Investigation for Insight
by
Susan
Elbaum Jootla
The Wheel
Publication No. 301/302
SL ISSN 0049-7541
Copyright
© 1983 Buddhist Publication Society
Buddhist Publication Society
P.O. Box 61
54, Sangharaja Mawatha
Kandy, Sri Lanka
Preface
[^]
We have
come into this world at a remarkable time, one of those brief
periods when the teachings of a Buddha are readily available.
There is his Noble Eightfold Path of wisdom, morality and concentration
and specifically the technique of vipassana meditation by means
of which we can train our minds to see the ultimate nature of
all phenomena of the world, their transience, unsatisfactoriness
and essencelessness. With the development of this detached wisdom,
our minds gradually lose their tensions, anguish and lust, and
so real peace and happiness can develop.
This article
is written in all humility by one who has just begun to walk
on the Path, in the spirit of "ehipassiko," the characteristic
of the Dhamma that invites all to come and see and try it. There
is yet a long way to travel, but there is no doubt whatsoever
that the Path leads to the Goal and so this article is an expression
of the mind's wish to encourage and urge others to undertake
for themselves this profoundly beneficial task of eliminating
ignorance and craving and so end all suffering.
Susan Elbaum Jootla
Dalhousie
Introduction
[^]
All the
teachings of the Buddha had one goal -- the elimination of all
suffering, all grief, misery, pain and anguish. All the kinds
of meditation he explained were designed to train the mind of
the student to become detached from all the phenomena of the
world, within and outside of himself. This is the aim of Buddhist
meditation because detachment is the opposite of tanha
or craving and it is this tanha that is the source of
all the sorts of suffering experienced by sentient beings. This
desire is very deeply ingrained in our minds because of our
ignorance about the real nature of the phenomena of the world.
So, vipassana, insight-meditation techniques of the Buddha,
are designed to enable us to penetrate our illusions about the
nature of reality which are perpetuated by our inaccurate perception
of the world and ourselves. Insight has to be gained into the
impermanent, unsatisfactory and essenceless nature of all conditioned
phenomena, of everything mental and physical, all of which is
the effect of certain causes. Insight is often conceived of
as a magical experience suddenly just happening and instantly
making all things clear. But, by and large, insight develops
slowly and gradually through the careful process of observation,
investigation and analysis of phenomena until the ultimate nature
that lies behind their apparent, conventional truth is distinctly
and indubitably perceived. It is this process known in Pali
as dhammavicaya (Investigation of Dhamma) and also the
closely related one of yoniso-manasikara (systematic
attention) which will be examined here. Ledi Sayadaw in this
Bodhipakkhiya Dipani[1] defines
dhammavicaya as identical with pañña
(wisdom) and Samma Ditthi (Right Understanding of View)
and then describes the investigative process with the simile:
"Just as cotton seeds are milled, carded, etc., so as to produce
cotton wool, the process of repeatedly viewing the five khandhas
(our personal aggregates of body, perception, feeling, volitions
and consciousness) with the functions of insight knowledge
(vipassana ñana) is called dhammavicaya."
First the subjects to be investigated, or the contents of the
investigation for insight leading to liberation, will be examined.
Then the role of dhammavicaya specifically as a part
of vipassana meditation will be discussed. Then will come the
role of systematic attention in preventing the arising of the
mental hindrances which can block progress in meditation and
as one of the basic factors conducive to the growth of wisdom.
Finally the way to use investigation of Dhamma with the other
Factors of Enlightenment and then with the elements of the Noble
Eightfold Path are shown. A well-trained, well-controlled mind
is a powerful tool capable of rationally thinking through and
continually comprehending the ultimate truths of existence.
By developing the mind's ability to penetratingly and objectively
investigate, we are working to free ourselves of all ignorance,
and thus of all craving and its resultant suffering.
Contents
of Investigation [^]
Investigation
of Dhamma is one of the key factors, the development of which
can lead us to liberation from all suffering. The Buddha defines
this dhammavicaya as "searching, investigation, scrutinizing,
for insight into one's own personal conditions... and... externals."
dhammavicaya is one of the Seven Bojjhangas or Factors
of Enlightenment and usually translated[2]
as "Investigation of Dhamma." The word "Dhamma" has two quite
distinct uses and so investigation of it implies both analysis
of the Dhamma -- the essential truths of existence as
taught by the Buddha, and analysis of dhammas -- all
things whatsoever. Investigation of the Dhamma must include
careful thought leading to a thorough understanding of at least
these teachings: the Four Noble Truths, the Three Salient Characteristics
of Existence, and the Doctrine of Dependent Origination, and
some idea of the workings of kamma. When we study the dhammas,
we are primarily concerned with determining for ourselves the
ultimate nature of our own Five Aggregates, the mind-and-matter
phenomenon, with its six sense organs and of the six respective
classes of sense objects which are the basis of all consciousness,
contact, feeling, perception and mental activities.
When we
investigate the Dhamma, we are trying to thoroughly understand
and grasp the significance of the Teachings of the Buddha. These
truths are things which he discovered for himself and therefore
knew with total certainty. For us to just accept them on faith
alone will not be of too much benefit. In the well-known discourse
the Buddha gave to the Kalamas, he said, "Be ye not misled by
report or tradition or hearsay... Nor out of respect of the
recluse (who holds it). But Kalamas, when you know for yourselves:
'These things are unprofitable, these things are blameworthy,'...
then indeed do ye reject them... But if at any time ye know
for yourselves: 'These things... when performed and undertaken
conduce to profit and happiness,' -- then Kalamas, do ye, having
undertaken them, abide therein."[3]
And he intended that the Kalamas treat his words just like those
of any other teacher. We must explore the teachings of the Buddha
thoroughly, carefully and rationally for ourselves by taking
the Four Noble Truths, the Three Salient Characteristics, and
the Doctrine of Dependent Origination (including Kamma) as working
hypotheses which are to be understood and demonstrated to the
satisfaction of our own minds. Even if on first contact with
these ideas we cannot understand them, we must not for that
reason alone reject them out of hand -- this kind of attitude
will block and prevent all our progress on the Path. After all,
it is quite reasonable to assume that there have been people
in the world wiser than ourselves and that the Buddha was one
of them. Once we have worked even a little on the Path and gained
some benefit from it, we know that the Buddha was far wiser
than we are as it was he who first taught this means of liberation.
So we willingly keep our minds open to explore what he says
even if it does not initially make much sense to our limited
way of thinking. On the basis of full comprehension of these
Truths gained by this balance between an open mind and confidence,
liberating wisdom automatically must grow.
1. The
Four Noble Truths [^]
The first
aspect of the Dhamma to deal with is the Four Noble Truths:
Suffering, its Origin, its Cessation and the way leading to
the Cessation of Suffering, the central teaching of the Buddha,
because "It is through not understanding, not penetrating the
Four Ariyan truths that we have run on, wandered on, this long,
long road" of Samsara, (K.S., V, p. 365).
We must
carefully consider the nature of life to determine for ourselves
whether it is essentially happy or unhappy, satisfactory or
unsatisfactory, full of joy or woe. No matter what we look at
-- our body, our mind, the external world -- if we penetrate
the apparent superficial truth of it, we are bound to find that
dukkha (suffering) predominates vastly over sukha
(happiness) because all the seemingly pleasant experiences and
aspects of life are doomed to fade away and leave behind them
the same state of unsatisfiedness that was there before the
momentary respite given by the sensual pleasure. If we think
about the nature of the body, obviously it has to grow
old, get sick and ultimately die and at almost no moment from
the time of birth do we find ourselves in perfect health; and
from then on it is all a downhill battle since death is the
only possible outcome of life. If we keep this in mind, how
can we say there is lasting satisfaction or happiness in life?
Ledi Sayadaw puts it this way in the magganga Dipanii[4]
"From the time of conception there is not a single moment...
when there is no liability to destruction. When actual destruction
comes, manifold is the suffering that is experienced." If we
examine our minds, there, too, we see that the vast majority
of the time they are in some unhappy state -- ranging from mild
dissatisfaction through anxiety to downright despair. Only rarely
are there moments of joy and to these we react by attempting
to cling to them, and that state of desiring, too, is dukkha.
If we look to the external world that we learn about through
our senses and realize how many people are in agony with dread
disease, how many sentient beings are preying on one another
for food, for sport, for power, how many are dying lonely and
helpless -- at this very moment -- we cannot doubt that dukkha
predominates. The Buddha summarizes the First Noble Truth saying,
"Birth is suffering, death is suffering, sorrow is suffering;
not to get what one desires is suffering; in short all the Five
groups of existence are suffering." (Digha Nikaya 22). We have
to investigate and see just how it is that all existence is
dukkha, and one way to do this is to ponder over the
"sights" of suffering seen by the Buddha before his Enlightenment,
which caused him to leave home and seek the ultimate liberation
for Suffering. We would do well to consider an old being, a
seriously ill person, and a corpse. Such attention to these
will teach us a great deal about both internal and external
dukkha.
In order
to find our way out of all this suffering, we have to be very
clear about its cause, and as the Buddha saw it, tanha
(clinging, craving, desire, lust, etc.) is the basic cause of
dukkha. "From craving springs grief, from craving springs fear,"
from all kinds of craving unhappiness comes; from endearment,
affection, attachment, lust (as well as from the negative side
of it: hatred, aversion, ill-will) (Dhp. v. 216). Craving is
in itself dukkha, and it inevitably leads to more ill
in this and in future existences. To realize how this is true,
so that we are convinced of the necessity of giving up absolutely
all craving, we have to examine the workings of our own mind
thoroughly. We must observe how our mind is virtually always
engaged in some form of craving or desire -- either positively
reaching out for some object or obversely trying to push something
away -- whether the object is gross or subtle. While we are
actually craving for some object -- be it something as mundane
as food or as lofty as rebirth among the Brahma gods -- we are
in a state of mind that is unsatisfied, that is incomplete and
longing for completion -- this lack of satisfaction, of completionness,
is dukkha. Then, if we should attain the object, our
tanha does not disappear; it is actually reinforced and
more dukkha results. Getting what we want may lead to
a new object for desire, or to modify the original one to avoid
boredom. But satisfying one craving does nothing to eliminate
the basic mental process of tanha; in fact more fuel
is simply added to its fires when we obtain what is wanted.
If the desired state, experience or thing is unobtainable, then
a more acute form of dukkha results -- frustration. And
if we consider the feelings associated with the negative form
of tanha, aversion, they are always clearly unhappy,
dukkha. Thus we can determine for ourselves how tanha
causes all our suffering in this lifetime.
Craving
(tanha) is also the cause of rebirth, and once there
is a new life the whole chain of dukkha inevitably culminating
in death automatically comes into play. Most of us, cannot know
the phenomenon of rebirth directly for ourselves as the Buddha
did, but we certainly see the logic in it. All kinds of craving,
if looked at carefully, turn out to be just different forms
or manifestations of the underlying desire to perpetuate our
existence. The great power of this force pushing for life does
not just vanish at the time of death, but these urgings for
renewed existence (bhava sankharas) become the cause
of rebirth in the appropriate place. Most of these forces in
sentient beings are not wholesome, so when most beings die and
the life continua take a new form, it is in the Realms of Woe.
Thus we can see how tanha produces a new life with all
the dukkha that comes along with it. Seeing how much
suffering is experienced, all because of craving, surely is
strong motivation for us to figure out how to eliminate this
tanha.
The Third
Noble Truth says that there is a cessation of suffering;
and suffering will and must cease when the cause (tanha)
is eliminated. "For who is wholly free from craving there is
no grief, whence fear?" (Dhp. v. 216). Any phenomena which arise
due to causes and conditions have to pass away when those causes
cease to operate. So, if we ponder on it, we must conclude that
the vital task for us is to root out all our tendencies to crave;
all our desires and aversions irrespective of their objects
must be given up if we are to be liberated of dukkha.
To become utterly detached from every thing, state of mind or
experience on any plane of existence, to see that absolutely
nothing is worth clinging to: this is the wisdom that must be
cultivated by investigating all such phenomena. The insight
thus gained will necessarily eliminate all desires and so all
dukkha.
The Noble
Eightfold Path was the means given by the Buddha to gain this
liberating wisdom. It is by clearly understanding and following
the steps of the Path that we gain the insight that there is
nothing worth craving for. As this insight deepens through more
and more thought on the subject, tanha decreases and
eventually must disappear, and so we free ourselves of all suffering.
The Path is divided into three sections: morality (sila),
concentration (samadhi), and wisdom (pañña).
It is through the practice of sila that samadhi
can develop and through samadhi, pañña.
The eight steps of the Path are all actually to be developed,
not consecutively, but at any opportune time as they feed into
one another at every stage. (For a detailed discussion of the
Path, please see the final section of this paper.) There is
a well-known analogy which describes the respective roles of
morality, concentration and wisdom, and if we examine the simile
carefully, we will come to understand how we must proceed in
order to eliminate our tanha. A thirsty man comes to
a pond overgrown with weeds and he wishes to drink the water
in the pool. If he pushes the weeds aside with his hands and
quickly gets a sip or two from in between them, it is like practicing
virtue (sila), restraining the gross verbal and bodily
actions by very temporary means. If the man somehow fences off
a small area of the pond keeping all the weeds outsides the
fence, this is like meditative concentration samadhi
where even unwholesome thoughts disappear for a time, but they
are only suppressed and can reappear if the fence breaks down.
But if the man uproots every single weed in the pond leaving
the water really pure and potable, this is like wisdom (pañña).
It actually only through wisdom, through constantly seeing things
as they really are -- changing, unsatisfactory, essenceless
-- that the subconscious, latent tendencies to craving are totally
rooted out, never again to return. By means of careful investigation
we can thus understand how the Fourth Noble Truth, the Noble
Eight-Fold Path operates, how "Right View, Right Aim, Right
Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right
Mindfulness, Right Concentration if cultivated and made much
of, end in the restraint of lust, ends in the restraint of hatred,
ends in the restraint of illusion" (K.S., V, p. 5). Having thoroughly
investigated, understood and penetrated these Four Noble Truths,
we are bound to eventually put an end to our wanderings in Samsara
and to all our suffering.
2. The
Three Signata (Ti-lakkhana) [^]
Investigation
of Dhamma for full liberation also must include, in addition
to the Four Noble Truths, a study of the Three Universal Characteristics
or Signata of existence, (ti-lakkhana): anicca
-- impermanence, dukkha -- suffering, and anatta
-- essencelessness. Everything in the universe, mental or physical,
inside or outside of us, real or imaginary, that comes into
being due to causes and conditions, has these three traits as
its nature. And since there is nothing that exists without depending
on other things, there is absolutely nothing which we can determine
to be permanent, full of happiness only, or having any real
substance. We must examine these three truths very carefully
to know how thoroughly and totally they apply in all cases.
Once there is this deep insight into the nature of reality,
detachment and thereby liberation follow.
The first
of these to be investigated and in some ways the characteristic
that underlies the other two is anicca -- the utterly
transitory, ephemeral, unstable nature off all mental and physical
phenomena. On the level of the apparent truth, we know quite
well that things change but we have to train ourselves to see
how the process of change is going on continually at every instant
in everything. How else could the gross conventional alterations
like maturing and aging actually come about? We have to carefully
examine all the evidence we can find to comprehend the profundity
of the anicca-nature of existence. There is nothing which
we can think of that would be as we know it conventionally if
things were permanently stable. Change is synonymous with life
-- our bodies could not exist, let alone function, if the elements
of which they are made remained constant or unchanged for even
a brief time. Our minds could neither feel nor think nor perceive
nor be conscious, if the mind were unalterable in nature. Likewise
in inanimate objects, change is essential although sometimes
less apparent. We must thoroughly investigate this universal
trait so that we can get beyond the limited scope of our usual
perception which mistakenly takes apparent form for ultimate
reality. Because of the incredible rapidity with which both
mind and matter alter, we can only occasionally notice that
a particular change has come about; we are never able to perceive
the continual ongoing process of change which actually makes
up existence. Everything is just in a state of flux, always
becoming something else, never, really stopping to be
something; all nama (mind) and all rupa (matter)
are just a continual series of risings and vanishings following
very rapidly one after the other. The ultimate reality of everything
is just these vibrations. The importance of really knowing anicca
is described by the Buddha with the simile of a farmer plowing
his field. "In the autumn season a plowman plowing with a great
plowshare, cuts through the spreading roots as he plows, even
so, brethren, the perceiving of impermanence, if practiced and
enlarged, wears out all sensual lust, wears out all ignorance,
wears out, tears out all conceit of 'I am'... Just as, brethren,
in the autumn season (after the monsoon rains) when the sky
is opened up and cleared of clouds, the sun, leaping forth up
into the firmament, drives away all darkness from the heavens,
and shines and burns and flashes forth; even so, brethren, the
perceiving of impermanence, if practices and enlarged, wears
out all sensual lust, wears out all lust for the body, all desire
for rebirth all ignorance, wears out, tears out all conceit
of 'I am'" (K.S., III, p. 132-33).
The characteristic
of dukkha has been dealt with on the grosser level as
the First Noble Truth, in which the suffering of illness, age,
of separation from the desired and association with the undesired,
in our own minds and bodies and in the external world and in
the external world were considered. but there are many subtle
ways in which we can see how life is -- and must be -- unsatisfying.
It has been seen how life is inseparable from change, how without
the perpetual process of development and disintegration there
would and could be no existence at all. And yet there is the
very profound contradiction between this anicca-nature
of life and our constant desire and wish for stability, for
security, for lasting happiness. If a situation is pleasant,
we always hope that it will last and try our utmost to make
it do so; but all experiences of life are doomed to pass away
as everything on which they are based is completely impermanent,
changing at every moment. So all our desires (and we are almost
never without some form of tanha in our minds) are bound
to be frustrated in the long run; we can never find the durable
satisfaction we seek in this world of mind and matter. There
is nothing in this universe of anicca that has even the
potential capability of giving any real happiness because each
and every things is so completely unstable. We have to give
careful attention to all the apparently pleasant and happy experiences
that come in through the six sense doors (five physical ones
and the mind as the sixth), to see whether they really can bring
us satisfaction. The Buddha warns: "In him, brethren, who contemplates
the enjoyment that there is in all that makes for grasping,
(in all the sense pleasures) craving grows... Such is the uprising
of this entire mass of ill." If we analyze how we ourselves
develop strong tanha -- and in inevitable consequence
dukkha -- when we think about and dwell on our pleasurable
experiences, we can come to see how this fearful irony of pain
caused by considering pleasure unwisely is all too true. With
this understanding, then, we will instead contemplate dukkha
in these same phenomena because, "In him, brethren, who contemplates
the misery that there is in all that makes for grasping, craving
ceases... Such is the ceasing of this entire mass of ill." (K.S.,
II, p. 59). As we are able to comprehend this dukkha-nature
of everything more and more, naturally the mind will cease to
long for that which it knows cannot bring happiness. And so
the mind grows detached and moves toward liberation.
The third
universal characteristic, anatta -- essencelessness,
soullessness, egolessness -- is the teaching unique to the Buddhas;
it does not appear in any other religious or philosophical tradition.
A complete understanding of anatta for and in oneself
must be developed before liberation is possible. The Buddha
explained this doctrine, so alien to our conventional way of
thinking, in many discourses beginning with the second discourse
after his Enlightenment.
"Body...
feeling... perception, the activities and consciousness (the
five aggregates that make up everything there is in a 'being')
are not self. If consciousness etc., brethren, were self the
consciousness would not be involved in sickness and one could
say of consciousness, etc.: 'thus let my consciousness be, thus
let my consciousness not be'; but inasmuch as consciousness
is not the self, that is why consciousness is involved in sickness.
That is why one cannot (so) say of consciousness.
"Now
what think ye brethren. Is body permanent or impermanent?"
"Impermanent,
Lord."
"And
what is impermanent, is that weal or woe?"
"Woe,
Lord."
"Then
what is impermanent, woeful, unstable by nature, is it fitting
to regard it thus: 'This is mine; I am this; this is the self
of me'?"
"Surely
not, Lord."
"...
Therefore, brethren,... every consciousness, etc., what-ever
it be, past, future or present, be it inward or outward, gross
or subtle, low or high, far or near, -- every consciousness,
I say, must be regarded as it really is by right insight:
'this is not mine; this I am not; this is not the self of
me.'
"So seeing,
brethren, the well-taught Ariyan disciple feels disgust for
body, etc. So feeling disgust he is repelled, being repelled
he is freed... so that he knows 'destroyed is rebirth... done
is my task.'"
-- K.S., III, p. 56-60
To develop
insight in order to fully comprehend the implications of anatta
takes a great deal of careful, systematic thought in combination
with direct meditative experience. We must try and see that
this thing we have habitually for an immeasurably long time
called "I" actually has no real existence. This word can only
be accurately used as a term of reference for the Five Aggregates
-- each of which is constantly changing -- that go to make up
this so-called "being." Only by investigating all the Five Khandhas
in depth and finding them to be void of any essence or substance
at all which might correctly be called one's "self" can we come
to fully understand anatta.
There are
two main ways to come to grips with this doctrine: via anicca
and via dukkha. These two signata are to some extent
manifest as apparent truths as well as being ultimate realities,
while anatta is the complete opposite of the apparent
truth. When we think of ourselves and use "I" or "me" or "man"
etc., there is the inherent implication that these words refer
to some constant, ongoing being. But we have previously seen
that if we carefully investigate -- intellectually and by direct
observation in vipassana meditation -- all the Five Groups that
comprise what we customarily consider "I" and all the physical
and mental sense organs that are taken as "mine," that there
is no trace of anything even slightly durable in any of them.
Ledi Sayadaw explains the relationship between anicca
and anatta by showing how people with untrained minds
assume that there is some on-going core or stable essence somewhere
in the Five Khandhas (and take this substance to be their atta,
their self or soul. "Those beings who are not able to discern
the momentary arisings and dissolutions of the physical and
mental phenomena of the five constituent groups of existence
and thus are not able to realize the characteristic of anicca
maintain: 'the corporeality-group (or sensation, perception,
activities or consciousness-group) is the essence and therefore
the atta of beings.'"[5] If we wish
to take any of these groups as our substance, then we must admit
that "I" "decay, die and am reborn every moment"; but such an
ephemeral "I" is very far from our usual conception of ourselves.
If we have carefully considered anicca as it exists in
everything internal that could be considered "I," then we must
come to the conclusion that this "I" is nothing but a mistaken
idea that has grown from inaccurate perception which has been
habitually reinforced for a long, long time. As the truth of
anatta becomes clearer, we gradually let go of this "I"
and so are closer and closer to Enlightenment, where not the
slightest shadow of a trace of this misconception can remain.
If we discern
all the mental and physical dukkha we have to undergo
in life, we learn about anatta from a different angle.
This nama-rupa phenomenon is constantly subject to this
pain and that anguish, and yet we foolishly insist on calling
the body and mind "mine" and assuming that they belong to "me."
But the very idea of possession means that the owner has control
of the property; so "I" should be able to keep my body and mind
as I want them to be, naturally healthy and happy. As the Buddha
stated in the quotation at the start of this section, "Let my
body be thus; let it not be thus." But obviously and undeniably,
suffering is felt and cannot be prevented by mere exertion of
will or wishing. So, in reality, we have to come to the conclusion
that there is no "I" who controls this nama-rupa; mind
and body are in no way fit to be called "mine." "The arising
of the five constituent groups do not yield to the wishes of
anyone." (SDD, p. 93). Phenomena which are dependent upon specific
causes which operate strictly according to their nature from
moment to moment cannot be subject to control by any "being"
and as we explore it thoroughly, we come to understand how this
Five Aggregate phenomenon which we wrongly tend to consider
"I" is just such a conditioned and dependent process. And suffering
(or pleasure, for that matter) likewise comes about because
of certain conditions, chief amongst them being tanha.
There is no "being" who controls what ultimately happens to
these five aggregates.
Being caught
in personality belief, (sakkaya ditthi) -- the inability
to comprehend anatta -- causes tremendous dukkha
to creatures on all the planes of existence from the lowest
hell to the highest brahma worlds. This great source of suffering
must be carefully examined and its workings understood if we
are to escape from its powerful, deep-rooted grasp. "Ego-delusion
is the foremost of the unwholesome Kamma of old and accompanies
beings incessantly. As long as personality belief exists these
old unwholesome actions are fiery and full of strength... those
beings who harbor within themselves this personality-belief
are continually under pressure to descend or directly fall towards
the worlds of woe."[6] (A of A, p.
50). By thoroughly rooting out, seeing through and letting go
of this mistaken conception that there is a real substantial
"I," "all wrong views, evil mental factors and evil Kammas which
would lead... to the Lower Worlds will disappear." (SDD, p.
87). Thus if we can really know our anatta-nature totally,
there is no longer any possibility of the extreme dukkha
of rebirth in the lower realms of existence and the life continuum
will "always remain within the fold of the Buddha's Dispensation
wherever... reborn." (A of A, p. 52). But if one does not understand
the impersonal nature of this five aggregate phenomenon, he
will "undoubtedly have to preserve his soul (or self) by entertaining
evil thoughts and evil actions as the occasion arises." (SDD,
p. 50) We can see that if we act on the assumption that there
is an "I" we are always in the position of attempting to protect
and preserve this 'self' and thus very much prone to commit
unwholesome thoughts, words and deeds in relation to other "beings."
"People are generally concerned with what they consider to be
themselves or their own... and their bodily, verbal and mental
acts are based on and are conditioned by that concern. So the
root of all vice for the foolish concern is 'self' and one's
'own.'" Ledi Sayadaw explains how the belief that there is an
"I" causes this continual rebirth with a strong downward tendency
with the analogy of a string of beads:
In a string of beads where a great number of beads are strung
together by a strong silk thread, if one bead is pulled all
the others will follow the one that is pulled. But if the silk
thread is cut of removed, pulling one of the beads will not
disturb the other beads because there is no longer any attachment
between them.
Similarly,
a being that possesses personality-belief harbors a strong
attachment to the series of Aggregates arisen during past
existences... and transforms them into an ego... It is thus
that the innumerable unwholesome karmic actions of the past
existences which have not yet produced resultants, will accompany
that being wherever he may be reborn. These unwholesome actions
of the past resemble beads that are strung and bound together
by a strong thread.
Beings,
however, who clearly perceive the characteristic of Not-self
and have rid themselves of personality-belief, will perceive
that the bodily and mental Aggregates that arise and disappear
even within the short period of one sitting, do so as separate
phenomena and not as a closely interlinked continuum. The
concept of 'my self' which is like the thread, is not longer
present. Those bodily and mental processes appear to them
like the beads from which the thread has been removed."
-- A of A, pp. 53-54
Thus the
dispelling of personality belief removes all the mental factors
which might cause one to behave in such a way that would lead
to rebirth in the realms of woe as well as cutting off the link
of attachment to an "ego" that has kept us connected to all
our evil deeds of the past. Even in this present life it is
clear if we think about it that Sakkaya Ditthi (personality-belief)
causes us great suffering and its elimination would be of great
benefit. For example, "When external or internal dangers are
encountered or disease and ailments occur, beings attach themselves
to them through such thoughts as, 'I feel pain, I feel hurt,'
thus take a possessive attitude towards them. This becomes an
act of bondage that later may obstruct beings from ridding themselves
of those diseases... though they are so greatly oppressive"
(A of A, p. 56).
However,
understanding that it is this erroneous personality-belief that
keeps us thinking that there is some ongoing essence or substance
in this five aggregate phenomena that can rightly be called
"I" will not immediately or automatically prevent the thought
of "I" from coming up in the mind as it is a very deeply rooted
Sankhara that has been built up over a long period of
time. Whenever a thought related to "I" does appear, we must
mindfully apply the wisdom of anatta we have already
gained and realize that "I" is nothing but an idea originating
form an incorrect perception of reality. Whenever we notice
ourselves thinking of an "I" as one of the aggregates or as
related to one of them, we have to consider carefully the thought
and reinforce our understanding that "Whatsoever material object...
whatsoever feeling, whatsoever perception, whatsoever activities,
whatsoever consciousness... (must be rightly regarded as) 'This
is not mine, this I am not; this is not the self of me.'" This
process of seeing the ignorance arise and repeatedly applying
the Right View to it, gradually wears away even the thoughts
of "I," "myself" and "mine." This total elimination of "I"-consciousness
which is nothing but a subtle form of conceit, and of this concept
of "mine" which is subtle form of tanha, does not happen
until Arhantship is reached. But our task is to deepen the comprehension
and investigation of anatta to greater and greater depths
of insight by means of Vipassana meditation.
A group
of monks once questioned the Venerable Khemaka about anatta
and inquired whether he had attained Arhantship. He replied
that he was not yet fully liberated because he still had subtle
remnants of "I am" in his mind. He said to them:
I see that in these five grasping groups I have got the idea
of "I am" yet I do not think that I am this "I am." Though (one
is a Non-returner)... yet there remains in him a subtle remnant
of the I-conceit, of the I am-desire, of the lurking tendency
to think "I am" still not removed from him. Later on he lives
contemplating the rise and fall of the five grasping groups
seeing thus: "Such is the body, such is the arising of body,
such is the ceasing of it. Such is feeling... perception...
the activities... consciousness."
In this
way... the subtle remnant of the I am-conceit, of the I am-desire,
that lurking tendency to think "I am" which was still not
removed from him -- that is now removed.
-- K.S., III, p. 110
This explanation
of Khemaka's was so clear and profound that as a direct result
of his discourse, all the monks who listened to it and Khemaka
himself as well, were fully liberated -- with no remnants of
"I am" remaining. So we would do well to carefully study what
this wise monk said about the development of anatta so
that we can come to understand how by means of this process
of carefully observing, clearly experiencing, and thoroughly
investigating the rise and fall of the five khandhas we gradually
eliminate the gross layers of Sakkaya Ditthi and by the
same means, more and more refined, ultimately root out even
the latent, subconscious tendency to think "I am."
Investigation
into the Three Universal Characteristics -- anicca, dukkha,
and anatta -- is a fundamental requirement for the growth
of liberating insight. Once we have thoroughly analyzed our
own nama-rupa and also the phenomena of the external
world, and completely understood how everything we can conceive
of -- real or imaginary, mental or physical, internal or external
-- is totally unstable, incapable of bringing real durable happiness
and without any actual substance, detachment must follow and
with it freedom from the dukkha of existence. The process
of gradually overcoming ignorance with wisdom comes through
the direct bodily experience of the unsatisfactoriness and essencelessness
of this nama-rupa in vipassana meditation, combined with
careful thought, so that these "experiences" have their full
impact on the mind. Once again, it is by investigation in meditation
that detachment from the "all" is won -- and so too the ultimate
peace free from all desire.
3. Dependent
Origination (Paticcasamuppada) [^]
The doctrine
of Dependent Origination (Paticcasamuppada) is one of the most
profound and far-reaching teachings of the Buddha and as such
this law of causality requires very thorough investigation and
comprehension by anyone seeking liberation. Without clearly
knowing the causal law, the Three Signata and the Four Noble
Truths cannot be fully understood with the full insight that
leads to dispassion, to Nibbana. All of these are included within
Paticcasamuppada which demonstrates their relation with
each other. The Buddha himself pointed out the great significance
of this teaching to Ananda when Ananda said that he found the
causal law quite plain. The Buddha admonished him saying, "Say
not so, Ananda, say not so! Deep indeed is this causal law,
and deep indeed it appears. It is through not knowing, not understanding,
not penetrating, that doctrine, that this generation has become
entangled like a ball of string... unable to overpass the doom
of the Waste, the Woeful Way, the Downfall, the Constant Faring
on." (K.S., II, p.64) And elsewhere Sariputta quotes the Exalted
One as saying, " Whoever sees conditional genesis sees the Dhamma,
whoever see the Dhamma sees conditioned genesis." (M., I, p.
237)
The general
all-encompassing form of the law of Dependent Origination is
a very simple statement of cause and effect but is something
to which the meditator must give "his mind thoroughly and systematically";
succinctly it states "this being that comes to be; from the
arising of this, that arises; from the ceasing of this that
ceases." (K.S., II, p.45) This is really just another more abstract
formulation of the Second and Third Noble Truths -- the cause
of and the cessation of suffering. The full twelve-link formula
of the Paticcasamuppada is an expansion of these two
middle Truths, a full explanation of the process by which suffering
is generated and how by the removal of the causes, suffering
also comes to cease. Thus in order to understand completely
the Four Noble Truths, one must have contemplated on and gained
insight into dependent origination as well. Another very important
aspect of this doctrine to be understood is how its description
of the process of life, the process of becoming, clearly demonstrates
how it is totally impersonal manifestation of certain causes,
with no "I" or 'being' in any way involved in or related to
it, anatta. Finally, this doctrine enables us to discern
just how kamma operates in generating the causes of rebirth.
The list
of twelve links in direct order explaining the arising of suffering,
is usually described as beginning with the past life, going
on to the present life and then to future life (or potential
lives.) Avijja-paccaya sankhara -- ignorance conditions
mental volitions. It is due to the root cause of ignorance (about
the ultimate nature of reality) that the mind generates desires,
sankharas, kamma. Sankhara-paccaya viññanam
-- these mental volitions, this kamma of the past, gives rise
to the rebirth-linking consciousness which is the first mind
moment of the new (present) birth. Note there is no "thing"
transmigrating from one life to another, only a process of cause
and effect goes on: Viññana-paccaya nama-rupam
-- the mind and matter phenomenon (five aggregates) of the present
life come to be due to the existence of this rebirth-linking
consciousness. Conception has taken place and this nama-rupa
phenomenon continues its processes until death intervenes. Nama-rupa-paccaya
salayatanam -- through mind and matter, the six sense bases
are conditioned; with this very start of the new life the five
physical sense organs and mind as the sixth come into being.
Salayatana-paccaya phasso -- throughout the life these
six senses are the condition for the arising of contact (with
their appropriate objects) which occur from moment to moment.
Phassa-paccaya vedana -- feeling (pleasant, unpleasant
or neutral) is conditioned by sense impression and this feeling
rises in relation to contacts at first through one then another
sense door, ad infinitum. Vedana-paccaya tanha -- craving
arises based on feeling. In terms of practice, this is the most
important step of the Paticcasamuppada as it is at this
point that we can learn to turn around the whole process and
make it lead to the cessation of suffering.
The other
(unnamed) factor which conditions craving along with feeling
is ignorance (the same as the first factor) -- the inability
to see that in reality there is nothing worth craving for, nothing
that can actually be held, and no ongoing being truly capable
of having its desires satisfied. At this link volition can alter
the old habitual sequences and the feeling part of the mind
by means of training in the Noble Eightfold Path can be made
to condition the arising of wisdom, and pañña
will forestall the arising of tanha (and the whole mass
of suffering that is conditioned by this craving). Tanha-paccaya
upadanam -- craving gives rise to clinging, tenacious desire.
Actually, for most of us, the application of wisdom and mindfulness
is very rarely such that it can totally prevent the deep habits
of tanha from surfacing after feeling, but what we can
do is prevent either of the next two links -- upadana
and bhava -- from developing out of the initial spurt
of desire. Upadana-paccaya bhavo -- conditioned by clinging,
becoming arises. Due to the power of the accumulation of sankharas,
of kamma (tanha, upadana and bhava being
simply mental volitions of increasing strength), the very strong
kamma which is responsible for the process of becoming arises
and it is these bhava-sankharas that generate the momentum
for a new birth at the appropriate moment. Bhava-paccaya
jati -- becoming conditions birth in a future life at the
dissolution of this present five aggregate phenomenon. If we
seriously consider the matter, we can perceive that all desires
are just particular manifestations of the will to exist or to
continue; and all such craving and clinging are future directed
energies whose function is the seeking of fulfillment. This
force of kammic energy does not cease with death. Becoming is
just the very strong form of desire and it contains sufficient
momentum behind it that at the time of death it is the force
that makes for a new birth. This energy manifests and a new
nama-rupa begins. Thus once again the start of life is
shown to be a completely impersonal, conditioned process working
totally irrespective of anyone's wishes, hopes or desires, leading
to a phenomena with no essence of "I." This link repeats the
second one in the series just in different words. Jati-paccaya
jaramaranam -- once there is birth there automatically comes
to be old age and death and all the other manifold forms of
suffering encountered in life -- the First Noble Truth. And
thus the cycle beginning with our inherited ignorance leads
inexorably towards more and more suffering in the future.
The inverse
form of the cycle is stated alongside the form above. It is
the inverse that demonstrates the Third Noble Truth, how with
the cessation of the cause, the effect must cease; so avijja
nirodha, sankhara nirodho etc., -- when ignorance ceases,
no more sankharas are generated and carried through all the
intervening links, the way of ending all suffering is thus shown.
This is
but a very rough sketch of the workings of the Paticcasamuppada
that must be wisely considered and thoroughly elaborated on
and then incorporated into the meditator's own thought processes
for it to serve him as a means to liberation. Each link has
to be investigated in terms of the Four Noble Truths -- to understand
the factor itself, its arising, its ceasing and the way leading
to its cessation (always the Fourth Noble Truth -- the Path).
The Buddha has Sariputta explain to him the way the meditator
in training who is still a learner, considers things. Sariputta
states: "'This has come to be,' Lord -- thus by right insight
he sees as it really is; and seeing it in this way he practices
revulsion from it, and that it may fade away and cease. From
the ceasing of a certain sustenance that which has come to be
is liable to cease -- so he sees by right insight as it really
is. And seeing that in this way he practices revulsion from
that which is liable to cease that it may fade away and cease."
The revulsion to be practiced in relation to all conditioned
phenomena, to all things that have arisen dependent on causes,
is closely akin to detachment and dispassion. Unlike aversion,
revulsion is based on wisdom and developed in relation to all
pleasant, unpleasant or neutral experiences. The Arahant makes
the same observations about the unstable nature of conditioned
phenomena, but for him the stage of practicing has passed, and
when by right insight, the fully liberated one sees "This has
come to be," then "because of revulsion at that which has come
to be, because of its fading away and ceasing he becomes free,
grasping at nothing..." (K.S., II, p. 36-37) So the lesson to
be learned from the Doctrine of Dependent Origination -- as
from all the Dhamma -- is that nothing that arises due to causes
and conditions can possibly provide secure happiness due to
its inherent changeability and instability; so there is absolutely
nothing on any plane of existence worth developing the slightest
interest in or attachment to as all such involvement can only
lead to suffering. So detachment and revulsion are the result
of a complete understanding of the workings of the causal law
-- and this is liberation.
In one
place, the Buddha actually describes the series of causes leading
to liberation itself, beginning with suffering, thus: "What
is that which is the cause of liberation? Passionlessness is
the answer... and repulsion is causally related to passionlessness...
knowledge-and-vision of things as they really are is causally
associated with repulsion... concentration is causally associated
with knowledge-and-vision... happiness is causally associated
with concentration... serenity is causally associated with happiness...
rapture is causally associated with serenity... joy is causally
associated with rapture... faith is causally associated with
joy... And what is the cause of faith? Suffering is the answer.
Suffering is causally related with faith." (K.S., II, p. 25-26)
The Buddha then continues with the origins of suffering back
to ignorance following the usual Paticcasamuppada formulation
backwards, thus showing the whole length of the route -- the
Path, the Fourth Noble Truth -- out of the causal cycle. It
is because of the experience of suffering that beings seek a
way out and put their faith in the Buddha as a guide and in
his teachings as the true method to attain freedom from all
ill. Thus the causal cycle proceeds from dukkha, the
end of the usual twelve-link Dependent Origination formula,
through saddha (faith) and all the steps here named to
final and total emancipation.
Kamma is
one of the basic causes in the cycle of Dependent Origination
(in the past life it goes under name sankhara and in
the present life it encompasses tanha, upadana,
and bhava) and a deep investigation of its significance
and operation must be made, as, after all, it is through our
own wholesome and unwholesome kamma that we are tied down to
the infinite cycle of rebirths and it is by means of good kamma
that we are able to transcend this universe of kamma, rebirth
and dukkha.
It is important
to remind ourselves and to discover how in our own minds, at
every moment we are creating new kammas. When we investigate
the thinking process carefully in our meditation, we come to
observe that all our thoughts are related to some tanha,
some desire or aversion, some volition. And each moment the
kamma we are creating is either beneficial or harmful to us
both in the immediate and far distant future; there is not an
instant when we are molding our future fate. And no matter how
good an act of body or speech may seem, it is only a gross manifestation
of a mental volition, and if the thought behind it is impure,
the kammic effects are in the long run bound to be painful.
Hence it is vital to analyze our own minds and then cultivate
the beneficial volitions that aid us on the Path to Liberation,
otherwise the old habitual tendencies rooted in ignorance are
bound to take us to the unhappy realms for rebirth, and once
reborn there it is almost impossible to be reborn on the human
plane for an extremely long period of time.
But we
must also consider that in the ultimate analysis, even good
volitions must be given up, as "That which we will, brethren,
and that which we intend to do, that wherewithal we are occupied
-- this becomes an object for the persistence of consciousness,"
and so anything we think about will become nourishment for a
new birth either in the lower or higher realms, depending on
the purity of the willing, the intention or the occupation (K.S.,
II, p. 45). And ultimately in order to totally eradicate all
suffering (even the very subtle dukkha that is inherent
in the fact that the life span of even the most long-lived Brahma
is limited, finite), rebirth must be eliminated -- and this
means rooting out its causes as explained in the cycle of Dependent
Origination.
Particularly
for the Western mind this infinite Samsaric cycle of rebirth
has to be thought about quite thoroughly before our understanding
of it can influence our behavior, making us act on the basis
of a very long-term view. "Incalculable is the beginning, brethren,
of this faring on. The earliest point is not revealed of the
running on, the faring on of beings cloaked in ignorance, tied
to craving... For many a long day, brethren, have ye experienced
death of mother, of son, of daughter, have ye experienced the
ruin of kinfolk, the calamity of disease. Greater is the flood
of tears shed by you crying and weeping of one and all these
as ye fare on, run on this many a long day, united with the
undesirable, sundered from the desirable, than are the waters
in the four seas. (Because) incalculable is the beginning, brethren,
of this faring on." (K.S., II, p. 120)
Ledi Sayadaw
reminds us that, "Lack of wholesome kamma will lead to the lower
worlds where one has to suffer grievously. Fearing such suffering,
one has to perform wholesome kamma which can lead one to be
reborn as man or deva in the existences to come." (Manuals
of Buddhism, p. 227, Magganga Dipani). One important aspect
of Right View which as to be investigated relates to kamma.
We have to know for ourselves that "Only the wholesome and unwholesome
actions of beings are the origin of their wanderings in many
a becoming or world cycle"; and that only these actions "are
their real refuge wherever they may wander" (Magganga Dipani,
p. 221). There is nothing very strange in this idea of kamma
being the one thing that endures (while always being influenced
and altered by present mental volitions), carrying over from
one life to the next. If we ponder over the matter, we see that
just as a moral cause and effect works within this life to only
some extent, the effects of many kammas can only show up in
future lives; so over an infinite span of lives kusala
(wholesome) kammas ultimately must bring good results and akusala
(unwholesome) kammas bring unhappy states. As we study the cycle
of Dependent Origination it clearly shows that there is no entity
or ongoing being involved anywhere in all these births, deaths
and rebirths, but only past kamma manifesting in a five aggregate
phenomenon which changes every moment and which in turn continues
to generate new kamma leading to new births, in a process that
evolves endlessly from moment to moment.
As seen
above, it is of vital importance to investigate thoroughly the
causal law and kamma in order for full insight into the nature
of existence to develop, for some causes lie behind the arising
of absolutely everything. "Whether any... mental or physical
phenomena arises, the arising of any thing whatsoever is dependent
on conditions, and without condition, nothing can ever arise
or enter into existence."[7] It is
only through giving systematic thought to the twelve factors
and the connections between them in the Paticcasamuppada
cycle that we can introduce the appropriate causes to make this
law cease operating. And only thus can we bring to an end the
process of rebirth and its attendant suffering, by substituting
wisdom for ignorance when feeling arises -- and so prevent the
development of tanha which would inexorably lead to rebirth.
Most important of all to train the mind in wisdom is to understand
clearly how completely impersonally and automatically moment
to moment every link in the cycle operates; the sequence goes
on strictly as a matter of cause and effect with no room for,
no need for, any "I" to explain the continual rise and fall
of nama-rupa.
In this religion, brethren, a pondering brother ponders: 'This
diverse and manifold ill that arises in the world as old age
and death -- what is this ill based on, how comes it to pass?...
What being there does old age-and-death come to be? What not
being there does old age-and-death not come to be?' He pondering
comes to know that this... is based on birth... He comes to
know old age-and-death, he comes to know its arising, he comes
to know its ceasing and he comes to know the way going to its
ceasing.
-- K.S., II, p. 56-57
He ponders
similarly on all the other factors in the Dependent Origination
and thus he is called a "brother who has wholly practiced for
the complete destroying of ill." Full comprehension through
very careful analysis of the Paticcasamuppada must make
us detached, must make us see that there is nothing which really
corresponds to the word "I," and must make us learn to cease
creating sankharas by willing actions. Once we cease to create
any more kamma of any kind, the other links in the cycle must
automatically fall away. And the Buddha ends this discourse
emphatically referring to this process of breaking the causal
chain saying, "Believe me, brethren, be convinced of this, be
ye without doubt herein, without hesitation just this is the
end of Dukkha!"
4. The
Five Aggregates (Khandha) [^]
Dhammavicaya
in addition to the definition used in the previous three sections
of investigation of the Dhamma, may also be interpreted as meaning
investigation of dhammas, of all things, all phenomena, mental
or physical, real or imaginary, conditioned or unconditioned.
In this connection the most important things to be examined
are perhaps, first the five khandhas or aggregates that make
one life continuum, one nama-rupa, a "person": and second
the six sense doors -- five physical ones and the mind, and
their corresponding six categories of sense objects.
We have
to examine the aggregate of body and four of the mind -- perception,
feeling, mental volitions and consciousness -- that in combination
make up this thing we have been calling "I," very thoroughly
and deeply in order to see how ultimately there is nothing lasting,
satisfying or which deserves to be considered "myself" in any
of them; to know how all that we associate with "me" is just
anicca, dukkha and anatta, and to understand
how these aggregates arise to pass away. The khandhas are the
basic components which make up what we perceive of as an individual.
But each of these aggregates in itself has no essence; each
is merely a process of continual minute momentary risings and
fallings.
Viññana
is consciousness, just the process or faculty of knowing, or
awareness, that arises immediately upon the coming together
of any sense organ and its respective object. Sañña
is perception or recognition of the object, defining it by associating
it with past memories. Vedana is the feeling that arises
as an immediate result of contact when the internal and external
sense bases get together and the appropriate consciousness comes
into being. Vedana can be pleasant, unpleasant or neutral
feeling of body or of mind. Sankhara is mental volitions
or activities; the thinking process of the mind is the facet
of nama governed by this khandha. The past mind-moment
with its consciousness, feeling, perception and volition is
the condition for the arising of the next, but there is nothing
of any of those four mental components (nor anything outside
of them) that continues over from one instant to the next. The
body aggregate, too, is utterly impermanent and insubstantial,
just like any form of matter, living or inorganic. All matter
is made up of the infinitely small kalapas (sub-atomic
particles or vibrations) which come to be and vanish at only
a slightly slower rate than the mind, but still so extremely
quickly that we get the illusion of continuity, unity and substance
where these do not actually exist.
The Buddha
tells the monks the importance of such examination of the aggregates
thus: "So soon, brethren, as beings thoroughly understand, as
they really are the satisfaction as such, the misery as such,
the way of escape as such in these five factors of grasping
(the aggregates) then, brethren, beings do remain aloof, detached...
with barriers of the mind done away with." (K.S., III, p. 30)
Once we intellectually realize that none of the khandhas can
rightly be called "mine," then we are faced with the urgent
task of rooting out, eliminating this aspect of personality
belief from our minds, of becoming truly aloof and detached.
The Buddha described this work thus: "What is not of you, brethren,
put it away. Putting it away will be for your profit and welfare.
And what, brethren, is not of you? Body... feeling... perception...
the activities, consciousness is not of you. Put it away." (K.S.,
III, p. 231-2). Putting away or giving up or letting go of what
we incorrectly think of as "mine" is a gradual and long term
process. In fact, not only is this process of investigating
and giving systematic attention to the anicca, dukkha,
anatta nature of the aggregates the work of the beginner,
the same thing is done by beings at any stage along the way,
even by the fully-liberated ones. "The grasping groups, friend
Kotthita," says the great disciple of the Buddha, Sariputta,
"are the conditions which should be pondered with method by
a virtuous brother, as being impermanent, sick, as a boil, as
a dart, as pain, as ill-health, as alien, as transitory, empty
and soulless... It is possible for a virtuous brother so pondering
with method... to realize the fruits of stream winning... of
once returning... of never returning... of arahantship... For
the Arahant, friend, there is nothing further to be done...
Nevertheless, these things, if practiced and enlarged conduce
to a happy existence and self-possession even in this present
life" for him. (K.S., III, p. 143)
Very frequently
the Buddha refers to the five aggregates or groups of existence
as the upadanakkhandha or grasped-at groups, aggregates
(as objects) of clinging, etc. It is worthwhile to contemplate
why he considered these components of life so inseparable from
tanha and upadana that he actually called them
clinging-aggregates. First of all, these aggregates only come
into being because of tanha; through craving and clinging
the past sankharas gave rise to the present birth, the current
namarupa which is precisely the same as these five grasped-at
groups. What has its cause in clinging must have clinging as
its very core. Secondly, these aggregates are the means by which
we are conscious of and perceive through the six
sense doors; an impression is then felt and as a result
of this process the input leads to mental volitions as
well as to actions of body directed by some tanha
to gain, grasp at, cling to something. Thirdly, and most important,
it is just these five constituent groups that we tend to cling
to most tenaciously, convinced that they are "I" and "mine."
We have already looked into this misperception of reality and
by means of a strong simile the Buddha illustrated the danger
in such clinging to any of the aggregates or seeing in them
any security:
Suppose... a mountain torrent... rising from afar, swift-flowing,
and on both its banks are growing grasses overhanging the stream;...
and a man is swept away by that stream and clutches at the grasses,
but they might break away and owing to that he might come by
his destruction.
Even
so, brethren, the untaught manyfolk... regard the body as
the self, or the self as having body, or the body as being
in the self, or the self as being in the body. Then the body
breaks away, and owing to that they come by their destruction.
And so
with feeling, perception, the activities... consciousness.
-- K.S., III, p. 116
We also
subject ourselves to tremendous suffering because we "are possessed
by this idea" that the body belongs to "me" for, when the body
or any of the aggregates "alters and changes, owing to the unstable
nature of the body, then sorrow and grief, woe, lamentation
and despair arise" if these changes are not what we wanted (K.S.,
III, p. 3).
Only by
completely investigating the ultimate reality of these five
aggregates will we see that they are incapable of giving satisfaction
and so not worth grasping at, that actually they are so unstable
that holding onto them is impossible, and there is no one who
can cling anyhow (as the 'self' arises and vanishes every moment
and so cannot possibly continue to possess anything for any
period of time). So, in order to attain liberation, one must
attain insight into these five aggregates so that the necessary
dispassion arises, for "by not thoroughly knowing, by not understanding,
by not being detached from, by not renouncing body (and the
other khandhas) one is unfit for the destruction of suffering...
But, brethren, by thoroughly knowing (them)... one is fit for
the destruction of suffering" (K.S., III, p. 26).
5. The
Sense Bases (Ayatana) [^]
The investigative
process also must be applied to the internal and external sense
bases (ayatana), so that the pleasure and misery in them,
their cause and cessation, and their anicca, dukkha
and anatta nature is fully comprehended. Only with this
insight are we able to let go of our attachments to, desire
for, and clinging to, the eye and visible objects, the ear and
sounds, the nose and smells, the tongue and tastes, the body
and things tangible, the mind and mental objects. One must especially
learn how the mind operates as just another sense organ, whose
field is all the perceptions and thoughts that have occurred
in the past, in order to dissociate the workings of the mind
from the "I" notion. In his third sermon, the Buddha stated,
"The all is on fire" and the nature of this conflagration must
be seen and understood before it can be extinguished and freedom
gained from it. "The eye, brethren, is on fire, objects are
on fire, eye-consciousness... eye contact... that weal or woe
or neutral state experienced, which arises owing to eye-contact
(vedana, feeling);... that also is on fire... On fire
with the blaze of lust, the blaze of ill-will, the blaze of
infatuation, the blaze of birth, decay and death, sorrow...
," (K.S., IV, p. 10) and so are tongue and mind-related phenomena
-- and by extrapolation those coming from the other senses as
well.
The six
internal sense organs (salayatana) and their corresponding
objects have a crucial role in the present lifetime phase of
the Paticcasamuppada. Consciousness, viññana,
is not permanent or abiding; instead it arises and ceases every
moment, and it is the coming together of one of the sense organs
and its respective object that causes the arising of a moment
of consciousness. Thus every consciousness is eye-consciousness,
or ear-consciousness, or nose- or tongue- or body- or mind-consciousness,
depending on which sense organ at that instant has met its object.
The cycle of causality continues on from there: "Owing to eye
and objects arises eye-consciousness. The coming together of
the three is contact. Dependent on contact is feeling. Dependent
on feeling is craving... grasping... becoming. Dependent on
becoming is rebirth, decay and death, sorrow and grief... This
is the arising of the world." (K.S., IV, p. 53) From thus analyzing
the genesis of existence (the "world") and of dukkha
(as it is more often formulated) we can understand the absolutely
impersonal nature of the arising of consciousness, as well as
the germinal role in creating sankharas played by the internal
and external sense bases.
Consciousness,
or mind, is analogous to the proverbial monkey constantly on
the move high up in the trees in the jungle, always grasping
at something or the other. Similarly with the mind, at each
and every mind-moment when awake, consciousness must be connected
with one or another of the sense doors; there is no underlying
substratum of consciousness that endures through time, but only
momentary clutching after sights, grabbing for sounds, clinging
to smells, holding on to tastes, attachment to tangibles or
(and often most predominantly) hanging onto mind objects. It
is because the sense organs and their objects inherently contain
the danger of tempting us to create craving (tanha) and
an urge to renewed existence (bhava-sankhara) that the
Buddha frequently warned the monks about keeping the sense doors
well guarded, since the external objects cannot be eliminated.
By means of ongoing mindfulness, rooted in insight into the
true nature of all the phenomena that appear at the sense doors,
it is necessary to observe how craving starts to rear its head
(as it inevitably will, due to the old completely automatic
mental conditioning) once contact and feeling have taken place,
and not allow the desire to take over the mind and becomes a
strong rebirth producing force. If we do not keep watch over
our senses and reactions attentively, we are like the fish attracted
by the well-baited hook on the line held by the fisherman. "Just
as a fisherman, brethren, casts a baited hook in some deep pool
of water, and some fish greedy for the bait, gulps it down and
thus... comes to destruction, -- even so, brethren, there are
these six hooks in the world, to the sorrow of beings... objects
cognizable by the eye inciting to lust... If a brother delights
therein, persists in clinging to them, such a one is called
'hook-swallower'... is come to destruction." (K.S., IV, p. 99)
And of course the other hooks to be wary of in the world are
alluring sounds, smells, tastes, tangibles and mental objects.
If we give careful, systematic attention to these external sense
objects as we meet them, we cannot help but realize that the
pain of swallowing the hooks by clinging to the sense objects
far outweighs the possible momentary pleasure of tasting the
bait.
The basic
aim of investigating the sense organs is the same as for the
aggregates -- to see how thoroughly they are anicca and
Dukkha and so to cease to cling to them as "I" and "mine."
"A brother beholds no trace of the self nor what pertains to
the self in the six-fold sense sphere. so beholding, he is attached
to nothing in the world. Unattached he is not troubled. Untroubled
he is of himself utterly set free" (K.S., IV, p. 104).
The specific
subjects in the Dhamma that must be investigated for insight
have in this section been given initial exploration. The task
is to turn these thoughts and ideas into real wisdom, so that
the whole course of the life becomes oriented to and aimed at
liberation. We must learn to keep before us at all the time
the ultimate nature of all dhammas -- all phenomena of any conceivable
kind that can enter consciousness -- so that the gross perceptual
illusion or hallucination of the apparent truth loses its strength
and the ignorance it fosters vanishes and with it all craving.
We have to analyze completely this body-and-mind and all the
external phenomena that appear from time to time at the six
sense doors until the pleasure and misery in them are understood,
until the causes of their arising and ceasing are comprehended,
until their ultimately impermanent, unsatisfactory, conditioned
and essenceless nature is clearly known. This is done by means
of careful investigation in meditation of the Three Signata
of Existence, and the Doctrine of Dependent Origination. With
this insight fully developed there can be no clinging or craving,
no ill-will or aversion, and ultimately one becomes "independent,
unattached to anything in the world," and so with all its causes
uprooted, liberation from all suffering is achieved.
Investigation
in Meditation [^]
There are
a number of other aspects of Dhamma Investigation that have
to be examined now that the contents of such exploration have
been discussed. The very basic and essential relationship between
investigative thinking and insight meditation, how the two are
required to support each other and send the meditator's mind
to its goal of ending all possibility of dukkha, is the appropriate
one to deal with first.
For investigation
of Dhamma to lead to liberating insight it must be combined
with and done in the course of insight meditation. It is just
through investigation and wise consideration of phenomena that
insight into their ultimate nature develops. At the time of
the Buddha there were people who became fully Enlightened in
just a few moments of time, but even for them some sort of thought
process had to go on. But these individuals had accumulated
such a vast store of paramis -- accumulated good acts
and mental dispositions of the past -- that the liberating wisdom
came with nearly instantaneous impact. While just a Bodhisatta,
the Buddha went back to the first jhana, a deep absorption (after
having mastered seven still deeper, more profound concentrative
states) -- which includes thinking -- when he sat under the
Bodhi Tree with the final and total determination to become
fully liberated. "Before my enlightenment, while I was still
only an unenlightened Bodhisatta, I thought: This world has
fallen into a slough for it is born, ages and dies, it passes
away and reappears, and yet knows no escape from this suffering.
When will an escape from this suffering be described? I thought:
what is there when aging and death come to be? What is their
necessary condition? Then with ordered attention I came to understand...
birth is a necessary condition for them." And so as he exerted
the utmost effort to become a Buddha, a fully self-liberated
being, he proceeded carefully thinking through all the links
of the cycle of Dependent Origination in both directions. "I
thought: This is the path to enlightenment that I have now reached...
that is how there is a cessation to this whole aggregate mass
of suffering. 'The cessation, the cessation' such was the insight,
the knowledge, the understanding, the vision, the light, that
arose in me about ideas no heard of before."[8]
Also to
gain the full understanding of the khandhas at this crucial
juncture of this life, the Bodhisatta used careful intellectual
consideration. "I thought: in the case of material form, of
feeling, of perception, of formations, of consciousness what
is the gratification, what is the danger, what the escape? Then
I thought: In the case of each the bodily pleasure and mental
joy that arise in dependence on these things (the five categories)
are the gratification; the fact that these things are all impermanent,
painful and subject to change is the danger; the disciplining
and abandoning of desire and lust for them is the escape."[9]
These quotations
show how vital wise investigative thinking was to the Buddha
himself in his meditations while moving towards his Enlightenment
and so must we, too, carefully combine the thought process and
meditation to liberate ourselves from suffering.
The long
quotation given in the section on investigating the khandhas
shows how it is the process of pondering deeply on things that
brings us dispassion towards them all, and so to the stages
of Enlightenment. So insight, clarity of vision into the ultimate
nature of reality, bhavana-maya-pañña,
(wisdom born of meditation) the personal direct knowledge that
bears concrete fruit in our behavior in life, is really based
on careful thinking so that the apparent truths are seen through
and no longer allowed to delude us by coloring and covering
up the real nature of our minds and bodies and of the external
world.
This liberating
insight can, however, only develop if the investigating is done
by a person who meditates regularly. Meditation provides us
with the relatively concrete evidence of personal experience
to guarantee the validity of our more abstract thinking. There
are times when meditation consists of just observing, in a very
one-pointed manner, the rise and fall of the sensations (vedana)
caused by the subtle biochemical changes going on in the body.
But there are other occasions either when thinking is going
on quite strongly or when there is a tendency to sloth and torpor,
and at these times it is very beneficial to do Dhamma investigation.
When the mind is busy thinking, it is always involved in ignorance,
always full of clinging or aversion, always dwelling in the
past or future because this is the nature of the conditioning
that it has gotten from the past. By this kind of thinking we
are creating "heaps and heaps" of unwholesome mental volitions,
sankharas, akusala kamma, which are bound to bear
fruit in some sort of dukkha in the future. If instead
we apply the mind in a systematic way to thinking about Dhamma,
trying to eliminate craving, trying to see through to the ultimate
realities of phenomena, we are creating very powerful good kamma
for ourselves which has to lead us toward liberation. At the
same time, this kind of consideration clarifies in our minds
the fundamental truths of Buddha Dhamma that we have read or
heard previously so that they become fully comprehensible and
meaningful. Thus carefully directed thought, while sitting in
vipassana meditation, is a vital tool for the rooting out of
all our ignorance and for contrasting the path to emancipation.
Also investigation
is important to practice strenuously when there is a tendency
to a daydreaming, lazy kind of meditation, when the hindrances
of sloth and torpor are attacking. The Buddha told the monks,
"... at such time, monks, as the mind is sluggish, then is the
season for cultivating the limb of wisdom that is Norm-investigation,
the season for cultivating the limb of wisdom that is energy,
the season for cultivating the limb of wisdom that is zest.
Why so? Because, monks, the sluggish mind is easily raised up
by such conditions." (K.S., V, p. 96) By energetically applying
the mind to trying to understand more thoroughly than before
the Four Noble Truths or another important aspect of Dhamma,
the mind will be directed and stimulated. When this happens,
the tendency of the mind to drift must disappear and zest for
meditation and the clarity of mind which is crucial to real
understanding return.
Thus to
use investigation in meditation is to apply Right Thought, one
of the factors of the Noble Eightfold Path. Obviously, analytical
thinking takes places in relation to Dhamma outside of meditation
as well -- when listening to discourses or when doing Dhamma
reading, for example. But for the information gained from outside
to become truly meaningful to us, for it to become our own "wisdom-born-of-meditation"
(bhavana-maya-pañña), for this information
to influence how we live our lives, it must be thoroughly thought
through while we are actually sitting in meditation. At such
times the mind is much more concentrated and subtle than usual
and as the hindrances to concentration and insight (i.e., doubt,
excitement and restlessness, sloth and torpor, greed, and ill-will)
are at a fairly low level, the mind is much more pliable and
fit to assimilate pure Dhamma thoughts. As we increase our understanding
and wisdom through meditative investigation, we decrease our
ignorance, and as ignorance diminishes we are loosening the
bondage of our suffering and becoming more and more free of
craving (tanha).
Systematic
Attention and Control of the Hindrances [^]
Another
important role played by investigation is in preventing the
arising of all the hindrances that tend to block our progress
now and again. It is by means of analytical thought, systematic
attention, yoniso-manasikara, that we can keep the hindrances
under control. In this process the two Enlightenment Factors
of investigation and mindfulness are employed, as it takes careful
thought in combination with continuous awareness to keep control
of the mind. "And what, monks, is no food for the arising of
sensual lust not yet arisen?" The Buddha answers his own question
saying that sensual lust is kept from growing by "systematic
attention" to "the repulsive feature of things." To counter
the hindrance of ill will, systematic attention must be given
to metta, the quality of unbounded loving kindness. To
deal with sloth and torpor, systematic attention must be applied
to "the element of putting forth effort, the element of exertion,
the element of striving." Against excitement, one must apply
systematic attention to tranquillity of mind. To still doubt,
one must give systematic attention to Dhamma, or in the Buddha's
words, to "things good and things bad, things blameworthy and
things not blameworthy, things mean and things exalted, things
that are constituent parts of darkness and light" (K.S. V, p.
88).
These five
great hindrances to concentration, to meditation, to living
the Dhamma life are all quite familiar habits to us. But we
can develop the tools to prevent their arising and to control
them when they do come up. And chief amongst these is the application
of systematic attention to the external situations that stimulate
the sensual lust, the ill will, the sloth and torpor, the excitement
and the doubt that lie latent in our minds, and to the internal
negative tendencies themselves. Thus when it is seen that with
wisdom these inappropriate deep-rooted, habitual mental reactions
to impermanent, unsatisfactory and essenceless phenomena, the
hindrances must lose strength and gradually disappear, leaving
behind a pure mind.
Investigation
Conduces to Insight [^]
Investigation
of Dhamma is one of the four factors which the Buddha frequently
describes as conducing "to growth in wisdom, to acquiring insight,
to growth of insight, the increase of insight." The four elements
involved are: "Association with good men (following after the
good), hearing Saddhamma (the Good Norm), thorough work
of mind (systematic attention to Dhamma), and behavior in accordance
with Dhamma (living in accordance with the precepts of the Norm)."
When the Buddha spoke, of course, the good man to associate
oneself with was specifically the Tathagata himself and his
Arahant disciples, all fully liberated beings. Today we do not
have this opportunity, but we certainly can choose our associates
from amongst those who are on the Path and who are striving
to gain wisdom. If we associate with the foolish, we are wasting
our time and tempting ourselves unnecessarily, making our task
of self-purification all the more difficult. But if we spend
time with other strivers, we will reinforce our own motivation
and also perhaps get some direct help or encouragement in times
of need. As for the second factor, only rarely do we get the
opportunity to actually "hear" the Dhamma and then of course
not directly from the Fully Enlightened One. But when we take
a meditation course, this purpose is served by the teacher's
discourses which are designed to inform us of and elucidate
to us the fundamentals of the Dhamma. Naturally this opportunity,
too, is limited, and to supplement live Dhamma teachings regularly,
we have to do some reading both of the direct words of the Buddha
as preserved in the translated Pali texts, and also of what
later meditators have written about him and his teachings. Without
this beneficial material for our minds to thoroughly think about,
to consider wisely, to give systematic attention to, we are
apt to find our meditation getting into ruts which become so
habitual as to lose their impact on our minds -- and on how
we live our lives as well. On the other hand, reading Dhamma
as an intellectual pastime without combining it with meditation
and trying to make what we read our own wisdom which can influence
our life patterns, is a complete waste of time. But if we are
associating with a Sangha (the community of those walking on
the Noble Eightfold Path), if we are learning the basics of
Dhamma and carefully and persistently applying our minds to
it, then our behavior cannot help but reflect the wisdom we
are so gaining. Thus these four factors must "if cultivated
and made much of, conduce to realising the fruits of stream-winning...
of once-returning, of non-returning and of Arahantship" (K.S.
V, p. 351).
The Seven
Factors of Enlightenment [^]
Investigation
of Dhamma, dhammavicaya, usually the second in the list
of the seven Factors of Enlightenment, has a unique place amongst
these limbs of wisdom whose function is to purify and train
the mind and to "conduce to downright revulsion, to dispassion,
to cessation, to calm, to full comprehension, to wisdom, to
Nibbana." (K.S., V, p. 69) Thinking over the Buddha's teachings
is the very basis for the development of these seven factors,
as described in the following quotation:
When a monk... remembers and turns over in his mind that teaching
of the Norm, it is then that the limb of wisdom which is mindfulness
is established in that monk;... Thus, he, dwelling mindful,
with full recognition investigates and applies insight to that
teaching of the Norm and comes to close scrutiny of it.
Now,
monks, at such a time as a monk, dwelling thus mindful, with
full recognition investigates and applies insight to that
teaching of the Norm, then it is that limb of wisdom which
is Norm-investigation that, as he comes to close scrutiny
of it, by his culture of it, it comes to perfection.
-- K.S., V, p. 55
Clearly,
from the Buddha's description of the cultivation of the two
limbs of wisdom of mindfulness and investigation, they are closely
tied up with each other; certainly neither can be perfected
without the help of the other. But thinking about the Norm is
the most basic feature involved in the development of these
seven Bojjhangas because it is the original motivator behind
their development. That is why the Buddha placed it at the very
beginning of his description of the seven as well as in its
regular spot as the second factor, dhammavicaya.
Mindfulness
is a vital skill to develop, for without mindfully observing
one's mind and body to see the defilements as they tend to creep
in, it is impossible to purify oneself. But without some degree
of understanding of the ultimate facts of existence (anicca,
dukkha and anatta and the relationship between
tanha and dukkha particularly), the practice of
"bare attention" (sati) would probably be futile. Just
watching what is going on at the gross level of bodily action
is unlikely in and of itself to take us to that deep insight
that automatically begins to rid our minds of greed, hatred
and delusion, the roots of tanha and hence of dukkha.
Only if our minds are also carefully at work to try and delve
into the ultimate realities is mindfulness, constant watchfulness,
guaranteed to bear fruit. The Buddha describes this when he
defines "the cultivation of a station of mindfulness. Herein
a monk dwells contemplating the rise of things in body. He so
dwells contemplating the fall of things in body,... and also
in feeling, mind and mind-states." (K.S. V, p. 160) In other
words, it is by the consideration of the anicca (and
by extrapolation, the dukkha and anatta nature
as well) of the body, the feelings, the mind and the mind-states
that mindfulness is actually developed.
On the
other hand, investigation alone also tends to be sterile, a
merely intellectual knowledge. Only by continuing meditative
mindfulness and observation of whatever comes into the mind
via any of the six sense doors, can we put into practice our
understanding of Dhamma. The Pali phrase "yoniso manasikara"
combines the two factors of mindfulness and investigation in
itself, although the stress seems to be on the latter. Yoniso
manasikara is translated as systematic attention or wise
consideration. Systematically, mindfully, with full awareness,
one considers the Dhamma; one thinks about the matter at hand
until its apparent nature has been penetrated and the ultimate
truth is clear. Once the wisdom is gained and the mindfulness
of the ultimate reality of the body, feelings, mind and mental
states (the Four Stations of Mindfulness) is constant, then
it is only a matter of effort, of energy (the third Enlightenment
Factor) of just patiently and persistently doing the work --
the results of these conditions (detachment leading to liberation)
must come about automatically.
This energy
is the Enlightenment Factor which follows dhammavicaya.
"As with full recognition he investigates and applies insight
to that Norm-teaching, then unshaken energy is established in
him" (K.S., V, p. 56). On the basis of understanding the utter
suffering of existence we become so convinced of the need to
escape from the perpetual rounds of Samsara, that we are completely
willing to put out all the effort needed to do so. Knowing that
we are doing what has to be done brings us piti, the
next limb of wisdom. Piti is pure joy or pleasurable
interest or zest -- it is the positive feeling that arises from
knowing we have the technique for eliminating our suffering
which sustains us further, encouraging us to continue to apply
that method wholeheartedly. Tranquillity of mind and body, the
next limb, develops, with piti; with the elimination
of doubt a deep sense of peace of mind based on wisdom comes
about. When one has thought about life very carefully and knows
that there is nothing in the world worth getting the least bit
involved with or attached to, then the mind runs after objects
less and less and tends to settle down and get well concentrated
(the sixth factor), as no possible phenomena at any of the six
sense doors appear worthwhile for it to try and grasp onto.
This pure concentration as it is rooted in insight and allows
insight to grow more and more, makes the mind balanced and calm,
and so equanimity (the final limb of wisdom) grows. This is
not bored, mundane callousness, but an equanimity that is rooted
in clear thought and deep understanding which has made it apparent
that there can be absolutely nothing, mental or physical, anywhere
on any plane of existence, past, present or future, worth reacting
to or getting involved with.
Thus it
is that the Buddha declared, "As a matter concerning one's own
self, monks, I see no other single factor so potent for the
arising of the seven limbs of wisdom as systematic attention.
Of a monk who is possessed of systematic attention we may expect
that he will cultivate, that he will make much of the seven
limbs of wisdom," and developing these seven Enlightenment Factors
is precisely developing liberation from suffering (K.S., V,
pp. 84-5). Hence, careful investigation, persistently pursued
is the root cause of, as well as the route to, wisdom in all
its facets.
The Noble
Eightfold Path [^]
The Buddha
states that it is this same factor of systematic attention (yoniso
manasikara) that brings one onto the Noble Eightfold Path,
the Fourth Noble Truth, which leads to the cessation of all
suffering.
Just as the dawn, monks, is the forerunner, the harbinger of
the sun, even so possession of systematic thought, monks, is,
the forerunner, the harbinger, of the arising of the Ariyan
Eightfold Way.
Of a
monk who is possessed of systematic thought, it may be expected
that he will cultivate, that he will make much of the Ariyan
Eightfold Way. And how monks, does a monk so possessed make
much of the Ariyan Eightfold Way?
Herein
a monk cultivates right view, that is based on seclusion,
that is based on dispassion, on cessation, that ends in self-surrender,
and he makes much of it... He cultivates right aim (thought),
right speech, right action, right living (livelihood), right
effort, right mindfulness, he cultivates and makes much of
right concentration that is based on seclusion, on dispassion,
on cessation, that ends in self-surrender.
-- K.S., V, p. 27
The Noble
Eightfold Path is divided into three sections: the first is
Pañña (wisdom) and includes the first two
factors of samma-ditthi (Right View or Understanding)
and samma-sankappa (Right Thought); second is sila
(morality) which includes samma-vaca (Right Speech),
samma-kammanta (Right Action) and samma-ajiva
(Right Livelihood); the third division is samadhi (concentration)
including the final three elements of the Path -- samma-vayama
(Right Effort), samma-sati (Right Mindfulness) and samma-samadhi
(Right Concentration). Investigation is important to each group.
Although it is virtually identical with the pañña
section of the Path, the faculty of reasoned contemplation has
significant role to play in the development of both sila
and samadhi, and samadhi and sila in turn
both support investigation.
Careful
investigation of the apparent truth must enable to break through
the barriers of our conditioned, colored and unclear perception
of things until we thoroughly penetrate and clearly comprehend
their ultimate truth. This is vipassana -- insight; this is
pañña -- Right Understanding and Right
Thought, wisdom. As the Buddha shows us in a simile, all perception
is as unsubstantial and essenceless as a mirage. "Just as if,
brethren, in the last month of the dry season at high noontide
there should be a mirage and a keen-sighted man should observe
it and look close into the nature of it, so observing it he
would find it to be without essence." (K.S., III, p. 119) If
we accept the information we get about the world both internal
and external from our sense organs automatically without carefully
examining it, we are bound to act on the basis of the mirage
of ignorance as all the past thinking that influences the perception
-- and so the feeling and reaction which come along with it
-- was based on the inaccurate assumptions of permanence, beauty,
happiness and self. But once we begin to develop Right View,
we come to see gradually how in actual fact nothing lasts, nothing
can really be called beautiful (since everything is always changing,
undergoing corruption and decay), nothing can really bring us
satisfaction and there is no essence in any of the apparently
solid objects, beings or mental phenomena of the universe. And
we come to understand that there can only be the conditioned
processes of becoming that arise and cease strictly and solely
in accordance with the appropriate conditions. Right Thought
is a vital means to the attainment of this Right Understanding
or View; and investigation of truth is one and the same with
Right Thought.
"Whatsoever
there is of thinking, considering, reasoning, thought, ratiocination,
application... the mind being holy, being turned away from the
world, and conjoined with the path, the holy path being pursued"
is called Right Thought (Majjhima Nikaya, 117). Right Thought
is also specifically, and on the more mundane level, thinking
that is free from ill-will or cruelty and thinking relating
to renunciation of greed and lust. Right Understanding grows
deeper and deeper the more thoroughly we investigate the essentials
of Buddha Dhamma. As we apply our minds to them, the Three Salient
Characteristics of Existence, the nature of wholesome and unwholesome
Kamma, the Doctrine of Dependent Origination and the Four Noble
Truths all become more meaningful to us and we comprehend more
clearly how they explain the phenomena of existence and the
way out of all suffering. "He understands what is worthy of
consideration... He considers the worthy... What suffering is
he wisely considers; what the extinction of suffering is he
wisely considers, what the path that leads to the extinction
of suffering is, he wisely considers." (Majjhima Nikaya, 2)
And thus wisely considering, we come to act on the basis of
such thought; with such purified deeds of body, speech and mind
we are bringing ourselves nearer and nearer to the cessation
of all suffering.
Sila
is morality; in the context of the Noble Eightfold Path it refers
specifically to Right Speech, Action and Mode of Livelihood.
However, there are many broader kinds of sila -- from
the Five Precepts every lay disciple tries to live by to the
227 rules for monks. The culmination of sila is the culmination
of the Path -- perfect purity of bodily and verbal action rooted
in similarly cleansed mental volition; when the mind can no
longer develop tanha for any object whatsoever, then
it is completely pure and totally free from all suffering. We
may keep the sila precepts rather mechanically, by tradition,
or automatically reciting the Five Precepts at the start of
a meditation course and this may for a time seem to serve our
purpose. But if such morality is not based on Right Understanding,
it will be very weak when put under duress by adverse conditions.
Unless we have thought through and understood the drastic kammic
results, in future lives as well as in this one, that we must
expect from breaking sila, we may well be tempted to
lie for our own gain, to earn our livelihood by some means involving
subterfuge or dishonesty, or to take something that actually
belongs to someone else. An understanding of the fact that "Only
the wholesome and unwholesome volitional actions (kamma)
done by beings are their own properties that always accompany
them, wherever they may wander in many a becoming," (Subha-sutta
quoted in Ledi Sayadaw, Manuals of Buddhism p. 75, Samma-ditthi
Dipani) will greatly strengthen one's resolve to abstain
from doing unwholesome deeds, of body, speech and most importantly
mind. Clearly understanding the Path and how sila relates
to the other sections is also a great support for keeping the
moral code. Sila makes up the preliminary steps in self-purification.
If we indulge in intoxicants or sexual misconduct (e.g., adultery)
or break the other three precepts, we cannot hope to gain concentration
or wisdom. This is because it is the nature of such behavior
that it keeps the mind distracted, either over-excited or very
dull. But if we keep our morality pure on this gross level of
bodily and verbal actions, then we are able to undertake the
task of mental concentration and purification which is the work
of samadhi and pañña. Right View
and Understanding, roots out the causes of all our unwholesome
mental volitions. With ignorance thus eliminated, free from
tanha-related thoughts, we automatically keep perfect
sila of body and speech. Working on these principles
of Dhamma in our minds so that we really comprehend both the
results of our immoral actions and the importance of keeping
sila as the basis for progress on the Path will make
our sila much stronger and less likely to break no matter
what provocative situation may crop up.
The three
final elements of the Path make up the concentration group.
They are effort, mindfulness and concentration. Strenuous, tireless
effort is required if we are to be able to apply our minds sufficiently
to penetrate through the apparent truths of life and really
understand the ultimate realities. Without some understanding
and careful thinking we will not be able to clearly distinguish
those unwholesome states of mind that effort must be put forth
in order to eliminate from the wholesome ones which must be
cultivated with similarly great energy. Unless these distinctions
are known, the effort cannot be Right Effort which is the Path
factor. "A monk puts forth desire, makes an effort, begins to
strive, applies his mind, lays hold of his mind to prevent the
arising of ill unprofitable states not yet arisen. As to all
unprofitable states that have arisen, he puts forth desire to
destroy them. [As to profitable states that have not yet arisen,
he puts forth desire for their arising.] As to the profitable
states that have already arisen, he puts forth desire, makes
an effort, begins to strive, applies his mind, lays hold of
his mind for their continuance, for the non-confusion, for their
more-becoming, increase, culture and fulfillment. That, monks,
is called 'right effort'" (K.S., V, p. 8). Hence effort strengthens
and supports thorough, deep investigation, and conversely, investigation
leads to the understanding of how effort is to be correctly
applied.
As has
already been discussed at some length, there is a very close
link between mindfulness and investigation; they are totally
interdependent and it is often impossible in practice to distinguish
them from each other at any given moment. The four stations
of mindfulness -- of body, of feelings, of mind, and of mental
objects -- are to be cultivated by means of contemplating on,
thinking through their anicca (and also dukkha
and anatta) nature. "A monk dwells contemplating the
rise of things in body. He dwells contemplating the fall of
things in body; he dwells contemplating both the rise and fall
of things in body; and in feelings, in mind, in mind-objects,
ardent, composed and mindful by having restrained coveting and
dejection with regard to the world... This, monks, is called
'the cultivation of a station of mindfulness'" (K.S., V, p.
160). Mindfulness of the body must include a well thought out
understanding of its transient nature, of the inevitability
of its decay and death -- anicca; of its unsatisfactoriness
as, ultimately, we cannot control its fate as it brings with
it the myriad forms of physical suffering -- dukkha;
and of the fact that it cannot rightly be considered "I" or
"mine" since we cannot control its changes or make it remain
as we wish to -- anatta. The specific exercises in mindfulness
of the body (such as on the breath or the thirty-two parts of
the body) if practiced for insight not just for concentration,
must include such contemplation on the essential nature of the
body.
The same
kind of thought is required for the proper cultivation of (vedananupassana)
contemplation of feelings, contemplation of mind (cittanupassana)
and contemplation of mind-objects (dhammanupassana).
The Buddha told a group of elder monks to instruct the novices
in this fashion: "In feelings do ye abide contemplating feelings
(as transient) ardent, composed, one-pointed, of tranquil mind,
calmed down, of concentrated mind, for insight into feelings
as they really are. In mind... for insight into mind as it really
is. In mind-states... for insight into mind-states as they really
are" (K.S., V, p. 123). This means that feelings, mind and mind
objects are to be observed and considered most carefully, concentratedly
and objectively in order to gain true insight into their ultimately
unstable nature. In vedananupassana (the particular technique
taught by S. N. Goenka et al), it is the combination
of the meditative experience of feeling, the subtle changing
sensations, produced in the body by its bio-chemical processes
which reflect the changing mind-states, with Right Thought
about the ultimate nature of all the five aggregates that can
free us of all our ignorance and so of our tanha and
dukkha. The experience of free flow -- feeling the sensations
throughout the body in one sweep or all at one time (the sensations
which are continually being produced by the changing kalapas,
the subatomic particles of which the whole mass of the body
is composed) -- alone, without understanding the far-reaching
significance of these sensations, can be just like any other
experience, a thing of passing interest that has no substantive
effect on our lives. Similarly infertile will be mere intellectualizing
about ultimate realities without any direct way of knowing them
within our own five aggregate phenomena through mindful meditation.
Careful analysis and rational thinking must also be applied
mindfully, in an ongoing way, to the activity of the mind
and to the objects of thought. Thus in order to carry the four
stations of mindfulness to their goal, the transiency, unsatisfactoriness
and essencelessness of these phenomena must be comprehended.
On the
other hand, without one-pointed concentration investigation
will be shallow and unable to penetrate through the conventions
of the apparent truths we perceive because the mind will not
be able to remain on one subject long enough. Concentration
cannot be powerful if the mind is constantly intrigued by and
grasps at the thoughts that come and go; and only when we understand
how useless and dukkha-ridden is everything in the mind,
will it become detached and disinterested and so naturally tend
to stay put on the chosen salutary object.
Thus we
see how investigative Dhamma thinking is an integral part of
the development of Right Thought and Right Understanding, how
careful contemplation strengthens morality, how sila
allows dhammavicaya to deepen, how careful consideration
shows where effort is to be applied, the ultimate significance
of the objects of mindfulness, which enables concentration to
grow, and conversely how the development of these three elements
of the samadhi section of the Path contributes to the
deepening and widening scope of Dhamma investigation. So, once
we begin to develop systematic attention, we are starting to
walk on the Path, the Fourth Noble Truth set out by the Buddha,
the Way which enables us to develop minds which are totally
detached and at peace, free from ignorance, from craving, and
so from suffering. dhammavicaya -- Right Thought -- supports
us at all stages and all aspects of the Path and developments
of the other Path factors similarly contributes to the growth
of investigation of Dhamma.
Conclusion
[^]
Dhammavicaya
-- investigation of reality -- is one of the most important
tools to be used by the meditator seeking liberating insight
and freedom from dukkha, suffering, as has here been
shown. By means of careful investigation in meditation we are
able to penetrate the apparent truths and come to full realization
of the ultimate nature of the phenomena of existence. So by
keen thinking in the course of Vipassana meditation we come
to understand thoroughly how our own five aggregates and all
the external mental and material universe (nama-rupa) perceived
by the senses, are utterly transient, arising and passing away
at every moment as the causes that produced them do likewise.
Because every dhamma is so unstable, the five aggregates can
never bring true happiness but only dukkha, as such changing
and unsatisfactory phenomena are utterly essenceless and not
worth clinging to, not to be taken as "I" or "mine." As we seriously
consider all this and also investigate the cause-and-effect
nature of all life processes and contemplate the Noble Truths
of Dukkha, its Cause, its Cessation and the Way leading to its
Cessation, while persevering in our meditation, craving (tanha)
must weaken and detachment, liberation must develop. And as
the other Enlightenment and Path Factors are also brought to
perfection with the support of dhammavicaya -- complete
freedom from all future birth and so of future suffering is
attained.
Our good
tendencies from the past have put us in the exceedingly fortunate
position of being born as human beings during the time of a
Buddha's dispensation, and they have brought us into contact
with this incomparable jewel, the Dhamma. So now is the time
to exert and strengthen our present mental volition towards
liberation. To free ourselves from dukkha, we must strive
to experience and investigate, to realize and understand, the
ultimate truths of existence. With this insight, this wisdom,
the mind becomes utterly detached, and since it is completely
independent of all the world's changing, unsatisfactory and
essenceless phenomena, there is absolute Peace and Freedom.
May all
beings be Happy!
May all beings be Peaceful!
May all beings be Liberated!
Notes
1.
Translated as Requisites of Enlightenment in The Wheel
No. 171/174.
[Go back]
2.
Kindred Sayings. (Translation of Samyutta Nikaya).
5 vols. Pali Text Society, London. (Quoted as:) K.S., V, p.93.
[Go back]
3.
Gradual Sayings. (Translation of Anguttara Nikaya).
5 Vols. Pali Text Society, London. I, p. 173.
[Go back]
4.
Translated as The Noble Eightfold Path and its Factors Explained
in The Wheel No. 245/247.
[Go back]
5.
Manuals of Buddhism. Ledi Sayadaw. Union of Burma Buddha
Sasana Council, Rangoon. 'Samma-Ditthi Dipani', p. 91.
[Go back]
6.
"The Advantages of Realising the Doctrine of Anatta" by Ledi
Sayadaw in The Three Facts of Existence: III Egolessness,
The Wheel No. 202/204, p. 50. Henceforth: A of A.
[Go back]
7.
Buddhist Dictionary, Manual of Buddhist Terms and Doctrines
Nyanatiloka. Buddhist Publication Society, Kandy. p. 135.
[Go back]
8.
"The Life of the Buddha," Ñanamoli, Buddhist Publication
Society, pp. 25, 27 quoting from Samyutta Nikaya, XII,
65.
[Go back]
9.
Ibid. p. 28.
[Go back]
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