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THE JOURNAL

OF THE INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF

BUDDHIST STUDIES

EDITOR-IN-CHIEF

A. K. Narain
University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA

EDITORS
Heinz Bechert Leon Hurvitz
Universitdt Gottingen, FRG UBC, Vancouver, Canada

Lewis Lancaster Alexander W. MacDonald


University of California, Berkeley, USA Universite de Paris X, Nanterre, France

B. f. Stavisky Alex Wayman


WNIIR, Moscow, USSR Columbia University, New York, USA

ASSOCIATE EDITOR

Stephan Beyer
University of Wisconsin, Madison, USA

Volume 4 1981 Number I


CONTENTS

I. ARTICLES

The Concepts of Truth and Meaning in the Buddhist


Scriptures, by Jose I. Cabezon 7
Changing the Female Body: Wise Women and the Bodhi-
sattva Career in Some Maharatnakvtasutras, by Nancy
Schuster 24
liodhi and Amhattaphala. From early Buddhism to early
Mahayana, h Karel Werner 70

II. SHORT PAPERS

A Study on the Madhyamika Method of Refutation and Its


Influence on Buddhist Logic, by Shohei Ichimura 87
An Exceptional Group of Painted Buddha Figures at Ajanta,
fry Anand Krishna 96
Rune E. A. Johansson's Analysis of Citta: A Criticism, by
Arvind Sharma 101

III. BOOK REVIEWS AND NOTICES

Cross Currents in Early Buddhism, fry S. N. Dube 108


Buddha's Lions—The Lives of the Eighty-Four Siddhas, by
James B. Robinson 111
Tangles and Webs, by Padmasiri de Silva 113
Buddhist and Freudian Psychology, by Padmasiri de Silva 114
Buddhist-Christian Empathy, by Joseph J. Spae 115
T h e Religions of Tibet, by Guiseppe Tucci 119

IV. NOTES AND NEWS

A Report on the 3rd Conference of the IABS 123


Buddhism and Music 127
Presidential Address at the 2nd IABS Conference at Nalanda
hyP.Prndhan 128

contributors 143
Rune E. A. Johansson's Analysis of
Citta: A Criticism

by Arvind Sharma

It has been questioned whether the enumeration of the five skandhas]


in Buddhist psychology is exhaustive of the human personality. 2 As a
matter of fact this question underlies the whole doctrine of anattd. In
this regard it has been asserted that "If it be true to say that the
Buddha has nowhere explicitly stated in so many words, that the
'being' (satta) is composed only of the khandhas, it would be a hundred
times truer to say that nowhere has he said of 'being' that it comprises
anything else at all, of any description whatsoever, apart from the five
khandhas."*
Rune E. A. Johansson has recently raised the question anew. He
remarks:

We have also the final question, whether the khandhd are to be


considered an exhaustive enumeration of all personality factors.
Is there nothing in personality not included in the khandhd}
There certainly is. Attn is denied, with good reason, but citta is
not denied. 4

He goes on to argue that this citta is "a name for the core of the
personality, mainly conscious but including also the subconscious
processes on which continuity depends. It is not a soul, but it reminds
of the 'ego' of Western psychology: the person knows that citta is what
he is; he usually identifies himself with it but need not do so; he can
observe his citta, discuss with it, train it, punish it, and so on." 5
Johansson seems to present two kinds of evidence, analytical
and empirical, to establish his case for the citta constituting the core of
the personality according to Buddhist psychology as found in the
Nikayas.
T h e analytical evidence turns on the analysis of the skandhas.
101
After an analysis of all the personality factors in relation to Nibbana
and after having identified citta as an independent personality factor,
he remarks:

T o some extent, it is possible to map the relations between citta


and other psychological factors. Sahhd and vedana are called
citta-sankhdra, so we know that the perceptual processes affect
citta. We also know that the working of citta is called sankhdra.
T h e relation of citta to vihndna is not so clear-cut. 6 There are
texts that simply identify vinhana with citta, and other that iden-
tify vihndna with sahhd and vedana. Vinhana is more frequently
said to be actively engaged in rebirth, and citta is frequently said
to attain nibbana. Nibbana is attained through the stopping of
vihhdria. T h e relations must be close, and probably vihndna is a
function of citta, a name for certain nrta-processes. When in the
case of ordinary rebirth, both are said to undergo this process
(never in the same context, always in different), then we may
assume a simple identification. In the case of a living person,
there should be no identification, because somebody should
experience the function of vinhana and also experience that it
has stopped: that is citta. Citta can go on functioning (vijjd,
pah ha, mettd, karuna are still to be found) and can observe vin-
hana and other khandhd as being still.7

The empirical evidence is provided, according to Johansson, by


the fact that the assertion that the arahant cannot be known either in
this life or afterwards "is not a universal truth, since arahants always
can recognize each other. . . . This fact will not surprise us once we
have understood that citta is the agency within the person which really
attains nibbana,"" and that it is "thought to survive death." 9 Johansson
goes on to stress that "we are not without information about exactly
what is thought to survive death in the arahant, although in a form
that not everybody can recognize, not even Mara or the gods." 10 He
goes on to say:

We know, however, that at least the Buddha himself claimed


ability to identify and report about dead arahants: We have, for
instance, the story about Vakkali ( S i l l 119 ff), who was ill and
killed himself. T h e Buddha said about him later: Apatitthitena ca
bhikkhavte vihhdnVakkali kulaputto parinibbuto ti, 'with con-
sciousness not established the noble-born Vakkali has attained
parinibbana.' A similar story is to be found in D II 91 f, where
Xnanda tells the buddha that a number of people, some monks
and some lay people, had died in Nadika, where the Buddha
102
and his disciples had just arrived, and asks what has happened to
them. He got detailed information, indeed, and among them
one monk was mentioned as arahant. We can take these stories
to mean that at least the Buddha himself was able to trace an
arahant even after death. After the quotations given earlier, this
would not seem to involve any fundamental difficulties, as there
seems to be small difference between his state before and after
death. One more text is worth quoting to this effect. In SN 1075,
the Buddha is asked: Atthan gato so uda va so natthi uddhu ve
sassatiyd arogo? 'The man who has gone to rest, is he no more or
is he forever free from illness?' And he replies: Atthan gatassa na
pamdnam atthi, yena nam vajju, tarn tassa n'atthi, sabbesu dhammesu
samuhatesu samuhatd vddapathdpi sabbe ti. 'There is no measure of
him who has gone to rest, by which to define him: that is not for
him; when all dhammd are removed, then all means of recogni-
tion are removed.' This informs us again that the arahant, when
dead, cannot be found or recognized, but an explanation is
given which is extremely interesting: dhammd are removed. The
PTA translation gives the rendering 'conditions,' but a more
normal translation would be 'ideations' or 'mental contents,'
'mental processes.' This would give an easily understandable
psychological meaning. For one of the effects of meditation is to
make the mind {citta or viiuuina) stable and empty of mental
contents {dhamma). As we know that citta was thought to survive,
it can easily be understood that an empty citta is more difficult to
read and recognize than the more complicated and desire-rid-
den 'normal' citta: it is more impersonal. In order to 'read' a
person's mind, there must be a mind to read, and this mind
must be as differentiated and rich in content as possible. Sabbesu
dhammesu samuhatesu may well imply the same psychological
process as I'irifubiassa nirodhena in A I 236, quoted above."

Johansson concludes that

the word nibbana is used because of the tire analogy (to some
extent, the word updddna and related words seem to be used for
the same reason). Still, it does not imply annihilation but rather
a different type of existence: perhaps a diluted, undifferen-
tiated, 'resting' existence, more or less impersonal but still recog-
nizable. 12

Is this evidence adduced by Johansson sufficient to challenge


the standard Theravada position on the question of whether the
arahant continues to exist after death? The standard Theravada
position, of course, is that "It does not fit the case to assert existence
or non-existence." 13
103
It is as much the Theravada position that one may not assert the
existence of the arhat after death, as that one may not posit his non-
existence. This was the elder Yamaka's view, and was corrected by
Sariputta. 1 4 Sariputta asserts that "A Tathagata cannot be held to be
perceived as existing even in this life in truth and reality," what to say
of his post-mortem state! But while Theravadins draw the conclusion
of the nonpredicability of the post-mortem state of the arhat from his
case, Johansson remarks:

What Sariputta wanted to stress here is that the anatta doctrine


applies also to the arahant and that he cannot be identified with
any of the personality factors {khandha). It is therefore not
possible to define what an arahant really is even in this life, and
so no conclusion can be drawn as to the state after death. The
khandha are anicca and dukkha and therefore dissolved: this is
pointed out in the continued discussion. Two things should be
noted: first that it is denied that the arahant is annihilated in
death, secondly that citta was not mentioned in this discussion.
T h e fact that the arahant cannot be known either in this life or
afterwards, is not a universal truth, since arahants always can
recognize each other. We find, for instance, in S I 194 that Maha
Moggallana in a company of five hundred arahants could check
that they really were arahants: Tesam sudam dyasmd Maha-Mog-
galldno cetasd cittam samannesati vippamuttam nirupadhim. 'The
venerable Maha-Moggallana saw with his mind (ceto) that their
mind {citta) was freed without basis (for rebirth remaining).'
This can only mean that the arahant has still his citta and that
this has kept enough of its individuality in order to be identi-
fied.' s

T h u s from the analytical point of view Johansson is relying on


'argument of silence' which is rather weak, especially as he is himself
unsure of the relation of citta to vifindna. Moreover, the expression
cetovimutti seems to go against it, as "Cetovimutti is . . . not identical
with Nibbana which is much higher than and completely different
from pure vifindna "xt> It is the empirical evidence which seems to
argue in favour of the case more strongly. One may first consider the
case of Vakkali. "In the Samyutta Nikdya, Buddha referring to the
parinibbdna or Vakkali bhikkhu said that the wicked Mara was search-
ing for the consciousness {vi ft nana) of Vakkali, who had been just
dead, and predicted that Mara's attempt would not be successful
because Vakkali had passed away {parinibbuto) with vifindna, which
needed no support (apatitthita). T h e sense of apatitthita-vinndna is
104
given elsewhere in the Samyutta Nikdya, where it is explained as con-
sciousness which arises only when attachment (rdga) to material ele-
ments of the body (rupa), and the other four constituents is removed.
It is unconstituted, devoid of growth and independent of any cause
and condition and hence free. Being free it is steady; being steady it is
happy; being happy it is without any fear of change for the worse;
being fearless it attains parinibbdna."'7
One may note that the Buddha did not say that he had recog-
nized Vakkali, rather that Mara will not recognize him because his
"consciousness is not established." The fact of his having attained
nirxdna is recognised on account of his caitsasika non-recognizability.
Obviously here is an alternative explanation of how an arhant recog-
nizes another or a Buddha identifies an arhat—the very noncog-
nizability serves to cognize arhathood. This possibility, it seems, has
not been taken into account by Johansson.
T o conclude: the evidence adduced by Johansson in favour of
citta as the element of the arhat surviving death does not seem to be
strong enough to lead one to modify the standard Theravada position
that the post-mortem state of the arhat is unpredicable.

NOTES

1. S. G. F. Brandon, ed., A Dictionary of Comparative Religion (New York: Charles


Scribner's Sons, 1970), pp. 3 9 4 - 3 9 5 .
2. Rune E. A. Johansson, The Psychology of Xiivana (London: George Allen Sc
Unwin. 1969). p. 68.
3. G. P. Malalasekera, ed., Encyclopedia of Buddhism Facsimile A-Aca (Government
of Ceylon, 1961), p. 475. It is further stated that "Numerous passages ran be quoted
from the Pitakas which show beyond all possible doubt that, in Buddhist ontology, when
'being' (satta) is resolved into the five khandhas, there is no residuum whatever left. It is
clearly stated in one passage (e.g., S.I 11, 46 f.) that "all samanas and brahmanas. who
talk about the world which is variously described by them, talk about it in reference to
the five khandhas or one or other of them.' Buddhaghosa says (Vism. xiv, § 218) that the
five khandhas were selected for this very purpose for examination to show tht there was
no residual self. So does Vasubandhu in the Abhidhannako'sa (chap, ix) where it is stated
that andtman is synonymous with skandha. dyatana and dhdtu" (ibid.).
4. Johansson, op. cit.. p. 68.
5. Ibid., p. 83. Note, however, that the comparison with 'ego' must be made with
caution. As Edward Conze has pointed out, it is "Hume's denial of the existence of the ego as
au entity distinct from mental processes" which "comes very near the Anatta-doctrine"
(Buddhism: Its Essence and Development (New York: Harper 8c Row, 1959J. pp. 19-20.
emphasis added).

105
6. Johansson remarks on this ambiguity elsewhere: "It remains to be said about
x'inndna, that it is probably one aspect of citta or a name for some of the processes of citta.
Both are said to be involved in rebirth, but we should of course not understand this as a
dual rebirth; the instrumental processes are the I'iniirina-processcs of citta. The basis of
rebirth (drrttiimanu, uftddcina) is the intense wish (uftddcina) to go on living. When vinfitina
has stopped, there are practically no r>mw>w-processes left in citta, and there is no base
for rebirth. F.vidently the arahant has conscious processes as long as he lives. This may
be explained in two ways, and it cannot be decided which is the more correct. There
may be two layers of citta: one surface layer which consists of the everyday pnxesses,
perceptions and reflections, and one deeper layer that is undifferentiated. Or perhaps
I) I 223 really describes the highest level of meditation which was considered the most
normal stepping-stone to nibbana and therefore in this text simply was described as a
characteristic of nibbana itself" (Rune E. A. Johansson, oft. at., pp. 76-77).
7. I hid., p. 83.
8. Ibid., p. 62.
9. Ibid.
10. Ibid., p. 63.
I I. Ibid., pp. 6 3 - 4 .
12. Ibid. T h e use of the Are analogy is not without its difficulties, though
elsewhere too Johansson suggests that "Perhaps the fire was thought to 'go back' to
some diluted, 'calm' existence, evenly distributed in matter, when it was extinguished
(but without ceasing to be fire)" (ibid., p. 61). Normally the danger with the fire-analogy
is that it suggested nm/inn involved annihilation, now the problem, from the ortruxfox
Theravada point of view seems to be that it suggests survival! "Some scholars who
inadvertently compared the extinction of the flame of a lamp to Nibbana, wrongly
interpreted it as annihilation. In the line quoted above there is no ambiguity that the
constituted mind (vifiiidna), which was normally functioning during Buddha's life-time
through the sense-organs, without, of course, attachment, hatred and delusion, ceased
finally, i.e., became fully emancipated. It did not require any more support (undrain-
maiia, (ifiatittbitu). It is the constituted mind that suffered extinction and has nothing to
do with Nibbana. which therefore cannot mean annihilation. Prof. Keith also relied on
the wrong rendering of the statement but he gave is an L'panisadic turn, saying that
the extinction of lire was not that which <xcurs to us of utter annihilation but rather
the flame returns to the primitive, pure, invisible state of fire, in which i( existed prior
to its manifestation in the form of visible fire.' Prof. Keith's interpretation is also not
acceptable, for, according to the Buddhist philosophy, Nibbana has nothing to do with
anything worldly and unlike the Upanisadic Brahman it can never have worldly mani-
festation similar to the flame of a lamp" (Nalinaksha Dutt, Early Monastic Buddhism
[Calcutta: Calcutta Oriental Book Agency, 196()|, pp. 280-281).
13. Edward J. Thomas, The History of Buddhist Thought (New York: Barnes &
Noble Inc.. 1971), p. 128. It should be noted though that the Buddha used the
expression "would not fit the case" not in relation to the question does "the saint exist
after death, etc." (see Henry Clarke Warren. Buddhism in Translations I New York:
Atheneutn. 1970], p. 122) but in relation to the question "will the saint be relx)rn" (ibid.,
p. 127).
14. See Samyutta iXikdya iii. 109. Edward J. Thomas presents the following
abbreviated account: "Here the charge of annihilationism is simply denied. In a
106
discourse attributed to Sariputta it is discussed ;uid refuted. The elder Yamaka had
formed the view, 'thus do 1 understand the doctrine taught by the Lord, that a monk, in
whom the asasas are destroyed is annihilated and destroyed with the dissolution of the
body, and does not exist after death.' Yamaka is made to admit that the body—and all
the other constituents of the individual are impermanent, and that, therefore, he
cannot sav ol anv one of them 'this is mine. 1 am this, this mv self." 'What do von think.
friend Yamaka, is a Tathagata the body?' 'No, friend.' (And so of feeling, perception.
the aggregates, and consciousness.) 'l>o you look on a Tathagata as existing in body,
etc-.?' 'No. friend." 'Do you look on a Tathagata as existing apart from body. etc.—or as
consisting ol them—or as existing without any of them?' To all these questions Yamaka
answers no. No loophole* is left for asserting the existence of a sell either within or
beyond the five constituents. The conclusion is that 'A Tathagata cannot be held to be
perceived as existing even in this life in truth and reality'" (op. tit., pp. 125- 126).
15. Johansson, op, fit,, p. 62, It may be noted that the context is one of living
achats.
Hi. Dull, t>/>. fit., p. 2X5; also see David ]. Kalupahana. Causality: The Central
Philosophy of Buddhism (Honolulu: University Press of Hawaii, l<)7.")), pp, 181 182.
17. Dun., op fit., pp. 2 8 5 - 2 8 6 .

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