The essence of the Buddha's teaching can be summed up in two principles: the
Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path. The first covers the side of
doctrine, and the primary response it elicits is understanding; the second
covers the side of discipline, in the broadest sense of that word, and the
primary response it calls for is practice. In the structure of the teaching
these two principles lock together into an indivisible unity called the
dhamma-vinaya, the doctrine-and-discipline, or, in brief, the Dhamma. The
internal unity of the Dhamma is guaranteed by the fact that the last of the Four
Noble Truths, the truth of the way, is the Noble Eightfold Path, while the first
factor of the Noble Eightfold Path, right view, is the understanding of the Four
Noble Truths. Thus the two principles penetrate and include one another, the
formula of the Four Noble Truths containing the Eightfold Path and the Noble
Eightfold Path containing the Four Truths.
Given this integral unity, it would be pointless to pose the question which
of the two aspects of the Dhamma has greater value, the doctrine or the path.
But if we did risk the pointless by asking that question, the answer would have
to be the path. The path claims primacy because it is precisely this that brings
the teaching to life. The path translates the Dhamma from a collection of
abstract formulas into a continually unfolding disclosure of truth. It gives an
outlet from the problem of suffering with which the teaching starts. And it
makes the teaching's goal, liberation from suffering, accessible to us in our
own experience, where alone it takes on authentic meaning.
To follow the Noble Eightfold Path is a matter of practice rather than
intellectual knowledge, but to apply the path correctly it has to be properly
understood. In fact, right understanding of the path is itself a part of the
practice. It is a facet of right view, the first path factor, the forerunner and
guide for the rest of the path. Thus, though initial enthusiasm might suggest
that the task of intellectual comprehension may be shelved as a bothersome
distraction, mature consideration reveals it to be quite essential to ultimate
success in the practice.
The present book aims at contributing towards a proper understanding of the
Noble Eightfold Path by investigating its eight factors and their components to
determine exactly what they involve. I have attempted to be concise, using as
the framework for exposition the Buddha's own words in explanation of the path
factors, as found in the Sutta Pitaka of the Pali Canon. To assist the reader
with limited access to primary sources even in translation, I have tried to
confine my selection of quotations as much as possible (but not completely) to
those found in Venerable Nyanatiloka's classic anthology, The Word of the
Buddha. In some cases passages taken from that work have been slightly
modified, to accord with my own preferred renderings. For further amplification
of meaning I have sometimes drawn upon the commentaries; especially in my
accounts of concentration and wisdom (Chapters VII and VIII) I have relied
heavily on the Visuddhimagga (The Path of Purification), a vast
encyclopedic work which systematizes the practice of the path in a detailed and
comprehensive manner. Limitations of space prevent an exhaustive treatment of
each factor. To compensate for this deficiency I have included a list of
recommended readings at the end, which the reader may consult for more detailed
explanations of individual path factors. For full commitment to the practice of
the path, however, especially in its advanced stages of concentration and
insight, it will be extremely helpful to have contact with a properly qualified
teacher.
Bhikkhu Bodhi
Abbreviations
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Textual references have been abbreviated as follows:
DN ..... Digha Nikaya (number of sutta)
MN ..... Majjhima Nikaya (number of sutta)
SN ..... Samyutta Nikaya (chapter and number of sutta)
AN ..... Anguttara Nikaya (numerical collection and number of sutta)
Dhp ..... Dhammapada (verse)
Vism ..... Visuddhimagga
References to Vism. are to the chapter and section number of the translation
by Bhikkhu Ñanamoli, The Path of Purification (BPS ed. 1975, 1991)
Chapter I
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The Way to the End of Suffering
The search for a spiritual path is born out of suffering. It does not start
with lights and ecstasy, but with the hard tacks of pain, disappointment, and
confusion. However, for suffering to give birth to a genuine spiritual search,
it must amount to more than something passively received from without. It has to
trigger an inner realization, a perception which pierces through the facile
complacency of our usual encounter with the world to glimpse the insecurity
perpetually gaping underfoot. When this insight dawns, even if only momentarily,
it can precipitate a profound personal crisis. It overturns accustomed goals and
values, mocks our routine preoccupations, leaves old enjoyments stubbornly
unsatisfying.
At first such changes generally are not welcome. We try to deny our vision
and to smother our doubts; we struggle to drive away the discontent with new
pursuits. But the flame of inquiry, once lit, continues to burn, and if we do
not let ourselves be swept away by superficial readjustments or slouch back into
a patched up version of our natural optimism, eventually the original glimmering
of insight will again flare up, again confront us with our essential plight. It
is precisely at that point, with all escape routes blocked, that we are ready to
seek a way to bring our disquietude to an end. No longer can we continue to
drift complacently through life, driven blindly by our hunger for sense
pleasures and by the pressure of prevailing social norms. A deeper reality
beckons us; we have heard the call of a more stable, more authentic happiness,
and until we arrive at our destination we cannot rest content.
But it is just then that we find ourselves facing a new difficulty. Once we
come to recognize the need for a spiritual path we discover that spiritual
teachings are by no means homogeneous and mutually compatible. When we browse
through the shelves of humanity's spiritual heritage, both ancient and
contemporary, we do not find a single tidy volume but a veritable bazaar of
spiritual systems and disciplines each offering themselves to us as the highest,
the fastest, the most powerful, or the most profound solution to our quest for
the Ultimate. Confronted with this melange, we fall into confusion trying to
size them up -- to decide which is truly liberative, a real solution to our
needs, and which is a sidetrack beset with hidden flaws.
One approach to resolving this problem that is popular today is the eclectic
one: to pick and choose from the various traditions whatever seems amenable to
our needs, welding together different practices and techniques into a synthetic
whole that is personally satisfying. Thus one may combine Buddhist mindfulness
meditation with sessions of Hindu mantra recitation, Christian prayer with Sufi
dancing, Jewish Kabbala with Tibetan visualization exercises. Eclecticism,
however, though sometimes helpful in making a transition from a predominantly
worldly and materialistic way of life to one that takes on a spiritual hue,
eventually wears thin. While it makes a comfortable halfway house, it is not
comfortable as a final vehicle.
There are two interrelated flaws in eclecticism that account for its ultimate
inadequacy. One is that eclecticism compromises the very traditions it draws
upon. The great spiritual traditions themselves do not propose their disciplines
as independent techniques that may be excised from their setting and freely
recombined to enhance the felt quality of our lives. They present them, rather,
as parts of an integral whole, of a coherent vision regarding the fundamental
nature of reality and the final goal of the spiritual quest. A spiritual
tradition is not a shallow stream in which one can wet one's feet and then beat
a quick retreat to the shore. It is a mighty, tumultuous river which would rush
through the entire landscape of one's life, and if one truly wishes to travel on
it, one must be courageous enough to launch one's boat and head out for the
depths.
The second defect in eclecticism follows from the first. As spiritual
practices are built upon visions regarding the nature of reality and the final
good, these visions are not mutually compatible. When we honestly examine the
teachings of these traditions, we will find that major differences in
perspective reveal themselves to our sight, differences which cannot be easily
dismissed as alternative ways of saying the same thing. Rather, they point to
very different experiences constituting the supreme goal and the path that must
be trodden to reach that goal.
Hence, because of the differences in perspectives and practices that the
different spiritual traditions propose, once we decide that we have outgrown
eclecticism and feel that we are ready to make a serious commitment to one
particular path, we find ourselves confronted with the challenge of choosing a
path that will lead us to true enlightenment and liberation. One cue to
resolving this dilemma is to clarify to ourselves our fundamental aim, to
determine what we seek in a genuinely liberative path. If we reflect carefully,
it will become clear that the prime requirement is a way to the end of
suffering. All problems ultimately can be reduced to the problem of suffering;
thus what we need is a way that will end this problem finally and completely.
Both these qualifying words are important. The path has to lead to a complete
end of suffering, to an end of suffering in all its forms, and to a final
end of suffering, to bring suffering to an irreversible stop.
But here we run up against another question. How are we to find such a path
-- a path which has the capacity to lead us to the full and final end of
suffering? Until we actually follow a path to its goal we cannot know with
certainty where it leads, and in order to follow a path to its goal we must
place complete trust in the efficacy of the path. The pursuit of a spiritual
path is not like selecting a new suit of clothes. To select a new suit one need
only try on a number of suits, inspect oneself in the mirror, and select the
suit in which one appears most attractive. The choice of a spiritual path is
closer to marriage: one wants a partner for life, one whose companionship will
prove as trustworthy and durable as the pole star in the night sky.
Faced with this new dilemma, we may think that we have reached a dead end and
conclude that we have nothing to guide us but personal inclination, if not a
flip of the coin. However, our selection need not be as blind and uninformed as
we imagine, for we do have a guideline to help us. Since spiritual paths are
generally presented in the framework of a total teaching, we can evaluate the
effectiveness of any particular path by investigating the teaching which
expounds it.
In making this investigation we can look to three criteria as standards for
evaluation:
(1) First, the teaching has to give a full and accurate picture of the
range of suffering. If the picture of suffering it gives is incomplete or
defective, then the path it sets forth will most likely be flawed, unable to
yield a satisfactory solution. Just as an ailing patient needs a doctor who can
make a full and correct diagnosis of his illness, so in seeking release from
suffering we need a teaching that presents a reliable account of our condition.
(2) The second criterion calls for a correct analysis of the causes
giving rise to suffering. The teaching cannot stop with a survey of the outward
symptoms. It has to penetrate beneath the symptoms to the level of causes, and
to describe those causes accurately. If a teaching makes a faulty causal
analysis, there is little likelihood that its treatment will succeed.
(3) The third criterion pertains directly to the path itself. It
stipulates that the path which the teaching offers has to remove suffering at
its source. This means it must provide a method to cut off suffering by
eradicating its causes. If it fails to bring about this root-level solution, its
value is ultimately nil. The path it prescribes might help to remove symptoms
and make us feel that all is well; but one afflicted with a fatal disease cannot
afford to settle for cosmetic surgery when below the surface the cause of his
malady continues to thrive.
To sum up, we find three requirements for a teaching proposing to offer a
true path to the end of suffering: first, it has to set forth a full and
accurate picture of the range of suffering; second, it must present a correct
analysis of the causes of suffering; and third, it must give us the means to
eradicate the causes of suffering.
This is not the place to evaluate the various spiritual disciplines in terms
of these criteria. Our concern is only with the Dhamma, the teaching of the
Buddha, and with the solution this teaching offers to the problem of suffering.
That the teaching should be relevant to this problem is evident from its very
nature; for it is formulated, not as a set of doctrines about the origin and end
of things commanding belief, but as a message of deliverance from suffering
claiming to be verifiable in our own experience. Along with that message there
comes a method of practice, a way leading to the end of suffering. This way is
the Noble Eightfold Path (ariya atthangika magga). The Eightfold Path
stands at the very heart of the Buddha's teaching. It was the discovery of the
path that gave the Buddha's own enlightenment a universal significance and
elevated him from the status of a wise and benevolent sage to that of a world
teacher. To his own disciples he was pre-eminently "the arouser of the path
unarisen before, the producer of the path not produced before, the declarer of
the path not declared before, the knower of the path, the seer of the path, the
guide along the path" (MN 108). And he himself invites the seeker with the
promise and challenge: "You yourselves must strive. The Buddhas are only
teachers. The meditative ones who practice the path are released from the bonds
of evil" (Dhp. v. 276).
To see the Noble Eightfold Path as a viable vehicle to liberation, we have to
check it out against our three criteria: to look at the Buddha's account of the
range of suffering, his analysis of its causes, and the programme he offers as a
remedy.
The Range of Suffering
The Buddha does not merely touch the problem of suffering tangentially; he
makes it, rather, the very cornerstone of his teaching. He starts the Four Noble
Truths that sum up his message with the announcement that life is inseparably
tied to something he calls dukkha. The Pali word is often translated as
suffering, but it means something deeper than pain and misery. It refers to a
basic unsatisfactoriness running through our lives, the lives of all but the
enlightened. Sometimes this unsatisfactoriness erupts into the open as sorrow,
grief, disappointment, or despair; but usually it hovers at the edge of our
awareness as a vague unlocalized sense that things are never quite perfect,
never fully adequate to our expectations of what they should be. This fact of
dukkha, the Buddha says, is the only real spiritual problem. The other
problems -- the theological and metaphysical questions that have taunted
religious thinkers through the centuries -- he gently waves aside as "matters
not tending to liberation." What he teaches, he says, is just suffering and the
ending of suffering, dukkha and its cessation.
The Buddha does not stop with generalities. He goes on to expose the
different forms that dukkha takes, both the evident and the subtle. He
starts with what is close at hand, with the suffering inherent in the physical
process of life itself. Here dukkha shows up in the events of birth,
aging, and death, in our susceptibility to sickness, accidents, and injuries,
even in hunger and thirst. It appears again in our inner reactions to
disagreeable situations and events: in the sorrow, anger, frustration, and fear
aroused by painful separations, by unpleasant encounters, by the failure to get
what we want. Even our pleasures, the Buddha says, are not immune from dukkha.
They give us happiness while they last, but they do not last forever; eventually
they must pass away, and when they go the loss leaves us feeling deprived. Our
lives, for the most part, are strung out between the thirst for pleasure and the
fear of pain. We pass our days running after the one and running away from the
other, seldom enjoying the peace of contentment; real satisfaction seems somehow
always out of reach, just beyond the next horizon. Then in the end we have to
die: to give up the identity we spent our whole life building, to leave behind
everything and everyone we love.
But even death, the Buddha teaches, does not bring us to the end of dukkha,
for the life process does not stop with death. When life ends in one place, with
one body, the "mental continuum," the individual stream of consciousness,
springs up again elsewhere with a new body as its physical support. Thus the
cycle goes on over and over -- birth, aging, and death -- driven by the thirst
for more existence. The Buddha declares that this round of rebirths -- called
samsara, "the wandering" -- has been turning through beginningless time. It
is without a first point, without temporal origin. No matter how far back in
time we go we always find living beings -- ourselves in previous lives --
wandering from one state of existence to another. The Buddha describes various
realms where rebirth can take place: realms of torment, the animal realm, the
human realm, realms of celestial bliss. But none of these realms can offer a
final refuge. Life in any plane must come to an end. It is impermanent and thus
marked with that insecurity which is the deepest meaning of dukkha. For
this reason one aspiring to the complete end of dukkha cannot rest
content with any mundane achievement, with any status, but must win emancipation
from the entire unstable whirl.
The Causes of Suffering
A teaching proposing to lead to the end of suffering must, as we said, give a
reliable account of its causal origination. For if we want to put a stop to
suffering, we have to stop it where it begins, with its causes. To stop the
causes requires a thorough knowledge of what they are and how they work; thus
the Buddha devotes a sizeable section of his teaching to laying bare "the truth
of the origin of dukkha." The origin he locates within ourselves, in a
fundamental malady that permeates our being, causing disorder in our own minds
and vitiating our relationships with others and with the world. The sign of this
malady can be seen in our proclivity to certain unwholesome mental states called
in Pali kilesas, usually translated "defilements." The most basic
defilements are the triad of greed, aversion, and delusion. Greed (lobha)
is self-centered desire: the desire for pleasure and possessions, the drive for
survival, the urge to bolster the sense of ego with power, status, and prestige.
Aversion (dosa) signifies the response of negation, expressed as
rejection, irritation, condemnation, hatred, enmity, anger, and violence.
Delusion (moha) means mental darkness: the thick coat of insensitivity
which blocks out clear understanding.
From these three roots emerge the various other defilements -- conceit,
jealousy, ambition, lethargy, arrogance, and the rest -- and from all these
defilements together, the roots and the branches, comes dukkha in its
diverse forms: as pain and sorrow, as fear and discontent, as the aimless
drifting through the round of birth and death. To gain freedom from suffering,
therefore, we have to eliminate the defilements. But the work of removing the
defilements has to proceed in a methodical way. It cannot be accomplished simply
by an act of will, by wanting them to go away. The work must be guided by
investigation. We have to find out what the defilements depend upon and then see
how it lies within our power to remove their support.
The Buddha teaches that there is one defilement which gives rise to all the
others, one root which holds them all in place. This root is ignorance (avijja).[1]
Ignorance is not mere absence of knowledge, a lack of knowing particular pieces
of information. Ignorance can co-exist with a vast accumulation of itemized
knowledge, and in its own way it can be tremendously shrewd and resourceful. As
the basic root of dukkha, ignorance is a fundamental darkness shrouding
the mind. Sometimes this ignorance operates in a passive manner, merely
obscuring correct understanding. At other times it takes on an active role: it
becomes the great deceiver, conjuring up a mass of distorted perceptions and
conceptions which the mind grasps as attributes of the world, unaware that they
are its own deluded constructs.
In these erroneous perceptions and ideas we find the soil that nurtures the
defilements. The mind catches sight of some possibility of pleasure, accepts it
at face value, and the result is greed. Our hunger for gratification is
thwarted, obstacles appear, and up spring anger and aversion. Or we struggle
over ambiguities, our sight clouds, and we become lost in delusion. With this we
discover the breeding ground of dukkha: ignorance issuing in the
defilements, the defilements issuing in suffering. As long as this causal matrix
stands we are not yet beyond danger. We might still find pleasure and enjoyment
-- sense pleasures, social pleasures, pleasures of the mind and heart. But no
matter how much pleasure we might experience, no matter how successful we might
be at dodging pain, the basic problem remains at the core of our being and we
continue to move within the bounds of dukkha.
Cutting Off the Causes of Suffering
To free ourselves from suffering fully and finally we have to eliminate it by
the root, and that means to eliminate ignorance. But how does one go about
eliminating ignorance? The answer follows clearly from the nature of the
adversary. Since ignorance is a state of not knowing things as they really are,
what is needed is knowledge of things as they really are. Not merely conceptual
knowledge, knowledge as idea, but perceptual knowledge, a knowing which is also
a seeing. This kind of knowing is called wisdom (pañña). Wisdom helps to
correct the distorting work of ignorance. It enables us to grasp things as they
are in actuality, directly and immediately, free from the screen of ideas,
views, and assumptions our minds ordinarily set up between themselves and the
real.
To eliminate ignorance we need wisdom, but how is wisdom to be acquired? As
indubitable knowledge of the ultimate nature of things, wisdom cannot be gained
by mere learning, by gathering and accumulating a battery of facts. However, the
Buddha says, wisdom can be cultivated. It comes into being through a set of
conditions, conditions which we have the power to develop. These conditions are
actually mental factors, components of consciousness, which fit together into a
systematic structure that can be called a path in the word's essential meaning:
a courseway for movement leading to a goal. The goal here is the end of
suffering, and the path leading to it is the Noble Eightfold Path with its eight
factors: right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right
livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration.
The Buddha calls this path the middle way (majjhima patipada). It is
the middle way because it steers clear of two extremes, two misguided attempts
to gain release from suffering. One is the extreme of indulgence in sense
pleasures, the attempt to extinguish dissatisfaction by gratifying desire. This
approach gives pleasure, but the enjoyment won is gross, transitory, and devoid
of deep contentment. The Buddha recognized that sensual desire can exercise a
tight grip over the minds of human beings, and he was keenly aware of how
ardently attached people become to the pleasures of the senses. But he also knew
that this pleasure is far inferior to the happiness that arises from
renunciation, and therefore he repeatedly taught that the way to the Ultimate
eventually requires the relinquishment of sensual desire. Thus the Buddha
describes the indulgence in sense pleasures as "low, common, worldly, ignoble,
not leading to the goal."
The other extreme is the practice of self-mortification, the attempt to gain
liberation by afflicting the body. This approach may stem from a genuine
aspiration for deliverance, but it works within the compass of a wrong
assumption that renders the energy expended barren of results. The error is
taking the body to be the cause of bondage, when the real source of trouble lies
in the mind -- the mind obsessed by greed, aversion, and delusion. To rid the
mind of these defilements the affliction of the body is not only useless but
self-defeating, for it is the impairment of a necessary instrument. Thus the
Buddha describes this second extreme as "painful, ignoble, not leading to the
goal."[2]
Aloof from these two extreme approaches is the Noble Eightfold Path, called
the middle way, not in the sense that it effects a compromise between the
extremes, but in the sense that it transcends them both by avoiding the errors
that each involves. The path avoids the extreme of sense indulgence by its
recognition of the futility of desire and its stress on renunciation. Desire and
sensuality, far from being means to happiness, are springs of suffering to be
abandoned as the requisite of deliverance. But the practice of renunciation does
not entail the tormenting of the body. It consists in mental training, and for
this the body must be fit, a sturdy support for the inward work. Thus the body
is to be looked after well, kept in good health, while the mental faculties are
trained to generate the liberating wisdom. That is the middle way, the Noble
Eightfold Path, which "gives rise to vision, gives rise to knowledge, and leads
to peace, to direct knowledge, to enlightenment, to Nibbana."[3]
Chapter II
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Right View
(Samma Ditthi)
The eight factors of the Noble Eightfold Path are not steps to be followed in
sequence, one after another. They can be more aptly described as components
rather than as steps, comparable to the intertwining strands of a single cable
that requires the contributions of all the strands for maximum strength. With a
certain degree of progress all eight factors can be present simultaneously, each
supporting the others. However, until that point is reached, some sequence in
the unfolding of the path is inevitable. Considered from the standpoint of
practical training, the eight path factors divide into three groups: (i) the
moral discipline group (silakkhandha), made up of right speech, right
action, and right livelihood; (ii) the concentration group (samadhikkhandha),
made up of right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration; and (iii)
the wisdom group (paññakkhandha), made up of right view and right
intention. These three groups represent three stages of training: the training
in the higher moral discipline, the training in the higher consciousness, and
the training in the higher wisdom.[4]
The order of the three trainings is determined by the overall aim and
direction of the path. Since the final goal to which the path leads, liberation
from suffering, depends ultimately on uprooting ignorance, the climax of the
path must be the training directly opposed to ignorance. This is the training in
wisdom, designed to awaken the faculty of penetrative understanding which sees
things "as they really are." Wisdom unfolds by degrees, but even the faintest
flashes of insight presuppose as their basis a mind that has been concentrated,
cleared of disturbance and distraction. Concentration is achieved through the
training in the higher consciousness, the second division of the path, which
brings the calm and collectedness needed to develop wisdom. But in order for the
mind to be unified in concentration, a check must be placed on the unwholesome
dispositions which ordinarily dominate its workings, since these dispositions
disperse the beam of attention and scatter it among a multitude of concerns. The
unwholesome dispositions continue to rule as long as they are permitted to gain
expression through the channels of body and speech as bodily and verbal deeds.
Therefore, at the very outset of training, it is necessary to restrain the
faculties of action, to prevent them from becoming tools of the defilements.
This task is accomplished by the first division of the path, the training in
moral discipline. Thus the path evolves through its three stages, with moral
discipline as the foundation for concentration, concentration the foundation for
wisdom, and wisdom the direct instrument for reaching liberation.
Perplexity sometimes arises over an apparent inconsistency in the arrangement
of the path factors and the threefold training. Wisdom -- which includes right
view and right intention -- is the last stage in the threefold training, yet its
factors are placed at the beginning of the path rather than at its end, as might
be expected according to the canon of strict consistency. The sequence of the
path factors, however, is not the result of a careless slip, but is determined
by an important logistical consideration, namely, that right view and right
intention of a preliminary type are called for at the outset as the spur for
entering the threefold training. Right view provides the perspective for
practice, right intention the sense of direction. But the two do not expire in
this preparatory role. For when the mind has been refined by the training in
moral discipline and concentration, it arrives at a superior right view and
right intention, which now form the proper training in the higher wisdom.
Right view is the forerunner of the entire path, the guide for all the other
factors. It enables us to understand our starting point, our destination, and
the successive landmarks to pass as practice advances. To attempt to engage in
the practice without a foundation of right view is to risk getting lost in the
futility of undirected movement. Doing so might be compared to wanting to drive
someplace without consulting a roadmap or listening to the suggestions of an
experienced driver. One might get into the car and start to drive, but rather
than approaching closer to one's destination, one is more likely to move farther
away from it. To arrive at the desired place one has to have some idea of its
general direction and of the roads leading to it. Analogous considerations apply
to the practice of the path, which takes place in a framework of understanding
established by right view.
The importance of right view can be gauged from the fact that our
perspectives on the crucial issues of reality and value have a bearing that goes
beyond mere theoretical convictions. They govern our attitudes, our actions, our
whole orientation to existence. Our views might not be clearly formulated in our
mind; we might have only a hazy conceptual grasp of our beliefs. But whether
formulated or not, expressed or maintained in silence, these views have a
far-reaching influence. They structure our perceptions, order our values,
crystallize into the ideational framework through which we interpret to
ourselves the meaning of our being in the world.
These views then condition action. They lie behind our choices and goals, and
our efforts to turn these goals from ideals into actuality. The actions
themselves might determine consequences, but the actions along with their
consequences hinge on the views from which they spring. Since views imply an
"ontological commitment," a decision on the question of what is real and true,
it follows that views divide into two classes, right views and wrong views. The
former correspond to what is real, the latter deviate from the real and confirm
the false in its place. These two different kinds of views, the Buddha teaches,
lead to radically disparate lines of action, and thence to opposite results. If
we hold a wrong view, even if that view is vague, it will lead us towards
courses of action that eventuate in suffering. On the other hand, if we adopt a
right view, that view will steer us towards right action, and thereby towards
freedom from suffering. Though our conceptual orientation towards the world
might seem innocuous and inconsequential, when looked at closely it reveals
itself to be the decisive determinant of our whole course of future development.
The Buddha himself says that he sees no single factor so responsible for the
arising of unwholesome states of mind as wrong view, and no factor so helpful
for the arising of wholesome states of mind as right view. Again, he says that
there is no single factor so responsible for the suffering of living beings as
wrong view, and no factor so potent in promoting the good of living beings as
right view (AN 1:16.2).
In its fullest measure right view involves a correct understanding of the
entire Dhamma or teaching of the Buddha, and thus its scope is equal to the
range of the Dhamma itself. But for practical purposes two kinds of right view
stand out as primary. One is mundane right view, right view which operates
within the confines of the world. The other is supramundane right view, the
superior right view which leads to liberation from the world. The first is
concerned with the laws governing material and spiritual progress within the
round of becoming, with the principles that lead to higher and lower states of
existence, to mundane happiness and suffering. The second is concerned with the
principles essential to liberation. It does not aim merely at spiritual progress
from life to life, but at emancipation from the cycle of recurring lives and
deaths.
Mundane Right View
Mundane right view involves a correct grasp of the law of kamma, the moral
efficacy of action. Its literal name is "right view of the ownership of action"
(kammassakata sammaditthi), and it finds its standard formulation in the
statement: "Beings are the owners of their actions, the heirs of their actions;
they spring from their actions, are bound to their actions, and are supported by
their actions. Whatever deeds they do, good or bad, of those they shall be
heirs."[5] More specific formulations have also come
down in the texts. One stock passage, for example, affirms that virtuous actions
such as giving and offering alms have moral significance, that good and bad
deeds produce corresponding fruits, that one has a duty to serve mother and
father, that there is rebirth and a world beyond the visible one, and that
religious teachers of high attainment can be found who expound the truth about
the world on the basis of their own superior realization.[6]
To understand the implications of this form of right view we first have to
examine the meaning of its key term, kamma. The word kamma means
action. For Buddhism the relevant kind of action is volitional action, deeds
expressive of morally determinate volition, since it is volition that gives the
action ethical significance. Thus the Buddha expressly identifies action with
volition. In a discourse on the analysis of kamma he says: "Monks, it is
volition that I call action (kamma). Having willed, one performs an
action through body, speech, or mind."[7] The
identification of kamma with volition makes kamma essentially a mental event, a
factor originating in the mind which seeks to actualize the mind's drives,
dispositions, and purposes. Volition comes into being through any of three
channels -- body, speech, or mind -- called the three doors of action (kammadvara).
A volition expressed through the body is a bodily action; a volition expressed
through speech is a verbal action; and a volition that issues in thoughts,
plans, ideas, and other mental states without gaining outer expression is a
mental action. Thus the one factor of volition differentiates into three types
of kamma according to the channel through which it becomes manifest.
Right view requires more than a simple knowledge of the general meaning of
kamma. It is also necessary to understand: (i) the ethical distinction of kamma
into the unwholesome and the wholesome; (ii) the principal cases of each type;
and (iii) the roots from which these actions spring. As expressed in a sutta:
"When a noble disciple understands what is kammically unwholesome, and the root
of unwholesome kamma, what is kammically wholesome, and the root of wholesome
kamma, then he has right view."[8]
(i) Taking these points in order, we find that kamma is first distinguished
as unwholesome (akusala) and wholesome (kusala). Unwholesome kamma
is action that is morally blameworthy, detrimental to spiritual development, and
conducive to suffering for oneself and others. Wholesome kamma, on the other
hand, is action that is morally commendable, helpful to spiritual growth, and
productive of benefits for oneself and others.
(ii) Innumerable instances of unwholesome and wholesome kamma can be cited,
but the Buddha selects ten of each as primary. These he calls the ten courses of
unwholesome and wholesome action. Among the ten in the two sets, three are
bodily, four are verbal, and three are mental. The ten courses of unwholesome
kamma may be listed as follows, divided by way of their doors of expression:
1. Destroying life
2. Taking what is not given
3. Wrong conduct in regard to sense pleasures
4. False speech
5. Slanderous speech
Verbal action
6. Harsh speech (vacikamma)
7. Idle chatter
8. Covetousness
9. Ill will
10. Wrong view
The ten courses of wholesome kamma are the opposites of these: abstaining
from the first seven courses of unwholesome kamma, being free from covetousness
and ill will, and holding right view. Though the seven cases of abstinence are
exercised entirely by the mind and do not necessarily entail overt action, they
are still designated wholesome bodily and verbal action because they center on
the control of the faculties of body and speech.
(iii) Actions are distinguished as wholesome and unwholesome on the basis of
their underlying motives, called "roots" (mula), which impart their moral
quality to the volitions concomitant with themselves. Thus kamma is wholesome or
unwholesome according to whether its roots are wholesome or unwholesome. The
roots are threefold for each set. The unwholesome roots are the three
defilements we already mentioned -- greed, aversion, and delusion. Any action
originating from these is an unwholesome kamma. The three wholesome roots are
their opposites, expressed negatively in the old Indian fashion as non-greed
(alobha), non-aversion (adosa), and non-delusion (amoha).
Though these are negatively designated, they signify not merely the absence of
defilements but the corresponding virtues. Non-greed implies renunciation,
detachment, and generosity; non-aversion implies loving-kindness, sympathy, and
gentleness; and non-delusion implies wisdom. Any action originating from these
roots is a wholesome kamma.
The most important feature of kamma is its capacity to produce results
corresponding to the ethical quality of the action. An immanent universal law
holds sway over volitional actions, bringing it about that these actions issue
in retributive consequences, called vipaka, "ripenings," or phala,
"fruits." The law connecting actions with their fruits works on the simple
principle that unwholesome actions ripen in suffering, wholesome actions in
happiness. The ripening need not come right away; it need not come in the
present life at all. Kamma can operate across the succession of lifetimes; it
can even remain dormant for aeons into the future. But whenever we perform a
volitional action, the volition leaves its imprint on the mental continuum,
where it remains as a stored up potency. When the stored up kamma meets with
conditions favorable to its maturation, it awakens from its dormant state and
triggers off some effect that brings due compensation for the original action.
The ripening may take place in the present life, in the next life, or in some
life subsequent to the next. A kamma may ripen by producing rebirth into the
next existence, thus determining the basic form of life; or it may ripen in the
course of a lifetime, issuing in our varied experiences of happiness and pain,
success and failure, progress and decline. But whenever it ripens and in
whatever way, the same principle invariably holds: wholesome actions yield
favorable results, unwholesome actions yield unfavorable results.
To recognize this principle is to hold right view of the mundane kind. This
view at once excludes the multiple forms of wrong view with which it is
incompatible. As it affirms that our actions have an influence on our destiny
continuing into future lives, it opposes the nihilistic view which regards this
life as our only existence and holds that consciousness terminates with death.
As it grounds the distinction between good and evil, right and wrong, in an
objective universal principle, it opposes the ethical subjectivism which asserts
that good and evil are only postulations of personal opinion or means to social
control. As it affirms that people can choose their actions freely, within
limits set by their conditions, it opposes the "hard deterministic" line that
our choices are always made subject to necessitation, and hence that free
volition is unreal and moral responsibility untenable.
Some of the implications of the Buddha's teaching on the right view of kamma
and its fruits run counter to popular trends in present-day thought, and it is
helpful to make these differences explicit. The teaching on right view makes it
known that good and bad, right and wrong, transcend conventional opinions about
what is good and bad, what is right and wrong. An entire society may be
predicated upon a confusion of correct moral values, and even though everyone
within that society may applaud one particular kind of action as right and
condemn another kind as wrong, this does not make them validly right and wrong.
For the Buddha moral standards are objective and invariable. While the moral
character of deeds is doubtlessly conditioned by the circumstances under which
they are performed, there are objective criteria of morality against which any
action, or any comprehensive moral code, can be evaluated. This objective
standard of morality is integral to the Dhamma, the cosmic law of truth and
righteousness. Its transpersonal ground of validation is the fact that deeds, as
expressions of the volitions that engender them, produce consequences for the
agent, and that the correlations between deeds and their consequences are
intrinsic to the volitions themselves. There is no divine judge standing above
the cosmic process who assigns rewards and punishments. Nevertheless, the deeds
themselves, through their inherent moral or immoral nature, generate the
appropriate results.
For most people, the vast majority, the right view of kamma and its results
is held out of confidence, accepted on faith from an eminent spiritual teacher
who proclaims the moral efficacy of action. But even when the principle of kamma
is not personally seen, it still remains a facet of right view. It is
part and parcel of right view because right view is concerned with understanding
-- with understanding our place in the total scheme of things -- and one who
accepts the principle that our volitional actions possess a moral potency has,
to that extent, grasped an important fact pertaining to the nature of our
existence. However, the right view of the kammic efficacy of action need not
remain exclusively an article of belief screened behind an impenetrable barrier.
It can become a matter of direct seeing. Through the attainment of certain
states of deep concentration it is possible to develop a special faculty called
the "divine eye" (dibbacakkhu), a super-sensory power of vision that
reveals things hidden from the eyes of flesh. When this faculty is developed, it
can be directed out upon the world of living beings to investigate the workings
of the kammic law. With the special vision it confers one can then see for
oneself, with immediate perception, how beings pass away and re-arise according
to their kamma, how they meet happiness and suffering through the maturation of
their good and evil deeds.[9]
Superior Right View
The right view of kamma and its fruits provides a rationale for engaging in
wholesome actions and attaining high status within the round of rebirths, but by
itself it does not lead to liberation. It is possible for someone to accept the
law of kamma yet still limit his aims to mundane achievements. One's motive for
performing noble deeds might be the accumulation of meritorious kamma leading to
prosperity and success here and now, a fortunate rebirth as a human being, or
the enjoyment of celestial bliss in the heavenly worlds. There is nothing within
the logic of kammic causality to impel the urge to transcend the cycle of kamma
and its fruit. The impulse to deliverance from the entire round of becoming
depends upon the acquisition of a different and deeper perspective, one which
yields insight into the inherent defectiveness of all forms of samsaric
existence, even the most exalted.
This superior right view leading to liberation is the understanding of the
Four Noble Truths. It is this right view that figures as the first factor of the
Noble Eightfold Path in the proper sense: as the noble right view. Thus
the Buddha defines the path factor of right view expressly in terms of the four
truths: "What now is right view? It is understanding of suffering (dukkha),
understanding of the origin of suffering, understanding of the cessation of
suffering, understanding of the way leading to the cessation to suffering."[10]
The Eightfold Path starts with a conceptual understanding of the Four Noble
Truths apprehended only obscurely through the media of thought and reflection.
It reaches its climax in a direct intuition of those same truths, penetrated
with a clarity tantamount to enlightenment. Thus it can be said that the right
view of the Four Noble Truths forms both the beginning and the culmination of
the way to the end of suffering.
The first noble truth is the truth of suffering (dukkha), the inherent
unsatisfactoriness of existence, revealed in the impermanence, pain, and
perpetual incompleteness intrinsic to all forms of life.
This is the noble truth of suffering. Birth is suffering; aging is suffering;
sickness is suffering; death is suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
despair are suffering; association with the unpleasant is suffering; separation
from the pleasant is suffering; not to get what one wants is suffering; in
brief, the five aggregates of clinging are suffering.[11]
The last statement makes a comprehensive claim that calls for some attention.
The five aggregates of clinging (pañcupadanakkandha) are a classificatory
scheme for understanding the nature of our being. What we are, the Buddha
teaches, is a set of five aggregates -- material form, feelings, perceptions,
mental formations, and consciousness -- all connected with clinging. We are the
five and the five are us. Whatever we identify with, whatever we hold to as our
self, falls within the set of five aggregates. Together these five aggregates
generate the whole array of thoughts, emotions, ideas, and dispositions in which
we dwell, "our world." Thus the Buddha's declaration that the five aggregates
are dukkha in effect brings all experience, our entire existence, into
the range of dukkha.
But here the question arises: Why should the Buddha say that the five
aggregates are dukkha? The reason he says that the five aggregates are
dukkha is that they are impermanent. They change from moment to moment,
arise and fall away, without anything substantial behind them persisting through
the change. Since the constituent factors of our being are always changing,
utterly devoid of a permanent core, there is nothing we can cling to in them as
a basis for security. There is only a constantly disintegrating flux which, when
clung to in the desire for permanence, brings a plunge into suffering.
The second noble truth points out the cause of dukkha. From the set of
defilements which eventuate in suffering, the Buddha singles out craving (tanha)
as the dominant and most pervasive cause, "the origin of suffering."
This is the noble truth of the origin of suffering. It is this craving which
produces repeated existence, is bound up with delight and lust, and seeks
pleasure here and there, namely, craving for sense pleasures, craving for
existence, and craving for non-existence.[12]
The third noble truth simply reverses this relationship of origination. If
craving is the cause of dukkha, then to be free from dukkha we
have to eliminate craving. Thus the Buddha says:
This is the noble truth of the cessation of suffering. It is the complete
fading away and cessation of this craving, its forsaking and abandonment,
liberation and detachment from it.[13]
The state of perfect peace that comes when craving is eliminated is
Nibbana (nirvana), the unconditioned state experienced while alive
with the extinguishing of the flames of greed, aversion, and delusion. The
fourth noble truth shows the way to reach the end of dukkha, the way to
the realization of Nibbana. That way is the Noble Eightfold Path itself.
The right view of the Four Noble Truths develops in two stages. The first is
called the right view that accords with the truths (saccanulomika samma
ditthi); the second, the right view that penetrates the truths (saccapativedha
samma ditthi). To acquire the right view that accords with the truths
requires a clear understanding of their meaning and significance in our lives.
Such an understanding arises first by learning the truths and studying them.
Subsequently it is deepened by reflecting upon them in the light of experience
until one gains a strong conviction as to their veracity.
But even at this point the truths have not been penetrated, and thus the
understanding achieved is still defective, a matter of concept rather than
perception. To arrive at the experiential realization of the truths it is
necessary to take up the practice of meditation -- first to strengthen the
capacity for sustained concentration, then to develop insight. Insight arises by
contemplating the five aggregates, the factors of existence, in order to discern
their real characteristics. At the climax of such contemplation the mental eye
turns away from the conditioned phenomena comprised in the aggregates and shifts
its focus to the unconditioned state, Nibbana, which becomes accessible through
the deepened faculty of insight. With this shift, when the mind's eye sees
Nibbana, there takes place a simultaneous penetration of all Four Noble Truths.
By seeing Nibbana, the state beyond dukkha, one gains a perspective from
which to view the five aggregates and see that they are dukkha simply
because they are conditioned, subject to ceaseless change. At the same moment
Nibbana is realized, craving stops; the understanding then dawns that craving is
the true origin of dukkha. When Nibbana is seen, it is realized to be the
state of peace, free from the turmoil of becoming. And because this experience
has been reached by practicing the Noble Eightfold Path, one knows for oneself
that the Noble Eightfold Path is truly the way to the end of dukkha.
This right view that penetrates the Four Noble Truths comes at the end of the
path, not at the beginning. We have to start with the right view conforming to
the truths, acquired through learning and fortified through reflection. This
view inspires us to take up the practice, to embark on the threefold training in
moral discipline, concentration, and wisdom. When the training matures, the eye
of wisdom opens by itself, penetrating the truths and freeing the mind from
bondage.
Chapter III
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Right Intention
(Samma Sankappa)
The second factor of the path is called in Pali samma sankappa, which
we will translate as "right intention." The term is sometimes translated as
"right thought," a rendering that can be accepted if we add the proviso that in
the present context the word "thought" refers specifically to the purposive or
conative aspect of mental activity, the cognitive aspect being covered by the
first factor, right view. It would be artificial, however, to insist too
strongly on the division between these two functions. From the Buddhist
perspective, the cognitive and purposive sides of the mind do not remain
isolated in separate compartments but intertwine and interact in close
correlation. Emotional predilections influence views, and views determine
predilections. Thus a penetrating view of the nature of existence, gained
through deep reflection and validated through investigation, brings with it a
restructuring of values which sets the mind moving towards goals commensurate
with the new vision. The application of mind needed to achieve those goals is
what is meant by right intention.
The Buddha explains right intention as threefold: the intention of
renunciation, the intention of good will, and the intention of harmlessness.[14]
The three are opposed to three parallel kinds of wrong intention: intention
governed by desire, intention governed by ill will, and intention governed by
harmfulness.[15] Each kind of right intention
counters the corresponding kind of wrong intention. The intention of
renunciation counters the intention of desire, the intention of good will
counters the intention of ill will, and the intention of harmlessness counters
the intention of harmfulness.
The Buddha discovered this twofold division of thought in the period prior to
his Enlightenment (see MN 19). While he was striving for deliverance, meditating
in the forest, he found that his thoughts could be distributed into two
different classes. In one he put thoughts of desire, ill will, and harmfulness,
in the other thoughts of renunciation, good will, and harmlessness. Whenever he
noticed thoughts of the first kind arise in him, he understood that those
thoughts lead to harm for oneself and others, obstruct wisdom, and lead away
from Nibbana. Reflecting in this way he expelled such thoughts from his mind and
brought them to an end. But whenever thoughts of the second kind arose, he
understood those thoughts to be beneficial, conducive to the growth of wisdom,
aids to the attainment of Nibbana. Thus he strengthened those thoughts and
brought them to completion.
Right intention claims the second place in the path, between right view and
the triad of moral factors that begins with right speech, because the mind's
intentional function forms the crucial link connecting our cognitive perspective
with our modes of active engagement in the world. On the one side actions always
point back to the thoughts from which they spring. Thought is the forerunner of
action, directing body and speech, stirring them into activity, using them as
its instruments for expressing its aims and ideals. These aims and ideals, our
intentions, in turn point back a further step to the prevailing views. When
wrong views prevail, the outcome is wrong intention giving rise to unwholesome
actions. Thus one who denies the moral efficacy of action and measures
achievement in terms of gain and status will aspire to nothing but gain and
status, using whatever means he can to acquire them. When such pursuits become
widespread, the result is suffering, the tremendous suffering of individuals,
social groups, and nations out to gain wealth, position, and power without
regard for consequences. The cause for the endless competition, conflict,
injustice, and oppression does not lie outside the mind. These are all just
manifestations of intentions, outcroppings of thoughts driven by greed, by
hatred, by delusion.
But when the intentions are right, the actions will be right, and for the
intentions to be right the surest guarantee is right views. One who recognizes
the law of kamma, that actions bring retributive consequences, will frame his
pursuits to accord with this law; thus his actions, expressive of his
intentions, will conform to the canons of right conduct. The Buddha succinctly
sums up the matter when he says that for a person who holds a wrong view, his
deeds, words, plans, and purposes grounded in that view will lead to suffering,
while for a person who holds right view, his deeds, words, plans, and purposes
grounded in that view will lead to happiness.[16]
Since the most important formulation of right view is the understanding of
the Four Noble Truths, it follows that this view should be in some way
determinative of the content of right intention. This we find to be in fact the
case. Understanding the four truths in relation to one's own life gives rise to
the intention of renunciation; understanding them in relation to other beings
gives rise to the other two right intentions. When we see how our own lives are
pervaded by dukkha, and how this dukkha derives from craving, the
mind inclines to renunciation -- to abandoning craving and the objects to which
it binds us. Then, when we apply the truths in an analogous way to other living
beings, the contemplation nurtures the growth of good will and harmlessness. We
see that, like ourselves, all other living beings want to be happy, and again
that like ourselves they are subject to suffering. The consideration that all
beings seek happiness causes thoughts of good will to arise -- the loving wish
that they be well, happy, and peaceful. The consideration that beings are
exposed to suffering causes thoughts of harmlessness to arise -- the
compassionate wish that they be free from suffering.
The moment the cultivation of the Noble Eightfold Path begins, the factors of
right view and right intention together start to counteract the three
unwholesome roots. Delusion, the primary cognitive defilement, is opposed by
right view, the nascent seed of wisdom. The complete eradication of delusion
will only take place when right view is developed to the stage of full
realization, but every flickering of correct understanding contributes to its
eventual destruction. The other two roots, being emotive defilements, require
opposition through the redirecting of intention, and thus meet their antidotes
in thoughts of renunciation, good will, and harmlessness.
Since greed and aversion are deeply grounded, they do not yield easily;
however, the work of overcoming them is not impossible if an effective strategy
is employed. The path devised by the Buddha makes use of an indirect approach:
it proceeds by tackling the thoughts to which these defilements give rise. Greed
and aversion surface in the form of thoughts, and thus can be eroded by a
process of "thought substitution," by replacing them with the thoughts opposed
to them. The intention of renunciation provides the remedy to greed. Greed comes
to manifestation in thoughts of desire -- as sensual, acquisitive, and
possessive thoughts. Thoughts of renunciation spring from the wholesome root of
non-greed, which they activate whenever they are cultivated. Since contrary
thoughts cannot coexist, when thoughts of renunciation are roused, they dislodge
thoughts of desire, thus causing non-greed to replace greed. Similarly, the
intentions of good will and harmlessness offer the antidote to aversion.
Aversion comes to manifestation either in thoughts of ill will -- as angry,
hostile, or resentful thoughts; or in thoughts of harming -- as the impulses to
cruelty, aggression, and destruction. Thoughts of good will counter the former
outflow of aversion, thoughts of harmlessness the latter outflow, in this way
excising the unwholesome root of aversion itself.
The Intention of Renunciation
The Buddha describes his teaching as running contrary to the way of the
world. The way of the world is the way of desire, and the unenlightened who
follow this way flow with the current of desire, seeking happiness by pursuing
the objects in which they imagine they will find fulfillment. The Buddha's
message of renunciation states exactly the opposite: the pull of desire is to be
resisted and eventually abandoned. Desire is to be abandoned not because it is
morally evil but because it is a root of suffering.[17]
Thus renunciation, turning away from craving and its drive for gratification,
becomes the key to happiness, to freedom from the hold of attachment.
The Buddha does not demand that everyone leave the household life for the
monastery or ask his followers to discard all sense enjoyments on the spot. The
degree to which a person renounces depends on his or her disposition and
situation. But what remains as a guiding principle is this: that the attainment
of deliverance requires the complete eradication of craving, and progress along
the path is accelerated to the extent that one overcomes craving. Breaking free
from domination by desire may not be easy, but the difficulty does not abrogate
the necessity. Since craving is the origin of dukkha, putting an end to dukkha
depends on eliminating craving, and that involves directing the mind to
renunciation.
But it is just at this point, when one tries to let go of attachment, that
one encounters a powerful inner resistance. The mind does not want to relinquish
its hold on the objects to which it has become attached. For such a long time it
has been accustomed to gaining, grasping, and holding, that it seems impossible
to break these habits by an act of will. One might agree to the need for
renunciation, might want to leave attachment behind, but when the call is
actually sounded the mind recoils and continues to move in the grip of its
desires.
So the problem arises of how to break the shackles of desire. The Buddha does
not offer as a solution the method of repression -- the attempt to drive desire
away with a mind full of fear and loathing. This approach does not resolve the
problem but only pushes it below the surface, where it continues to thrive. The
tool the Buddha holds out to free the mind from desire is understanding. Real
renunciation is not a matter of compelling ourselves to give up things still
inwardly cherished, but of changing our perspective on them so that they no
longer bind us. When we understand the nature of desire, when we investigate it
closely with keen attention, desire falls away by itself, without need for
struggle.
To understand desire in such a way that we can loosen its hold, we need to
see that desire is invariably bound up with dukkha. The whole phenomenon
of desire, with its cycle of wanting and gratification, hangs on our way of
seeing things. We remain in bondage to desire because we see it as our means to
happiness. If we can look at desire from a different angle, its force will be
abated, resulting in the move towards renunciation. What is needed to alter
perception is something called "wise consideration" (yoniso manasikara).
Just as perception influences thought, so thought can influence perception. Our
usual perceptions are tinged with "unwise consideration" (ayoniso manasikara).
We ordinarily look only at the surfaces of things, scan them in terms of our
immediate interests and wants; only rarely do we dig into the roots of our
involvements or explore their long-range consequences. To set this straight
calls for wise consideration: looking into the hidden undertones to our actions,
exploring their results, evaluating the worthiness of our goals. In this
investigation our concern must not be with what is pleasant but with what is
true. We have to be prepared and willing to discover what is true even at the
cost of our comfort. For real security always lies on the side of truth, not on
the side of comfort.
When desire is scrutinized closely, we find that it is constantly shadowed by
dukkha. Sometimes dukkha appears as pain or irritation; often it
lies low as a constant strain of discontent. But the two -- desire and dukkha
-- are inseparable concomitants. We can confirm this for ourselves by
considering the whole cycle of desire. At the moment desire springs up it
creates in us a sense of lack, the pain of want. To end this pain we struggle to
fulfill the desire. If our effort fails, we experience frustration,
disappointment, sometimes despair. But even the pleasure of success is not
unqualified. We worry that we might lose the ground we have gained. We feel
driven to secure our position, to safeguard our territory, to gain more, to rise
higher, to establish tighter controls. The demands of desire seem endless, and
each desire demands the eternal: it wants the things we get to last forever. But
all the objects of desire are impermanent. Whether it be wealth, power,
position, or other persons, separation is inevitable, and the pain that
accompanies separation is proportional to the force of attachment: strong
attachment brings much suffering; little attachment brings little suffering; no
attachment brings no suffering.[18]
Contemplating the dukkha inherent in desire is one way to incline the
mind to renunciation. Another way is to contemplate directly the benefits
flowing from renunciation. To move from desire to renunciation is not, as might
be imagined, to move from happiness to grief, from abundance to destitution. It
is to pass from gross, entangling pleasures to an exalted happiness and peace,
from a condition of servitude to one of self-mastery. Desire ultimately breeds
fear and sorrow, but renunciation gives fearlessness and joy. It promotes the
accomplishment of all three stages of the threefold training: it purifies
conduct, aids concentration, and nourishes the seed of wisdom. The entire course
of practice from start to finish can in fact be seen as an evolving process of
renunciation culminating in Nibbana as the ultimate stage of relinquishment,
"the relinquishing of all foundations of existence" (sabb'upadhipatinissagga).
When we methodically contemplate the dangers of desire and the benefits of
renunciation, gradually we steer our mind away from the domination of desire.
Attachments are shed like the leaves of a tree, naturally and spontaneously. The
changes do not come suddenly, but when there is persistent practice, there is no
doubt that they will come. Through repeated contemplation one thought knocks
away another, the intention of renunciation dislodges the intention of desire.
The Intention of Good Will
The intention of good will opposes the intention of ill will, thoughts
governed by anger and aversion. As in the case of desire, there are two
ineffective ways of handling ill will. One is to yield to it, to express the
aversion by bodily or verbal action. This approach releases the tension, helps
drive the anger "out of one's system," but it also poses certain dangers. It
breeds resentment, provokes retaliation, creates enemies, poisons relationships,
and generates unwholesome kamma; in the end, the ill will does not leave the
"system" after all, but instead is driven down to a deeper level where it
continues to vitiate one's thoughts and conduct. The other approach, repression,
also fails to dispel the destructive force of ill will. It merely turns that
force around and pushes it inward, where it becomes transmogrified into
self-contempt, chronic depression, or a tendency to irrational outbursts of
violence.
The remedy the Buddha recommends to counteract ill will, especially when the
object is another person, is a quality called in Pali metta. This word
derives from another word meaning "friend," but metta signifies much more
than ordinary friendliness. I prefer to translate it by the compound "lovingkindness,"
which best captures the intended sense: an intense feeling of selfless love for
other beings radiating outwards as a heartfelt concern for their well-being and
happiness. Metta is not just sentimental good will, nor is it a
conscientious response to a moral imperative or divine command. It must become a
deep inner feeling, characterized by spontaneous warmth rather than by a sense
of obligation. At its peak metta rises to the heights of a
brahmavihara, a "divine dwelling," a total way of being centered on the
radiant wish for the welfare of all living beings.
The kind of love implied by metta should be distinguished from sensual
love as well as from the love involved in personal affection. The first is a
form of craving, necessarily self-directed, while the second still includes a
degree of attachment: we love a person because that person gives us pleasure,
belongs to our family or group, or reinforces our own self-image. Only rarely
does the feeling of affection transcend all traces of ego-reference, and even
then its scope is limited. It applies only to a certain person or group of
people while excluding others.
The love involved in metta, in contrast, does not hinge on particular
relations to particular persons. Here the reference point of self is utterly
omitted. We are concerned only with suffusing others with a mind of
lovingkindness, which ideally is to be developed into a universal state,
extended to all living beings without discriminations or reservations. The way
to impart to metta this universal scope is to cultivate it as an exercise
in meditation. Spontaneous feelings of good will occur too sporadically and are
too limited in range to be relied on as the remedy for aversion. The idea of
deliberately developing love has been criticized as contrived, mechanical, and
calculated. Love, it is said, can only be genuine when it is spontaneous, arisen
without inner prompting or effort. But it is a Buddhist thesis that the mind
cannot be commanded to love spontaneously; it can only be shown the means to
develop love and enjoined to practice accordingly. At first the means has to be
employed with some deliberation, but through practice the feeling of love
becomes ingrained, grafted onto the mind as a natural and spontaneous tendency.
The method of development is metta-bhavana, the meditation on
lovingkindness, one of the most important kinds of Buddhist meditation. The
meditation begins with the development of lovingkindness towards oneself.[19]
It is suggested that one take oneself as the first object of metta
because true lovingkindness for others only becomes possible when one is able to
feel genuine lovingkindness for oneself. Probably most of the anger and
hostility we direct to others springs from negative attitudes we hold towards
ourselves. When metta is directed inwards towards oneself, it helps to
melt down the hardened crust created by these negative attitudes, permitting a
fluid diffusion of kindness and sympathy outwards.
Once one has learned to kindle the feeling of metta towards oneself,
the next step is to extend it to others. The extension of metta hinges on
a shift in the sense of identity, on expanding the sense of identity beyond its
ordinary confines and learning to identify with others. The shift is purely
psychological in method, entirely free from theological and metaphysical
postulates, such as that of a universal self immanent in all beings. Instead, it
proceeds from a simple, straightforward course of reflection which enables us to
share the subjectivity of others and experience the world (at least
imaginatively) from the standpoint of their own inwardness. The procedure starts
with oneself. If we look into our own mind, we find that the basic urge of our
being is the wish to be happy and free from suffering. Now, as soon as we see
this in ourselves, we can immediately understand that all living beings share
the same basic wish. All want to be well, happy, and secure. To develop metta
towards others, what is to be done is to imaginatively share their own innate
wish for happiness. We use our own desire for happiness as the key, experience
this desire as the basic urge of others, then come back to our own position and
extend to them the wish that they may achieve their ultimate objective, that
they may be well and happy.
The methodical radiation of metta is practiced first by directing
metta to individuals representing certain groups. These groups are set in an
order of progressive remoteness from oneself. The radiation begins with a dear
person, such as a parent or teacher, then moves on to a friend, then to a
neutral person, then finally to a hostile person. Though the types are defined
by their relation to oneself, the love to be developed is not based on that
relation but on each person's common aspiration for happiness. With each
individual one has to bring his (or her) image into focus and radiate the
thought: "May he (she) be well! May he (she) be happy! May he (she) be
peaceful!"[20] Only when one succeeds in generating
a warm feeling of good will and kindness towards that person should one turn to
the next. Once one gains some success with individuals, one can then work with
larger units. One can try developing metta towards all friends, all
neutral persons, all hostile persons. Then metta can be widened by
directional suffusion, proceeding in the various directions -- east, south,
west, north, above, below -- then it can be extended to all beings without
distinction. In the end one suffuses the entire world with a mind of
lovingkindness "vast, sublime, and immeasurable, without enmity, without
aversion."
The Intention of Harmlessness
The intention of harmlessness is thought guided by compassion (karuna),
aroused in opposition to cruel, aggressive, and violent thoughts. Compassion
supplies the complement to lovingkindness. Whereas lovingkindness has the
characteristic of wishing for the happiness and welfare of others, compassion
has the characteristic of wishing that others be free from suffering, a wish to
be extended without limits to all living beings. Like metta, compassion
arises by entering into the subjectivity of others, by sharing their interiority
in a deep and total way. It springs up by considering that all beings, like
ourselves, wish to be free from suffering, yet despite their wishes continue to
be harassed by pain, fear, sorrow, and other forms of dukkha.
To develop compassion as a meditative exercise, it is most effective to start
with somebody who is actually undergoing suffering, since this provides the
natural object for compassion. One contemplates this person's suffering, either
directly or imaginatively, then reflects that like oneself, he (she) also wants
to be free from suffering. The thought should be repeated, and contemplation
continually exercised, until a strong feeling of compassion swells up in the
heart. Then, using that feeling as a standard, one turns to different
individuals, considers how they are each exposed to suffering, and radiates the
gentle feeling of compassion out to them. To increase the breadth and intensity
of compassion it is helpful to contemplate the various sufferings to which
living beings are susceptible. A useful guideline to this extension is provided
by the first noble truth, with its enumeration of the different aspects of
dukkha. One contemplates beings as subject to old age, then as subject to
sickness, then to death, then to sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair,
and so forth.
When a high level of success has been achieved in generating compassion by
the contemplation of beings who are directly afflicted by suffering, one can
then move on to consider people who are presently enjoying happiness which they
have acquired by immoral means. One might reflect that such people, despite
their superficial fortune, are doubtlessly troubled deep within by the pangs of
conscience. Even if they display no outward signs of inner distress, one knows
that they will eventually reap the bitter fruits of their evil deeds, which will
bring them intense suffering. Finally, one can widen the scope of one's
contemplation to include all living beings. One should contemplate all beings as
subject to the universal suffering of samsara, driven by their greed,
aversion, and delusion through the round of repeated birth and death. If
compassion is initially difficult to arouse towards beings who are total
strangers, one can strengthen it by reflecting on the Buddha's dictum that in
this beginningless cycle of rebirths, it is hard to find even a single being who
has not at some time been one's own mother or father, sister or brother, son or
daughter.
To sum up, we see that the three kinds of right intention -- of renunciation,
good will, and harmlessness -- counteract the three wrong intentions of desire,
ill will, and harmfulness. The importance of putting into practice the
contemplations leading to the arising of these thoughts cannot be
overemphasized. The contemplations have been taught as methods for cultivation,
not mere theoretical excursions. To develop the intention of renunciation we
have to contemplate the suffering tied up with the quest for worldly enjoyment;
to develop the intention of good will we have to consider how all beings desire
happiness; to develop the intention of harmlessness we have to consider how all
beings wish to be free from suffering. The unwholesome thought is like a rotten
peg lodged in the mind; the wholesome thought is like a new peg suitable to
replace it. The actual contemplation functions as the hammer used to drive out
the old peg with the new one. The work of driving in the new peg is practice --
practicing again and again, as often as is necessary to reach success. The
Buddha gives us his assurance that the victory can be achieved. He says that
whatever one reflects upon frequently becomes the inclination of the mind. If
one frequently thinks sensual, hostile, or harmful thoughts, desire, ill will,
and harmfulness become the inclination of the mind. If one frequently thinks in
the opposite way, renunciation, good will, and harmlessness become the
inclination of the mind (MN 19). The direction we take always comes back to
ourselves, to the intentions we generate moment by moment in the course of our
lives.
Chapter IV
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Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood
(Samma Vaca, Samma Kammanta, Samma Ajiva)
The next three path factors -- right speech, right action, and right
livelihood -- may be treated together, as collectively they make up the first of
the three divisions of the path, the division of moral discipline (silakkhandha).
Though the principles laid down in this section restrain immoral actions and
promote good conduct, their ultimate purpose is not so much ethical as
spiritual. They are not prescribed merely as guides to action, but primarily as
aids to mental purification. As a necessary measure for human well-being, ethics
has its own justification in the Buddha's teaching and its importance cannot be
underrated. But in the special context of the Noble Eightfold Path ethical
principles are subordinate to the path's governing goal, final deliverance from
suffering. Thus for the moral training to become a proper part of the path, it
has to be taken up under the tutelage of the first two factors, right view and
right intention, and to lead beyond to the trainings in concentration and
wisdom.
Though the training in moral discipline is listed first among the three
groups of practices, it should not be regarded lightly. It is the foundation for
the entire path, essential for the success of the other trainings. The Buddha
himself frequently urged his disciples to adhere to the rules of discipline,
"seeing danger in the slightest fault." One time, when a monk approached the
Buddha and asked for the training in brief, the Buddha told him: "First
establish yourself in the starting point of wholesome states, that is, in
purified moral discipline and in right view. Then, when your moral discipline is
purified and your view straight, you should practice the four foundations of
mindfulness" (SN 47:3).
The Pali word we have been translating as "moral discipline," sila,
appears in the texts with several overlapping meanings all connected with right
conduct. In some contexts it means action conforming to moral principles, in
others the principles themselves, in still others the virtuous qualities of
character that result from the observance of moral principles. Sila in
the sense of precepts or principles represents the formalistic side of the
ethical training, sila as virtue the animating spirit, and sila as
right conduct the expression of virtue in real-life situations. Often sila
is formally defined as abstinence from unwholesome bodily and verbal action.
This definition, with its stress on outer action, appears superficial. Other
explanations, however, make up for the deficiency and reveal that there is more
to sila than is evident at first glance. The Abhidhamma, for example,
equates sila with the mental factors of abstinence (viratiyo) --
right speech, right action, and right livelihood -- an equation which makes it
clear that what is really being cultivated through the observance of moral
precepts is the mind. Thus while the training in sila brings the "public"
benefit of inhibiting socially detrimental actions, it entails the personal
benefit of mental purification, preventing the defilements from dictating to us
what lines of conduct we should follow.
The English word "morality" and its derivatives suggest a sense of obligation
and constraint quite foreign to the Buddhist conception of sila; this
connotation probably enters from the theistic background to Western ethics.
Buddhism, with its non-theistic framework, grounds its ethics, not on the notion
of obedience, but on that of harmony. In fact, the commentaries explain the word
sila by another word, samadhana, meaning "harmony" or
"coordination."
The observance of sila leads to harmony at several levels -- social,
psychological, kammic, and contemplative. At the social level the principles of
sila help to establish harmonious interpersonal relations, welding the
mass of differently constituted members of society with their own private
interests and goals into a cohesive social order in which conflict, if not
utterly eliminated, is at least reduced. At the psychological level sila
brings harmony to the mind, protection from the inner split caused by guilt and
remorse over moral transgressions. At the kammic level the observance of sila
ensures harmony with the cosmic law of kamma, hence favorable results in the
course of future movement through the round of repeated birth and death. And at
the fourth level, the contemplative, sila helps establish the preliminary
purification of mind to be completed, in a deeper and more thorough way, by the
methodical development of serenity and insight.
When briefly defined, the factors of moral training are usually worded
negatively, in terms of abstinence. But there is more to sila than
refraining from what is wrong. Each principle embedded in the precepts, as we
will see, actually has two aspects, both essential to the training as a whole.
One is abstinence from the unwholesome, the other commitment to the wholesome;
the former is called "avoidance" (varitta) and the latter "performance"
(caritta). At the outset of training the Buddha stresses the aspect of
avoidance. He does so, not because abstinence from the unwholesome is sufficient
in itself, but to establish the steps of practice in proper sequence. The steps
are set out in their natural order (more logical than temporal) in the famous
dictum of the Dhammapada: "To abstain from all evil, to cultivate the good, and
to purify one's mind -- this is the teaching of the Buddhas" (v. 183). The other
two steps -- cultivating the good and purifying the mind -- also receive their
due, but to ensure their success, a resolve to avoid the unwholesome is a
necessity. Without such a resolve the attempt to develop wholesome qualities is
bound to issue in a warped and stunted pattern of growth.
The training in moral discipline governs the two principal channels of outer
action, speech and body, as well as another area of vital concern -- one's way
of earning a living. Thus the training contains three factors: right speech,
right action, and right livelihood. These we will now examine individually,
following the order in which they are set forth in the usual exposition of the
path.
Right Speech (samma vaca)
The Buddha divides right speech into four components: abstaining from false
speech, abstaining from slanderous speech, abstaining from harsh speech, and
abstaining from idle chatter. Because the effects of speech are not as
immediately evident as those of bodily action, its importance and potential is
easily overlooked. But a little reflection will show that speech and its
offshoot, the written word, can have enormous consequences for good or for harm.
In fact, whereas for beings such as animals who live at the preverbal level
physical action is of dominant concern, for humans immersed in verbal
communication speech gains the ascendency. Speech can break lives, create
enemies, and start wars, or it can give wisdom, heal divisions, and create
peace. This has always been so, yet in the modern age the positive and negative
potentials of speech have been vastly multiplied by the tremendous increase in
the means, speed, and range of communications. The capacity for verbal
expression, oral and written, has often been regarded as the distinguishing mark
of the human species. From this we can appreciate the need to make this capacity
the means to human excellence rather than, as too often has been the case, the
sign of human degradation.
(1) Abstaining from false speech (musavada veramani)
Herein someone avoids false speech and abstains from it. He speaks the
truth, is devoted to truth, reliable, worthy of confidence, not a deceiver of
people. Being at a meeting, or amongst people, or in the midst of his
relatives, or in a society, or in the king's court, and called upon and asked
as witness to tell what he knows, he answers, if he knows nothing: "I know
nothing," and if he knows, he answers: "I know"; if he has seen nothing, he
answers: "I have seen nothing," and if he has seen, he answers: "I have seen."
Thus he never knowingly speaks a lie, either for the sake of his own
advantage, or for the sake of another person's advantage, or for the sake of
any advantage whatsoever.[21]
This statement of the Buddha discloses both the negative and the positive
sides to the precept. The negative side is abstaining from lying, the positive
side speaking the truth. The determinative factor behind the transgression is
the intention to deceive. If one speaks something false believing it to be true,
there is no breach of the precept as the intention to deceive is absent. Though
the deceptive intention is common to all cases of false speech, lies can appear
in different guises depending on the motivating root, whether greed, hatred, or
delusion. Greed as the chief motive results in the lie aimed at gaining some
personal advantage for oneself or for those close to oneself -- material wealth,
position, respect, or admiration. With hatred as the motive, false speech takes
the form of the malicious lie, the lie intended to hurt and damage others. When
delusion is the principal motive, the result is a less pernicious type of
falsehood: the irrational lie, the compulsive lie, the interesting exaggeration,
lying for the sake of a joke.
The Buddha's stricture against lying rests upon several reasons. For one
thing, lying is disruptive to social cohesion. People can live together in
society only in an atmosphere of mutual trust, where they have reason to believe
that others will speak the truth; by destroying the grounds for trust and
inducing mass suspicion, widespread lying becomes the harbinger signalling the
fall from social solidarity to chaos. But lying has other consequences of a
deeply personal nature at least equally disastrous. By their very nature lies
tend to proliferate. Lying once and finding our word suspect, we feel compelled
to lie again to defend our credibility, to paint a consistent picture of events.
So the process repeats itself: the lies stretch, multiply, and connect until
they lock us into a cage of falsehoods from which it is difficult to escape. The
lie is thus a miniature paradigm for the whole process of subjective illusion.
In each case the self-assured creator, sucked in by his own deceptions,
eventually winds up their victim.
Such considerations probably lie behind the words of counsel the Buddha spoke
to his son, the young novice Rahula, soon after the boy was ordained. One day
the Buddha came to Rahula, pointed to a bowl with a little bit of water in it,
and asked: "Rahula, do you see this bit of water left in the bowl?" Rahula
answered: "Yes, sir." "So little, Rahula, is the spiritual achievement (samañña,
lit. 'recluseship') of one who is not afraid to speak a deliberate lie." Then
the Buddha threw the water away, put the bowl down, and said: "Do you see,
Rahula, how that water has been discarded? In the same way one who tells a
deliberate lie discards whatever spiritual achievement he has made." Again he
asked: "Do you see how this bowl is now empty? In the same way one who has no
shame in speaking lies is empty of spiritual achievement." Then the Buddha
turned the bowl upside down and said: "Do you see, Rahula, how this bowl has
been turned upside down? In the same way one who tells a deliberate lie turns
his spiritual achievements upside down and becomes incapable of progress."
Therefore, the Buddha concluded, one should not speak a deliberate lie even in
jest.[22]
It is said that in the course of his long training for enlightenment over
many lives, a bodhisatta can break all the moral precepts except the pledge to
speak the truth. The reason for this is very profound, and reveals that the
commitment to truth has a significance transcending the domain of ethics and
even mental purification, taking us to the domains of knowledge and being.
Truthful speech provides, in the sphere of interpersonal communication, a
parallel to wisdom in the sphere of private understanding. The two are
respectively the outward and inward modalities of the same commitment to what is
real. Wisdom consists in the realization of truth, and truth (sacca) is
not just a verbal proposition but the nature of things as they are. To realize
truth our whole being has to be brought into accord with actuality, with things
as they are, which requires that in communications with others we respect things
as they are by speaking the truth. Truthful speech establishes a correspondence
between our own inner being and the real nature of phenomena, allowing wisdom to
rise up and fathom their real nature. Thus, much more than an ethical principle,
devotion to truthful speech is a matter of taking our stand on reality rather
than illusion, on the truth grasped by wisdom rather than the fantasies woven by
desire.
(2) Abstaining from slanderous speech (pisunaya vacaya veramani)
He avoids slanderous speech and abstains from it. What he has heard here he
does not repeat there, so as to cause dissension there; and what he has heard
there he does not repeat here, so as to cause dissension here. Thus he unites
those that are divided; and those that are united he encourages. Concord
gladdens him, he delights and rejoices in concord; and it is concord that he
spreads by his words.[23]
Slanderous speech is speech intended to create enmity and division, to
alienate one person or group from another. The motive behind such speech is
generally aversion, resentment of a rival's success or virtues, the intention to
tear down others by verbal denigrations. Other motives may enter the picture as
well: the cruel intention of causing hurt to others, the evil desire to win
affection for oneself, the perverse delight in seeing friends divided.
Slanderous speech is one of the most serious moral transgressions. The root
of hate makes the unwholesome kamma already heavy enough, but since the action
usually occurs after deliberation, the negative force becomes even stronger
because premeditation adds to its gravity. When the slanderous statement is
false, the two wrongs of falsehood and slander combine to produce an extremely
powerful unwholesome kamma. The canonical texts record several cases in which
the calumny ofan innocent party led to an immediate rebirth in the plane of
misery.
The opposite of slander, as the Buddha indicates, is speech that promotes
friendship and harmony. Such speech originates from a mind of lovingkindness and
sympathy. It wins the trust and affection of others, who feel they can confide
in one without fear that their disclosures will be used against them. Beyond the
obvious benefits that such speech brings in this present life, it is said that
abstaining from slander has as its kammic result the gain of a retinue of
friends who can never be turned against one by the slanderous words of others.[24]
(3) Abstaining from harsh speech (pharusaya vacaya veramani).
He avoids harsh language and abstains from it. He speaks such words as are
gentle, soothing to the ear, loving, such words as go to the heart, and are
courteous, friendly, and agreeable to many.[25]
Harsh speech is speech uttered in anger, intended to cause the hearer pain.
Such speech can assume different forms, of which we might mention three. One is
abusive speech: scolding, reviling, or reproving another angrily with
bitter words. A second is insult: hurting another by ascribing to him
some offensive quality which detracts from his dignity. A third is sarcasm:
speaking to someone in a way which ostensibly lauds him, but with such a tone or
twist of phrasing that the ironic intent becomes clear and causes pain.
The main root of harsh speech is aversion, assuming the form of anger. Since
the defilement in this case tends to work impulsively, without deliberation, the
transgression is less serious than slander and the kammic consequence generally
less severe. Still, harsh speech is an unwholesome action with disagreeable
results for oneself and others, both now and in the future, so it has to be
restrained. The ideal antidote is patience -- learning to tolerate blame and
criticism from others, to sympathize with their shortcomings, to respect
differences in viewpoint, to endure abuse without feeling compelled to
retaliate. The Buddha calls for patience even under the most trying conditions:
Even if, monks, robbers and murderers saw through your limbs and joints,
whosoever should give way to anger thereat would not be following my advice. For
thus ought you to train yourselves: "Undisturbed shall our mind remain, with
heart full of love, and free from any hidden malice; and that person shall we
penetrate with loving thoughts, wide, deep, boundless, freed from anger and
hatred."[26]
(4) Abstaining from idle chatter (samphappalapa veramani).
He avoids idle chatter and abstains from it. He speaks at the right time,
in accordance with facts, speaks what is useful, speaks of the Dhamma and the
discipline; his speech is like a treasure, uttered at the right moment,
accompanied by reason, moderate and full of sense.[27]
Idle chatter is pointless talk, speech that lacks purpose or depth. Such
speech communicates nothing of value, but only stirs up the defilements in one's
own mind and in others. The Buddha advises that idle talk should be curbed and
speech restricted as much as possible to matters of genuine importance. In the
case of a monk, the typical subject of the passage just quoted, his words should
be selective and concerned primarily with the Dhamma. Lay persons will have more
need for affectionate small talk with friends and family, polite conversation
with acquaintances, and talk in connection with their line of work. But even
then they should be mindful not to let the conversation stray into pastures
where the restless mind, always eager for something sweet or spicy to feed on,
might find the chance to indulge its defiling propensities.
The traditional exegesis of abstaining from idle chatter refers only to
avoiding engagement in such talk oneself. But today it might be of value to give
this factor a different slant, made imperative by certain developments peculiar
to our own time, unknown in the days of the Buddha and the ancient commentators.
This is avoiding exposure to the idle chatter constantly bombarding us through
the new media of communication created by modern technology. An incredible array
of devices -- television, radio, newspapers, pulp journals, the cinema -- turns
out a continuous stream of needless information and distracting entertainment
the net effect of which is to leave the mind passive, vacant, and sterile. All
these developments, naively accepted as "progress," threaten to blunt our
aesthetic and spiritual sensitivities and deafen us to the higher call of the
contemplative life. Serious aspirants on the path to liberation have to be
extremely discerning in what they allow themselves to be exposed to. They would
greatly serve their aspirations by including these sources of amusement and
needless information in the category of idle chatter and making an effort to
avoid them.
Right Action (samma kammanta)
Right action means refraining from unwholesome deeds that occur with the body
as their natural means of expression. The pivotal element in this path factor is
the mental factor of abstinence, but because this abstinence applies to actions
performed through the body, it is called "right action." The Buddha mentions
three components of right action: abstaining from taking life, abstaining from
taking what is not given, and abstaining from sexual misconduct. These we will
briefly discuss in order.
(1) Abstaining from the taking of life (panatipata veramani)
Herein someone avoids the taking of life and abstains from it. Without
stick or sword, conscientious, full of sympathy, he is desirous of the welfare
of all sentient beings.[28]
"Abstaining from taking life" has a wider application than simply refraining
from killing other human beings. The precept enjoins abstaining from killing any
sentient being. A "sentient being" (pani, satta) is a living being
endowed with mind or consciousness; for practical purposes, this means human
beings, animals, and insects. Plants are not considered to be sentient beings;
though they exhibit some degree of sensitivity, they lack full-fledged
consciousness, the defining attribute of a sentient being.
The "taking of life" that is to be avoided is intentional killing, the
deliberate destruction of life of a being endowed with consciousness. The
principle is grounded in the consideration that all beings love life and fear
death, that all seek happiness and are averse to pain. The essential determinant
of transgression is the volition to kill, issuing in an action that deprives a
being of life. Suicide is also generally regarded as a violation, but not
accidental killing as the intention to destroy life is absent. The abstinence
may be taken to apply to two kinds of action, the primary and the secondary. The
primary is the actual destruction of life; the secondary is deliberately harming
or torturing another being without killing it.
While the Buddha's statement on non-injury is quite simple and
straightforward, later commentaries give a detailed analysis of the principle. A
treatise from Thailand, written by an erudite Thai patriarch, collates a mass of
earlier material into an especially thorough treatment, which we shall briefly
summarize here.[29] The treatise points out that
the taking of life may have varying degrees of moral weight entailing different
consequences. The three primary variables governing moral weight are the object,
the motive, and the effort. With regard to the object there is a difference in
seriousness between killing a human being and killing an animal, the former
being kammically heavier since man has a more highly developed moral sense and
greater spiritual potential than animals. Among human beings, the degree of
kammic weight depends on the qualities of the person killed and his relation to
the killer; thus killing a person of superior spiritual qualities or a personal
benefactor, such as a parent or a teacher, is an especially grave act.
The motive for killing also influences moral weight. Acts of killing can be
driven by greed, hatred, or delusion. Of the three, killing motivated by hatred
is the most serious, and the weight increases to the degree that the killing is
premeditated. The force of effort involved also contributes, the unwholesome
kamma being proportional to the force and the strength of the defilements.
The positive counterpart to abstaining from taking life, as the Buddha
indicates, is the development of kindness and compassion for other beings. The
disciple not only avoids destroying life; he dwells with a heart full of
sympathy, desiring the welfare of all beings. The commitment to non-injury and
concern for the welfare of others represent the practical application of the
second path factor, right intention, in the form of good will and harmlessness.
(2) Abstaining from taking what is not given (adinnadana veramani)
He avoids taking what is not given and abstains from it; what another
person possesses of goods and chattel in the village or in the wood, that he
does not take away with thievish intent.[30]
"Taking what is not given" means appropriating the rightful belongings of
others with thievish intent. If one takes something that has no owner, such as
unclaimed stones, wood, or even gems extracted from the earth, the act does not
count as a violation even though these objects have not been given. But also
implied as a transgression, though not expressly stated, is withholding from
others what should rightfully be given to them.
Commentaries mention a number of ways in which "taking what is not given" can
be committed. Some of the most common may be enumerated:
(1) stealing: taking the belongings of others secretly, as in
housebreaking, pickpocketing, etc.;
(2) robbery: taking what belongs to others openly by force or
threats;
(3) snatching: suddenly pulling away another's possession before he
has time to resist;
(4) fraudulence: gaining possession of another's belongings by
falsely claiming them as one's own;
(5) deceitfulness: using false weights and measures to cheat
customers.[31]
The degree of moral weight that attaches to the action is determined by three
factors: the value of the object taken; the qualities of the victim of the
theft; and the subjective state of the thief. Regarding the first, moral weight
is directly proportional to the value of the object. Regarding the second, the
weight varies according to the moral qualities of the deprived individual.
Regarding the third, acts of theft may be motivated either by greed or hatred.
While greed is the most common cause, hatred may also be responsible as when one
person deprives another of his belongings not so much because he wants them for
himself as because he wants to harm the latter. Between the two, acts motivated
by hatred are kammically heavier than acts motivated by sheer greed.
The positive counterpart to abstaining from stealing is honesty, which
implies respect for the belongings of others and for their right to use their
belongings as they wish. Another related virtue is contentment, being satisfied
with what one has without being inclined to increase one's wealth by
unscrupulous means. The most eminent opposite virtue is generosity, giving away
one's own wealth and possessions in order to benefit others.
(3) Abstaining from sexual misconduct (kamesu miccha-cara veramani)
He avoids sexual misconduct and abstains from it. He has no intercourse
with such persons as are still under the protection of father, mother,
brother, sister or relatives, nor with married women, nor with female
convicts, nor lastly, with betrothed girls.[32]
The guiding purposes of this precept, from the ethical standpoint, are to
protect marital relations from outside disruption and to promote trust and
fidelity within the marital union. From the spiritual standpoint it helps curb
the expansive tendency of sexual desire and thus is a step in the direction of
renunciation, which reaches its consummation in the observance of celibacy (brahmacariya)
binding on monks and nuns. But for laypeople the precept enjoins abstaining from
sexual relations with an illicit partner. The primary transgression is entering
into full sexual union, but all other sexual involvements of a less complete
kind may be considered secondary infringements.
The main question raised by the precept concerns who is to count as an
illicit partner. The Buddha's statement defines the illicit partner from the
perspective of the man, but later treatises elaborate the matter for both
sexes.[33]
For a man, three kinds of women are considered illicit partners:
(1) A woman who is married to another man. This includes, besides a woman
already married to a man, a woman who is not his legal wife but is generally
recognized as his consort, who lives with him or is kept by him or is in some
way acknowledged as his partner. All these women are illicit partners for men
other than their own husbands. This class would also include a woman engaged
to another man. But a widow or divorced woman is not out of bounds, provided
she is not excluded for other reasons.
(2) A woman still under protection. This is a girl or woman who is under
the protection of her mother, father, relatives, or others rightfully entitled
to be her guardians. This provision rules out elopements or secret marriages
contrary to the wishes of the protecting party.
(3) A woman prohibited by convention. This includes close female relatives
forbidden as partners by social tradition, nuns and other women under a vow of
celibacy, and those prohibited as partners by the law of the land.
From the standpoint of a woman, two kinds of men are considered illicit
partners:
(1) For a married woman any man other than her husband is out of bounds.
Thus a married woman violates the precept if she breaks her vow of fidelity to
her husband. But a widow or divorcee is free to remarry.
(2) For any woman any man forbidden by convention, such as close relatives
and those under a vow of celibacy, is an illicit partner.
Besides these, any case of forced, violent, or coercive sexual union
constitutes a transgression. But in such a case the violation falls only on the
offender, not on the one compelled to submit.
The positive virtue corresponding to the abstinence is, for laypeople,
marital fidelity. Husband and wife should each be faithful and devoted to the
other, content with the relationship, and should not risk a breakup to the union
by seeking outside partners. The principle does not, however, confine sexual
relations to the marital union. It is flexible enough to allow for variations
depending on social convention. The essential purpose, as was said, is to
prevent sexual relations which are hurtful to others. When mature independent
people, though unmarried, enter into a sexual relationship through free consent,
so long as no other person is intentionally harmed, no breach of the training
factor is involved.
Ordained monks and nuns, including men and women who have undertaken the
eight or ten precepts, are obliged to observe celibacy. They must abstain not
only from sexual misconduct, but from all sexual involvements, at least during
the period of their vows. The holy life at its highest aims at complete purity
in thought, word, and deed, and this requires turning back the tide of sexual
desire.
Right Livelihood (samma ajiva)
Right livelihood is concerned with ensuring that one earns one's living in a
righteous way. For a lay disciple the Buddha teaches that wealth should be
gained in accordance with certain standards. One should acquire it only by legal
means, not illegally; one should acquire it peacefully, without coercion or
violence; one should acquire it honestly, not by trickery or deceit; and one
should acquire it in ways which do not entail harm and suffering for others.[34]
The Buddha mentions five specific kinds of livelihood which bring harm to others
and are therefore to be avoided: dealing in weapons, in living beings (including
raising animals for slaughter as well as slave trade and prostitution), in meat
production and butchery, in poisons, and in intoxicants (AN 5:177). He further
names several dishonest means of gaining wealth which fall under wrong
livelihood: practicing deceit, treachery, soothsaying, trickery, and usury (MN
117). Obviously any occupation that requires violation of right speech and right
action is a wrong form of livelihood, but other occupations, such as selling
weapons or intoxicants, may not violate those factors and yet be wrong because
of their consequences for others.
The Thai treatise discusses the positive aspects of right livelihood under
the three convenient headings of rightness regarding actions, rightness
regarding persons, and rightness regarding objects.[35]
"Rightness regarding actions" means that workers should fulfill their duties
diligently and conscientiously, not idling away time, claiming to have worked
longer hours than they did, or pocketing the company's goods. "Rightness
regarding persons" means that due respect and consideration should be shown to
employers, employees, colleagues, and customers. An employer, for example,
should assign his workers chores according to their ability, pay them
adequately, promote them when they deserve a promotion and give them occasional
vacations and bonuses. Colleagues should try to cooperate rather than compete,
while merchants should be equitable in their dealings with customers. "Rightness
regarding objects" means that in business transactions and sales the articles to
be sold should be presented truthfully. There should be no deceptive
advertising, misrepresentations of quality or quantity, or dishonest manoeuvers.
Chapter V
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Right Effort
(Samma Vayama)
The purification of conduct established by the prior three factors serves as
the basis for the next division of the path, the division of concentration (samadhikkhandha).
This present phase of practice, which advances from moral restraint to direct
mental training, comprises the three factors of right effort, right mindfulness,
and right concentration. It gains its name from the goal to which it aspires,
the power of sustained concentration, itself required as the support for
insight-wisdom. Wisdom is the primary tool for deliverance, but the penetrating
vision it yields can only open up when the mind has been composed and collected.
Right concentration brings the requisite stillness to the mind by unifying it
with undistracted focus on a suitable object. To do so, however, the factor of
concentration needs the aid of effort and mindfulness. Right effort provides the
energy demanded by the task, right mindfulness the steadying points for
awareness.
The commentators illustrate the interdependence of the three factors within
the concentration group with a simple simile. Three boys go to a park to play.
While walking along they see a tree with flowering tops and decide they want to
gather the flowers. But the flowers are beyond the reach even of the tallest
boy. Then one friend bends down and offers his back. The tall boy climbs up, but
still hesitates to reach for the flowers from fear of falling. So the third boy
comes over and offers his shoulder for support. The first boy, standing on the
back of the second boy, then leans on the shoulder of the third boy, reaches up,
and gathers the flowers.[36]
In this simile the tall boy who picks the flowers represents concentration
with its function of unifying the mind. But to unify the mind concentration
needs support: the energy provided by right effort, which is like the boy who
offers his back. It also requires the stabilizing awareness provided by
mindfulness, which is like the boy who offers his shoulder. When right
concentration receives this support, then empowered by right effort and balanced
by right mindfulness it can draw in the scattered strands of thought and fix the
mind firmly on its object.
Energy (viriya), the mental factor behind right effort, can appear in
either wholesome or unwholesome forms. The same factor fuels desire, aggression,
violence, and ambition on the one hand, and generosity, self-discipline,
kindness, concentration, and understanding on the other. The exertion involved
in right effort is a wholesome form of energy, but it is something more
specific, namely, the energy in wholesome states of consciousness directed to
liberation from suffering. This last qualifying phrase is especially important.
For wholesome energy to become a contributor to the path it has to be guided by
right view and right intention, and to work in association with the other path
factors. Otherwise, as the energy in ordinary wholesome states of mind, it
merely engenders an accumulation of merit that ripens within the round of birth
and death; it does not issue in liberation from the round.
Time and again the Buddha has stressed the need for effort, for diligence,
exertion, and unflagging perseverance. The reason why effort is so crucial is
that each person has to work out his or her own deliverance. The Buddha does
what he can by pointing out the path to liberation; the rest involves putting
the path into practice, a task that demands energy. This energy is to be applied
to the cultivation of the mind, which forms the focus of the entire path. The
starting point is the defiled mind, afflicted and deluded; the goal is the
liberated mind, purified and illuminated by wisdom. What comes in between is the
unremitting effort to transform the defiled mind into the liberated mind. The
work of self-cultivation is not easy -- there is no one who can do it for us but
ourselves -- but it is not impossible. The Buddha himself and his accomplished
disciples provide the living proof that the task is not beyond our reach. They
assure us, too, that anyone who follows the path can accomplish the same goal.
But what is needed is effort, the work of practice taken up with the
determination: "I shall not give up my efforts until I have attained whatever is
attainable by manly perseverance, energy, and endeavor."[37]
The nature of the mental process effects a division of right effort into four
"great endeavors":
(1) to prevent the arising of unarisen unwholesome states;
(2) to abandon unwholesome states that have already arisen;
(3) to arouse wholesome states that have not yet arisen;
(4) to maintain and perfect wholesome states already arisen.
The unwholesome states (akusala dhamma) are the defilements, and the
thoughts, emotions, and intentions derived from them, whether breaking forth
into action or remaining confined within. The wholesome states (kusala dhamma)
are states of mind untainted by defilements, especially those conducing to
deliverance. Each of the two kinds of mental states imposes a double task. The
unwholesome side requires that the defilements lying dormant be prevented from
erupting and that the active defilements already present be expelled. The
wholesome side requires that the undeveloped liberating factors first be brought
into being, then persistently developed to the point of full maturity. Now we
will examine each of these four divisions of right effort, giving special
attention to their most fertile field of application, the cultivation of the
mind through meditation.
(1) To prevent the arising of unarisen unwholesome states
Herein the disciple rouses his will to avoid the arising of evil,
unwholesome states that have not yet arisen; and he makes effort, stirs up his
energy, exerts his mind and strives.[38]
The first side of right effort aims at overcoming unwholesome states, states
of mind tainted by defilements. Insofar as they impede concentration the
defilements are usually presented in a fivefold set called the "five hindrances"
(pañcanivarana): sensual desire, ill will, dullness and drowsiness,
restlessness and worry, and doubt.[39] They receive
the name "hindrances" because they block the path to liberation; they grow up
and over the mind preventing calm and insight, the primary instruments for
progress. The first two hindrances, sensual desire and ill will, are the
strongest of the set, the most formidable barriers to meditative growth,
representing, respectively, the unwholesome roots of greed and aversion. The
other three hindrances, less toxic but still obstructive, are offshoots of
delusion, usually in association with other defilements.
Sensual desire is interpreted in two ways. Sometimes it is understood
in a narrow sense as lust for the "five strands of sense pleasure," i.e.,
agreeable sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and touches; sometimes a broader
interpretation is given, by which the term becomes inclusive of craving in all
its modes, whether for sense pleasures, wealth, power, position, fame, or
anything else it can settle upon. The second hindrance, ill will, is a
synonym for aversion. It comprises hatred, anger, resentment, repulsion of every
shade, whether directed towards other people, towards oneself, towards objects,
or towards situations. The third hindrance, dullness and drowsiness, is a
compound of two factors linked together by their common feature of mental
unwieldiness. One is dullness (thina), manifest as mental inertia; the
other is drowsiness (middha), seen in mental sinking, heaviness of mind,
or excessive inclination to sleep. At the opposite extreme is the fourth
hindrance, restlessness and worry. This too is a compound with its two
members linked by their common feature of disquietude. Restlessness
(uddhacca) is agitation or excitement, which drives the mind from thought to
thought with speed and frenzy; worry (kukkucca) is remorse over past
mistakes and anxiety about their possible undesired consequences. The fifth
hindrance, doubt, signifies a chronic indecisiveness and lack of
resolution: not the probing of critical intelligence, an attitude encouraged by
the Buddha, but a persistent inability to commit oneself to the course of
spiritual training due to lingering doubts concerning the Buddha, his doctrine,
and his path.
The first effort to be made regarding the hindrances is the effort to prevent
the unarisen hindrances from arising; this is also called the endeavor to
restrain (samvarappadhana). The effort to hold the hindrances in check is
imperative both at the start of meditative training and throughout the course of
its development. For when the hindrances arise, they disperse attention and
darken the quality of awareness, to the detriment of calm and clarity. The
hindrances do not come from outside the mind but from within. They appear
through the activation of certain tendencies constantly lying dormant in the
deep recesses of the mental continuum, awaiting the opportunity to surface.
Generally what sparks the hindrances into activity is the input afforded by
sense experience. The physical organism is equipped with five sense faculties
each receptive to its own specific kind of data -- the eye to forms, the ear to
sounds, the nose to smells, the tongue to tastes, the body to tangibles. Sense
objects continuously impinge on the senses, which relay the information they
receive to the mind, where it is processed, evaluated, and accorded an
appropriate response. But the mind can deal with the impressions it receives in
different ways, governed in the first place by the manner in which it attends to
them. When the mind adverts to the incoming data carelessly, with unwise
consideration (ayoniso manasikara), the sense objects tend to stir up
unwholesome states. They do this either directly, through their immediate
impact, or else indirectly by depositing memory traces which later may swell up
as the objects of defiled thoughts, images, and fantasies. As a general rule the
defilement that is activated corresponds to the object: attractive objects
provoke desire, disagreeable objects provoke ill will, and indeterminate objects
provoke the defilements connected with delusion.
Since an uncontrolled response to the sensory input stimulates the latent
defilements, what is evidently needed to prevent them from arising is control
over the senses. Thus the Buddha teaches, as the discipline for keeping the
hindrances in check, an exercise called the restraint of the sense faculties
(indriya-samvara):
When he perceives a form with the eye, a sound with the ear, an odor with
the nose, a taste with the tongue, an impression with the body, or an object
with the mind, he apprehends neither the sign nor the particulars. And he
strives to ward off that through which evil and unwholesome states, greed and
sorrow, would arise, if he remained with unguarded senses; and he watches over
his senses, restrains his senses.[40]
Restraint of the senses does not mean denial of the senses, retreating into a
total withdrawal from the sensory world. This is impossible, and even if it
could be achieved, the real problem would still not be solved; for the
defilements lie in the mind, not in the sense organs or objects. The key to
sense control is indicated by the phrase "not apprehending the sign or the
particulars." The "sign" (nimitta) is the object's general appearance
insofar as this appearance is grasped as the basis for defiled thoughts; the
"particulars" (anubyanjana) are its less conspicuous features. If sense
control is lacking, the mind roams recklessly over the sense fields. First it
grasps the sign, which sets the defilements into motion, then it explores the
particulars, which permits them to multiply and thrive.
To restrain the senses requires that mindfulness and clear understanding be
applied to the encounter with the sense fields. Sense consciousness occurs in a
series, as a sequence of momentary cognitive acts each having its own special
task. The initial stages in the series occur as automatic functions: first the
mind adverts to the object, then apprehends it, then admits the percept,
examines it, and identifies it. Immediately following the identification a space
opens up in which there occurs a free evaluation of the object leading to the
choice of a response. When mindfulness is absent the latent defilements, pushing
for an opportunity to emerge, will motivate a wrong consideration. One will
grasp the sign of the object, explore its details, and thereby give the
defilements their opportunity: on account of greed one will become fascinated by
an agreeable object, on account of aversion one will be repelled by a
disagreeable object. But when one applies mindfulness to the sensory encounter,
one nips the cognitive process in the bud before it can evolve into the stages
that stimulate the dormant taints. Mindfulness holds the hindrances in check by
keeping the mind at the level of what is sensed. It rivets awareness on the
given, preventing the mind from embellishing the datum with ideas born of greed,
aversion, and delusion. Then, with this lucent awareness as a guide, the mind
can proceed to comprehend the object as it is, without being led astray.
(2) To abandon the arisen unwholesome states
Herein the disciple rouses his will to overcome the evil, unwholesome
states that have already arisen and he makes effort, stirs up his energy,
exerts his mind and strives.[41]
Despite the effort at sense control the defilements may still surface. They
swell up from the depths of the mental continuum, from the buried strata of past
accumulations, to congeal into unwholesome thoughts and emotions. When this
happens a new kind of effort becomes necessary, the effort to abandon arisen
unwholesome states, called for short the endeavor to abandon
(pahanappadhana):
He does not retain any thought of sensual lust, ill will, or harmfulness,
or any other evil and unwholesome states that may have arisen; he abandons
them, dispels them, destroys them, causes them to disappear.[42]
Just as a skilled physician has different medicines for different ailments,
so the Buddha has different antidotes for the different hindrances, some equally
applicable to all, some geared to a particular hindrance. In an important
discourse the Buddha explains five techniques for expelling distracting
thoughts.[43] The first is to expel the defiled
thought with a wholesome thought which is its exact opposite, analogous to the
way a carpenter might use a new peg to drive out an old one. For each of the
five hindrances there is a specific remedy, a line of meditation designed
expressly to deflate it and destroy it. This remedy can be applied
intermittently, when a hindrance springs up and disrupts meditation on the
primary subject; or it can be taken as a primary subject itself, used to counter
a defilement repeatedly seen to be a persistent obstacle to one's practice. But
for the antidote to become effective in the first role, as a temporary expedient
required by the upsurge of a hindrance, it is best to gain some familiarity with
it by making it a primary object, at least for short periods.
For desire a remedy of general application is the meditation on impermanence,
which knocks away the underlying prop of clinging, the implicit assumption that
the objects clung to are stable and durable. For desire in the specific form of
sensual lust the most potent antidote is the contemplation of the unattractive
nature of the body, to be dealt with at greater length in the next chapter. Ill
will meets its proper remedy in the meditation on lovingkindness (metta),
which banishes all traces of hatred and anger through the methodical radiation
of the altruistic wish that all beings be well and happy. The dispelling of
dullness and drowsiness calls for a special effort to arouse energy, for which
several methods are suggested: the visualization of a brilliant ball of light,
getting up and doing a period of brisk walking meditation, reflection on death,
or simply making a firm determination to continue striving. Restlessness and
worry are most effectively countered by turning the mind to a simple object that
tends to calm it down; the method usually recommended is mindfulness of
breathing, attention to the in-and-out flow of the breath. In the case of doubt
the special remedy is investigation: to make inquiries, ask questions, and study
the teachings until the obscure points become clear.[44]
Whereas this first of the five methods for expelling the hindrances involves
a one-to-one alignment between a hindrance and its remedy, the other four
utilize general approaches. The second marshals the forces of shame (hiri)
and moral dread (ottappa) to abandon the unwanted thought: one reflects
on the thought as vile and ignoble or considers its undesirable consequences
until an inner revulsion sets in which drives the thought away. The third method
involves a deliberate diversion of attention. When an unwholesome thought arises
and clamours to be noticed, instead of indulging it one simply shuts it out by
redirecting one's attention elsewhere, as if closing one's eyes or looking away
to avoid an unpleasant sight. The fourth method uses the opposite approach.
Instead of turning away from the unwanted thought, one confronts it directly as
an object, scrutinizes its features, and investigates its source. When this is
done the thought quiets down and eventually disappears. For an unwholesome
thought is like a thief: it only creates trouble when its operation is
concealed, but put under observation it becomes tame. The fifth method, to be
used only as a last resort, is suppression -- vigorously restraining the
unwholesome thought with the power of the will in the way a strong man might
throw a weaker man to the ground and keep him pinned there with his weight.
By applying these five methods with skill and discretion, the Buddha says,
one becomes a master of all the pathways of thought. One is no longer the
subject of the mind but its master. Whatever thought one wants to think, that
one will think. Whatever thought one does not want to think, that one will not
think. Even if unwholesome thoughts occasionally arise, one can dispel them
immediately, just as quickly as a red-hot pan will turn to steam a few chance
drops of water.
(3) To arouse unarisen wholesome states
Herein the disciple rouses his will to arouse wholesome states that have
not yet arisen; and he makes effort, stirs up his energy, exerts his mind and
strives.[45]
Simultaneously with the removal of defilements, right effort also imposes the
task of cultivating wholesome states of mind. This involves two divisions: the
arousing of wholesome states not yet arisen and the maturation of wholesome
states already arisen.
The first of the two divisions is also known as the endeavor to develop
(bhavanappadhana). Though the wholesome states to be developed can be
grouped in various ways -- serenity and insight, the four foundations of
mindfulness, the eight factors of the path, etc. -- the Buddha lays special
stress on a set called the seven factors of enlightenment (satta bojjhanga):
mindfulness, investigation of phenomena, energy, rapture, tranquillity,
concentration, and equanimity.
Thus he develops the factors of enlightenment, based on solitude, on
detachment, on cessation, and ending in deliverance, namely: the enlightenment
factors of mindfulness, investigation of phenomena, energy, rapture,
tranquillity, concentration, and equanimity.[46]
The seven states are grouped together as "enlightenment factors" both because
they lead to enlightenment and because they constitute enlightenment. In the
preliminary stages of the path they prepare the way for the great realization;
in the end they remain as its components. The experience of enlightenment,
perfect and complete understanding, is just these seven components working in
unison to break all shackles and bring final release from sorrow.
The way to enlightenment starts with mindfulness. Mindfulness clears
the ground for insight into the nature of things by bringing to light phenomena
in the now, the present moment, stripped of all subjective commentary,
interpretations, and projections. Then, when mindfulness has brought the bare
phenomena into focus, the factor of investigation steps in to search out
their characteristics, conditions, and consequences. Whereas mindfulness is
basically receptive, investigation is an active factor which unflinchingly
probes, analyzes, and dissects phenomena to uncover their fundamental
structures.
The work of investigation requires energy, the third factor of
enlightenment, which mounts in three stages. The first, inceptive energy, shakes
off lethargy and arouses initial enthusiasm. As the work of contemplation
advances, energy gathers momentum and enters the second stage, perseverance,
wherein it propels the practice without slackening. Finally, at the peak, energy
reaches the third stage, invincibility, where it drives contemplation forward
leaving the hindrances powerless to stop it.
As energy increases, the fourth factor of enlightenment is quickened. This is
rapture, a pleasurable interest in the object. Rapture gradually builds
up, ascending to ecstatic heights: waves of bliss run through the body, the mind
glows with joy, fervor and confidence intensify. But these experiences, as
encouraging as they are, still contain a flaw: they create an excitation verging
on restlessness. With further practice, however, rapture subsides and a tone of
quietness sets in signalling the rise of the fifth factor, tranquillity.
Rapture remains present, but it is now subdued, and the work of contemplation
proceeds with self-possessed serenity.
Tranquillity brings to ripeness concentration, the sixth factor,
one-pointed unification of mind. Then, with the deepening of concentration, the
last enlightenment factor comes into dominance. This is equanimity,
inward poise and balance free from the two defects of excitement and inertia.
When inertia prevails, energy must be aroused; when excitement prevails, it is
necessary to exercise restraint. But when both defects have been vanquished the
practice can unfold evenly without need for concern. The mind of equanimity is
compared to the driver of a chariot when the horses are moving at a steady pace:
he neither has to urge them forward nor to hold them back, but can just sit
comfortably and watch the scenery go by. Equanimity has the same "on-looking"
quality. When the other factors are balanced the mind remains poised watching
the play of phenomena.
(4) To maintain arisen wholesome states
Herein the disciple rouses his will to maintain the wholesome things that
have already arisen, and not to allow them to disappear, but to bring them to
growth, to maturity, and to the full perfection of development; and he makes
effort, stirs up his energy, exerts his mind and strives.[47]
This last of the four right efforts aims at maintaining the arisen wholesome
factors and bringing them to maturity. Called the "endeavor to maintain"
(anurakkhanappadhana), it is explained as the effort to "keep firmly in the
mind a favorable object of concentration that has arisen."[48]
The work of guarding the object causes the seven enlightenment factors to gain
stability and gradually increase in strength until they issue in the liberating
realization. This marks the culmination of right effort, the goal in which the
countless individual acts of exertion finally reach fulfillment.
Chapter VI
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Right Mindfulness
(Samma Sati)
The Buddha says that the Dhamma, the ultimate truth of things, is directly
visible, timeless, calling out to be approached and seen. He says further that
it is always available to us, and that the place where it is to be realized is
within oneself.[49] The ultimate truth, the Dhamma,
is not something mysterious and remote, but the truth of our own experience. It
can be reached only by understanding our experience, by penetrating it right
through to its foundations. This truth, in order to become liberating truth, has
to be known directly. It is not enough merely to accept it on faith, to believe
it on the authority of books or a teacher, or to think it out through deductions
and inferences. It has to be known by insight, grasped and absorbed by a kind of
knowing which is also an immediate seeing.
What brings the field of experience into focus and makes it accessible to
insight is a mental faculty called in Pali sati, usually translated as
"mindfulness." Mindfulness is presence of mind, attentiveness or awareness. Yet
the kind of awareness involved in mindfulness differs profoundly from the kind
of awareness at work in our usual mode of consciousness. All consciousness
involves awareness in the sense of a knowing or experiencing of an object. But
with the practice of mindfulness awareness is applied at a special pitch. The
mind is deliberately kept at the level of bare attention, a detached
observation of what is happening within us and around us in the present moment.
In the practice of right mindfulness the mind is trained to remain in the
present, open, quiet, and alert, contemplating the present event. All judgments
and interpretations have to be suspended, or if they occur, just registered and
dropped. The task is simply to note whatever comes up just as it is occurring,
riding the changes of events in the way a surfer rides the waves on the sea. The
whole process is a way of coming back into the present, of standing in the here
and now without slipping away, without getting swept away by the tides of
distracting thoughts.
It might be assumed that we are always aware of the present, but this is a
mirage. Only seldom do we become aware of the present in the precise way
required by the practice of mindfulness. In ordinary consciousness the mind
begins a cognitive process with some impression given in the present, but it
does not stay with it. Instead it uses the immediate impression as a springboard
for building blocks of mental constructs which remove it from the sheer
facticity of the datum. The cognitive process is generally interpretative. The
mind perceives its object free from conceptualization only briefly. Then,
immediately after grasping the initial impression, it launches on a course of
ideation by which it seeks to interpret the object to itself, to make it
intelligible in terms of its own categories and assumptions. To bring this about
the mind posits concepts, joins the concepts into constructs -- sets of mutually
corroborative concepts -- then weaves the constructs together into complex
interpretative schemes. In the end the original direct experience has been
overrun by ideation and the presented object appears only dimly through dense
layers of ideas and views, like the moon through a layer of clouds.
The Buddha calls this process of mental construction papañca,
"elaboration," "embellishment," or "conceptual proliferation." The elaborations
block out the presentational immediacy of phenomena; they let us know the object
only "at a distance," not as it really is. But the elaborations do not only
screen cognition; they also serve as a basis for projections. The deluded mind,
cloaked in ignorance, projects its own internal constructs outwardly, ascribing
them to the object as if they really belonged to it. As a result, what we know
as the final object of cognition, what we use as the basis for our values,
plans, and actions, is a patchwork product, not the original article. To be
sure, the product is not wholly illusion, not sheer fantasy. It takes whatis
given in immediate experience as its groundwork and raw material, but along with
this it includes something else: the embellishments fabricated by the mind.
The springs for this process of fabrication, hidden from view, are the latent
defilements. The defilements create the embellishments, project them outwardly,
and use them as hooks for coming to the surface, where they cause further
distortion. To correct the erroneous notions is the task of wisdom, but for
wisdom to discharge its work effectively, it needs direct access to the object
as it is in itself, uncluttered by the conceptual elaborations. The task of
right mindfulness is to clear up the cognitive field. Mindfulness brings to
light experience in its pure immediacy. It reveals the object as it is before it
has been plastered over with conceptual paint, overlaid with interpretations. To
practice mindfulness is thus a matter not so much of doing but of undoing: not
thinking, not judging, not associating, not planning, not imagining, not
wishing. All these "doings" of ours are modes of interference, ways the mind
manipulates experience and tries to establish its dominance. Mindfulness undoes
the knots and tangles of these "doings" by simply noting. It does nothing but
note, watching each occasion of experience as it arises, stands, and passes
away. In the watching there is no room for clinging, no compulsion to saddle
things with our desires. There is only a sustained contemplation of experience
in its bare immediacy, carefully and precisely and persistently.
Mindfulness exercises a powerful grounding function. It anchors the mind
securely in the present, so it does not float away into the past and future with
their memories, regrets, fears, and hopes. The mind without mindfulness is
sometimes compared to a pumpkin, the mind established in mindfulness to a
stone.[50] A pumpkin placed on the surface of a
pond soon floats away and always remains on the water's surface. But a stone
does not float away; it stays where it is put and at once sinks into the water
until it reaches bottom. Similarly, when mindfulness is strong, the mind stays
with its object and penetrates its characteristics deeply. It does not wander
and merely skim the surface as the mind destitute of mindfulness does.
Mindfulness facilitates the achievement of both serenity and insight. It can
lead to either deep concentration or wisdom, depending on the mode in which it
is applied. Merely a slight shift in the mode of application can spell the
difference between the course the contemplative process takes, whether it
descends to deeper levels of inner calm culminating in the stages of absorption,
the jhanas, or whether instead it strips away the veils of delusion to
arrive at penetrating insight. To lead to the stages of serenity the primary
chore of mindfulness is to keep the mind on the object, free from straying.
Mindfulness serves as the guard charged with the responsibility of making sure
that the mind does not slip away from the object to lose itself in random
undirected thoughts. It also keeps watch over the factors stirring in the mind,
catching the hindrances beneath their camouflages and expelling them before they
can cause harm. To lead to insight and the realizations of wisdom, mindfulness
is exercised in a more differentiated manner. Its task, in this phase of
practice, is to observe, to note, to discern phenomena with utmost precision
until their fundamental characteristics are brought to light.
Right mindfulness is cultivated through a practice called "the four
foundations of mindfulness" (cattaro satipatthana), the mindful
contemplation of four objective spheres: the body, feelings, states of mind, and
phenomena.[51] As the Buddha explains:
And what, monks, is right mindfulness? Herein, a monk dwells contemplating
the body in the body, ardent, clearly comprehending and mindful, having put
away covetousness and grief concerning the world. He dwells contemplating
feelings in feelings... states of mind in states of mind... phenomena in
phenomena, ardent, clearly comprehending and mindful, having put away
covetousness and grief concerning the world.[52]
The Buddha says that the four foundations of mindfulness form "the only way
that leads to the attainment of purity, to the overcoming of sorrow and
lamentation, to the end of pain and grief, to the entering upon the right path
and the realization of Nibbana."[53] They are
called "the only way" (ekayano maggo), not for the purpose of setting
forth a narrow dogmatism, but to indicate that the attainment of liberation can
only issue from the penetrating contemplation of the field of experience
undertaken in the practice of right mindfulness.
Of the four applications of mindfulness, the contemplation of the body is
concerned with the material side of existence; the other three are concerned
principally (though not solely) with the mental side. The completion of the
practice requires all four contemplations. Though no fixed order is laid down in
which they are to be taken up, the body is generally taken first as the basic
sphere of contemplation; the others come into view later, when mindfulness has
gained in strength and clarity. Limitations of space do not allow for a complete
explanation of all four foundations. Here we have to settle for a brief
synopsis.
(1) Contemplation of the Body (kayanupassana)
The Buddha begins his exposition of the body with contemplation of the
mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati). Though not required as a starting
point for meditation, in actual practice mindfulness of breathing usually serves
as the "root meditation subject" (mulakammatthana), the foundation for
the entire course of contemplation. It would be a mistake, however, to consider
this subject merely an exercise for neophytes. By itself mindfulness of
breathing can lead to all the stages of the path culminating in full awakening.
In fact it was this meditation subject that the Buddha used on the night of his
own enlightenment. He also reverted to it throughout the years during his
solitary retreats, and constantly recommended it to the monks, praising it as
"peaceful and sublime, an unadulterated blissful abiding, which banishes at once
and stills evil unwholesome thoughts as soon as they arise" (MN 118).
Mindfulness of breathing can function so effectively as a subject of
meditation because it works with a process that is always available to us, the
process of respiration. What it does to turn this process into a basis for
meditation is simply to bring it into the range of awareness by making the
breath an object of observation. The meditation requires no special intellectual
sophistication, only awareness of the breath. One merely breathes naturally
through the nostrils keeping the breath in mind at the contact point around the
nostrils or upper lip, where the sensation of breath can be felt as the air
moves in and out. There should be no attempt to control the breath or to force
it into predetermined rhythms, only a mindful contemplation of the natural
process of breathing in and out. The awareness of breath cuts through the
complexities of discursive thinking, rescues us from pointless wandering in the
labyrinth of vain imaginings, and grounds us solidly in the present. For
whenever we become aware of breathing, really aware of it, we can be aware of it
only in the present, never in the past or the future.
The Buddha's exposition of mindfulness of breathing involves four basic
steps. The first two (which are not necessarily sequential) require that a long
inhalation or exhalation be noted as it occurs, and that a short inhalation or
exhalation be noted as it occurs. One simply observes the breath moving in and
out, observing it as closely as possible, noting whether the breath is long or
short. As mindfulness grows sharper, the breath can be followed through the
entire course of its movement, from the beginning of an inhalation through its
intermediary stages to its end, then from the beginning of an exhalation through
its intermediary stages to its end. This third step is called "clearly
perceiving the entire (breath) body." The fourth step, "calming the bodily
function," involves a progressive quieting down of the breath and its associated
bodily functions until they become extremely fine and subtle. Beyond these four
basic steps lie more advanced practices which direct mindfulness of breathing
towards deep concentration and insight.[54]
Another practice in the contemplation of the body, which extends meditation
outwards from the confines of a single fixed position, is mindfulness of the
postures. The body can assume four basic postures -- walking, standing, sitting,
and lying down -- and a variety of other positions marking the change from one
posture to another. Mindfulness of the postures focuses full attention on the
body in whatever position it assumes: when walking one is aware of walking, when
standing one is aware of standing, when sitting one is aware of sitting, when
lying down one is aware of lying down, when changing postures one is aware of
changing postures. The contemplation of the postures illuminates the impersonal
nature of the body. It reveals that the body is not a self or the belonging of a
self, but merely a configuration of living matter subject to the directing
influence of volition.
The next exercise carries the extension of mindfulness a step further. This
exercise, called "mindfulness and clear comprehension" (satisampajañña),
adds to the bare awareness an element of understanding. When performing any
action, one performs it with full awareness or clear comprehension. Going and
coming, looking ahead and looking aside, bending and stretching, dressing,
eating, drinking, urinating, defecating, falling asleep, waking up, speaking,
remaining silent -- all become occasions for the progress of meditation when
done with clear comprehension. In the commentaries clear comprehension is
explained as fourfold: (1) understanding the purpose of the action, i.e.,
recognizing its aim and determining whether that aim accords with the Dhamma;
(2) understanding suitability, i.e., knowing the most efficient means to achieve
one's aim; (3) understanding the range of meditation, i.e., keeping the mind
constantly in a meditative frame even when engaged in action; and (4)
understanding without delusion, i.e., seeing the action as an impersonal process
devoid of a controlling ego-entity.[55] This last
aspect will be explored more thoroughly in the last chapter, on the development
of wisdom.
The next two sections on mindfulness of the body present analytical
contemplations intended to expose the body's real nature. One of these is the
meditation on the body's unattractiveness, already touched on in connection with
right effort; the other, the analysis of the body into the four primary
elements. The first, the meditation on unattractiveness,[56]
is designed to counter infatuation with the body, especially in its form of
sexual desire. The Buddha teaches that the sexual drive is a manifestation of
craving, thus a cause of dukkha that has to be reduced and extricated as
a precondition for bringing dukkha to an end. The meditation aims at
weakening sexual desire by depriving the sexual urge of its cognitive
underpinning, the perception of the body as sensually alluring. Sensual desire
rises and falls together with this perception. It springs up because we view the
body as attractive; it declines when this perception of beauty is removed. The
perception of bodily attractiveness in turn lasts only so long as the body is
looked at superficially, grasped in terms of selected impressions. To counter
that perception we have to refuse to stop with these impressions but proceed to
inspect the body at a deeper level, with a probing scrutiny grounded in
dispassion.
Precisely this is what is undertaken in the meditation on unattractiveness,
which turns back the tide of sensuality by pulling away its perceptual prop. The
meditation takes one's own body as object, since for a neophyte to start off
with the body of another, especially a member of the opposite sex, might fail to
accomplish the desired result. Using visualization as an aid, one mentally
dissects the body into its components and investigates them one by one, bringing
their repulsive nature to light. The texts mention thirty-two parts: head-hairs,
body-hairs, nails, teeth, skin, flesh, sinews, bones, marrow, kidneys, heart,
liver, diaphragm, spleen, lungs, large intestines, small intestines, stomach
contents, excrement, brain, bile, phlegm, pus, blood, sweat, fat, tears, grease,
snot, spittle, sinovial fluid, and urine. The repulsiveness of the parts implies
the same for the whole: the body seen closeup is truly unattractive, its
beautiful appearance a mirage. But the aim of this meditation must not be
misapprehended. The aim is not to produce aversion and disgust but detachment,
to extinguish the fire of lust by removing its fuel.[57]
The other analytical contemplation deals with the body in a different way.
This meditation, called the analysis into elements (dhatuvavatthana),
sets out to counter our innate tendency to identify with the body by exposing
the body's essentially impersonal nature. The means it employs, as its name
indicates, is the mental dissection of the body into the four primary elements,
referred to by the archaic names earth, water, fire, and air, but actually
signifying the four principal behavioral modes of matter: solidity, fluidity,
heat, and oscillation. The solid element is seen most clearly in the body's
solid parts -- the organs, tissues, and bones; the fluid element, in the bodily
fluids; the heat element, in the body's temperature; the oscillation element, in
the respiratory process. The break with the identification of the body as "I" or
"my self" is effected by a widening of perspective after the elements have come
into view. Having analyzed the body into the elements, one then considers that
all four elements, the chief aspects of bodily existence, are essentially
identical with the chief aspects of external matter, with which the body is in
constant interchange. When one vividly realizes this through prolonged
meditation, one ceases to identify with the body, ceases to cling to it. One
sees that the body is nothing more than a particular configuration of changing
material processes which support a stream of changing mental processes. There is
nothing here that can be considered a truly existent self, nothing that can
provide a substantial basis for the sense of personal identity.[58]
The last exercise in mindfulness of the body is a series of "cemetery
meditations," contemplations of the body's disintegration after death, which may
be performed either imaginatively, with the aid of pictures, or through direct
confrontation with a corpse. By any of these means one obtains a clear mental
image of a decomposing body, then applies the process to one's own body,
considering: "This body, now so full of life, has the same nature and is subject
to the same fate. It cannot escape death, cannot escape disintegration, but must
eventually die and decompose." Again, the purpose of this meditation should not
be misunderstood. The aim is not to indulge in a morbid fascination with death
and corpses, but to sunder our egoistic clinging to existence with a
contemplation sufficiently powerful to break its hold. The clinging to existence
subsists through the implicit assumption of permanence. In the sight of a corpse
we meet the teacher who proclaims unambiguously: "Everything formed is
impermanent."
(2) Contemplation of Feeling (vedananupassana)
The next foundation of mindfulness is feeling (vedana). The word
"feeling" is used here, not in the sense of emotion (a complex phenomenon best
subsumed under the third and fourth foundations of mindfulness), but in the
narrower sense of the affective tone or "hedonic quality" of experience. This
may be of three kinds, yielding three principal types of feeling: pleasant
feeling, painful feeling, and neutral feeling. The Buddha teaches that feeling
is an inseparable concomitant of consciousness, since every act of knowing is
colored by some affective tone. Thus feeling is present at every moment of
experience; it may be strong or weak, clear or indistinct, but some feeling must
accompany the cognition.
Feeling arises in dependence on a mental event called "contact" (phassa).
Contact marks the "coming together" of consciousness with the object via a sense
faculty; it is the factor by virtue of which consciousness "touches" the object
presenting itself to the mind through the sense organ. Thus there are six kinds
of contact distinguished by the six sense faculties -- eye-contact, ear-contact,
nose-contact, tongue-contact, body-contact, and mind-contact -- and six kinds of
feeling distinguished by the contact from which they spring.
Feeling acquires special importance as an object of contemplation because it
is feeling that usually triggers the latent defilements into activity. The
feelings may not be clearly registered, but in subtle ways they nourish and
sustain the dispositions to unwholesome states. Thus when a pleasant feeling
arises, we fall under the influence of the defilement greed and cling to it.
When a painful feeling occurs, we respond with displeasure, hate, and fear,
which are aspects of aversion. And when a neutral feeling occurs, we generally
do not notice it, or let it lull us into a false sense of security -- states of
mind governed by delusion. From this it can be seen that each of the root
defilements is conditioned by a particular kind of feeling: greed by pleasant
feeling, aversion by painful feeling, delusion by neutral feeling.
But the link between feelings and the defilements is not a necessary one.
Pleasure does not always have to lead to greed, pain to aversion, neutral
feeling to delusion. The tie between them can be snapped, and one essential
means for snapping it is mindfulness. Feeling will stir up a defilement only
when it is not noticed, when it is indulged rather than observed. By turning it
into an object of observation, mindfulness defuses the feeling so that it cannot
provoke an unwholesome response. Then, instead of relating to the feeling by way
of habit through attachment, repulsion, or apathy, we relate by way of
contemplation, using the feeling as a springboard for understanding the nature
of experience.
In the early stages the contemplation of feeling involves attending to the
arisen feelings, noting their distinctive qualities: pleasant, painful, neutral.
The feeling is noted without identifying with it, without taking it to be "I" or
"mine" or something happening "to me." Awareness is kept at the level of bare
attention: one watches each feeling that arises, seeing it as merely a feeling,
a bare mental event shorn of all subjective references, all pointers to an ego.
The task is simply to note the feeling's quality, its tone of pleasure, pain, or
neutrality.
But as practice advances, as one goes on noting each feeling, letting it go
and noting the next, the focus of attention shifts from the qualities of
feelings to the process of feeling itself. The process reveals a ceaseless flux
of feelings arising and dissolving, succeeding one another without a halt.
Within the process there is nothing lasting. Feeling itself is only a stream of
events, occasions of feeling flashing into being moment by moment, dissolving as
soon as they arise. Thus begins the insight into impermanence, which, as it
evolves, overturns the three unwholesome roots. There is no greed for pleasant
feelings, no aversion for painful feelings, no delusion over neutral feelings.
All are seen as merely fleeting and substanceless events devoid of any true
enjoyment or basis for involvement.
(3) Contemplation of the State of Mind (cittanupassana)
With this foundation of mindfulness we turn from a particular mental factor,
feeling, to the general state of mind to which that factor belongs. To
understand what is entailed by this contemplation it is helpful to look at the
Buddhist conception of the mind. Usually we think of the mind as an enduring
faculty remaining identical with itself through the succession of experiences.
Though experience changes, the mind which undergoes the changing experience
seems to remain the same, perhaps modified in certain ways but still retaining
its identity. However, in the Buddha's teaching the notion of a permanent mental
organ is rejected. The mind is regarded, not as a lasting subject of thought,
feeling, and volition, but as a sequence of momentary mental acts, each distinct
and discrete, their connections with one another causal rather than substantial.
A single act of consciousness is called a citta, which we shall render
"a state of mind." Each citta consists of many components, the chief of which is
consciousness itself, the basic experiencing of the object; consciousness is
also called citta, the name for the whole being given to its principal
part. Along with consciousness every citta contains a set of concomitants called
cetasikas, mental factors. These include feeling, perception, volition,
the emotions, etc.; in short, all the mental functions except the primary
knowing of the object, which is citta or consciousness.
Since consciousness in itself is just a bare experiencing of an object, it
cannot be differentiated through its own nature but only by way of its
associated factors, the cetasikas. The cetasikas color the citta and give it its
distinctive character; thus when we want to pinpoint the citta as an object of
contemplation, we have to do so by using the cetasikas as indicators. In his
exposition of the contemplation of the state of mind, the Buddha mentions, by
reference to cetasikas, sixteen kinds of citta to be noted: the mind with lust,
the mind without lust, the mind with aversion, the mind without aversion, the
mind with delusion, the mind without delusion, the cramped mind, the scattered
mind, the developed mind, the undeveloped mind, the surpassable mind, the
unsurpassable mind, the concentrated mind, the unconcentrated mind, the freed
mind, the unfreed mind. For practical purposes it is sufficient at the start to
focus solely on the first six states, noting whether the mind is associated with
any of the unwholesome roots or free from them. When a particular citta is
present, it is contemplated merely as a citta, a state of mind. It is not
identified with as "I" or "mine," not taken as a self or as something belonging
to a self. Whether it is a pure state of mind or a defiled state, a lofty state
or a low one, there should be no elation or dejection, only a clear recognition
of the state. The state is simply noted, then allowed to pass without clinging
to the desired ones or resenting the undesired ones.
As contemplation deepens, the contents of the mind become increasingly
rarefied. Irrelevant flights of thought, imagination, and emotion subside,
mindfulness becomes clearer, the mind remains intently aware, watching its own
process of becoming. At times there might appear to be a persisting observer
behind the process, but with continued practice even this apparent observer
disappears. The mind itself -- the seemingly solid, stable mind -- dissolves
into a stream of cittas flashing in and out of being moment by moment, coming
from nowhere and going nowhere, yet continuing in sequence without pause.
(4) Contemplation of Phenomena (dhammanupassana)
In the context of the fourth foundation of mindfulness, the multivalent word
dhamma (here intended in the plural) has two interconnected meanings, as
the account in the sutta shows. One meaning is cetasikas, the mental
factors, which are now attended to in their own right apart from their role as
coloring the state of mind, as was done in the previous contemplation. The other
meaning is the elements of actuality, the ultimate constituents of experience as
structured in the Buddha's teaching.To convey both senses we render dhamma
as "phenomena," for lack of a better alternative. But when we do so this should
not be taken to imply the existence of some noumenon or substance behind
the phenomena.The point of the Buddha's teaching of anatta, egolessness,
is that the basic constituents of actuality are bare phenomena
(suddha-dhamma) occurring without any noumenal support.
The sutta section on the contemplation of phenomena is divided into five
sub-sections, each devoted to a different set of phenomena: the five hindrances,
the five aggregates, the six inner and outer sense bases, the seven factors of
enlightenment, and the Four Noble Truths. Among these, the five hindrances and
the seven enlightenment factors are dhamma in the narrower sense of
mental factors, the others are dhamma in the broader sense of
constituents of actuality. (In the third section, however, on the sense bases,
there is a reference to the fetters that arise through the senses; these can
also be included among the mental factors.) In the present chapter we shall deal
briefly only with the two groups that may be regarded as dhamma in the
sense of mental factors. We already touched on both of these in relation to
right effort (Chapter V); now we shall consider them in specific connection with
the practice of right mindfulness. We shall discuss the other types of dhamma
-- the five aggregates and the six senses -- in the final chapter, in relation
to the development of wisdom.
The five hindrances and seven factors of enlightenment require special
attention because they are the principal impediments and aids to liberation. The
hindrances -- sensual desire, ill will, dullness and drowsiness, restlessness
and worry, and doubt -- generally become manifest in an early stage of practice,
soon after the initial expectations and gross disturbances subside and the
subtle tendencies find the opportunity to surface. Whenever one of the
hindrances crops up, its presence should be noted; then, when it fades away, a
note should be made of its disappearance. To ensure that the hindrances are kept
under control an element of comprehension is needed: we have to understand how
the hindrances arise, how they can be removed, and how they can be prevented
from arising in the future.[59]
A similar mode of contemplation is to be applied to the seven factors of
enlightenment: mindfulness, investigation, energy, rapture, tranquillity,
concentration, and equanimity. When any one of these factors arises, its
presence should be noted. Then, after noting its presence, one has to
investigate to discover how it arises and how it can be matured.[60]
When they first spring up, the enlightenment factors are weak, but with
consistent cultivation they accumulate strength. Mindfulness initiates the
contemplative process. When it becomes well-established, it arouses
investigation, the probing quality of intelligence. Investigation in turn calls
forth energy, energy gives rise to rapture, rapture leads to tranquillity,
tranquillity to one-pointed concentration, and concentration to equanimity. Thus
the whole evolving course of practice leading to enlightenment begins with
mindfulness, which remains throughout as the regulating power ensuring that the
mind is clear, cognizant, and balanced.
Chapter VII
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Right Concentration
(Samma Samadhi)
The eighth factor of the path is right concentration, in Pali samma
samadhi. Concentration represents an intensification of a mental factor
present in every state of consciousness. This factor, one-pointedness of mind
(citt'ekaggata), has the function of unifying the other mental factors in
the task of cognition. It is the factor responsible for the individuating aspect
of consciousness, ensuring that every citta or act of mind remains centered on
its object. At any given moment the mind must be cognizant of something -- a
sight, a sound, a smell, a taste, a touch, or a mental object. The factor of
one-pointedness unifies the mind and its other concomitants in the task of
cognizing the object, while it simultaneously exercises the function of
centering all the constituents of the cognitive act on the object.
One-pointedness of mind explains the fact that in any act of consciousness there
is a central point of focus, towards which the entire objective datum points
from its outer peripheries to its inner nucleus.
However, samadhi is only a particular kind of one-pointedness; it is
not equivalent to one-pointedness in its entirety. A gourmet sitting down to a
meal, an assassin about to slay his victim, a soldier on the battlefield --
these all act with a concentrated mind, but their concentration cannot be
characterized as samadhi. Samadhi is exclusively wholesome
one-pointedness, the concentration in a wholesome state of mind. Even then its
range is still narrower: it does not signify every form of wholesome
concentration, but only the intensified concentration that results from a
deliberate attempt to raise the mind to a higher, more purified level of
awareness.
The commentaries define samadhi as the centering of the mind and
mental factors rightly and evenly on an object. Samadhi, as wholesome
concentration, collects together the ordinarily dispersed and dissipated stream
of mental states to induce an inner unification. The two salient features of a
concentrated mind are unbroken attentiveness to an object and the consequent
tranquillity of the mental functions, qualities which distinguish it from the
unconcentrated mind. The mind untrained in concentration moves in a scattered
manner which the Buddha compares to the flapping about of a fish taken from the
water and thrown onto dry land. It cannot stay fixed but rushes from idea to
idea, from thought to thought, without inner control. Such a distracted mind is
also a deluded mind. Overwhelmed by worries and concerns, a constant prey to the
defilements, it sees things only in fragments, distorted by the ripples of
random thoughts. But the mind that has been trained in concentration, in
contrast, can remain focused on its object without distraction. This freedom
from distraction further induces a softness and serenity which make the mind an
effective instrument for penetration. Like a lake unruffled by any breeze, the
concentrated mind is a faithful reflector that mirrors whatever is placed before
it exactly as it is.
The Development of Concentration
Concentration can be developed through either of two methods -- either as the
goal of a system of practice directed expressly towards the attainment of deep
concentration at the level of absorption or as the incidental accompaniment of
the path intended to generate insight. The former method is called the
development of serenity (samatha-bhavana), the second the development of
insight (vipassana-bhavana). Both paths share certain preliminary
requirements. For both, moral discipline must be purified, the various
impediments must be severed, the meditator must seek out suitable instruction
(preferrably from a personal teacher), and must resort to a dwelling conducive
to practice. Once these preliminaries have been dispensed with, the meditator on
the path of serenity has to obtain an object of meditation, something to be used
as a focal point for developing concentration.[61]
If the meditator has a qualified teacher, the teacher will probably assign
him an object judged to be appropriate for his temperament. If he doesn't have a
teacher, he will have to select an object himself, perhaps after some
experimentation. The meditation manuals collect the subjects of serenity
meditation into a set of forty, called "places of work" (kammatthana)
since they are the places where the meditator does the work of practice. The
forty may be listed as follows:
ten kasinas
ten unattractive objects (dasa asubha)
ten recollections (dasa anussatiyo)
four sublime states (cattaro brahmavihara)
four immaterial states (cattaro aruppa)
one perception (eka sañña)
one analysis (eka vavatthana).
The kasinas are devices representing certain primordial qualities. Four
represent the primary elements -- the earth, water, fire, and air kasinas; four
represent colors -- the blue, yellow, red, and white kasinas; the other two are
the light and the space kasinas. Each kasina is a concrete object representative
of the universal quality it signifies. Thus an earth kasina would be a circular
disk filled with clay. To develop concentration on the earth kasina the
meditator sets the disk in front of him, fixes his gaze on it, and contemplates
"earth, earth." A similar method is used for the other kasinas, with appropriate
changes to fit the case.
The ten "unattractive objects" are corpses in different stages of
decomposition. This subject appears similar to the contemplation of bodily decay
in the mindfulness of the body, and in fact in olden times the cremation ground
was recommended as the most appropriate place for both. But the two meditations
differ in emphasis. In the mindfulness exercise stress falls on the application
of reflective thought, the sight of the decaying corpse serving as a stimulus
for consideration of one's own eventual death and disintegration. In this
exercise the use of reflective thought is discouraged. The stress instead falls
on one-pointed mental fixation on the object, the less thought the better.
The ten recollections form a miscellaneous collection. The first three are
devotional meditations on the qualities of the Triple Gem -- the Buddha, the
Dhamma, and the Sangha; they use as their basis standard formulas that have come
down in the Suttas. The next three recollections also rely on ancient formulas:
the meditations on morality, generosity, and the potential for divine-like
qualities in oneself. Then come mindfulness of death, the contemplation of the
unattractive nature of the body, mindfulness of breathing, and lastly, the
recollection of peace, a discursive meditation on Nibbana.
The four sublime states or "divine abodes" are the outwardly directed social
attitudes -- lovingkindness, compassion, sympathetic joy, and equanimity --
developed into universal radiations which are gradually extended in range until
they encompass all living beings. The four immaterial states are the objective
bases for certain deep levels of absorption: the base of infinite space, the
base of infinite consciousness, the base of nothingness, and the base of
neither-perception-nor-non-perception. These become accessible as objects only
to those who are already adept in concentration. The "one perception" is the
perception of the repulsiveness of food, a discursive topic intended to reduce
attachment to the pleasures of the palate. The "one analysis" is the
contemplation of the body in terms of the four primary elements, already
discussed in the chapter on right mindfulness.
When such a variety of meditation subjects is presented, the aspiring
meditator without a teacher might be perplexed as to which to choose. The
manuals divide the forty subjects according to their suitability for different
personality types. Thus the unattractive objects and the contemplation of the
parts of the body are judged to be most suitable for a lustful type, the
meditation on lovingkindness to be best for a hating type, the meditation on the
qualities of the Triple Gem to be most effective for a devotional type, etc. But
for practical purposes the beginner in meditation can generally be advised to
start with a simple subject that helps reduce discursive thinking. Mental
distraction caused by restlessness and scattered thoughts is a common problem
faced by persons of all different character types; thus a meditator of any
temperament can benefit from a subject which promotes a slowing down and
stilling of the thought process. The subject generally recommended for its
effectiveness in clearing the mind of stray thoughts is mindfulness of
breathing, which can therefore be suggested as the subject most suitable for
beginners as well as veterans seeking a direct approach to deep concentration.
Once the mind settles down and one's thought patterns become easier to notice,
one might then make use of other subjects to deal with special problems that
arise: the meditation on lovingkindness may be used to counteract anger and ill
will, mindfulness of the bodily parts to weaken sensual lust, the recollection
of the Buddha to inspire faith and devotion, the meditation on death to arouse a
sense of urgency. The ability to select the subject appropriate to the situation
requires skill, but this skill evolves through practice, often through simple
trial-and-error experimentation.
The Stages of Concentration
Concentration is not attained all at once but develops in stages. To enable
our exposition to cover all the stages of concentration, we will consider the
case of a meditator who follows the entire path of serenity meditation from
start to finish, and who will make much faster progress than the typical
meditator is likely to make.
After receiving his meditation subject from a teacher, or selecting it on his
own, the meditator retires to a quiet place. There he assumes the correct
meditation posture -- the legs crossed comfortably, the upper part of the body
held straight and erect, hands placed one above the other on the lap, the head
kept steady, the mouth and eyes closed (unless a kasina or other visual object
is used), the breath flowing naturally and regularly through the nostrils. He
then focuses his mind on the object and tries to keep it there, fixed and alert.
If the mind strays, he notices this quickly, catches it, and brings it back
gently but firmly to the object, doing this over and over as often as is
necessary. This initial stage is called preliminary concentration
(parikkamma-samadhi) and the object the preliminary sign
(parikkamma-nimitta).
Once the initial excitement subsides and the mind begins to settle into the
practice, the five hindrances are likely to arise, bubbling up from the depths.
Sometimes they appear as thoughts, sometimes as images, sometimes as obsessive
emotions: surges of desire, anger and resentment, heaviness of mind, agitation,
doubts. The hindrances pose a formidable barrier, but with patience and
sustained effort they can be overcome. To conquer them the meditator will have
to be adroit. At times, when a particular hindrance becomes strong, he may have
to lay aside his primary subject of meditation and take up another subject
expressly opposed to the hindrance. At other times he will have to persist with
his primary subject despite the bumps along the road, bringing his mind back to
it again and again.
As he goes on striving along the path of concentration, his exertion
activates five mental factors which come to his aid. These factors are
intermittently present in ordinary undirected consciousness, but there they lack
a unifying bond and thus do not play any special role. However, when activated
by the work of meditation, these five factors pick up power, link up with one
another, and steer the mind towards samadhi, which they will govern as
the "jhana factors," the factors of absorption (jhananga). Stated in
their usual order the five are: initial application of mind (vitakka),
sustained application of mind (vicara), rapture (piti), happiness
(sukha), and one-pointedness (ekaggata).
Initial application of mind does the work of directing the mind to the
object. It takes the mind, lifts it up, and drives it into the object the way
one drives a nail through a block of wood. This done, sustained application
of mind anchors the mind on the object, keeping it there through its
function of examination. To clarify the difference between these two factors,
initial application is compared to the striking of a bell, sustained application
to the bell's reverberations. Rapture, the third factor, is the delight
and joy that accompany a favorable interest in the object, while happiness,
the fourth factor, is the pleasant feeling that accompanies successful
concentration. Since rapture and happiness share similar qualities they tend to
be confused with each other, but the two are not identical. The difference
between them is illustrated by comparing rapture to the joy of a weary
desert-farer who sees an oasis in the distance, happiness to his pleasure when
drinking from the pond and resting in the shade. The fifth and final factor of
absorption is one-pointedness, which has the pivotal function of unifying
the mind on the object.[62]
When concentration is developed, these five factors spring up and counteract
the five hindrances. Each absorption factor opposes a particular hindrance.
Initial application of mind, through its work of lifting the mind up to the
object, counters dullness and drowsiness. Sustained application, by anchoring
the mind on the object, drives away doubt. Rapture shuts out ill will, happiness
excludes restlessness and worry, and one-pointedness counters sensual desire,
the most alluring inducement to distraction. Thus, with the strengthening of the
absorption factors, the hindrances fade out and subside. They are not yet
eradicated -- eradication can only be effected by wisdom, the third division of
the path -- but they have been reduced to a state of quiescence where they
cannot disrupt the forward movement of concentration.
At the same time that the hindrances are being overpowered by the jhana
factors inwardly, on the side of the object too certain changes are taking
place. The original object of concentration, the preliminary sign, is a gross
physical object; in the case of a kasina, it is a disk representing the chosen
element or color, in the case of mindfulness of breathing the touch sensation of
the breath, etc. But with the strengthening of concentration the original object
gives rise to another object called the "learning sign" (uggaha-nimitta).
For a kasina this will be a mental image of the disk seen as clearly in the mind
as the original object was with the eyes; for the breath it will be a reflex
image arisen from the touch sensation of the air currents moving around the
nostrils.
When the learning sign appears, the meditator leaves off the preliminary sign
and fixes his attention on the new object. In due time still another object will
emerge out of the learning sign. This object, called the "counterpart sign"
(patibhaga-nimitta), is a purified mental image many times brighter and
clearer than the learning sign. The learning sign is compared to the moon seen
behind a cloud, the counterpart sign to the moon freed from the cloud.
Simultaneously with the appearance of the counterpart sign, the five absorption
factors suppress the five hindrances, and the mind enters the stage of
concentration called upacara-samadhi, "access concentration." Here, in
access concentration, the mind is drawing close to absorption. It has entered
the "neighbourhood" (a possible meaning of upacara) of absorption, but
more work is still needed for it to become fully immersed in the object, the
defining mark of absorption.
With further practice the factors of concentration gain in strength and bring
the mind to absorption (appana-samadhi). Like access concentration,
absorption takes the counterpart sign as object. The two stages of concentration
are differentiated neither by the absence of the hindrances nor by the
counterpart sign as object; these are common to both. What differentiates them
is the strength of the jhana factors. In access concentration the jhana factors
are present, but they lack strength and steadiness. Thus the mind in this stage
is compared to a child who has just learned to walk: he takes a few steps, falls
down, gets up, walks some more, and again falls down. But the mind in absorption
is like a man who wants to walk: he just gets up and walks straight ahead
without hesitation.
Concentration in the stage of absorption is divided into eight levels, each
marked by greater depth, purity, and subtlety than its predecessor. The first
four form a set called the four jhanas, a word best left untranslated for
lack of a suitable equivalent, though it can be loosely rendered "meditative
absorption."[63] The second four also form a set,
the four immaterial states (aruppa). The eight have to be attained in
progressive order, the achievement of any later level being dependent on the
mastery of the immediately preceding level.
The four jhanas make up the usual textual definition of right concentration.
Thus the Buddha says:
And what, monks, is right concentration? Herein, secluded from sense
pleasures, secluded from unwholesome states, a monk enters and dwells in the
first jhana, which is accompanied by initial and sustained application of mind
and filled with rapture and happiness born of seclusion.
Then, with the subsiding of initial and sustained application of mind, by
gaining inner confidence and mental unification, he enters and dwells in the
second jhana, which is free from initial and sustained application but is
filled with rapture and happiness born of concentration.
With the fading out of rapture, he dwells in equanimity, mindful and
clearly comprehending; and he experiences in his own person that bliss of
which the noble ones say: "Happily lives he who is equanimous and mindful" --
thus he enters and dwells in the third jhana.
With the abandoning of pleasure and pain and with the previous
disappearance of joy and grief, he enters and dwells in the fourth jhana,
which has neither-pleasure-nor-pain and purity of mindfulness due to
equanimity.
This, monks, is right concentration.[64]
The jhanas are distinguished by way of their component factors. The first
jhana is constituted by the original set of five absorption factors: initial
application, sustained application, rapture, happiness, and one-pointedness.
After attaining the first jhana the meditator is advised to master it. On the
one hand he should not fall into complacency over his achievement and neglect
sustained practice; on the other, he should not become over-confident and rush
ahead to attain the next jhana. To master the jhana he should enter it
repeatedly and perfect his skill in it, until he can attain it, remain in it,
emerge from it, and review it without any trouble or difficulty.
After mastering the first jhana, the meditator then considers that his
attainment has certain defects. Though the jhana is certainly far superior to
ordinary sense consciousness, more peaceful and blissful, it still stands close
to sense consciousness and is not far removed from the hindrances. Moreover, two
of its factors, initial application and sustained application, appear in time to
be rather coarse, not as refined as the other factors. Then the meditator renews
his practice of concentration intent on overcoming initial and sustained
application. When his faculties mature, these two factors subside and he enters
the second jhana. This jhana contains only three component factors: rapture,
happiness, and one-pointedness. It also contains a multiplicity of other
constituents, the most prominent of which is confidence of mind.
In the second jhana the mind becomes more tranquil and more thoroughly
unified, but when mastered even this state seems gross, as it includes rapture,
an exhilarating factor that inclines to excitation. So the meditator sets out
again on his course of training, this time resolved on overcoming rapture. When
rapture fades out, he enters the third jhana. Here there are only two absorption
factors, happiness and one-pointedness, while some other auxiliary states come
into ascendency, most notably mindfulness, clear comprehension, and equanimity.
But still, the meditator sees, this attainment is defective in that it contains
the feeling of happiness, which is gross compared to neutral feeling, feeling
that is neither pleasant not painful. Thus he strives to get beyond even the
sublime happiness of the third jhana. When he succeeds, he enters the fourth
jhana, which is defined by two factors -- one-pointedness and neutral feeling --
and has a special purity of mindfulness due to the high level of equanimity.
Beyond the four jhanas lie the four immaterial states, levels of absorption
in which the mind transcends even the subtlest perception of visualized images
still sometimes persisting in the jhanas. The immaterial states are attained,
not by refining mental factors as are the jhanas, but by refining objects, by
replacing a relatively gross object with a subtler one. The four attainments are
named after their respective objects: the base of infinite space, the base of
infinite consciousness, the base of nothingness, and the base of
neither-perception-nor-non-perception.[65] These
states represent levels of concentration so subtle and remote as to elude clear
verbal explanation. The last of the four stands at the apex of mental
concentration; it is the absolute, maximum degree of unification possible for
consciousness. But even so, these absorptions reached by the path of serenity
meditation, as exalted as they are, still lack the wisdom of insight, and so are
not yet sufficient for gaining deliverance.
The kinds of concentration discussed so far arise by fixing the mind upon a
single object to the exclusion of other objects. But apart from these there is
another kind of concentration which does not depend upon restricting the range
of awareness. This is called "momentary concentration" (khanika-samadhi).
To develop momentary concentration the meditator does not deliberately attempt
to exclude the multiplicity of phenomena from his field of attention. Instead,
he simply directs mindfulness to the changing states of mind and body, noting
any phenomenon that presents itself; the task is to maintain a continuous
awareness of whatever enters the range of perception, clinging to nothing. As he
goes on with his noting, concentration becomes stronger moment after moment
until it becomes established one-pointedly on the constantly changing stream of
events. Despite the change in the object, the mental unification remains steady,
and in time acquires a force capable of suppressing the hindrances to a degree
equal to that of access concentration. This fluid, mobile concentration is
developed by the practice of the four foundations of mindfulness, taken up along
the path of insight; when sufficiently strong it issues in the breakthrough to
the last stage of the path, the arising of wisdom.
Chapter VIII
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The Development of Wisdom
Though right concentration claims the last place among the factors of the
Noble Eightfold Path, concentration itself does not mark the path's culmination.
The attainment of concentration makes the mind still and steady, unifies its
concomitants, opens vast vistas of bliss, serenity, and power. But by itself it
does not suffice to reach the highest accomplishment, release from the bonds of
suffering. To reach the end of suffering demands that the Eightfold Path be
turned into an instrument of discovery, that it be used to generate the insights
unveiling the ultimate truth of things. This requires the combined contributions
of all eight factors, and thus a new mobilization of right view and right
intention. Up to the present point these first two path factors have performed
only a preliminary function. Now they have to be taken up again and raised to a
higher level. Right view is to become a direct seeing into the real nature of
phenomena, previously grasped only conceptually; right intention, to become a
true renunciation of defilements born out of deep understanding.
Before we turn to the development of wisdom, it will be helpful to inquire
why concentration is not adequate to the attainment of liberation. Concentration
does not suffice to bring liberation because it fails to touch the defilements
at their fundamental level. The Buddha teaches that the defilements are
stratified into three layers: the stage of latent tendency, the stage of
manifestation, and the stage of transgression. The most deeply grounded is the
level of latent tendency (anusaya), where a defilement merely lies
dormant without displaying any activity. The second level is the stage of
manifestation (pariyutthana), where a defilement, through the impact of
some stimulus, surges up in the form of unwholesome thoughts, emotions, and
volitions. Then, at the third level, the defilement passes beyond a purely
mental manifestation to motivate some unwholesome action of body or speech.
Hence this level is called the stage of transgression (vitikkama).
The three divisions of the Noble Eightfold Path provide the check against
this threefold layering of the defilements. The first, the training in moral
discipline, restrains unwholesome bodily and verbal activity and thus prevents
defilements from reaching the stage of transgression. The training in
concentration provides the safeguard against the stage of manifestation. It
removes already manifest defilements and protects the mind from their continued
influx. But even though concentration may be pursued to the depths of full
absorption, it cannot touch the basic source of affliction -- the latent
tendencies lying dormant in the mental continuum. Against these concentration is
powerless, since to root them out calls for more than mental calm. What it calls
for, beyond the composure and serenity of the unified mind, is wisdom
(pañña), a penetrating vision of phenomena in their fundamental mode of
being.
Wisdom alone can cut off the latent tendencies at their root because the most
fundamental member of the set, the one which nurtures the others and holds them
in place, is ignorance (avijja), and wisdom is the remedy for ignorance.
Though verbally a negative, "unknowing," ignorance is not a factual negative, a
mere privation of right knowledge. It is, rather, an insidious and volatile
mental factor incessantly at work inserting itself into every compartment of our
inner life. It distorts cognition, dominates volition, and determines the entire
tone of our existence. As the Buddha says: "The element of ignorance is indeed a
powerful element" (SN 14:13).
At the cognitive level, which is its most basic sphere of operation,
ignorance infiltrates our perceptions, thoughts, and views, so that we come to
misconstrue our experience, overlaying it with multiple strata of delusions. The
most important of these delusions are three: the delusions of seeing permanence
in the impermanent, of seing satisfaction in the unsatisfactory, and of seeing a
self in the selfless.[66] Thus we take ourselves
and our world to be solid, stable, enduring entities, despite the ubiquitous
reminders that everything is subject to change and destruction. We assume we
have an innate right to pleasure, and direct our efforts to increasing and
intensifying our enjoyment with an anticipatory fervor undaunted by repeated
encounters with pain, disappointment, and frustration. And we perceive ourselves
as self-contained egos, clinging to the various ideas and images we form of
ourselves as the irrefragable truth of our identity.
Whereas ignorance obscures the true nature of things, wisdom removes the
veils of distortion, enabling us to see phenomena in their fundamental mode of
being with the vivacity of direct perception. The training in wisdom centers on
the development of insight (vipassana-bhavana), a deep and comprehensive
seeing into the nature of existence which fathoms the truth of our being in the
only sphere where it is directly accessible to us, namely, in our own
experience. Normally we are immersed in our experience, identified with it so
completely that we do not comprehend it. We live it but fail to understand its
nature. Due to this blindness experience comes to be misconstrued, worked upon
by the delusions of permanence, pleasure, and self. Of these cognitive
distortions, the most deeply grounded and resistant is the delusion of self, the
idea that at the core of our being there exists a truly established "I" with
which we are essentially identified. This notion of self, the Buddha teaches, is
an error, a mere presupposition lacking a real referent. Yet, though a mere
presupposition, the idea of self is not inconsequential. To the contrary, it
entails consequences that can be calamitous. Because we make the view of self
the lookout point from which we survey the world, our minds divide everything up
into the dualities of "I" and "not I," what is "mine" and what is "not mine."
Then, trapped in these dichotomies, we fall victim to the defilements they
breed, the urges to grasp and destroy, and finally to the suffering that
inevitably follows.
To free ourselves from all defilements and suffering, the illusion of
selfhood that sustains them has to be dispelled, exploded by the realization of
selflessness. Precisely this is the task set for the development of wisdom. The
first step along the path of development is an analytical one. In order to
uproot the view of self, the field of experience has to be laid out in certain
sets of factors, which are then methodically investigated to ascertain that none
of them singly or in combination can be taken as a self. This analytical
treatment of experience, so characteristic of the higher reaches of Buddhist
philosophical psychology, is not intended to suggest that experience, like a
watch or car, can be reduced to an accidental conglomeration of separable parts.
Experience does have an irreducible unity, but this unity is functional rather
than substantial; it does not require the postulate of a unifying self separate
from the factors, retaining its identity as a constant amidst the ceaseless
flux.
The method of analysis applied most often is that of the five aggregates of
clinging (panc'upadanakkhandha): material form, feeling, perception,
mental formations, and consciousness.[67] Material
form constitutes the material side of existence: the bodily organism with its
sense faculties and the outer objects of cognition. The other four aggregates
constitute the mental side. Feeling provides the affective tone, perception the
factor of noting and identifying, the mental formations the volitional and
emotive elements, and consciousness the basic awareness essential to the whole
occasion of experience. The analysis by way of the five aggregates paves the way
for an attempt to see experience solely in terms of its constituting factors,
without slipping in implicit references to an unfindable self. To gain this
perspective requires the development of intensive mindfulness, now applied to
the fourth foundation, the contemplation of the factors of existence
(dhammanupassana). The disciple will dwell contemplating the five
aggregates, their arising and passing:
The disciple dwells in contemplation of phenomena, namely, of the five
aggregates of clinging. He knows what material form is, how it arises, how it
passes away; knows what feeling is, how it arises, how it passes away; knows
what perception is, how it arises, how it passes away; knows what mental
formations are, how they arise, how they pass away; knows what consciousness
is, how it arises, how it passes away.[68]
Or the disciple may instead base his contemplation on the six internal and
external spheres of sense experience, that is, the six sense faculties and their
corresponding objects, also taking note of the "fetters" or defilements that
arise from such sensory contacts:
The disciple dwells in contemplation of phenomena, namely, of the six
internal and external sense bases. He knows the eye and forms, the ear and
sounds, the nose and odors, the tongue and tastes, the body and tangibles, the
mind and mental objects; and he knows as well the fetter that arises in
dependence on them. He understands how the unarisen fetter arises, how the
arisen fetter is abandoned, and how the abandoned fetter does not arise again
in the future.[69]
The view of self is further attenuated by examining the factors of existence,
not analytically, but in terms of their relational structure. Inspection reveals
that the aggregates exist solely in dependence on conditions. Nothing in the set
enjoys the absolute self-sufficiency of being attributed to the assumed "I."
Whatever factors in the body-mind complex be looked at, they are found to be
dependently arisen, tied to the vast net of events extending beyond themselves
temporally and spatially. The body, for example, has arisen through the union of
sperm and egg and subsists in dependence on food, water, and air. Feeling,
perception, and mental formations occur in dependence on the body with its sense
faculties. They require an object, the corresponding consciousness, and the
contact of the object with the consciousness through the media of the sense
faculties. Consciousness in its turn depends on the sentient organism and the
entire assemblage of co-arisen mental factors. This whole process of becoming,
moreover, has arisen from the previous lives in this particular chain of
existences and inherit all the accumulated kamma of the earlier existences. Thus
nothing possesses a self-sufficient mode of being. All conditioned phenomena
exist relationally, contingent and dependent on other things.
The above two steps -- the factorial analysis and the discernment of
relations -- help cut away the intellectual adherence to the idea of self, but
they lack sufficient power to destroy the ingrained clinging to the ego
sustained by erroneous perception. To uproot this subtle form of ego-clinging
requires a counteractive perception: direct insight into the empty, coreless
nature of phenomena. Such an insight is generated by contemplating the factors
of existence in terms of their three universal marks -- impermanence
(aniccata), unsatisfactoriness (dukkhata), and selflessness
(anattata). Generally, the first of the three marks to be discerned is
impermanence, which at the level of insight does not mean merely that everything
eventually comes to an end. At this level it means something deeper and more
pervasive, namely, that conditioned phenomena are in constant process,
happenings which break up and perish almost as soon as they arise. The stable
objects appearing to the senses reveal themselves to be strings of momentary
formations (sankhara); the person posited by common sense dissolves into
a current made up of two intertwining streams -- a stream of material events,
the aggregate of material form, and a stream of mental events, the other four
aggregates.
When impermanence is seen, insight into the other two marks closely follows.
Since the aggregates are constantly breaking up, we cannot pin our hopes on them
for any lasting satisfaction. Whatever expectations we lay on them are bound to
be dashed to pieces by their inevitable change. Thus when seen with insight they
are dukkha, suffering, in the deepest sense. Then, as the aggregates are
impermanent and unsatisfactory, they cannot be taken as self. If they were self,
or the belongings of a self, we would be able to control them and bend them to
our will, to make them everlasting sources of bliss. But far from being able to
exercise such mastery, we find them to be grounds of pain and disappointment.
Since they cannot be subjected to control, these very factors of our being are
anatta: not a self, not the belongings of a self, just empty, ownerless
phenomena occurring in dependence on conditions.
When the course of insight practice is entered, the eight path factors become
charged with an intensity previously unknown. They gain in force and fuse
together into the unity of a single cohesive path heading towards the goal. In
the practice of insight all eight factors and three trainings co-exist; each is
there supporting all the others; each makes its own unique contribution to the
work. The factors of moral discipline hold the tendencies to transgression in
check with such care that even the thought of unethical conduct does not arise.
The factors of the concentration group keep the mind firmly fixed upon the
stream of phenomena, contemplating whatever arises with impeccable precision,
free from forgetfulness and distraction. Right view, as the wisdom of insight,
grows continually sharper and deeper; right intention shows itself in a
detachment and steadiness of purpose bringing an unruffled poise to the entire
process of contemplation.
Insight meditation takes as its objective sphere the "conditioned formations"
(sankhara) comprised in the five aggregates. Its task is to uncover their
essential characteristics: the three marks of impermanence, unsatisfactoriness,
and selflessness. Because it still deals with the world of conditioned events,
the Eightfold Path in the stage of insight is called the mundane path
(lokiyamagga). This designation in no way implies that the path of insight
is concerned with mundane goals, with achievements falling in the range of
samsara. It aspires to transcendence, it leads to liberation, but its objective
domain of contemplation still lies within the conditioned world. However, this
mundane contemplation of the conditioned serves as the vehicle for reaching the
unconditioned, for attaining the supramundane. When insight meditation reaches
its climax, when it fully comprehends the impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and
selflessness of everything formed, the mind breaks through the conditioned and
realizes the unconditioned, Nibbana. It sees Nibbana with direct vision, makes
it an object of immediate realization.
The breakthrough to the unconditioned is achieved by a type of consciousness
or mental event called the supramundane path (lokuttaramagga). The
supramundane path occurs in four stages, four "supramundane paths," each marking
a deeper level of realization and issuing in a fuller degree of liberation, the
fourth and last in complete liberation. The four paths can be achieved in close
proximity to one another -- for those with extraordinarily sharp faculties even
in the same sitting -- or (as is more typically the case) they can be spread out
over time, even over several lifetimes.[70] The
supramundane paths share in common the penetration of the Four Noble Truths.
They understand them, not conceptually, but intuitively. They grasp them through
vision, seeing them with self-validating certainty to be the invariable truths
of existence. The vision of the truths which they present is complete at one
moment. The four truths are not understood sequentially, as in the stage of
reflection when thought is the instrument of understanding. They are seen
simultaneously: to see one truth with the path is to see them all.
As the path penetrates the four truths, the mind exercises four simultaneous
functions, one regarding each truth. It fully comprehends the truth of
suffering, seeing all conditioned existence as stamped with the mark of
unsatisfactoriness. At the same time it abandons craving, cuts through the mass
of egotism and desire that repeatedly gives birth to suffering. Again, the mind
realizes cessation, the deathless element Nibbana, now directly present to the
inner eye. And fourthly, the mind develops the Noble Eightfold Path, whose eight
factors spring up endowed with tremendous power, attained to supramundane
stature: right view as the direct seeing of Nibbana, right intention as the
mind's application to Nibbana, the triad of ethical factors as the checks on
moral transgression, right effort as the energy in the path-consciousness, right
mindfulness as the factor of awareness, and right concentration as the mind's
one-pointed focus. This ability of the mind to perform four functions at the
same moment is compared to a candle's ability to simultaneously burn the wick,
consume the wax, dispel darkness, and give light.[71]
The supramundane paths have the special task of eradicating the defilements.
Prior to the attainment of the paths, in the stages of concentration and even
insight meditation, the defilements were not cut off but were only debilitated,
checked and suppressed by the training of the higher mental faculties. Beneath
the surface they continued to linger in the form of latent tendencies. But when
the supramundane paths are reached, the work of eradication begins.
Insofar as they bind us to the round of becoming, the defilements are
classified into a set of ten "fetters" (samyojana) as follows: (1)
personality view, (2) doubt, (3) clinging to rules and rituals, (4) sensual
desire, (5) aversion, (6) desire for fine-material existence, (7) desire for
immaterial existence, (8) conceit, (9) restlessness, and (10) ignorance. The
four supramundane paths each eliminate a certain layer of defilements. The
first, the path of stream-entry (sotapatti-magga), cuts off the first
three fetters, the coarsest of the set, eliminates them so they can never arise
again. "Personality view" (sakkaya-ditthi), the view of a truly existent
self in the five aggregates, is cut off since one sees the selfless nature of
all phenomena. Doubt is eliminated because one has grasped the truth proclaimed
by the Buddha, seen it for oneself, and so can never again hang back due to
uncertainty. And clinging to rules and rites is removed since one knows that
deliverance can be won only through the practice of the Eightfold Path, not
through rigid moralism or ceremonial observances.
The path is followed immediately by another state of supramundane
consciousness known as the fruit (phala), which results from the path's
work of cutting off defilements. Each path is followed by its own fruit, wherein
for a few moments the mind enjoys the blissful peace of Nibbana before
descending again to the level of mundane consciousness. The first fruit is the
fruit of stream-entry, and a person who has gone through the experience of this
fruit becomes a "stream-enterer" (sotapanna). He has entered the stream
of the Dhamma carrying him to final deliverance. He is bound for liberation and
can no longer fall back into the ways of an unenlightened worldling. He still
has certain defilements remaining in his mental makeup, and it may take him as
long as seven more lives to arrive at the final goal, but he has acquired the
essential realization needed to reach it, and there is no way he can fall away.
An enthusiastic practitioner with sharp faculties, after reaching
stream-entry, does not relax his striving but puts forth energy to complete the
entire path as swiftly as possible. He resumes his practice of insight
contemplation, passes through the ascending stages of insight-knowledge, and in
time reaches the second path, the path of the once-returner
(sakadagami-magga). This supramundane path does not totally eradicate any of
the fetters, but it attenuates the roots of greed, aversion, and delusion.
Following the path the meditator experiences its fruit, then emerges as a
"once-returner" who will return to this world at most only one more time before
attaining full liberation.
But our practitioner again takes up the task of contemplation. At the next
stage of supramundane realization he attains the third path, the path of the
non-returner (anagami-magga), with which he cuts off the two fetters of
sensual desire and ill will. From that point on he can never again fall into the
grip of any desire for sense pleasure, and can never be aroused to anger,
aversion, or discontent. As a non-returner he will not return to the human state
of existence in any future life. If he does not reach the last path in this very
life, then after death he will be reborn in a higher sphere in the fine-material
world (rupaloka) and there reach deliverance.
But our meditator again puts forth effort, develops insight, and at its
climax enters the fourth path, the path of arahatship (arahatta-magga).
With this path he cuts off the five remaining fetters -- desire for
fine-material existence and desire for immaterial existence, conceit,
restlessness, and ignorance. The first is the desire for rebirth into the
celestial planes made accessible by the four jhanas, the planes commonly
subsumed under the name "the Brahma-world." The second is the desire for rebirth
into the four immaterial planes made accessible by the achievement of the four
immaterial attainments. Conceit (mana) is not the coarse type of pride to
which we become disposed through an over-estimation of our virtues and talents,
but the subtle residue of the notion of an ego which subsists even after
conceptually explicit views of self have been eradicated. The texts refer to
this type of conceit as the conceit "I am" (asmimana). Restlessness
(uddhacca) is the subtle excitement which persists in any mind not yet
completely enlightened, and ignorance (avijja) is the fundamental
cognitive obscuration which prevents full understanding of the Four Noble
Truths. Although the grosser grades of ignorance have been scoured from the mind
by the wisdom faculty in the first three paths, a thin veil of ignorance
overlays the truths even in the non-returner.
The path of arahatship strips away this last veil of ignorance and, with it,
all the residual mental defilements. This path issues in perfect comprehension
of the Four Noble Truths. It fully fathoms the truth of suffering; eradicates
the craving from which suffering springs; realizes with complete clarity the
unconditioned element, Nibbana, as the cessation of suffering; and consummates
the development of the eight factors of the Noble Eightfold Path.
With the attainment of the fourth path and fruit the disciple emerges as an
arahat, one who in this very life has been liberated from all bonds. The arahat
has walked the Noble Eightfold Path to its end and lives in the assurance stated
so often in the formula from the Pali Canon: "Destroyed is birth; the holy life
has been lived; what had to be done has been done; there is no coming back to
any state of being." The arahat is no longer a practitioner of the path but its
living embodiment. Having developed the eight factors of the path to their
consummation, the Liberated One lives in the enjoyment of their fruits,
enlightenment and final deliverance.
Epilogue
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This completes our survey of the Noble Eightfold Path, the way to deliverance
from suffering taught by the Buddha. The higher reaches of the path may seem
remote from us in our present position, the demands of practice may appear
difficult to fulfill. But even if the heights of realization are now distant,
all that we need to reach them lies just beneath our feet. The eight factors of
the path are always accessible to us; they are mental components which can be
established in the mind simply through determination and effort. We have to
begin by straightening out our views and clarifying our intentions. Then we have
to purify our conduct -- our speech, action, and livelihood. Taking these
measures as our foundation, we have to apply ourselves with energy and
mindfulness to the cultivation of concentration and insight. The rest is a
matter of gradual practice and gradual progress, without expecting quick
results. For some progress may be rapid, for others it may be slow, but the rate
at which progress occurs should not cause elation or discouragement. Liberation
is the inevitable fruit of the path and is bound to blossom forth when there is
steady and persistent practice. The only requirements for reaching the final
goal are two: to start and to continue. If these requirements are met there is
no doubt the goal will be attained. This is the Dhamma, the undeviating law.
Appendix
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A Factorial Analysis of the Noble Eightfold Path
(Pali and English)
I. Samma ditthi ..... Right view
dukkhe ñana ..... understanding suffering
dukkhasamudaye ñana ..... understanding its origin
dukkhanirodhe ñana ..... understanding its cessation
dukkhanirodhagaminipatipadaya ñana ..... understanding the way
leading to its cessation
II. Samma sankappa ..... Right intention
nekkhamma-sankappa ..... intention of renunciation
abyapada-sankappa ..... intention of good will
avihimsa-sankappa ..... intention of harmlessness
III. Samma vaca ..... Right speech
musavada veramani ..... abstaining from false speech
pisunaya vacaya veramani ..... abstaining from slanderous speech
pharusaya vacaya veramani ..... abstaining from harsh speech
samphappalapa veramani ..... abstaining from idle chatter
IV. Samma kammanta ..... Right action
panatipata veramani ..... abstaining from taking life
adinnadana veramani ..... abstaining from stealing
kamesu micchacara veramani ..... abstaining from sexual misconduct
V. Samma ajiva ..... Right livelihood
miccha ajivam pahaya ..... giving up wrong livelihood,
samma ajivena jivitam kappeti ..... one earns one's living by a
right form of livelihood
VI. Samma vayama ..... Right effort
samvarappadhana ..... the effort to restrain defilements
pahanappadhana ..... the effort to abandon defilements
bhavanappadhana ..... the effort to develop wholesome states
anurakkhanappadhana ..... the effort to maintain wholesome states
VII. Samma sati ..... Right mindfulness
kayanupassana ..... mindful contemplation of the body
vedananupassana ..... mindful contemplation of feelings
cittanupassana ..... mindful contemplation of the mind
dhammanupassana ..... mindful contemplation of phenomena
VIII. Samma samadhi ..... Right concentration
pathamajjhana ..... the first jhana
dutiyajjhana ..... the second jhana
tatiyajjhana ..... the third jhana
catutthajjhana ..... the fourth jhana
Recommended Readings
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I. General treatments of the Noble Eightfold Path:
Ledi Sayadaw. The Noble Eightfold Path and Its Factors Explained.
(Wheel 245/247).
Nyanatiloka Thera. The Word of the Buddha. (BPS 14th ed., 1968).
Piyadassi Thera. The Buddha's Ancient Path. (BPS 3rd ed., 1979).
II. Right View:
Ñanamoli, Bhikkhu. The Discourse on Right View. (Wheel 377/379).
Nyanatiloka Thera. Karma and Rebirth. (Wheel 9).
Story, Francis. The Four Noble Truths. (Wheel 34/35).
Wijesekera, O.H. de A. The Three Signata. (Wheel 20).
III. Right Intentions:
Ñanamoli Thera. The Practice of Lovingkindness. (Wheel 7).
Nyanaponika Thera. The Four Sublime States. (Wheel 6).
Prince, T. Renunciation. (Bodhi Leaf B 36).
IV. Right Speech, Right Action, & Right Livelihood:
Bodhi, Bhikkhu. Going for Refuge and Taking the Precepts. (Wheel
282/284).
Narada Thera. Everyman's Ethics. (Wheel 14).
Vajirañanavarorasa. The Five Precepts and the Five Ennoblers.
(Bangkok: Mahamakuta, 1975).
V. Right Effort:
Nyanaponika Thera. The Five Mental Hindrances and Their Conquest.
(Wheel 26).
Piyadassi Thera. The Seven Factors of Enlightenment. (Wheel 1).
Soma Thera. The Removal of Distracting Thoughts.(Wheel 21).
VI. Right Mindfulness:
Nyanaponika Thera. The Heart of Buddhist Meditation.(London: Rider,
1962; BPS, 1992).
Nyanaponika Thera. The Power of Mindfulness. (Wheel 121/122).
Nyanasatta Thera. The Foundations of Mindfulness (Satipatthana
Sutta). (Wheel 19).
Soma Thera. The Way of Mindfulness. (BPS, 3rd ed., 1967).
VII. Right Concentration & The Development of Wisdom:
Buddhaghosa, Bhadantacariya. The Path of Purification
(Visuddhimagga). Translated by Bhikkhu Ñanamoli, 4th ed. (BPS, 1979).
Khantipalo, Bhikkhu. Calm and Insight. (London: Curzon, 1980).
Ledi Sayadaw. A Manual of Insight. (Wheel 31/32).
Nyanatiloka Thera. The Buddha's Path to Deliverance. (BPS, 1982).
Sole-Leris, Amadeo. Tranquillity and Insight. (London: Rider, 1986;
BPS 1992).
Vajirañana, Paravahera. Buddhist Meditation in Theory and Practice.
2nd ed. (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Buddhist Missionary Society, 1975).
All Wheel publications and Bodhi Leaves referred to above are published by
the Buddhist Publication Society.
About the Author
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Bhikkhu Bodhi is a Buddhist monk of American nationality, born in New York
City in 1944. After completing a doctorate in philosophy at the Claremont
Graduate School, he came to Sri Lanka for the purpose of entering the Sangha. He
received novice ordination in 1972 and higher ordination in 1973, both under the
eminent scholar-monk, Ven. Balangoda Ananda Maitreya, with whom he studied Pali
and Dhamma. He is the author of several works on Theravada Buddhism, including
four translations of major Pali suttas along with their commentaries. Since 1984
he has been the Editor for the Buddhist Publication Society, and since 1988 its
President.
Notes
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1. Ignorance is actually identical in nature with the
unwholesome root "delusion" (moha). When the Buddha speaks in a
psychological context about mental factors, he generally uses the word
"delusion"; when he speaks about the causal basis of samsara, he uses the
word "ignorance" (avijja).
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2. SN 56:11; Word of the Buddha, p. 26
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3. Ibid.
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4. Adhisilasikkha, adhicittasikkha,
adhipaññasikkha.
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5. AN 3:33; Word of the Buddha, p. 19.
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6. MN 117; Word of the Buddha, p. 36.
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7. AN 6:63; Word of the Buddha, p. 19.
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8. MN 9; Word of the Buddha, p. 29.
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9. See DN 2, MN 27, etc. For details, see Vism.
XIII, 72-101.
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10. DN 22; Word of the Buddha, p. 29.
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11. DN 22, SN 56:11; Word of the Buddha, p. 3
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12. Ibid. Word of the Buddha, p. 16.
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13. Ibid. Word of the Buddha, p. 22.
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14. Nekkhammasankappa, abyapada sankappa,
avihimsasankappa.
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15. Kamasankappa, byapadasankappa,
avihimsasankappa. Though kama usually means sensual desire, the
context seems to allow a wider interpretation, as self-seeking desire in all its
forms.
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16. AN 1:16.2.
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17. Strictly speaking, greed or desire (raga)
becomes immoral only when it impels actions violating the basic principles of
ethics, such as killing, stealing, adultery, etc. When it remains merely as a
mental factor or issues in actions not inherently immoral -- e.g., the enjoyment
of good food, the desire for recognition, sexual relations that do not hurt
others -- it is not immoral but is still a form of craving causing bondage to
suffering.
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18. For a full account of the dukkha tied up with
sensual desire, see MN 13.
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19. This might appear to contradict what we said
earlier, that metta is free from self-reference. The contradiction is
only apparent, however, for in developing metta towards oneself one
regards oneself objectively, as a third person. Further, the kind of love
developed is not self-cherishing but a detached altruistic wish for one's own
well-being.
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20. Any other formula found to be effective may be
used in place of the formula given here. For a full treatment, see Ñanamoli
Thera, The Practice of Lovingkindness, Wheel No. 7.
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21. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 50.
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22. MN 61.
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23. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 50.
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24. Subcommentary to Digha Nikaya.
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25. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, pp. 50-51.
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26. MN 21; Word of the Buddha, p. 51.
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27. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 51
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28. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 53.
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29. HRH Prince Vajirañanavarorasa, The Five
Precepts and the Five Ennoblers (Bangkok, 1975), pp. 1-9.
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30. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 53.
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31. The Five Precepts and the Five Ennoblers
gives a fuller list, pp. 10-13.
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32. AN 10:176; Word of the Buddha, p. 53.
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33. The following is summarized from The Five
Precepts and the Five Ennoblers, pp. 16-18.
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34. See AN 4:62; AN 5:41; AN 8:54.
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35. The Five Precepts and the Five Ennoblers,
pp. 45-47.
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36. Papañcasudani (Commentary to Majjhima Nikaya).
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37. MN 70; Word of the Buddha, pp. 59-60.
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38. AN 4:13; Word of the Buddha, p. 57.
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39. Kamacchanda, byapada, thina-middha,
uddhacca-kukkucca, vicikiccha.
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40. AN 4:14; Word of the Buddha, p. 57.
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41. AN 4:13; Word of the Buddha, p. 58.
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42. AN 4:14; Word of the Buddha, p. 58.
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43. MN 20; Word of the Buddha, p. 58.
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44. For a full treatment of the methods for dealing
with the hindrances individually, consult the commentary to the Satipatthana
Sutta (DN 22, MN 10). A translation of the relevant passages, with further
extracts from the subcommentary, can be found in Soma Thera, The Way of
Mindfulness, pp. 116-26.
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45. AN 4:13; Word of the Buddha, pp. 58-59.
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46. AN 4:14; Word of the Buddha, p.59. The
Pali names for the seven are: satisambojjhanga,
dhammavicayasambojjhanga, viriyasambojjhanga, pitisambojjhanga,
passaddhisambojjhanga, samadhisambojjhanga,
upekkhasambojjhanga.
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47. AN 4:13; Word of the Buddha, p. 59.
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48. AN 4:14; Word of the Buddha, p. 59.
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49. Dhammo sanditthiko akaliko ehipassiko
opanayiko paccattam veditabbo viññuhi. (M. 7, etc.)
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50. Commentary to Vism. See Vism. XIV, n. 64.
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51. Sometimes the word satipatthana is
translated "foundation of mindfulness," with emphasis on the objective side,
sometimes "application of mindfulness," with emphasis on the subjective side.
Both explanations are allowed by the texts and commentaries.
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52. DN 22; Word of the Buddha, p. 61.
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53. Ibid. Word of the Buddha, p. 61.
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54. For details, see Vism. VIII, 145-244.
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55. See Soma Thera, The Way of Mindfulness,
pp. 58-97.
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56. Asubha-bhavana. The same subject is also
called the perception of repulsiveness (patikkulasañña) and mindfulness
concerning the body (kayagata sati).
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57. For details, see Vism. VIII, 42-144.
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58. For details, see Vism. XI, 27-117.
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59. For a full account, see Soma Thera, The Way
of Mindfulness, pp. 116-127.
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60. Ibid., pp. 131-146.
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61. In what follows I have to restrict myself to a
brief overview. For a full exposition, see Vism., Chapters III-XI.
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62. See Vism. IV, 88-109.
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63. Some common renderings such as "trance,"
"musing," etc., are altogether misleading and should be discarded.
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64. DN 22; Word of the Buddha, pp. 80-81.
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65. In Pali: akasanañcayatana,
viññanañcayatana, akiñcaññayatana, n'eva-sañña-nasaññayatana.
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66. Anicce niccavipallasa, dukkhe sukhavipallasa,
anattani atta-vipallasa. AN 4:49.
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67. In Pali: rupakkhandha, vedanakkhandha,
saññakkhandha, sankharakkhandha, viññanakkhandha.
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68. DN 22; Word of the Buddha, pp. 71-72.
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69. DN 22; Word of the Buddha, p. 73.
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70. In the first edition of this book I stated here
that the four paths have to be passed through sequentially, such that there is
no attainment of a higher path without first having reached the paths below it.
This certainly seems to be the position of the Commentaries. However, the Suttas
sometimes show individuals proceeding directly from the stage of worldling to
the third or even the fourth path and fruit. Though the commentator explains
that they passed through each preceding path and fruit in rapid succession, the
canonical texts themselves give no indication that this has transpired but
suggest an immediate realization of the higher stages without the intermediate
attainment of the lower stages.
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71. See Vism. XXII, 92-103.
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The Buddhist Publication Society
The Buddhist Publication Society is an approved charity dedicated to
making known the Teaching of the Buddha, which has a vital message for people of
all creeds.
Founded in 1958, the BPS has published a wide variety of books and
booklets covering a great range of topics. Its publications include accurate
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