of
training when their requisite conditions are complete. Thus
the course of spiritual development these Suttas reveal is a
dependent arising -- a coming into being in dependence on
conditions. But this dependent arising differs significantly
from its mundane counterpart. The mundane version, with its
twelve links, describes the movement of samsára, which
revolves in a perpetually self-regenerating circle leading
from beginning to end only to find the end lead back to the
beginning. The mechanism of this process, by which defilements
and renewed existence mutually kindle one another, is fueled
by the hope that some-how some solution will yet emerge within
the framework of laws set for the turning of the wheel, a hope
repeatedly disappointed. The present version of dependent
arising delineates a type of development that only becomes
possible when this hope has been dispensed with. It hinges on
the prior recognition that any attempt to eliminate suffering
through the gratification of craving is doomed to failure, and
that the only way to stop it is to cut through the vicious
nexus at its base. Though the movement it describes is still
cyclic, it is not the circular revolution of Samsara it is
concerned with but a different kind of rotation that only
comes into play when the essentially defective nature of the
ordinary human condition has been clearly perceived and the
urge towards liberation from it made the dominant motive of
the inner life. The present sequence depicts the movement
towards release. It sets forth a drive which, in contrast to
the pointless repetition of samsára, evolves up and outwards
in an unbroken spiral ascent -- a pattern in which each turn
supports and strengthens its successor's capacity for
liberation, enabling the series as a whole to pick up the
momentum needed to break the gravitational pull of the mundane
sphere. Since all the phases in this progression arise in
dependence on their antecedents, the series represents a
dependent arising. But unlike the familiar version of
dependent arising, the present version leads, not back to the
round of becoming, but to the overcoming of samsára and all
its attendant sufferings. Hence the Nettippakarana
calls this sequence "transcendental dependent arising" (lokuttara
paticcasamuppada) -- a dependent arising that leads to the
transcendence of the world. [5]
The Sutta we will investigate here for an account of
"transcendental dependent arising, is the Upanisa Sutta
of the Nidanasamyutta (SN. XI.I No. 23). In addition to
giving a clear, explicit account of the conditional structure
of the liberative progression, this Sutta has the further
advantage of bringing the supra-mundane form of dependent
arising into immediate connection with its familiar samsaric
counterpart. By making this connection it brings into
prominence the comprehensive character of the principle of
conditionality -- its ability to support and explain both the
process of compulsive involvement which is the origin of
suffering and the process of disengagement which leads to
deliverance from suffering. Thereby it reveals dependent
arising to be the key to the unity and coherence of the
Buddha's teaching. When the Buddha declares, "I teach only
suffering and the cessation of suffering,"[6] the bond which
unites these two terminals of the doctrine as complementary
sides of a single, internally consistent system is simply the
law of dependent arising.
The Upanisa Sutta gives three expositions of
"transcendental dependent arising." The first expounds the
sequence in reverse order, beginning with the last link in the
series, the knowledge of the destruction of the cankers (asavakkhaye
ñana), and tracing the chain backwards to the first link
in the liberative sequence, namely, faith. At this point it
crosses over to the mundane order, explaining faith as arising
through suffering, suffering as conditioned by birth, birth as
conditioned by existence, and so on back through the familiar
links to ignorance as the first member of the chain. After
completing the reverse exposition, the Buddha then expounds
the same series in forward order, beginning with ignorance and
following through to the knowledge of destruction. This he
does twice, in exactly the same way, once before and once
after the striking simile comparing the sequential origination
of the factors to the gradual descent of rainfall from a
mountain, through the graded ponds, lakes, streams, and rivers
to the great ocean at the mountain's base. Thus the series of
conditions presented in the Sutta can be mapped out in the
abstract as follows:
Mundane Order
Ignorance (avijja)
Kamma formations (sankhara)
Consciousness (viññana)
Mentality-materiality (namarupa)
Six-fold sense base (salayatana)
Contact (phassa)
Feeling (vedana)
Craving (tanha)
Clinging (upadana)
Existence (bhava)
Birth (jati)
Suffering (dukkha)
Transcendental Order
Faith (saddha)
Joy (pamojja)
Rapture (piti)
Tranquility (passaddhi)
Happiness (sukha)
Concentration (samádhi)
Knowledge and vision of things as they are (yathabhutañanadassana)
Disenchantment (nibbida)
Dispassion (viraga)
Emancipation (vimutti)
Knowledge of destruction of the cankers (asavakkhaye
ñana)
For ease of explanation we will examine the links of
transcendental dependent arising in direct order. However,
before doing so, it is instructive to note that there is
special significance in the initial presentation of the series
in reverse. Such a presentation serves to throw an important
spotlight on the nature of the causal relation obtaining
between the path to liberation and its goal. It shows that the
type of causal development displayed by this progression is
quite different from the pattern of blind efficient causality
which involves the incidental emergence of an effect out of
its causal matrix, as for example when a series of geological
changes triggers off an earthquake or a number of atoms
combine to form some new molecule. The relationship between
the path and the goal belongs to a more complex order of
causality, one which can perhaps be pictured as a set of prior
causes giving rise to an effect but can never be adequately
and correctly comprehended in terms of this model. What we
have here is not an instance of simple, one-directional
causality proceeding forward unmodified in a straight line; we
have, rather, a species of teleological causality involving
purpose, intelligence, and planned striving simultaneously
projected towards and refracted from the aimed at effect in a
process of reciprocal determination. In the workings of this
relationship not only does the path facilitate the achievement
of the goal, but the goal as well, already present from the
outset as the envisaged aim of striving, itself bends back to
participate in the shaping of the path. Starting from man's
awareness of the painful inadequacies of his existence, and
his intuitive groping towards a condition where these are
allayed, the formula proceeds to trace back, in terms
derivative from and constantly checked against the goal, the
series of alterations he must induce in his cognitive and
emotive makeup to bring the goal into his reach.
We see this pattern illustrated in the traditional account of
prince Siddhartha's great renunciation. [7] When the future
Buddha leaves his palace, he goes forth in the confidence that
beyond the perishable, defective, and substance-less things of
the world there is accessible to man an un-perishable and
self-sufficient state which makes possible deliverance from
suffering. What he needs to discover, as the objective of his
"holy quest," is the path bridging the two domains. This he
does by pursuing backwards from the goal of striving the
obstructions to its attainment and the steps to be taken to
remove those obstructions. One line of exploration begins with
aging and death as the fundamental manifestation of the
suffering, which weighs upon the world, and follows its chain
of conditions back to ignorance as the underlying root. [8]
Another, complementary line starts with the defilements as the
principal obstruction to emancipation. It then finds the
defilements to be sustained by ignorance, ignorance by the
distracted mind, and the distracted mind by a causal nexus
going back to lack of faith in the true Dhamma. [9] From this
the conclusion follows, as shown in the Upanisa Sutta,
that to achieve deliverance the defilements must be removed
through dispassion, to reach dispassion ignorance must be
overcome by correct understanding, to arouse understanding the
mind must be concentrated, and so on through the
counter-conditions down to the gain of faith in the true
Dhamma.
In both cases the reverse direction of the sequential logic
reveals the peculiar nature of the path-goal relationship. The
two stand together in a bond of reciprocal determination, the
path leading to the achievement of the goal and the goal
giving form and content to the path. In addition to the
forward thrust of the path, there is thus a basic feedback
emanating from the goal, so that the goal can, in a sense,
generate out of itself through the circuit system of man's
constitutional capacities the series of measures needed to
bring about its actualization. This relationship is analogous
to the relation between a guided missile and its mobile
target. The missile does not reach its target merely through
its own initial thrust and direction. It finds it precisely
because it is being controlled by signals the target is itself
emitting.
Faith (Saddha)
"Suffering is the supporting condition for faith": After
asserting as the last step in the mundane sequence that birth
is the supporting condition for suffering, the Sutta switches
over to the transcendental series with the pronouncement that
suffering is the supporting condition for faith. With respect
to both assertions the present formulation diverges from the
usual version of twelve-factored dependent arising. In the
usual version the forward sequence ends with the statement
that birth is the condition for aging-and-death, sorrow,
lamentation, pain, grief, and despair. With this it concludes,
leaving unstated the implied aftermath -- that this "mass of
suffering" will generate anew the fundamental ignorance at the
head of the whole series, thus beginning another run through
the cycle. The fact that suffering here replaces
aging-and-death as the last member of the samsaric part of the
series therefore has a special importance. It cautions us to
the impending change, signaling that we are about to witness,
in the progression of links to follow, not just one more turn
of the wheel but an interruption of its forward spin and a
struggle to reverse its natural direction of movement.
The Buddha's declaration that suffering is the supporting
condition for faith points to the essential backdrop to the
awakening of the religious consciousness. It reveals that
spiritual awareness and the quest for enlightenment do not
arise spontaneously in harmony with our natural modes of
world-engagement, but require a turn "against the current" a
break away from our instinctual urges for expansion and
enjoyment and the embarkation in a different direction. This
break is precipitated by the encounter with suffering.
Suffering spurs the awakening of the religious consciousness
in that it is the experience of suffering which first tears us
out of our blind absorption in the immediacy of temporal being
and sets us in search of a way to its transcendence. Whether
in the form of pain, frustration, or distress, suffering
reveals the basic insecurity of the human condition,
shattering our naive optimism and unquestioned trust in the
goodness of the given order of things. It throws before our
awareness, in a way we cannot evade, the vast gulf stretching
between our ingrained expectations and the possibilities for
their fulfillment in a world never fully susceptible to
domination by our wills. It makes us call into question our
schemes of values built upon the bedrock of personal
expedience. It leads to a revaluation of all values and a new
scale of worth indifferent to the claims of self-concern. And
it opens us to confidence in an unseen order of relations and
inter-connections, an order in which the values that emerge,
so often in forceful opposition to the old, will find their
proper justification and reward.
Yet for suffering to become an effective spur to spiritual
awakening it is not enough merely to encounter it. For the
religious consciousness to be aroused suffering must be not
only met as a constant liability of our existence, but
confronted and grappled with in the arena of thematic
reflection. As long as we engage suffering simply in its
superficial modes, as felt pain and sorrow, we will react to
it in one of two ways, both of which operate at a purely
psychological level. In the first case we will react to
suffering in an unhealthy manner, as when we arouse resentment
against the source of our displeasure and seek relief by
annihilating it, ignoring it, or running away in pursuit of
some easy escape. In the second case we will react to
suffering in a mentally healthy way, as when we fortify our
minds with patience and courage, strengthen our capacities for
endurance, and seek to resolve the problem in a realistic
manner. But though the second approach is definitely to be
preferred to the first, in neither case does that inward
revolution take place which awakens us to our extreme need for
deliverance and compels us to set off in a new direction
previously unknown and unexplored. The urge for liberation can
only set in when pain and sorrow have been confronted with
reflective awareness and recognized as symptoms of a deeper
ailment demanding a radical therapy. The quest for a
conclusive solution to the problem of suffering begins with an
act of understanding, not with mere tribulation. It starts
from the realization that suffering is more than a chance
encroachment upon a state of affairs otherwise felicitous,
that it is a malady which infects our being upwards from its
very root. We must come to see that the breeding ground of
suffering lies not so much in the outside world as at the base
of our own being, and that any cure that is to be permanently
effective must uproot it at this inward source.
The arising of such a realization depends upon the adoption of
a new perspective from which the fact of suffering can be
faced in its full range and universality. Though single in its
essence, suffering or dukkha yet divides into three
stages or tiers in accordance with the level of understanding
from which it is viewed. [10] At the most elementary level
suffering appears as physical pain and oppression, manifest
most clearly in the events of birth, sickness, aging and
death, as well as in hunger, thirst, privation, and bodily
discomfort. At a higher level it comes to be seen as a
psychological fact -- as the sorrow and frustration springing
from our separation from what is desired, our meeting with
what is disliked, and the disappointment of our expectations.
And at the third and highest level suffering becomes manifest
in its essential form, as the inherent un-satisfactoriness of
the samsaric round in which we turn without purpose on account
of our ignorance and attachments. These three tiers are not
mutually exclusive. In each case the lower level serves as
basis for the higher, by which it is absorbed and
comprehended. Thus, though the penetration of the highest
stage, the essential suffering comprised in the "five clinging
aggregates" (pañcupadanakkhandha), represents the
climax of understanding, this realization comes as the fruit
of a long period of preparation grounded upon the first flash
of insight into the basic inadequacy of the human condition.
Such an insight usually dawns through particular experiences
typical of the first two stages of suffering -- through sudden
pain, loss or disappointment, or through chronic anxiety,
confusion, and distress. But in order to become the stimulus
to a higher course of development, our vision must be capable
of rising from the particular to the universal. It is only
when we see clearly for ourselves that we are "sunk in birth,
aging, and death, in sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
despair, sunk in suffering, overcome by suffering" (MN. No.
29), that we are really ready for the means to bring this
unsatisfactory condition to an end.
Since it is suffering that impels us to seek the way to
liberation, suffering is called the supporting condition for
faith. By itself, however, the confrontation with suffering
even at the level of mature reflection is not sufficient to
generate faith. For faith to arise two conditions are
required: the first is the awareness of suffering, which makes
us recognize the need for a liberative path; the second is the
encounter with a teaching that proclaims a liberative path.
Thence the Buddha says that faith has for its nutriment
hearing the exposition of the true Dhamma. [11] Saddha,
the faith that comes into being as a result of hearing the
exposition of the true Dhamma is essentially an attitude of
trust and commitment directed to ultimate emancipation. In
order for such faith to arise and become a driving force of
spiritual development, it must meet with an objective ground
capable of eliciting its forward leap into the unknown and of
prompting its inner urge towards liberation. From the Buddhist
perspective this objective ground is provided by the three
objects of refuge -- the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha,
that is, the enlightened Teacher, his teaching, and his
community of noble disciples. The faith to be placed in them
must not be blind and uncritical. Though initially requiring
consent born out of trust, it also must be based on critical
scrutiny -- the Teacher tested to determine his
trustworthiness, his doctrine examined to decide on its
cogency, and his disciples interrogated to ascertain their
reliability. [12] As a result of such examination, conducted
either through personal confrontation whenever possible or
through scrutiny of the scriptural records, faith becomes
settled in the Buddha as the Perfectly Enlightened One, the
unerring guide on the path to deliverance; in the Dhamma as
his teaching and the path leading to deliverance; and in the
Sangha as the community of the Buddha's disciples who have
verified his teaching through their own direct experience, and
hence may be relied upon for guidance in our own pursuit of
the goal.
As the first requisite of spiritual development, faith is
compared to a hand in that it is needed to take hold of
beneficial practices, and to a seed in that it is the
vitalizing germ for the growth of the higher virtues.
Beneath its seeming simplicity it is a complex phenomenon
combining intellectual, emotional, and cognitive elements.
Intellectually faith implies a willingness to accept on trust
propositions beyond our present capacity for verification,
propositions relating to the basic tenets of the doctrine.
Through practice this assent will be translated from belief
into knowledge, but at the outset there is required an
acceptance which cannot be fully corroborated by objective
evidence. Emotionally faith issues in feelings of confidence
and serene joy, coupled with an attitude of devotion directed
to the objects of refuge. And at the level of volition faith
reinforces the readiness to implement certain lines of conduct
in the conviction they will lead to the desired goal. It is
the mobilizing force of action, stirring up the energy to
actualize the ideal.
Joy (Pamojja)
"Faith is the supporting condition for joy": Faith functions
as a support for the next link in the series, joy or gladness
(pamojja), by permitting an outlet from the pent-up
tensions of an existential impasse brought on by the
reflective encounter with the problem of suffering. Prior to
the discovery of the true Dhamma two alternatives present
themselves to the thoughtful individual as he struggles to
work out a viable solution to the problem of suffering once it
has emerged into the open in its full depth and universality.
One alternative is compliant submission to a justification of
suffering developed along traditional theological lines --
that is, a theodicy which sees evil and suffering as
detracting from the goodness of the created order only
superficially, while ultimately contributing to the total
perfection of the whole. This solution, though generally
aligned with the higher ethical values, still appears to the
sensitive thinker to be a facile answer constantly provocative
of a gnawing sense of doubt and disbelief. The other
alternative is resignation to suffering as a brute fact
unintelligible to man's moral sense, an incidental offshoot of
a universe totally indifferent to any structure of spiritual
or ethical values. This solution, though not internally
inconsistent, clashes with our basic moral intuitions so
sharply that the result, for the sensitive thinker, is often a
turn to nihilism in one of its two forms -- as reckless
license or ineffectual despair.
Neither the theological nor the materialistic answers can show
the way to an actual escape from suffering. Both, in the last
analysis, can only hold out a choice between resignation and
rebellion. The gain of faith in the true Dhamma spells the end
to this quandary by pointing to a solution which can admit the
pervasive reality of suffering without needing to justify it,
yet can give this suffering a cogent explanation and indicate
an escape. Suffering, from this perspective, is traceable to
distinct causes endowed with ethical significance; it is the
inevitable result of our own immoral actions returning to
ourselves. Our actions, when viewed from the standpoint of the
Dhamma, are neither threads in some invisible handiwork of
divine perfection, nor meaningless pulsations of nerves and
brain, but expressions of ethically significant decisions
having an integral place in a morally intelligible world. They
are seen as choices for which we bear full responsibility
before an impersonal universal law that ensures the
preservation of an equilibrium between deeds and their
results, so that virtuous deeds bring forth happiness and evil
deeds suffering. The round of becoming in which we are
immersed -- where we are born, grow old, suffer, and die --
this round is created by ourselves, fashioned out of our own
blindness and craving. We build the round ourselves and we can
bring it to an end by ourselves, by eradicating this
world-sustaining ignorance and desire. The path to liberation
is revealed in all its practical details with full precision
and clarity. It is a path of conduct and insight each man must
tread for himself, success being dependent entirely on his own
diligence, sincerity and energy, and on his capacities for
renunciation and understanding.
The gain of faith in the true Dhamma thus points to an outlet
from the contention of opposed alternatives, neither of which
can be happily embraced. It exhausts the pressures of an
apparent dead-end, and as the stress and tension fall away
there springs up a surge of joy conditioned by the acquisition
of faith. This incipient swell of joy grows by degrees as the
aspirant's contemplation focuses more sharply upon the objects
in which confidence has been reposed. Sustained reflection on
the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha gradually dispels the darkness
of doubt and indecision. It issues in an effusion of light, of
peace and inner clarity, when as a result of such reflection
the defilements are attenuated and the mind's impulsion
towards the elevating qualities the refuges represent gains in
forward momentum. For this reason faith is compared to a
miraculous water-clearing gem. According to Indian legend,
there is a special gem possessed by the mythic universal
monarch which, when thrown into a stream of turbid water,
immediately causes it to become clear. The strands of
vegetation float away, the mud settles, and the water becomes
pure, serene, and sweet-tasting, fit to be drunk by the
monarch. Similarly, it is said, when the gem of faith is set
up in the heart it causes the hindrances to disappear, the
defilements to settle, and the mind to become clear, lucid,
and serene. [13]
The strengthening of confidence in the objects of refuge
becomes the incentive for a firmer dedication to the practice
of the teaching. Thence the texts ascribe to faith the
characteristic of "leaping forward."[14] Faith leaps forward
in that "when the yogin sees that the hearts of others have
been set free, he leaps forward, by way of aspiration, to the
various fruits of a holy life, and he makes efforts to attain
the yet unattained, to find the unfound, to realize the
unrealized."[15] This aspect of faith is illustrated by a
courageous hero who lunges across a turbulent river to escape
from danger, saving himself thereby and inspiring others by
his example.
At this stage, in particular, the aspirant's faith creates a
readiness to undertake the basic rules of moral training.
Through his settled faith in the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha he
is prepared to enter the path of practice, which requires at
the start that he train in the foundation of the path, the
observance of moral discipline (Síla). For this reason
the acceptance of moral restraint is said to be undertaken out
of faith. [16] Moral restraint is taken up by accepting rules
of discipline designed to inculcate an inner disposition of
virtue by controlling bodily and verbal actions. The codes of
rules vary in scope from the five basic precepts of the
Buddhist layman to the more than 227 training rules undertaken
by the Bhikkhu or fully ordained monk, but all share the
common characteristic of disciplining behavior. Each of the
basic precepts involves an explicit principle of abstinence
requiring to be observed and an implicit mental attitude to be
cultivated through such abstinence. The former consists in
abstention from the unwholesome actions of taking life,
stealing, sexual abuse, false speech and partaking of
intoxicants; the latter calls for a persistent effort to
develop a mind of compassion, honesty, purity, truthfulness,
and sobriety. The immediate result of living in conformity
with these guidelines to right action is the arising of a
sense of freedom from remorse (avippatisara), Remorse,
a feeling of regret over moral transgression and neglect,
tends to provoke guilt, agitation, and self-recrimination.
When, through close adherence to the precepts, the mind is
freed from remorse, an ease of conscience and "bliss of
blamelessness" set in born of the knowledge that one's actions
are beyond reproach. Thence the Buddha declares wholesome
rules of conduct to have freedom from remorse as their benefit
and reward. [17] The joy that comes through realizing one's
purity confirms the confidence originally placed in the
teaching. Thereby it arouses still stronger faith and a desire
for further application to the practice.
Rapture (Piti)
"Joy is the supporting condition for rapture": Though for
certain individuals serene faith in the objects of refuge and
a clear conscience are sufficient to transform joy into
rapture, such cases are the exception rather than the rule.
Generally, in order for the emotional tone of the spiritual
life to be lifted to that pitch of intensity suggested by the
term "rapture" (piti) a further commitment to the
training is necessary. This commitment takes the form of
deliberate application to the practice of meditation. Methods
of meditation contributing to the attainment of liberation are
classified into two systems -- serenity meditation (samatha
bhávaná) and insight meditation (vipassana bhávaná).
Serenity meditation aims at the creation of a state of calm
concentration by unifying the mind in focus on a single
object. Insight meditation aims at insight into the nature of
phenomena by directly contemplating the bodily and mental
processes as they occur on the successive moments of
experience. Though there is a system, which employs
mindfulness as a direct means to the awakening of insight, in
the usual pattern serenity is cultivated first as a
preliminary measure, since the unification and purification of
consciousness effected by concentration facilitate correct
penetration of the nature of things through contemplative
insight. This is the sequence utilized by the present Sutta,
the stages from "rapture" through "concentration" covering the
systematic development of serenity, the two following stages
the development of insight.
Serenity meditation is cultivated on the basis of a single
object selected from a standard set of objects reserved
exclusively for the development of concentration. These
objects, traditionally numbered at forty, include the colored
and elemental circles called kasinas, the cemetery
contemplations, the recollections of the three refuge objects,
meditation on the sublime abodes of love and compassion,
mindfulness of breathing, etc. After taking up one of these
objects as his field of work, the yogin strives to unify his
mind by fixing his attention on his object to the exclusion of
all sense data, concepts, thoughts, memories, projections,
fantasies, and associative thinking. His aim is to make his
mind one-pointed, and this forbids at once its dispersal among
a multiplicity of concerns. Success in the practice depends on
the harmonization of the mental faculties in the work of
concentration. Through mindfulness (sati) the yogin
bears the object in his field of awareness and prevents it
from slipping away; through discernment (sampajañña) he
maintains a cautious watch upon the mind, noting its
tendencies to stray and swiftly correcting them; and through
energy (viriya) he strives to dispel the impediments to
mental unification, and to maintain his awareness at a pitch
which is simultaneously taut but relaxed.
The impediments to meditation are classified into a group of
five factors called the "five hindrances" (pañcanivarana).
These are sensual desire, ill will, stiffness and torpor,
restlessness and regret, and doubt. The Buddha calls these
five hindrances "corruptions of the mind" and "weakeners of
wisdom." He says they are conducive to pain, blindness, and
ignorance, and compares them respectively to a debt, a
disease, imprisonment, slavery, and the dangers of a desert
journey. Their removal by unremitting exertion is the first
task facing the meditator. As he proceeds in his practice,
striving with patience and diligence, there come suddenly
momentary breaks in the course of his efforts when the
hindrances fall away, the flow of inner verbalization stops,
and the mind abides one-pointedly on the object. The
achievement of this momentary concentration, brief as it is,
gives immense satisfaction. It is a powerful experience
unleashing spurts of mental energy, which flood up to the
surface of consciousness and inundate the mind with waves of
joyous refreshment. It brings an elating thrill bordering on
ecstasy, crowning the yogin's previous endeavors and inspiring
further effort.
This experience marks the arising of rapture. The
distinguishing feature of rapture is a strong interest and
delight directed to the object of attention. Its function is
to give refreshment to the body and mind. It can assume both
wholesome and unwholesome forms, depending on whether it is
motivated by attachment or detachment with respect to its
object, but on occasions of meditative consciousness it is
always wholesome. The commentaries distinguish five degrees of
rapture, which make their appearance in the successive stages
of mental unification. [18] "Minor rapture," the lowest on the
scale, is said to be able to raise the hairs of the body.
"Momentary rapture," the next degree of development, rushes
through the body with an intensity likened to streaks of
lightning flashing forth in the sky at different moments.
"Showering rapture," the third degree, breaks over the body
again and again with considerable force, like the waves on the
seashore breaking upon the beach. "Uplifting rapture" is
so-called because it is credited with the ability to cause the
body to levitate, and the Visuddhimagga cites several
cases where this literally occurs. And "pervading rapture,"
the highest on the scale, is said to completely fill the whole
body as a huge inundation fills a rock cavern. Since the
commentary to our Sutta defines joy (pamojja), the
prior link in our sequence, as weak rapture, we may assume
this to signify the delightful interest preceding the
deliberate development of meditation, that is, in the stages
when faith in the Dhamma was just acquired and the
purification of moral discipline commenced. The five degrees
of rapture presented here would then pertain exclusively to
the rapture found in meditative consciousness. And since the
last degree of rapture only gains ascendancy with the
attainment of full absorption, which does not come until
later, it seems that the degrees of rapture which are
distinctive of the present stage of progress are the four
beginning with minor rapture and reaching their peak with
uplifting rapture.
Tranquility (Passaddhi)
"Rapture is the supporting condition for tranquility": While
the appearance of rapture indicates a definite advance in the
work of concentration, its coarser modes still contain an
element of exuberance which is in constant danger of slipping
out of control and spilling over into unwholesome states of
mind dominated by restlessness and agitation. For rapture
involves an intense delight in the object coupled with an
anticipation of even greater delight to come. The experience
of present delight can often be accompanied by an underlying
worry that this pleasure will disappear, while the expectation
of further delight can stimulate a subtle grasping at the
future. Both states, the anxiety and the grasping, bring along
an excitation inimical to the centering of the mind in
one-pointed calm. For this reason, as the yogin progresses in
his practice a point is reached where the ecstatic exultation
sparked off by rapture becomes felt as an obstruction to the
development of mental unification, a corruption of the
training which must be pacified and stilled.
Rapture itself will remain as a factor of meditative
development up to the third absorption, but to permit further
progress its detrimental tendencies have to be sublimated.
Through continued application to the practice rapture becomes
more refined, shedding the heated zest of its initial forms.
With its refinement it increasingly evokes along with itself
another quality called "tranquility" (passaddhi).
Tranquility is characterized by the quieting down of mental
disturbances. It removes agitation and restlessness, imparting
to the mind a soothing calm comparable to the cool shade
offered by a tree to travelers oppressed by the sun's heat.
Tranquility operates in two co-occurrent forms, "tranquility
of body" and "tranquility of mind," where "mind" signifies the
aggregate of consciousness and "body," not the physical
organism, but the group of consciousness-adjuncts included in
the aggregates of feeling, perception, and mental formations.
[19] Thence the arising of tranquility results in the
subsiding of disturbances throughout the full extent of the
psychodynamic system. It allays the propensity towards
excitement, soothes the innervations brought on by rapture,
and casts over the meditative endeavor a profound stillness
paving the way for deeper states of concentration to follow.
Tranquility further induces in both consciousness and its
adjuncts the qualitative factors of lightness, malleability,
wieldiness, proficiency, and rectitude. These factors, present
to some extent in every wholesome state of consciousness,
perform the respective tasks of eliminating sluggishness,
rigidity, unwieldiness, disability, and insincerity. By
holding at bay these mental corruptions destructive to moral
and spiritual progress, they enhance the functional efficiency
of the mind, rendering it a more tractable instrument for
application to the higher stages of the path.
Happiness (Sukha)
"Tranquility is the supporting condition for happiness": As
the yogin's psychosomatic system is brought to a state of
tranquil composure, a feeling of inner happiness or bliss (sukha),
unobtrusively present from the start, gains in prominence
until it emerges in its own right as a salient feature of the
training. Though closely associated with rapture, happiness is
not identical with the latter and can arise in its absence.
Rapture denotes a mental factor belonging to the fourth of the
five aggregates into which Buddhism classifies the
psychophysical organism, namely, the aggregate of mental
formations (sankharakkhandha). It is a cognitive rather
than affective phenomenon, which fuses zestful interest with a
sense of joyous delight. Happiness, on the other hand, is a
purely hedonic factor belonging to the second aggregate, the
aggregate of feelings (vedanakkhandha). It is
pleasurable feeling, here, as the happiness conditioned by
tranquility, the pleasure, which springs up in meditation as
disturbances subside.
Rapture is relatively coarse in quality and happiness subtle.
Thence, though rapture is always accompanied by happiness, in
the higher meditative attainment of the third jhana happiness
can remain even after rapture has faded away. The
Atthasalini, a commentary to the Abhidhamma-Pitaka,
illustrates the difference between them with a vivid simile:
A man who, traveling along the path through a great desert
and overcome by the heat is thirsty and desirous of drink,
if he saw a man on the way, would ask, "Where is water?"
The other would say, "Beyond the wood is a dense forest
with a natural lake. Go there, and you will get some." He
hearing these words would be glad and delighted. Going
onwards, be would see men with wet clothes and hair, hear
the sound of wild fowl and pea-fowl, etc., see the dense
forest of green like a net of jewels by the edge of the
natural lake, he would see the water lily, the lotus, the
white lily, etc., growing in the lake, he would see the
clear transparent water, he would be all the more glad and
delighted, would descend into the natural lake, bathe and
drink at pleasure and, his oppression being allayed, he
would eat the fibers and stalks of the lilies, adorn
himself with the blue lotus, carry on his shoulders the
roots of the mandalaka, ascend from the lake, put on his
clothes, dry the bathing cloth in the sun, and in the cool
shade where the breeze blew ever so gently lay himself
down and say: "O bliss! O bliss!" Thus should this
illustration be applied: -- The time of gladness and
delight from when he heard of the natural lake and the
dense forest till he saw the water is like piti
having the manner of gladness and delight at the object in
view. The time when, after his bath and drink be laid
himself down in the cool shade, saying, "O bliss! O
bliss!" etc., is the sense of sukha grown strong,
established in that mode of enjoying the taste of the
object.
-- Maung Tin, trans. The Expositor (Atthasalini),
(London 1920), Vol. I, pp 157-58.
Despite the simile's suggestion, rapture and happiness are not
necessarily asynchronous, and are in fact only sundered with
the attainment of the third jhana. The presentation of
happiness as arising subsequent to rapture only means that
happiness becomes the salient feature of the path after
rapture has already made its own distinctive contribution and
settled back to a subsidiary place. In the present stage
rapture still persists, only its exuberance has now been toned
down by the prevailing quiescence developed in the stage of
tranquility.
The sub-commentary to the Upanisa Sutta explains
sukha as the happiness of the access to absorption. The
term "access" (upacara) denotes the stage in the
cultivation of serenity immediately preceding full absorption,
the intended goal of serenity meditation. Access is
characterized by the abandonment of the five hindrances and
the arising of the "counterpart sign," the self-luminous
object of interior perception, which is the focal point for
the higher stages of concentration. The abandoning of the
hindrances began already with the gain of faith, which
conferred a serene lucency suspending their turbulence, and
each ascending rung along the path marked their attenuation to
a further degree. Since the hindrances are the principal
obstructions to both serenity and insight, the early stages of
the path are primarily concerned with their debilitation and
elimination.
The elimination of the hindrances prior to attaining access is
brought about by means of two methods, one specifically
directed to each hindrance separately, the other applicable to
all at once. The former is to be employed when a particular
hindrance obtrudes itself with persistent force, the latter on
other occasions when no one hindrance seems especially
conspicuous. The specific method involves the reversing of the
causal situation out of which the hindrance develops. Since
each defiling factor is a conditioned phenomenon coming into
existence through distinct causes, the key to its elimination
lies in applying the appropriate antidote to its causal base.
Thus sensual desire arises on account of unskillful attention
to the attractive features of things, to alluring objects and
physical bodies. It is attenuated by considering the
impermanence of the objects of attachment, and by reflecting
on the repulsive nature underlying the attractive appearance
of the bodies, which arouse desire. Ill-will or anger also
springs up from unskillful attention, in this case to the
unpleasant aspects of persons and things; it is reversed by
developing loving kindness towards disagreeable people and
patience in the face of unfavorable circumstances. Stiffness
and torpor become prominent by submitting to moods of sloth
and drowsiness; they are dispelled by the arousal of energy.
Restlessness and regret arise from attending to disturbing
thoughts and are eliminated by directing the mind to an object
conducive to inner peace. And doubt, grounded upon un-clarity
with regard to fundamental points of doctrine, is dispelled by
clear thinking and precise analysis of the issues shrouded in
obscurity.
In contrast to these techniques, which counter the hindrances
separately, the practice of concentration on one of the
prescribed objects of serenity meditation inhibits them all
simultaneously. Though only affective so long as no particular
hindrance impedes the meditative progress, this method,
drawing upon the power of mental unification, is capable of
bringing tremendous force to bear upon the struggle against
their supremacy. Since the latent defilements can crop up into
the open only so long as the mind is driven by discursive
thinking, the unification of the mind upon a single object
closes off the portal through which they emerge. As the mind
descends to increasingly deeper levels of concentration, the
hindrances are gradually made to subside until, with the
attainment of access, their suppression becomes complete. Held
at bay in the base of the mental continuum, the latent
defilements are no longer capable of rising to the surface of
consciousness. For as long as the suppressive force of
concentration prevails, their activity is suspended, and the
mind remains secure in its one-pointed stabilization, safe
from their disruptive influence. This abandonment of the
hindrances through the power of suppression brings a feeling
of profound relief accompanied by a blissful effusion born
from the newly accomplished purification. The Buddha compares
the happiness of abandoning the hindrances to the happiness a
man would experience if he were unexpectedly freed from debt,
cured of a serious illness, released from prison, set free
from slavery, or led to safety at the end of a desert journey.
[20]
Concentration (Samádhi)
"Happiness is the supporting condition for concentration": The
attainment of access signals a major breakthrough, which spurs
on further exertion. As a result of such exertion the bliss
generated in the access stage is made to expand and to suffuse
the mind so completely that the subtlest barriers to inner
unification disappear. Along with their disappearance the mind
passes beyond the stage of access and enters into absorption
or full concentration (samádhi). Concentration itself
denotes a mental factor present in both the attainments of
access and absorption. Its salient feature is the wholesome
unification of the mind on a single object, and it brings
about a harmonization between consciousness and its
concomitants to a degree sufficient to free them from the
distraction, vacillation, and unsteadiness characterizing
their normal operations. The mind in concentration, fixed
firmly on its object, is like the flame of a candle shielded
from the wind or the surface of a lake on which all the waves
and ripples have been stilled.
However, although both access and absorption partake of the
nature of concentration, an important difference still
separates them, justifying the restriction of the term "full
concentration" to absorption alone. This difference consists
in the relative strength in the two attainments of certain
mental concomitants called the "factors of absorption" or "jhana
factors" (jhanangani) -- namely, applied thought,
sustained thought, rapture, happiness, and mental
one-pointed-ness. These factors, aroused at the very beginning
of serenity meditation and gradually cultivated through the
course of its progress, have the dual function of inhibiting
the hindrances and unifying the mind on its object. According
to the commentaries, the factors are aligned with the
hindrances in a direct one-to-one relation of opposition, such
that each jhana factor has the specific task of countering and
occluding one hindrance. Thus applied thought counteracts
stiffness and torpor, sustained thought doubt, rapture ill
will, happiness restlessness and regret, and one-pointed-ness
sensual desire. [21] At the same time the factors exercise a
consolidating function with respect to the object, applied
thought directing the mind to the object, sustained thought
anchoring it there, rapture creating an interest in it,
happiness experiencing its affective quality, and
one-pointed-ness focusing the mind on the object.
In the access attainment the jhana factors are strong enough
to keep the hindrances suppressed, but not yet strong enough
to place the mind in absorption. They still stand in need of
maturation. Maturation comes as a result of continued
practice, which gives them the power to lift the mind beyond
the threshold plane of access and plunge it into the object
with the unshakable force of full absorption. In the state of
absorption the mind fixes upon its object with such a high
intensity of concentration that subjective discriminations
between the two no longer occur. The waves of discursive
thinking have at last subsided, and the mind abides without
straying even the least from its base of stabilization.
Nevertheless, even full concentration admits of degrees. At
the plane of absorption concentration is divided into four
levels called the four jhanas. These are distinguished by the
aggregation of factors present in each attainment, the order
of the four being determined by the successive elimination of
the comparatively courser factors. In the first jhana all five
jhana factors are present; in the second applied and sustained
thought are eliminated, in the third rapture is made to fade
away; and in the fourth the feeling of happiness is replaced
by equanimity, the peaceful feeling-tone which veers neither
toward pleasure nor toward pain. One-pointed-ness remains
present in all four jhanas, the one constant in the series. To
rise from the first jhana to the second, the yogin, after
emerging from the first jhana, must reflect upon the
coarseness of applied and sustained thought and the first
jhanas inadequacy due to the proximity of the hindrances. Then
he must consider the second jhana as more peaceful and
sublime, arouse the aspiration to attain it, and exert his
energy to achieve a stronger degree of mental unification.
Similarly, to rise from the second to the third jhana he must
repeat the same procedure taking rapture as the coarse factor
needing to be eliminated, and to rise from the third to the
fourth jhana he must reflect on the coarseness of happiness
and the superiority of neutral, equanimous feeling.
Beyond the fourth jhana lie four even subtler stages of
concentration called the four formless attainments (arupasamapatti).
In these attainments the luminous counterpart sign serving as
the object of the jhanas is replaced by four successively more
refined formless objects, which give their names to their
respective attainments -- the base of infinite space, the base
of infinite consciousness, the base of nothingness, and the
base of neither perception nor non-perception. At the peak of
this scale of meditative equipoise consciousness arrives at a
point of unification so fine that, like the geometric point,
it eludes detection, and its presence can be neither affirmed
nor denied.
Knowledge and Vision (Ñana dassana)
"Concentration is the supporting condition for the knowledge
and vision of things as they really are": Despite the
loftiness and sublimity of these exalted attainments,
immersion in deep concentration is not the end of the Buddhist
path. The unification of consciousness effected by serenity
meditation is only a means to a further stage of practice.
This stage, ushered in by the next link in the series, "the
knowledge and vision of things as they really are" (yathabhuta-ñanadassana),
is the development of insight (vipassana bhávaná).
Through his deep concentration the yogin is able to suppress
the defilements, to bring them to a state of quiescence where
they no longer invade the active processes of thought. But
beneath the surface stillness the defilements lie latent,
ready to spring up again if provoked. As long as the
defilements remain present, even if only in dormant form,
release from suffering has yet to be achieved, for the
latencies of the defilements lying quietly in the mental
continuum can still regenerate the samsaric round of continued
birth and death. The latent tendencies are the seeds of
renewed existence, which bring about a re-arising of the
stream of consciousness and thence of all the remaining links
in the samsaric chain. To end the round and attain deliverance
the defilements must be completely destroyed; it is not enough
merely to suppress them. The destruction of the defilements
cannot be brought about by concentration alone, for
concentration, even at its deepest levels, can only effect the
suspension of their activity, not their eradication. To
destroy the defilements down to their bottommost stratum of
latency something more is needed -- paññá, the wisdom
which penetrates the true mark of phenomena. Concentration
gains its place in the Buddhist discipline in so far as it
induces the mental one-pointed-ness of at least the access
level required as the support for wisdom. Thus the Buddha
enjoins his disciples to develop concentration, not as an end
in itself, but because "one who is concentrated understands
things as they really are."[22] Only a mind, which has been
rendered pure and calm can comprehend things in accordance
with actuality, and the discipline of concentration, by
suppressing the hindrances, engenders the required purity and
calm. The actual work, however, of extricating the defilements
is performed exclusively by wisdom.
Wisdom is "the one thing needed" to cut off the defilements
because the most fundamental of all the mental depravities is
ignorance (avijja). Ignorance is the kingpost upon
which all the other defilements converge and the lynchpin,
which holds them all in place. While it remains the others
remain, and for the others to be destroyed it must be
destroyed. Doctrinally defined as nescience with regard to the
four noble truths, ignorance signifies not so much the lack of
specific pieces of information as a basic non-comprehension
regarding the true nature of things as expressed in the four
truths. Since the eradication of the defilements depends upon
the eradication of ignorance, the one factor capable of
abolishing the defilements is the factor capable of abolishing
their fundamental root, and that is the direct antithesis of
ignorance -- wisdom or "the knowledge and vision of things as
they really are." For this reason, at the beginning of our
Sutta, the Buddha proclaims: "The destruction of the cankers
is for one who knows and sees, I say, not for one who does not
know and does not see." The defilements, epitomized in the
"cankers," are only destroyed for one who overcomes ignorance
by the wisdom, which knows and sees things as they are.
The compound expression "knowledge and vision," indicates that
the kind of knowledge to be developed is not mere conceptual
understanding, but knowledge, which in its directness and
immediacy is akin to visual perception. Conceptual
understanding is often needed to clear away the intellectual
obstructions to a correct perspective, but it must
eventually yield to the light of direct experience. To
achieve this experiential understanding it is necessary to
enter upon the practice of the second system of Buddhist
meditation, the development of insight. The practice of
insight meditation aims at dislodging the defilements by
eradicating the ignorance at their base. Ignorance is overcome
by generating, through mindful observation, a direct insight
into things as they really are. The material upon which
insight works is precisely the sphere where ignorance is
concealed, our own psychophysical experience. Its method is
the application of mindfulness or discerning awareness to this
sphere without interruption and in all activities.
In the discourse the Buddha states that what must be known and
seen as they are is the five aggregates -- their nature, their
arising, and their passing away. The five aggregates --
material form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and
consciousness -- are the basic categories structuring the
Buddha's analysis of experience. Each experiential occasion,
from the Buddhist perspective, is a complex process involving
a number of factors functioning in unison. To normal,
non-analytical consciousness this unified complex appears as a
uniform mass, a false appearance which, when accepted at face
value, leads to the assumption of a simple solid self as the
permanent subject of cognition. The assumption of permanent
selfhood Buddhism holds to be the basic conceptual error
dominating our mental horizon. It is the outermost shell of
egoistic projection shielding the pre-conceptual ignorance,
and thus the first of the ten fetters to be broken along the
path to liberation.
To dispel the illusion of independent selfhood the
experiential process must be submitted to searching scrutiny,
which rectifies the false perceptions contributing to its
formation. The first phase in this examination is the
dissection of the cognitive fabric into the distinct threads
entering into its make-up. These "threads" or components are
the five aggregates. The aggregate of material form covers the
physical side of experience, comprising both external material
objects and the body together with its sense faculties. The
other four aggregates constitute the mental side of
experience. Feeling is the affective quality of pleasure or
pain, or the neutral tone of neither pleasure nor pain,
present on any occasion of mental activity. Perception is the
selective faculty, which singles out the object's distinctive
marks as a basis for recognition. The formations aggregate is
a comprehensive category incorporating all mental factors
other than feeling and perception; its most conspicuous member
is volition. And consciousness is the faculty of cognition
itself, which sustains and coordinates all the other factors
in the task of apprehending the object. These five aggregates
function in complete autonomy, entirely through their
reciprocal support, without need for a self-subsistent
unifying principle to be identified as a self or subject.
In order to develop the knowledge and vision of things as they
really are with respect to the aggregates, the yogin must
first emerge from his state of deep concentration, for the
analytical faculty -- silenced in the folds of serenity -- has
to be brought into play to effect the required dissection.
With his mind made clear and pliant as a result of
concentration, the yogin attends to the diverse phenomena
coming into range of his awareness. The phenomena are attended
to as they become manifest to determine their salient
characteristics; then, on this basis, they are assigned to
their appropriate place among the aggregates. Whatever is
physical belongs to the aggregate of material form; whatever
registers affective tone is feeling; whatever notices the
object's marks is perception; whatever wills is a mental
formation; and whatever cognizes is consciousness. The
aggregates may further be grouped into a simpler scheme by
placing material form on one side and the four mental
aggregates on the other, the two being coupled as
mentality-materiality (nama rupa). They are then
correlated with their causes and conditions to expose their
dependently arisen nature. The analytic procedure generates
the realization that experience is just a double stream of
material and mental events without a subsisting self. The
synthetic procedure makes it clear that all these events are
conditioned phenomena, which arise when their conditions are
present and cease when their conditions disappear.
This last realization becomes the portal to the next major
stage in the development of understanding, the contemplation
of rise and fall. As the yogin attends to the states that
appear, he sees how each undergoes the same process of coming
into being, altering, and passing away: "Such is the arising
of material form, feeling, perception, formations, and
consciousness. Such is the passing away of material form,
feeling, perception, formations, and consciousness." The
contemplation of rise and fall brings into focus three marks
common to all conditioned phenomena -- their impermanence,
un-satisfactoriness, and selflessness. Impermanence is
generally the first characteristic to be discerned, as it
becomes clear through the immediate attention given to rise
and fall. The perception of impermanence leads directly to
insight into the other marks, which follow naturally from the
first. The notion of "happiness," or "pleasure," at the level
of philosophical understanding rather than mere feeling,
hinges upon an implicit notion of permanence. If something is
to be truly a source of happiness it must be permanent. What
is impermanent is incapable of yielding lasting happiness and
security, and therefore turns out, under examination, to be
really unsatisfactory, a potential source of suffering. The
notion of selfhood in turn rests upon the two pillars of
permanence and pleasure. What is impermanent and
unsatisfactory cannot be identified as a self, for it lacks
any solid unchanging core upon which the notion of selfhood
can be grounded. Thus the impermanent, unsatisfactory
phenomena comprised in the five aggregates turn out to have a
third characteristic, the aspect of selflessness. The
realization of these three characteristics -- impermanence,
un-satisfactoriness, and selflessness -- through unmediated
insight is the knowledge and vision of things as they really
are.
Disenchantment (Nibbida)
"The knowledge and vision of things as they really are is the
supporting condition for disenchantment": As the yogin
contemplates the rise and fall of the five aggregates, his
attention becomes riveted to the final phase of the process,
their dissolution and passing away. This insight into the
instability of the aggregates at the same time reveals their
basic unreliability. Far from being the ground of satisfaction
we unreflectively take them to be, conditioned things are seen
to be fraught with peril when adhered to with craving and
wrong views. The growing realization of this fundamental
insecurity brings a marked transformation in the mind's
orientation towards conditioned existence. Whereas previously
the mind was drawn to the world by the lure of promised
gratification, now, with the exposure of the underlying
danger, it draws away in the direction of a disengagement.
This inward turning away from the procession of formations is
called nibbida. Though some times translated "disgust"
or "aversion," the term suggests, not emotional repugnance,
but a conscious act of detachment resulting from a profound
noetic discovery. Nibbida signifies in short, the
serene, dignified withdrawal from phenomena, which supervenes
when the illusion of their permanence, pleasure, and selfhood
has been shattered by the light of correct knowledge and
vision of things as they are. The commentaries explain
nibbida as powerful insight (balava vipassana), an
explanation consonant with the word's literal meaning of
"finding out." It indicates the sequel to the discoveries
unveiled by that contemplative process, the mind's appropriate
response to the realizations thrust upon it by the growing
experiences of insight. Buddhaghosa compares it to the
revulsion a man would feel who, having grabbed bold of a snake
in the belief it was a fish, would look at it closely and
suddenly realize he was holding a snake. [23]
As our rendering implies, disenchantment marks the dissipation
of an "enchantment" or fascination with the kaleidoscopic
pleasures of conditioned existence, whether in the form of
sense enjoyments, emotions, or ideas. This fascination,
resting upon the distorted apprehension of things as
permanent, pleasurable, and self, is maintained at a deep
un-verbalized level by the hope of finding self identity in
the conditioned. As the enchanted mind presses forward seeking
explicit confirmation of the innate sense of selfhood,
everything encountered is evaluated in terms of the notions
"mine," "I," and "my self," the principal appropriative and
identificatory devices with which the inherent sense of
personal selfhood works. These three notions, imputed to
phenomena on account of ignorance, are in actuality conceptual
fabrications woven by craving, conceit, and speculation,
respectively. The insight into impermanence,
un-satisfactoriness, and selflessness cuts the ground out from
underneath this threefold fabrication, reversing the mode in
which phenomena can be viewed. Whereas before the development
of insight the aggregates were regarded as being "mine," "I,"
and "self," now, when illuminated with the light of insight
knowledge, they are seen in the opposite way as "not-mine,"
"not I," and "not self." Since the fascination with phenomenal
existence is sustained by the assumption of underlying
selfhood, the dispelling of this illusion through the
penetration of the three marks brings about a
de-identification with the aggregates and an end to their
spell of enchantment. In place of the fascination and
attraction a profound experience of estrangement sets in,
engendered by the perception of selfness in all conditioned
being. The Suttas present this sequence thus:
Material form, monks, is impermanent, suffering, and non-self.
Feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness are
impermanent, suffering, and not self. What is impermanent,
suffering and non-self, that should be seen with correct
wisdom as it really is: "This is not mine, this am I not, this
is not my self." So seeing, the instructed noble disciple
becomes disenchanted with material form, disenchanted with
feeling, disenchanted with perception, disenchanted with
mental formations, and disenchanted with consciousness.
-- SN. XXII. No. 15-17.
Dispassion (Viraga)
"Disenchantment is the supporting condition for dispassion":
In the trail of disenchantment there arises a deep yearning
for deliverance from the round of samsaric becoming.
Previously, prior to the arrival at correct knowledge and
vision, the mind moved freely under the control of the
impulses of delight and attachment. But now, with the growth
of insight and the consequent disenchantment with conditioned
existence, these impulses yield to a strong detachment and
evolving capacity for renunciation. Whatever tends to provoke
grasping and adherence is immediately abandoned, whatever
tends to create new involvement is left behind. The old urges
towards outer extension and accumulation give way to a new
urge towards relinquishment as the one clearly perceived way
to release. Every motion of the will becomes subordinated to
the newly ascendant desire for liberation: "Just as a fish in
a net, a frog in a snake's jaws, a jungle fowl shut into a
cage, ... -- just as these are desirous of being delivered, of
finding an escape from these things, so too this meditator's
mind is desirous of being delivered from the whole field of
formations and escaping from it."[24]
The desire for deliverance leads to a quickening of insight.
The capacity for comprehension picks up new speed, depth, and
precision. Like a sword the mind of insight-wisdom cuts
through the net of illusions fabricated on account of
ignorance; like a light it illuminates phenomena exactly as
they are. As the power of insight mounts, driven by the
longing for liberation, a point is eventually reached where a
fundamental turn-about takes place in the seat of
consciousness, effecting a radical restructuring of the mental
life. The beam-like radiance of insight expands into the full
luminosity of enlightenment, and the mind descends upon the
supra-mundane path leading directly and irreversibly to final
deliverance.
This transformation, signified by viraga or dispassion,
is the first strictly supra-mundane (lokuttara) stage
in the progression of transcendental dependent arising. The
earlier links in the sequence leading up to dispassion are all
technically classified as mundane (lokiya). Though
loosely called "transcendental" in the sense that they are
directed to the unconditioned, they are still mundane in terms
of their scope since they operate entirely within range of the
conditioned world. Their objects of concern are still the five
aggregates, or things derivative upon them. But with the
attainment of dispassion consciousness passes clear beyond the
mundane level, and for a fleeting moment realizes as its
object the unconditioned state, nibbána.
The shift in standpoint comes about as the immediate
consequence of the preceding stages of development. Through
insight into the three marks the basic distortions covering
over the true nature of phenomena were exposed; with the
uncovering of their true nature there set in a disengagement
from phenomena. This disengagement led to an attitude of
relinquishment and a fading out of desire. Now, having
released its grip on the conditioned, the mind turns to the
unconditioned, the deathless element (amata dhatu),
focusing upon it as the only state fully adequate to itself:
Whatever is there of material form, feeling, perception,
mental formations, and consciousness -- he beholds these
phenomena as impermanent, suffering, as a disease, a boil, a
dart, a misfortune, an affliction, as alien, as decomposing,
as empty, as selfless. He turns his mind away from these
phenomena; and when he has turned his mind away from them, he
focuses his mind on the deathless element, thinking: "This is
the peaceful, this is the sublime, that is, the stilling of
all formations, the relinquishing of the foundations, the
destruction of craving, dispassion, cessation, nibbána."[25]
Though the realization of the unconditioned requires a turning
away from the conditioned, it must be emphasized that this
realization is achieved precisely through the understanding of
the conditioned. Nibbána cannot be reached by backing off from
a direct confrontation with samsára to lose oneself in a
blissful oblivion to the world. The path to liberation is a
path of understanding, of comprehension and transcendence, not
of escapism or emotional self-indulgence. Nibbána can only be
attained by turning one's gaze towards samsára, and
scrutinizing it in all its starkness. This principle -- that
the understanding of the conditioned is the way to the
unconditioned -- holds true not only in the general sense that
an understanding of suffering is the spur to the quest for
enlightenment, but in a deeper, more philosophical sense as
well.
The path to nibbána lies through the understanding of samsára
for the reason that the experiential realization of the
unconditioned emerges from a prior penetration of the
fundamental nature of the conditioned, without which it is
impossible. The states of mind, which realize nibbána are
called liberations (vimokkha), and these liberations
are threefold according to the particular aspect of nibbána
they fix upon -- the sign-less (animitta), the
wish-less (appanihita), and emptiness (suññata).
The sign-less liberation focuses upon nibbána as devoid of the
"signs" determinative of a conditioned formation, the
wish-less liberation as free from the hankering of desire, and
the emptiness liberation as devoid of a self or of any kind of
substantial identity. Now these three liberations are each
entered by a distinct gateway or door called "the three doors
to liberation," (vimokkhamukha). [26] These three doors
signify precisely the contemplations of the three universal
marks of the conditioned -- impermanence, suffering, and
selflessness. Insight into each mark is a different door
leading into the realization of the unconditioned. The
profound contemplation of impermanence is called the door to
the sign-less liberation, since comprehension of impermanence
strips away the "sign of formations" exposing the mark-less
reality of the imperishable to the view of the contemplative
vision. The contemplation of suffering is called the door to
the wish-less liberation, since understanding of the suffering
inherent in all formations dries up the desire that reaches
out for them. And deep contemplation of selflessness is called
the door to the emptiness liberation. Since it exposes the
void-ness of substantial identity in all phenomena and hence
the un-viability of the self-notion in relation to the
unconditioned. In each close the understanding of the
conditioned and the realization of the unconditioned are found
to lock together in direct connection, so that by penetrating
the conditioned to its very bottom and most universal
features, the yogin passes through the door leading out of the
conditioned to the supreme security of the unconditioned.
The supra-mundane consciousness that realizes nibbána directly
penetrates the four noble truths, illuminating them all at
once with startling clarity: "Just, O monks, as a man in the
gloom and darkness of the night, at the sudden flashing up of
lightning, should with his eyes recognize the objects; just so
the monk sees, according to reality: 'This is suffering, this
is the origin of suffering, this is the cessation of
suffering, this is the path leading to the cessation of
suffering.'"[27] The penetration of the truths simultaneously
performs four functions, one with respect to each truth. It
fully understands (parijanati) the first noble truth,
the truth of suffering, since by taking nibbána as its object
it acquires a perspective from which it can directly see that
in contrast to the unconditioned every thing impermanent,
defiled, and conditioned is marked with suffering. It abandons
(pajahati) the second noble truth, the truth of the
origin, since it eradicates the craving and defilements, which
originate suffering so that they can never arise again. It
realizes (sacchikaroti) the third noble truth, the
truth of cessation, by apprehending nibbána in which all the
suffering of samsára is permanently cut off. And it develops
(bhaveti) the path, the fourth noble truth, since at
the moment of penetration the eight mental factors comprised
in the noble eightfold path concurrently arise performing the
task of realization. Right view sees the unconditioned; right
thought directs the mind upon it; right speech, right action,
and right livelihood eradicate their opposites; right effort
invigorates the mind; right mindfulness fixes attention on the
unconditioned, and right concentration unifies the mind in
absorption on the unconditioned. The ancients compare the
mind's ability to perform this fourfold function to the
burning of a lamp. Just as a lamp simultaneously burns the
wick, dispels the darkness, creates light, and uses up the
oil, so the supra-mundane knowledge simultaneously understands
suffering, abandons craving, realizes nibbána, and develops
the path. [28]
The breakthrough to the unconditioned comes in four distinct
stages called the four supra-mundane paths. Each momentary
path-experience eradicates a determinate group of defilements
ranked in degrees of coarseness and subtlety, so that the
first path eliminates the coarsest defilements and the fourth
path the most subtle. The defilements cut off by the paths are
generally classified as ten "fetters" (samyojana),
receiving this designation because they fetter sentient beings
to samsára. With the first path the yogin eradicates the first
three fetters -- personality view, doubt, and misapprehension
of rules and observances. Thereby he becomes a
"stream-enterer" (sotápanna), one who has entered the stream
of the Dhamma and is bound for final deliverance in a maximum
of seven more lives passed in the human or heavenly worlds.
The second path weakens all the remaining fetters to the point
where they no longer arise frequently or obsessively, but cuts
off none completely; with its attainment the yogin advances to
the stage of a "once-returner" (Sakrdagamin), one who
is due to return to the sense sphere world only one more time.
By eliminating sensual desire and aversion by means of the
third path, he attains the state of a non-returner (Anagamin),
no longer bound to the sense sphere but heading for rebirth in
a pure divine abode, where he will reach the final goal. The
fourth path cuts off the remaining five fetters -- desire for
existence in the fine material and immaterial planes, conceit,
restlessness, and ignorance. With its attainment the yogin
becomes an arahat, who has destroyed all the defilements and
reached the state of perfect purification.
Emancipation (Vimutti)
"Dispassion is the supporting condition for emancipation":
Each of the supra-mundane path-moments is immediately followed
by several moments of a different kind of supra-mundane
experience called "fruition" (phala). Fruition marks
the enjoyment of the realized degree of release effected by
the path's work of eradicating defilements. Whereas the
attainment of the path is an extremely intense exhilarating
experience requiring the expenditure of a tremendous quantum
of energy, the attainment of fruition is characterized by its
peacefulness, relaxedness, and blissful quiescence. If the
path-attainment be illustrated by a captive's sudden bursting
of the chains that hold him in captivity, fruition may be
compared to his savoring the taste of freedom that lies beyond
the captive state.
The completion of the fourth path and fruition results in full
emancipation (vimutti): "With the destruction of the
cankers, he directly realizes for himself, enters, and abides
in that emancipation of mind, emancipation of wisdom, which is
canker-less."[29] The subtlest and most tenacious fetters have
been broken, and there is nothing now that makes for further
bondage. Having destroyed the mental corruptions at their
basic level of latency, the yogin has completed his task.
There is nothing more to do, and nothing to add to what has
been done. He abides in the living experience of deliverance.
The emancipation realized by the arahat has a twofold aspect.
One aspect is the emancipation from ignorance and defilements
experienced during the course of his lifetime, the other the
emancipation from repeated existence attained with his passing
away. Through his complete penetration of the four noble
truths, the arahat has eradicated ignorance and released his
mind from the grip of the passions. The fading away of the
passions issues in a stainless purity called emancipation of
mind (cetovimutti); the fading away of ignorance issues
in a radiant awareness called emancipation of wisdom (pannnavimutti).
The mind of the arahat is at once impeccably pure through the
absence of attachment and radiantly bright through the
luminosity of wisdom. Endowed with this emancipation of mind
and of wisdom, he can move and act in the world without being
soiled by the mire of the world. He chooses, thinks, decides,
and wills free from the compulsion of egoistic habits. The
grasping of "I" and "mine" has ceased, the inclination to
conceit can no more obsess him. Having seen the ego-less
nature of all phenomena he has cut through the tangle of
egoistic constructs and become "a sage who is at peace" (muni
santo).
Since he has destroyed the defilements, whatever disturbances
might assail a person on their account no longer assail him.
Even though sublime and striking sense objects come into range
of his perception they cannot overwhelm his mind: "His mind
remains untouched, steadfast, unshakable, beholding the
impermanency of everything."[30] In the arahat greed, hatred,
and delusion, the unwholesome roots, which underlie all evil,
have been totally abandoned. They are not merely suppressed,
but withered up down to the level of their latencies, so that
they are no longer able to spring up again in the future. This
destruction of greed, hatred, and delusion is called the
nibbána realizable during lifetime; it is nibbána visible here
and now. "In so far as the monk has realized the complete
extinction of greed, hatred, and delusion, in so far is
nibbána realizable, immediate, inviting, attractive, and
comprehensible to the wise."[31] Because in this attainment
the five aggregates continue to function, sustained by bodily
vitality, it is also called "the nibbána element with a
residue remaining."[32]
But though for the arahat disturbances due to the defilements
do not arise, he is still subject to "a measure of
disturbance" conditioned by the body with its six sense
faculties. [33] Though he cannot be overcome by greed and
aversion he still experiences pleasure and pain; though he
cannot generate kamma binding to samsára he must still choose
and act within the limits set by his circumstances. Such
experience, however, is for the arahat purely residual. It is
merely the playing out of his stored up kamma from the past,
which can still fructify and call forth responses so long as
the body acquired through prior craving stands. But because
craving has now been inwardly exhausted, there lies ahead for
him no renewal of the round of birth and death. All feelings,
being experienced with detachment, not being delighted in,
will become cool. They arouse no new craving, provoke no new
expectations, lead to no new accumulations of kamma; they
merely continue on devoid of fecundity until the end of the
life span. With the break-up of the body at his passing away,
the arahat makes an end to the beginning-less process of
becoming. This is the second stage of his emancipation --
emancipation from renewed existence, from future birth, aging,
and death: "The sage who is at peace is not born, does not
age, does not die, does not tremble, does not yearn. For him
there does not exist that on account of which he might be
born. Not being born, how can he age? Not aging, how can he
die?"[34] Because, with the emancipation from continued
existence, no residue of the aggregates persists, this
attainment is called "the nibbána element without residue
remaining."[35]
The Knowledge of Destruction (Khaya Ñana)
"Emancipation is the supporting condition for the knowledge of
destruction": Following each of the four paths and fruits
there arises a retrospective cognition or "reviewing
knowledge" (paccavekkhana ñana) which reviews the
defilements that have been abandoned by the particular path
and the defilements remaining to be eliminated. In the case of
the last path and fruition, the path and fruition of
Arahatship, the reviewing knowledge ascertains that all
defilements have been eradicated and that there are none left
to be destroyed. This knowledge certifying the abandonment of
the defilements arises immediately after the mind has been
liberated from their grip by the full penetration of the four
noble truths:
He understands as it really is: "This is suffering, this
is the origin of suffering, this is the cessation of
suffering, this is the path to the cessation of suffering.
These are the cankers, this is the origin of the cankers,
this is the cessation of the cankers. This is the path to
the cessation of the cankers." As he is knowing and seeing
thus, his mind is liberated from the canker of sensuality,
from the canker of existence, and from the canker of
ignorance. When it is liberated, the knowledge arises in
him: "It is liberated."
-- MN. No. 39.
As the text indicates, this cognizance of the mind's
liberation is direct and personal, without dependence on
others. Just as a keen sighted man can look into a pool of
clear, limpid water and see for himself the shells, pebbles,
gravel and shoals of fish. The liberated person can look into
himself and see that his mind has been set free from the
cankers. [36]
The retrospective cognition of release involves two acts of
ascertainment. The first, called the "knowledge of
destruction" (khaya ñana), ascertains that all
defilements have been abandoned at the root; the second, the
"knowledge of non-arising" (anuppade ñana), ascertains
that no defilement can ever arise again. The two together are
also called the "knowledge and vision of emancipation"
(vimutti ñanadassana), the use of the word "vision" again
underscoring the perceptual immediacy of the cognition by
which the mind verifies its own release from the defilements.
By possessing this knowledge, one who has destroyed the
defilements not only experiences the freedom that results from
their destruction, but acquires as well an inner certitude
with respect to their destruction. If a liberated individual
only enjoyed liberation from the defilements without also
enjoying indubitable knowledge that he is liberated, his
attainment would always be haunted by an inner suspicion that
perhaps, after all, some area of vulnerability remains. Even
though no defilement ever came to manifestation, the shadow of
uncertainty would itself mar the attainment's claim to
completeness. However, because the attainment of Arahatship
automatically generates a retrospective cognition ascertaining
the final abandonment of all defilements, there is no room for
such a suspicion to arise. Like a deer in a remote forest far
from the reach of hunters, the one who has crossed over
attachment to the world walks in confidence, stands in
confidence, sits down in confidence, and sleeps in confidence.
[37] He is out of reach of the defilements, and knows he is
out of their reach.
Though the knowledge of the destruction of the cankers is not
always set up in the arahat's awareness, it is permanently
available to him, and awaits only his advertence to make
itself present. Since the cankers have been eradicated,
whenever the arahat looks into his mind he can see at once
that they have been cut off. The Suttas illustrate this with a
bold simile:
Sandaka, it is like a man whose hands and feet have been
cut off; whether he is walking or standing still or asleep
or awake, constantly and perpetually are his hands and
feet as though cut off; and moreover while he is
reflecting on it, he knows: "My hands and feet have been
cut off." Even so, Sandaka, whatever monk is a perfected
one, the cankers destroyed, who has lived the life, done
what was to be done, laid down the burden, attained his
own goal, the fetters of becoming utterly destroyed, freed
by perfect profound knowledge, for him whether he is
walking or standing still or asleep or awake, the cankers
are as though destroyed; and moreover while he is
reflecting on it, he knows: "My cankers are destroyed."
-- MN. No. 76 (trans, I.B.Horner).
The arahat understands that the defilements he has eradicated
brought bondage to the round of existence. He sees them as
"defiling, conducive to renewed existence, afflictive,
resulting in suffering, leading to future birth, aging, and
death."[38] Thence, by witnessing their utter eradication in
himself, he gains certainty of his emancipation from the
round: "Unshakable is my emancipation. This is my last birth.
There is now no renewal of existence."[39] Such knowledge
remains an inalienable part of the arahat's spiritual
inheritance. It is the basis for his assurance of immunity
from future becoming. By reason of this knowledge he sounds
the lion's roar with which he seals his triumph over the cycle
of repeated births: "Destroyed is birth, lived is the holy
life, the task has been completed, there is no returning to
this state."
Footnotes
1. MN. No. 28.
2. Imasmim sati idam hoti, imass, uppada idam uppajjati.
Imasmim asati idam na hoti, imassa nirodha idam nirujjati.
MN, Nos. 79, 115 etc.
3. SN. XII. No. 23; AN. X. No. 3-5.
4. AN.X. No.2.
5. Sec. 388, See Ñanamoli, transl., The Guide (Nettippakaranam),
(London: Pali Text Society, 1962), p. 97.
6. MN. No. 22, SN. XXII. No. 86.
7. MN. No. 26.
8. See SN.XII. Nos. 4-10.
9. See AN.X. Nos. 61,62
10. See Lama Anagarika Govinda, The Psychological
Attitude of Early Buddhist Philosophy, (London, 1969), pp.
49-52.
11. AN.X. No. 61. Ko caharo saddhaya?
Saddhammassavananti'ssa vacaniyam.
12. See MN. Nos. 47, 95.
13. Milindapañha. See Edward Conze, The Way of
Wisdom (The Wheel No. 65/66), (Kandy: Buddhist Publication
Society), pp. 30-31.
14. Ibid. Pakkhandanalakkhan Saddha
15. Ibid., p.31.
16. Visuddhimagga, I.98. Bhikkhu Ñanamoli, trans. The
Path of Purification, 3rd ed. (Kandy 1975. Buddhist
Publication Society) p.36.
17. AN.X. No. 1
18. Vism, IV. 94-98, Ñanamoli, pp. 149-150.
19. Vism. XIV. 144, Ñanamoli, p. 525. The "five
aggregates" (pañcakkhandha) are the basic categories
into which Buddhism analyzes the sentient organism. The
aggregate of material form covers the physical body; the
aggregates of feeling, perception, mental formations and
consciousness cover the mind. Of these four, the first three
are considered the adjuncts or concomitants of consciousness,
the primary factor of mental life.
20. DN. No. 2.
21. Vism. IV. 86, Ñanamoli, p. 147.
22. SN. XXII. No. 5.
23. Vism. XXI. 49-50, Ñanamoli, p. 761.
24. Vism. XXI. 46. Ñanamoli, p. 760.
25. MN. No. 64
26. See Vism. XX1.66-73, Ñanamoli, pp. 766-769.
27. AN. III. No. 25.
28. See Vism. XXII. 92, Ñanamoli, p. 808.
29. MN. Nos. 6,12,40, etc.
30. AN. VI. No.55.
31. AN. III. No. 55.
32. Sa-upadisesa nibbanadhatu. See Itivuttaka,
No. 38.
33. See MN. No. 121.
34. MN. No. 140.
35. Anupadisesa nibbanadhatu. See Itivuttaka,
No. 38.
36. Ibid.
37. MN. No. 26.
38. MN. No. 36.
39. MN. No. 26.
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