Buddhism

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Buddhism Introduction to Buddhism Who was Gautam Buddha,What were his basic teachings? Gautama Buddha (563 B.C. 483 B.C.) was the founder of the Buddhist Philosophy. His original name was Siddhartha. Buddha is a title applied to him afterwards as a sign of enlightenment. Buddha was a radical thinker and preacher as he galvanized the prevailing modes of thinking, beliefs, and practices. Criticised traditional thinking and believes According to him traditional form of thinking and beliefs are unable to encourage the habit of sell-effort, self-experience and free analytic attitude. He found them lacking in transforming the ethical and humanitarian attitude of a person. According to him, only liberation from dogmatic slumber, the Awakened Wisdom, transformation of attitude, and moral practices can bring emancipation, peace, happiness, and harmony for man. Ultimate physician to cure Ills of life : diagnosed cause of men's suffering The Buddha is called by his disciples the ultimate physician (baisajya-guru) for his prescription to cure unsatisfactoriness and ills of life and the society. His diagnosis of man as a suffering being whose psychophysical constitution itself is the cause of suffering is an ingenious discovery. In addition, he finds that man‘s blind adherence to dogmatic beliefs and the corresponding practices enhance his suffering further, the ultimate root-cause of which is his polluted mind. Therefore, he affirmed, purity of mind through the Awakened Wisdom attained by self-effort. Awakened wisdom The terms like Awakened Wisdom, freedom and self-effort are not mystified terms. Awakened Wisdom here means a penetrating and transforming insight into the nature of existence, which is essentially dynamic and conditionally arisen. Four noble truths

description

Buddhism core concepts (as per UPSC syllabus)

Transcript of Buddhism

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Buddhism Introduction to Buddhism Who was Gautam Buddha,What were his basic teachings?

Gautama Buddha (563 B.C. — 483 B.C.) was the founder of the Buddhist Philosophy. His original name was Siddhartha.

Buddha is a title applied to him afterwards as a sign of enlightenment.

Buddha was a radical thinker and preacher as he galvanized the prevailing modes of thinking, beliefs, and practices.

Criticised traditional thinking and believes

According to him traditional form of thinking and beliefs are unable to encourage the habit of sell-effort, self-experience and free analytic attitude.

He found them lacking in transforming the ethical and humanitarian attitude of a person.

According to him, only liberation from dogmatic slumber, the Awakened Wisdom, transformation of attitude, and moral practices can bring emancipation, peace, happiness, and harmony for man.

Ultimate physician to cure Ills of life : diagnosed cause of men's suffering

The Buddha is called by his disciples the ultimate physician (baisajya-guru) for his prescription to cure unsatisfactoriness and ills of life and the society.

His diagnosis of man as a suffering being whose psychophysical constitution itself is the cause of suffering is an ingenious discovery.

In addition, he finds that man‘s blind adherence to dogmatic beliefs and the corresponding practices enhance his suffering further, the ultimate root-cause of which is his polluted mind.

Therefore, he affirmed, purity of mind through the Awakened Wisdom attained by self-effort.

Awakened wisdom

The terms like Awakened Wisdom, freedom and self-effort are not mystified terms.

Awakened Wisdom here means a penetrating and transforming insight into the nature of existence, which is essentially dynamic and conditionally arisen.

Four noble truths

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What are the four noble truths?

Lord Buddha has presented Four Noble Truths:

(1) There is suffering. Existence is invariably associated with suffering. (2) Every suffering (dukkha) has a cause. (3) Suffering can be eliminated if the cause is eliminated. (4) There is a path to Nirvana which puts an end to all sufferings.

(1) There is suffering (dukkha) :

Life is full of misery and pain. Even the so-called pleasures are really fraught with pain.

There is always fear of losing the so-called pleasures and their loss involves pain.Indulgence also results in pain.

That there is suffering in this world is a fact of common experience.Poverty, disease, old age, death, selfishness, meanness, greed, anger, hatred, quarrels, bickering, conflicts, exploitation are rampant in this world. That life is full of suffering none can deny.

(2) There is a cause of suffering (dukha-samudaya) :

Everything has a cause. Nothing comes out of nothing – ex nihilo nihil

fit. The existence of every event depends upon its causes and conditions.

Suffering being a fact, it must have a cause. It must depend on some conditions. This being, that arises‘, ‗the cause being present, the effect arises‘, is the causal law of Dependent Origination.

(3) There is a cessation of suffering (duhkha-nirodha) :

Because everything arises depending on some causes and conditions, If the cause being removed, the effect ceases to exist.

Everything being conditional and relative is necessarily momentary and what is momentary must perish.

That which is born must die. Production implies destruction.

(4) There is a way leading to this cessation of suffering (dukha-nirodha-gamini pratipada) :

There is an ethical and spiritual path by following which misery may be removed and liberation attained.

This is the Noble Eight-fold Path.

Buddha :Follower of Middle path = Eight fold path

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In intellectual as well as practical life, the Buddha professes middle path, i.e., avoidance of extreme dogmatic views like — (i) Absolute existence and non-existence (ii) Self-indulgence in sensuous pleasure, which is of a low value, uncivilized and disadvantageous practice and ascetic self-mortifcation, which is pain causing.

He equates the middle path with the Eightfold Noble Path, which leads to knowledge, vision, Awakened Wisdom and freedom.

What are the steps in eight fold path?

The Noble Eight-fold Path consists of eight steps which are :

(1) Right faith (samyag drsti), (2) right resolve (sankalpa), (3) right speech (vak), (4) right action (karmanta) (5) right living (ajiva), (6) right effort (vyayama), (7) right though (smrti) (8) right concentration (Samadhi). What is budhhist understanding behind concept of liberation?

For the Buddha, attainment of Awakening is not a simple intellectual exercise, i.e., the product of logical rationality.

Analogy of mirror

Just as for the true reflection of an image of mirror is to be cleansed of image-distorting factors like dust and moisture, in the same way for the attainment of Awakened Wisdom it is necessary to cleanse the psychological defilements like greed (lobha), aversion (dosa), and intellectual confusion (moha) from the mind of the seeker.

Nirvana: total freedom

Nirvana is a state of total freedom and no sufferings. With perfect knowledge, perfect peace and perfect wisdom, man is free

from all bondage in a state of Nirvana.

Theory of momentariness

Buddhism gives importance to the impermanence of existence and the sufferings associated with it.

All existence, animate or inanimate, being in a state of flux, undergoes changes incessantly. Nothing is permanent.

The impermanence itself is the greatest dukha. Ignorance leads to sufferings and bondage. Karma is born out of ignorance.

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Doctrine of Anatma

The most ‗striking‘ feature of Buddhism is the doctrine of non-self (anatma).

In a glaring and sharp contrast to the major philosophies, the Buddhism does not accept the permanent entity such as ‗soul‘ or the ‗atman‘.

It maintains that there is no permanent and enduring entity in man. There is no distinct entity as the self or the soul.

Schools of Buddhism

Though Buddha was very particular in avoiding metaphysical discussions, there arose different schools of Buddhist philosophical thought after his death. Why did different schools of Buddhism come into existence? Budda's silence on metaphysical questions: Why?

Buddha devoted himself to the sole task of finding the path of which the sorrows and sufferings of life could be put to an end forever. Buddha was not in favour of speculative metaphysics.

He said that if a person hit by an arrow should, first of all, try to put it out immediately and to try to heal up the wound.would certainly be reckoned a foolish man if he speculating about the origin, maker and the thrower of the arrow whiled a way his time in , without first trying to pull the arrow out. Similarly, a man should not indulge in vain metaphysical speculations which will take him nowhere.

The knowledge of these things does not conduce to progress in holiness, does not contribute to peace and enlightenment.

Discussion of these problems (metaphysical questions) is futile, because there is no sufficient ground for the solution of them, and because these insufficient grounds lead but to partial and conflicting views.

Questions which have not been discussed by Buddha have been called ‗Avyaktani‘ (indeterminable questions) in Pali. They are followings:

Is the world eternal? Is it non-eternal? Is it finite? Is it infinite? Is the body and self the same? Is the self different from body? Was the Tathagat reborn after death? Was he not born after death? Is there rebirth and also no rebirth? Are the rebirth and no rebirth both false?

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Different interpretation of of these metaphysical questions by followers after Buddha's death Buddha‘s reluctance to discuss metaphysical questions regarding thing beyond our experience and his silence about them came to be interpreted by his follows in different lights, and thus arose different system of Buddhist philosophy. What were the devision of Buddhism? In process of answering these questions, Buddhism divided into two main religious schools:-

(1) Hinayana

The Hinayanist admits the existence of external objects along with the reality of mind. He is, therefore, called Sarvastivadi (Those who hold the reality of all things).

Sautrantika and Vaibhasika philosophies, belong to the Hinayana school.

(2) Mahayana

The Mahayanist does not admit the reality of non-mental things. He is, therefore, called idealist.

Madhyamika or Sunyavada and Yogacara or Vijnanavad belong to the Mahayana school.

What were the fundamental question based on that devision occurred?

Buddha philosophy has been classified into four main schools according to the answer given to two chief questions, of which one is metaphysical and the other epistemological

The metaphysical questions is : ―Is there any reality at all, mental or nonmental?

The epistemological question is : ―How the reality can be known to exist?

Mahayanist's interpretation (a) The Madhyamika holds that there is no reality, mental or non-mental. All is void (Sunya). He is, therefore, known as sunyavadin. (b) The Yogacara holds that only the mental is real, and the non-mental world is devoid of reality. He is thus known as subjective idealist or Vijnanavadin. Hinyanist's interpretation According to Sarvastivada, both the mental and the non-mental are

real. But on the epistemological question this last school holds two

different views. (c) The Sautrantika holds that the external objects are not directly perceived, but known by inference.

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(d) Like Sautrantikas, Vaibhasika also maintains the independent existence of mind and external objects, but according to them, the external objects are directly perceived. Accordintg to it If external objects were never perceived, as the Sautrantikas hold, then they could not even be inferred. Their doctrine regarding this is called Bahya-ratyaksa-vada.

The following table will show the classification of Buddha thought :

What is the philosophical position of The Sautrantika School of Hinayana?

The name ‗Sautrantika‘ is given to the school because it attaches importance to the sutra pitaka of the pali canon.

Accepted both mental and external realities

The Sautrantika subscribes to the reality of both the mental and the non-mental.

Different from Vaibhashika on epistemology

But there are important differences between the realism of the Vaibhasikas and that of the Sautrantika While the Vaibhasikas maintain that we perceive external objects directly (bahyapratyaksavada), the Sautrantikas hold that external objects are not perceived by us directly but inferred from our perceptions, which are representations or copies of external objects According to them, external objects are momentary in nature. These objects produce their ideas in our mind. On the basis of these ideas, we inferred the existence of external objects.

Representationalism

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Ideas are copies or representations of their objects. It is because this that the Sautrantika epistemology is called ‗representationlism‘ or ‗copy theory of knowledge‘, which closely resembles that of John Locke.

What are the Arguments given by Sautantrika in favour of existence of external object? The Sautrantika defends the existence of the external objects by the following argument: Our ability to distinguish illusionary and non-illusionary

If the thesis of the independent existence of the external objects is false, then how can we distinguish between illusionary and non-illusionary experiences? According to the Sautrantika School, it is because of the existence of the external objects that we are able to distinguish between illusionary and non-illusionary experiences.

Non existence can not lead to cognition of existence

The Sautrantikas also reject the Yogacara thesis that external objects are not real and are merely our own metnal forms. if all we ever perceive are our own mental forms then the Yogacara is not entitled to say that consciousness appears to itself as external objects.

If external objets are absolutely non-existent, then an internal cognition cannot appear to be an external object. The illusion of externality presupposes the knowledge of externality somewhere. Because when no genuine contrast between ‗internal‘ and ‗external‘ is admitted the use of the term ‗external‘ can only be vacuous.

On basis of practical utility

Again the reality of objects external to the mind has to be admitted from the standpoint of practical utility.

The mere idea of food does not and cannot satisfy hunger. It requires real food. Hence, the Sautrantikas contend that the existence of an external world, independent of mind or consciousness, is undeniable.

The Madhyanika or Shunyavad School of Mahayana

Shunyavada is one of the most important schools of Buddhism. Nagarjuna is accepted as the first systematic expounder of Shunyavada. Why do they called as Madhyamika?: Follower of middle path

Shunyavadins call themselves Madhyamikas or the followers of the Middle Path (Madhyama Pratipada) which Buddha advocated.

Buddha avoids the extreme doctrines of being and Non-being, and the extreme practices of self-indulgence and self-mortification.

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Nagarjuna rejects the alternative stand points of 'is‘ and is not‘ and their conjunction as well as disjunction. Hence, his philosophy named Madhyamika.

What does word shunya means?:Not void but Indescribable

The word "Shunya‘ in its literal sense indicates ‗nothing‘ or an ‗empty void‘ or a ‗negative abyss‘.But this is not the real meaning and sense of ‗Shunya‘ here. Many thinkers have accepted ‗Shunya‘ in its literal sense ignoring its real philosophical meaning and have condemned Shunayavada as a hopeless skepticism and a selfcondemned nihilism‘.

But Shunya is neither skeptical nor nihilist. According to Shunyavadins, 'Shunya‘ essentially means indescribable as it is beyond the four category of intellect (chatuskoti-vinirmukta).

It is reality, which ultimately transcends existence, non-existence, both and neither.

It is neither affirmation nor negation nor both nor neither. Empirically it means Realtivity (pratity-samutpada) which is phenomena (samsara).

The world ‗Shunya‘ has to be understood from two points of view, viz

(1) From the point of view of phenomena or empirical reality,

it means svabhavashunya i.e. devoid of svabhava or independent, substantial reality of its own.

There is not a single thing in the world, which is unconditionally, absolutely real. Everything is related to, contingent upon, conditioned by something else.Everything is conditioned by something.

The world is not Reality :it is a realm of relativity. That is why Nagarjuna says, ―There is not real production : there is only manifestation of a thing contingent on causes and conditions.

In other words, all empirical entities are devoid of independent self-hood (Svabhava). In this sense pratitya samutpada is equated with shunyata or relativity.

(2) From the point of view of the Absolute,

it means prapanca-shunya i.e. devoid of prapancha or verbalization, thought-construction and plurality.

It is reality, which ultimately transcends existence, non-existence, both and neither. It is neither affirmation nor negation nor both nor neither.

What are the types of reality according to Shunyavad?

Nagarjuna admitted two forms of reality One is empirical truth(Samvrti

Satya), It is for the ordinary person. The other is transcendental truth(Parmartha satya). Those persons who do not know the distinction between these truths cannot understand the subtle secrets of Buddha‘s teachings

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Empirical truth(Samvrti Satya)

The empirical truth is the only means by which the transcendental truth can be attained. and without realizing the transcendental truth nirvana cannot be attained. It is for the ordinary person.

The world of names and forms is governed by the Doctrine of Dependent Origination. Therefore, every truth generated by any conceptual system is relative to and dependent upon other truths and systems.

In the realm of phenomena, there can be no absolute truth or truth of the absolutely real. All phenomenal truths are relative, conditioned, and valid within particular domains of our perceptual, conceptual experience.

For this reason, Nagarjuna calls phenomenal truths Conventional, ―relative, ―mundane, and ―lower truths(samvrti-satya).

Empirical truth is of the following two types :

(i) Loka Samvriti : Loka Samvriti is that phenomenon which is born out of some cause and through which all the activities of the wordly beings are conducted.Thus it is the truth in the world.( ii) Mithya Samvriti : This is the phenomenon which is born due to some

cause but is not admitted to be true by all. It helps all in their behavior. Transcendental truth

Nagarjuna maintains that the transcendental truth cannot be realized without the help of the empirical truth and without realizing the transcendental truth Nirvana cannot be attained. On the other hand, there is the absolute, unconditional, higher truth, beyond percepts and concepts, defying all descriptions. It is grasped in prajna – direct, intuitive insight into reality as it is in itself.

The Buddha maintained silence with respect to such non-empirical questions as whether the world is eternal or non-eternal, finite or infinite, Such silence is due to the Buddha‘s awareness that these questions transcend reason and sense-experience and that consequently any attempt to answer them through names and forms can only serve to detract men, by producing confusion, ignorance, and dogmatism, from the immediate task of overcoming suffering.

Such questions and the puzzlement they generate simply vanish away in the light of prajna, transcendental wisdom.

The Yogachar School of Subjective Idealism

The followers of Vijnanavada were called Vijnanavadins. They were also known as yogacharas as they emphasized the importance of yoga for the realization of pure knowledge (bodhi).

The standpoint that Reality is consciousness was developed by Vijnanavada.

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Why is it called as Vigyanvad? :admit only consciousness as reality

The Yogachara view is called Vijanana-vada or idealism because it admits that there is only one kind of reality which is of the nature of consciousness (vijnana) and objects which appear to be material or external to consciousness are really ideas or states of consciousness. There is no extra mental reality.

According to them, what the mind knows is its own idea, and not the object.

In truth, there is no duality of mind and matter. Externality is a fiction, an illusion. The mind does not know the relation between the idea and the so called object.

Why is it Subjective idealism?

This theory may be described further as subjective idealism, because according to it the existence of an object perceived is not different from the subject or the perceiving mind. Hence, according to Yogachara, there is no external objective reality independent of Vijnana.

What are the differences with Shunyavad? : on Reality of mind

While agreeing with the Madhyamikas, as to the unreality of external objects, the Yogacharac School differs from them in holding that the mind (citta) cannot be regarded as unreal.

For then all reasoning and thinking would be false and the Madhyamikas could not even establish that their own arguments were correct. To say that everything, mental or non-mental, is unreal is suicidal. The reality of the mind should at least be admitted in order to make correct thinking possible.

The mind, consisting of a stream of different kinds of ideas, is the only reality. So, against the Carvaka doctrine – "matter is all‘, the Yogacara maintains that "consciousness is all‘.

How did Yogacharya refuted existence of External Object or Extra Mental Reality or Substance?

Refutation of external object 1. Just as in cases of dreams and hallucinations a man fancies to perceive things

outside, though they do not really exist there, similarly the objects which appear to be out there, are really ideas in the mind 2. The existence of any external object cannot be proved, because it cannot be shown that the object is different from the consciousness of the object.

As Dharmakirti states, the blue colour and the consciousness of the blue colour are identical, because they are never perceived to exist separately. Though really one, they appear as two owing to defective vision. As an object is never known without the consciousness of it, the object

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cannot be proved to have an known without the consciousness of it, the object cannot be proved to have an existence independent of consciousness.

Yogacara points out that if we assume that there exists an external object. This object must be either indivisible, part less and atomic, or divisible and composite. If it is the former, it cannot be perceived, since atoms are too minute to be perceived. On the other hand, if it is composite, we can never perceive all the parts and the sides of the object simultaneously. Thus, in either case the assumption of the existence of external objects is fraught with difficulties.

Refutation of Substance based on theory of dependent origination There is no absolutely unchanging entity like substance. Everything is changing with respect of something or other. Since everything is changing, nothing is identical with itself at all times and hence there is no substance.

According to Dependent Origination, there are no self-existent entities (substance) in the world. All that exists is conditioned and changeable in nature. Therefore, anything unchanging is non-existent.

It is in this manner that the phrase ―self-existing entity is self-contradictory.

Alayvijnana

The Yogacara calls consciousness Alayavijnana.The term Alayavijnana is sued in the Yogacara School to indicate the abiding or storehouse consciousness. The expression Alayavijnana is used sometimes to refer to the continually changing stream of consciousness and at other time to the absolute Being.

What are the levels of Reality accoding to Yogacharya? The Yogacara distinguishes between three levels of reality :-

1. Parikalpita : What is imagined appears as real. Parikalpita-satya is positive error, as we mistake a rope for a snake 2. Paratantra : The empirical phenomena are recognized to be relative and interdependent. Paratantra-satya is relative knowledge, as we recognize rope as a rope. 3. Parinispana :Pure consciousness is realized to be the absolute reality. Parinispanna- satya is metaphysical insight, when we recognize that rope is a mere concept and has no being as a thing in itself. The Parinispanna is also called Tathata, 'suchness‘ or 'thatness‘. Its nature is beyond the reach of language. It is indefinable. The Parinispanna is the highest truth (Paramartha).

The realization of this truth is Nirvana. The mind then ceases to be mind; the subject-object duality is removed completely.

The Yogacara position is remarkably similar to the idealism of Berkeley.

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Pratityasamutpada or Dependent Origination Why is it an important concept?

The doctrine of Pratityasamutpada or dependent origination is regarded as the foundation of all the teachings of Buddha (Central teachings of the Buddha).

It is the causal law both of the universe and the lives of individuals. It is important from two points of view.

Firstly, it gives a very clear idea of the impermanent and conditioned nature of all phenomena.

Secondly, it shows birth, old age, death and all the miseries of phenomenal existence arise in dependence upon conditions, and how all the miseries cease in the absence of these conditions.

Origination of all other theories based on PS

Pratityasamutpada is the central teaching of Buddha and his other teachings are deduced from it as corollaries.

Hence Pratityasamutpada is considered as the base for all other Buddhist philosophical doctrines like

o Theory of Karma Theory of Momentariness (Ksana-bhanga-vala) o Theory of no-ego (Nairatmavada) o Theory of aggregates (Sanghatavada) o Theory of causal efficiency (artha-Kriya-Karitva)

What is the meaning of PS?

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Pratityasamutpada means arising (Samutpada) after getting (pratitya). It means the production of an effect out of a complement of cause and conditions. Nothing is spontaneous.

Everything that happens in the metnal or physical world is dependent on something. The existence of everything is conditional, dependent on some cause.When the cause and conditions disappear, the effect disappears.

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Causal formula

The casual formula is :Asmin Sati, Idam Bhavati Means, this being that arises, i.e. ‗Depending on the cause, the effect arises‘.And because it is relative, it is neither absolutely real (for it is subject to death) nor absolutely unreal (For it appears to rise).

Why is it middle path? Between principle of eternity and annihilation

Pratityasamutpada is middle path between the principle of eternity (Saswatavada) and the principle of annihilation (unchedavada).

According to Shaswatavada somethings are eternal, they have neither beginning nor end, they are uncaused and do not depend on anything

else. According to Uchedavad nothing remains after destruction of things.

The doctrine of Pratityasamutpada maintains a middle path between the two extremes. It maintains that things have existence, but they are not eternal. On the other hand, they are never completely annihitated but something always remains. The origin of a thing is owing to another.

How this concept arises from Noble truths and Buddism?

Second Noble Truth which propounds the cause of the suffering (dhukha samudaya) an The origin of life‘s evil is explained by Buddha in the light of his conception of natural causation (Known as Pratityasamutpada).

Nothing is unconditional; the existence of everything depends on some condition. This doctrine is contained in the second Noble Truth which propounds the cause of the suffering (dhukha samudaya) and in the Third noble Truth which present the cessation of suffering (Dukha nirodha).

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What is concept of Dwadas Nidan or bhav chakra and How it originates from PS?

According to Buddha life is suffering which is called jara-marana, it is because there is birth (jati). Birth is due to the will to be born (Bhava). Bhava is the cause of life after death.

The cause of this tendency is our metnal clinging (upadana) to the objects of the world.

This mental clinging is owing to our thirst (Trsna) to enjoy objects.

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Previous senseexperince tinged with pleasant feeling (Vedana) is the cause of our thirst.

But the question arise why do we have sense-experience. It is because of sense-object contact (sparsa).

This contact again would not arise had there not been the six sense organs (Sadayatana).

These six sense organs depend for their existence on psychophysical organism (nama-rupa) which constitutes the perceptible being of man.

Again question arises why do we have this organism? It is because of the initial consciousness of the embryo (vijnana).This consciousness of the embryo is because of our predispositions or impressions of Karma (Samskara) of our past existence.

The impressions which make for rebirth are owing to ignorance (Avidya) about truth Hence ignorance is the root cause of all our suffering.

Out these twelve links the last two are related to the past life, the first two to the future and the rest to the present.

So the twelve links cover the past, the present and the future life which are causally connected.

Thus we have the twelve links in the chain of causation or causal wheel of dependent origination. It is also known as the twelve sources (dvadasa-nidana).

Also known as

It has been popularized among Buddhist by various epithets such as Bhava-Chakra (The wheel of rebirth) Samsara-chakra Janama-marana chakra Dharma-chakra Pratityasamutpada chakra, etc.

Views of Hinayanist : reality of separate element

According to Hinayanists Pratityasamutpada is a temporal sequence of real entities between which there was a causal relation.

The Hinayanists had analysed all phenomena into elements (dharmas), and believed that these dharmas had a separate reality of their own.

Views and Mahayanist: refusal of reality of separate element

According to the Madhyamika, Pratityasamutpada does not mean the principle of temporal sequence, but the principle of essential dependence of things on each other. In one word, it is the principle of relativity.

Accordingly to Chandrakirti – Pratityasamutpada means the manifestation of entities as relative to causes and conditions.

The Madhyamika says that the very doctrine of Pratityasamutpada declares that all the dharmas are relative; they have no separate reality (svabhava) of their own.Pratityasamutpada or Interdependence means Relativity, and Relativity connotes the unreality of the separate elements. According to it all phenomenal existence, all entities in the world are conditioned, are devoid of independence existence.

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View of Science

Relativity is the most important discovery of modern science. What science has discovered today, the great Buddha had discovered two thousand seven hundred years before.

Importance :

The twelve links as interpreted to causality explain the past, the present and the future life.

Ksanika-vada (Theory of Momentariness) Buddha’s theory of Pratityasamutpada was further developed in the form of theory of momentariness. What is Ksanika-vada? Every thing is momentary and in process of becoming

According to this doctrine every thing change from moment to moment, everything comes into existence just for a moment gives birth to its effect and is exhausted. Things last not even for short periods of time, but exist for one partless moment only, is what Ksanika-vada lays down.

Nothing is permanent. Body, sensation, perception disposition, consciousness, all these are impermanent and sorrowful.

There is neither being nor not-being, but only becoming. Life is a series of manifestations of becoming. There is nothing which changes only ceaseless change goes on. Everyhting is merely a link in the chain, a spoke in the wheel, a transitory phase in the series.Everything is subject to birth and death, to production and destruct to creation and decay. There is nothing, human or divine, that permanent.

To quote the excellent words of Shelley

“Worlds on worlds are rolling over. From creation to decay, Like the bubbles on a river. Sparkling, bursting, borne away”.

Why is there momentariness?

Whatever exists originates from some condition and disappears when condition ceases to be.

Therefore Buddha says know that whatever exists arises from causes and conditions and is in every respect impermanent’.

Whatever is produced or arise or is born, necessarily be subject to death and destruction and if so, they are not permanent and if they are not permanent, they are momentary.

This view is deduced from criterion of existence as causal efficiency (Artha-kriya-karitva) which states that the criterion of the existence (Sat) of a thing is its capacity to produce some effect.

What is Arth Kriya Karitva?

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The Buddhist logicians support the theory of momentariness by a logical argument called Arthakriya-karitva or the efficiency of production.

They maintain that the criterion of existence (satta) is its capacity to produce some effect. An existent thing must produce an effect.

A seed produces a plant. It means that the seed exists because it has the capacity to produce a plant. Only a non-existent thing like a hare’s horn or a sky-flower cannot produce any effect because they are non-existent.

Hence the Buddhist logicians deduce that a thing is momentary and impermanent. If a thing has the capacity to produce some effect, it must change. Hence change is the stuff of reality. It is impossible to conceive a thing that continues without change. Buddhism denies unity in the sense of identity, but recognizes continuity in its place. From this it can be validly deduce that a thing having existence must be momentary.

Capacity to produce Existent

Does'nt have capacity to produce non existent

What are the important propositions of Ksanikvada? There are two important propositions of Ksanikavada. 1. “Everything is momentary” To it only momentary atoms and ideas exist. There is no eternal reality. This view has been explained with the help of two theories.

Santanavada or theory of streams. According to it there is a continuous flow of momentary atoms conscious (idea) and unconscious (matter) in the series of cause and effect.

Sanghatavada or the theory of Aggregates. According to this theory soul is only an aggregate of the five fleeting Skandas (pancha skandha) and the so called matter is only an aggregate of the momentary atoms.

The denial of an eternal substance is called Pudgala-nairatmay. If everything is momentary then there is neither being, nor not being but only becoming. 2.“Everything is changing”

It is the logical outcome of the first proposition. If everything is momentary then only change is real.

From this it is clear that there is neither being nor non-being but becoming. Everything is becoming, change, flux.

All substances are mere aggregates of impermanent qualities. They are devoid of permanence and substantiality. All existences are essenceless and impermanent. This is a universal law.

Analogy of River and flame of lamp to explain momentariness

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The Buddhist logicians illustrate the theory of momentariness with the help of two classical similes of the stream of river and of the flame of lamp.

The stream of a river is sustained in its flow by ever new ater. It is continuous flow of different water. Similarly, a flame is not the same flame in the next moment. Every moment it is another. A river is not the same river the next moment. It is only a continuous flow of different waters. Similarly a flame is not one and the same flame. It is a series of flame.

One volume of water or one flame continually succeeds another volume of water or another flame. The rapidity of succession preserves continuity which is not broken. Similarity is mistaken as identity or sameness. The so-called ‘same flame’ is only a succession of so many similar flames, each flame lasting for a moment. Rapidity of succession gives rise to the illusion of unity or identity or permanence.Therefore, the so-called same river and the same flame is only an appearance. They are never the same for two consecutive moments.

Heraclites said : ‘You cannot bathe twice into the same river.

Nairatmyavada or Anattvada The logical consequence of the Doctrine of Dependent Origination is the doctrine of non-self (nairatmyavada). "Pratityasamutpada —> anityavada —> ksanikavada —> nairatmyavada" What is NAiratmyavada? and How it describe existence of non-permanent soul? Theory of dependent origination->every thing is momentary-> soul is also changeable

According to the doctrine of Dependent Origination everything exists dependently and conditionally. Its logical consequence is that nothing is permanent and unchanging. Everything is momentary either it is physical or non-physical element. Impernanence is the inexorable law of all existence. Everything is becoming change, flux. The law of change is universal, hence here the existence of a permanent soul is denied. Soul is also changeable in nature.

self is just series of successive mental and bodily processes

It is commonly believed that in man there is a permanent and abiding substance called soul or self or spirit (atma), which persists through all the changes in the body and the mind, and which exists before birth and continues after death, and migrates from one body, after death, to another body.

Consistently with his theory of dependent origination, Buddha denies the existence of such soul or self. Whenever we look towards what we call ‘mind’, we see a stream of ideas or thoughts. Thoughts, feelings, desires etc, arise at one moment and vanish at the next, and this process continues perpetually. No mental idea lasts for more than an instant. Our mental process like a stream is a continuous flux. The self is nothing but the series of successive mental and bodily processes which are impermanent. There is no permanent self behind this stream.

What is pudgal nairatmya , Dharma nairatmya and Panch skandhas? What is idea about Soul in Buddhist philosphy?

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The doctrine of anatmavada or theory of no-ego in a wider sense stands for not only the denial of eternal soul but also the denial of material objects. In this context they sometimes talk of pudgal nairatmya and dharma nairatmya.

According to this view soul is a continuous stream of momentary ideas. According to this doctrine, the soul is bundle of five ‘Skandhas’ (Aggregates) of changing elements (In ‘Milindpanho’ soul has been described as Nam-rupa or the aggregate of five Skandha).

1. ‘Rupa’ or form (matter) : It consists of different material factors which we perceive in

this body. It is a physical body which produces the form of the body. 2. ‘Vedana’ (feeling) : It consists of pleasure, pain and other kinds of feeling. 3. ‘Sanjna’ (perceptions) : It consists of perceptions, concepts or ideas including naming. 4. ‘Samskara’ (disposition) : It consists of instincts, tendencies and urges etc. 5. ‘Vijnana’ (consciousness) : It is a constant flow or series.

Analogy of chariot and Milindpanho

The first is material (rupa) and the last four are psychical (Nama). Hence psychologically, a man is a collection of five groups (pancha-skandha). Each part of the group is only a momentary existence. Man is only a conventional name for a collection of different constituents, just as a chariot is a collection of wheels, axles, shafts, etc. This is illustrated beautifully in a dialogue between king Milinda and sage Nagasena.

Nagasena, Buddhist teacher, brings out the nature of the soul but means of the parallel of the chariot. Just as a chariot is nothing but an aggregate of wheels, axle and the body, so the self is nothing but the name of the five aggregates of body, feelings, perceptions, predispositions and consciousness. The five aggregates constitute the empirical individual. There is no eternal soul behind the collection of the five aggregates.

Hence according to Buddha the self is nothing but a conventional name for a series of discrete, momentary states of which the individual is directly and immediately aware in all kinds of experience. To him, the self or soul is simply an abbreviation for the aggregate of these skandhas and not some entity over and above the aggregate. Thus there is no distinct substance known as the ‘self’ our ‘soul’ which is permanent and immortal.

Buddha does not deny the existence of self or soul understood as the collection of the skandhas’, what he does deny is the belief that there exists behind and beyond the skndhas a self or soul as a permanent and unchanging entity. To put it differently, the Buddha readily acknowledges a changing self, but rejects an unchanging substantial self as a illusion traceable partly to our linguistic habits and partly to such psychological factors as craving, grasping, insecurity and most importantly, fear of vanishing away with death.

What are the Arguments given in favour of Anatmavada?

We can’t get the knowledge of eternal soul by perception. The theory of Pratityasamutpada also leads to the non-permanence of soul.

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Permanent and eternal soul cannot produce non-permanent actions (karmas). Thus, belief in eternal soul is against the law of Karma.

Rebirth cannot be explained because eternal soul can neither take brith nor can die. Bondage and liberation cannot be explained because pure eternal soul can never

fall in bondage and if it is impure then it can never get liberation. If it is sometimes pure, sometimes impure then it cannot be eternal.

If we will accept anatmavada moral responsibility creates no problem. A man is held responsible for his actions, not because he possesses a permanent soul, but because his existence is an unbroken stream in which the past, present, and future are bound together by causal chains. In other words, it is by virtue of the continuity of his existence and not because he possesses a permanent soul that a man is responsible for his action.

How does Buddhist accounts for rebirth and Karma?

Rebirth is not transmigration instead it is causation on next life from present life

Buddha believs in the law of karma and rebirth. If a permanent soul is denied, who, then, will reap the consequences of actions in the life hereafter? To this Buddha replies that rebirth is not transmigration, i.e., migration of the same soul into another boy. Rebirth means causation of the next life by the present life.

Buddhism does not believe in rebirth in the sense that a permanent soul enters a different body after leaving one body. As one flame may be lighted from another flame and though the two are different, they are causally connected, similarly the end-state of this life may cause the beginning of the next.

The present state of consciousness inherits its characters from previous ones, and the past in a way continues in the present through its effect. Memory thus becomes explainable without an eternal soul.

Link between births by Samkaras

Buddhism believes that after death the samskaras or karmic impressions of the jiva remain. These samskaras (impressions of karmic forces) are in accordance with the Jiva’s karmas and it is due to them that a link between one birth and another is maintained.

The samskaras are said to have been expressed in the last thought of a dying man. The past (old birth) and the present (new birth) bear no resemblance except that the new birth is according to the karmas of the old one.

Self is just Flow of consciousness

Buddha regards the self only as the flow of consciousness which is ever changing. In this flow of consciousness, the present moment is the result of the past moment and the present moment causes the future moment. Thus one moment succeeding, another moment takes in its wake the actions and the memory of the past moment. In other words, with the change of moment, the actions and the memory of the past moment are also transferred to the succeeding moment.

Buddha has explained the transience and continuity of life by citing the example of the flame of a lamp. The flame of a lamp is changing every moment.

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This change depends on the conditions prevailing at that particular moment but in spite of the differences in the flame, it appears to be the same due to continuity. Similarly, life is a systematic and continuous process of different stages conditioned by cause and effect. Buddha believs in rebirth in the sense that another birth is caused due to one birth. And just as a lamp can be lighted by another lamp and yet the lights of both the lamps cannot be identified, similarly in spite of cause and effect relation in two births, they are different and not identical.

Buddha always preached to his disciples that they should not indulge in useless discussions with regard to the soul. In his view, if the soul is taken to be intransient and everlasting one gets attached to it and suffers in his efforts to make it happy. Buddha likened the love with the invisible and unproved soul to the greatly ludicrous love of some invisible and imaginary beautiful woman. The attachment to the soul has been likened to preparing a ladder to mount to a place which has not been seen by anyone.

Nirvana (Nibbana)

Nirvana is the "summum bonum" of Buddhism. It is discussed in the third noble truth called Dukha Nirodha which means cessation of suffering. It is a state of enlightenment, an ultimate experience.

What does Nirvana means?

Etymologically, the word is a combination of two words (Ni + vana) which means freedom or departure from craving, extinction of greed, hate and delusion. Nirvana is complete extinction of the fire of passions.

Again, ‘Nirvana’ means ‘blowing out’. It is the cessation of the vicious circle of Samsara or becoming, the dissolution of the five skandhas (Aggregation). It is a realization of the free state of consciousness, the tranquil state of the eternal nature and blessedness.

The ideal saint who has attained nirvana is called an Arhat or perfectly pure, one who has blown himself out of existence by annihilating all desires and passions.

This highest idea is described both positively and negatively. Positively, Nirvana is identified with bliss. It is the mental illumination conceived as light, insight, state of happiness, cool, calm and content. It is happiness here and hereafter, it is fearless goal. Hence, positively, it is the ideal of place, safety and purity. Negatively, it is the assimilation of passion, hatred and delusion (‘raga’, ‘dwesa’ and ‘moha’). It is wearing out of all evils and cessation of the sense of discordance.

Hinyana mahayana description of Nirvana

The Hinayana School favours mostly the negative description of Nirvana. It is described as Nirodha or Nirveda (Cessation of suffering). It is the annihilation of existence for ever. Samsara and nirvana are entirely different in the Hinayana School. Samsara is the way of becoming and Nirvana is the end of becoming. The Hinayanists believe that Nirvana is something to be acquired.

But, according to the Mahayana School, Samsara and Nirvana are two relative ideas and as such there is no absolute distinction between the two. Both stand on the same footing in respect of each other as regard their significance. Suffering is Samsara and cessation of suffering is Nirvana. Both are only aspects of the same reality.

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Again, Madhyamikas believe that it is not something to be acquired. Nagarjuna describes Nirvana as: “Nirvana is that which is neither abandoned nor acquired, it is neither a thing annihilated nor a thing eternal; it is neither destroyed nor produced.”

Pratitya Samutpada in it samutpada aspect is samsara and the same in its nirodha aspect is Nirvana. Difference regarding the means for the attainment of Nirvana

Hinyanist

The Hinayanist believes that by the realization of pudgala-nairatmya (not-self or unsubstantiality of the person), one could attain Nirvana.

Mahayanist

The Mahayanist maintains that it is not only by the realization of pudgala-nairatmya, but also by the realization of dharma-nairatmya (i.e. that all the dharmas or elements of existence are unsubstantial, devoid of any independent reality of their own) that one realy attains Nirvana.

According to Mahayana, the realization of both pudgala-nairatmya and dharma-nairatmya is necessary for the attainment of Nirvana.

In the Bauddha literature a distinction has been drawn between two kinds of nirvana – 1. Upadhiseasa (Nirvana), where only human passions are extinct, condition of a

perfect saint where the five skandhas are still present,hough the desire which attracts us to being is extinct

2. Anupadhisesa(Parinirvana), where all being is extinct. In this cessation of all being

consequent on the death of the saint.

But even parinirvana cannot mean absolute non-being. It only means absolute perfection of being. In nirvana, desire is extinct, though there remains unruffled and unperturbed consciousness. In parinirvana, the unruffled consciousness is also extinct. For this reason, nirvana has been described as annihilation of existence.

What is eight fold path to attain liberation? The fourth noble truth lays down that there is a path consisting of eight steps called the eight fold noble path (astangika-marga) to reach a state free from misery. The path is open to all, monks as well as laymen. The Nobel eight-fold path consists of following eight steps: 1. Right Views (Samyak-drsti) : Right view is defined as the correct knowledge about

the four noble truths. Wrong view (mithyadrsti) about the self and the world is the root cause of our sufferings. Right view leads us towards nirvana, the final goal.

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2. Right Resolve (Samyak-sankalpa) : Right resolve is defined as the firm

determination to reform life in the light of truth. The aspirant is asked (i) to renounce worldliness,(ii) to give up ill feeling towards others and (iii) desist from doing any harm to them. 3.Right Speech (Samyak-vak) : Right speech consists in abstention from lying, slander, unkind words and frivolous talks. 4. Right Conduct (Samyak-karmanta) : Right conduct includes the Panca-sila, the fine

vows of desisting from killing, stealing, lying and intoxication etc. 5.Right Liveihood (Samyak-ajiva) : One should earn his livelihood by honest means. Even for the sake of maintaining one’s life, one should not take to forbidden means but work in consistency with good determination. 6. Right Effort (Samyak-vyayama) : Right effort consists is making a constant effort (i)

to root out old evil thoughts (ii) prevent evil thoughts from arising anew (iii) to fill the mind with good ideas, and (iv) retain such ideas in the mind. 7. Right mindfulness (Samyak-smirti) : Right Mindufulness lays down that the aspirant

should constanly bear in mind the things he has already learnt. He should constantly rember the perishable nature of things. This is necessary for keeping off attachment to things, and grief over their loss. The practice of such thought is recommended by Buddha in minute details in Digha-nikaya. 8. Right concentration (Samyak-smadhi) : Right concentration through four stages is

the last step in the path that leads to the goal nirvana. 1. The first state of concentration is on reasoning and investigation regarding the truths.

There is then a joy of pure thinking. 2. The second state of concentration is unruffled meditation, free from reasoning, etc.

there is then a joy of tranquility. 3. The third stage of concentration is detachment from even the joy of tranquility. There is

then indifference even to such joy but a feeling of bodily ease still persists. 4. The fourth state of concentration is detachement from this bodily case too. There are

the perfect equanimity and indifference. This is the state of nirvana or perfect wisdom. The noble eightfold path consists of three main things : Conduct (shila). Concentration (Samadhi) and knowledge (prajna) harmonisouly cultivated. They correspond to Darshana, Jnana and Charitra of Jainism. Shila and Samadhi lead to Prajna which is the direct cause of liberation.