Paticca Samuppada - Buddhadasa PDF
Paticca Samuppada - Buddhadasa PDF
Paticca Samuppada - Buddhadasa PDF
Preface
Because much of the Theravadan orthodoxy has been built, so to speak, on the
shoulders of Buddhagosa, misunderstanding about Paticcasamuppada has become
the norm and the truth has become obscured. Briefly stated, Buddhagosa explains
that Dependent Origination covers three lifetimes the past, present and future.
Ignorance and volitional activity in a past life give rise to this present life, in which the
results of those past deeds are experienced. This process conditions our present life
defilements (craving and attachment) which, in their turn, lead to birth and suffering
in a future life. The Venerable Buddhadasa takes a close look at this explanation and
raises some important questions: if the Buddha taught anatta (non-selfhood), then
what is it that migrates from life to life? And, if the causes of suffering are in one
lifetime and the results in another, then how are we to practice in a way that leads to
benefits here and now?
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mindfulness at the moment of sense contact delivers wisdom and prevents suffering
from arising. The causes of the arising and quenching of suffering exist in the present
moment. When ignorance clouds the mind, suffering arises; when mindfulness and
wisdom govern the six sense doors (eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind),
suffering ceases. This is a Paticcasa-muppada that we can practice, because both
the causes and effects exist here and now, where we can get at them. If the cause of
suffering is in a past life, however, as Buddhagosa claims, then freedom from
suffering in this life is impossible, because its causes are beyond our reach.
2
Translator's Foreword
Editing of the original text has been quite minimal, usually eliminating frequent
repetitions appearing within a given paragraph which are typical of the oral tradition
followed by the Venerable Buddhadasa.
Since it is expected that the majority of people who will read this translation will be
those already familiar with Buddhism, the notes accompanying the translation have
been kept to a minimum. This is not to say that someone with no background at all to
Buddhism should not attempt this work. But the casual reader is advised to reflect
upon the Buddha's own assertion that Paticcasamuppada, or Dependent Origination,'
is a terribly complex, intricate and subtle matter. The first twenty-five pages of this
translation, in particular, may appear rather daunting to the person with no previous
understanding of Buddhist theory and practice. But-since Dependent Origination is,
in fact, the essence of the Buddha's practical teaching, I strongly urge all serious
students of self development, all people who are determined to confront and deal
with those existential problems of daily life which make life seem not worth living, to
take the time and make the effort to study, reflect upon and practice the teaching of
Paticcasamuppada, the Middle Way of Right Living which leads to release and
wisdom.
The Venerable Buddhadasa refers sometimes to the Pali Scriptures. His own source
of reference was the Thai script Pali language edition published during the reign of
the Seventh Monarch of the Chakri Dynasty, the present ruling family of the Kingdom
of Thailand. My translations of these texts were done directly from the Venerable
Buddhadasa's Thai translations. For reference purposes, however, I have indicated
the equivalent passages in the Pali Text Society translations, where I was able to find
those references. There are one or two quotations that I have not yet been able to
track down.
I would like to add a word of caution regarding the P.T.S. translations. Although trie
debt owed to the P.T.S. in making available the Pali Scriptures is an inestimable one,
the fact remains that their translations tend to be rather cumbersome and sometimes
inaccurate, if, for example, one accepts the present thesis regarding Dependent
Origination as explained by the Venerable Buddhadasa. So, it will be noted, the word
"consciousness" (vinnana), is frequently translated as "rebirth-consciousness"; and
"birth" (bhava) is frequently translated as "re-birth". With this caveat I provide the
following references for those who want to do more in depth study of this key
teaching of the Buddha:
3
The Middle Length Sayings, Majjhima-Nikaya, Vol. I, Pali Text Society translation
series, no. 29; translated by I. B. Homer. (London, Luzac & Company, Ltd., 1967).
The Middle Length Sayings, Majjhina-Nikaya, Vol. II, Pali Text Society translation
series, no. 30; translated by I. B. Homer. (London, Luzac & Company, Ltd., 1970).
The Book of the Kindred Sayings, Sangyutta-Nikaya, or Grouped Suttas, Part [I, Pali
Text Society translation series, no. 10; The Nidana-vagga, translated by Mrs. Rhys
Davids. (London, Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd., 1972).
The Book of the Kindred Sayings, Sangyutta-Nikaya, or Grouped Suttas, Part III, Pali
Text Society translation series, no. 13; The Khandha-vagga, translated by F.L.
Woodward. (London, Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd., 1975).
The Book of the Kindred Sayings, Sangyutta-Nikaya, or Grouped Suttas, Part IV, Pali
Text Society, translation series, no. 14; The Salayatana-vagga, translated by F.L.
Woodward. (London, Routledge and Kegan Paul Ltd., 1972).
For those who are interested in studying the Pali language, I have provided an
appendix with all of the Pali terms appearing in the text with their diacritical marks.
Finally, I would like to express my thanks to all those who helped and encouraged
me in this effort. First of all, I thank those innumerable people who offered their
support, encouragement and advice who are too many to name individually. A word
of special gratitude, of course, must be offered to the Venerable Buddhadasa for his
wise teachings and gentle and kind encouragements. To Ajan Poh, the Venerable
Buddhadhammo, I also offer my special thanks. His constant looking after my
material as well as my spiritual needs while staying at Suan Mokkh has been one of
the true joys of my life. Last, but not least, I would like to offer my thanks to Khun
Manit, my landlord in Bangkok who kindly donated office space during the last month
while I rushed to prepare the final copy for the offset printers.
May all beings come to see the impermanent, unsatisfactory and selfless nature of
the world and thereby come to know true and lasting Light, Purity and Peace.
Steve Schmidt
Bangkok, April 1986/2529
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1 Paticcasamuppada: Dependent Origination
It was my original intention to write a detailed explanation for the study of the book
Paticcasamuppada in the Words of the Buddha. But in the end, for reasons of health
as well as other matters, I was not able to do so. As it happened, there was a talk I
had given on another occasion which more or less fit just the purposes I wanted.
That talk also appears in another book of this series, entitled Idappaccayata (The
Law of Conditionality)1 It will prove quite useful for those studying
Paticcasamuppada because, in fact, they are the very same thing. The only
difference is that Idappaccayata is broader in scope. In any case, the student of
Paticcasamuppada should use these explanatory notes as a starting point for his or
her study.
There are two doctrines (dhamma) well taught by the Exalted One who knows, the
Awakened One who is free from all defilements and perfectly enlightened by Himself.
All bhikkhus should study these two doctrines well and there should be no division or
contention concerning them. In this way this Holy Life (religion)2 will long stand firm.
Those two doctrines will be for the great benefit of all mankind, for the well being of
the world, and for the advantage of great beings and human beings. What are those
two doctrines? They are: (1) Skillful understanding concerning the sense bases
(ayatana-kusalata), and (2) Skillful understanding concerning the Law of Dependent
Origination (paticcasamuppada-kusalata). [Sangiti Sutta, Digha-nikaya]
This passage shows us that we should try to help each other to understand correctly
Dependent Origination for our own benefit, for the benefit of the religion and for the
well being of all great beings and humans. Most especially, we must strive for mutual
understanding in order to eliminate divisive bickering amongst the followers of the
Buddha, which leads to problems in putting Dependent Origination into practice. We
must take advantage of any means which help us to arrive at that mutual
understanding. This present exposition is not intended to establish complex
argumentative conditions. Rather, this work is offered in the hope of helping to
eliminate any contentiousness which may exist among teachers and students of
Paticcasamuppada, as well as for any other groups of people who may be interested
in studying this doctrine.
5
Ananda! Ananda! Don't say such a thing! Don't ever say such a thing!
Paticcasamuppada is a profound teaching. Its characteristic feature is that it is
profound. The various groups of sentient beings don't understand what we teach
about this; they are not able to penetrate the Law of Dependent Origination and so
their minds are befuddled just like a ball of twine which becomes all tangled up and
knotted; just like a disorderly pile of tangled pieces of short threads; just like an
untended thicket of grass or reeds which become all interwoven and entangledjust
so are those beings ensnared and unable to free themselves from the wheel of
existence, the conditions of suffering, the states of hell and ruin.3
This passage shows us that Dependent Origination is not a play thing. Rather we
must make a firm resolution and utilize our intellectual faculties to their fullest in the
diligent study of Paticcasamuppada.
For the arahat, however, a fully enlightened person, Dependent Origination becomes
like second nature or plain science, similar to something which can be casually
examined while resting in the palm of one's hand. And this knowledge of the
enlightened person does not depend on a knowledge of names or words. What this
means is that the arahat, or enlightened person, knows things so well that he doesn't
grasp at, cling to or become attached to anything at all. He has no craving or desire
(tanha), or attachment (upadana), no matter what kind of emotions beset him,
because the enlightened person has completely perfected mindfulness. Such a
person can completely extinguish suffering by following the order of extinction of
Dependent Origination. But it is not necessary that an enlightened person know the
names of the eleven conditions of Dependent Origination. He may not be able to
teach anyone about the Law of Dependent Origination in detail or may not even be
able to say anything at all about it.
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must appreciate the great problem which faced the Buddha in trying to explain this
teaching, which is not easily understood by ordinary people.
One profound fact concerning this matter is that, in the difficult task of making his
teaching known, the Buddha had to use two languages at the same time. He spoke
in the language of relative truth in order to teach morals to people still befuddled with
the idea of eternalismthose who feel that they are selves, that they possess things.
Such people feel this way to the point that they habitually cling to these ideas and
become attached to them. But the Buddha also spoke in the language of ultimate
truth in order to teach those who had only a little dust in their eyes so that they could
come to an understanding of absolute reality (paramattha-dhamma). The teaching of
absolute reality was designed to free people from their long held and cherished
theory of eternalism. So it is that there are these two kinds of language.
7
Usually, ordinary people cling to the way of morality in order to have minds that are
peaceful because of the goodness that they do. This state can last for as long as the
causes and conditions of their goodness do not change. But when those causes and
conditions change, or manifest their uncertainty and selflessness (anatta) and
become dissatisfactory (dukkha), because clinging has arisen, then a knowledge of
morality alone will not be able to serve as a refuge. And so it becomes necessary to
turn to ultimate truth, such as Dependent Origination, in order to alleviate the feeling
of dissatisfaction which becomes greater and greater. That is, it is necessary to have
a mind which is above the idea of having a self or of anything belonging to a self, a
mind which is even above the ideas of good and bad, merit and demerit, pleasure
and pain. In this way it is possible to eliminate completely dissatisfaction or suffering.
Teaching Paticcasamuppada in such a way that there is a self persisting over a
series of lives is contrary to the principle of Dependent Origination and contrary to
the principles of the Buddha's teaching, which teaches people to eliminate the feeling
of self, to be completely above the feeling of being a self. Therefore Dependent
Origination is in no way concerned with morality, which must depend upon a theory
of eternalism, a theory that depends upon the existence of a self.
In any case, we can say that there may be two kinds of Paticcasamuppada. The first
kind is inflated or incorrectly explained so that it cannot be practiced. Such an
incorrectly explained theory has been taught for a thousand years. The second or
correctly explained kind of Paticcasamuppada is explained according to the Buddha's
intentions. It can be practiced here and now. Results can be had here and now. This
second Law of Dependent Origination teaches us to be careful whenever there is
contact between the senses and their objects. Feeling mast not be allowed to brew
up or give rise to craving. Indeed, such practice is being done in many places without
calling it "Paticcasamuppada" and the results are always satisfying. People
interested in this matter, however, must take care to follow the correct version of the
Buddha's Dependent Origination since there are these two versions mixed up with
each other. The real Dependent Origination of the Buddha is not annihilationism,
which, as people who like to argue are quick to point out, leads people to not doing
good, not accepting responsibility or not loving their country. Furthermore, the real
Dependent Origination of the Buddha is not eternalism, which causes people to
become obsessed with the self or country or anything which is seen as "me" or
"mine."
The Law of Dependent Origination is not simply a matter of inflated study and
memorizing as most people tend to say. Rather, it must be a matter of skillful
practice: mindfulness must be present to control feelings when sense contact arises.
Craving and attachment must not be allowed to arise. And in this practice, it is not
necessary to use the word "Paticcasamuppada, " which is merely a very technical
term.
One thing that we must help each other to be careful about is not to explain
Dependent Origination, the heart of Buddhism, in terms of animism, which teaches
that there is a mind or a spirit or a soul or some such thing which is like a ghosta
"self" that is born or is in the body all the time after birth. In this age of atoms, space
and pingpong, there are university students and educated westerners who would
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laugh at such a concept of the "ghost in the machine." Let us rigorously help save the
face of Thai Buddhists. Don't take the teaching of morality in the language of relative
truth, the language of eternalism, and mix it with the teaching of ultimate truth,
Dependent Origination, which uses the language of the highest right views. The
practice of Dependent Origination is the middle way of ultimate truth. In the Suttas5 it
is said that the highest right view, supramundane right view, is the view that is neither
eternalism nor annihilationism, which can be had by the power of understanding
Dependent Origination. Dependent Origination is in the middle between the ideas of
having a self and the total lack of self. It has its own principle: "Because there is this,
there is that; because this is not, that is not." It is this principle which makes
Buddhism neither eternalism nor annihilationism. Look carefully. Don't teach a new
Buddhist theory of Paticcasamuppada. Don't teach Hinduism or Brahmanism. For
eternalists there can be no such thing as the Law of Dependent Origination because
it is the exact opposite of their theory. To teach Dependent Origination in terms of
eternalism is to destroy Dependent Origination. This is what we must be careful
about.
If we examine the original Pali Scriptures, the teachings as given by the Buddha
himself, we will see that they are clearly divided into matters of morality, for those still
attached to an eternalist view, and matters of ultimate truth, which are intended to
eliminate both the eternalist and the annihilationist points of view. Later on, during
the time that the commentaries were being composed, there arose a widespread
tendency to explain matters of ultimate truth in terms of the eternalist theory,
including such matters as Paticcasamuppada. Whenever the opportunity arose,
explanations were given in terms of the same person who died. Sometimes
everything was explained in terms of gross materialism, For example, hell was
explained as a place beneath the ground and a place that a person went to only after
death. No reference -was made to the hell that arises in the flow of Dependent
Origination, a more fearful kind of hell which is present in this life. If any reference
was made to hell as arising from feeling according to the Law of Dependent
Origination, it was usually located under the earth after death.
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commentaries, but that we must be rigorous in choosing what to accept, using the
Buddha's own guidelines to separate out what is not correct. A recent scholar,
Somdet Phra Maha Samanachao Krom Phraya Vachira Nyanna Varorot, advised
that we should investigate carefully, as mentioned above, even the carefully
memorized Pali dissertations. I have been a faithful disciple of his all along. As far as
Paticcasamuppada is concerned, there is weighty evidence to dismiss both the
theory of eternalism and the theory of annihilationism. To teach the Law of
Dependent Origination with reference to one individual spanning three lives cannot
be accepted according to the principle of mahapadesa.
(1). Every time there is sense contact without wisdom concerning liberation, there will
be becoming (bhava) and birth (jati). To put it another way: when there is only
ignorance present at the point of sense contact, the Law of Dependent Origination is
put into motion.
(2). In the language of Paticcasamuppada, the words "individual," "self," "we," and
"they" do not appear. There is no "person" who has suffering or extinguishes
suffering or flows about in the whirlpool of rebirth, as Bhikkhu Sati, the fisherman's
son, held.
(3). In the language of Paticcasamuppada, the word "happiness" does not appear.
Only "suffering" and the "complete cessation 01 extinction of suffering" appear. This
is so because the Law of Dependent Origination does not intend to talk about
happiness, which is a corner stone of eternalism. In the language of relative truth,
however, it can be accepted that the absence of suffering is happiness. But this is
only useful in the teaching of morality, such as when it is said that "Nibbana is the
highest happiness."
(4). The kind of rebirth consciousness (patisandhi vinnana) which is a self does not
appear in the language of Paticcasamuppada. Therefore, the word "consciousness"
(vinnana) in Dependent Origination is taken to refer to the six kinds of consciousness
which arise with sense contact. But if you try to pull a fast one and call this sixfold
consciousness "rebirth consciousness," it can also be accepted as part of the sixfold
sense base analysis which gives rise to mentality/materiality, the six sense bases,
contact, feeling, becoming and birth on to the end of the process of
Paticcasamuppada. But the Buddha never called anything rebirth consciousness and
he never explained it as such because it was his intention that we view
consciousness in the usual way. The word "rebirth consciousness" only came to be
used in later works and it re-introduces the theory of eternalism in an indirect way.
This is a corruption of Buddhism which will nibble away at Buddhism until it is gone.
We have six kinds of consciousness as usually understood and we have Dependent
Origination for which it is not at all necessary to bring in the word "rebirth
consciousness."
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just a moment in order to condition the arising of a further event. This symptom of
conditioning is called Dependent Origination. Don't think in terms of self. Don't be an
eternalist. And don't think in terms of the opposite of self so that there is nothing at
all, which is annihilationism. Rather, stay in the middle, the middle way, where there
are only events which arise because of previous conditions.
(7). A principle of Buddhism is that of sanditthiko: here and now, the actual present
reality. Interpreting Paticcasamuppada in such a way that one turn of its wheel
covers three lives (according to the language of relative truth) is not in keeping with
this principle. Each and every one of the eleven links of Dependent Origination must
always be in the present for it to be Dependent Origination as taught by the Buddha.
(8). The various Suttas which discuss Paticcasamuppada talk about it in many
different ways. There is, for example, (a) the direct order (anuloma) from ignorance
to suffering; (b) the reverse order (patiloma) from suffering to ignorance; (c) the way
of cessation which may be done in both the forward and the reverse orders; (d) the
way starting with sensation and
then giving rise to consciousness, contact, and feeling. This is done without
mentioning ignorance; (e) the way starting with feeling and ending with suffering; (f)
finally, there is perhaps the strangest way of mixing the way of arising with the way of
cessation at the same time. That is, it is explained that ignorance gives rise to mental
formations, consciousness, mentality/materiality, up to craving, and then it changes
to the cessation of craving, attachment, up to the cessation of suffering. The
implication seems to be that, even if Dependent Origination has gone up to the point
of craving, it is still possible that mindfulness will arise to stop the arising of clinging
and, strange to say, "flip over" into the stream of the cessation of suffering. If we take
all the discourses that deal with Dependent Origination and examine them together, it
will be clearly seen-that it is not at all necessary for Dependent Origination to cover
three lifetimes (according to the language of relative truth).
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language of Paticcasamuppada which reflects the momentary. To use the word
"birth" as used in the language of relative truth will be an obstacle to understanding.
We should preserve that sense of "next life" which is within our reach and which can
be dealt with as we want. Such a "next life" is better than one which we can't locate
or see.
(10). Mere talking about Paticcasamuppada is philosophy in its worst sense. It is not
necessary and it doesn't have a lot of value in itself. True Dependent Origination is
the practice of not allowing suffering to arise by establishing awareness at the six
sense doors when there is sense contact. This is done by bringing the faculties of
mental development7 to bear on the six sense doors so that the taints (asava)8 do
not arise. This is Dependent Origination perfected in the order of cessation. Even if
this process were called by a different name, it would still be the same thing. This
kind of Paticcasamuppada is called the Right Way (samma-patipada).
All of the above are principles to use in testing to see what the real Dependent
Origination is. Briefly put, the real Paticcasamuppada is a practical matter that leads
directly to the cessation of suffering. Suffering arises because once there is a
defilement (kilesa), then there will be one turn of the wheel of Dependent Origination.
It may seem as if there were two rounds of birth because when an outer sense base
comes into contact with an inner sense base, then consciousness arises; if, at this
moment, ignorance is present, there arises consciousness, mentality/materiality, and
the sense bases, which heretofore, it can be said, did not exist because they were
asleep. The consciousness at this point is what the eternalists call pati-sandhi
vinnana or rebirth consciousness. When the power of contact causes feeling to arise,
then defilement (kilesa) will arise directly. Grasping and attachment will give rise to
becoming and birth, which is another birththe birth of the "self" idea, "I" or "mine",
which will taste the fruit of suffering in the form of problems which arise from birth, old
age, death, sadness, lamentation, suffering, grief, tribulation, or, as these are
collectively known, the five aggregates of clinging (pancupadana-khandha)9 which
are suffering. In one turning of the cycle of Dependent Origination there seems to be
two births as explained above, but it is not necessary to die and enter a coffin to die
or be born. Thai kind of death is concerned with the body and the language of
relative truth, not with Paticcasamuppada as taught by the Buddha.
Clearly, the benefit intended by the Buddha from Dependent Origination was to
banish the theory of selfhood, or to eliminate the importance of the self. Simply
analyzing the five aggregates to see that neither this aggregate nor that one is self is
not sufficient. It is necessary also to show that these aggregates only arise when all
the eleven conditions of Paticcasamuppada arise, according to the cause and effect
principle: "Because there is this, there is that; because this is not, then that is not."
This will enable us to see selflessness more clearlyselflessness in the defilements,
in deeds (karma) and in karmic results (vipaka); or, to put it another way,
selflessness in every cause and effect without any interval. If this is not clear from the
elements of Dependent Origination, simply hearing the five aggregates explained as
selfless may lead to a rather ridiculous vacillation as described in the Parileyya
Sutta,10 where it is said : "Respected sirs! Have you heard that the five aggregates
are selfless? How, then, can all the deeds (karma) done by the selfless have an
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effect on the self?" This opinion indicates only a partial understanding of
selflessness, namely that the five aggregates are selfless. That is easy enough to
see. When it comes to karmic actions and results, however, there is a jump in taking
those results as belonging to a self, be it a result characterized by pleasure (sukha)
or suffering (dukkha). This causes a kind of funny situation to arise. But if there is a
clear perception of the matter in terms of the elements of Dependent Origination,
then such a mistake cannot arise.
If feeling or suffering is full of fear, then the state of the asura (fallen angels) arises. If
there is hunger to the point of death, then the state of peta (hungry ghosts) arises. If
there is stupidity, then the state of being an animal arises; if there is just a modicum
of suffering as with humans, then the state of being human arises; if there is sensual
pleasure of a variety of kinds and intensities, then one of the heavenly states arises;
when there is a sense of being filled with pleasurable feeling or an equanimous
feeling as with the various rupa-jhanas (fine-material states of meditative absorption),
and arupa-jhanas (immaterial states of meditative absorption), then one of the
various Brahma states arises. All of these states are more real than those talked
about which will be experienced after entering the coffin. This misunderstanding has
arisen because the meaning of "opapatika"12 in Buddhism has been misinterpreted.
In the order of cessation of Dependent Origination, we can find the real Buddha, the
real Dhamma, and the real Sangha. They are sanditthiko (immanent; here and now)
and paccatang veditabbo vinnuhi (that which the knower knows for himself through
direct experience). And these three can be found more truly than in the triple gem of
the eternalists which is absent mindedly chanted to the point of meaninglessness
13
mere lip service. This life means the cycle of Dependent Origination; the next life
means the next cycle of Dependent Origination, and so on. To consider it in this way
is still to see this life and the next life in a way that is more real than life as
understood by the eternalists, which is defined in terms of a physical birth from the
mother's womb and entering the coffin. This definition comes from the language of
relative truth, or the language of children still sucking their thumbs; it is not the
language of the Buddha's teaching of Paticcasamuppada. This correct understanding
is the best aid in teaching about the Buddha's Paticcasamuppada, not the
Paticcasamuppada of the eternalist teachers, who made it up themselves in later
ages and handed it down to the present.
There are many things which can help us to understand the fact that the language of
Dependent Origination (the language of the highest dhamma) is not the same as the
language of the relative truth, which must always be diluted with a dash of
eternalism. An example can be seen in samma-ditthi or right view. Right view which
is spoken of in the language of relative truth for ordinary people says that there exists
a present world and a future world, fathers and mothers, hell and heaven, deeds and
the doers of deeds, this life and the future life. All of this is said according to the
idiomatic vernacular, as understood and clung to by ordinary people.
When we come to the middle level of right view, however, as it manifests itself as
one of the eightfold path, we find that things are not talked about as on the lower
level. There is only talk about suffering and the complete cessation of suffering.
There is no mention of the person who suffers, or of the person who extinguishes
suffering. And yet this is also called right view. Finally we come to right view on the
highest levelthe level of the supramundane, which is the view that sees real
Dependent Origination.13 There is no leaning to the view that there is a self (atthita)
and there is no leaning to the view that there is no self (natthita), because the middle
path is clearly seen, which is to say the flow of Dependent Origination is seen. That
flow consists of the conditionality expressed by the phrase: "because there is this,
that exists; because this is not, that does not exist." There is nothing which is the self
or a person in any sense, ever if you talk about hell and heaven. This view point is
called the real middle way because it doesn't at all lean towards either eternalism or
annihilationism.
Please notice that when speaking about right view in the language of relative truth, it
is said that there is a self, but no self can be found in the right view in the language of
ultimate truth or in the language of Paticcasamuppada. And yet both of these are
right view in Buddhism. The language of relative truth is for the teaching of morality
to ordinary
people; the language of ultimate truth is for teaching absolute reality to those who
have only a little dust in their eyes, so that they may become noble disciples. The
Buddha had to speak in two languages like this all the time. Paticcasamuppada is a
matter of the highest ultimate truth; it is not a matter of morality. There is no self
travelling from life to life and no need to say that one cycle of Paticcasamuppada
must cover three lifetimes, as understood in the language of relative truth.
14
Finally, we must consider for what purpose Paticcasamuppada was explained in
terms of three lifetimes. It is explicitly understood that the teaching of Dependent
Origination in this manner comes, clearly in parts and not so clearly in parts, from the
Visuddhimagga of Buddhagosa. This is so because, as far as there is written
evidence to judge from, there are no works older than the Visuddhimagga which offer
such an explanation. My critical review, then, centers in on that work, or on the
person believed to be the author of that work. But when stated accurately, my critical
review here is not a criticism of Buddhagosa, because Paticcasamuppada is a part of
the Buddhism that we must help each other to study and practice in the correct
wayin a way that is useful. We are not satisfied with someone's explanation which
is seen to be inconsistent with the Buddha's aim. Therefore, critical reviews don't
really criticize anything. They are merely showing the reasons for inviting a renewed
examination of the original Pali Scriptures concerning Paticcasamuppada, so that
each individual can know and see for himself how it is without believing me or
anyone else, which would be contrary to the spirit of the Kalama Sutta. To blindly
accept something, as warned against in the ten headings of the Kalama Sutta,
cannot be useful at all. We must use what is called "the eye of the norm" as a tool for
making decisions in problems like this.14
Suppose I were really to consider the merits and demerits of Buddhagosa critically. I
would criticize the Visuddhimagga ("The Path of Purity") of Buddhagosa in the sense
that it is merely a collection of tales and an analysis of scriptural terms used to cover
and enclose the book Vimuttimagga ("The Path of Liberation"), which had already
been written. Such a criticism could get blown up into a large affair, but at this time,
all I want to do is to direct the interest of those of us who love the Buddha more than
any other particular person back to the explanations of Dependent Origination given
by the Buddha himself in so many places. I want to redirect this interest no matter
how difficult it is. It is simply a matter of dedicating and sacrificing oneself in order to
make that which the Buddha intended to benefit all sentient beings become an actual
benefit to all sentient beings, rather than letting it sleep fruitlessly as it is now, good
only for useless argumentation.
The word "Paticcasamuppada" is probably still a strange and uncommon one, not
often heard by most people. But since it is probably not possible to use another word,
we will continue using it. It behoves all of you to try to understand the word
"Paticcasamuppada" to a greater and greater degree until it comes naturally to you.
Those people who have become monks and studied Buddhism have heard this word
a bit, but most people will be uncertain about it, which will cause them to become
uninterested. In this way they will not come to understand the most important
15
teaching of Buddhism. I think that we should use this word until, finally, it becomes a
matter that is understood by most people. The reason we must talk about Dependent
Origination is that it is the heart of Buddhism. When we talk about the heart of
Buddhism most people think of the Four Noble Truths. Please understand that
Paticcasamuppada is the fullness of the Noble Truths, it is the full measure of the
Noble Truths. So let us call it the "Great Noble Truth," the heart of Buddhism.
Therefore we must talk about it until it is perfectly understood.
Something that should be understood from the start is that Dependent Origination is
inside all of us almost all of the time, yet we don't know about it. We must accept the
blame; it is our mistake and not the fault of the Dhamma. Because we are not
interested, we do not know about that which is in us almost all of the time. A little
further on I will explain how it is in us almost all of the time.
Now I would like to expound upon and clarify these ideas by raising the following
topics: What is Dependent Origination about? Why must there be the subject of
Dependent Origination? What is the purpose of Dependent Origination? What is the
method of Dependent Origination?
16
under the sway of ignorance. And so that person feels or thinks that there are beings,
persons, selves, we's and they's. This is one of the aims of Dependent Origination: to
show how suffering arises and ceases in terms of interdependence which need not
make any reference at all to beings, persons, selves, we's or they's.
(2) The second question is "Why must there be the subject of Dependent
Origination?" The subject of Dependent Origination is necessary for study and
practice. Nowadays very few people know about Paticcasamuppada. In addition,
there is wrong view, just like the wrong view of Bhikkhu Sati, the fisherman's son.
This man, even though he was a monk, held the wrong view that there is "...only this
soul which floats along, which travels aboutnothing else ..."15 This monk held that
the soul was a being or a person which floated around or moved about in the
whirlpool of existence, birth and re-birth. This belief, that the soul is a being or a
person, the occupier of the body which floats on in the cycle of birth and re-birth,
arises because the truth of Dependent Origination is not known, thereby giving rise to
wrong view.
The other monks tried to make Sati renounce his view. When he would not they
reported to the Buddha who sent for him and asked him if, indeed, he held this view.
Bhikkhu Sati answered that he did, indeed, hold the view that "...the soul and only the
soul moves on ...." The Buddha then asked him what his soul was. He answered:
"Honored One, the soul is that which can speak, that which can feel something, and
that which tastes the fruit of both wholesome and unwholesome karmic action."
Such a view is even more of a wrong viewnamely, that the soul is that which can
speak, which can feel and which, in the future, tastes the fruit of karma.
Ordinary people who don't understand will ask why such a view is wrong, because
most people believe that the soul exists just like Sati believed. Ordinary people speak
this way as a matter of habit, not knowing that it is wrong view.
Such talk is wrong view because it asserts that the soul is a definite and lasting thing.
People believe that the soul is something that exists independently in itself, not
simply a paticca-saimippanna-dhamma, or conditioned event, which arises by reason
of the law of conditionally, which is to say that it is merely the result of Dependent
Origination.
17
In fact, the soul is merely a paticca-samuppanna-dhamma, which means that there is
no self. Rather, it depends on conditions which cause it to arise for just a moment.
This is what it means to see the soul as a paticca-samuppanna-dhamma, which,
according to Dependent Origination, demonstrates that there is no self.
In the passage quoted above, Sati, the fisherman's son, asserted that there is a self,
or that the soul is a self, that it exists here and now and that it moves on to a future
state. He said that it was the speaker of words, the feeler of various emotions and
the receiver of the fruit of both wholesome and unwholesome karmic deeds. In other
words, he held that there was a self, which he called "soul."
So this is the reason that we must have Paticcasamuppada: because the majority of
people generally hold this wrong view without knowing that it is a wrong view. We
must have Paticcasamuppada in order to know the truth that there is no self. The
soul is not the self. If there is a soul, it is merely a series of events (paticca-
samuppanna-dhamma) which arise quickly one after the other and which are
dependent on the law of conditionality. There is no self anywhere. For this reason, it
is necessary to study about Paticcasamuppada.
(3) The next question is "For what purpose must we know about
Paticcasamuppada?" The answer is: in order to be free from the wrong view that
persons exist, that they are born, and that they exist according to karma. Moreover,
we must know about Dependent Origination in order to completely extinguish
suffering and give rise to right view. If you are still deceived into believing that the
soul is you, then you have wrong view and will experience suffering and will not be
able to extinguish it. Therefore, it is necessary to know what the real Dependent
Origination is all about. The soul is a paticca-samuppanna-dhamma which arises
according to the law of Paticcasamuppada. Suffering can be extinguished and
extinguished completely by this right view or correct understanding. This is briefly
explained in the Pali Scriptures: "...the soul is a paticca-samuppanna-dhamma, an
event which arises dependent on other things. If these other things are absent, then
there can be no arising of the soul...."16
This quote demonstrates that if the soul really existed, it would exist by itself, without
having to depend on any condition. But it cannot exist by itself. There are only
conditions which come together and give rise to it. But it is profoundly subtle, to the
point of making us feel that it can think. It seems that this "soul" is what enables this
mind/body to do anything, to speak or anything else at all. And so we misunderstand,
thinking that there is some one thing which is the self in our mind/body, which we call
the soul. Dependent Origination is useful in getting rid of this wrong view and, in so
doing, completely extinguishing suffering.
(4) The next question is "In what way can suffering be extinguished?"
The answer is the same as we have already seen in general. Namely, the cessation
of suffering can be obtained by correct practiceby correct living or right livelihood.
Correct living is living in such a way that ignorance can be destroyed by wisdom,
living in such a way that stupidity is destroyed by knowledge. Or to put it another
way, correct living means having mindfulness all the time, especially when there is
18
contact between the sense bases and sense objects. Please understand that "right
livelihood" means living with perfected mindfulness all the time, especially when
there is sense contact. When you live in this way, stupidity cannot arise and it will be
possible to eliminate ignorance. Only wisdom or knowledge will be left. Living in such
a way that suffering cannot arise is right living.
(2). Why must we know about this? Because most people are foolish and don't know
about it.
(3). What is the value of knowing about it? Knowing about it brings correct knowledge
and the extinguishing of suffering.
(4). In what way can suffering be extinguished? By the method of correct practice
following the principles of Paticcasamuppadaby being mindful at all times and not
allowing the stream of Dependent Origination to arise.
All together, the above four connected answers are called Dependent Origination.
1. This book has not yet been translated from the Thai.
2. The Pali word is "Brahmacariya," which literally means "the conduct, behavior or
state of life of a Brahma." "Brahma" is the name of the supreme Vedic deity. Thus it
implies the highest and noblest kind of life, the kind of life for which religion, in the
best sense of the word, is ideally suited.
3. 10th Sutta, The "Tree" Suttas, The Kindred Sayings on Cause, Nidana-vagga,
Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS, p. 64
4. Tathagata: lit., "one who has thus gone." Used by the Buddha when speaking of
himself and hence generally used when referring to the Buddha.
5. See the 5th Sutta, called Kalara, The Nobleman, in the Kindred Saying on Cause,
Nidana-vagga, Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS, p. 43.
6. Kalama Sutta, a Discourse appearing in the Anguttara-nikaya, which the Buddha
delivered to the people of the Kalama clan when they asked him how to distinguish
correct teaching from among the mass of various teachings being offered by different
monks, ascetics, philosophers and yogis. The Buddha's answer constitutes a
declaration of intellectual independence. Any teaching, he said, should not be
accepted as true for any of the following ten reasons: (1) hearsay; (2) tradition; (3)
rumour; (4) accepted scriptures; (5) surmise; (6) axiom; (7) logical reasoning; (8) a
feeling of affinity for the matter being pondered; (9) the ability or attractiveness of the
person offering the teaching; (10) the fact that the person offering the teaching is "my"
teacher. Rather, the Buddha counselled that a teaching should be accepted as true
when one knows by direct experience that such is the case.
7. There are five faculties of mental development: faith, energy, mindfulness,
concentration, and wisdom.
8. "Asava" literally means "that which flows into." These are deep-scaled mental
tendencies which, if not eradicated, taint the mind and so allow suffering to arise.
These taints are listed as being sensuality, existence, views and ignorance.
19
9. Pancupadana-khandha or the Five Aggregates of Clinging is an analysis of
mind/body into five groups or aggregates of phenomena which, when clung to as
"me" or "mine," give rise to suffering. They are (1) the body group; (2) the feeling
group; (3) the perception or recognition group; (4) the mental concocting or thought
group; and (5) the consciousness group.
10. In the section entitled On What Must be Devoured, Kindred Sayings on Elements,
Sangyutta-nikaya,PTS, P.83.
11. In the Second Discourse of the Chapter on Devadaha, Salayatana-vagga,
Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS p. 81.
12. "Opapatika" literally means "accidental." It has been interpreted as meaning
"spontaneously born," that is, not being born of parents. Traditionally, this term is
used to refer to beings "born" in heaven or hell.
13. As mentioned in the Fifth Sutta, The Sustenance Suttas, The Kindred Sayings on
Cause, Nidana-vagga, Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS pp. 12 - 13.
14. In the Eighth Sutta, The Kindred Sayings on Understanding, Nidana-vagga,
Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS p. 95.
15. Mahatanhasankhaya Sutta, Mahayamaka-vagga, Majjhimanikaya, PTS p..III.
16. Ibid., pp. 313 314
20
2 Incorrect Teaching Leads to the Inability to practice
Now there is even a more serious problem than those mentioned so far, and that is
that Paticcasamuppada is being taught in a way that is not correct according to the
original Pali Scriptures (the sayings of the Buddha which appear in the original
discourses). The original Pali says one thing but the current teaching says another.
The divergence here is that, in the Pali, Dependent Origination is spoken of as a
connected chain with eleven events or conditions composing one turn of the wheel of
Dependent Origination. But nowadays it is taught that these eleven events cover
three lifetimes: the past life, the present life, and the future life. Dependent
Origination taught in this way cannot be practiced.
In the original Pali Scriptures, the eleven conditions are connected to form one chain
of Dependent Origination, each time a defilement arises in our minds. Therefore, it is
not necessary to cover a period of three lifetimes. It is not even necessary to cover a
period of one life, one year, one month or one day. In the flick of an eye lash, one
complete cycle of Dependent Origination, together with its suffering, can come to
pass. When Paticcasamuppada is incorrectly taught in this way, it becomes a
useless thing, good only for amusing argumentation. But if Dependent Origination is
correctly taught, as in the original Pali Scriptures, it an be a most beneficial thing,
because it is directly concerned with the immediate problems of daily life. So please
pay attention to what follows.
In order to understand well, it is first necessary to know about the 11 links or steps in
the chain of causation. They are:
(1). With ignorance as a condition, mental concocting arises;
(2). With mental concocting as a condition, consciousness arises;
(3). With consciousness as a condition, mentality/materiality arises;
(4). With mentality/materiality as a condition, the six sense bases arise;
(5). With the six sense bases as a condition, contact arises;
(6). With contact as a condition, feeling arises;
(7). With feeling as a condition, craving arises;
(8). With craving as a condition, attachment arises;
(9). With attachment as a condition, becoming arises;
(10). With becoming as a condition, birth arises;
(11). With birth as a condition, old age, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
tribulation arise. Thus the mass of suffering arises.
When these eleven conditions are connected there is one turn or one complete cycle
of Paticcasamuppada. As given in the Pali Scriptures, you can see that the eleven
events are joined and that there is no division or separation. It is not necessary to
place the first two parts in a past life, the next eight in the present life and the
remaining link in a future life, so that one turn covers a space of three lifetimes. If it is
understood in this way, what can be done? How can the cycle be controlled? How
21
can there be a practice to extinguish suffering when the whole thing is broken apart,
with the cause in one life and the result in another? So now, no benefit is derived
from Dependent Origination because it is incorrectly understood and taught, so that
one cycle straddles three lifetimes. If you study the Pali scriptures, you will see that
it's not like that. It is not necessary to wait three lifetimes for one complete cycle of
Dependent Origination. In just one moment, a complete cycle of Paticcasamuppada
can roll on. Or it could roll on in the space of two or three moments, depending on
the situation. But it is not necessary to wait for three lifetimes. Just one moment is
sufficient.
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3 The Birth of the Flow of Dependent Origination
Example I
Now I would like to give a few examples from everyday life to show how Dependent
Origination arises. A little child cries loudly because her doll is broken. Think carefully
for a moment about this and then I will explain how Dependent Origination arises.
A little child cries loudly because her doll is broken. When she sees the broken doll,
there is contact between the eye and the visual object, in this case, the form (shape
and color) of the doll in a broken condition. At that moment, eye consciousness
arises and knows that the doll is broken.
As a matter of course, the child is filled with ignorance because she doesn't know
anything about dhamma. When her doll breaks, her mind is filled with ignorance.
Ignorance gives rise to volitional formations, a kind of power that gives rise to an idea
or thought, which is consciousness.
That which is called consciousness is seeing the broken doll and knowing that it is a
broken doll. This is eye consciousness, because it depends on the eye seeing the
broken doll. There is ignorance, or no mindfulness, at that moment because the child
has no knowledge of dharma. Because of this lack of mindfulness, there arises the
power to give rise to consciousness, which sees form in a way that will be suffering.
The meeting of the eye and the form (the doll) and the consciousness that knows this
are all three together called contact.
Now eye contact arises in that girl. And, if we are to be detailed, that contact gives
rise to mentality/materiality: the girl's body and mind conditioned to experience
suffering arise.
Please understand that ordinarily our body and mind are not in a condition to
experience suffering. There must be ignorance, or something to condition it to
become receptive to the possibility of suffering. And so it is said that the mind/body
only now arises in this case. It means that ignorance conditions consciousness and
this consciousness helps the mind/body change and arise to action and become
capable of experiencing suffering.
In this kind of mind/body, at this moment, the sense bases arise which are also
primed to experience suffering. They are not asleep, as is usually the case, so there
will be perfected contact which is ready for suffering. Then arises vedana or feeling
which is unpleasant. Then this unpleasant feeling gives rise to grasping, the desire to
follow the power of that unpleasantness. Next, attachment clings to the feeling as
"mine". This is where the "I" concept arises, which is called becoming. When this
23
blossoms fully, it is called birth. Then there is suffering in seeing the broken doll
there is crying. That's what is known as tribulation, which means extreme frustration.
Now about birth (jati): it has a wide range of meaning, which includes such things as
old age and 'death. If there were no ignorance, there would not arise the belief that
the doll broke or that the doll died or some such belief. If that were the case, no
suffering at all would have arisen. But now suffering has arisen fully because there
arose attachment to self: my doll. When the doll broke, there was incorrect action
because of ignorance, and so the girl cried, Crying is a symptom of completed
suffering: the end of Dependent Origination has been reached.
Here is the point that most people fail to understand. It's the hidden part of the topic
called the language of ultimate truth or the language of Dependent Origination. Most
people don't believe that people are born all the time or that mind/body is born or that
the sense bases are born. They don't believe that the normal state is equivalent to
not yet being born, in which there has yet been no action according to functions.
When any natural event causes these things to function, then we can say that birth
has occurred. For example, take our eyeball. We believe that it already exists, that it
has already been born. But in the sense of dhamma, it has not yet been born until
that eye sees some form. When it performs its function, the seeing of forms, it can be
said that the eye is born and the form is born and then eye consciousness is born.
These three help each other to give rise to what is called contact. Contact gives rise
to feeling, grasping and all of the other elements, all the way up to the completion of
the cycle.
Now, if later on, that young girl goes to bed and thinks about the broken doll, she will
cry again. At that time, it is a matter of mind consciousness, not eye consciousness.
When she thinks about the broken doll, the thought is the object of perception, and
that object contacts the mind, giving rise to mind consciousness. She thinks about
the broken doll. This gives rise to the body and mind at that moment and causes
them instantly to change into body and mind which are the condition for the sense
bases which will experience suffering. Those sense bases will give rise to contact of
a kind that will experience suffering. Then feeling arises, followed by grasping,
attachment, and finally suffering. At this point, the little girl is crying again, even
though the doll broke many days or even many weeks ago. These thoughts, which
are concocted one after another, are called Paticcasamuppada and they are in all of
us as a rule.
Example II
As another example, let us suppose that there is a young male student who fails his
final exam. He may end up fainting or going to bed at night crying. How does this
happen? The student goes to where the exam results are posted and either doesn't
see his name listed as passing or sees his name listed as failing. He sees the posted
results with his eyes. Those posted lists have a meaningthey are not merely form.
The lists are meaningful forms which tell him something he wants to know. When his
eyes perceive the lists, a kind of eye consciousness arises that gives rise to
mind/body. That is, his body and mind which were in a state of normalcy suddenly
24
change character. They are now primed to give rise to sense bases and contact
which can lead to suffering.
The sense bases in their normal condition are not characterized by suffering, but
when they are mixed with ignorance, these sense bases will work in a way to help
suffering arise. There will be contact, feeling and so on, all the way up to attachment
to the "I" concept: "I failed!" The student falls down in a faint at the moment the eyes
perceive the list. In that brief moment, he faints. This is called one complete working
of the eleven conditions of Dependent Origination. The student has a self that failed,
and so this self experiences great suffering, grief and tribulation.
Several hours or even two or three days later, that student thinks about his failing
again and he may faint again. The same symptoms arise. It is a manifestation of
Dependent Origination in the same way, but this time it begins with the mind door, or
mind consciousness. When consciousness arises, it causes mentality/materiality of a
type subject to suffering to arise. That, in turn, causes suffering prone sense bases to
arise, which cause suffering prone feeling, grasping and attachment to arise. Each in
their order is conditioned by ignorance for suffering. Finally, conditioned birth arises
again: "I have failed my exam!"
Example III
For our third example let's suppose that a young lady sees her boyfriend walking
along with another woman. She immediately becomes inflamed. Within the space of
a brief moment, she becomes so enraged that it is just as if she had passed through
ten hells, so burned up is she! And all this because she saw her boyfriend walking
together with another woman.
What has happened is that her eyes have seen the form of her boyfriend with
another woman. This causes eye consciousness to arise immediately. Before this
moment, this kind of consciousness did not exist. There was only a functionless
consciousness, a consciousness without any duty to perform. You could say there
was no consciousness. But now, this kind of consciousness arises with that form and
these eyes and together they make contact. Just a moment ago there was no
contact; now there is: there is a coming together of the eye, the eye object or form,
and eye consciousness.
Contact arises and causes feeling, craving and so on, to arise. Or to put it in more
detail, once consciousness arises, it causes a newly conditioned kind of body/mind to
arise which, in turn, gives rise to the kind of sense bases, eyes, that can experience
suffering. This is followed by a feeling of suffering and a restless craving. Then arises
attachment to the "I" concept: "I, I, I'm so mad! I could die!" And it all arose by way of
the eye.
This is birth (jati). It is a suffering prone ego. An "I" that can experience
dissatisfaction has arisen and will become subject to suffering. We can simply say
that it is an ego so attached to its arising that it suffers. It is the passing away of this
ego that is suffering, sorrow and frustration. This is full blown Paticcasamuppada,
25
eleven conditions, all within the mind of this young girl. This particular example of
Paticcasamuppada arises by way of the eye.
Now let us suppose that this young lady was fooled by one of her friends. In fact, her
boyfriend is not going with any other woman, but someone decides to play a trick on
her and tells her that her boyfriend was seen going with some other woman and she
believes it. Now there is ear contact; sound comes in by way of the ear and ear
consciousness, accompanied by ignorance, is present. Because there is no
mindfulness, this ear consciousness gives rise to mentality/materiality, i.e., her body
and mind are newly primed to give rise to the sense bases which will function in a
way that leads to suffering, as in this example. Once the sense bases have arisen,
there is complete contact and then the feeling appropriate to the situation, namely,
an unpleasant feeling, arises. Restless craving then arises, which gives rise to
attachment. Then there is the full blown becoming of the "I/mine" concept. It is the
birth of the "I" which has suffering, grief and lamentation. Suffering has arisen in
accordance with the law of Dependent Origination by way of the ear.
Again, several hours or days later, this young lady may simply begin to doubt the
sincerity of her boyfriend. No one has said anything to her, and she hasn't seen
anything, but in her own mind she begins to doubt whether or not her boyfriend has
been going with another woman. She begins to make assumptions and so
Dependent Origination begins to operate by way of the mind door: a mental object
comes into contact with the mind and mind consciousness arises. This mind
consciousness conditions a new mentality/materiality to arise: what was an inert
body/mind, not conditioned to experience suffering, is now the mentality/materiality
that conditions sense bases capable of experiencing suffering to arise. The sense
bases condition suffering prone contact to arise. Contact conditions feeling
conducive to the arising of suffering. Then follows restless craving and clinging
attachment and the same kind of suffering arises again. This is a case of Dependent
Origination becoming active in that young lady by way of mind consciousness.
In the three cases of this young lady, we can see that when she saw forms with her
eyes, Dependent Origination became active in her by way of eye consciousness;
when she heard her friend telling her a lie, Dependent Origination was activated by
ear consciousness; and, finally, when she began to doubt, all on her own, Dependent
Origination became functional by way of mind consciousness. This shows that
Dependent Origination can arise dependent on different sense bases, and suffering
will be the result in each case.
Please observe that in just a very short time the complete course of Dependent
Origination leading to suffering can arise. It is the complete chain of all eleven
conditions. In the brief moment that a daughter-in-law sees her mother-in-law's face,
suppressed restlessness and uneasiness arise. In that brief moment, Dependent
Origination manifests itself with all its eleven conditions. She sees a form with her
eyes. That gives rise to the kind of eye consciousness that conditions a change in
mentality/materiality to a mentality/materiality ready for suffering prone sense bases,
which condition contact conducive to suffering. The feeling that then arises is
unpleasant. The resultant craving is restless because she does not like her mother-
26
in-law's face. There then arises attachment, becoming and the birth of the "I" concept
which hates the mother-in-law's face and, so, suffering finally arises.
Example IV
For my last example, I don't want to talk about a particular case or individual, but I
would like to talk about people in general when they are chewing some very tasty
food. Most people become unmindful when they are eating delicious food. They are
forgetful and ignorance is in control. Let this be a given: when eating something
delicious, mindfulness is absent because of the delicious taste, and so ignorance is
present.
The thoughts of the person experiencing in this way something very delicious are a
complete manifestation of Paticca-samuppada already, in the same sort of way as in
the previous examples. When the tongue and one of its objects, in this case, taste,
come into contact, tongue consciousness arises which creates a new
mentality/materiality, in the sense of changing ordinary mentality/materiality into that
kind of mentality/ materiality capable of experiencing suffering. There then arises the
sense bases capable of having contact and feeling which can experience
unpleasantness or pleasantness from the present situation.
If the experience is one of good taste, then the average run of the mill person calls it
a pleasurable feeling. But as soon as the good taste is clung to, there is attachment
which then transforms the feeling into one prone to suffering because of the
tendency to want to sustain that good taste and make it last. People cling to and
grasp after it and begin to worry and become anxious about it. They become
attached to it. And so in this way the good taste or pleasant feeling instantly becomes
a manifestation of suffering. "This is delicious! I am happy! I'm really happy!" But the
mind is a slave of pleasure because it is aflame with attachment to the pleasure.
This is a trick of Dependent Origination that shows its depth and profundity. If the
average person were to give an opinion, he or she would say that there was
pleasure. If Dependent Origination speaks, that pleasure becomes unsatisfactory.
When anyone thinks "delicious," Dependent Origination has already arisen in its
entirety.
Now there is more to all this. When someone thinks "This is so delicious that I think
I'll go steal some more tomorrow so I can have some more to eat," that person is
born as a thief at that moment. Whenever a person thinks he will steal something or
has a thief-like thought, that person has become a thief! So someone goes and
steals some fruit from a neighboring farm and, having eaten it and found it to his
delight, thinks to go and steal another one the next day. The thought of being a thief
or of becoming a thief is the arising of one bhava or state of becoming. Similarly, if
someone eats some meat and thinks that he will go hunting the next day for some
more, that person has been born a hunter. Even if it's simply a matter of getting lost
in the great taste of some food, such a one is born into heavenly realms of good
taste. Or if it's a matter of something tasting so good that that person can't eat fast
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enough, that person is born a peta, or hungry ghost, who can never get enough to
eat fast enough to satisfy his great hunger.
Take a look at all this and you will see that in just the space of chewing some
delicious food, many kinds of Dependent Origination may arise. So please observe
carefully that Dependent Origination is concerned with the cycle of suffering.
Paticcasamuppada is a teaching about suffering which arises in its fullness because
of attachment. There must be attachment in order for suffering to arise according to
Dependent Origination. If there is no attachment then even if suffering arises, it is not
the dukkha of Paticcasamuppada.
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4 Suffering in Dependent Origination Always Depends on
Attachment
If one is hot and has a backache but nothing more, if one simply feels and knows that
he is hot without any clinging to the "I" concept as above, then the suffering of
Dependent Origination has not arisen. Please observe this carefully and make clear
the distinction between these two kinds of suffering. If there is clinging, it is suffering
according to Dependent Origination. Suppose you cut your hand with a sharp knife or
razor blade and the blood gushes out. If you simply feel the pain but don't cling to
anything, then your suffering is natural and not according to Dependent Origination.
Don't confuse the two. Suffering according to Dependent Origination must always
follow upon ignorance, formations, consciousness, mentality/materiality, sense
bases, contact, feeling, craving, attachment, becoming and birth. It must be complete
this way in order to be called Dependently Originated suffering.
Now we can put the whole matter briefly. Someone who has studied the dhamma
may understand that the internal sense base (e.g., the eye) comes into contact with
the external sense base (e.g., the form) which has a value or meaning and which
then becomes the base of ignorance. For example, take your eye. Look about you.
You see a variety of things: trees, stones, or whatever. But there is not any suffering
because nothing of what you see has any value or meaning for you. But if you see a
tiger or a woman, or something that has meaning, it's not the same. One kind of sight
has meaning and another kind has no meaning. If, for example, a dog sees a pretty
woman, it means nothing to the dog. But if a young man sees a lovely woman, it has
a lot of meaning. Seeing a pretty woman has meaning for a man. The dog's seeing is
not a matter of Dependent Origination. The young man's vision is a matter of
Dependent Origination.
We are speaking about people: people in the act of seeing. Whenever we look about
we naturally see whatever is there and, if there is no meaning, it has nothing to do
with Paticcasamuppada. We see, perhaps, trees, grass and stones, none of which,
normally, have meaning. But maybe there's a diamond or a sacred stone or a tree
that will have meaning; there will be mental events occurring and Dependent
Origination will become operative. And so it is that we distinguish the internal sense
bases (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind) from the external sense bases (form,
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sound, smell, taste, tactile sensation, and mental objects), and these latter must be
meaningful things. In this way they become the base for ignorance or stupidity or
delusion. At this point of contact between the internal and external sense bases,
sense consciousness arises. The consciousness arises instantaneously and gives
rise to mental concocting a kind of power to cause further compounding or brewing
up. That is, it brews up mentality/materiality, body and mind of the sort that is crazily
stupid because it is prone to suffering.
When the body/mind change it means that the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and
mind also change. They become "crazy" sense spheres. The contact, feeling, craving
and attachment that arise are also "crazy" to the point of suffering. It all culminates in
birth (jati), the full blown birth of the "I" concept. Old age, sickness, death or any
other kind of suffering will then all immediately arise and take on meaning because of
clinging to the "I" and the "my" concept.
All of the above is concerned with Dependent Origination in daily life. I think it should
be enough for you to see that Paticcasamuppada is something that arises in a flash,
complete with all eleven conditions. In one day I don't know how many hundreds of
times it can arise. No! It's not the case that one turn of the cycle of Dependent
Origination must be spread over three life times, the past, the present and the future.
It is not like that at all.
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5 The Origins of Paticcasamuppada
Now I'd like to talk about the origins of Dependent Origination. How did Dependent
Origination come to be formulated? How did it originate? We hold that the Buddha is
the source of Dependent Origination. In the 10th Sutta of the Buddha Suttas, the
Buddha told of his own life as an ascetic monk, how one day he discovered what we
now call Paticcasamuppada. And now I will quote the Pali Scriptures for the
Buddha's own story of this discovery:
Bhikkhus! Before I became enlightened when I was still a Bodhisattva, I had this
feeling: all beings, without exception, in this world suffer. They are born, get old and
die, and are born again. When the beings of this world don't know the method to free
themselves from suffering, that is, from old age and death, how will they be able to
escape that suffering?
Bhikkhus! I wondered what is it that must be present for old age and death to arise.
What is the condition of old age and death? Bhikkhus! This supremely clear sighted
and wise knowledge arose in me by means of my wise mental training:
Because birth is, old age and death are; old age and death have birth as a condition;
Because becoming is, birth is; birth" has becoming as a condition; Because
attachment is, becoming is; becoming has attachment as a condition; Because
craving is, attachment is; attachment has craving as a condition; Because feeling is,
craving is; craving has feeling as a condition; Because contact is, feeling is; feeling
has contact as a condition; Because the sense bases are, contact is; contact has the
sense bases as a condition; Because mentality/materiality is, the sense bases are;
the sense bases have mentality/materiality as a condition; Because consciousness
is, mentality/materiality is; mentality/materiality has consciousness as a condition;
Because mental concocting is, consciousness is, consciousness has mental
concocting as a condition; Because ignorance is, the mental concocting is; the
mental concocting have ignorance as a condition.
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This is the discovery of Paticcasamuppada by the Buddha before his enlightenment.
We can call it the discovery of the links of the chain of suffering. It was discovered
that suffering arises by means of these eleven conditions or stages. When there is
sense contact and ignorance is dominantwhen mindfulness is not presentthen
consciousness arises immediately. Don't misunderstand that this consciousness is a
permanent self or anything like that. It only arises with sense contact. Having arisen,
consciousness immediately gives rise to mental concocting or the power to brew up
a new mind/body. This is a mentality/materiality which may experience suffering.
Then arise sense bases and contact prone to suffering, and feeling which is
conducive to suffering in just this case. Then craving, attachment, becoming, and the
birth of the "I" concept follow in order. Now suffering is complete.
Before this no one had ever discovered this thing. The Buddha was the first person in
the history of Buddhism and, as far as we know, the first person in history to discover
Paticcasamuppada, after which he became enlightened. So we call this the origin of
Dependent Origination.
Now we come to a rather difficult matter for the ordinary person, but it is necessary to
mention it if we are to be complete. This difficult matter is that the eleven conditions
of Paticcasamuppada are given in many forms in the various Suttas related after the
Buddha's enlightenment.
This is called one turning of the chain or wheel of Dependent Origination, from
beginning to end. This is the most commonly heard form and it appears in many
tens, many hundreds of Suttas in the Tripitika.
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Form 2: Reverse Order
This form includes all the elements but in the reverse order and is called patlloma or
reversed. If it goes from ignorance to suffering it is called anuloma or direct. These
two forms are easily recited and memorized.
The third form does not give the whole eleven conditions. Rather, it begins in the
middle with the four kinds of nutriments, for example, kavalinkarahara (bodily
nutriment).
This form starts in the middle of the chain and works its way back to ignorance at the
beginning. This form appears, for example, in the Mahatanha Sutta of the Sangyutta-
nikaya.
The next form of Paticcasamuppada starts in the middle again, but goes on to the
end and not back to the beginning. The starting point is feeling which is pleasant,
unpleasant or neither pleasant nor unpleasant. Feeling is the first condition, then
craving arises, attachment arises, becoming arises, birth arises, and suffering arises
at the the end of the series. Even this one half of the chain is called
Paticcasamuppada, because it still proves to be of benefit. That is, it shows how
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suffering arises, just as do the other forms. The determining factor of the appropriate
form used was the needs, as perceived by the Buddha, of the people listening to him.
The Visuddhimagga has a very good simile to explain why there are different forms
of Dependent Origination. Suppose there are four people, each wanting a creeper or
climbing vine for different purposes. The first person might cut the creeper at its base
and pull the whole thing away to use as he needs it. Another person may grab the tip
and pull the whole thing out and away to use as he needs it. Yet another person may
come along and cut the creeper in the middle and pull it out from its base. Still
another will cut the middle and pull only the half from where he cut it to the tip for his
needs. Cutting creepers for various uses depends on the individual's needs. Each
may cut the creeper in a different way, but each gets the use he needs of it. This is a
simile used by Buddhagosa to explain the four different forms of Paticcasamuppada
as described above.
But there is another form which is very strange and appears in only a few Suttas.
This form starts in order of the causation of suffering for one half of the series. When
it comes to craving, it switches over to the order of cessation; cessation of craving,
attachment, becoming, birth. This is very strange, and I don't know why Buddhagosa
didn't mention it. This form is rather confusing. It starts by saying:
This form shows an about face in the middle. It's as if mindfulness has arisen instead
of mindlessly going on to the end of the chain. In the middle of the search we catch
ourselves and so we don't allow the flow of Dependent Origination to complete itself.
What was a matter of conditioned arising turns into a matter of cessation in the
middle. Craving is extinguished and so suffering does not arise at the end of the
chain of Dependent Origination.
How shall we compare this form to someone cutting a creeper? We could say that
grabbing the creeper by the middle he pulls the whole creeper out, including its base
and its tip. These are the various forms of Dependent Origination taught by the
Buddha.
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6 The Details of Dependent Origination
Now I'm going to talk about the details of Paticcasamuppada so that you will better
understand them. For some it will be easy, but for others it will be difficult. Each will
benefit according to his or her own capacity. I will cover all twelve factors of
Dependent Origination starting with ignorance.
What is ignorance? Ignorance is not knowing about suffering, the cause of suffering,
the cessation of suffering and the way to bring about the cessation of suffering. Not
knowing these four things is called ignorance. And ignorance gives rise to mental
concocting.
What is mental concocting? The Buddha said: "Monks, there are these three kinds of
mental concocting: bodily formation, verbal formation and mental formation." The
sayings of the Buddha in the Pali Scriptures explain sankhara as that which brews up
or gives rise to the bodily functions, that which brews up verbal functions and that
which brews up mental functions.
But people who study in dhamma schools don't explain sankhara this way. They
usually are taught according to the Visuddhimaggathat the three sankhara are
meritorious karma functions (punn-abhisankhara), demeritorious karma functions
(apunn-abhisankhara) and imperturbable karma functions (anenj-abhisankhara).
They are different but overlapping matters needing detailed explanation.
For now, you should know that those who like to explain Dependent Origination in
terms of three life times always like to explain sankhara as meritorious, demeritorious
and imperturbable karma formations. But in the Pali Scriptures, the real words of the
Buddha explain sankhara as bodily, verbal and mental functions. Mental concocting
gives rise to consciousness.
What is consciousness? The Buddha said: "Monks, there are six kinds of
consciousness: eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind consciousness."
Those who explain Paticcasamuppada as covering several life times, including the
Visuddhimagga, explain consciousness as rebirth consciousness (patisandhi-
vinnana). In all of the later text books, consciousness is so explained because they
don't understand how to explain Paticcasamuppada in terms of the sixfold kinds of
consciousness. This is so because they believe in "rebirth" and so they must
interpret consciousness as rebirth consciousness. The whole thing becomes, then,
something completely different.
The words of the Buddha himself tell us that there are six kinds of consciousness as
mentioned above. But we ourselves have explained it in terms of rebirth
consciousness. Consciousness gives rise to mentality/materiality.
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What is mentality/materiality? In the Scriptures the Buddha said that feeling,
perception, intention, contact and attention were mentality. The four great elements
and the secondary derived phenomena1 were materiality. This is not a matter of
dispute. Everyone teaches that flesh, muscle, blood and winds comprise the four
great physical elements. Various conditions and phenomena dependent on the four
elements, such as beauty, ugliness, femininity, virility and so on, are derived
materiality. Both together are called materiality. Mentality/materiality gives rise to the
six sense bases.
What are the six sense bases? The Buddha said that they are the sense bases of the
eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind. The six sense bases give rise to contact.
What is contact? The Buddha said that there are six kinds of contact, named after
the six sense bases. Contact gives rise to feeling.
What is feeling? There are six types of feeling: feeling arising from contact by way of
the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind. Feeling gives rise to craving.
What is craving? Again there are six types of craving: craving for forms, sounds,
smells, tastes, tactile sensations, and mental objects. Craving conditions the arising
of attachment.
What is attachment? The Buddha said that there are four kinds of attachment:
sensuous attachment (kamupadana), attachment to views (ditthupadana),
attachment to rules and rituals (silabbatupadana) and attachment to the "I" concept
(at-tavadupadana), which are well known to all of us. Attachment conditions the
arising of becoming.
What is becoming? There are three kinds of becoming: sensuous becoming, fine-
material becoming, and immaterial sound; (8) odor; (9) taste; (10) femininity; (11)
masculinity; (12) the physical base of mind; (13) bodily expression; (14) verbal
expression; (15) physical life; (16) space; (17) physical agility; (18) physical elasticity;
(19) physical adaptability; (20) physical growth; (21) physical continuity; (22) decay;
(23) im-permanence; (24) nutriment becoming.2 Becoming conditions the arising of
birth.
What is birth? It is being born, arising, coming to be among the various groups of
sentient beings, the appearance of the various aggregates, the arising of a particular
sense door. This is birth. Birth conditions the arising of old age and death.
What are old age and death? Old age is the greying of the hair, the breaking of the
teeth and anything else associated with becoming old, such as the failing of the
sense faculties. Death is the end, the breaking up, the destruction, the running out of
time, the dispersal of the aggregates, the casting off of the corpse, the
disappearance of life and the sense faculties. This is death.
Now there is a problem which makes all of this difficult to understand. The problem is
in the use of the word "to be born," which is a common everyday word with an
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uncommon meaning. It means the birth of the "I" concept which is only a feeling and
not the physical birth from a mother's womb.
As far as birth from a mother's womb is concerned, we are born only once and that's
the end of it. After that there are many, many more births; many births in one day,
even. This means being born because of attachmentthe feeling that I am
something or other. This is called one birth. Having been born in this way, we cling to
the idea that the birth from a mother's womb or a normal birth is suffering because
there is fear and anxiety in that kind of birth.
When we are born in this way, fear and anxiety spread over everything connected
with pain and illness or death, which will come in the future. ln fact the pain, illness
and death have yet to appear, but we suffer because we always see them as my
pain, my old age and my death. We especially suffer when it appears before us. We
are afraid of death all the time without knowing it. We hate old age because we think
it will come to "me.'
If only you don't have the "I" concept, then old age, death and so on will have no
meaning. Therefore, one round of Paticcasamuppada is nothing more than a
manifestation of stupidity which allows one kind of suffering to arise once: suffering
because something satisfies, or does not satisfy, or we don't know if it satisfies or
not. When there is attachment, there is suffering.
1. The four great elements are earth (solidity), water (cohesion), fire (heat) and air
(motion). There are 24 secondary phenomena derived from the four great elements:
(1) eye (2) ear (3) nose (4) tongue; (5) body; (6) form;
2. These three kinds of becoming reflect the levels of attachment to the physical body
and its sensations, attachment to the fine-material states of meditative absorption and
attachment to the immaterial states of meditative absorption. These last two are
respectively called the rupa-jhana and arupa-jhana states; they are highly developed
states of mental concentration.
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7 The Meanings of the Words in Dependent Origination
Now we come to the most important matter: the meanings of the words in
Paticcasamuppada.
The meanings of these words are meanings from the language of ultimate truth, the
language of those who know the dhamma and not according to the meanings of the
language of relative truththe language of ordinary people who don't know the
dhamma. I've already noted these two types of language: the language of relative
truth which refers to the everyday language of people who don't know the dhamma
and the language of Paticcasamuppada which is dhammic language.
The words bhava and jati, which mean becoming and birth, in the case of Dependent
Origination do not mean birth from a mother's womb. Rather they mean a non-
material kind of birth, a birth from attachment which brews up the feeling of being an
"I." That's what is born. There is clear scriptural evidence for this in the Mahatanha
Sangkaya Sutta, where the Buddha says: "Any delight (nandi) in any feeling is
attachment." This means that when there is sense contact and feeling arises, be it
pleasurable, unpleasurable or neither pleasurable nor unpleasurable feeling, then
there is amusement or delight in that feeling. We delight in the pleasurable feeling in
the form of lust; we delight in unpleasurable feeling in the form of anger or hate; we
delight in the neither pleasurable nor unpleasurable feeling in the form of delusion.
This indeed is attachment. Delight is attachment because this very delight is the base
of clinging: if there is delight then there must be clinging.
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Amusement means being delighted in, being satisfied with. Nandi itself is the kind of
attachment referred to by the Buddha. When we are satisfied with something, it
means that we cling to that thing. Therefore, nandi equals attachment and it is
something that must exist in feeling. Whenever there is feeling, there is nandi and
there is attachment; "because there is attachment, there is becoming; because there
is becoming, there is birth; because there is birth, there is old age and death which is
suffering."
This shows that becoming and birth arise from feeling, craving and attachment. It is
not necessary to die and be born again for becoming and birth to arise. Becoming
and birth arise here and now. In a given day they may arise any number of times:
each time there is feeling which is beclouded with ignorance, it then becomes
amused enjoyment of one kind or another, which is attachment, and that gives rise to
becoming and birth.
The words becoming and birth must be understood in terms of the language of
ultimate truth of those who understand the Dhamma and not the language of relative
truth, the language of ordinary people. In the language of ordinary people, one must
await death in order to be rebornin order to have becoming and birth. According to
the language of relative truth, we are born once of the body and then we die and go
into the coffin before being reborn. But in the language of ultimate truth, one may be
born many times in one day. Each time the "I" concept arises, it is called one set of
becoming and birth. In a month there may be many hundreds of births; in a year
many thousands; in one physical life time there may be many tens of thousands or
hundreds of thousands of becomings and births.
We can immediately see that Paticcasamuppada is concerned with the here and now
and not with waiting for the death of three physical lives for the turning of one cycle.
In fact, in one day, it will operate many times; whenever there is feeling, craving and
attachment, then there is also a turn of the wheel of Dependent Origination, including
becoming and birth. Dependent Origination operates in the daily life of all people. It is
as in the example given above of the student who failed, or the young lady who was
upset because of her boyfriend. These are common examples from everyday life.
The only problem left is to show how ignorance, mental concocting, consciousness,
mentality/materiality, sense bases and contact must all be present first before feeling
can arise. This is not so difficult. The ringleader, the trouble maker, is feeling. And we
all already know well what feeling isit arises constantly. But if you want to know it in
greater detail, just go back along the series of Dependent Origination. Feeling arises
from contact, contact arises from the sense bases, which were specially concocted
for the occasion. The sense bases arise from mentality/materiality, which arises from
a specially prepared consciousness. Consciousness arises from specially brewed
mental concocting and mental concocting arises from ignorance, the start of the
series. Eliminate ignorance and none of the rest will arise. There will be no suffering
prone mentality/materiality, no sense bases conducive to suffering, no contact that is
suffering. Other things will arise instead, namely the same things only without
suffering. It is ignorance that conditions mentality/materiality, body/mind, sense
bases, contact and feeling of a kind that will experience suffering.
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Let me stress again and warn you to understand well the difference between ordinary
language and the language of ultimate truth. The word "birth" in the language of
relative truth means birth from a mother's womb. The word "birth" in the language of
ultimate truth means something arising that functions in a way conducive to suffering,
which is to say, arising with ignorance as a. basic cause. At this moment
mentality/materiality has not arisen because it is not functioning as "I" or "mine".
Though you are sitting reading this text with attention, there is no craving or
attachment. Your sitting and reading with attention are material phenomena, but
there is no Dependent Origination yet.
All of what has been said so far is so that you will understand in advance that the
language of Paticcasamuppada is the language of ultimate truth, which has special
meanings. Don't bring in the language of relative truth, or you will misunderstand it,
especially the word "birth."
Another important point that I would like you to know is that Paticcasamuppada is a
detailed version of the Four Noble Truths. Dependent Origination in the order or
arising is equal to the Noble Truths of suffering and its cause. Dependent Origination
in the order of cessation is equal to the Noble Truths of the end of suffering and the
way to end suffering.
Suffering is dealt with in the same way as in other places. The way of extinguishing
suffering is also the same, namely,
the eightfold path. Paticcasamuppada is simply the Four Noble Truths given in detail.
Instead of starting with the bare brevity that craving causes suffering, it analyses
suffering into eleven stages or conditions. And the same goes for the extinction of
suffering. So Paticcasamuppada is the Four Noble Truths.
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8 On the Explanation of Paticcasamuppada Which is
Inaccurate
According to the letter of the Scriptures, in the passage quoted above regarding the
Buddha's discovery of Paticcasamuppada just before his enlightenment, the Buddha
spoke of Dependent Origination without sticking anything in or adding anything in
between, as you have read. Dependent Origination starts with ignorance and goes
on to suffering with nothing indiscriminately mixed in. To add anything is to make it
contrary to the letter of the principle.
If we look at it in light of the spirit of the teaching, we will easily see that the teaching
under consideration is wrong. Buddha delivered his teaching on Dependent
Origination in order to destroy wrong views and in order to destroy attachment to the
self, beings and persons. So it is that there is a continuous series of eleven
conditions wherein no self, no "I" can be found.
Now there are some people who explain it anew by saying Paticcasamuppada
covers three life times (births) connected by the same person. A person's defilements
in a past birth cause karmic results to arise in this birth at some point. There are
karmic results in this life which cause new defilements in this birth and give rise to
karmic results in a future life.
For this point we take as our standard the principle of mahapadesa or the principle of
references or great authorities. This principle tells us that to explain
Paticcasamuppada in terms of self is wrong, because Buddhism teaches that there is
no self. If you hold that Paticcasamuppada leaves no room for a self, your
understanding is correct. But if you hold that there is a self that spans three births,
your understanding is incorrect. The correct point of view is a continuous flow of
conditions from beginning to end, with no self.
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9 When did the Incorrect Explanation Arise?
Now I'd like to talk about something more substantially certainnamely, why did
such an incorrect explanation arise and when did it arise.
It is hard to say when this incorrect explanation first arose. But the fact that it is
incorrect is easy to show because it is contrary to the original Pali Scriptures. It is
contrary to the purpose of Paticcasamuppada, which is to destroy the "I" concept.
Somdet Sangkharaj Krom Phra Vachirayanawong of Wat Bowoniwet was of the
opinion that the incorrect explanation began 1,000 years ago. He didn't accept that
version of Dependent Origination that spans three births and he taught that it spans
only one birth, but he was not sure and so did not go into details, and it was left at
that. He did assert, however, that it was his understanding that Dependent
Origination had been incorrectly explained for the past 1,000 years. I agree with him
on this point. But I would like to add that the misunderstanding goes back even
further, to 1,500 years ago, when the Visuddhimagga was first written.
If you want an exact date, you will have to do some archeological research and that
would be difficult. But now we must ask why it was that an incorrect explanation
arose. Why, if the Buddha taught in a way that was not necessary to span three
births, did the teaching change to explain Dependent Origination in terms of a self
spanning three births?
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original teaching and their thinking began to diverge until the teaching was the
complete opposite of the original doctrine. In this way we see how ignorance and not
intention may have led to an incorrect understanding.
Now, let's look at it another way. Is it possible that there was a worm nibbling at the
innards of Buddhism? Were there Buddhists who consciously turned against the
original teaching and who only pretended to be explaining Dependent Origination, a
basic principle of Buddhism. Were these people, in fact, explaining it incorrectly in
terms of Hinduistic eternalism, or Brahmanism? There is no way that Buddhists can
have a self or a soul or atman or any other such thing. If any one consciously
attempts to explain Dependent Origination, the heart of Buddhism, in terms of three
births, that person would be effectively destroying Buddhism.
If there was such an evilly intentioned person or group of people as just speculated
about, it means that someone pretended to be explaining Paticcasamuppada, but in
such a way as to create a niche for the soul concept in Buddhism. In this way, then,
Brahmanism could indirectly swallow Buddhism in a flash. I'm only speculating here
in a negative way.
Another explanation could be that someone was rash or foolish and attempted to
explain what he did not understand in terms of his own limited knowledge. Whether
this is what happened and whether there was intention or not, the results are the
same.
Do you know why Buddhism disappeared from India? Different people say for this,
that or the other reason: for example, because foreign enemies came in and
oppressed the religion. I don't think that is the case. I think that Buddhism
disappeared from India because the followers of Buddhism began to interpret the
principles of Buddhism incorrectly, explaining Paticcasamuppada, the heart of
Buddhism, as a form of having a self. This is, I believe, the de facto reason for
Buddhism's disappearing from India. Buddhism became simply an appendage of
Hinduism.
The incorrect explanation must have begun with some such event. And whether that
event was intentional or not is most difficult to know. It is a fact that Brahmanism was
an enemy of Buddhism and wanted to swallow Buddhism, and so it is quite possible
that there were people who tried to destroy it. This is clearly a possibility and I don't
say it to malign Brahmanism. Buddhism is not eternalismit does not mention
beings, individuals or self. There is no person who spins around in the cycle of birth,
death and rebirth. Buddhism has no being or person, but yet it turns out that in the
form of Paticcasamuppada which covers a span of three births, there is a being, a
person who is caught up in the spin. This is, indeed, the dissolution of Buddhism.
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If you want evidence prior to the time of the Visuddhimagga, you should go to the
third general council when certain monks, who were determined to be "false" monks,
were ordered to leave the community of monks. But monks who were seen to be
genuine did not have to leave. In the screening process, the monks were asked to
explain their views of the Buddha-dhamma. If any monk did not answer by analysing
life into paticca-samuppana-dhamma, aggregates, elements and sense bases, and if
he said that there was a self that spun around in the cycle of birth and death and
rebirth, as in the case of Bhikkhu Sati, the fisherman's son, he was held to be holding
wrong views in the sense of eternalism and was made to leave the order.
What this means is that at the time of the third council, those monks who held that
there was a self or an ego were made to leave the monkhood. Only the monks who
did not hold that there were selves or egos remained. So we can see that the primary
cause of the eternalist theory had its beginning at the time of the third council, 2,200
years ago, at which time it \vas admitted that there were many monks who were
spuriously ordained as Buddhist monks and who held that there is an individual, a
self. This fact is itself sufficient to be seen as a primary condition giving rise, within
the Buddhist order, to the explanation of Paticcasamuppada of the kind that holds
there is a self. Even though those monks were made to leave the order, it is likely
that there were still some, both inside and outside the order, who believed in selves
and taught such.
In summary, it is hard to say whether or not the basis of the dhamma was still pure
before the third council in B.E. 300. After that it became sullied through the
acceptance of a self. An incorrect Dhamma began from that time. As you can see,
Buddhism disappeared from India. But why didn't the Jain religion, the religion of the
naked ascetics, more properly called the Saina, disappear from India? Because it
hasn't yet changed any of its principles from the original teachings.
Buddhism's basic principles changed from positing no self to positing self and it
disappeared. It automatically disappeared at that very time; as soon as the self
concept entered Buddhism, it disappeared from India. This is the phenomenon of
Paticcasamuppada being incorrectly explained. The written evidence begins with the
Visuddhimagga. For now, I merely wanted to talk about when Paticcasamuppada
began to be explained in a way contrary to the Buddha's intent.
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10 The Reason for the Incorrect Explanation
If we speak in the language of relative truth, the language of ordinary people, each of
us calls ourselves a "person." If we speak in the language of ultimate truth, we don't
say "person" but we say "mentality/materiality," or "mind/body." Whether you call it
person or mentality/materiality makes no real difference. The problem still remains
how often does it arise? How does it arise, this person or mentality/materiality?
If you ask this question there are three different levels of answer:
(1) Mentality/materiality arises and passes away every thought moment. This is a.
level of explanation few people know about or want to know about and it is not
necessary to know about it. Our mentality/materiality, mind/body, arises and passes
away each thought moment. This is the language of Abhidhamma. Desire arises
because mind arises, is sustained and passes away in the space of what is called
bhavanga-citta.1 One cycle of arising, persisting and passing away is called one
thought moment. It is faster than the flick of an eye. So, according to this meaning, it
is held that "mentality/materiality" or "person" arises, exists and passes away each
thought moment, so fast as to be beyond counting.
Mentality/materiality, or this person, arising and passing away each thought moment,
is one meaning. It's similar to the rapid frequency of an electric current. When electric
current flows in one uninterrupted circuit, there is an impulse of electricity. And these
impulses may number a thousand a minute, so rapid as to become indistinguishable.
But they occur in such rapid succession that the bulb burns brightly without flickering.
One thought moment is similarly fast and, when they occur in rapid and close
succession, we don't sense the arising and passing away. We must depend upon
careful psychological study to realize that the mentality/materiality or person arises
and passes away with rapid and close succession each thought moment, faster,
indeed, than the frequency of an electrical current. But this kind of arising and
passing away is not the same type as in Paticcasamuppada. Paticcasamuppada
doesn't refer to this kind of arising and passing away.
45
This arising and passing away of each thought moment is purely a mental
mechanism. It is superfluous, inflated Abhidhammic knowledge which is not
concerned with Dependent Origination. The word used here to mean "to be born" is
not jati, but uppada, which means "genesis" or "coming into existence." The formula
goes uppada, thiti, bhangagenesis, stasis, cessation; or arising, existing, passing
away. Uppada means arising, which is similar to, but not the same as birth or jati.
(2) The normal, everyday meaning is that mentality/ materiality arises with the issuing
forth from the mother's womb and passes away into a coffin. The state of existence
may last as long as 80 or 100 years. In these 80 or 100 years, there is only one
arising, or birth, and only one passing away, or death. The words "to be born" and
"pass away" are used once only in the space of 80 or 100 years according to this
second meaning of arising and passing away. In this language of relative truth,
mentality/materiality, or person, exists for 80 to 100 years between being born and
passing away. In the inflated language of Abhidhamma, a person is born and passes
away with such great rapidity that it can't be counted. But in. tie language of the
every day world, it is so much slower that arising and passing away are easily
counted. Both the language of the Abhidhamma and the language of relative truth
reflect extremes.
(3) Now there is a middle sense to all of this and that is given in the language of
Paticcasamuppada, which we are presently concerned with. Being born and passing
away in the language of Paticcasamuppada means the arising of a particular kind of
feeling, and then the arising of craving, grasping, becoming and birth. This kind of
arising and passing away can be counted and observed. When, in our minds, there
arises the "I" concept, then there is one becoming, one birth, and it may be counted.
If one is diligent, one may observe and note, in a given day, how many times the "I"
concept arises. And the same can be done the next day and the next day after that.
The arising and passing away in this sense is not so rapidly successive as to prevent
counting and it doesn't simply mean birth from the mother's womb and passing away
into the coffin. It means the being born and passing away of mentality/ materiality,
person, in the sense of "me" and "mine," which is conditioned by ignorance each
time.
46
to the middle of the road sense. It is not so rapid and close that it can't be counted
and not so separated that one life has only one arising and one passing away.
Dependent Origination refers to the arising and passing away of attachment to the "I"
concept any one time. Moreover, it means understanding the arising and passing
away in terms of paticca-samuppana-dhammas: merely interdependent natural
phenomena arising and passing away. Dependent on something, something arises.
Dependent on something, something passes away.
There is another sense of being born and passing away, the sense of pure matter
which we don't believe as having thought or feeling, such as the arising and passing
away of grass. This kind of arising and passing away is another matter. Don't
confuse it with Dependent Origination. It is not concerned with ignorance or
attachment. Grass is alive, it arises and passes away but it is not concerned with
ignorance, craving or grasping at all. Don't confuse these different senses. The
arising and passing away of grass is another kind of birth and passing away. If we
know about the arising and passing away of a personmentality/materiality in the
sense of Dependent Originationthat is good enough. We learn about all these
different meanings in order to be able to distinguish them. But be assured that
Dependent Origination in the original Pali Scriptures of the Buddha is not divided into
three lives. It is a matter of daily life and it may arise many times in one day.
It is impossible to say just who the first person was to explain Dependent Origination
in a way that spans three births, or when this explanation was first set forth. It first
appears in written form in the Visuddhimagga, but the primary cause is sure to
precede that book. If you want to know the details of this teaching, you can study the
books used in those Dhamma schools which teach this tradition, as well as the
Visuddhimagga itself. You will find that Dependent Origination is explained in a way
that spans three lives. In general, it is taught that ignorance and mental concocting
are the past cause, the cause in the past life. Consciousness, mentality/materiality,
sense bases, contact and feeling are results in the present life. Craving, grasping
and that part of becoming which is karmically active are present causes in the
present life and finally, that part of becoming which is genesis (uppada) and birth, old
age and death are the future results in the next life. In this way three lives are
spanned.
47
In review we see the eleven conditions divided up as follows: the first two are placed
in the past life, the eight conditions in the middle are assigned to the present life, and
the last two conditions are put in the future life as results, spanning three births
altogether. And there are three points of connection, or links, called sandhi (union):
one between the past and the present births; another in the middle of the present
birth, between those conditions which are causes and those which are results; and
finally another link between the present and future births. And, strange to say, this
teaching uses the word "attha, " which means "distant time," in conjunction with the
three lives. So we find "distant past time," "distant present time," and "distant future
time." All of this is not in accord with the Pali scriptures, which never spoke of a
present "attha." In the Pali Scriptures, there are references made only to the past and
future attha, the distant past and the distant future. The present was not called
distant. Nowadays, they translate attha as "time" and apply it to the three times of the
past, present and future.
48
1. Concerning the "thought-process," we find the following explanation in A Manual of
Abhidhamma, Narada Maha Tera's English translation of Anuruddha's
Abhidhammattha Sangaha (written between the 5th and 11th centuries A.D.):
"According to Abhidhamma, ordinarily there is no moment when we do not
experience a particular kind of consciousness, hanging on to some objectwhether
physical or mental. The time limit of such a consciousness is termed one thought
moment. The rapidity of the succession of such thought moments is hardly
conceivable by the ken of human knowledge. Books state that within the brief
duration of a flash of lightning, or in the twinkling of an eye billions of thought
moments may arise and perish." (p. 21 of the 1975 Edition, Buddhist Publication
Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka).
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11 Buddhagosa
Now I'd like to talk about Buddhagosa, as I said I would. Almost every Buddhist
believes that Buddhagosa was an Arahat. In this regard I have no beliefs at all. I only
look at what he did and what he said. That which is of benefit I hold as being correct.
That which is of no benefit I hold as being incorrect. For the most part you will see
that Buddhagosa is a man of very great knowledge and of very great benefit. He
explained many tens and many hundreds of things to the great benefit of all. But I
don't at all agree with him regarding Dependent Origination, because he spoke of it in
terms of a soul and so it became Brahmanistic.
I don't respect or believe Buddhagosa entirely, because there are some matters that I
don't agree with. I hold him in respect for about 90 to 95 percent of what he wrotein
a hundred matters I may agree with 95. But four or five I don't agree with,
Paticcasamuppada for example. And if we speak in terms of the significance of
various matters, you will see that Dependent Origination is only one matter, but it
outweighs all the rest in significance.
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and he doesn't waive responsibility or ask for leave. But with regard to Dependent
Origination, he says that it is a difficult subject, yet he will dare to attempt an
explanation because he holds that Buddhism can be explained in many ways, from
different angles and, therefore, he must at least offer one point of view as an
explanation. Another point is that previous teachers had already offered explanations
of Dependent Origination and so we can hold to those explanations. But even so, he
is still doubtful concerning his present attempt. He is not able to sound the bottom of
the ocean. Just like a great ocean, Paticcasamuppada is so deep that we can't send
the sounding cord to the bottom. Therefore, even though he gave a voluminous and
finely detailed explanation, there is no guarantee that it reaches the bottom of the
ocean.
This kind of explanation gives rise to a problem: when defilements (kilesa) and karma
(e.g., ignorance and mental concocting) in this life give rise to results in some far off
future life, it is as if there are no karmic results (vipaka) at all which we will receive in
this birth in which the deed was done. That means that we have no chance to see
the results of our karma in this life at all. The person with defilements or the doer of
karma will not receive the effects of his karma in the present life in time for him to see
it. He must wait for some future life.
If Buddhagosa used that word "jati" as understood in the language of ultimate truth,
as I have done above, results immediately visible would arise every dayit would be
timeless, not delayed, and seen for oneself. To insist that defilements and karma
from a past life become effective in this, a later life, is impossible. And when it is said
that the same person exists in the past, present and future lives, it becomes
eternalism, an extremist view (anta-gahika-ditthi)'. And so it is contrary to
Paticcasamuppada as taught by the Buddha in order to eliminate eternalism and the
extremist view.
The most serious loss is that there is no freedom to control defilements or karma
because they are in different births than we are in. This life is a result, we are results,
we sit here as results. And the cause of the result, the karma and defilements, are in
another life, the last life. And the defilements and karma in this life will become
results in some distant future life. We derive no benefit, then, from our actions. This
is called the lack of freedom in receiving immediately visible results to our deeds.
When Paticcasamuppada is explained in this way, it means that we cannot do
anything and receive satisfactory results in this life.
Karma performed in this life must await results in the next life. Where can there be
51
satisfaction in this? This explanation is contrary to the principle of savakha-dhamma
sa-vakhato bhagavata dhammo: "The dhamma well expounded by the Perfect One,"
which is:
It is wrong on all counts. And it is wrong because it wrongly explains the word "jati" to
mean that birth spans three lifetimes in one turn of Paticcasamuppada. Don't forget
this point! The misuse of language here can cause great confusion!
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12 Personal Matters Regarding Buddhagosa
Now I want to critique some personal matters concerning Buddhagosa. No, I am not
going to insult or defame or vilify Buddhagosa. I just want to examine his personal
history and offer it as a rational basis for some observations concerning his
explanation of Dependent Origination. I only want to make some observations.
Buddhagosa was born a Brahmin. His lineage and background was Brahmin, and he
completed a study of the three Vedas like any other Brahmin. His spirit was that of a
Brahmin. Later on, he was ordained as a Buddhist monk. For the past 1,000 years,
many have believed him to be an Arahat. Archeologists believe that he was born in
the south of India and not in Magadha, the Middle Country (where the Buddha lived
and taught). Some people think he was a Mon, which is not the same as in the
commentaries, which claim him to be a person from the Middle Country. Ethnically
he was a Brahmin and then he became a Buddhist Arahat. If he later came to explain
the Buddhist theory of Dependent Origination as a form of Brahmanism, it is most
reasonable to suspect that he was careless and forgetful, so that cannot be
considered an Arahat. All I can say is that I offer this point for intelligent people to
consider.
This means that in the six foot long body appears the world, its cause, its cessation
and the means for its cessation. That is, the Holy Life in its entirety is in the six foot
body, a living body, not a dead one. All of these things appear in a living, feeling
body. The Buddha is the "knower of worlds" because he knows this world, which is
equivalent to the Four Noble Truths: the world; its cause; its cessation; and the
means to its cessation.
In explaining the Buddha's virtue of being a knower of worlds, Buddhagosa did not
explain it in this way. I think that his explanation is not Buddhist. He explained the
world of location (space) just as we have heard it passed down in the story of "The
Three Worlds of Pra Riiang."1 His explanation comes from beliefs passed on from
the Brahmins concerning the circumference of the world; its width; its length; the size
of the universe; the thickness of earth, water and air; the height of Mount Sumeru
53
and its encircling mountain ranges; the size of the Himalayas; the size of the Jambu
Tree; the characteristics of the seven world trees; the size of the sun and the moon
and the other three continents and so on and so on. This is not at all Buddhism. To
describe the world of location in this way as an explanation of the Buddha's virtue of
world knower to say that the Buddha knew all those facts and figures and so on
is something I don't believe at all. Just think about it. Such an explanation of the
world of location is Brahmanism. It comes from the Hindus, even before the time of
the Buddha.
When he explains beings of the world Buddhagosa explains that beings have
differing faculties. Some have little and some have much dust in their eyes. Some
have sharp faculties and others weak. Some know easily and others with difficulty.
Some are of good behavior and others are not. No mention is made of the world of
the Four Noble Truths.
When he explains the world of formations (sankhara), he says that the Buddha knew
about mentality/materiality, feeling, nutriments, attachment, sense bases, the states
of consciousness, the eight worldly conditions, the nine abodes of beings, the ten
sense bases, the twelve sense bases and the eighteen elements. Again, there is no
explanation of the Four Noble Truths, which are a complete explanation of the world.
It is for these reasons that I hold Buddhagosa's explanation of the Buddha's virtue of
lokkhavithu to be just lofty Bra.hminism. What is explained in a Buddhist sense is
diluted ani not in accord with the fourfold sense of the world as spoken of by the
Buddha: the world, the cause of the world, the cessation of the world and the means
to the cessation of the world, all of which may be found in this six foot long living
body with perception and mind, as the Buddha mentioned again and again. The
heart of the matter is that, when Buddhagosa explains it in his way, it is not
Buddhism.
In fact, it is Dependent Origination itself that explains the world, its cause, its
cessation and the means to its cessation. And it is in this six foot body. This means
that Dependent Origination, in the order of arising and in the order of cessation, is in
each person who is still alive in this very body. Someone who is still alive and not
dead, with a body, has in him both the arising and the cessation of Dependent
Origination. There is no way that there can be a soul, a self, a being or an individual
at all.
There are still some other matters that have caused confusion: for example, the four
kinds of morality consisting of purification (catu parisuddhisila). These four kinds of
morality are found nowhere other than in the Visuddhimagga of Buddhagosa. He
made restraint of the senses a precept of morality and, in so doing, has caused a
difficulty for students. He also made purification of livelihood a precept to add to the
problem. Then he made the four requisitesrobes, almsfood, shelter and
medicineanother precept of morality. All of this has made a mass of confusion with
regards to morality. It is a problem for any rational study of the matter. This definition
of morality is found nowhere in the Pali Scriptures. It appears only in the
Visuddhimagga of Buddhagosa.
54
Another matter is the two kinds of Nibbana. Buddhagosa explains that when an
Arahat dies it is called an-upadi-sesa-nibbtina: the full extinction of the groups of
existence. An Arahat who is still alive is called sa-upadi-sesa-nibbana: the full
extinction of defilements. These two kinds of nibbana are talked about a lot in the
Visuddhimagga, but they are not in accordance with the Pali Tripitika (for example,
the Ithivuttaka in the Khuddaka-nikaya).
There are many things concerning which I don't agree with Buddhagosa. I don't
agree 100 percent with him because there are some things I don't yet understand or
to which I cannot adjust. I have said much and I may be criticized by those who hold
that Buddhagosa is fully an Arahat. But we can whisper to our friends: "Go ahead
and take a critical look at it. It is not necessary to believe me."
Next I want to talk about the reasons that Dependent Origination does not span three
births. Those reasons are many.
(1) The first reason is concerned with the language of relative truth and the language
of ultimate truth. Dependent Origination is definitely not of the language of the
common folk. I've already written about this above. If Dependent Origination is in the
language of relative truth, then it would follow that when the Buddha became
enlightened, he would have to have died right there under the Bodhi Tree. When
ignorance ceased, so would mental concocting, consciousness and
mentality/materiality. This would have been to die. This shows that Dependent
Origination is not spoken of in the language of relative truth. Ignorance was
extinguished, mental concocting was extinguished, consciousness and
mentality/materiality were extinguished, but the Buddha did not die there and then.
He lived forty-five more years to teach us. This shows that Dependent Origination is
not spoken of in the language of relative truth.
Even in the order of arising, it is the same. Ignorance gives rise to mental concocting,
which give rise to consciousness, which gives rise to mentality/materiality. It is not a
birth of mentality/materiality as in the language of relative truth, because the Buddha
asserted that when feeling arose as delight, then there would arise craving,
attachment, becoming and birth. No one dies bodily and no one is born bodily. One is
still as one was, but in one's mind there is arising and ceasing: the arising of the "I"
concept and the ceasing of the "I" concept.
The term "mentality/materiality" in this case is used in terms of the language of
ultimate truth. In the common language, mentality/materiality is the mind/body
combination that we have all the time. It can be said that, after birth, it exists all the
time. This is really speaking in the language of relative truth: having been born, it
(mentality/materiality) exists all the time. The inflated language of absolute reality,
that of the Abhidhamma, would say that there are many successive births every
thought moment. But the language of the Buddha, which is the real language of
ultimate truth, says of this matter that there is birth every time there is ignorant sense
contact, followed by a passing away each time. If you use the language of relative
truth for the entire series of Dependent Origination, then one cycle of Dependent
Origination must include two births and so it becomes incomprehensible. This very
point is what made it necessary to explain it in terms of two becomings and three
55
lives, making it a kind of eternalism. This is the difference between the language of
relative truth and the language of ultimate truth.
Now I would like to give the last example, which unquestionably shows the difference
between the language of relative truth and the language of ultimate truth. I am
referring to the word "sambhavesi." When we do the water pouring ceremony to pay
respect to the dead, we say a chant which, when translated, implies that there are
two kinds of beings: "bhuta" or "produced beings," beings already born, and
"sambhavesi" or beings not yet born, Generally, in Thailand and everywhere else,
people explain these two words by saying there are these two types of beings: those
already born and still living, like you and I (these are called "bhuta"), and those which
are called "sambhavesi," who are pure spirits without bodies, floating about in
location (space) looking around for a place to be born.
The above explanation is strictly in terms of the language of relative truth and it is
also another religion, because it is not Buddhism. It is not Buddhism because
Buddhism does not assert that there is a spirit or a self which can float around, an
inherent individual looking for a birthplace. Such an idea appears only in eternalism,
not in Buddhism. That which is called "vinnana" (consciousness) must always be a
paticca-samuppana-dhamma. It always arises and passes away according to the
immediate prevailing conditions. There is no inherent spiritual individual floating
around in space. Therefore the sambhavesi of the language of relative truth is not the
sambhavesi of Buddhism. This is my opinion! The Buddhist sambhavesi must be
understood in terms of the language of ultimate truth and it is not at all the same as
the sambhavesi of the language of relative truth. Sambhavesi, or the unborn, means
the mind of an ordinary person at those times when there is no craving, attachment,
or clinging to a concept of self.
If you cannot understand this point, please attend carefully. In any given day, it is the
normal thing for most of us that sometimes we have craving, attachment and clinging
to an "I" concept. "I am this," or "This is mine." Most of the time, however, it is not like
that. There is a passive, non-grasping state. For example, as you sit and read this,
you have no "I" concept because you have no craving or attachment. You are empty
of the "I" delusion; you are just sitting and reading. But sometimes craving and
grasping, which are so hot as to cause suffering, arise in you. So there are these two
states. When there is craving and attachment to the "I" concept, which is violently
hot, that is bhuta, or having been born. Then there is the more normal state of
sambhavesi, or awaiting to lie born, ready for birth. These are the two kinds of beings
-which the water pouring ceremony prays for: the foolish who are already born and
those who are free from illusion and not yet born.
If we speak in the language of Abhidhamma for a moment, we can say that the mind
that is not in a state of rest or sleep (bhavanga), but, rather, awakened from
bhavanga, has the quality of alertness (avajjana), and has not yet arrived at the point
of creating the illusions of "me" or "mine." It is a mind in its natural state, free from the
flow of Dependent Origination, the naturally void mind. This is the state of
sambhavesi for ordinary people. What this means is that when a thought process
begins to evolve naturally, there is, actually, no defilement or craving to be a self or
56
to consider something as "mine." Such a state is sambhavesi. Anyone who is in this
state of sambhavesi may be said to be awaiting the birth of the delusions of "me" and
"mine." It is a pitiable kind of sambhavesi, because it is primed for the birth of the
"I/mine" delusion at any moment.
Now, when an object enters the consciousness that is not mindful and is beclouded
by ignorance, then the "I/mine" delusion arises, which is bhuta or birth, a most pitiful
condition. One should have love and compassion for such a born person. The water
pouring ceremony is performed in memory of both those born and those awaiting
birth. But once the "I/mine" delusion has arisen, its power will last only momentarily.
Such a bhuta will occur when there is anger or love, but in less than an hour, the
power of that anger or love will pass away and the born being will die and become
sambhavesi again. The being awaiting birth will wait like that and, momentarily, there
will be production of the "I/mine" delusion again by means of lust, or anger, or hate,
or fear, or whatever else it is that sets the cycle of Dependent Origination into motion
for one revolution. That is one bhuta and, in a moment, the conditions of that bhuta
will dissolve and pass away, and the being returns to a state of sambhavesi.
I assert that this kind of sambhavesi can be used to one's advantage; it can become
a practice; it is something that allows a measure of control. It is very different from
the kind of sambhavesi that floats around looking for a new place to be born after
one dies and is put in a coffin. I don't believe that this is sambhavesi. Moreover, it is
of no interest because it can't be used to any advantage. It can't be observed or
understood and so it becomes a mere belief in what others say. And to top it all off, it
is a kind of sambhavesi with eternalism mixed in as well.
There is a Pali text that is supportive to the unconventional interpretation that I have
taken here. It is concerned with the four nutriments and appears in the 1st Sutta of
the Sustenance Suttas, in the Kindred Sayings on Cause. The Buddha talked about
the four nutriments: material food (kavalinkarahara), sense and mental impressions
(phassahara), mental volition (mano-sangcetanahara) and consciousness
(vinnahara). The Buddha said that these four are for the setting up (existence) of
beings already born, or bhuta, and for the support of beings that are still sambhavesi.
These four kinds of nutriments were explained by the Buddha with similes, showing
that they are concerned with the daily lives of people here and now. On any given
day, we are those two kinds of beings. The four kinds of nutriment merely have the
function of rendering assistance to the establishment of a receptacle for bhuta
beings, those beings already born.
I brought this example up to let you understand that even the words sambhavesi and
bhuta have two meanings depending on whether one is using the language of
relative truth or ultimate truth. Moreover, I want you to see which kind can be of
benefit in the study and practice of Dhamma and which is in our power to control.
That kind is the language of ultimate truth. It seems sort of surprising that everyone
who is usually still without defilements is sambhavesi. But when defilements arise
there is craving and attachment and they become bhuta beings. Therefore any
57
individual who has not yet died is first sambhavesi, then bhuta, then sambhavesi,
then bhuta, and so on.
Now we want to restrain completely both bhuta and sambhavesi beings. For this we
must rely on the correct practice according to Dependent Origination. Don't allow the
self to arise. Don't allow the "I" concept to fully blossom or even partially blossom, in
the sense of waiting for a time of birth as sambhavesi or bhuta beings, so that the
four kinds of nutriment can be eliminated completely. Don't allow the four kinds of
nutriment to become meaningful or allow them to brew up the "I" concept. This is a
beneficial knowledge of Paticcasa-muppada. This is how to understand sambhavesi
in terms of both the language of relative truth and the language of ultimate truth.
Now I'd like to consider another example: suffering. There are many levels of the
meaning of suffering. On the highest level of the language of ultimate truth, there is
the suffering as explained in Paticcasamuppada. In the Pali Scriptures concerned
with Dependent Origination, the word suffering appears: it arises (Dependent
Origination in the order of arising) and it passes away (Dependent Origination in the
order of cessation). The word suffering here is not the same as elsewhere: it has a
special meaning when it appears as a part of dependent Origination. In the arising of
suffering, ignorance gives rise to sankhara and sankhara gives rise to
consciousness, all the way up to suffering. This is the Dependent Origination of the
arising of suffering.
This entire series of Dependent Origination in the order of arising has been called the
wrong way of practice. You can see it for yourself in the 3rd Sutta of the Buddha
Suttas.2 What is the wrong way? The wrong way is the wheel of existence giving rise
to suffering. And what is the right way? The correct way is the wheel of existence
leading to the cessation of suffering.
The word "suffering" in the order of arising refers to the genesis of suffering; and in
the order of cessation it refers to its extinction. This use of the word is not the same
as elsewhere, because it only refers to suffering which depends on attachment and
grasping. Therefore, merit is suffering; demerit is suffering; imperturbability is
suffering.
That demerit is a state of wrongness is easy to see. But merit and imperturbability
are also suffering and, as such, states of wrongness. Even though there is merit and
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imperturbability, they are still wrong because they are foundations of attachment. In
fact, imperturbability tends towards merit, bit it is not called merit. It is called
steadfastness, not stirring after either merit or demerit. But it still has the "I" delusion.
Those who are imperturbable are what we like to call Brahmas or great beings.
These beings still have a sense of the "I" delusion. They are not attached to merit or
demerit, but they have the "I" delusion. Even though they are steadfast, their minds
are steadfast in jhana and meditative achievements, which are foundations for
attachment because they have the "I" delusion: "this is my imperturbability", and so it
is suffering. Please understand that merit and suffering are all intermingled with each
other.
Most people say merit and they want happiness or goodness. But in the language of
Dependent Origination both are the same: both are suffering. Merit is suffering;
goodness is suffering; wholesomeness is suffering because they are all pa-ticca-
samuppanna-dhamma and will lead to suffering. If you can see this and accept that
the language of relative and ultimate truth are different from and opposed to each
other and, if you choose to use the language of ultimate truth when talking about
Dependent Origination, you will understand it more easily.
In order to more easily remember this, let us put it this way: the principles of
Dependent Origination are not used with children in the womb because foetuses in
the womb do not yet have clear enough feelings to have ignorance, craving and
attachment. The Mahatanhasankhaya Sutta3 talks about the birth of a child and the
arising of Dependent Origination. In this Sutta the Buddha clearly describes how a
person's life begins.4
The Buddha said that when a man and a woman come together in sexual
intercourse, and if it is the time of the woman's period, and if the sperm, unites with
the egg, then a human being will be born. If the man and the woman don't come
together, there is no chance for birth. If the man and the woman have intercourse but
it is not the time of the woman's period, there will be no birth. Or if the man and the
woman come together and the woman is fertile but the sperm does not fertilize the
egg, there will be no birth. There must be three conditions present for birth to take
place: sexual intercourse, the fertility of the woman and the fertilization of the egg by
the sperm.
After nine or ten months, the baby will be born. While still a baby, the child will play
as a baby, with toys, sand, dirt or anything at all. When the baby gets older and all
the while his parents have tried to please him by way of sight, sound, smell, taste
and tactile sensation, the child will begin to experience satisfaction and
dissatisfaction. This is the beginning of Dependent Origination.
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Dependent Origination doesn't arise for the foetus in the womb or the very young
child. Dependent Origination begins to take effect only when the child begins to feel
and know grasping and clinging. As the Buddha says clearly in the Scriptures: "The
young child will be aroused to love the thing he sees when sense consciousness
arises. He will be displeased with the unpleasant sight. He will live with his body
without mindfulness. His mind will not be heavy (without knowledge or wisdom;
without being full-of unwholesomeness). He will not know the deliverance of the mind
or the deliverance through wisdom which is real and of the kind that, when known,
will cause all demerit and unwholesomeness to pass away completely."
Pay attention and I will review that: a foetus in the womb is, in time, born as a baby.
While still small, the baby plays in the dirt and sand as it will until there comes a time
when the child becomes concerned with the five sense satisfactions of sight, smell,
sound, taste and tactile sensation. The child sees something lovely and loves it or is
aroused by it. The child sees something unpleasant and it is disturbed and
dissatisfied. The child lives in a state without mindfulness, which means that the child
does not know how to establish mindfulness. There is only ignorance, a mind that is
light-weight, that floats about and is buffeted by sense impressions.
What is strange is that the child does not know about the deliverance of the mind or
deliverance through wisdom as it really is, the kind of deliverance that leads to the
complete extinction of demerit and unwholesomeness. It is rather funny, but it is also
most real. The young child does not know about deliverance of the mind or through
wisdomthe way to make the mind free of defilements and emotions. The child
doesn't know about deliverance and has no mindfulness.
That child lives wrapped up in satisfaction and dissatisfaction, back and forth, back
and forth. He tastes the fruits of feelings. Some are pleasurable, some unpleasurable
and some are neutral. The child is pleased to sing the praises of the pleasant
feelings and become all wrapped up in them. When pleasure arises, then arises
attachment, becoming, birth, old age and death.
We are talking about the young child who, upon birth, has no knowledge of anything
at all. Dependent Origination does not become operative until the child becomes
concerned with the five sense pleasures and knows satisfaction and dissatisfaction.
The child has no wisdom or knowledge of the deliverance that is liberation from
suffering; the child is unable to establish mindfulness because of ignorance.
When the child tastes feelings from the five sense satisfactions, of which some are
pleasant, some unpleasant and some neutral, he becomes very pleased so that he
loudly sings their praises: "Oh! this is good! Oh! this is delicious!" This is singing the
praises of pleasure. Then the child becomes beclouded, befuddled and all wrapped
up in the flavors of those feelings, and delight arises in the mind of the child. When
the child sees a desirable form, he is aroused and excited by it. When he sees an
ugly form, he rebels and averts from it. This is the birth of delight, which is
attachment. This, then, is the arising of Dependent Origination. A child must be old
enough to understand the meaning of the five sense gratifications for Dependent
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Origination to become operative. The child's mind must also beclouded with
ignorancethere must be a lack of the knowledge of deliverance.
In order for Dependent Origination to become operative, the following factors are
necessary: the child must be old enough to know about the five sense pleasures.
The child must not have knowledge of Dhamma or wisdom. When the child has
experienced a feeling, there must be great enjoyment and praise and the child must
become lost or bound up in that feeling. This last point refers to nandi or delight,
which is attachment. This is how Dependent Origination becomes operative. When
the child is grown up, even if not yet to the age of marriage, the child can have these
symptoms. When the child begins to know about the five sense pleasures, then
Dependent Origination can become operative in that child.
We have had a great deal of misunderstanding and confusion about this matter. Now
we have seen that the Buddha's own -words clearly show that it is as I have related
above. Such a child may have existence and be born. A little child may exist and be
born anew and not the kind of existence or birth from a mother's womb. And this child
may have many existences and births every time he has an emotion resulting from
one of the five sense pleasures. As already explained, every day, month and year,
there may be many, many existences and birthstoo many to count. And it is not
necessary to die and enter the coffin to have a new existence and birth every day.
This is the flow of Dependent Origination in a recently born child.
(3) Now, most importantly, we come to the point that the entire series of Dependent
Origination operates so quickly that it is beyond catching. It may be called a lightning
flash. Lightning is extremely fast. In a flash it disappears. And in that brief space, the
eleven elements or twelve conditions of Dependent Origination may all arise,
exercise their function and pass away, so fast that we are completely unaware of it.
When we are angry, we suffer. In a flash, we are angry and experience suffering
one complete operation of Dependent Origination. We don't realize that, in that brief
moment, the eleven elements arose and passed away, each in its order, from
ignorance to mental concocting to consciousness to mentality/materiality to sense
bases to contact to feeling to craving to attachment to becoming to birth. All eleven in
their order in the briefest of moments. So, for example, we see something with the
eye and immediately there is desire or aversion, complete and whole. This is a
lightning flash. But that brief time can be analyzed into eleven elements which, taken
together, are called Dependent Origination.
In the Loka Sutta5 the Buddha describes the world, its cause, its cessation and the
way to its cessation by referring to Dependent Origination in the following way:
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Bhikkhus! What is the arising of the world like? Conditioned by the eye and form, eye
consciousness arises. These three coming together are contact. With contact as a
condition, feeling arises. With feeling as a condition, craving arises. With craving as a
condition, attachment arises. With attachment as a condition, existence arises. With
existence as a condition, birth arises. With birth as a condition, old age, death,
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and tribulation arise. Bhikkhus! This is the arising of
the world.
The arising of Dependent Origination as generally related is what the Buddha said is
"the birth of the world." The arising of suffering is the arising of the world. And it
arises only when the internal and external sense bases come in contact and
consciousness arises.
(4) Now I'd like to clarify existence and birth some more. It's not a matter of dying and
entering the coffin but rather one becomes and is born many times a day.
While chewing just one mouthful of food in your mouth and not yet having swallowed
it, it is possible that many existences and many births may come to pass. Suppose,
for example, that it takes you two minutes or even just one minute to chew your food
before swallowing it. In those sixty seconds, your thoughts may lead you back and
forth concerning the good or bad taste of the food, or you may become entranced
with a host of other thoughts in relation to the food's taste. In just this brief time, the
"I" delusion and the "mine" delusion may arise in this way and that way until you
swallow your food and take another mouthful. Before you finish your meal, you may
have countless existences and births. If you are a great thinker or feeler or, if the
environment is filled with distractions, then before you can eat your fill at one sitting,
you may have many existences and many births.
Bhikkhus! If there is really lust, nandi, and craving in material food, then the
consciousness is established therein and fully blossoms in that food. And wherever
the consciousness is established and blossoms, there also will be the development
of mind/body.6
Do you understand that correctly? Maybe it's too deep to understand correctly, so re-
read it until you are sure you understand it.
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"While chewing a mouthful of food, if you think that it tastes good and you have
intense delight, satisfaction and craving for that good taste, then at that moment
consciousness is established and fully blossoms. This means that before you can
fully chew and swallow your food, there are many opportunities for consciousness to
arise: "Oh! This is good! Yummy! I gotta have some more! Umm, umm good!!" Each
time you react in that way, a consciousness arises. And each time consciousness
arises, it conditions the arising of mentality/materiality.
Feelings are established in the mind, first in this way and then in that way, depending
on the power of consciousness. It is there that the mind/body which changes and
performs its functions arises. Before this moment, mind/body wasn't performing and
functioning. Now it arises to perform its function conditioned by consciousness.
Consciousness may arise many times. Mentality/materiality arises and passes away
many times also, in response to the condition of consciousness, all in the space of
chewing a mouthful of rice. So it is that the Buddha said that wherever
consciousness arises, meaning in this example, the mouthful of food, there it is
established and blossoms. The arising of mentality/materiality will also be there in
that mouthful of food. The consciousness for each swallowed mouthful is not the
same consciousness in each case. There are many kinds of feeling arising which
may all be associated with good taste and so there are many kinds of mentality
/materiality arising before one mouthful of food can be chewed and swallowed.
The scriptures go on: "Whenever mental concocting is perfected, there also will be
the arising of a new existence." While sitting and eating some food, mental
concocting is at work right there, and there will be a new existence arising right there
also. Before you can get up from the table, a new existence has arisen in that place.
The scriptures continue: ''Wherever a new existence has arisen, there also will arise
birth, old age and death."
If this point is explained in terms of the language of relative truth, it must become a
matter of future birth. But the Pali Scriptures of the Buddha's sayings don't allow such
an interpretation. It says that if satisfaction, lust and craving arise while just chewing
some food, then there will be a new existence. It doesn't say anything more than that.
That takes care of material food.
The other three kinds of nutrimentsthe nutriments of contact, mental volition and
consciousnessare dealt with in the same way. This allows us to see more clearly
that the function of material food is just as described above. The non-material
nutriments are even faster. The non-material nutriments which come from the mind
alone give rise to new existences and births in an even faster fashion. This is a fact
which you must see concerning this Sutta.
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The principle we are concerned with here is that lust or satisfaction, or excited
arousal and pleasure in good taste, arises only when there is a tasting of food. When
there is no chewing, no eating, no such activity, then such emotions cannot arise.
Therefore, any of those things that we have been talking about can arise only when
there is a sensation of good taste at the tongue, while chewing food. Tongue
consciousness is established in that food and fully arises there. The longer this
happens, the more consciousness arises and blossoms.
I want all of you to know that this kind of consciousness which arises and blossoms
due to intense delight and satisfaction while chewing food is just ordinary
consciousness. It is not the linking consciousness of the uninformed. It is the ordinary
consciousness of Dependent Origination which gives rise to existence and birth in
the real sense of Dependent Origination: here and now and in great numbers. When
it is said that "mentality/materiality makes a sounding,"7 it means that it simply
perceives or feels the food's good taste that is presently being chewed in the mouth.
Just at this moment, mind/ body performs its full function. It is not the case that
mentality/materiality, mind/body, are born, die and enter a coffin in order to be
reborn.
That which is called "the perfection of mental concocting means mental concocting in
Dependent Origination: that which brews up body, speech and mind to function with
greater and greater vigor, being, robustness and breadth. In the Pali it says "the
perfection of mental concocting," and it is very fast at the moment of chewing good
tasting food. It can give rise to new existence and new birth-a new "I" delusion, and
yet again another "I" delusion, and yet again and again and again; I, I, I...all strung
together on top of one another in a big broad mass. This is called the perfection of
mental concocting.
The problems concerned with the "I" delusion, be they problems of birth, old age,
sickness, death or whatever, are many, and suffering is much. And so the Buddha
continued: "Bhikkhus! Hereafter, wherever birth, old age and death are, we call that
thing filled with grief, with dust and with tribulation." Difficult, mind disturbing
problems about birth, old age and death are disturbing because of attachment to the
"I" delusion, which sees those things as belonging to the self, to "me".
The problems of birth, old age and death may appear anywhere or in anything at all.
The Buddha said that such things were filled with sadness, dust and tribulation. That
means that any new existence of the "I" delusion is full of sadness, defilements and
frustration. There can be innumerable new existences or births in the brief time of
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chewing delicious food where there is intense delight, craving and satisfaction. This
also gives rise to mental concocting. It is complete and it equals one turn of the
wheel of Dependent Origination.
1. "The Three Worlds of Pra Ruang" is a famous work in Thai literature, set in the
period when Sukhothai was the center of Thai power. The world view described by
Buddhagosa is taken for granted in this story, as well as in many other works of Asian
literature.
2. MahayamaKag-vagga, Majjhima-nikaya, PTS pp. 311 ff.
3. Mahatanhasankhaya Sutta, Mahayamaka-vagga, Majjhimanikaya, PTSp.311
4. Ibid., pp. 321 ff.
5. The Chapter on Winning Security, The Third Fifty Suttas of the Kindred Sayings on
the Sixfold Sphere of Sense, Salayatana-vagga, Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS p. 53.
6. 4th Sutta, The Great Chapter in the Kindred Sayings on Cause, Nidana-vagga,
Sangyutta-nikaya, PTS p. 71.
7. A Thai idiom. "Sounding" is a literal translation of the phrase used by sailors in
determining the water's depth. When used with the Thai word for mind or heart
("chai"), it simply means to think or to feel. The Thai idiom, however, graphically
depicts the way that many people think about the mind and its operations: the mind is
like an object that is sent out to test the depth of the present experience, which in turn
reflects a bias towards the eternalist extreme.
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13 The Foundation of Practice or The Radiant of Dependent
Origination
The Buddha's words concerning this speak about an order of extinguishing suffering
which is rather strange. The Buddha said: "for the person who knows and who sees,
I will talk; for the person who does not know or does not see, I will not talk concerning
the end of the asava." The end of the asava will come when one sees the nature of
the arising and passing away of the aggregates. Concerning the ending of the asava,
the Buddha said that it was possible that they would end when one knew about and
saw the arising and the nature of the arising and passing away of the five aggregates
of clinging, namely, body, feeling, recognition, mental formations, and
consciousness. When one really knows the nature of these and the nature of their
"arising and passing away, that will mean the end of the asava. The end of the asava
will come because of this knowledge. The Buddha said that he could speak of these
things because he knew them and saw them. If he didn't know and didn't see these
things, he would not have spoken.
If the end of the asava occurs, there will be consciousness of its end. This knowledge
of the end of asava will arise when there is deliverance; deliverance or liberation will
arise because of fading away or detachment; fading away or detachment will arise
with aversion or disgust; aversion or disgust will arise with absolute knowledge, or
knowledge of how things really are; absolute knowledge will arise with concentration;
concentration will arise with happiness; happiness will arise with tranquility or
quietude; tranquility will arise with rapture; rapture will arise with joy; joy will arise
with faith; and faith will arise with suffering as a condition.
Ignorance - Nibbana
Mental Concocting - Knowledge of the Deliverance
Consciousness - Deliverance
Mind/Body - Fading Away
Sense Bases - Disgust
Contact - Knowledge of How Things Are
Feeling - Concentration
Craving - Happiness
Attachment - Tranquility
Becoming - Rapture
Birth - Joy
Old Age, Death, Suffering - Faith
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Now the matter turns to Dependent Origination: suffering is based on birth; birth on
becoming; becoming on attachment; attachment on craving; craving on feeling;
feeling on contact; contact on sense bases; sense bases on mentality/ materiality;
mentality/materiality on consciousness; consciousness on mental concocting; mental
concocting on ignorance.
This means that the end of asava depends on all the various conditions, in the order
mentioned, until one comes down to faith. If we have confidence in the Buddha, the
Dhamma and the Sangha, if we have confidence that the practice will end suffering,
this is called the beginning of faith. Now let's trace all the conditions back:
Faith depends on suffering. This is strange. I would guess that not too many people
have ever heard it put this way. The faith we have we have because of suffering. If
suffering did not oppress us, we would not run to the Buddha for refuge. Isn't that so?
We run to the Buddha as a refuge. We have a firm and strict faith in the Buddha
because we have been oppressed by suffering. So in our life, suffering becomes the
condition of faith and so suffering becomes a good thing. Just like a jewel in the
forehead of the toad, which is really as ugly thing. In suffering there appears a
gem/that which drives us to run to the Buddha and have faith.
We have covered quite a lot of material. I'm sure that it will not be easy to remember
it all unless you review and study it well. In any case, I will now offer a brief summary.
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14 Conclusion
(1) The world, its cause, its cessation and the way to its cessation all arise when
there is sense contact, in the arising or the extinguishing cycle of Dependent
Origination. And all of this is in the six foot body that is alive and not dead.
(2) There is no way for the series of Dependent Origination conditions to span three
existences or three births, or to span any existence or birth as is said in the language
of relative truth. There is no reason to think so even when taking the literal
interpretation of the word "paticca."
The word "paticca" means to depend upon, but it is the kind of dependence which
does not admit of any gaps. There are a series of dependent connections. As the
simile goes: because of the sun, the world exists; because of the world, there is
water in the world; because of water in the world, there is evaporation; because of
evaporation, there are rain clouds; because of rain clouds, there is rain; because of
rain, there is rainfall; because of rainfall, there are wet roads; because of wet roads,
Mr. A slips; because Mr. A. slips, he cracks his head; because he cracks his head,
he goes to the doctor; because he goes to the doctor, he is better.
Can you interrupt the series anywhere? No. Each step must be connected
immediately, without any intervening spaces or things. That is the meaning of
"paticca." Dependent Origination means to be dependently connected in order to
arise, so it can't be divided into three existences and births.
If someone divides it into three lifetimes or births, it's like playful and fun filled study
without any truthfun filled study and debate concerning Dependent Origination.
The more profound it is, the more fun it is, but it is of no value at all because it can't
be practiced. It must be correct Dependent Origination according to the original Pali
Scriptures to be practical, to allow some measure of control, here, within one's grasp.
That means that we may use it in a practical way. It is subject to our management.
The kind of Dependent Origination which depends on a three birth span is like a kind
of tumor or cancer which can't be cured.
(3) The heart of the matter is that Dependent Origination becomes operative each
time there is sense contact with a person who is old enough (not a foetus in the
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womb and not a small baby with no knowledge of anything at all). The person must
be old enough to know something and the sense contact must arise without
mindfulness or wisdom, but only with ignorance. The external and internal sense
bases help give rise to consciousness, which gives rise to mentality/materiality
immediately, which immediately gives rise to the sense bases, which become
mind/body immediately or which become new sense bases in order to act upon the
initial ignorance. All of this happens in a flash, like lightning. If it is very intense, it
may even be startling.
(4) Dependent Origination demonstrates the fact of suffering, its arising and its
passing away. It does not demonstrate the owner of suffering, who carries suffering
across existences and births. There is no owner of suffering. Suffering arises without
an owner. Please see that Dependent Origination shows the arising and passing
away of suffering and not the owner of the suffering which arises and passes away. It
also shows the principles of the causes and conditions in detail, so it is practical and
unlike anything else in the world.
Now I'd like to make a confession: I studied Dependent Origination that was not
according to the Buddha's intention. I couldn't help it because I was a Dhamma
student. And for one year after that, I also taught Dependent Origination in the
incorrect way that spans three births. Therefore, I'd like to confess and ask
forgiveness now. And let me affirm that I have tried all these tens of years to discover
Dependent Origination that is within our means to control and that can be practiced;
that, with mindfulness, can be used to protect one as soon as contact arises. This is
the only beneficial kind of Paticcasamuppada that can be practiced.
If you ask how can it be practiced, the only answer is to have mindfulness when
there is sense contact. Don't let your mindfulness become forgetful. Don't allow
ignorance to brew up consciousness, mentality/materiality and sense bases of the
sort that will experience suffering. See that you remain in your original state. To be
sambhavesi, not born, is better because there is then no suffering.
May you all have correct understanding from now on. May you understand
Paticcasamuppada correctly. Even in the kitchen while eating good tasting food,
Dependent Origination may arise many, many times.
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sunnata and Abhidhamma and I'm loudly criticized in Thailand. But in talking about
Dependent Origination, I am sure that it will cause a more widespread reaction. But
since I am a "servant of the Buddha" I must do what I do. I must fight and work
against whatever I know to be to the detriment of the Buddha. Therefore, I am not
afraid that anyone will criticize me, even if it is throughout the universe, let alone the
world.
So this is the exposition of Dependent Origination that doesn't span existences and
births, and of Dependent Origination that does span existences and births. These
differ as I have shown. The kind that spans existences and births is useless and can't
be practiced. Leave it for the loud conversations of the philosophers who don't have
any self-knowledge. As for the practical kind of Dependent Origination, it was taught
by the Buddha himself. If we accept that kind, we will be able to extinguish suffering
and won't become associated with eternalists or extremists; it is completely perfect
and practical.
All of this is advice that I offer to those interested in study, so that they can study in
the greatest detail.
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