-
The
Jhanas
- In
Theravada Buddhist Meditation
- by
- Henepola
Gunaratana
- The Wheel
Publication No. 351/353
ISBN 955-24-0035-X
- Copyright
© 1988 Buddhist Publication Society
(^ = back to table of contents)
Available in PDF / PDF
- 260 KB
Abbreviations ^
PTS = Pali Text
Society edition
BBS = Burmese Buddhasasana Samiti edition
A. ..... Anguttara
Nikaya (PTS)
D. ..... Digha Nikaya (PTS)
Dhs. ..... Dhammasangani (BBS)
Dhs.A. ..... Dhammasangani Atthakatha = Atthasalini (BBS)
M. ..... Majjhima Nikaya (PTS)
M.A. ..... Majjhima Nikaya Atthakatha (BBS)
Miln. ..... Milindapanha (PTS)
PP. ..... Path of Purification (translation of Visuddhimagga,
by Bhikkhu Ñanamoli; Kandy: BPS, 1975)
S. ..... Samyutta Nikaya (PTS)
SA. ..... Samyutta Nikaya Atthakatha (BBS)
ST. ..... Samyutta Nikaya Tika (BBS)
Vbh. ..... Vibhanga (PTS)
Vin.A. ..... Vinaya Atthakatha (BBS)
Vism. ..... Visuddhimagga (PTS)
Vism.T. ..... Visuddhimagga Tika (BBS)
1. Introduction
^
The Doctrinal Context
of Jhana ^
The Buddha says that
just as in the great ocean there is but one taste, the taste
of salt, so in his doctrine and discipline there is but one
taste, the taste of freedom. The taste of freedom that pervades
the Buddha's teaching is the taste of spiritual freedom, which
from the Buddhist perspective means freedom from suffering.
In the process leading to deliverance from suffering, meditation
is the means of generating the inner awakening required for
liberation. The methods of meditation taught in the Theravada
Buddhist tradition are based on the Buddha's own experience,
forged by him in the course of his own quest for enlightenment.
They are designed to re-create in the disciple who practices
them the same essential enlightenment that the Buddha himself
attained when he sat beneath the Bodhi tree, the awakening to
the Four Noble Truths.
The various subjects
and methods of meditation expounded in the Theravada Buddhist
scriptures -- the Pali Canon and its commentaries -- divide
into two inter-related systems. One is called the development
of serenity (samathabhavana), the other the development
of insight (vipassanabhavana). The former also goes under
the name of development of concentration (samadhibhavana),
the latter the development of wisdom (paññabhavana).
The practice of serenity meditation aims at developing a calm,
concentrated, unified mind as a means of experiencing inner
peace and as a basis for wisdom. The practice of insight meditation
aims at gaining a direct understanding of the real nature of
phenomena. Of the two, the development of insight is regarded
by Buddhism as the essential key to liberation, the direct antidote
to the ignorance underlying bondage and suffering. Whereas serenity
meditation is recognized as common to both Buddhist and non-Buddhist
contemplative disciplines, insight meditation is held to be
the unique discovery of the Buddha and an unparalleled feature
of his path. However, because the growth of insight presupposes
a certain degree of concentration, and serenity meditation helps
to achieve this, the development of serenity also claims an
incontestable place in the Buddhist meditative process. Together
the two types of meditation work to make the mind a fit instrument
for enlightenment. With his mind unified by means of the development
of serenity, made sharp and bright by the development of insight,
the meditator can proceed unobstructed to reach the end of suffering,
Nibbana.
Pivotal to both systems
of meditation, though belonging inherently to the side of serenity,
is a set of meditative attainments called the jhanas.
Though translators have offered various renderings of this word,
ranging from the feeble "musing" to the misleading
"trance" and the ambiguous "meditation,"
we prefer to leave the word untranslated and to let its meaning
emerge from its contextual usages. From these it is clear that
the jhanas are states of deep mental unification which result
from the centering of the mind upon a single object with such
power of attention that a total immersion in the object takes
place. The early suttas speak of four jhanas, named simply after
their numerical position in the series: the first jhana, the
second jhana, the third jhana and the forth jhana. In the suttas
the four repeatedly appear each described by a standard formula
which we will examine later in detail.
The importance of
the jhanas in the Buddhist path can readily be gauged from the
frequency with which they are mentioned throughout the suttas.
The jhanas figure prominently both in the Buddha's own experience
and in his exhortation to disciples. In his childhood, while
attending an annual ploughing festival, the future Buddha spontaneously
entered the first jhana. It was the memory of this childhood
incident, many years later after his futile pursuit of austerities,
that revealed to him the way to enlightenment during his period
of deepest despondency (M.i, 246-47). After taking his seat
beneath the Bodhi tree, the Buddha entered the four jhanas immediately
before direction his mind to the threefold knowledge that issued
in his enlightenment (M.i.247-49). Throughout his active career
the four jhanas remained "his heavenly dwelling" (D.iii,220)
to which he resorted in order to live happily here and now.
His understanding of the corruption, purification and emergence
in the jhanas and other meditative attainments is one of the
Tathagata's ten powers which enable him to turn the matchless
wheel of the Dhamma (M.i,70). Just before his passing away the
Buddha entered the jhanas in direct and reverse order, and the
passing away itself took place directly from the fourth jhana
(D.ii,156).
The Buddha is constantly
seen in the suttas encouraging his disciples to develop jhana.
The four jhanas are invariably included in the complete course
of training laid down for disciples.[1]
They figure in the training as the discipline of higher consciousness
(adhicittasikkha), right concentration (sammasamadhi)
of the Noble Eightfold Path, and the faculty and power of concentration
(samadhindriya, samadhibala). Though a vehicle of dry
insight can be found, indications are that this path is not
an easy one, lacking the aid of the powerful serenity available
to the practitioner of jhana. The way of the jhana attainer
seems by comparison smoother and more pleasurable (A.ii,150-52).
The Buddha even refers to the four jhanas figuratively as a
kind of Nibbana: he calls them immediately visible Nibbana,
factorial Nibbana, Nibbana here and now (A.iv,453-54).
To attain the jhanas,
the meditator must begin by eliminating the unwholesome mental
states obstructing inner collectedness, generally grouped together
as the five hindrances (pañcanivarana): sensual
desire, ill will, sloth and torpor, restlessness and worry and
doubt.[2] The mind's absorption on
its object is brought about by five opposing mental states --
applied thought, sustained thought, rapture, happiness and one
pointedness[3] -- called the jhana
factors (jhanangani) because they lift the mind to the level
of the first jhana and remain there as its defining components.
After reaching the
first jhana the ardent meditator can go on to reach the higher
jhanas, which is done by eliminating the coarser factors in
each jhana. Beyond the four jhanas lies another fourfold set
of higher meditative states which deepen still further the element
of serenity. These attainments (aruppa), are the base
of boundless space, the base of boundless consciousness, the
base of nothingness, and the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.[4]
In the Pali commentaries these come to be called the four
immaterial jhanas (arupajhana), the four preceding states
being renamed for the sake of clarity, the four fine-material
jhanas (rupajhana). Often the two sets are joined together
under the collective title of the eight jhanas or the eight
attainments (atthasamapattiyo).
The four jhanas and
the four immaterial attainments appear initially as mundane
states of deep serenity pertaining to the preliminary stage
of the Buddhist path, and on this level they help provide the
base of concentration needed for wisdom to arise. But the four
jhanas again reappear in a later stage in the development of
the path, in direct association with liberating wisdom, and
they are then designated the supramundane (lokuttara) jhanas.
These supramundane jhanas are the levels of concentration pertaining
to the four degrees of enlightenment experience called the supramundane
paths (magga) and the stages of liberation resulting
from them, the four fruits (phala).
Finally, even after
full liberation is achieved, the mundane jhanas can still remain
as attainments available to the fully liberated person, part
of his untrammeled contemplative experience.
Etymology of Jhana
^
The great Buddhist
commentator Buddhaghosa traces the Pali word "jhana"
(Skt. dhyana) to two verbal forms. One, the etymologically
correct derivation, is the verb jhayati, meaning to think
or meditate; the other is a more playful derivation, intended
to illuminate its function rather than its verbal source, from
the verb jhapeti meaning to burn up. He explains: "It
burns up opposing states, thus it is jhana" (Vin.A. i,
116), the purport being that jhana "burns up" or destroys
the mental defilements preventing the developing the development
of serenity and insight.
In the same passage
Buddhaghosa says that jhana has the characteristic mark of contemplation
(upanijjhana). Contemplation, he states, is twofold:
the contemplation of the object and the contemplation of the
characteristics of phenomena. The former is exercised by the
eight attainments of serenity together with their access, since
these contemplate the object used as the basis for developing
concentration; for this reason these attainments are given the
name "jhana" in the mainstream of Pali meditative
exposition. However, Buddhaghosa also allows that the term "jhana"
can be extended loosely to insight (vipassana), the paths
and the fruits on the ground that these perform the work of
contemplating the characteristics of things the three marks
of impermanence, suffering and non-self in the case of insight,
Nibbana in the case of the paths and fruits.
In brief the twofold
meaning of jhana as "contemplation" and "burning
up" can be brought into connection with the meditative
process as follows. By fixing his mind on the object the meditator
reduces and eliminates the lower mental qualities such as the
five hindrances and promotes the growth of the higher qualities
such as the jhana factors, which lead the mind to complete absorption
in the object. Then by contemplating the characteristics of
phenomena with insight, the meditator eventually reaches the
supramundane jhana of the four paths, and with this jhana he
burns up the defilements and attains the liberating experience
of the fruits.
Jhana and Samadhi
^
In the vocabulary
of Buddhist meditation the word "jhana" is closely
connected with another word, "samadhi" generally
rendered by "concentration." Samadhi derives
from the prefixed verbal root sam-a-dha, meaning to collect
or to bring together, thus suggesting the concentration or unification
of the mind. The word "samadhi" is almost interchangeable
with the word "samatha," serenity, though the
latter comes from a different root, sam, meaning to become
calm.
In the suttas samadhi
is defined as mental one-pointedness, (cittass'ekaggata
M.i,301) and this definition is followed through rigorously
in the Abhidhamma. The Abhidhamma treats one-pointedness as
a distinct mental factor present in every state of consciousness,
exercising the function of unifying the mind on its object.
From this strict psychological standpoint samadhi can
be present in unwholesome states of consciousness as well as
in wholesome an neutral states. In its unwholesome forms it
is called "wrong concentration" (micchasamadhi),
In its wholesome forms "right concentration" (sammasamadhi).
In expositions on
the practice of meditation, however, samadhi is limited
to one-pointedness of mind (Vism.84-85; PP.84-85), and even
here we can understand from the context that the word means
only the wholesome one-pointedness involved in the deliberate
transmutation of the mind to a heightened level of calm. Thus
Buddhaghosa explains samadhi etymologically as "the
centering of consciousness and consciousness concomitants evenly
and rightly on a single object ... the state in virtue of which
consciousness and its concomitants remain evenly and rightly
on a single object, undistracted and unscattered" (Vism.84-85;
PP.85).
However, despite
the commentator's bid for consistency, the word samadhi
is used in the Pali literature on meditation with varying degrees
of specificity of meaning. In the narrowest sense, as defined
by Buddhaghosa, it denotes the particular mental factor responsible
for the concentrating of the mind, namely, one-pointedness.
In a wider sense it can signify the states of unified consciousness
that result from the strengthening of concentration, i.e. the
meditative attainments of serenity and the stages leading up
to them. And in a still wider sense the word samadhi
can be applied to the method of practice used to produce and
cultivate these refined states of concentration, here being
equivalent to the development of serenity.
It is in the second
sense that samadhi and jhana come closest in meaning.
The Buddha explains right concentration as the four jhanas (D.ii,313),
and in doing so allows concentration to encompass the meditative
attainments signified by the jhanas. However, even though jhana
and samadhi can overlap in denotation, certain differences
in their suggested and contextual meanings prevent unqualified
identification of the two terms. First behind the Buddha's use
of the jhana formula to explain right concentration lies a more
technical understanding of the terms. According to this understanding
samadhi can be narrowed down in range to signify only
one mental factor, the most prominent in the jhana, namely,
one-pointedness, while the word "jhana" itself must
be seen as encompassing the state of consciousness in its entirety,
or at least the whole group of mental factors individuating
that meditative state as a jhana.
In the second place,
when samadhi is considered in its broader meaning it
involves a wider range of reference than jhana. The Pali exegetical
tradition recognizes three levels of samadhi: preliminary
concentration (parikammasamadhi), which is produced as
a result of the meditator's initial efforts to focus his mind
on his meditation subject; access concentration (upacarasamadhi),
marked by the suppression of the five hindrances, the manifestation
of the jhana factors, and the appearance of a luminous mental
replica of the meditation object called the counterpart sign
(patibhaganimitta); and absorption concentration (appanasamadhi),
the complete immersion of the mind in its object effected by
the full maturation of the jhana factors.[5]
Absorption concentration comprises the eight attainments, the
four immaterial attainments, and to this extent jhana and samadhi
coincide. However, samadhi still has a broader scope
than jhana, since it includes not only the jhanas themselves
but also the two preparatory degrees of concentration leading
up to them. Further, samadhi also covers a still different
type of concentration called momentary concentration (khanikasamadhi),
the mobile mental stabilization produced in the course of insight
contemplation of the passing flow of phenomena.
2. The Preparation
for Jhana ^
The jhanas do not
arise out of a void but in dependence on the right conditions.
They come to growth only when provided with the nutriments conductive
to their development. Therefore, prior to beginning meditation,
the aspirant to the jhanas must prepare a groundwork for his
practice by fulfilling certain preliminary requirements. He
first must endeavor to purify his moral virtue, sever the outer
impediments to practice, and place himself under a qualified
teacher who will assign him a suitable meditation subject and
explain to him the methods of developing it. After learning
these the disciple must then seek out a congenial dwelling and
diligently strive for success. In this chapter we will examine
in order each of the preparatory steps that have to be fulfilled
before commencing to develop jhana.
The Moral Foundation
for Jhana ^
A disciple aspiring
to the jhanas first has to lay a solid foundation of moral discipline.
Moral purity is indispensable to meditative progress for several
deeply psychological reasons. It is needed first, in order to
safeguard against the danger of remorse, the nagging sense of
guilt that arises when the basic principles of morality are
ignored or deliberately violated. Scrupulous conformity to virtuous
rules of conduct protects the meditator from this danger disruptive
to inner calm, and brings joy and happiness when the meditator
reflects upon the purity of his conduct (see A.v,1-7).
A second reason a
moral foundation is needed for meditation follows from an understanding
of the purpose of concentration. Concentration, in the Buddhist
discipline, aims at providing a base for wisdom by cleansing
the mind of the dispersive influence of the defilements. But
in order for the concentration exercises to effectively combat
the defilements, the coarser expressions of the latter through
bodily and verbal action first have to be checked. Moral transgressions
being invariably motivated by defilements -- by greed, hatred
and delusion -- when a person acts in violation of the precepts
of morality he excites and reinforces the very same mental factors
his practice of meditation is intended to eliminate. This involves
him in a crossfire of incompatible aims which renders his attempts
at mental purification ineffective. The only way he can avoid
frustration in his endeavor to purify the mind of its subtler
defilements is to prevent the unwholesome inner impulses from
breathing out in the coarser form of unwholesome bodily and
verbal deeds. Only when he establishes control over the outer
expression of the defilements can he turn to deal with them
inwardly as mental obsessions that appear in the process of
meditation.
The practice of moral
discipline consists negatively in abstinence from immoral actions
of body and speech and positively in the observance of ethical
principles promoting peace within oneself and harmony in one's
relations with others. The basic code of moral discipline taught
by the Buddha for the guidance of his lay followers is the five
precepts: abstinence from taking life, from stealing, from sexual
misconduct, from false speech, and from intoxicating drugs and
drinks. These principles are bindings as minimal ethical obligations
for all practitioners of the Buddhist path, and within their
bounds considerable progress in meditation can be made. However,
those aspiring to reach the higher levels of jhanas and to pursue
the path further to the stages of liberation, are encouraged
to take up the more complete moral discipline pertaining to
the life of renunciation. Early Buddhism is unambiguous in its
emphasis on the limitations of household life for following
the path in its fullness and perfection. Time and again the
texts say that the household life is confining, a "path
for the dust of passion," while the life of homelessness
is like open space. Thus a disciple who is fully intent upon
making rapid progress towards Nibbana will when outer conditions
allow for it, "shave off his hair and beard, put on the
yellow robe, and go forth from the home life into homelessness"
(M.i,179).
The moral training
for the bhikkhus or monks has been arranged into a system called
the fourfold purification of morality (catuparisuddhisila).[6]
The first component of this scheme, its backbone, consists in
the morality of restraint according to the Patimokkha,
the code of 227 training precepts promulgated by the Buddha
to regulate the conduct of the Sangha or monastic order. Each
of these rules is in some way intended to facilitate control
over the defilements and to induce a mode of living marked by
harmlessness, contentment and simplicity. The second aspect
of the monk's moral discipline is restraint of the senses,
by which the monk maintains close watchfulness over his mind
as he engages in sense contacts so that he does not give rise
to desire for pleasurable objects and aversion towards repulsive
ones. Third, the monk is to live by a purified livelihood,
obtaining his basic requisites such as robes food, lodgings
and medicines in ways consistent with his vocation. The fourth
factor of the moral training is proper use of the requisites,
which means that the monk should reflect upon the purposes for
which he makes use of his requisites and should employ them
only for maintaining his health and comfort, not for luxury
and enjoyment.
After establishing
a foundation of purified morality, the aspirant to meditation
is advised to cut off any outer impediments (palibodha)
that may hinder his efforts to lead a contemplative life. These
impediments are numbered as ten: a dwelling, which becomes an
impediment for those who allow their minds to become preoccupied
with its upkeep or with its appurtenances; a family of relatives
or supporters with whom the aspirant may become emotionally
involved in ways that hinder his progress; gains, which may
bind the monk by obligation to those who offer them; a class
of students who must be instructed; building work, which demands
time and attention; travel; kin, meaning parents, teachers,
pupils or close friends; illness; the study of scriptures; and
supernormal powers, which are an impediment to insight (Vism.90-97;
PP.91-98).
The Good Friend
and the Subject of Meditation ^
The path of practice
leading to the jhanas is an arduous course involving precise
techniques and skillfulness is needed in dealing with the pitfalls
that lie along the way. The knowledge of how to attain the jhanas
has been transmitted through a lineage of teachers going back
to the time of the Buddha himself. A prospective meditator is
advised to avail himself of the living heritage of accumulated
knowledge and experience by placing himself under the care of
a qualified teacher, described as a "good friend"
(kalyanamitta), one who gives guidance and wise advice
rooted in his own practice and experience. On the basis of either
of the power of penetrating others minds, or by personal observation,
or by questioning, the teacher will size up the temperament
of his new pupil and then select a meditation subject for him
appropriate to his temperament.
The various meditation
subjects that the Buddha prescribed for the development of serenity
have been collected in the commentaries into a set called the
forty kammatthana. This word means literally a place
of work, and is applied to the subject of meditation as the
place where the meditator undertakes the work of meditation.
The forty meditation subjects are distributed into seven categories,
enumerated in the Visuddhimagga as follows: ten kasinas,
ten kinds of foulness, ten recollections, four divine abidings,
four immaterial states, one perception, and one defining.[7]
A kasina is a device
representing a particular quality used as a support for concentration.
The ten kasinas are those of earth, water, fire and air; four
color kasinas -- blue, yellow, red and white; the light kasina
and the limited space kasina. The kasina can be either a naturally
occurring form of the element or color chosen, or an artificially
produced device such as a disk that the meditator can use at
his convenience in his meditation quarters.
The ten kinds of
foulness are ten stages in the decomposition of a corpse: the
bloated, the livid, the festering, the cut-up, the gnawed, the
scattered, the hacked and scattered, the bleeding, the worm-infested
and a skeleton. The primary purpose of these meditations is
to reduce sensual lust by gaining a clear perception of the
repulsiveness of the body.
The ten recollections
are the recollections of the Buddha, the Dhamma, the Sangha,
morality, generosity and the deities, mindfulness of death,
mindfulness of the body, mindfulness of breathing, and the recollection
of peace. The first three are devotional contemplations on the
sublime qualities of the "Three Jewels," the primary
objects of Buddhist virtues and on the deities inhabiting the
heavenly worlds, intended principally for those still intent
on a higher rebirth. Mindfulness of death is reflection on the
inevitably of death, a constant spur to spiritual exertion.
Mindfulness of the body involves the mental dissection of the
body into thirty-two parts, undertaken with a view to perceiving
its unattractiveness. Mindfulness of breathing is awareness
of the in-and-out movement of the breath, perhaps the most fundamental
of all Buddhist meditation subjects. And the recollection of
peace is reflection on the qualities of Nibbana.
The four divine abidings
(brahmavihara) are the development of boundless loving-kindness,
compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity. These meditations
are also called the "immeasurables" (appamañña)
because they are to be developed towards all sentient beings
without qualification or exclusiveness.
The four immaterial
states are the base of boundless space, the base of boundless
consciousness, the base of nothingness, and the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.
These are the objects leading to the corresponding meditative
attainments, the immaterial jhanas.
The one perception
is the perception of the repulsiveness of food. The one defining
is the defining of the four elements, that is, the analysis
of the physical body into the elemental modes of solidity, fluidity,
heat and oscillation.
The forty meditation
subjects are treated in the commentarial texts from two important
angles -- one their ability to induce different levels of concentration,
the other their suitability for differing temperaments. Not
all meditation subjects are equally effective in inducing the
deeper levels of concentration. They are first distinguished
on the basis of their capacity for inducing only access concentration
or for inducing full absorption; those capable of inducing absorption
are then distinguished further according to their ability to
induce the different levels of jhana.
Of the forty subjects,
ten are capable of leading only to access concentration: eight
recollections -- i.e. all except mindfulness of the body and
mindfulness of breathing -- plus the perception of repulsiveness
in nutriment and the defining of the four elements. These, because
they are occupied with a diversity of qualities and involve
and active application of discursive thought, cannot lead beyond
access. The other thirty subjects can all lead to absorption.
The ten kasinas and
mindfulness of breathing, owing to their simplicity and freedom
from thought construction, can lead to all four jhanas. The
ten kinds of foulness and mindfulness of the body lead only
to the first jhana, being limited because the mind can only
hold onto them with the aid of applied thought (vitakka)
which is absent in the second and higher jhanas. The first three
divine abidings can induce the lower three jhanas but the fourth,
since they arise in association with pleasant feeling, while
the divine abiding of equanimity occurs only at the level of
the fourth jhana, where neutral feeling gains ascendency. The
four immaterial states conduce to the respective immaterial
jhanas corresponding to their names.
The forty subjects
are also differentiated according to their appropriateness for
different character types. Six main character types are recognized
-- the greedy, the hating, the deluded, the faithful, the intelligent
and the speculative -- this oversimplified typology being taken
only as a pragmatic guideline which in practice admits various
shades and combinations. The ten kind of foulness and mindfulness
of the body, clearly intended to attenuate sensual desire, are
suitable for those of greedy temperament. Eight subjects --
the four divine abidings and four color kasinas -- are appropriate
for the hating temperament. Mindfulness of breathing is suitable
for those of the deluded and the speculative temperament. The
first six recollections are appropriate for the faithful temperament.
Four subjects -- mindfulness of death, the recollection of peace,
the defining of the four elements, and the perception of the
repulsiveness in nutriment -- are especially effective for those
of intelligent temperament. The remaining six kasinas and the
immaterial states are suitable for all kinds of temperaments.
But the kasinas should be limited in size for one of speculative
temperament and large in size for one of deluded temperament.
Immediately after
giving this breakdown Buddhaghosa adds a proviso to prevent
misunderstanding. He states that this division by way of temperament
is made on the basis of direct opposition and complete suitability,
but actually there is no wholesome form of meditation that does
not suppress the defilements and strengthen the virtuous mental
factors. Thus an individual meditator may be advised to meditate
on foulness to abandon lust, on loving-kindness to abandon hatred,
on breathing to cut off discursive thought, and on impermanence
to eliminate the conceit "I am" (A.iv,358).
Choosing a Suitable
Dwelling ^
The teacher assigns
a meditation subject to his pupil appropriate to his character
and explains the methods of developing it. He can teach it gradually
to a pupil who is going to remain in close proximity to him,
or in detail to one who will go to practice it elsewhere. If
the disciple is not going to stay with his teacher he must be
careful to select a suitable place for meditation. The texts
mention eighteen kinds of monasteries unfavorable to the development
of jhana: a large monastery, a new one, a dilapidated one, one
near a road, one with a pond, leaves, flowers or fruits, one
sought after by many people, one in cities, among timber of
fields, where people quarrel, in a port, in border lands, on
a frontier, a haunted place, and one without access to a spiritual
teacher (Vism. 118-121; PP122-125).
The factors which
make a dwelling favorable to meditation are mentioned by the
Buddha himself. If should not be too far from or too near a
village that can be relied on as an alms resort, and should
have a clear path: it should be quiet and secluded; it should
be free from rough weather and from harmful insects and animals;
one should be able to obtain one's physical requisites while
dwelling there; and the dwelling should provide ready access
to learned elders and spiritual friends who can be consulted
when problems arise in meditation (A.v,15). The types of dwelling
places commended by the Buddha most frequently in the suttas
as conductive to the jhanas are a secluded dwelling in the forest,
at the foot of a tree, on a mountain, in a cleft, in a cave,
in a cemetery, on a wooded flatland, in the open air, or on
a heap of straw (M.i,181). Having found a suitable dwelling
and settled there, the disciple should maintain scrupulous observance
of the rules of discipline, He should be content with his simple
requisites, exercise control over his sense faculties, be mindful
and discerning in all activities, and practice meditation diligently
as he was instructed. It is at this point that he meets the
first great challenge of his contemplative life, the battle
with the five hindrances.
3. The First Jhana
and its Factors ^
The attainment of
any jhana comes about through a twofold process of development.
On one side the states obstructive to it, called its factors
of abandonment, have to be eliminated, on the other the states
composing it, called its factors of possession, have to be acquired.
In the case of the first jhana the factors of abandonment are
the five hindrances and the factors of possession the five basic
jhana factors. Both are alluded to in the standard formula for
the first jhana, the opening phrase referring to the abandonment
of the hindrances and the subsequent portion enumerating the
jhana factors:
Quite secluded
from sense pleasures, secluded from unwholesome states of
mind, he enters and dwells in the first jhana, which is accompanied
by applied thought and sustained thought with rapture and
happiness born of seclusion. (M.i,1818; Vbh.245)
In this chapter we
will first discuss the five hindrances and their abandonment,
then we will investigate the jhana factors both individually
and by way of their combined contribution to the attainment
of the first jhana. We will close the chapter with some remarks
on the ways of perfecting the first jhana, a necessary preparation
for the further development of concentration.
The Abandoning of
the Hindrances ^
The five hindrances
(pañcanivarana) are sensual desire, ill will, sloth and
torpor, restlessness and worry, and doubt. This group, the principal
classification the Buddha uses for the obstacles to meditation,
receives its name because its five members hinder and envelop
the mind, preventing meditative development in the two spheres
of serenity and insight. Hence the Buddha calls them "obstructions,
hindrances, corruptions of the mind which weaken wisdom"(S.v,94).
The hindrance of
sensual desire (kamachanda) is explained as desire for
the "five strands of sense pleasure," that is, for
pleasant forms, sounds, smells, tastes and tangibles. It ranges
from subtle liking to powerful lust. The hindrance of ill will
(byapada) signifies aversion directed towards disagreeable
persons or things. It can vary in range from mild annoyance
to overpowering hatred. Thus the first two hindrances correspond
to the first two root defilements, greed and hate. The third
root defilement, delusion, is not enumerated separately among
the hindrances but can be found underlying the remaining three.
Sloth and torpor
is a compound hindrance made up of two components: sloth (thina),
which is dullness, inertia or mental stiffness; and torpor (middha),
which is indolence or drowsiness. Restlessness and worry is
another double hindrance, restlessness (uddhacca) being
explained as excitement, agitation or disquietude, worry (kukkucca)
as the sense of guilt aroused by moral transgressions. Finally,
the hindrance of doubt (vicikiccha) is explained as uncertainty
with regard to the Buddha, the Dhamma, the Sangha and the training.
The Buddha offers
two sets of similes to illustrate the detrimental effect of
the hindrances. The first compares the five hindrances to five
types of calamity: sensual desire is like a debt, ill will like
a disease, sloth and torpor like imprisonment, restless and
worry like slavery, and doubt like being lost on a desert road.
Release from the hindrances is to be seen as freedom from debt,
good health, release from prison, emancipation from slavery,
and arriving at a place of safety (D.i,71-73). The second set
of similes compares the hindrances to five kinds of impurities
affecting a bowl of water, preventing a keen-sighted man from
seeing his own reflection as it really is. Sensual desire is
like a bowl of water mixed with brightly colored paints, ill
will like a bowl of boiling water, sloth and torpor like water
covered by mossy plants, restlessness and worry like water blown
into ripples by the wind, and doubt like muddy water. Just as
the keen-eyed man would not be able to see his reflection in
these five kinds of water, so one whose mind is obsessed by
the five hindrances does not know and see as it is his own good,
the good of others or the good of both (S.v,121-24). Although
there are numerous defilements opposed to the first jhana the
five hindrances alone are called its factors of abandoning.
One reason according to the Visuddhimagga, is that the
hindrances are specifically obstructive to jhana, each hindrance
impeding in its own way the mind's capacity for concentration.
The mind affected
through lust by greed for varied objective fields does not
become concentrated on an object consisting in unity, or being
overwhelmed by lust, it does not enter on the way to abandoning
the sense-desire element. When pestered by ill will towards
an object, it does not occur uninterruptedly. When overcome
by stiffness and torpor, it is unwieldy. When seized by agitation
and worry, it is unquiet and buzzes about. When stricken by
uncertainty, it fails to mount the way to accomplish the attainment
of jhana. So it is these only that are called factors of abandonment
because they are specifically obstructive to jhana.(Vism.146:
PP.152)
A second reason for
confining the first jhana's factors of abandoning to the five
hindrances is to permit a direct alignment to be made between
the hindrances and the jhanic factors. Buddhaghosa states that
the abandonment of the five hindrances alone is mentioned in
connection with jhana because the hindrances are the direct
enemies of the five jhana factors, which the latter must eliminate
and abolish. To support his point the commentator cites a passage
demonstrating a one-to-one correspondence between the jhana
factors and the hindrances: one-pointedness is opposed to sensual
desire, rapture to ill will, applied thought to sloth and torpor,
happiness to restlessness and worry, and sustained thought to
doubt (Vism. 141; PP.147).[8] Thus
each jhana factor is seen as having the specific task of eliminating
a particular obstruction to the jhana and to correlate these
obstructions with the five jhana factors they are collected
into a scheme of five hindrances.
The standard passage
describing the attainment of the first jhana says that the jhana
is entered upon by one who is "secluded from sense pleasures,
secluded from unwholesome states of mind." The Visuddhimagga
explains that there are three kinds of seclusion relevant to
the present context -- namely, bodily seclusion (kayaviveka),
mental seclusion (cittaviveka), and seclusion by suppression
(vikkhambhanaviveka) (Vism. 140; PP.145). These three
terms allude to two distinct sets of exegetical categories.
The first two belong to a threefold arrangement made up of bodily
seclusion, mental seclusion, and "seclusion from the substance"
(upadhiviveka). The first means physical withdrawal from
active social engagement into a condition of solitude for the
purpose of devoting time and energy to spiritual development.
The second, which generally presupposes the first, means the
seclusion of the mind from its entanglement in defilements;
it is in effect equivalent to concentration of at least the
access level. The third, "seclusion from the substance,"
is Nibbana, liberation from the elements of phenomenal existence.
The achievement of the first jhana does not depend on the third,
which is its outcome rather than prerequisite, but it does require
physical solitude and the separation of the mind from defilements,
hence bodily and mental seclusion. The third type of seclusion
pertinent to the context, seclusion by suppression, belongs
to a different scheme generally discussed under the heading
of "abandonment" (pahana) rather than "seclusion."
The type of abandonment required for the attainment of jhana
is abandonment by suppression, which means the removal of the
hindrances by force of concentration similar to the pressing
down of weeds in a pond by means of a porous pot.[9]
The work of overcoming
the five hindrances is accomplished through the gradual training
(anupubbasikkha) which the Buddha has laid down so often
in the suttas, such as the Samaññaphala Sutta and the Culahatthipadopama
Sutta. The gradual training is a step-by-step process designed
to lead the practitioner gradually to liberation. The training
begins with moral discipline, the undertaking and observance
of specific rules of conduct which enable the disciple to control
the coarser modes of bodily and verbal misconduct through which
the hindrances find an outlet. With moral discipline as a basis,
the disciple practices the restraint of the senses. He does
not seize upon the general appearances of the beguiling features
of things, but guards and masters his sense faculties so that
sensual attractive and repugnant objects no longer become grounds
for desire and aversion. Then, endowed with the self-restraint,
he develops mindfulness and discernment (sati-sampajañña)
in all his activities and postures, examining everything he
does with clear awareness as to its purpose and suitability.
He also cultivates contentment with a minimum of robes, food,
shelter and other requisites.
Once he has fulfilled
these preliminaries the disciple is prepared to go into solitude
to develop the jhanas, and it is here that he directly confronts
the five hindrances. The elimination of the hindrances requires
that the meditator honestly appraises his own mind. When sensuality,
ill will and the other hindrances are present, he must recognize
that they are present and he must investigate the conditions
that lead to their arising: the latter he must scrupulously
avoid. The meditator must also understand the appropriate antidotes
for each of the five hindrances. The Buddha says that all the
hindrances arise through unwise consideration (ayoniso manasikara)
and that they can be eliminated by wise consideration (yoniso
manasikara). Each hindrance, however, has its own specific
antidote. Thus wise consideration of the repulsive feature of
things is the antidote to sensual desire; wise consideration
of loving-kindness counteracts ill will; wise consideration
of the elements of effort, exertion and striving opposes sloth
and torpor; wise consideration of tranquillity of mind removes
restlessness and worry; and wise consideration of the real qualities
of things eliminates doubt (S.v,105-106).
Having given up
covetousness [i.e. sensual desire] with regard to the world,
he dwells with a heart free of covetousness; he cleanses his
mind from covetousness. Having given up the blemish of ill
will, he dwells without ill will; friendly and compassionate
towards all living beings, he cleanses his mind from the blemishes
of ill will. Having given up sloth and torpor, he dwells free
from sloth and torpor, in the perception of light; mindful
and clearly comprehending, he cleanses his mind from sloth
and torpor. Having given up restlessness and worry, he dwells
without restlessness; his mind being calmed within, he cleanses
it from restlessness and worry. Having given up doubt, he
dwells as one who has passed beyond doubt; being free from
uncertainty about wholesome things, he cleanses his mind from
doubt ....
And when he sees
himself free of these five hindrances, joy arises; in him
who is joyful, rapture arises; in him whose mind is enraptured,
the body is stilled; the body being stilled, he feels happiness;
and a happy mind finds concentration. Then, quite secluded
from sense pleasures, secluded from unwholesome states of
mind, he enters and dwells in the first jhana, which is accompanied
by applied thought and sustained thought, with rapture and
happiness born of seclusion. (D.i,73-74)[10]
The Factors of the
First Jhana ^
The first jhana possesses
five component factors: applied thought, sustained thought,
rapture, happiness and one-pointedness of mind. Four of these
are explicitly mentioned in the formula for the jhana; the fifth,
one-pointedness, is mentioned elsewhere in the suttas but is
already suggested by the notion of jhana itself. These five
states receive their name, first because they lead the mind
from the level of ordinary consciousness to the jhanic level,
and second because they constitute the first jhana and give
it its distinct definition.
The jhana factors
are first aroused by the meditator's initial efforts to concentrate
upon one of the prescribed objects for developing jhana. As
he fixes his mind on the preliminary object, such as a kasina
disk, a point is eventually reached where he can perceive the
object as clearly with his eyes closed as with them open. This
visualized object is called the learning sign (uggahanimitta).
As he concentrates on the learning sign, his efforts call into
play the embryonic jhana factors, which grow in force, duration
and prominence as a result of the meditative exertion. These
factors, being incompatible with the hindrances, attenuate them,
exclude them, and hold them at bay. With continued practice
the learning sign gives rise to a purified luminous replica
of itself called the counterpart sign (patibhaganimitta),
the manifestation of which marks the complete suppression of
the hindrances and the attainment of access concentration (upacarasamadhi).
All three events-the suppression of the hindrances, the arising
of the counterpart sign, and the attainment of access concentration
-- take place at precisely the same moment, without interval
(Vism. 126; PP.131). And though previously the process of mental
cultivation may have required the elimination of different hindrances
at different times, when access is achieved they all subside
together:
Simultaneously
with his acquiring the counterpart sign his lust is abandoned
by suppression owing to his giving no attention externally
to sense desires (as object). And owing to his abandoning
of approval, ill will is abandoned too, as pus is with the
abandoning of blood. Likewise stiffness and torpor is abandoned
through exertion of energy, agitation and worry is abandoned
through devotion to peaceful things that cause no remorse;
and uncertainty about the Master who teaches the way, about
the way, and about the fruit of the way, about the way, and
about the fruit of the way, is abandoned through the actual
experience of the distinction attained. So the five hindrances
are abandoned. (Vism. 189; PP.196)
Though the mental
factors determinative of the first jhana are present in access
concentration, they do not as yet possess sufficient strength
to constitute the jhana, but are strong enough only to exclude
the hindrances. With continued practice, however, the nascent
jhana factors grow in strength until they are capable of issuing
in jhana. Because of the instrumental role these factors play
both in the attainment and constitution of the first jhana they
are deserving of closer individual scrutiny.
Applied Thought
(vitakka) ^
The word vitakka
frequently appears in the texts in conjunction with the word
vicara. The pair signify two interconnected but distinct
aspects of the thought process, and to bring out the difference
between them (as well as their common character), we translate
the one as applied thought and the other as sustained thought.
In both the suttas
and the Abhidhamma applied thought is defined as the application
of the mind to its object (cetaso abhiniropana), a function
which the Atthasalini illustrates thus: "Just as
someone ascends the king's palace in dependence on a relative
of friend dear to the king, so the mind ascends the object in
dependence on applied thought" (Dhs.A.157). This function
of applying the mind to the object is common to the wide variety
of modes in which the mental factor of applied thought occurs,
ranging from sense discrimination to imagination, reasoning
and deliberation and to the practice of concentration culminating
in the first jhana. Applied thought can be unwholesome as in
thoughts of sensual pleasure, ill will and cruelty, or wholesome
as in thoughts of renunciation, benevolence and compassion (M.i,116).
In jhana applied
through is invariably wholesome and its function of directing
the mind upon its object stands forth with special clarity.
To convey this the Visuddhimagga explains that in jhana
the function of applied thought is "to strike at and thresh
-- for the meditator is said, in virtue of it, to have the object
struck at by applied thought, threshed by applied thought"
(Vism.142;PP148). The Milindapanha makes the same point
by defining applied thought as absorption (appana): "Just
as a carpenter drives a well-fashioned piece of wood into a
joint, so applied thought has the characteristic of absorption"
(Miln.62).
The object of jhana
into which vitakka drives the mind and its concomitant
states is the counterpart sign, which emerges from the learning
sign as the hindrances are suppressed and the mind enters access
concentration. The Visuddhimagga explains the difference
between the two signs thus:
In the learning
sign any fault in the kasina is apparent. But the counterpart
sign appears as if breaking out from the learning sign, and
a hundred times, a thousand times more purified, like a looking-glass
disk drawn from its case, like a mother-of-pearl dish well
washed, like the moon's disk coming out from behind a cloud,
like cranes against a thunder cloud. But it has neither color
nor shape; for if it had, it would be cognizable by the eye,
gross, susceptible of comprehension (by insight) and stamped
with the three characteristics. But it is not like that. For
it is born only of perception in one who has obtained concentration,
being a mere mode of appearance (Vism. 125-26; PP.130)
The counterpart sign
is the object of both access concentration and jhana, which
differ neither in their object nor in the removal of the hindrances
but in the strength of their respective jhana factors. In the
former the factors are still weak, not yet fully developed,
while in the jhana they are strong enough to make the mind fully
absorbed in the object. In this process applied thought is the
factor primarily responsible for directing the mind towards
the counterpart sign and thrusting it in with the force of full
absorption.
Sustained Thought
(vicara) ^
Vicara seems
to represent a more developed phase of the thought process than
vitakka. The commentaries explain that it has the characteristic
of "continued pressure" on the object (Vim. 142; PP.148).
Applied thought is described as the first impact of the mind
on the object, the gross inceptive phase of thought; sustained
thought is described as the act of anchoring the mind on the
object, the subtle phase of continued mental pressure. Buddhaghosa
illustrates the difference between the two with a series of
similes. Applied thought is like striking a bell, sustained
thought like the ringing; applied thought is like a bee's flying
towards a flower, sustained thought like its buzzing around
the flower; applied thought is like a compass pin that stays
fixed to the center of a circle, sustained thought like the
pin that revolves around (Vism. 142-43; PP.148-49).
These similes make
it clear that applied thought and sustained thought functionally
associated, perform different tasks. Applied thought brings
the mind to the object, sustained thought fixes and anchors
it there. Applied thought focuses the mind on the object, sustained
thought examines and inspects what is focused on. Applied thought
brings a deepening of concentration by again and again leading
the mind back to the same object, sustained thought sustains
the concentration achieved by keeping the mind anchored on that
object.
Rapture (piti)
^
The third factor
present in the first jhana is piti, usually translated
as joy or rapture.[11] In the suttas
piti is sometimes said to arise from another quality
called pamojja, translated as joy or gladness, which
springs up with the abandonment of the five hindrances. When
the disciple sees the five hindrances abandoned in himself "gladness
arises within him; thus gladdened, rapture arises in him; and
when he is rapturous his body becomes tranquil" (D.i,73).
Tranquillity in turn leads to happiness, on the basis of which
the mind becomes concentrated. Thus rapture precedes the actual
arising of the first jhana, but persists through the remaining
stages up to the third jhana.
The Vibhanga defines
piti as "gladness, joy, joyfulness, mirth, merriment,
exultation, exhilaration, and satisfaction of mind" (Vbh.
257). The commentaries ascribe to it the characteristic of endearing,
the function of refreshing the body and mind or pervading with
rapture, and the manifestation as elation (Vism.143; PP.149).
Shwe Zan Aung explains that "piti abstracted means
interest of varying degrees of intensity, in an object felt
as desirable or as calculated to bring happiness."[12]
When defined in terms
of agency, piti is that which creates interest in the object;
when defined in terms of its nature it is the interest in the
object. Because it creates a positive interest in the object,
the jhana factor of rapture is able to counter and suppress
the hindrance of ill will, a state of aversion implying a negative
evaluation of the object.
Rapture is graded
into five categories: minor rapture, momentary rapture, showering
rapture, uplifting rapture and pervading rapture.[13]
Minor rapture is generally the first to appear in the progressive
development of meditation; it is capable of causing the hairs
of the body to rise. Momentary rapture, which is like lightning,
comes next but cannot be sustained for long. Showering rapture
runs through the body in waves, producing a thrill but without
leaving a lasting impact. Uplifting rapture, which can cause
levitation, is more sustained but still tends to disturb concentration,
The form of rapture most conductive to the attainment of jhana
is all-pervading rapture, which is said to suffuse the whole
body so that it becomes like a full bladder or like a mountain
cavern inundated with a mighty flood of water. The Visuddhimagga
states that what is intended by the jhana factor of rapture
is this all-pervading rapture "which is the root of absorption
and comes by growth into association with absorption" (Vism.144;
PP.151)
Happiness (sukha)
^
As a factor of the
first jhana, sukha signifies pleasant feeling. The word
is explicitly defined in the sense by the Vibhanga in
its analysis of the first jhana: "Therein, what is happiness?
Mental pleasure and happiness born of mind-contact, the felt
pleasure and happiness born of mind-contact, pleasurable and
happy feeling born of mind contact -- this is called 'happiness'
" (Vbh.257). The Visuddhimagga explains that happiness
in the first jhana has the characteristic of gratifying, the
function of intensifying associated states, and as manifestation,
the rendering of aid to its associated states (Vism. 145; PP.151).
Rapture and happiness
link together in a very close relationship, but though the two
are difficult to distinguish, they are not identical. Happiness
is a feeling (vedana); rapture a mental formation (sankhara).
Happiness always accompanies rapture, so that when rapture is
present happiness must always be present; but rapture does not
always accompany happiness, for in the third jhana, as we will
see, there is happiness but no rapture. The Atthasalini,
which explains rapture as "delight in the attaining of
the desired object" and happiness as "the enjoyment
of the taste of what is required," illustrates the difference
by means of a simile:
Rapture is like
a weary traveler in the desert in summer, who hears of, or
sees water of a shady wood. Ease [happiness] is like his enjoying
the water of entering the forest shade. For a man who, traveling
along the path through a great desert and overcome by the
heat, is thirsty and desirous of drink, if he saw a man on
the way, would ask 'Where is water?' The other would say,
'Beyond the wood is a dense forest with a natural lake. Go
there, and you will get some.' He, hearing these words, would
be glad and delighted and as he went would see lotus leaves,
etc., fallen on the ground and become more glad and delighted.
Going onwards, he would see men with wet clothes and hair,
hear the sounds of wild fowl and pea-fowl, etc., see the dense
forest of green like a net of jewels growing by the edge of
the natural lake, he would see the water lily, the lotus,
the white lily, etc., growing in the lake, he would see the
clear transparent water, he would be all the more glad and
delighted, would descend into the natural lake, bathe and
drink at pleasure and, his oppression being allayed, he would
eat the fibers and stalks of the lilies, adorn himself with
the blue lotus, carry on his shoulders the roots of the mandalaka,
ascend from the lake, put on his clothes, dry the bathing
cloth in the sun, and in the cool shade where the breeze blew
ever so gently lay himself down and saw: 'O bliss! O bliss!'
Thus should this illustration be applied. The time of gladness
and delight from when he heard of the natural lake and the
dense forest till he say the water is like rapture having
the manner of gladness and delight at the object in view.
The time when, after his bath and dried he laid himself down
in the cool shade, saying, 'O bliss! O bliss!' etc., is the
sense of ease [happiness] grown strong, established in that
mode of enjoying the taste of the object.[14]
Since rapture and
happiness co-exist in the first jhana, this simile should not
be taken to imply that they are mutually exclusive. Its purport
is to suggest that rapture gains prominence before happiness,
for which it helps provide a causal foundation.
In the description
of the first jhana, rapture and happiness are said to be "born
of seclusion" and to suffuse the whole body of the meditator
in such a way that there is no part of his body which remains
unaffected by them:
Monks, secluded
from sense pleasure ... a monk enters and dwells in the first
jhana. He steeps, drenches, fills and suffuses his body with
the rapture and happiness born of seclusion, so that there
is no part of his entire body that is not suffused with this
rapture and happiness. Just as a skilled bath-attendant or
his apprentice might strew bathing powder in a copper basin,
sprinkle it again and again with water, and knead it together
so that the mass of bathing soap would be pervaded, suffused,
and saturated with moisture inside and out yet would not ooze
moisture, so a monk steeps, drenches, fills and suffuses his
body with the rapture and happiness born of seclusion, so
that, there is no part of his entire body that is not suffused
with this rapture and happiness born of seclusion. (D.i,74)
One-pointedness
(ekaggata) ^
Unlike the previous
four jhana factors, one-pointedness is not specifically mentioned
in the standard formula for the first jhana, but it is included
among the jhana factors by the Mahavedalla Sutta (M.i,294) as
well as in the Abhidhamma and the commentaries. One-pointedness
is a universal mental concomitant, the factor by virtue of which
the mind is centered upon its object. It brings the mind to
a single point, the point occupied by the object.
One-pointedness is
used in the text as a synonym for concentration (samadhi)
which has the characteristic of non-distraction, the function
of eliminating distractions, non-wavering as its manifestation,
and happiness as its proximate cause (Vism.85; PP.85). As a
jhana factor one-pointedness is always directed to a wholesome
object and wards off unwholesome influences, in particular the
hindrance of sensual desire. As the hindrances are absent in
jhana one-pointedness acquires special strength, based on the
previous sustained effort of concentration.
Besides the five
jhana factors, the first jhana contains a great number of other
mental factors functioning in unison as coordinate members of
a single state of consciousness. Already the Anupada Sutta lists
such additional components of the first jhana as contact, feeling,
perception, volition, consciousness, desire, decision, energy,
mindfulness, equanimity and attention (M.iii,25). In the Abhidhamma
literature this is extended still further up to thirty-three
indispensable components. Nevertheless, only five states are
called the factors of the first jhana, for only these have the
functions of inhibiting the five hindrances and fixing the mind
in absorption. For the jhana to arise all these five factors
must be present simultaneously, exercising their special operations:
But applied thought
directs the mind onto the object; sustained thought keeps
it anchored there. Happiness [rapture] produced by the success
of the effort refreshes the mind whose effort has succeeded
through not being distracted by those hindrances; and bliss
[happiness] intensifies it for the same reason. Then unification
aided by this directing onto, this anchoring, this refreshing
and this intensifying, evenly and rightly centers the mind
with its remaining associated states on the object consisting
in unity. Consequently possession of five factors should be
understood as the arising of these five, namely, applied thought,
sustained thought, happiness [rapture], bliss [happiness],
and unification of mind. For it is when these are arisen that
jhana is said to be arisen, which is why they are called the
five factors of possession. (Vism.146;PP.152)
Each jhana factor
serves as support for the one which succeeds it. Applied thought
must direct the mind to its object in order for sustained thought
to anchor it there. Only when the mind is anchored can the interest
develop which will culminate in rapture. As rapture develops
it brings happiness to maturity, and this spiritual happiness,
by providing an alternative to the fickle pleasures of the senses,
aids the growth of one-pointedness. In this way, as Nagasena
explains, all the other wholesome states lead to concentration,
which stands at their head like the apex on the roof of a house
(Miln. 38-39).
Perfecting the First
Jhana ^
The difference between
access and absorption concentration, as we have said, does not
lie in the absence of the hindrances, which is common to both,
but in the relative strength of the jhana factors. In access
the factors are weak so that concentration is fragile, comparable
to a child who walks a few steps and then falls down. But in
absorption the jhana factors are strong and well developed so
that the mind can remain continuously in concentration just
as a healthy man can remain standing on his feet for a whole
day and night (Vism.126; PP.131).
Because full absorption
offers the benefit of strengthened concentration, a meditator
who gains access is encouraged to strive for the attainment
of jhana. To develop his practice several important measures
are recommended.[15] The meditator
should live in a suitable dwelling, rely upon a suitable alms
resort, avoid profitless talk, associate only with spiritually-minded
companions, make use only of suitable food, live in a congenial
climate, and maintain his practice in a suitable posture. He
should also cultivate the ten kinds of skill in absorption.
He should clean his lodging and his physical body so that they
conduce to clear meditation, balance his spiritual faculties
by seeing that faith is balanced with wisdom and energy with
concentration, and he must be skillful in producing and developing
the sign of concentration (1-3). He should exert the mind when
it is slack, restrain it when it is agitated, encourage it when
it is restless or dejected, and look at the mind with equanimity
when all is proceeding well (4-7). The meditator should avoid
distracting persons, should approach people experienced in concentration,
and should be firm in his resolution to attain jhana (8-10).
After attaining the
first jhana a few times the meditator is not advised to set
out immediately striving for the second jhana. This would be
a foolish and profitless spiritual ambition. Before he is prepared
to make the second jhana the goal of his endeavor he must first
bring the first jhana to perfection. If he is too eager to reach
the second jhana before he has perfected the first, he is likely
to fail to gain the second and find himself unable to regain
the first. The Buddha compares such a meditator to a foolish
cow who, while still unfamiliar with her own pasture, sets out
for new pastures and gets lost in the mountains: she fails to
find food or drink and is unable to find her way home (A.iv,
418-19).
The perfecting of
the first jhana involves two steps: the extension of the sign
and the achievement of the five masteries. The extension of
the sign means extending the size of the counterpart sign, the
object of the jhana. Beginning with a small area, the size of
one or two fingers, the meditator gradually learns to broaden
the sign until the mental image can be made to cover the world-sphere
or even beyond (Vism. 152-53; PP.158-59).
Following this the
meditator should try to acquire five kinds of mastery over the
jhana: mastery in adverting, in attaining, in resolving, in
emerging and in reviewing.[16] Mastery in adverting is the ability to advert
to the jhana factors one by one after emerging from the jhana,
wherever he wants, whenever he wants, and for as long as he
wants. Mastery in attaining is the ability to enter upon jhana
quickly, mastery in resolving the ability to remain in the jhana
for exactly the pre-determined length of time, mastery in emerging
the ability to emerge from jhana quickly without difficulty,
and mastery in reviewing the ability to review the jhana and
its factors with retrospective knowledge immediately after adverting
to them. When the meditator has achieved this fivefold mastery,
then he is ready to strive for the second jhana.
4. The Higher Jhanas
^
In this chapter we
will survey the higher states of jhana. First we will discuss
the remaining three jhanas of the fine-material sphere, using
the descriptive formulas of the suttas as our starting point
and the later literature as our source for the methods of practice
that lead to these attainments. Following this we will consider
the four meditative states that pertain to the immaterial sphere,
which come to be called the immaterial jhanas. Our examination
will bring out the dynamic character of the process by which
the jhanas are successively achieved. The attainment of the
higher jhanas of the fine-material sphere, we will see, involves
the successive elimination of the grosser factors and the bringing
to prominence of the subtler ones, the attainment of the formless
jhanas the replacement of grosser objects with successively
more refined objects. From our study it will become clear that
the jhanas link together in a graded sequence of development
in which the lower serves as basis for the higher and the higher
intensifies and purifies states already present in the lower.
We will end the chapter with a brief look at the connection
between the jhanas and the Buddhist teaching of rebirth.
The Higher Fine-material
Jhanas ^
The formula for the
attainment of the second jhana runs as follows:
With the subsiding
of applied thought and sustained thought he enters and dwells
in the second jhana, which has internal confidence and unification
of mind, is without applied thought and sustained thought,
and is filled with rapture and happiness born of concentration
(M.i,181; Vbh. 245)
The second jhana,
like the first, is attained by eliminating the factors to be
abandoned and by developing the factors of possession. In this
case however, the factors to be abandoned are the two initial
factors of the first jhana itself, applied thought and sustained
thought; the factors of possession are the three remaining jhana
factors, rapture, happiness and one-pointedness. Hence the formula
begins "with the subsiding of applied thought and sustained
thought," and then mentions the jhana's positive endowments.
After achieving the
five kinds of mastery over the first jhana, a meditator who
wishes to reach the second jhana should enter the first jhana
and contemplate its defects. These are twofold: one, which might
be called the defect of proximate corruption, is the nearness
of the five hindrances, against which the first jhana provides
only a relatively mild safeguard; the other defect, inherent
to the first jhana, is its inclusion of applied and sustained
thought, which now appear as gross, even as impediments needing
to be eliminated to attain the more peaceful and subtle second
jhana.
By reflecting upon
the second jhana as more tranquil and sublime than the first,
the meditator ends his attachment to the first jhana and engages
in renewed striving with the aim of reaching the higher stage.
He directs his mind to his meditation subject -- which must
be one capable of inducing the higher jhanas such as a kasina
or the breath -- and resolves to overcome applied and sustained
thought. When his practice comes to maturity the two kinds of
thought subside and the second jhana arises. In the second jhana
only three of the original five jhana factors remain -- rapture,
happiness, and one-pointedness. Moreover, with the elimination
of the two grosser factors these have acquired a subtler and
more peaceful tone.[17]
Besides the main
jhana factors, the canonical formula includes several other
states in its description of the second jhana. "Internal
confidence" (ajjhattamsampasadanam), conveys the
twofold meaning of faith and tranquillity. In the first jhana
the meditator's faith lacked full clarity and serenity due to
"the disturbance created by applied and sustained thought,
like water ruffled by ripples and wavelets" (Vism. 157;
PP.163). But when applied and sustained thought subside, the
mind becomes very peaceful and the meditator's faith acquires
fuller confidence.
The formula also
mentions unification of mind (cetaso ekodibhavam), which
is identified with one-pointedness or concentration. Though
present in the first jhana, concentration only gains special
mention in connection with the second jhana since it is here
that it acquires eminence. In the first jhana concentration
was still imperfect, being subject to the disturbing influence
of applied and sustained thought. For the same reason this jhana,
along with its constituent rapture and happiness, is said to
be born of concentration (samadhijam): "It is only
this concentration that is quite worthy to be called 'concentration'
because of its complete confidence and extreme immobility due
to absence of disturbance by applied and sustained thought"
(Vism.158; PP.164).
To attain the third
jhana the meditator must use the same method he used to
ascend from the first jhana to the second. He must master the
second jhana in the five ways, enter and emerge from it, and
reflect upon its defects. In this case the defect of proximate
corruption is the nearness of applied and sustained thought,
which threaten to disrupt the serenity of the second jhana;
its inherent defect is the presence of rapture, which now appears
as a gross factor that should be discarded. Aware of the imperfections
in the second jhana, the meditator cultivates indifference towards
it and aspires instead for the peace and sublimity of the third
jhana, towards the attainment of which he now directs his efforts.
When his practice matures he enters the third jhana, which has
the two jhana factors that remain when the rapture disappears,
happiness and one-pointedness, and which the suttas describe
as follows:
With the fading away
of rapture, he dwells in equanimity, mindful and discerning;
and he experiences in his own person that happiness of which
the noble ones say: 'Happily lives he who is equanimous and
mindful' -- thus he enters and dwells in the third jhana. (M.i,182;
Vbh.245)
The formula indicates
that the third jhana contains, besides its two defining factors,
three additional components not included among the jhana factors:
equanimity, mindfulness and discernment. Equanimity is mentioned
twice. The Pali word for equanimity, upekkha, occurs
in the texts with a wide range of meanings, the most important
being neutral feeling -- that is, feeling which is neither painful
nor pleasant -- and the mental quality of inner balance or equipoise
called "specific neutrality" (tatramajjhattata
-- see Vism.161; PP.167). The equanimity referred to in the
formula is a mode of specific neutrality which belongs to the
aggregate of mental formations (sankharakkhandha) and
thus should not be confused with equanimity as neutral feeling.
Though the two are often associated, each can exist independently
of the other, and in the third jhana equanimity as specific
neutrality co-exists with happiness or pleasant feeling.
The meditator in
third jhana is also said to be mindful and discerning, which
points to another pair of frequently conjoined mental functions.
Mindfulness (sati), in this context, means the remembrance
of the meditation object, the constant bearing of the object
in mind without allowing it to float away. Discernment (sampajañña)
is an aspect of wisdom or understanding which scrutinizes the
object and grasps its nature free from delusion. Though these
two factors were already present even in the first two jhanas,
they are first mentioned only in connection with the third since
it is here that their efficacy becomes manifest. The two are
needed particularly to avoid a return to rapture. Just as a
suckling calf, removed from its mother and left unguarded, again
approaches the mother, so the happiness of jhana tends to veer
towards rapture, its natural partner, if unguarded by mindfulness
and discernment (Dhs. A.219). To prevent this and the consequent
loss of the third jhana is the task of mindfulness and discernment.
The attainment of
the fourth jhana commences with the aforesaid procedure.
In this case the meditator sees that the third jhana is threatened
by the proximity of rapture, which is ever ready to swell up
again due to its natural affinity with happiness; he also sees
that it is inherently defective due to the presence of happiness,
a gross factor which provides fuel for clinging. He then contemplates
the state where equanimous feeling and one-pointedness subsist
together -- the fourth jhana -- as far more peaceful and secure
than anything he has so far experienced, and therefore as far
more desirable. Taking as his object the same counterpart sign
he took for the earlier jhana, he strengthens his efforts in
concentration for the purpose of abandoning the gross factor
of happiness and entering the higher jhana. When his practice
matures the mind enters absorption into the fourth jhana:
With the abandoning
of pleasure and pain, and with the previous disappearance
of joy and grief, he enters and dwells in the fourth jhana,
which has neither-pain-nor-pleasure and has purity of mindfulness
due to equanimity. (M.i,182; Vbh.245)
The first part of
this formula specifies the conditions for the attainment of
this jhana -- also called the neither-painful-nor-pleasant liberation
of mind (M.i, 296) -- to be the abandoning of four kinds of
feeling incompatible with it, the first two signifying bodily
feelings, the latter two the corresponding mental feelings.
The formula also introduces several new terms and phrases which
have not been encountered previously. First, it mentions a new
feeling, neither-pain-nor-pleasure (adukkhamasukha),
which remains after the other four feelings have subsided. This
kind of feeling also called equanimous or neutral feeling, replaces
happiness as the concomitant feeling of the jhana and also figures
as one of the jhana factors. Thus this attainment has two jhana
factors: neutral feeling and one-pointedness of mind. Previously
the ascent from one jhana to the next was marked by the progressive
elimination of the coarser jhana factors, but none were added
to replace those which were excluded. But now, in the move from
the third to the fourth jhana, a substitution occurs, neutral
feeling moving in to take the place of happiness.
In addition we also
find a new phrase composed of familiar terms, "purity of
mindfulness due to equanimity" (upekkhasatiparisuddhi).
The Vibhanga explains: "This mindfulness is cleared, purified,
clarified by equanimity" (Vbh. 261), and Buddhaghosa adds:
"for the mindfulness in this jhana is quite purified, and
its purification is effected by equanimity, not by anything
else" (Vism.167; PP.174). The equanimity which purifies
the mindfulness is not neutral feeling, as might be supposed,
but specific neutrality, the sublime impartiality free from
attachment and aversion, which also pertains to this jhana.
Though both specific neutrality and mindfulness were present
in the lower three jhanas, none among these is said to have
"purity of mindfulness due to equanimity." The reason
is that in the lower jhanas the equanimity present was not purified
itself, being overshadowed by opposing states and lacking association
with equanimous feeling. It is like a crescent moon which exists
by day but cannot be seen because of the sunlight and the bright
sky. But in the fourth jhana, where equanimity gains the support
of equanimous feeling, it shines forth like the crescent moon
at night and purifies mindfulness and the other associated states
(Vism. 169; PP.175).
The Immaterial Jhanas
^
Beyond the four jhanas
lie four higher attainments in the scale of concentration, referred
to in the suttas as the "peaceful immaterial liberations
transcending material form" (santa vimokkha atikammarupe
aruppa, M.i,33). In the commentaries they are also called
the immaterial jhanas, and while this expression is not found
in the suttas it seems appropriate in so far as these states
correspond to jhanic levels of consciousness and continue the
same process of mental unification initiated by the original
four jhanas, now sometimes called the fine-material jhanas.
The immaterial jhanas are designated, not by numerical names
like their predecessors, but by the names of their objective
spheres: the base of boundless space, the base of boundless
consciousness, the base of nothingness, and the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.[18] They receive the designation "immaterial"
or " formless" (arupa) because they are achieved
by surmounting all perceptions of material form, including the
subtle form of the counterpart sign which served as the object
of the previous jhanas, and because they are the subjective
correlates of the immaterial planes of existence.
Like the fine-material
jhanas follow a fixed sequence and must be attained in the order
in which they are presented. That is, the meditator who wishes
to achieve the immaterial jhanas must begin with the base of
boundless space and then proceed step by step up to the base
of neither-perception-nor-non-perception. However, an important
difference separates the modes of progress in the two cases.
In the case of the fine-material jhanas, the ascent from one
jhana to another involves a surmounting of jhana factors. To
rise from the first jhana to the second the meditator must eliminate
applied thought and sustained thought, to rise from the second
to the third he must overcome rapture, and to rise from the
third to the fourth he must replace pleasant with neutral feeling.
Thus progress involves a reduction and refinement of the jhana
factors, from the initial five to the culmination in one-pointedness
and neutral feeling.
Once the fourth jhana
is reached the jhana factors remain constant, and in higher
ascent to the immaterial attainments there is no further elimination
of jhana factors. For this reason the formless jhanas, when
classified from the perspective of their factorial constitution
as is done in the Abhidhamma, are considered modes of the fourth
jhana. They are all two-factored jhanas, constituted by one-pointedness
and equanimous feeling.
Rather than being
determined by a surmounting of factors, the order of the immaterial
jhanas is determined by a surmounting of objects. Whereas for
the lower jhanas the object can remain constant but the factors
must be changed, for the immaterial jhanas the factors remain
constant while the objects change. The base of boundless space
eliminates the kasina object of the fourth jhana, the base of
boundless consciousness surmounts the object of the base of
boundless space, the base of nothingness surmounts the object
of base of boundless consciousness, and the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception
surmounts the objects the object of the base of nothingness.
Because the objects
become progressively more subtle at each level, the jhana factors
of equanimous feeling and one-pointedness, while remaining constant
in nature throughout, become correspondingly more refined in
quality. Buddhaghosa illustrates this with a simile of four
pieces of cloth of the same measurements, spun by the same person,
yet made of thick, thin, thinner and very thin thread respectively
(Vism. 339; PP.369). Also, whereas the four lower jhanas can
each take a variety of objects -- the ten kasinas, the in-and-out
breath, etc. -- and do not stand in any integral relation to
these objects, the four immaterial jhanas each take a single
object inseparably related to the attainment itself. The first
is attained solely with the base of boundless space as object,
the second with the base of boundless consciousness, and so
forth.
The motivation which
initially leads a meditator to seek the immaterial attainments
is a clear recognition of the dangers inherent in material existence:
it is in virtue of matter that injuries and death by weapons
and knives occur that one is afflicted with diseases, subject
of hunger and thirst, while none of this takes place on the
immaterial planes of existence (M.i,410). Wishing to escape
these dangers by taking rebirth in the immaterial planes, the
meditator must first attain the four fine-material jhanas and
master the fourth jhana with any kasina as object except the
omitted space kasina. By this much the meditator has risen above
gross matter, but he still has not transcended the subtle material
form comprised by the luminous counterpart sign which is the
object of his jhana. To reach the formless attainments the meditator,
after emerging from the fourth jhana, must consider that even
that jhana, as refined as it is, still has an object consisting
in material form and thus is distantly connected with gross
matter; moreover, it is close to happiness, a factor of the
third jhana, and is far coarser than the immaterial states.
The meditator sees the base of boundless space, the first immaterial
jhana, as more peaceful and sublime than the fourth fine-material
jhana and as more safely removed from materiality.
Following these preparatory
reflections, the meditator enters the fourth jhana based on
a kasina object and extends the counterpart sign of the kasina
"to the limit of the world-sphere, or as far as he likes."
Then, after emerging from the fourth jhana, he must remove the
kasina by attending exclusively to the space it has been made
to cover without attending to the kasina itself. Taking as his
object the space left after the removal of the kasina, the meditator
adverts to it as "boundless space" or simply as "space,
space," striking at it with applied and sustained thought.
As he cultivates this practice over and over, eventually the
consciousness pertaining to the base of boundless space arises
with boundless space as its object (Vism. 327-28; PP.355-56).
A meditator who has
gained mastery over the base of boundless space, wishing to
attain as well the second immaterial jhana, must reflect upon
the two defects of the first attainment which are its proximity
to the fine-material jhanas and its grossness compared to the
base of boundless consciousness. Having in this way developed
indifferent to the lower attainment, he must next enter and
emerge from the base of boundless space and then fix his attention
upon the consciousness that occurred there pervading the boundless
space. Since the space taken as the object by the first formless
jhana was boundless, the consciousness of that space also involves
an aspect of boundlessness, and it is to this boundless consciousness
that the aspirant for the next attainment adverts. He is not
to attend to it merely as boundless, but as "boundless
consciousness" or simply as "consciousness."
He continues to cultivate this sign again and again until the
consciousness belonging to the base of boundless consciousness
arises in absorption taking as its object the boundless consciousness
pertaining to the first immaterial state (Vism. 331-32; PP.360-61).
To attain the next
formless state, the base of nothingness, the meditator who has
mastered the base of boundless consciousness must contemplate
its defects in the same twofold manner and advert to the superior
peacefulness of the base of nothingness. Without giving any
more attention to the base of boundless consciousness, he should
"give attention to the present non-existence, voidness,
secluded aspect of that same past consciousness belonging to
the base consisting of boundless space" (Vism. 333; PP.362).
In other words, the meditator is to focus upon the present absence
or non-existence of the consciousness belonging to the base
of boundless space, adverting to it over and over thus: "There
is not, there is not" or "void, void". When his
efforts fructify there arises in absorption a consciousness
belonging to the base of nothingness, with the non-existence
of the consciousness of boundless space as its object. Whereas
the second immaterial state relates to the consciousness of
boundless space positively, by focusing upon the content of
that consciousness and appropriating its boundlessness, the
third immaterial state relates to it negatively, by excluding
that consciousness from awareness and making the absence or
present non-existence of that consciousness its object.
The fourth and final
immaterial jhana, the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception,
is reached through the same preliminary procedure. The meditator
can also reflect upon the unsatisfactoriness of perception,
thinking: "Perception is a disease, perception is a boil,
perception is a dart ... this is peaceful, this is sublime,
that is to say, neither-perception-nor-non-perception"
(M.ii,231). In this way he ends his attachment to the base of
nothingness and strengthens his resolve to attain the next higher
stage. He then adverts to the four mental aggregates that constitute
the attainment of the base of nothingness -- its feeling, perception,
mental formations and consciousness -- contemplating them as
"peaceful, peaceful," reviewing that base and striking
at it with applied and sustained thought. As he does so the
hindrances are suppressed, the mind passes through access and
enters the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.
This jhana receives
its name because, on the one hand, it lacks gross perception
with its function of clearly discerning objects, and thus cannot
be said to have perception; on the other, it retains a very
subtle perception, and thus cannot be said to be without perception.
Because all the mental functions are here reduced to the finest
and most subtle level, this jhana is also named the attainment
with residual formations. At this level the mind has reached
the highest possible development in the direction of pure serenity.
It has attained the most intense degree of concentration, becoming
so refined that consciousness can no longer be described in
terms of existence or non-existence. Yet even this attainment,
from the Buddhist point of view, is still a mundane state which
must finally give way to insight that alone leads to true liberation.
The Jhanas and Rebirth
^
Buddhism teaches
that all sentient beings in whom ignorance and craving still
linger are subject to rebirth following death. Their mode of
rebirth is determined by their kamma, their volitional action,
wholesome kamma issuing in a good rebirth and unwholesome kamma
in a bad rebirth. As a kind of wholesome kamma the attainment
of jhana can play a key role in the rebirth process, being considered
a weighty good kamma which takes precedence over other lesser
kammas in determining the future rebirth of the person who attains
it.
Buddhist cosmology
groups the numerous planes of existence into which rebirth takes
place into three broad spheres each of which comprises a number
of subsidiary planes. The sense-sphere (kamadhatu) is
the field of rebirth for evil deeds and for meritorious deeds
falling short of the jhanas; the fine-material sphere (rupadhatu),
the field of rebirth for the fine-material jhanas; and the immaterial
sphere (arupadhatu), the field of rebirth for the immaterial
jhanas.
An unwholesome kamma,
should it become determinative of rebirth, will lead to a new
existence in one of the four planes of misery belonging to the
sense-sphere: the hells, the animal kingdom, the sphere of afflicted
spirits, or the host of titans. A wholesome kamma of a subjhanic
type produces rebirth in one of the seven happy planes in the
sense-sphere, the human world or the six heavenly worlds.
Above the sense-sphere
realms are the fine-material realms, into which rebirth is gained
only through the attainment of the fine-material jhanas. The
sixteen realms in this sphere are hierarchically ordered in
correlation with the four jhanas. Those who have practiced the
first jhana to a minor degree are reborn in the Realm of the
Retinue of Brahma, to a moderate degree in the Realm of the
Ministers of Brahma, and to a superior degree in the Realm of
the Great Brahma.[19] Similarly,
practicing the second jhana to a minor degree brings rebirth
in the Realm of Minor Lustre, to a moderate degree in the Realm
of Infinite Lustre, and to a superior degree the Realm of Radiant
Lustre.[20] Again, practicing the
third jhana to a minor degree brings rebirth in the Realm of
Minor Aura, to a moderate degree in the Realm of Infinite Aura,
and to a superior degree in the Realm of Steady Aura.[21]
Corresponding to
the fourth jhana there are seven realms: the Realm of Great
Reward, the Realm of Non-percipient Beings, and the five Pure
Abodes.[22] With this jhana the
rebirth pattern deviates from the former one. It seems that
all beings who practice the fourth jhana of the mundane level
without reaching any supramundane attainment are reborn in the
realm of Great Reward. There is no differentiation by way of
inferior, moderate or superior grades of development. The Realm
of Non-percipient Beings is reached by those who, after attaining
the fourth jhana, then use the power of their meditation to
take rebirth with only material bodies; they do not acquire
consciousness again until they pass away from this realm. The
five Pure Abodes are open only to non-returners (anagamis),
noble disciples at the penultimate stage of liberation who have
eradicated the fetters binding them to the sense-sphere and
thence automatically take rebirth in higher realms, where they
attain arahatship and reach final deliverance.
Beyond the fine-material
sphere lie the immaterial realms, which are four in number --
the base of boundless space, the base of boundless consciousness,
the base of nothingness, and the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception.
As should be evident, these are realms of rebirth for those
who, without having broken the fetters that bind them to samsara,
achieve and master one or another of the four immaterial jhanas.
Those meditators who have mastery over a formless attainment
at the time of death take rebirth in the appropriate plane,
where they abide until the kammic force of the jhana is exhausted.
Then they pass away, to take rebirth in some other realm as
determined by their accumulated kamma.[23]
5. Jhanas and the
Supramundane ^
The Way of Wisdom
^
The goal of the Buddhist
path, complete and permanent liberation from suffering, is to
be achieved by practicing the full threefold discipline of morality
(sila), concentration (samadhi), and wisdom (pañña). The mundane
jhanas, comprising the four fine-material jhanas and the four
immaterial jhanas, pertain to the stage of concentration, which
they fulfill to an eminent degree. However, taken by themselves,
these states do not ensure complete deliverance, for they are
incapable of cutting off the roots of suffering. The Buddha
teaches that the cause of suffering, the driving power behind
the cycle of rebirths, is the defilements with their three unwholesome
roots -- greed, hatred and delusion. Concentration of the absorption
level, no matter to what heights it is pursued, only suppresses
the defilements, but cannot destroy their latent seeds. Thence
bare mundane jhana, even when sustained, cannot by itself terminate
the cycle of rebirths. To the contrary, it may even perpetuate
the round. For if any fine-material or immaterial jhana is held
to with clinging, it will bring about a rebirth in that particular
plane of existence corresponding to its own kammic potency,
which can then be followed by rebirth in some lower realm.
What is required
to achieve complete deliverance from the cycle of rebirths is
the eradication of the defilements. Since the most basic defilement
is ignorance (avijja), the key to liberation lies in developing
its direct opposite, namely wisdom (pañña).
Since wisdom presupposes
a certain proficiency in concentration it is inevitable that
jhana comes to claim a place in its development. This place,
however, is not fixed and invariable, but as we will see allows
for differences depending on the individual meditator's disposition.
Fundamental to the
discussion in this chapter is a distinction between two terms
crucial to Theravada philosophical exposition, "mundane"
(lokiya) and "supramundane" (lokuttara).
The term "mundane" applies to all phenomena comprised
in the world (loka) -- to subtle states of consciousness
as well as matter, to virtue as well as evil, to meditative
attainments as well as sensual engrossments. The term "supramundane,"
in contrast, applies exclusively to that which transcends the
world, that is the nine supramundane states: Nibbana, the four
noble paths (magga) leading to Nibbana, and their corresponding
fruits (phala) which experience the bliss of Nibbana.
Wisdom has the specific
characteristic of penetrating the true nature of phenomena.
It penetrates the particular and general features of things
through direct cognition rather than discursive thought. Its
function is "to abolish the darkness of delusion which
conceals the individual essences of states" and its manifestation
is "non-delusion." Since the Buddha says that one
whose mind is concentrated knows and sees things as they are,
the proximate cause of wisdom is concentration (Vism. 438; PP.481).
The wisdom instrumental
in attaining liberation is divided into two principal types:
insight knowledge (vipassanañana) and the knowledge pertaining
to the supramundane paths (maggañana). The first is the
direct penetration of the three characteristics of conditioned
phenomena -- impermanence, suffering and non-self.[24] It takes as its objective sphere the five
aggregates (pañcakkhandha) -- material form, feeling
perception, mental formations and consciousness. Because insight
knowledge takes the world of conditioned formations as its object,
it is regarded as a mundane form of wisdom. Insight knowledge
does not itself directly eradicate the defilements, but serves
to prepare the way for the second type of wisdom, the wisdom
of the supramundane paths, which emerges when insight has been
brought to its climax. The wisdom of the path, occurring in
four distinct stages (to be discussed below ), simultaneously
realizes Nibbana, fathoms the Four Noble Truths, and cuts off
the defilements. This wisdom is called "supramundane"
because it rises up from the world of the five aggregates to
realize the state transcendent to the world, Nibbana.
The Buddhist disciple,
striving for deliverance, begins the development of wisdom by
first securely establishing its roots -- purified moral discipline
and concentration. He then learns and masters the basic material
upon which wisdom is to work -- the aggregates, elements, sense
bases, dependent arising, the Four Noble Truths, etc. He commences
the actual practice of wisdom by cultivating insight into the
impermanence, suffering and non-self aspect of the five aggregates.
When this insight reaches its apex it issues in supramundane
wisdom, the right view factor of the Noble Eightfold Path, which
turns from conditioned formations to the unconditioned Nibbana
and thereby eradicates the defilements.
The Two Vehicles
^
The Theravada tradition
recognizes two alternative approaches to the development of
wisdom, between which practitioners are free to choose according
to their aptitude and propensity. These two approaches are the
vehicle of serenity (samathayana) and the vehicle of
insight (vipassanayana). The meditators who follow them
are called, respectively, the samathayanika, "one
who makes serenity his vehicle," and the vipassanayanika,
"one who makes insight his vehicle." Since both vehicles,
despite their names, are approaches to developing insight, to
prevent misunderstanding the latter type of meditator is sometimes
called a suddhavipassanayanika, "one who makes bare
insight his vehicle," or a sukkhavipassaka, "a
dry-insight worker." Though all three terms appear initially
in the commentaries rather than in the suttas, the recognition
of the two vehicles seems implicit in a number of canonical
passages.
The samathayanika
is a meditator who first attains access concentration or one
of the eight mundane jhanas, then emerges and uses his attainment
as a basis for cultivating insight until he arrives at the supramundane
path. In contrast, the vipassanayanika does not attain
mundane jhana prior to practicing insight contemplation, or
if he does, does not use it as an instrument for cultivating
insight. Instead, without entering and emerging from jhana,
he proceeds directly to insight contemplation on mental and
material phenomena and by means of this bare insight he reaches
the noble path. For both kinds of meditator the experience of
the path in any of its four stages always occurs at a level
of jhanic intensity and thus necessarily includes supramundane
jhana under the heading of right concentration (samma samadhi),
the eighth factor of the Noble Eightfold Path.
The classical source
for the distinction between the two vehicles of serenity and
insight is the Visuddhimagga where it is explained that
when a meditator begins the development of wisdom "if firstly,
his vehicle is serenity, [he] should emerge from any fine-material
or immaterial jhana except the base consisting of neither-perception-nor-non-perception,
and he should discern, according to characteristic, function,
etc. the jhana factors consisting of applied thought, etc. and
the states associated with them" (Vism. 557; PP679-80).
Other commentarial passages allow access concentration to suffice
for the vehicle of serenity, but the last immaterial jhana is
excluded because its factors are too subtle to be discerned.
The meditator whose vehicle is pure insight, on the other hand,
is advised to start directly by discerning material and mental
phenomena, beginning with the four elements, without utilizing
a jhana for this purpose (Vism. 558; PP.680). Thus the samathayanika
first attains access concentration or mundane jhana and then
develops insight knowledge, by means of which he reaches the
supramundane path containing wisdom under the heading of right
view, and supramundane jhana under the heading of right concentration.
The vipassanayanika, in contrast, skips over mundane
jhana and goes directly into insight contemplation. When he
reaches the end of the progression of insight knowledge he arrives
at the supramundane path which, as in the previous case, brings
together wisdom with supramundane jhana. This jhana counts as
his accomplishment of serenity.
For a meditator following
the vehicle of serenity the attainment of jhana fulfills two
functions: first, it produces a basis of mental purity and inner
collectedness needed for undertaking the work of insight contemplation;
and second, it serves as an object to be examined with insight
in order to discern the three characteristics of impermanence,
suffering and non-self. Jhana accomplishes the first function
by providing a powerful instrument for overcoming the five hindrances.
As we have seen, for wisdom to arise the mind must first be
concentrated well, and to be concentrated well it must be freed
from the hindrances, a task accomplished pre-eminently by the
attainment of jhana. Though access concentration will keep the
hindrances at bay, jhana will ensure that they are removed to
a much safer distance.
In their capacity
for producing concentration the jhanas are called the basis
(pada) for insight, and that particular jhana a meditator
enters and emerges from before commencing his practice of insight
is designated his padakajjhana, the basic or foundational
jhana. Insight cannot be practiced while absorbed in jhana,
since insight meditation requires investigation and observation,
which are impossible when the mind is immersed in one-pointed
absorption. But after emerging from the jhana the mind is cleared
of the hindrances, and the stillness and clarity that then result
conduce to precise, penetrating insight.
The jhanas also enter
into the samathayanika's practice in second capacity,
that is, as objects for scrutinization by insight. The practice
of insight consists essentially in the examination of mental
and physical phenomena to discover their marks of impermanence,
suffering and non-self. The jhanas a meditator attains provide
him with a readily available and strikingly clear object in
which to seek out the three characteristics. After emerging
from a jhana the meditator will proceed to examine the jhanic
consciousness and to discern the way it exemplifies the three
universal marks. This process is called sammasanañana,
"comprehension knowledge," and the jhana subject to
such treatment is termed sammasitajjhana, "the comprehended
jhana" (Vism. 607-11; PP.706-10). Though the basic jhana
and the comprehended jhana will often be the same, the two do
not necessarily coincide. A meditator cannot practice comprehension
on a jhana higher than he is capable of attaining, but one who
uses a higher jhana as his padakajjhana can still practice
insight comprehension on a lower jhana which he has previously
attained and mastered. The admitted difference between the padakajjhana
and the sammasitajjhana leads to discrepant theories
about the supramundane concentration of the noble path, as we
will see.
Whereas the sequence
of training undertaken by the samathayanika meditator
is unproblematic, the vipassanayanika's approach presents
the difficulty of accounting for the concentration he uses to
provide a basis for insight. Concentration is needed in order
to see and know things as they are, but without access concentration
or jhana, what concentration can he use? The solution to this
problem is found in a type of concentration distinct from the
access and absorption concentrations pertaining to the vehicle
of serenity, called "momentary concentration" (khanika
samadhi). Despite its name, momentary concentration does
not signify a single moment of concentration amidst a current
of distracted thoughts, but a dynamic concentration which flows
from object to object in the ever-changing flux of phenomena,
retaining a constant degree of intensity and collectedness sufficient
to purify the mind of the hindrances. Momentary concentration
arises in the samathayanika simultaneously with his post-jhanic
attainment of insight, but for the vipassanayanika it
develops naturally and spontaneously in the course of his insight
practice without his having to fix the mind upon a single exclusive
object. Thus the follower of the vehicle of insight does not
omit concentration altogether from his training, but develops
it in a different manner from the practitioner of serenity.
Without gaining jhana he goes directly into contemplation on
the five aggregates and by observing them constantly from moment
to moment acquires momentary concentration as an accompaniment
of his investigations. This momentary concentration fulfills
the same function as the basic jhana of the serenity vehicle,
providing the foundation of mental clarity needed for insight
to emerge.
Supramundane Jhana
^
The climax in the
development of insight is the attainment of the supramundane
paths and fruits. Each path is a momentary peak experience directly
apprehending Nibbana and permanently cutting off certain defilements.
These defilements are generally grouped into a set of ten "fetters"
(samyojana) which keep beings chained to the round of
rebirths. The first path, called the path of stream-entry (sotapatti)
because it marks the entry into the stream of the Dhamma, eradicates
the first three fetters -- The false view of self, doubt, and
clinging to rites and rituals. The disciple who has reached
stream-entry has limited his future births to a maximum of seven
in the happy realms of the human and heavenly worlds, after
which he will attain final deliverance. But an ardent disciple
may progress to still higher stages in the same life in which
he reaches stream-entry, by making an aspiration for the next
higher path and again undertaking the development of insight
with the aim of reaching that path.
The next supramundane
path is that of the once-returner (sakadagami). This
path does not eradicate any fetters completely, but it greatly
attenuates sensual desire and ill will. The once-returner is
so called because he is bound to make an end of suffering after
returning to this world only one more time. The third path,
that of the non-returner (anagami) utterly destroys the
sensual desire and ill will weakened by the preceding path.
The non-returner is assured that he will never again take rebirth
in the sense-sphere; if he does not penetrate higher he will
be reborn spontaneously in the Pure Abodes and there reach final
Nibbana. The highest path, the path of arahatship, eradicate
the remaining five fetters -- desire for existence in the fine-material
and immaterial spheres, conceit, restlessness and ignorance.
The arahat has completed the development of the entire path
taught by the Buddha; he has reached the end of rebirths and
can sound his "lion's roar": "Destroyed is birth,
the holy life has been lived, what was to be done has been done,
there is nothing further beyond this."
Each path is followed
immediately by the supramundane experience of fruition, which
results from the path, comes in the same four graded stages,
and shares the path's world-transcending character. But whereas
the path performs the active function of cutting off defilements,
fruition simply enjoys the bliss and peace that result when
the path has completed its task. Also, where the path is limited
to a single moment of consciousness, the fruition that follows
immediately on the path endures for two or three moments. And
while each of the four paths occurs only once and can never
be repeated, fruition remains accessible to the noble disciple
at the appropriate level. He can resort to it as a special meditative
state called fruition attainment (phalasamapatti) for
the purpose of experiencing nibbanic bliss here and now (Vism.
699-702; PP.819-24).
The supramundane
paths and fruits always arise as states of jhanic consciousness.
They occur as states of jhana because they contain within themselves
the jhana factors elevated to an intensity corresponding to
that of the jhana factors in the mundane jhanas. Since they
possess the jhana factors these states are able to fix upon
their object with the force of full absorption. Thence, taking
the absorptive force of the jhana factors as the criterion,
the paths and fruits may be reckoned as belonging to either
the first, second, third or fourth jhana of the fourfold scheme,
or to the first, second, third, fourth or fifth jhana of the
fivefold scheme.
The basis for the
recognition of a supramundane type of jhana goes back to the
suttas, especially to the section of "The Great Discourse
on the Foundations of Mindfulness" where the Buddha defines
right concentration of the Noble Eightfold Path by the standard
formula for the four jhanas (D.ii,313). However, it is in the
Abhidhamma that the connection between the jhanas, paths and
fruits comes to be worked out with great intricacy of detail.
The Dhammasangani, in its section on states of consciousness,
expounds each of the path and fruition states of consciousness
as occasions, first, of one or another of the four jhanas in
the fourfold scheme, and then again as occasions of one or another
of the five jhanas in the fivefold scheme (Dhs.74-86). Standard
Abhidhammic exposition, as formalized in the synoptical manuals
of Abhidhamma, employs the fivefold scheme and brings each of
the paths and fruits into connection with each of the five jhanas.
In this way the eight types of supramundane consciousness --
the path and fruition consciousness of stream-entry, the once-returner,
the non-returner and arahatship -- proliferate to forty types
of supramundane consciousness, since any path or fruit can occur
at the level of any of the five jhanas. It should be noted,
however, that there are no paths and fruits conjoined with the
immaterial attainments, the reason being that supramundane jhana
is presented solely from the standpoint of its factorial constitution,
which for the immaterial attainment and the fifth jhana is identical
-- equanimity and one-pointedness.
The fullest treatment
of the supramundane jhanas in the authoritative Pali literature
can be found in the Dhammasangani read in conjunction
with its commentary, the Atthasalini. The Dhammasangani
opens its analysis of the first wholesome supramundane consciousness
with the words:
On the occasion
when one develops supramundane jhana which is emancipating,
leading to the demolition (of existence), for the abandonment
of views, for reaching the first plane, secluded from sense
pleasures ... one enters and dwells in the first jhana. (Dhs.
72)
The Atthasalini
explains the word lokuttara, which we have been translating
"supramundane," as meaning "it crosses over the
world, it transcends the world, it stands having surmounted
and overcome the world." It glosses the phrase "one
develops jhana" thus: "One develops, produces, cultivates
absorption jhana lasting for a single thought-moment."
This gloss shows us two things about the consciousness of the
path: that it occurs as a jhana at the level of full absorption
and that this absorption of the path lasts for only a single
thought-moment. The word "emancipating" (niyyanika)
is explained to mean that this jhana "goes out" from
the world, from the round of existence, the phrase "leading
to demolition" (apacayagami) that it demolishes
and dismantles the process of rebirth (Dhs.A.259).
This last phrase
points to a striking difference between mundane and supramundane
jhana. The Dhammasangani's exposition of the former begins:
"On the occasion when one develops the path for rebirth
in the fine-material sphere ... one enters and dwells in
the first jhana" [my italics]. Thus, with this statement,
mundane jhana is shown to sustain the round of rebirths; it
is a wholesome kamma leading to renewed existence. But the supramundane
jhana of the path does not promote the continuation of the round.
To the contrary, it brings about the round's dismantling and
demolition, as the Atthasalini shows with an illustrative
simile:
The wholesome states
of the three planes are said to lead to accumulation because
they build up and increase death and rebirth in the round.
But not this. Just as when one man has built up a wall eighteen
feet high another might take a club and go along demolishing
it, so this goes along demolishing and dismantling the deaths
and rebirths built up by the wholesome kammas of the three
planes by bringing about a deficiency in their conditions.
Thus it leads to demolition.[25]
Supramundane jhana
is said to be cultivated "for the abandoning of views."
This phrase points to the function of the first path, which
is to eradicate the fetters. The supramundane jhana of the first
path cuts off the fetter of personality view and all speculative
views derived from it. The Atthasalini points out that
here we should understand that it abandons not only wrong views
but other unwholesome states as well, namely, doubt, clinging
to rites and rituals, and greed, hatred and delusion strong
enough to lead to the plane of misery. The commentary explicates
"for reaching the first plane" as meaning for attaining
the fruit of stream-entry.
Besides these, several
other differences between mundane and supramundane jhana may
be briefly noted. First, with regard to their object, the mundane
jhanas have as object a conceptual entity such as the counterpart
sign of the kasinas or, in the case of the divine abodes, sentient
beings. In contrast, for the supramundane jhana of the paths
and fruits the object is exclusively Nibbana. With regard to
their predominant tone, in mundane jhana the element of serenity
prevails, while the supramundane jhana of the paths and fruits
brings serenity and insight into balance. Wisdom is present
as right view and serenity as right concentration, both function
together in perfect harmony, neither one exceeding the other.
This difference in
prevailing tone leads into a difference in function or activity
between the two kinds of jhana. Both the mundane and supramundane
are jhanas in the sense of closely attending (upanijjhana),
but in the case of mundane jhana this close attention issues
merely in absorption into the object, an absorption that can
only suppress the defilement temporarily. In the supramundane
jhana, particularly of the four paths, the coupling of close
attention with wisdom brings the exercise of four functions
at a single moment. These four functions each apply to one of
the Four Noble Truths. The path penetrates the First Noble Truth
by fully understanding suffering; it penetrates the Second Noble
Truth by abandoning craving, the origin of suffering; it penetrates
the Third Noble Truth by realizing Nibbana, the cessation of
suffering; and it penetrates the fourth Noble Truth by developing
the Noble Eightfold Path that leads to the end of suffering.
Buddhaghosa illustrates this with the simile of a lamp, which
also performs four tasks simultaneously: it burns the wick,
dispels darkness, makes light appear, and consumes oil (Vism.690;
PP.808).
The Jhanic Level
of the Path and Fruit ^
When the paths and
fruits are assigned to the level of the four or five jhanas,
the question arises as to what factor determines their particular
level of jhanic intensity. In other words, why do the path and
fruit arise for one meditator at the level of the first jhana,
for another at the level of the second jhana, and so forth?
The commentaries present three theories concerning the determination
of the jhanic level of the path, apparently deriving from the
lineages of ancient teachers (Vism. 666-67; PP.778-80. Dhs.A.271-74).
The first holds that it is the basic jhana, i.e. the jhana used
as a basis for the insight leading to emergence in immediate
proximity to the path, that governs the difference in the jhanic
level of the path. A second theory says that the difference
is governed by the aggregates made the objects of insight on
the occasion of insight leading to emergence. A third theory
holds that it is the personal inclination of the meditator that
governs the difference.
According to the
first theory the path arisen in a dry-insight meditator who
lacks jhana, and the path arisen in one who possesses a jhana
attainment but does not use it as a basis for insight, and the
path arisen by comprehending formations after emerging from
the first jhana, are all paths of the first jhana only. When
the path is produced after emerging from the second, third,
fourth and fifth jhanas (of the fivefold system) and using these
as the basis for insight, then the path pertains to the level
of the jhana used as a basis -- the second, third, fourth of
fifth. For a meditator using an immaterial jhana as basis the
path will be a fifth jhana path. Thus in this first theory,
when formations are comprehended by insight after emerging from
a basic jhana, then it is the jhana attainment emerged from
at the point nearest to the path, i.e. just before insight leading
to emergence is reached, that makes the path similar in nature
to itself.
According to the
second theory the path that arises is similar in nature to the
states which are being comprehended with insight at the time
insight leading to emergence occurs. Thus if the meditator,
after emerging from a meditative attainment, is comprehending
with insight sense-sphere phenomena or the constituents of the
first jhana, then the path produced will occur at the level
of the first jhana. On this theory, then, it is the comprehended
jhana (sammasitajjhana) that determines the jhanic quality
of the path. The one qualification that must be added is that
a meditator cannot contemplate with insight a jhana higher than
he is capable of attaining.
According to the
third theory, the path occurs at the level of whichever jhana
the meditator wishes -- either at the level of the jhana he
has used as the basis for insight or at the level of the jhana
he has made the object of insight comprehension. In other words,
the jhanic quality of the path accords with his personal inclination.
However, mere wish alone is not sufficient. For the path to
occur at the jhanic level wished for, the mundane jhana must
have been either made the basis for insight or used as the object
of insight comprehension.
The difference between
the three theories can be understood through a simple example.[26] If a meditator reaches the supramundane path
by contemplating with insight the first jhana after emerging
from the fifth jhana, then according to the first theory his
path will belong to the fifth jhana, while according to the
second theory it will belong to the first jhana. Thus these
two theories are incompatible when a difference obtains between
basic jhana and comprehended jhana. But according to the third
theory, the path becomes of whichever jhana the meditator wishes,
either the first or the fifth. Thus this doctrine does not necessarily
clash with the other two.
Buddhaghosa himself
does not make a decision among these three theories. He only
points out that in all three doctrines, beneath their disagreements,
there is the recognition that the insight immediately preceding
the supramundane path determines the jhanic character of the
path. For this insight is the proximate and the principal cause
for the arising of the path, so whether it be the insight leading
to emergence near the basic jhana or that occurring through
the contemplated jhana or that fixed by the meditator's wish,
it is in all cases this final phase of insight that gives definition
to the supramundane path. Since the fruition that occurs immediately
after the path has an identical constitution to the path, its
own supramundane jhana is determined by the path. Thus a first
jhana path produces a first jhana fruit, and so forth for the
remaining jhanas.
6. Jhana and the
Noble Disciples ^
All noble persons,
as we saw, acquire supramundane jhana along with their attainment
of the noble paths and fruits. The noble ones at each of the
four stages of liberation, moreover, have access to the supramundane
jhana of their respective fruition attainments, from the fruition
attainment of stream-entry up to the fruition attainments of
arahatship. It remains problematic, however to what extent they
also enjoy the possession of mundane jhana. To determine an
answer to this question we will consult an early typology of
seven types of noble disciples, which provides a more psychologically
oriented way of classifying the eight noble individuals. A look
at the explanation of these seven types will enable us to see
the range of jhanic attainment reached by the noble disciples.
On this basis we will proceed to assess the place of mundane
jhana in the early Buddhist picture of the arahat, the perfected
individual.
Seven Types of Disciples
^
The sevenfold typology
is originally found in the Kitagiri Sutta of the Majjhima Nikaya
(M.i,477-79) and is reformulated in the Puggalapaññatti
of the Abhidhamma Pitaka. This typology classifies the noble
persons on the paths and fruits into seven types: the faith-devotee
(saddhanusari), the one liberated by faith (saddhavimutta),
the body-witness (kayasakkhi), the one liberated in both
ways (ubhatobhagavimutta), the truth-devotee (dhammanusari),
the one attained to understanding (ditthipatta), and
the one liberated by wisdom (paññavimutta). The seven
types may be divided into three general groups, each defined
by the predominance of a particular spiritual faculty, The first
two types are governed by a predominance of faith, the middle
two by a predominance of concentration, and the last three by
a predominance of wisdom. To this division, however, certain
qualifications will have to made as we go along.
[1] The faith-devotee
is explained the sutta thus:
Herein, monks,
some person has not reached with his own (mental) body those
peaceful immaterial deliverances transcending material form:
nor after seeing with wisdom, have his cankers been destroyed.[27]
But he has a certain degree of faith in the Tathagata, a certain
degree of devotion to him, and he has these qualities -- the
faculties of faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration and
wisdom. This person, monks, is called a faith-devotee. (M.i,479)
The Puggalapaññatti
(p 182) defines the faith-devotee from a different angle as
a disciple practicing for the fruit of stream-entry in whom
the faculty of faith is predominant and who develops the noble
path led by faith. It adds that when he is established in the
fruit he becomes one liberated by faith. Although the sutta
excluded the "peaceful immaterial attainments," i.e.
the four immaterial jhana, from the faith-devotee's equipment,
this implies nothing with regard to his achievement of the four
lower mundane jhanas. It would seem that the faith-devotee can
have previously attained any of the four fine-material jhanas
before reaching the path, and can also be a dry-insight worker
bereft of mundane jhana.
[2] The one
liberated by faith is strictly and literally defined
as a noble disciple at the six intermediate levels, from the
fruit of stream-entry through to the path of arahatship, who
lacks the immaterial jhanas and has a predominance of the faith
faculty.
The Buddha explains
the one liberated by faith as follows:
Herein, monks,
some person has not reached with his own (mental) body those
peaceful immaterial deliverances transcending material form;
but having seen with wisdom, some of his cankers have been
destroyed, and his faith in the Tathagata is settled, deeply
rooted, well established. This person, monks, is called one
liberated by faith. (M.i,478)
As in the case of
the faith-devotee, the one liberated by faith, while lacking
the immaterial jhanas, may still be an obtainer of the four
mundane jhanas as well as a dry insight worker.
The Puggalapaññatti
states (pp.184-85) that the person liberated by faith is one
who understands the Four Noble Truths, has seen and verified
by means of wisdom the teachings proclaimed by the Tathagata,
and having seen with wisdom has eliminated some of his cankers.
However, he has not done so as easily as the ditthipatta,
the person attained to understanding, whose progress is easier
due to his superior wisdom. The fact that the one liberated
by faith has destroyed only some of this cankers implies that
he has advanced beyond the first path but not yet reached the
final fruit, the fruit of arahatship.[28]
[3] The body-witness
is a noble disciple at the six intermediate levels, from the
fruit of stream-entry to the path of arahatship, who has a predominance
of the faculty of concentration and can obtain the immaterial
jhanas. The sutta explanation reads:
And what person,
monks is a body-witness? Herein, monks, some person has reached
with his own (mental) body those peaceful immaterial deliverances
transcending material form, and having seen with wisdom, some
of his cankers having been destroyed. This person, monks,
is called a body-witness. (M.i,478)
The Puggalapaññatti
(p. 184) offers a slight variation in this phrasing, substituting
"the eight deliverances" (atthavimokkha) for
the sutta's "peaceful immaterial deliverances" (santa
vimokkha aruppa). These eight deliverances consist of three
meditative attainments pertaining to the fine-material sphere
(inclusive of all four lower jhanas), the four immaterial jhanas,
and the cessation of perception and feeling (saññavedayitanirodha)
-- the last a special attainment accessible only to those non-returners
and arahats who have also mastered the eight jhanas.[29]
The statement of the Puggalapaññatti does not mean either that
the achievement of all eight deliverances is necessary to become
a body-witness or that the achievement of the three lower deliverances
is sufficient. What is both requisite and sufficient to qualify
as a body-witness is the partial destruction of defilements
coupled with the attainment of at least the lowest immaterial
jhana. Thus the body witness becomes fivefold by way of those
who obtain any of the four immaterial jhanas and the one who
also obtains the cessation of perception and feeling.
[4] One who
is liberated in both ways is an arahat who has completely
destroyed the defilements and possesses the immaterial attainments.
The commentaries explain the name "liberated in both ways"
as meaning "through the immaterial attainment he is liberated
from the material body and through the path (of arahatship)
he is liberated from the mental body" (MA.ii,131). The
sutta defines this type of disciple thus:
And what person,
monks, is liberated in both ways? Herein, monks, someone has
reached with his own (mental) body those peaceful immaterial
deliverances transcending material form, and having seen with
wisdom, his cankers are destroyed. This person, monks, is
called liberated in both ways. (M.i,477)
The Puggalapaññatti
(p.184) gives basically the same formula but replaces "immaterial
deliverances" with "the eight deliverances."
The same principle of interpretation that applied to the body-witness
applies here: the attainment of any immaterial jhana, even the
lowest, is sufficient to qualify a person as both-ways liberated.
As the commentary to the Visuddhimagga says: "One
who has attained arahatship after gaining even one [immaterial
jhana] is liberated both ways" (Vism.T.ii,466). This type
becomes fivefold by way of those who attain arahatship after
emerging from one or another of the four immaterial jhanas and
the one who attains arahatship after emerging from the attainment
of cessation (MA:iii,131).
[5] The truth-devotee
is a disciple on the first path in whom the faculty of wisdom
is predominant. The Buddha explains the truth-devotee as follows:
Herein, monks,
some person has not reached with his own (mental) body those
peaceful immaterial deliverances transcending material form;
nor, after seeing with wisdom, have his cankers been destroyed.
But the teachings proclaimed by the Tathagata are accepted
by him through mere reflection, and he has these qualities
-- the faculties of faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration
and wisdom. This person, monks, is called a truth-devotee.
(M.i,479)
The Puggalapaññatti
(p.185) defines the truth-devotee as one practicing for realization
of the fruit of stream-entry in whom the faculty of wisdom is
predominant, and who develops the path led by wisdom. It adds
that when a truth-devotee is established in the fruit of stream-entry
he becomes one attained to understanding, the sixth type. The
sutta and Abhidhamma again differ as to emphasis, the one stressing
lack of the immaterial jhanas, the other the ariyan stature.
Presumably, he may have any of the four fine-material jhanas
or be a bare-insight practitioner without any mundane jhana.
[6] The one
attained to understanding is a noble disciple at the six
intermediate levels who lacks the immaterial jhanas and has
a predominance of the wisdom faculty. The Buddha explains:
And what person,
monks, is the one attained to understanding? Herein, monks
someone has not reached with his own mental body those peaceful
immaterial deliverances transcending material form, but having
seen with wisdom some of his cankers are destroyed, and the
teachings proclaimed by the Tathagata have been seen and verified
by him with wisdom. This person, monks, is called the one
attained to understanding. (M.i,478)
The Puggalapaññatti
(p.185) defines the one attained to understanding as a person
who understands the Four Noble Truths, has seen and verified
by means of wisdom the teachings proclaimed by the Tathagata,
and having seen with wisdom has eliminated some of his cankers.
He is thus the "wisdom counterpart" of the one liberated
by faith, but progresses more easily than the latter by virtue
of his sharper wisdom. Like his counterpart, he may possess
any of the four mundane jhanas or may be a dry-insight worker.
[7] The one
liberated by wisdom is an arahat who does not obtain the
immaterial attainments. In the words of the sutta:
And what person,
monks, is the one liberated by wisdom? Herein, monks, someone
has not reached with his own (mental) body those peaceful
material deliverances transcending material form, but having
seen with wisdom his cankers are destroyed. This person, monks,
is called one liberated by wisdom. (M.i,477-78)
The Puggalapaññatti's
definition (p.185) merely replaces "immaterial deliverance"
with "the eight deliverances." Though such arahats
do not reach the immaterial jhanas it is quite possible for
them to attain the lower jhanas. The sutta commentary in fact
states that the one liberated by wisdom is fivefold by way of
the dry-insight worker and the four who attain arahatship after
emerging from the four jhanas.
It should be noted
that the one liberated by wisdom is contrasted not with the
one liberated by faith, but with the one liberated in both ways.
The issue that divides the two types of arahat is the lack or
possession of the four immaterial jhanas and the attainment
of cessation. The person liberated by faith is found at the
six intermediate levels of sanctity, not at the level of arahatship.
When he obtains arahatship, lacking the immaterial jhanas, he
becomes one liberated by wisdom even though faith rather that
wisdom is his predominant faculty. Similarly, a meditator with
predominance of concentration who possesses the immaterial attainments
will still be liberated in both ways even if wisdom rather than
concentration claims first place among his spiritual endowments,
as was the case with the venerable Sariputta.
Jhana and the Arahat
^
From the standpoint
of their spiritual stature the seven types of noble persons
can be divided into three categories. The first, which includes
the faith-devotee and the truth-devotee, consists of those on
the path of stream-entry, the first of the eight noble individuals.
The second category, comprising the one liberated by faith,
the body-witness and the one attained to understanding, consists
of those on the six intermediate levels, from the stream-enterer
to one on the path of arahatship. The third category, comprising
the one liberated in both ways and the one liberated by wisdom,
consists only of arahats.[30]
The ubhatobhagavimutta,
"one liberated in both ways," and the paññavimutta
"one liberated by wisdom," thus form the terms of
a twofold typology of arahats distinguished on the basis of
their accomplishment in jhana. The ubhatobhagavimutta
arahat experiences in his own person the "peaceful deliverances"
of the immaterial sphere, the paññavimutta arahat lacks
this full experience of the immaterial jhanas. Each of these
two types, according to the commentaries, again becomes fivefold
-- the ubhatobhagavimutta by way of those who possess
the ascending four immaterial jhanas and the attainment of cessation,
the paññavimutta by way of those who reach arahatship
after emerging from one of the four fine-material jhanas and
the dry-insight meditator whose insight lacks the support of
mundane jhana.
The possibility of
attaining the supramundane path without possession of a mundane
jhana has been questioned by some Theravada scholars, but the
Visuddhimagga clearly admits this possibility when it
distinguishes between the path arisen in a dry-insight meditator
and the path arisen in one who possesses a jhana but does not
use it as a basis for insight (Vism.666-67; PP.779). Textual
evidence that there can be arahats lacking mundane jhana is
provided by the Susima Sutta (S.ii, 199-23) together with is
commentaries. When the monks in the sutta are asked how they
can be arahats without possessing supernormal powers of the
immaterial attainments, they reply: "We are liberated by
wisdom" (paññavimutta kho mayam). The commentary
glosses this reply thus: "We are contemplatives, dry-insight
meditators, liberated by wisdom alone" (Mayam nijjhanaka
sukkhavipassaka paññamatten'eva vimutta ti, SA.ii,117).
The commentary also states that the Buddha gave his long disquisition
on insight in the sutta "to show the arising of knowledge
even without concentration" (vina pi samadhimevam nanuppattidassanattham,
SA.ii,117). The subcommentary establishes the point by explaining
"even without concentration" to mean "even without
concentration previously accomplished reaching the mark of serenity"
(samathalakkhanappattam purimasiddhamvina pi samadhin ti),
adding that this is said in reference to one who makes insight
his vehicle (ST.ii,125).
In contrast to the
paññavimutta arahats, those arahats who are ubhatobhagavimutta
enjoy a twofold liberation. Through their mastery over the formless
attainments they are liberated from the material body (rupakaya),
capable of dwelling in this very life in the meditations corresponding
to the immaterial planes of existence; through their attainment
of arahatship they are liberated from the mental body (namakaya),
presently free from all defilements and sure of final emancipation
from future becoming. Paññavimutta arahats only possess
the second of these two liberations.
The double liberation
of the ubhatobhagavimutta arahat should not be confused
with another double liberation frequently mentioned in the suttas
in connection with arahatship. This second pair of liberations,
called cetovimutti paññavimutti, "liberation of
mind, liberation by wisdom," is shared by all arahats.
It appears in the stock passage descriptive of arahatship: "With
the destruction of the cankers he here and now enters and dwells
in the cankerless liberation of mind, liberation by wisdom,
having realized it for himself with direct knowledge."
That this twofold liberation belongs to paññavimutta
arahats as well as those who are ubhatobhagavimutta is made
clear by the Putta Sutta, where the stock passage is used for
two types of arahats called the "white lotus recluse"
and the "red lotus recluse":
How, monks, is
a person a white lotus recluse (samanapundarika)? Here,
monks, with the destruction of the cankers a monk here and
now enters and dwells in the cankerless liberation of mind,
liberation by wisdom, having realized it for himself with
direct knowledge. Yet he does not dwell experiencing the eight
deliverances with his body. Thus, monks, a person is a white
lotus recluse.
And how, monks,
is a person a red lotus recluse (samanapaduma)? Here,
monks, with the destruction of the cankers a monk here and
now enters and dwells in the cankerless liberation of mind,
liberation by wisdom, having realized it for himself with
direct knowledge. And he dwells experiencing the eight deliverances
with his body. Thus, monks, a person is a red lotus recluse.
(A.ii,87)
Since the description
of these two types coincides with that of paññavimutta
and ubhatobhagavimutta the two pairs may be identified,
the white lotus recluse with the paññavimutta, the red
lotus recluse with the ubhatobhagavimutta. Yet the paññavimutta
arahat, while lacking the experience of the eight deliverances,
still has both liberation of mind and liberation by wisdom.
When liberation of
mind and liberation by wisdom are joined together and described
as "cankerless" (anasava), they can be taken
to indicate two aspects of the arahat's deliverance. Liberation
of mind signifies the release of his mind from craving and its
associated defilements, liberation by wisdom the release from
ignorance: "With the fading away of lust there is liberation
of mind, with the fading away of ignorance there is liberation
by wisdom" (A.i,61). "As he sees and understands thus
his mind is liberated from the canker of sensual desire, from
the canker of existence, from the canker of ignorance"
(M.i,183-84) -- here release from the first two cankers can
be understood as liberation of mind, release from the canker
of ignorance as liberation by wisdom. In the commentaries "liberation
of mind" is identified with the concentration factor in
the fruition attainment of arahatship, "liberation by wisdom"
with the wisdom factor.
Since every arahat
reaches arahatship through the Noble Eightfold Path, he must
have attained supramundane jhana in the form of right concentration,
the eighth factor of the path, defined as the four jhanas. This
jhana remains with him as the concentration of the fruition
attainment of arahatship, which occurs at the level of supramundane
jhana corresponding to that of his path. Thus he always stands
in possession of at least the supramundane jhana of fruition,
called the "cankerless liberation of mind." However,
this consideration does not reflect back on his mundane attainments,
requiring that every arahat possess mundane jhana.
Although early Buddhism
acknowledges the possibility of a dry-visioned arahatship, the
attitude prevails that jhanas are still desirable attributes
in an arahat. They are of value not only prior to final attainment,
as a foundation for insight, but retain their value even afterwards.
The value of jhana in the stage of arahatship, when all spiritual
training has been completed, is twofold. One concerns the arahat's
inner experience, the other his outer significance as a representative
of the Buddha's dispensation.
On the side of inner
experience the jhanas are valued as providing the arahat with
a "blissful dwelling here and now" (ditthadhammasukhavihara).
The suttas often show arahats attaining to jhana and the Buddha
himself declares the four jhanas to be figuratively a kind of
Nibbana in this present life (A.iv.453-54). With respect to
levels and factors there is no difference between the mundane
jhanas of an arahat and those of a non-arahat. The difference
concerns their function. For non-arahats the mundane jhanas
constitute wholesome kamma; they are deeds with a potential
to produce results, to precipitate rebirth in a corresponding
realm of existence. But in the case of an arahat mundane jhana
no longer generates kamma. Since he has eradicated ignorance
and craving, the roots of kamma, his actions leave no residue;
they have no capacity to generate results. For him the jhanic
consciousness is a mere functional consciousness which comes
and goes and once gone disappears without a trace.
The value of the
jhanas, however, extends beyond the confines of the arahat's
personal experience to testify to the spiritual efficacy of
the Buddha's dispensation. The jhanas are regarded as ornamentations
of the arahat, testimonies to the accomplishment of the spiritually
perfect person and the effectiveness of the teaching he follows.
A worthy monk is able to "gain at will without trouble
or difficulty, the four jhanas pertaining to the higher consciousness,
blissful dwellings here and now." This ability to gain
the jhanas at will is a "quality that makes a monk an elder."
When accompanied by several other spiritual accomplishments
it is an essential quality of "a recluse who graces recluses"
and of a monk who can move unobstructed in the four directions.
Having ready access to the four jhanas makes an elder dear and
agreeable, respected and esteemed by his fellow monks. Facility
in gaining the jhanas is one of the eight qualities of a completely
inspiring monk (samantapasadika bhikkhu) perfect in all
respects; it is also one of the eleven foundations of faith
(saddha pada). It is significant that in all these lists
of qualities the last item is always the attainment of arahatship,
"the cankerless liberation of mind, liberation by wisdom,"
showing that all desirable qualities in a bhikkhu culminate
in arahatship.[31]
The higher the degree
of his mastery over the meditative attainments, the higher the
esteem in which an arahat monk is held and the more praiseworthy
his achievement is considered. Thus the Buddha says of the ubhatobhagavimutta
arahat: "There is no liberation in both ways higher and
more excellent than this liberation in both ways"(D.ii,71).
The highest respect
goes to those monks who possess not only liberation in both
ways but the six abhiññas or "super-knowledges": the
exercise of psychic powers, the divine ear, the ability to read
the minds of others, the recollection of past lives, knowledge
of the death and rebirth of beings, and knowledge of final liberation.
The Buddha declares that a monk endowed with the six abhiññas,
is worthy of gifts and hospitality, worthy of offerings and
reverential salutations, a supreme field of merit for the world
(A.iii,280-81). In the period after the Buddha's demise, what
qualified a monk to give guidance to others was endowment with
ten qualities: moral virtue, learning, contentment, mastery
over the four jhanas, the five mundane abhiññas and attainment
of the cankerless liberation of mind, liberation by wisdom (M.iii,11-12).
Perhaps it was because he was extolled by the Buddha for his
facility in the meditative attainments and the abhiññas
that the venerable Mahakassapa assumed the presidency of the
first great Buddhist council held in Rajagaha after the Buddha's
passing away.
The graduation in
the veneration given to arahats on the basis of their mundane
spiritual achievements implies something about the value system
of early Buddhism that is not often recognized. It suggests
that while final liberation may be the ultimate and most important
value, it is not the sole value even in the spiritual domain.
Alongside it, as embellishments rather than alternatives, stand
mastery over the range of the mind and mastery over the sphere
of the knowable. The first is accomplished by the attainment
of the eight mundane jhanas, the second by the attainment of
the abhiññas. Together, final liberation adorned with
this twofold mastery is esteemed as the highest and most desirable
way of actualizing the ultimate goal.
About the Author
^
Mahathera Henepola
Gunaratana was ordained as a Buddhist monk in Kandy, Sri Lanka,
in 1947 and received his education at Vidyalankara College and
Buddhist Missionary College, Colombo. He worked for five years
as a Buddhist missionary among the Harijans (Untouchables) in
India and for ten years with the Buddhist Missionary Society
in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In 1968 he came to the United States
to serve as general secretary of the Buddhist Vihara Society
at the Washington Buddhist Vihara. In 1980 he was appointed
president of the Society. He has received a Ph.D. from The American
University and since 1973 has been Buddhist Chaplain at The
American University. He is now director of the Bhavana Meditation
Center in West Virginia in the Shenandoah Valley, about 100
miles from Washington, D.C.
Notes ^
1.
See for example, the Samaññaphala Sutta (D. 2), the Culahatthipadopama
Sutta (M. 27),etc.
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2.
Kamacchanda, byapada, thinamiddha, uddhaccakukkucca, vicikiccha.
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3.
Vitakka, vicara, piti, sukha, ekaggata.
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4.
Akasanañcayatana, viññanañcayatana, akincaññayatana, nevasaññanasaññayatana.
[Go back]
5.
See Narada, A Manual of Abhidhamma, 4th ed. (Kandy: Buddhist
Publication Society, 1980), pp.389, 395-96.
[Go back]
6.
A full description of the fourfold purification of morality
will be found in the Visuddhimagga, Chapter 1.
[Go back]
7.
The following discussion is based on Vism.110-115; PP.112-118.
[Go back]
8.
Buddhaghosa ascribes the passage he cites in support of the
correspondence to the "Petaka," but it cannot be traced
anywhere in the present Tipitaka, nor in the exegetical work
named Petakopadesa.
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9.
The other two types of abandoning are by substitution of opposites
(tadangappahana), which means the replacement of unwholesome
states by wholesome ones specifically opposed to them, and abandoning
by eradication (samucchedappahana), the final destruction
of defilements by the supramundane paths. See Vism.693-96;PP.812-16.
[Go back]
10.
Adapted from Nyanaponika Thera, The Five Mental Hindrances
and Their Conquest (Wheel No. 26). This booklet contains
a full compilation of texts on the hindrances.
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11.
Ven Ñanamoli, in his translation of the Visuddhimagga,
renders piti by "happiness," but this rendering can
be misleading since most translators use "happiness"
as a rendering for sukha, the pleasurable feeling present in
the jhana. We will render piti by "rapture," thus
maintaining the connection of the term with ecstatic meditative
experience.
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12.
Shwe Zan Aung, Compendium of Philosophy (London: Pali
Text Society, 1960), p243.
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13.
Khuddhikapiti, khanikapiti, okkantikapiti, ubbega piti
and pharana piti. Vism 143-44; PP. 149-51. Dhs.A.158.
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14.
Dhs.A.160-61. Translation by Maung Tin, The Expositor (Atthasalini)
(London: Pali Text Society, 1921), i.155-56.
[Go back]
15.
The following is based on Vism. 126-35; PP.132-40
[Go back]
16.
Avajjanavasi, samapajjanavasi, adhitthanavasi, vutthanavasi,
paccavekkhanavasi. For a discussion see Vism. 154-55; PP.160-61.
The canonical source for the five masteries is the Patisambhidamagga,
i.100.
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17.
Based on the distinction between applied and sustained thought,
the Abhidhamma presents a fivefold division of the jhanas obtained
by recognizing the sequential rather than simultaneous elimination
of the two kinds of thought. On this account a meditator of
duller faculties eliminates applied thought first and attains
a second jhana with four factors including sustained thought,
and a third jhana identical with the second jhana of the fourfold
scheme. In contrast a meditator of sharp faculties comprehends
quickly the defects of both applied and sustained thought and
so eliminates them both at once.
[Go back]
18.
Akasanañcayatana, viññanañcayatana, akincaññayatana, nevasaññana
saññayatana.
[Go back]
19.
Brahmaparisajja brahmapurohita, maha brahma.
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20.
Paritabha, appamanabha, abhassara.
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21.
Parittasubha, appamanasubha, subhakinha.
[Go back]
22.
Vehapphala, asaññasatta, suddhavasa.
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23.
A good summary of Buddhist cosmology and of the connection between
kamma and planes of rebirth can be found in Narada, A Manual
of Abhidhamma, pp.233-55.
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24.
Anicca, dukkha, anatta.
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25.
Dhs.A.259.See Expositor, ii.289-90.
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26.
Dhs.A.274. See Expositor, ii.310.
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27.
The cankers (asava) are four powerful defilements that
sustain samsara; sensual desire, desire for existence, wrong
views and ignorance.
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28.
The Visuddhimagga, however says that arahats in whom
faith is predominant can also be called "liberated by faith"
(Vism.659; PP.770). Its commentary points out that this statement
is intended only figuratively, in the sense that those arahats
reach their goal after having been liberated by faith in the
intermediate stages. Literally, they would be "liberated
by wisdom". (Vism.T.ii,468)
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29.
The first three emancipations are: one possessing material form
sees material forms; one not perceiving material forms internally
sees material forms externally; and one is released upon the
idea of the beautiful. They are understood to be variations
on the jhanas attained with color kasinas. For the attainment
of cessation, see PP.824-833.
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30.
It should be noted that the Kitagiri Sutta makes no provision
in its typology for a disciple on the first path who gains the
immaterial jhanas. Vism.T.(ii,466) holds that he would have
to be considered either a faith-devotee or a truth-devotee,
and at the final fruition would be one liberated in both ways.
[Go back]
31.
The references are to: A,ii,23; iii,131,135,114; iv,314-15;
v,337.
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