Introduction
The Buddha's
teaching called Paticca-samuppada, usually
translated as Dependent Origination, is fundamental
to the Dhamma (Truth) awakened to by The Buddha on
the night of His Enlightenment. The Buddha is
recorded to have said:
One who sees
Dependent Origination, sees the Dhamma.
One who sees the Dhamma, sees Dependent Origination.
MN 28.1
Furthermore, the
understanding of Dependent Origination is an
integral part of the delusion-shattering insight
that brings one to the state of 'one who has entered
the stream' (sotapanna), destined for full
Enlightenment within a maximum of seven more lives.
It is stated by The Buddha that one who has entered
the stream may be considered as possessing five
attributes:
-
Unshakeable
faith in The Buddha, as opposed to other
religious leaders.
-
Unshakeable
faith in the Dhamma, as opposed to other
religious beliefs.
-
Unshakeable
faith in the Sangha, the Enlightened members of
the monastic community.
-
Very high
standard of morality, `dear to the Enlightened
Ones'.
-
Accurate
understanding of Dependent Origination, and its
corollary Idappaccayata (Causality).
SN 12, 27; AN 5, 25.
Therefore it is fair
to say that the correct understanding of Dependent
Origination can only be known by the Enlightened
Ones, that is by the Streamwinners, Once Returners,
Non Returners and Arahants. This goes a long way to
answering the question why there is so much
difference of opinion on the meaning of Dependent
Origination.
In this essay I will
discuss the meaning of the 12 factors that make up
the standard description of Dependent Origination.
Then I will analyse the nature of the causes linking
each pair of neighbouring factors, using a Western
model of causality. Having explained what The Buddha
meant by Dependent Origination, I will then examine
perhaps the most interesting question "Why did The
Buddha place such importance on Dependent
Origination? What is its purpose?". In this final
section, I will propose that the function of
Dependent Origination is threefold:
-
To explain how
there can be rebirth without a soul.
-
To answer the
question "What is life?".
-
To understand
why there is suffering, and where suffering
comes to an end.
So let us begin by
seeing what The Buddha meant by Dependent
Origination.
Dependent
Origination - Standard Description
Avijjapaccaya
sankhara, sankharapaccaya vinnanam, vinnanam
napaccay namarupam, namarupapaccaya salayatanam,
salayatanapaccaya phasso, phassapaccayo vedana,
vedanapaccayo tanha, tanhapaccayo upadanam,
upadanapaccayo bhava, bhavapaccayo jati, jatipaccayo
jaramaranam soka-parideva-dukkha-domanass-upayasa
sambavanti. Evametassa kevalassa dukkha-khandhassa
samudayo hoti.
Avijjayatveva
asesaviraganirodha sankharanirodho, sankharanirodho
vinnananirodho, vinnanam nirodha namarupanirodho,
namarupanirodha salayatananirodho, salayatananirodha
phassanirodho, phassanirodha vedananirodho,
vedananirodha tanhanirodho, tanhanirodha
upadananirodho, upadananirodha bhavanirodho,
bhavanirodha jatinirodho, jatinirodha jaramaranam
soka-parideva-dukkha-domanass-upayasa nirujjanti.
Evametassa kevalassa dukkha-khandassa nirodho hoti.
From delusion as
condition, volitional formations [come to be]; from
volitional formations as condition, consciousness;
from consciousness as condition, name-and-form; from
name-and-form as condition, the six sense bases;
from the six sense bases as condition, contact; from
contact as condition, feeling; from feeling as
condition craving; from craving as condition,
clinging; from clinging as condition, existence;
from existence as condition, birth; from birth as
condition, aging-and-death, sorrow, lamentation,
pain, displeasure, and despair come to be. Such is
the origin of this whole mass of suffering.
But from the
remainderless fading away and cessation of delusion
comes cessation of volitional formations; from the
cessation of volitional formations, cessation of
consciousness; from the cessation of consciousness,
cessation of name-and-form; from the cessation of
name-and form, cessation of the six sense bases;
from the cessation of the six sense bases, cessation
of contact; from cessation of contact, cessation of
feeling; from the cessation of feeling, cessation of
craving; from the cessation of craving, cessation of
clinging; from the cessation of clinging, cessation
of existence; from the cessation of existence,
cessation of birth; from the cessation birth,
aging-and-death, sorrow, lamentation, pain,
displeasure, and despair cease. Such is the
cessation of this whole mass of suffering.
(SN 12, 1)
The Meaning of the
Twelve Factors, as Defined by The Buddha
It is important for
us to understand exactly what The Buddha meant by
these twelve terms. Fortunately, when The Buddha
taught the Dhamma He also explained in great detail
what He meant by what He said. Admittedly, some
terms would be used in slightly different contexts
in different suttas. The Nidanasamyutta (SN 12),
however, is a collection of suttas that are
completely concerned with Paticca-samuppada. The
second sutta in this collection is called the
Vibhanga Sutta2.
Vibhanga means the explanation of the terms used. As
far as Dependent Origination is concerned, in this
sutta The Buddha gives the clearest explanation of
what each of these terms mean. Using Bhikkhu Bodhi's
translation of the Vibhanga Sutta, the meaning of
these twelve terms will now be explained. Also, with
the aid of some other suttas, the meaning of two of
the most controversial terms will be clarified.
First of all, The
Buddha said: "What, bhikkhus, is aging-and-death?
The aging of the various beings in the various
orders of beings, their growing old, brokenness of
teeth, greyness of hair, wrinkling of skin, decline
of vitality, degeneration of the faculties: this is
called aging. The passing away of the various beings
from the various orders of beings, their perishing,
their break up, disappearance, mortality, death,
completion of time, the break up of the aggregates,
the laying down of the carcass: this is called
death. Thus this aging and this death are together
called aging-and-death." It is quite clear here that
The Buddha was talking about death in the usual
meaning of the term, not a death in a moment (which
is a term that some people mistakenly use). It means
the death that you call an undertaker to settle.
And what, bhikkhus,
is birth? The birth of the various beings into the
various orders of beings, their being born, descent
(into the womb), production (abhinibbatti= rebirth),
the manifestation of the aggregates, the obtaining
of the sense bases. This is called birth." The
meaning of the term `various orders of beings', is
fully brought out by a passage in another sutta
specifically dealing with Dependent Origination, the
Mahanidana Sutta (DN 15): "With birth as condition
there is aging and death. How that is so, Ananda,
should be understood in this way. If there were
absolutely and utterly no birth of any kind anywhere
- that is, of gods into the state of gods, of
celestials into the state of celestials, of spirits,
demons, human beings, quadrupeds, winged creatures,
reptiles, each into their own state - if there were
no birth of beings, of any sort into any state,
then, in the complete absence of birth, with the
cessation of birth, would aging and death be
discerned?" "Certainly not, venerable sir."3
Again, it is quite clear here that birth means what
we would normally consider it to be: the arising in
the human realm of a being in the womb.
And what, bhikkhus,
is existence (bhava)? There are these three kinds of
existence: sense-sphere existence, form-sphere
existence, formless-sphere existence. This is called
existence." Because this term, bhava, is often
misunderstood I will explain its meaning in further
detail. The above classification of existence into
three realms is sometimes called the tiloka, the
three worlds. The kamaloka are the worlds dominated
by the five senses. They are the human realm, the
animal realm, the realm of ghosts, the hell realms
and the deva realms up to, but not including the
brahmaloka. The rupaloka are the silent worlds
wherein one exists in the jhana attainments. They
begin with the brahmaloka and include several other
realms based on higher jhanas. The arupaloka are the
worlds of pure mind, wherein one exists in one of
the four immaterial attainments. The rupaloka and
arupaloka are the jhana experience attained at the
moment of death that continues for vast periods of
time, transcending cataclysms of universes and
counted in, sometimes, thousands of aeons.
To understand the
full meaning of bhava one has to go to the Anguttara
Nikaya (3, 76), where Venerable Ananda asks The
Buddha, "What is bhava?" The Buddha responds by
questioning Ananda: "If there was no kamma ripening
in the kamaloka, would there be existence in the
realm dominated by the five senses?" He then asks
the same about the other two realms: "If there was
no kamma ripening in the rupaloka, would there be
existence in the rupaloka? If there was no kamma
ripening in the arupaloka, would there be existence
in the arupaloka?" Accordingly, Ananda replies
"certainly not" to each question. The Buddha then
further explains: "So, Ananda, you can regard kamma
(the actions of body, speech and mind) as the field,
you can regard consciousness as the seed, and you
can regard craving as the moisture. Thus, for beings
who are blinded by ignorance and fettered by
craving, there is the establishment of the
consciousness in this lower realm, in the hinadhatu
(ie. the realms dominated by the five senses), (and
so forth for the two higher realms of existence).
Thus there is in the future more existence
(punabbhava), rebirth (abhinibbatti)". Here The
Buddha was giving the simile of plants growing, with
kamma as the field, and consciousness as the seed,
which is fed by the moisture of craving to explain
how bhava is a cause for rebirth (jati).
And what, bhikkhus,
is clinging (sometimes translated as `fuel')? There
are these four kinds of clinging: clinging to
sensual pleasures, clinging to (wrong) views,
clinging to rules and vows, clinging to a doctrine
of self. This is called clinging.
And what, bhikkhus,
is craving? There are these six classes of craving:
craving for forms (sights), craving for sounds,
craving for odours, craving for tastes, craving for
tactile objects, craving for mental phenomena. This
is called craving.
And what, bhikkhus,
is feeling (vedana4)?
There are these six classes of feeling: feeling born
of eye-contact, feeling born of ear-contact, feeling
born of nose-contact, feeling born of
tongue-contact, feeling born of body-contact,
feeling born of mind-contact. This is called
feeling.
And what, bhikkhus,
is contact? There are these six classes of contact:
eye-contact, ear-contact, nose-contact,
tongue-contact, body-contact, mind-contact. This is
called contact.
And what, bhikkhus,
are the six sense bases? The eye base, the ear base,
the nose base, the tongue base, the body base, the
mind base. These are called the six sense bases.
And what, bhikkhus,
is name-and-form (nama-rupa)? Feeling, perception,
volition (cetana), contact (phassa), and attention
(manasikara): this is called name. The four great
elements and the form derived from the four great
elements: this is called form. Thus this name and
this form are together called name-and-form.
And what, bhikkhus,
is consciousness? There are these six classes of
consciousness: eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness,
nose-consciousness, tongue-consciousness,
body-consciousness, and mind-consciousness. This is
called consciousness.
And what, bhikkhus,
are the volitional formations (sankhara)? There are
these three kinds of volitional formations: the
bodily volitional formation, the verbal volitional
formation, the mental volitional formation. These
are called the volitional formations." The meaning
of sankhara is sometimes debated because this is a
word that does have many meanings in different
places. If one wishes to see the word sankhara used
as a cause for rebirth, one can go to the
Sankharupapatti Sutta (MN 120). Sankharupapatti
means `rebirth according to sankhara'. Here, The
Buddha talks about how certain beings arise in
different realms according to their planned actions
of body, speech or mind. These are actions of body,
speech and mind, which are accompanied by will
(cetana); and it is this kamma which gives rise to
future rebirth. This is called sankhara. In another
sutta (SN 12, 51) The Buddha talks about how, if a
person who has ignorance (avijjagato, who has gone
to ignorance) plans a meritorious sankhara (punnam
sankharam abhisankaroti), his consciousness goes to
a meritorious place. If he plans a demeritorious
sankhara (apunnam sankharam abhisankaroti), his
consciousness goes to an apunna place, a
demeritorious place. If he plans an anenja sankhara
(anenja being something in-between), then his
consciousness goes to that place accordingly. Again,
this shows that there are three types of sankhara -
meritorious, demeritorious and in-between - and that
sankhara is the working of kamma. In much the same
way that kamma can be made by body, speech and mind,
so too there are three types of sankhara - body,
speech and mind sankhara.
And what, bhikkhus,
is ignorance (avijja)? Not knowing suffering, not
knowing the origin of suffering, not knowing the
cessation of suffering, not knowing the way leading
to the cessation of suffering. This is called
ignorance."
Causality and the
Twelve Factors
Alongside Dependent
Origination, The Buddha also taught Idappaccayata,
Causality. The standard formula of causality is as
follows:
When this is, that
is. From the arising of this, that arises.
When this is not, that is not. From the ceasing of
this, that ceases.
Imasmim sati,
idam hoti. Imass uppadadam uppajjati.
Imasmim asati, idam na hoti. Imassa nirodha, idam
nirujjhati."
SN 12, 21.
The first feature of
such causality that must be emphasized is that there
can be a substantial time interval between a cause
and its effect. It is a mistake to assume that the
effect follows one moment after its cause, or that
it appears simultaneously with its cause. In
Buddhist causality, the cause and its effect can be
separated by any length of time.
The above two Pali
phrases Imasmim sati, idam hoti, and Imasmim asati,
idam na hoti are grammatical constructions called in
Pali 'locative absolutes'. In Professor A.K.
Warder's Introduction to Pali (page 103), the author
states categorically that, in such a grammatical
construction, the subordinate action (the cause) can
precede or be simultaneous with the main action (the
effect). As far as the Pali is concerned, the
grammar allows the cause to precede the effect by
any length of time interval.
For example, in the
Nidana Samyutta (SN 12, 10) The Buddha states:
When birth is, death
is. From the arising of birth, death arises."
It has been shown
already that in the Nidana Samyutta 'birth' and
'death' are to be understood in their common
meanings. It is clear that birth and death do not
happen simultaneously. Nor does birth precede death
by just one moment. Birth can sometimes precede
death by many years - 80, 90, 100, even 120 years.
I have emphasized
this point because of the misunderstandings about
Dependent Origination presented by some modern
authors on the subject. The fact remains that there
can be a substantial time interval between a cause
and its effect.
On the Meaning of
Sanditthika and Akalika
Some modern writers
have suggested that the effect must arise
simultaneously with its cause, or arise just one
moment after, for this to qualify as a Dhamma which
can be 'seen here and now' and be 'immediate'. They
argue that since the Dhamma is sanditthika and
akalika, and Dependent Origination is one of the
central features of the Dhamma, therefore Dependent
Origination must be sanditthika and akalika. But
does 'sanditthika' mean 'seen here and now'? Does
'akalika' mean 'immediate'? As I will now show,
these translations can be misleading.
The passage in the
suttas which gives the clearest indication of the
meaning of 'sanditthika' is in the
Mahadukkhakkhandha Sutta (MN 13). In this sutta, the
dangers of sensual pleasures are described by seven
examples of consequences to be experienced in this
life, and all seven are described as 'sanditthika'.
This is in contrast to the consequence of sensual
pleasures described in the sutta's next paragraph
that are to be experienced after death and are
called samparayika. Clearly, sanditthika and
samparayika are antonyms (words with opposite
meanings). In this context, sanditthika must mean
'visible in this life'. Although some Pali words
carry slightly different meanings in different
contexts, this is rare and it seems reasonable to
assume that sanditthika mans 'visible in this life'
in all other contexts as well.
Sanditthika and
kalika (the opposite of akalika) are used together
in a revealing phrase which occurs three times in
the suttas (SN 1, 20; SN 4, 21; and MN 70). The
phrase, with minor variations in each sutta is as
follows:
I don't run after
what is kalika, having abandoned what is
sanditthika.
I run after what is sanditthika, having abandoned
what is kalika.
Naham
sanditthikam hitva, kalikam anudhavami.
Kalikam hitva, sanditthikam anudhavami.
In these three
contexts, sanditthika and kalika are clearly direct
opposites, antonyms again. Thus it is reasonable to
assume that the opposite of kalika, akalika, must be
synonymous with sanditthika. That is, sanditthika
and akalika have essentially the same meaning. They
both refer to that which is 'visible in this life'.
For example, The
Buddha encouraged such practices as maranasati, the
meditation on death, and many monks, nuns and lay
Buddhists practise this method of meditation with
liberating results. Maranasati is certainly a part
of the Dhamma that is sanditthika and akalika. So,
if these two Pali words really did mean 'here and
now' and 'immediate', maranasati would be next to
impossible - one would need to be dead to be able to
contemplate death in the 'here and now',
'immediately'! Obviously, sanditthika and akalika do
not have such a meaning. They both refer to
something visible in this life, as opposed to what
may only be known after one has died.
It is because each
one of the 12 factors of Dependent Origination can
be seen in this life, and their causal relationship
can also be seen in this life, that Dependent
Origination spanning more than one life qualifies as
a Dhamma that is sanditthika and akalika.
You may not be able
to directly see your own death, but you can see
death occurring every day in the hospitals, on the
television or in the newspapers. You don't have to
wait until some afterlife to understand the truth of
death. You have also seen birth, maybe not your own,
but that of many others. You can verify the truth of
birth in this very life. Then by seeing human beings
in their various stages from birth to death, you can
verify in this life that birth is the cause of
death. This is why the part of Dependent Origination
'with birth as a condition, aging and death' is a
Dhamma that is sanditthika and akalika, to be seen
in this life.
You cannot see all
the 12 factors in this moment, because they do not
occur all in one moment. But you can see a
manifestation of each factor in this very life.
That, also is why Dependent Origination is
sanditthika and akalika.
You can also see in
this life the causality that links each pair of
neighbouring factors. Through the development of
penetrating insight empowered by tranquil
meditation, you can see in this life how feeling
(vedana) gives rise to craving (tanha). You can
similarly witness how craving gives rise to
clinging/fuel (upadana). And you can likewise
understand in this life how craving and
clinging/fuel produces existence (bhava) and birth
(jati) in the next life. The way that one sees such
causality stretching beyond death may be explained
by paraphrasing The Buddha's simile in the
Mahasihanada Sutta (MN 12). One can know from data
seen in this life that a person's conduct will lead
them to an unpleasant rebirth in just the same way
that one can know that a person walking along a path
with no fork must fall into a pit of coals further
along that path. Thus, even the causality that links
connected factors on either side of death also
qualifies as a Dhamma which is sanditthika and
akalika, to be seen in this life.
I have discussed
this issue at length here only because the
misunderstandings over the meaning of sanditthika
and akalika have resulted in a misconceived
rejection of The Buddha's clear intention to let His
Dependent Origination span more than one life.
Causality and the
Necessary and Sufficient Conditions
I have already
introduced The Buddha's formula for causality,
Idappaccayata, earlier on in this essay. Here I will
show how Idappaccayata relates to what in Western
logic we call a 'necessary condition' and a
'sufficient condition'. This modern analysis of
causes throws much light on Idappaccayata and
Dependent Origination.
A necessary
condition is a cause without which there would be no
effect. For example, fuel is a necessary condition
for a fire. Without fuel there can be no fire. The
necessary condition is expressed by the second half
of Idappaccayata:
When this is not,
that is not. From the ceasing of this, that ceases.
A sufficient
condition is a cause that must always produce the
effect. For example, a fire is a sufficient
condition for heat. A fire must cause heat. The
sufficient condition is expressed by the first half
of Idappaccayata:
When this is, that
is. From the arising of this, that arises.
In order to
demonstrate the difference between these two types
of causes I will use the example just given. Fuel is
a necessary condition for fire, because with the
ceasing of fuel, the fire ceases. But fuel is not a
sufficient condition for fire, because fuel doesn't
always produce fire - some fuel remains unlit. Fire
is a sufficient condition for heat, because fire
must cause heat. But fire is not a necessary
condition for heat, because without fire there can
still be heat - heat can be generated from other
sources.
So a necessary
condition is a cause without which there would be no
effect, and it is expressed by the second half of
Idappaccayata. A sufficient condition is a cause
that must produce the effect, and it is expressed by
the first half of Idappaccayata. Together they make
up Buddhist causality.
~oOo~
The `forward' order
of Paticca-samuppada, when analysed, shows that only
some of the first 11 factors are a sufficient
condition for the factor following. Those factors
linked by a sufficient condition, meaning that the
following factor must come about sooner or later as
a consequence of the preceding factor, are as
follows:
-
avijja -
sankhara
-
vinnana -
namarupa
-
namarupa -
salayatana
-
salayatana -
phassa
-
phassa - vedana
-
tanha - upadana
-
bhava - jati
-
jati - dukkha
Thus, when there is
avijja, there will inevitably occur some kamma
formations inclining to rebirth. When there is
vinnana, there must be namarupa, salayatana, phassa
and vedana. When there is tanha, there will be
upadana. Also, bhava is sufficient to produce birth
(see AN 3, 76). Then, most importantly, jati must
produce dukkha. Having been born one must suffer
dukkha. Therefore, the only escape from suffering is
to cease being reborn. As Venerable Sariputta said:
In brief, to be
reborn is dukkha, not to be reborn is sukha
(happiness).
(AN 10, 65)
~oOo~
It is of interest
now to look at the links that are not sufficient
conditions.
sankhara is not a
sufficient condition for rebirth linking
consciousness and the stream of consciousness that
follows. This is because, having produced many
rebirth-inclining kamma formations early on in one's
life, it is possible to make them all null and void
(called `ahosi kamma') with the attainment of
arahant, which attainment eliminates the stream of
consciousness that would otherwise begin at rebirth.
The fact that
upadana is not a sufficient condition for bhava is
similar to sankhara not being a sufficient condition
for vinnana. Through the development of the Noble
Eightfold Path as far as Full Enlightenment, no new
upadana are generated and all previous upadana
becomes ineffective in producing a ground for a new
existence or bhava. The upadana previous to Full
Enlightenment becomes, as it were, `ahosi upadana'.
Even more obvious,
vedana is not a sufficient condition for tanha.
vedana are certainly experienced by arahants, but
they never generate tanha. Moreover, for ordinary
people, not every vedana produces craving.
~oOo~
Some Western
Buddhists have proposed that the 'forward' order of
Paticca-samuppada can be halted by 'cutting' the
process between vedana and tanha. Often I have heard
some suggest that rebirth can be avoided through
using sati (mindfulness) on vedana to stop it
generating tanha and the following factors of
Paticca-samuppada. This is, in my understanding,
misconceived on two grounds.
First, the 'forward'
order of Paticca-samuppada was never intended to
demonstrate how the process should be 'cut'. The
'forward' order is only meant to show how the
process continues. The teaching on how the process
is 'cut', or rather ceases, is the purpose reserved
for the 'reverse' order of Paticca-samuppada or
`Dependent Cessation'.
Secondly, even
though vedana does not inevitably produce tanha,
because it is not a sufficient condition, it is well
stated by The Buddha that only when avijja ceases
once and for all does vedana never generate tanha !
This means that one doesn't `cut' the process using
sati on vedana. Sati is not enough. The process
stops from the cessation of avijja, as Dependent
Cessation makes abundantly clear. The cessation of
avijja is much more than the practice of sati.
Misreading the
Suttas
There is a sutta in
the Anguttara collection that is often presented as
evidence that Dependent Origination does not span
more than one life. This sutta is called 'Tenets' in
the Pali Text Society's translation (AN 3, 61). Some
interpret this sutta as stating that vedana is not
caused by kamma formations (sankhara) done in a past
life. Therefore the link called sankhara in
Dependent Origination (which does cause vedana)
cannot mean kamma formations of a previous life. I
will show below that this conclusion is wrong, as it
comes from a misreading of the suttas.
The relevant part of
this sutta presents three theories to explain why
one feels pleasant, unpleasant or neutral vedana.
The first theory states that everything one feels is
due to what one did in the past (sabbam tam pubbe
katahetu). The other two theories state that
everything one feels is either caused by God or by
chance. The Buddha categorically states in this
sutta that all three theories are wrong.
The first theory,
the one pertinent to this discussion, that
everything that one feels now is due to what one did
in the past, is repeated in the Devadaha Sutta (MN
101) where it is said to be a belief of the Jains.
The Jains held that all the suffering one
experienced in this life was due to bad kamma from a
previous life. Indeed, this sutta clarifies this
first theory as meaning everything that one feels
now is due to what one did in a past life. The
Devadaha Sutta disproves this theory.
So it is true that
The Buddha denied that everything that one feels,
happiness or suffering or neutral feeling, is due to
what one did in a past life (i.e. due to kamma
formations of a past life). This should be obvious.
Some of what one feels is caused by kamma formations
from a past life, some caused by past kamma
formations earlier in this life, and some caused by
kamma formations being performed now. What The
Buddha was denying was that all happiness or
suffering or neutral feelings are caused by kamma
from a previous life.
It should be pointed
out that The Buddha is here referring to the type of
feeling, rather than to feeling itself. It is true
that whichever one of the three types of feeling
that one experiences, happiness or suffering or
neutral, is not always due to kamma from a past
life. But it is also true that the situation whereby
one can experience feeling at all, the fact that
vedana exists, is due to kamma from a past life.
A simile might make
this clearer. The situation that you possess a TV on
a public holiday is due to you having purchased it
on some previous day. Its presence, as it were, is
due to kamma from a past day. But whichever one of
the three available channels that appears on the
screen, Channel Happiness or Channel Suffering or
Channel Neutral, is not always due to what you did
on some previous day. The content is not all due to
kamma from the past.
In the same way, The
Buddha states that the existence of vedana in this
life is due to kamma formations done in the previous
life. But the particular type of feeling, happiness
or suffering or neutral is not always due to kamma
from a previous life.
Once the distinction
is made between vedana and the contents of vedana
(happiness or suffering or neutral), it is clear
that the 'Tenets' sutta doesn't state that vedana is
not caused by kamma formations from a previous life.
It does not disprove the orthodox understanding of
Dependent Origination as spanning three lives.
Indeed, the latter
part of the 'Tenets' sutta introduces Dependent
Origination from a unique starting point.
"Depending on the
six elements (earth, air, fire, water, space and
consciousness) there is the descent of the being to
be born into the womb; when there is descent, there
is name-and-form; with name-and-form as condition,
the six sense bases; with the six sense bases as
condition, contact; with contact as condition,
feeling."
Channam dhutanam
upadaya gabbhass' vakkanti hoti; okkantiy
sati, namarupam; namarupa-paccaya salayatanam;
salayatana-paccaya phasso; phassa-paccaya vedana."
Thus The Buddha is
clearly showing the origin of vedana as due to the
descent of the being to be born into the womb. This
can now be compared to the Mahanidana Sutta (DN 15)
and its definition of namarupa:
It was said 'with
consciousness as condition there is name-and-form'.
How this is so, Ananda, should be understood in this
way. If consciousness were not to descend into the
mother's womb, would name-and-form take shape in the
womb?" "No, venerable sir.
namarupa-paccaya
vinnann'ti, iti kho pa'etam vuttam. Tad, Ananda,
imina p'etam pariyayena veditabbam, yatha
namarupa-paccaya vinnanam. vinnanam va hi Ananda
matu kucchismim no okkamissattha, api nu kho
namarupam matu kucchismim samucchissatha' ti? No
h'etam bhante.
This clearly equates
the descent of the being to be born into the womb of
'Tenets' with the descent of (rebirth linking)
consciousness into the womb of the Mahanidana Sutta.
Thus vedana is said in `Tenets' to be caused by the
first consciousness arising in this life, whose own
cause can only be found in a previous life.
Thus the sutta in
the Anguttara collection which is often presented as
evidence that Dependent Origination does not span
more than one life, when read accurately and
completely, actually clearly proves the opposite.
The situation that vedana exists at all is due to
avijja and kamma formations from the previous life,
and Dependent Origination, as taught by The Buddha,
does indeed span more than a single life.
The Purpose of
Dependent Origination
So far, I have
described what Dependent Origination means. I have
shown, by quoting from the original texts, that the
factor vinnana refers to the stream of consciousness
beginning in a life after the avijja and kamma
formations that caused the rebirth. I have shown how
causality, the link between one factor and the next
can involve a substantial interval of time, even
extending beyond this life into a future life. In
summary, I have shown that Paticca-samuppada, as
taught by The Buddha in the suttas, can only mean a
process that spans three lives. To believe that
Paticca-samuppada must be restricted to a single
life, or even to a few moments, is simply untenable
in light of reason and facts.
It is now time to
consider the purpose of Dependent Origination. One
can gain understanding of a thing, not only by
finding out what it is made of, but also by
investigating what it does. Now I am going to
discuss the function of Paticca-samuppada. I will
discuss three purposes of Paticca-samuppada:
-
To explain how
there can be rebirth without a soul.
-
To answer the
question "What is life?"
-
To understand
why there is suffering, and where suffering
comes to an end.
Rebirth Without a
Soul
One of the most
common questions that I am asked is how can there be
rebirth when there is no soul to be reborn. The
answer to that question is Dependent Origination.
Paticca-samuppada shows the empty process, empty of
a soul that is, which flows within a life and
overflows into another life. It also shows the
forces at work in the process, which drive it this
way and that, even exercising sway in a subsequent
life. Dependent Origination also reveals the answer
to how kamma done in a previous life can affect a
person in this life.
Dependent
Origination presents two sequences that generate
rebirth:
-
delusion
(avijja) + kamma the stream of consciousness
beginning at rebirth (vina).
-
craving (tanh) +
fuel (updna) existence (bhava) + rebirth into
that existence (jti).
These are parallel
processes. They describe the same operation viewed
from two different angles. I will now combine them:
Deluded kamma and
craving produce the fuel which generates existence
and rebirth (into that existence), thereby giving
rise to the start of the stream of consciousness
that is at the heart of the new life.
It is kamma and
craving, both under the sway of delusion, that is
the force propelling the stream of consciousness
into a new life.
~oOo~
I will now offer
some similes to illustrate this operation. These
similes are only approximations and, therefore, will
never perfectly match Paticca-samuppda. This is
because Dependent Origination is mainly a process
describing the flow of the mental consciousness,
whilst the similes at my disposal are from the more
well known material world. Still, they should help
to clarify one's understanding.
Someone goes to an
airport to fly to another country. If they have
enough money for the fare and they have a desire to
go to a new country, then they may arrive in that
land. If they have the fare but not the desire, or
the desire but not the fare, or they lack both, then
they will not arrive in the new country. In this
simile: the person stands for the stream of
consciousness; the airport stands for death; the new
country stands for the next life; the fare stands
for the person's accumulated kamma; and their desire
to go there stands for craving. With much good kamma
and a craving for happiness, or just the craving to
be, the stream of consciousness that one thinks of
as `me' is propelled into one's chosen next life.
With much bad kamma and a craving for happiness, one
cannot reach the happiness one wants, and thus one
is propelled into an unsatisfactory next life. With
much bad kamma and a craving for punishment, what we
recognize in this life as the guilt complex, one
falls into a next life of suffering. Then with much
good kamma and no craving at all, one goes nowhere.
Like the traveller at the airport, they have enough
money to go wherever they want first-class, but the
delusion has been shattered and the desire that
generated all this coming-and-going is no more. They
cease at the airport.
How does one seed
produce a new seed? Suppose a seed is planted in a
good field, it is fed by moisture carrying essential
nutrients, and it grows to maturity producing
another seed at its death. There is no soul or self
in the seed, yet one seed has evolved into another
seed following a process of cause and effect. The
original seed and the new seed are completely
different. Almost certainly, there isn't even one
molecule of the original seed to be found in the new
seed. Even the DNA, though similar, is not the same.
It is an example of a well known process which spans
a life, but with nothing that one can identify as an
essence passing unaltered from the original seed to
the new seed. Rebirth, as it were, has happened with
no `seed-soul' going across. I mention this example
because it is similar to a metaphor of The Buddha:
Kamma is like the
field, craving like the moisture, and the stream of
consciousness like the seed. When beings are blinded
by delusion and fettered with craving, the stream of
consciousness becomes established, and rebirth of a
new seed (consciousness) takes place in the future."
(paraphrased from AN 3, 76)
It is interesting to
describe how a recent, real instance of kamma and
craving worked together to change bhava, the kind of
one's existence. In the late 1970's in Britain, many
uneconomical coalmines were permanently closed. One
particular disused mine was close to a heavily
populated area in South Wales. When some of the poor
of that area had unwanted kittens, they would
cheaply dispose of them by cruelly throwing them
down into the abandoned mineshaft. Several years
later, some engineers entered that mine to check on
its safety. They found a remarkable discovery. Some
of the kittens had survived the fall and, in the
space of only a few generations, had evolved into a
completely new species of cat, blind in their eyes
but with enormous ears. Craving and behavioural
conditioning (kamma) had been the obvious driving
forces that produced the mutation.
The above examples
only begin to give an indication of the process that
is Paticca-samuppda. Dependent Origination, after
all, is mainly a process that describes the flow of
mental consciousness, and this is fundamentally
different from material processes. If one can
imagine a beach of white sand, then the stretch
looks continuous. On closer examination, though, one
finds that the beach is made up of an uncountable
number of small grains, each close to the next. If
one looks even closer, one discovers that the grains
aren't even touching, that each grain is alone.
Similarly, when one's mindfulness has been empowered
by jhana meditation, one may see the stream of
consciousness in much the same way. Before, it
looked like a continuous stretch of unbroken
cognition. But now it is revealed as granular, tiny
moments of consciousness, uncountable in number,
close together but not touching, and each one alone.
Having seen the true nature of consciousness, only
then can one see how one moment of consciousness
influences what follows. Kamma, like a discrete
particle of behavioural conditioning, together with
craving combine to make the impersonal forces that
steer the journey of consciousness, like an aircraft
on an automatic super-pilot. Furthermore, when the
insight comes, based uniquely on the data of jhana,
that the mental consciousness is independent of the
body and must clearly survive the death of the body,
then one sees with absolute certainty that the
forces of kamma and craving that drive mental
consciousness now, will continue to drive the mind
through and beyond death. Rebirth and its process
are seen. Paticca-samuppda is understood.
The Buddha said to
Venerable Ananda at the opening of the Mahnidna
Sutta (DN 15):
This Dependent
Origination, Ananda, is deep and it appears deep.
In my opinion, one
needs the experience of jhana to see it clearly.
Nevertheless, I hope that the explanation and
similes that I have given will help throw some light
onto the true nature and purpose of this impersonal
process that drives the mind from life to life. At
least you can know that when Paticca-samuppda is
fully understood, it is also clearly seen how
rebirth happens without any soul.
What is Life?
One of the major
difficulties that Buddhists find with the teaching
of Anatta is that if there is no soul or self, then
what is this? What is it that thinks, wills, feels
or knows? What is it that is reading this? In
summary, what is life?
In one of the most
profound of all suttas in the Buddhist scriptures,
the Kaccnagotta Sutta (SN 12, 15), which was to play
a major role in later Buddhist history, The Buddha
stated that, for the most part, people's views on
the nature of life fall into one of two extremes.
Either they maintain that there is a soul, or they
hold that there is nothing at all. Unfortunately,
too many Buddhists confuse the teaching of Anatta
and side with the view that there is nothing at all.
The Buddha condemned
both extremes with a devastating argument based on
experience. It is untenable to maintain that there
is a soul because anything that can be meaningfully
considered as a soul or self the body, will, love,
consciousness or mind - can all be seen as
impermanent. As The Buddha put it "One cannot say
that there is (a soul), because a cessation (of all
that can be a soul) is seen". On the other hand, it
is untenable to maintain that there is nothing at
all, because it is obvious that life is! As The
Buddha put it "One cannot say that there is nothing,
because an arising (of all phenomena) is seen".
Thus, as the Buddhist philosopher-monk Nagarjuna
(2nd century CE) was to remind everyone, The Buddha
clearly denied the doctrine of absolute emptiness.
Even today, most
people fall into one of these two extremes. Either
that there is nothing at all and the mind, love,
life is complete illusion, or that there is an
eternal soul with God as the corollary. Both are
wrong.
The Kaccanagotta
Sutta continues with The Buddha pointing out that
there is a middle that has been excluded in this
dichotomy of views. There is a third option that
avoids both extremes. So what is this 'middle'
between the extremes of a soul and nothingness? That
middle, said The Buddha, is Paticca-samuppda.
When The Buddha
stated that it is untenable to hold that there is a
soul or self (or a God) because a cessation is seen,
He explained what He meant as: "From the cessation
of delusion, kamma formations cease; from the
cessation of kamma formations consciousness ceases
... from the cessation of birth, dukkha5
ceases". He was referring to the passing away
process called Dependent Cessation. This impersonal
process is the very thing that we identify as life.
Moreover, it includes all the 'usual suspects' that
masquerade as a soul: the body (part of nmarpa),
will (part of the kamma formations, sometimes
tanha), love (part of the kamma formations and
mostly part of updana, clinging), consciousness
(vina) and mind (part of salyatana and often
equivalent to vina). These usual suspects are
clearly seen in the light of Dependent Cessation as
transient, insubstantial, granular and fading away
soon after they arise. They are all conditioned.
They exist only as long as they are supported by
their external causes, which are themselves
unstable. When the external supporting causes
disappear, so do each of the usual suspects. Because
these things do not persist, since they do not
continue in being, it is untenable to hold that
there is a soul, a self or a God.
When The Buddha
stated that it is also untenable to maintain that
all is pure emptiness, void, nothing, because an
arising is seen, He explained what He meant as:
"From the arising of delusion, kamma formations
arise, from kamma formations arises the stream of
consciousness in the next life ... from birth arises
dukkha!" He was referring to the arising process
called Dependent Origination. Again, this impersonal
process includes all that we can know as 'life'.
Because this arising is seen, one cannot say they
are not. It is not an illusion. These phenomena are
real.
A simile might help
here. In mathematics a point is a concept drawn from
the science of life. It describes aspects of real
phenomena. Yet a point has no size. It is smaller
than any measure that you can suggest, yet it is
bigger than nothing. In a sense, one cannot say a
point is, because it does not persist, it does not
continue in space. Yet one cannot say it is not, as
it is clearly different from nothing. The point is
similar to the momentary nature of conscious
experience. Nothing continues in being therefore it
cannot be something. Something arises therefore it
cannot be nothing. The solution to this paradox, the
excluded middle, is the impersonal process.
~oOo~
In Advaita Vedanta,
one common method is to pursue the enquiry "Who am
I?". That is a loaded question. It carries an
implicit premise that has yet to be agreed on. The
question "Who am I?" assumes that 'I am', only one
doesn't know what. In the Sabbsav Sutta (MN 2) The
Buddha called such enquiries 'attending unwisely'
(ayonisamanasikra), and in the Mahtanhsankhaya Sutta
(MN 38) The Buddha described this as remaining
'inwardly perplexed' (kathamkath). In other words,
it doesn't lead to anything penetrating. This
enquiry of Advaita Vedanta is said to end with an
experience of ultimate reality described as 'You are
that', or 'Tat tvam asi' in Sanskrit. But such an
end-doctrine is plainly begging the question. What
is this 'That' that you are? The Buddha never
circled around the issue in such a fruitless way.
For The Buddha would say:
`Patticca-samuppado
tvam asi'
`You are Dependent Origination'
~oOo~
What was once
assumed to be 'me', a self or a soul, or assumed to
be an illusion or complete emptiness, is now clearly
seen as the impersonal process of Dependent
Origination, a causal sequence rolling on from life
to life, containing all and anything that can
meaningfully be a soul, the 'usual suspects' as I
call them, but nothing continuing in being.
So, if you wanted to
find out who you are, now you have the answer -
Dependent Origination!
And if you wanted to
find out what is life, now you also have the answer
- Dependent Origination!
Paticca-samuppada -
That's life!
Why Suffering?
The main purpose of
Paticca-samuppada is to establish the reason why we
suffer, and to find a way of eliminating suffering
once and for all. To understand this point, we must
now take a look at The Buddha's discovery of
Dependent Origination in the context of the story of
The Buddha's life.
The Bodhisatta (an
unenlightened being soon to become Enlightened) sat
under the Bodhi Tree on the night of His
Enlightenment for the sole purpose of finding a
solution to suffering. As a young man, He had been
deeply moved by the tragic sights of an old man, a
sick man, and a dead man. Realizing that the
suffering of old age, sickness and death was the
certain destiny of himself as well, He left home in
order to find a way out of all suffering. Under the
Bodhi Tree, the Bodhisatta entered the jhanas for
the first time since He was a small boy. Having thus
empowered his mind, He then pursued a method of
enquiry called 'yonisamanasikra', which literally
means 'work of the mind which goes back to the
source'. The problem was suffering, in particular
the seemingly inescapable suffering associated with
old age, sickness and death. Tracing the problem
back to the source, the source was seen as birth.
Jatipaccay Dukkha -
'Suffering is caused by birth'.
As shown above,
birth is a sufficient cause for suffering, that is,
birth must give rise to dukkha. Every being that is
born will get old, get sick and die, and experience
the inescapable dukkha associated with that process.
Thus birth is the problem.
This first link of
Paticca-samuppada is rarely given the attention it
deserves. It has enormous implications. Before the
great insight into Dependent Origination under the
Bodhi Tree, the Bodhisatta, like most people, had
lived in hope that somehow He could attain perfect
happiness in this existence or some future
existence. Now He saw that all existence (bhava) is
inextricably involved with suffering. There is no
perfect happiness to be found in any form of
existence. As The Buddha said in the Anguttara
collection:
Just as a tiny bit
of faeces has a bad smell, so I do not recommend
even a tiny bit of existence, not even for so long
as a fingersnap. (AN 1, 18)
A simile might help.
A person born in a harsh prison, raised in that
prison, who has spent all their time in the prison,
can only know prison life. They don't even suspect
that anything beyond their prison can exist. So they
make the best of prison. Those who think positively,
because they have gone to prison seminars, begin to
think that the harsh prison is instead a wonderful
place. They even compose songs like "All jails
bright and beautiful ... the good Lord made them
all"! Others get involved with social service,
compassionately decorating the prison cells of
others. When someone gets tortured or otherwise
punished in jail, they think something has gone
wrong and look for someone to blame. If someone
suggests that it is the very nature of jail to be
suffering, then they are dismissed as a pessimist
and told to "Get a life!". One full moon night, a
prisoner discovers a door leading out of the jail
and goes through. Only then does he realize that
jail was inherently suffering and you can't make it
otherwise. He goes back to tell his fellow
prisoners. Most don't believe him. They can't even
imagine anything other than their jail. When he says
that the jail is suffering and the cessation of
imprisonment is happiness, he is accused by one and
all of escapism.
Sometimes people
rebuke me saying "You monks are just trying to
escape from the real world!".
I reply "Well done!
At last someone else has understood Buddhism!"
What's wrong with
escapism, especially when one realises that the real
world is the harsh prison
The Enlightenment
experience of The Buddha began with the experience
of jhanas. These 'stages of letting go' are also
stages of increasing bliss. After jhana, one can
reflect on the reason why these jhanas are by far
the most pure and powerful happiness of one's life.
What is the cause of such happiness? Ajahn Chah used
to say that it is like having had a tight rope
around one's neck for as long as one can remember.
Then one day the rope is suddenly released. The
bliss and ease that is felt is because a huge burden
of suffering has gone. The ecstasy of jhana is
because one has escaped, albeit temporarily, from
what people mean by 'the real world'. When The
Buddha reflected on jhana, He realized that the real
world is suffering, it is a jail, and release from
it is bliss. He could only know this once He had
stepped out beyond jail. That is one of the purposes
of jhana. Jhana is also called vimokkha, which means
'release'.
Even Arahants,
Enlightened monks and nuns, experience suffering.
They are not released from suffering, they are still
in the world, in jail. The main difference between
an ordinary 'prisoner' and an Arahant is that the
latter is certain to leave soon. Using the simile
from the Theragatha (Th 1003, 606), an Arahant is
like a workman having completed the job and now
calmly waiting for his wages. In the sutta called
'The Dart' (SN 36, 6) suffering is compared to being
stabbed with two darts. An Arahant is only stabbed
with one dart. The two 'darts' refer to bodily
suffering and mental suffering. The Arahant, alone
of this world, only experiences bodily suffering.
But it is still enough to say that an Arahant in
this life still experiences suffering. As the
Enlightened nun Vajir explained (SN 5, 10), what it
feels like to be an Arahant is just experiencing
suffering arising and suffering passing away, and
this was confirmed by The Buddha in the Kaccnagotta
Sutta (SN 12, 15), already mentioned above. Arahants
experience suffering because all existence (bhava)
or birth (jati) is suffering. Only when they pass
away, or `parinibbna', when existence ceases, does
suffering end once and for all.
"Bhava-nirodho
nibbnam" - "Nibbana is the cessation of existence."
(SN 12, 68)
~oOo~
Having discovered
that existence (bhava) and birth (jati) are a
sufficient cause of suffering (dukkha), that they
must create suffering, the problem became how to put
an end to more existence (puna-bhava) and rebirth.
As it became popularly and accurately known, the
goal of Buddhist practice (for those who realize
that the real world's a jail and are not in denial
of this truth) is to make an end of samsara, the
incredibly long journey through countless lives, and
get off the crushing wheel of rebirth.
Thus, the Bodhisatta
continued to pursue yonisamanasikara, work of the
mind that goes back to the source, to find the
causes of bhava and jati. He traced the sequence of
causes, now known as Dependent Origination, through
craving (tanha) back to delusion (avijja). It was
delusion that was seen as the basic culprit.
What is this
delusion? Avijj is consistently explained as not
fully understanding the Four Noble Truths. In other
word, one doesn't realize that one is in jail. It is
amazing how so many people are in such profound
denial of life's suffering that they show severe
signs of maladjustment to old age, sickness and
death. Some people are even surprised that these
things even happen, and exhibit such derangements as
anger and grief when they do! Our delusion is that
life can be fixed.
As every Buddhist
would know, the way to get out of jail, to put an
end to rebirth and the inevitable suffering that
follows, is to develop the Noble Eightfold Path
culminating in jhana (samma-samdhi). But that is a
subject for another essay.
Here I want to add
that Dependent Origination is often cited as an
alternative definition of the Second Noble Truth,
the cause of suffering. And Dependent Cessation is
an alternative definition of the Third Noble Truth,
the cessation of suffering (SN 12, 43). Thus the
main purpose of Dependent Origination, equivalent to
the Second Noble Truth, is to answer the question
"Why suffering?". And the main purpose of Dependent
Cessation, equivalent to the Third Noble Truth, is
to answer the question "How can suffering be
stopped?".
Conclusion
In this essay, I
have attempted to describe what Paticca-samuppada is
all about. I began by presenting the standard
sequence of the twelve factors, and then their
meaning as defined by The Buddha Himself. It should
have been clear from these definitions that
Paticca-samuppada, as The Buddha meant it to be
understood, spans more than one life.
I then went on to
discuss a Western model of causality, the necessary
and sufficient conditions, and how these slotted so
neatly into Idappaccayat, The Buddha's model of
causality. I later used the 'necessary and
sufficient conditions' model to throw more light on
the different forms of causal relationships between
each pair of factors.
A digression on the
meaning of sanditthika-akalika, and a section called
'Misreading the Suttas', were meant to address some
objections (misconceived, as I hope that I have
proved) to the fact that Paticca-samuppada in the
suttas does span more than one life. Although the
argument here was somewhat technical, it highlighted
the importance of kamma and rebirth to The Buddha's
Dhamma. Kamma and rebirth are obviously not a mere
cultural accretion, as some modern misinformed
authors would have us believe, but are essential to
the central teaching of Paticca-samuppda.
Lastly, I introduced
a section rarely mentioned in essays about
Paticca-samuppada - What is its purpose? I have
shown that the purpose of Paticca-samuppada is much
more than mere food for intellectual debate. Indeed,
Paticca-samuppada demonstrates how there can be
rebirth without a soul, it reveals what life is, and
it explains why there is suffering together with the
way suffering is totally ended. Paticca-samuppda
answers the big questions.
It is no
exaggeration to state that Paticca-samuppda is at
the very heart of the Dhamma. As The Buddha stated,
one who understands Paticca-samuppada accurately,
also sees the Dhamma. And the one who sees the
Dhamma fully, is one who has entered the stream and
will soon put an end to all suffering. May that be
you!
Ajahn Brahmavamso,
Bodhinyana Monastery, October 2002.
(1)References to The
Buddha's discourses (suttas) in the Pali canon: DN =
Dgha Nikya, MN = Majjhima Nikya, SN = Samyutta
Nikya, AN = Anguttara Nikya, (SN and AN references
to book number, followed by sutta number), Th =
Theragth (references to verse number).
(2)Connected
Discourses of the Buddha, Wisdom Publications,
Boston 2000,p534f.
(3)Translation
by Bhikkhu Bodhi in The Great Discourse on
Causation, published by BPS, Kandy 1984, p54.
(4)Vedana
- usually translated as `feeling', denotes that
aspect of sensory experience which is taken to be
either pleasant (sukha), unpleasant (dukkha) or
neutral (adukkhamasukha).
(5)Dukkha
(suffering) here stands for the full term
soka-parideva-dukkha-domanassa-upysa.