Contents
Preface
[top]
The essence of the
Buddha's teaching can be summed up in two
principles: the Four Noble Truths and the Noble
Eightfold Path. The first covers the side of
doctrine, and the primary response it elicits is
understanding; the second covers the side of
discipline, in the broadest sense of that word, and
the primary response it calls for is practice. In
the structure of the teaching these two principles
lock together into an indivisible unity called the
dhamma-vinaya, the doctrine-and-discipline,
or, in brief, the Dhamma. The internal unity of the
Dhamma is guaranteed by the fact that the last of
the Four Noble Truths, the truth of the way, is the
Noble Eightfold Path, while the first factor of the
Noble Eightfold Path, right view, is the
understanding of the Four Noble Truths. Thus the two
principles penetrate and include one another, the
formula of the Four Noble Truths containing the
Eightfold Path and the Noble Eightfold Path
containing the Four Truths.
Given this integral
unity, it would be pointless to pose the question
which of the two aspects of the Dhamma has greater
value, the doctrine or the path. But if we did risk
the pointless by asking that question, the answer
would have to be the path. The path claims primacy
because it is precisely this that brings the
teaching to life. The path translates the Dhamma
from a collection of abstract formulas into a
continually unfolding disclosure of truth. It gives
an outlet from the problem of suffering with which
the teaching starts. And it makes the teaching's
goal, liberation from suffering, accessible to us in
our own experience, where alone it takes on
authentic meaning.
To follow the Noble
Eightfold Path is a matter of practice rather than
intellectual knowledge, but to apply the path
correctly it has to be properly understood. In fact,
right understanding of the path is itself a part of
the practice. It is a facet of right view, the first
path factor, the forerunner and guide for the rest
of the path. Thus, though initial enthusiasm might
suggest that the task of intellectual comprehension
may be shelved as a bothersome distraction, mature
consideration reveals it to be quite essential to
ultimate success in the practice.
The present book
aims at contributing towards a proper understanding
of the Noble Eightfold Path by investigating its
eight factors and their components to determine
exactly what they involve. I have attempted to be
concise, using as the framework for exposition the
Buddha's own words in explanation of the path
factors, as found in the Sutta Pitaka of the Pali
Canon. To assist the reader with limited access to
primary sources even in translation, I have tried to
confine my selection of quotations as much as
possible (but not completely) to those found in
Venerable Nyanatiloka's classic anthology, The
Word of the Buddha. In some cases passages taken
from that work have been slightly modified, to
accord with my own preferred renderings. For further
amplification of meaning I have sometimes drawn upon
the commentaries; especially in my accounts of
concentration and wisdom (Chapters VII and VIII) I
have relied heavily on the Visuddhimagga
(The Path of Purification), a vast encyclopedic
work which systematizes the practice of the path in
a detailed and comprehensive manner. Limitations of
space prevent an exhaustive treatment of each
factor. To compensate for this deficiency I have
included a list of recommended readings at the end,
which the reader may consult for more detailed
explanations of individual path factors. For full
commitment to the practice of the path, however,
especially in its advanced stages of concentration
and insight, it will be extremely helpful to have
contact with a properly qualified teacher.
Bhikkhu Bodhi
Abbreviations
[top]
Textual references
have been abbreviated as follows:
DN ..... Digha
Nikaya (number of sutta)
MN ..... Majjhima Nikaya (number of sutta)
SN ..... Samyutta Nikaya (chapter and number of
sutta)
AN ..... Anguttara Nikaya (numerical collection and
number of sutta)
Dhp ..... Dhammapada (verse)
Vism ..... Visuddhimagga
References to Vism.
are to the chapter and section number of the
translation by Bhikkhu Ñanamoli, The Path of
Purification (BPS ed. 1975, 1991)
Chapter I
[top]
The Way to the End of Suffering
The search for a
spiritual path is born out of suffering. It does not
start with lights and ecstasy, but with the hard
tacks of pain, disappointment, and confusion.
However, for suffering to give birth to a genuine
spiritual search, it must amount to more than
something passively received from without. It has to
trigger an inner realization, a perception which
pierces through the facile complacency of our usual
encounter with the world to glimpse the insecurity
perpetually gaping underfoot. When this insight
dawns, even if only momentarily, it can precipitate
a profound personal crisis. It overturns accustomed
goals and values, mocks our routine preoccupations,
leaves old enjoyments stubbornly unsatisfying.
At first such
changes generally are not welcome. We try to deny
our vision and to smother our doubts; we struggle to
drive away the discontent with new pursuits. But the
flame of inquiry, once lit, continues to burn, and
if we do not let ourselves be swept away by
superficial readjustments or slouch back into a
patched up version of our natural optimism,
eventually the original glimmering of insight will
again flare up, again confront us with our essential
plight. It is precisely at that point, with all
escape routes blocked, that we are ready to seek a
way to bring our disquietude to an end. No longer
can we continue to drift complacently through life,
driven blindly by our hunger for sense pleasures and
by the pressure of prevailing social norms. A deeper
reality beckons us; we have heard the call of a more
stable, more authentic happiness, and until we
arrive at our destination we cannot rest content.
But it is just then
that we find ourselves facing a new difficulty. Once
we come to recognize the need for a spiritual path
we discover that spiritual teachings are by no means
homogeneous and mutually compatible. When we browse
through the shelves of humanity's spiritual
heritage, both ancient and contemporary, we do not
find a single tidy volume but a veritable bazaar of
spiritual systems and disciplines each offering
themselves to us as the highest, the fastest, the
most powerful, or the most profound solution to our
quest for the Ultimate. Confronted with this
melange, we fall into confusion trying to size them
up -- to decide which is truly liberative, a real
solution to our needs, and which is a sidetrack
beset with hidden flaws.
One approach to
resolving this problem that is popular today is the
eclectic one: to pick and choose from the various
traditions whatever seems amenable to our needs,
welding together different practices and techniques
into a synthetic whole that is personally
satisfying. Thus one may combine Buddhist
mindfulness meditation with sessions of Hindu mantra
recitation, Christian prayer with Sufi dancing,
Jewish Kabbala with Tibetan visualization exercises.
Eclecticism, however, though sometimes helpful in
making a transition from a predominantly worldly and
materialistic way of life to one that takes on a
spiritual hue, eventually wears thin. While it makes
a comfortable halfway house, it is not comfortable
as a final vehicle.
There are two
interrelated flaws in eclecticism that account for
its ultimate inadequacy. One is that eclecticism
compromises the very traditions it draws upon. The
great spiritual traditions themselves do not propose
their disciplines as independent techniques that may
be excised from their setting and freely recombined
to enhance the felt quality of our lives. They
present them, rather, as parts of an integral whole,
of a coherent vision regarding the fundamental
nature of reality and the final goal of the
spiritual quest. A spiritual tradition is not a
shallow stream in which one can wet one's feet and
then beat a quick retreat to the shore. It is a
mighty, tumultuous river which would rush through
the entire landscape of one's life, and if one truly
wishes to travel on it, one must be courageous
enough to launch one's boat and head out for the
depths.
The second defect in
eclecticism follows from the first. As spiritual
practices are built upon visions regarding the
nature of reality and the final good, these visions
are not mutually compatible. When we honestly
examine the teachings of these traditions, we will
find that major differences in perspective reveal
themselves to our sight, differences which cannot be
easily dismissed as alternative ways of saying the
same thing. Rather, they point to very different
experiences constituting the supreme goal and the
path that must be trodden to reach that goal.
Hence, because of
the differences in perspectives and practices that
the different spiritual traditions propose, once we
decide that we have outgrown eclecticism and feel
that we are ready to make a serious commitment to
one particular path, we find ourselves confronted
with the challenge of choosing a path that will lead
us to true enlightenment and liberation. One cue to
resolving this dilemma is to clarify to ourselves
our fundamental aim, to determine what we seek in a
genuinely liberative path. If we reflect carefully,
it will become clear that the prime requirement is a
way to the end of suffering. All problems ultimately
can be reduced to the problem of suffering; thus
what we need is a way that will end this problem
finally and completely. Both these qualifying words
are important. The path has to lead to a complete
end of suffering, to an end of suffering in all its
forms, and to a final end of suffering, to
bring suffering to an irreversible stop.
But here we run up
against another question. How are we to find such a
path -- a path which has the capacity to lead us to
the full and final end of suffering? Until we
actually follow a path to its goal we cannot know
with certainty where it leads, and in order to
follow a path to its goal we must place complete
trust in the efficacy of the path. The pursuit of a
spiritual path is not like selecting a new suit of
clothes. To select a new suit one need only try on a
number of suits, inspect oneself in the mirror, and
select the suit in which one appears most
attractive. The choice of a spiritual path is closer
to marriage: one wants a partner for life, one whose
companionship will prove as trustworthy and durable
as the pole star in the night sky.
Faced with this new
dilemma, we may think that we have reached a dead
end and conclude that we have nothing to guide us
but personal inclination, if not a flip of the coin.
However, our selection need not be as blind and
uninformed as we imagine, for we do have a guideline
to help us. Since spiritual paths are generally
presented in the framework of a total teaching, we
can evaluate the effectiveness of any particular
path by investigating the teaching which expounds
it.
In making this
investigation we can look to three criteria as
standards for evaluation:
(1) First,
the teaching has to give a full and accurate picture
of the range of suffering. If the picture of
suffering it gives is incomplete or defective, then
the path it sets forth will most likely be flawed,
unable to yield a satisfactory solution. Just as an
ailing patient needs a doctor who can make a full
and correct diagnosis of his illness, so in seeking
release from suffering we need a teaching that
presents a reliable account of our condition.
(2) The second
criterion calls for a correct analysis of the causes
giving rise to suffering. The teaching cannot stop
with a survey of the outward symptoms. It has to
penetrate beneath the symptoms to the level of
causes, and to describe those causes accurately. If
a teaching makes a faulty causal analysis, there is
little likelihood that its treatment will succeed.
(3) The third
criterion pertains directly to the path itself. It
stipulates that the path which the teaching offers
has to remove suffering at its source. This means it
must provide a method to cut off suffering by
eradicating its causes. If it fails to bring about
this root-level solution, its value is ultimately
nil. The path it prescribes might help to remove
symptoms and make us feel that all is well; but one
afflicted with a fatal disease cannot afford to
settle for cosmetic surgery when below the surface
the cause of his malady continues to thrive.
To sum up, we find
three requirements for a teaching proposing to offer
a true path to the end of suffering: first, it has
to set forth a full and accurate picture of the
range of suffering; second, it must present a
correct analysis of the causes of suffering; and
third, it must give us the means to eradicate the
causes of suffering.
This is not the
place to evaluate the various spiritual disciplines
in terms of these criteria. Our concern is only with
the Dhamma, the teaching of the Buddha, and with the
solution this teaching offers to the problem of
suffering. That the teaching should be relevant to
this problem is evident from its very nature; for it
is formulated, not as a set of doctrines about the
origin and end of things commanding belief, but as a
message of deliverance from suffering claiming to be
verifiable in our own experience. Along with that
message there comes a method of practice, a way
leading to the end of suffering. This way is the
Noble Eightfold Path (ariya atthangika magga).
The Eightfold Path stands at the very heart of the
Buddha's teaching. It was the discovery of the path
that gave the Buddha's own enlightenment a universal
significance and elevated him from the status of a
wise and benevolent sage to that of a world teacher.
To his own disciples he was pre-eminently "the
arouser of the path unarisen before, the producer of
the path not produced before, the declarer of the
path not declared before, the knower of the path,
the seer of the path, the guide along the path" (MN
108). And he himself invites the seeker with the
promise and challenge: "You yourselves must strive.
The Buddhas are only teachers. The meditative ones
who practice the path are released from the bonds of
evil" (Dhp. v. 276).
To see the Noble
Eightfold Path as a viable vehicle to liberation, we
have to check it out against our three criteria: to
look at the Buddha's account of the range of
suffering, his analysis of its causes, and the
programme he offers as a remedy.
The
Range of Suffering
The Buddha does not
merely touch the problem of suffering tangentially;
he makes it, rather, the very cornerstone of his
teaching. He starts the Four Noble Truths that sum
up his message with the announcement that life is
inseparably tied to something he calls dukkha.
The Pali word is often translated as suffering, but
it means something deeper than pain and misery. It
refers to a basic unsatisfactoriness running through
our lives, the lives of all but the enlightened.
Sometimes this unsatisfactoriness erupts into the
open as sorrow, grief, disappointment, or despair;
but usually it hovers at the edge of our awareness
as a vague unlocalized sense that things are never
quite perfect, never fully adequate to our
expectations of what they should be. This fact of
dukkha, the Buddha says, is the only real
spiritual problem. The other problems -- the
theological and metaphysical questions that have
taunted religious thinkers through the centuries --
he gently waves aside as "matters not tending to
liberation." What he teaches, he says, is just
suffering and the ending of suffering, dukkha
and its cessation.
The Buddha does not
stop with generalities. He goes on to expose the
different forms that dukkha takes, both the
evident and the subtle. He starts with what is close
at hand, with the suffering inherent in the physical
process of life itself. Here dukkha shows up
in the events of birth, aging, and death, in our
susceptibility to sickness, accidents, and injuries,
even in hunger and thirst. It appears again in our
inner reactions to disagreeable situations and
events: in the sorrow, anger, frustration, and fear
aroused by painful separations, by unpleasant
encounters, by the failure to get what we want. Even
our pleasures, the Buddha says, are not immune from
dukkha. They give us happiness while they
last, but they do not last forever; eventually they
must pass away, and when they go the loss leaves us
feeling deprived. Our lives, for the most part, are
strung out between the thirst for pleasure and the
fear of pain. We pass our days running after the one
and running away from the other, seldom enjoying the
peace of contentment; real satisfaction seems
somehow always out of reach, just beyond the next
horizon. Then in the end we have to die: to give up
the identity we spent our whole life building, to
leave behind everything and everyone we love.
But even death, the
Buddha teaches, does not bring us to the end of
dukkha, for the life process does not stop with
death. When life ends in one place, with one body,
the "mental continuum," the individual stream of
consciousness, springs up again elsewhere with a new
body as its physical support. Thus the cycle goes on
over and over -- birth, aging, and death -- driven
by the thirst for more existence. The Buddha
declares that this round of rebirths -- called
samsara, "the wandering" -- has been turning
through beginningless time. It is without a first
point, without temporal origin. No matter how far
back in time we go we always find living beings --
ourselves in previous lives -- wandering from one
state of existence to another. The Buddha describes
various realms where rebirth can take place: realms
of torment, the animal realm, the human realm,
realms of celestial bliss. But none of these realms
can offer a final refuge. Life in any plane must
come to an end. It is impermanent and thus marked
with that insecurity which is the deepest meaning of
dukkha. For this reason one aspiring to the
complete end of dukkha cannot rest content
with any mundane achievement, with any status, but
must win emancipation from the entire unstable
whirl.
The
Causes of Suffering
A teaching proposing
to lead to the end of suffering must, as we said,
give a reliable account of its causal origination.
For if we want to put a stop to suffering, we have
to stop it where it begins, with its causes. To stop
the causes requires a thorough knowledge of what
they are and how they work; thus the Buddha devotes
a sizeable section of his teaching to laying bare
"the truth of the origin of dukkha." The
origin he locates within ourselves, in a fundamental
malady that permeates our being, causing disorder in
our own minds and vitiating our relationships with
others and with the world. The sign of this malady
can be seen in our proclivity to certain unwholesome
mental states called in Pali kilesas, usually
translated "defilements." The most basic defilements
are the triad of greed, aversion, and delusion.
Greed (lobha) is self-centered desire: the
desire for pleasure and possessions, the drive for
survival, the urge to bolster the sense of ego with
power, status, and prestige. Aversion (dosa)
signifies the response of negation, expressed as
rejection, irritation, condemnation, hatred, enmity,
anger, and violence. Delusion (moha) means
mental darkness: the thick coat of insensitivity
which blocks out clear understanding.
From these three
roots emerge the various other defilements --
conceit, jealousy, ambition, lethargy, arrogance,
and the rest -- and from all these defilements
together, the roots and the branches, comes
dukkha in its diverse forms: as pain and sorrow,
as fear and discontent, as the aimless drifting
through the round of birth and death. To gain
freedom from suffering, therefore, we have to
eliminate the defilements. But the work of removing
the defilements has to proceed in a methodical way.
It cannot be accomplished simply by an act of will,
by wanting them to go away. The work must be guided
by investigation. We have to find out what the
defilements depend upon and then see how it lies
within our power to remove their support.
The Buddha teaches
that there is one defilement which gives rise to all
the others, one root which holds them all in place.
This root is ignorance (avijja).[1]
Ignorance is not mere absence of knowledge, a lack
of knowing particular pieces of information.
Ignorance can co-exist with a vast accumulation of
itemized knowledge, and in its own way it can be
tremendously shrewd and resourceful. As the basic
root of dukkha, ignorance is a fundamental
darkness shrouding the mind. Sometimes this
ignorance operates in a passive manner, merely
obscuring correct understanding. At other times it
takes on an active role: it becomes the great
deceiver, conjuring up a mass of distorted
perceptions and conceptions which the mind grasps as
attributes of the world, unaware that they are its
own deluded constructs.
In these erroneous
perceptions and ideas we find the soil that nurtures
the defilements. The mind catches sight of some
possibility of pleasure, accepts it at face value,
and the result is greed. Our hunger for
gratification is thwarted, obstacles appear, and up
spring anger and aversion. Or we struggle over
ambiguities, our sight clouds, and we become lost in
delusion. With this we discover the breeding ground
of dukkha: ignorance issuing in the
defilements, the defilements issuing in suffering.
As long as this causal matrix stands we are not yet
beyond danger. We might still find pleasure and
enjoyment -- sense pleasures, social pleasures,
pleasures of the mind and heart. But no matter how
much pleasure we might experience, no matter how
successful we might be at dodging pain, the basic
problem remains at the core of our being and we
continue to move within the bounds of dukkha.
Cutting Off the Causes of Suffering
To free ourselves
from suffering fully and finally we have to
eliminate it by the root, and that means to
eliminate ignorance. But how does one go about
eliminating ignorance? The answer follows clearly
from the nature of the adversary. Since ignorance is
a state of not knowing things as they really are,
what is needed is knowledge of things as they really
are. Not merely conceptual knowledge, knowledge as
idea, but perceptual knowledge, a knowing which is
also a seeing. This kind of knowing is called wisdom
(pañña). Wisdom helps to correct the
distorting work of ignorance. It enables us to grasp
things as they are in actuality, directly and
immediately, free from the screen of ideas, views,
and assumptions our minds ordinarily set up between
themselves and the real.
To eliminate
ignorance we need wisdom, but how is wisdom to be
acquired? As indubitable knowledge of the ultimate
nature of things, wisdom cannot be gained by mere
learning, by gathering and accumulating a battery of
facts. However, the Buddha says, wisdom can be
cultivated. It comes into being through a set of
conditions, conditions which we have the power to
develop. These conditions are actually mental
factors, components of consciousness, which fit
together into a systematic structure that can be
called a path in the word's essential meaning: a
courseway for movement leading to a goal. The goal
here is the end of suffering, and the path leading
to it is the Noble Eightfold Path with its eight
factors: right view, right intention, right speech,
right action, right livelihood, right effort, right
mindfulness, and right concentration.
The Buddha calls
this path the middle way (majjhima patipada).
It is the middle way because it steers clear of two
extremes, two misguided attempts to gain release
from suffering. One is the extreme of indulgence in
sense pleasures, the attempt to extinguish
dissatisfaction by gratifying desire. This approach
gives pleasure, but the enjoyment won is gross,
transitory, and devoid of deep contentment. The
Buddha recognized that sensual desire can exercise a
tight grip over the minds of human beings, and he
was keenly aware of how ardently attached people
become to the pleasures of the senses. But he also
knew that this pleasure is far inferior to the
happiness that arises from renunciation, and
therefore he repeatedly taught that the way to the
Ultimate eventually requires the relinquishment of
sensual desire. Thus the Buddha describes the
indulgence in sense pleasures as "low, common,
worldly, ignoble, not leading to the goal."
The other extreme is
the practice of self-mortification, the attempt to
gain liberation by afflicting the body. This
approach may stem from a genuine aspiration for
deliverance, but it works within the compass of a
wrong assumption that renders the energy expended
barren of results. The error is taking the body to
be the cause of bondage, when the real source of
trouble lies in the mind -- the mind obsessed by
greed, aversion, and delusion. To rid the mind of
these defilements the affliction of the body is not
only useless but self-defeating, for it is the
impairment of a necessary instrument. Thus the
Buddha describes this second extreme as "painful,
ignoble, not leading to the goal."[2]
Aloof from these two
extreme approaches is the Noble Eightfold Path,
called the middle way, not in the sense that it
effects a compromise between the extremes, but in
the sense that it transcends them both by avoiding
the errors that each involves. The path avoids the
extreme of sense indulgence by its recognition of
the futility of desire and its stress on
renunciation. Desire and sensuality, far from being
means to happiness, are springs of suffering to be
abandoned as the requisite of deliverance. But the
practice of renunciation does not entail the
tormenting of the body. It consists in mental
training, and for this the body must be fit, a
sturdy support for the inward work. Thus the body is
to be looked after well, kept in good health, while
the mental faculties are trained to generate the
liberating wisdom. That is the middle way, the Noble
Eightfold Path, which "gives rise to vision, gives
rise to knowledge, and leads to peace, to direct
knowledge, to enlightenment, to Nibbana."[3]
Chapter II
[top]
Right View
(Samma Ditthi)
The eight factors of
the Noble Eightfold Path are not steps to be
followed in sequence, one after another. They can be
more aptly described as components rather than as
steps, comparable to the intertwining strands of a
single cable that requires the contributions of all
the strands for maximum strength. With a certain
degree of progress all eight factors can be present
simultaneously, each supporting the others. However,
until that point is reached, some sequence in the
unfolding of the path is inevitable. Considered from
the standpoint of practical training, the eight path
factors divide into three groups: (i) the moral
discipline group (silakkhandha), made up of
right speech, right action, and right livelihood;
(ii) the concentration group (samadhikkhandha),
made up of right effort, right mindfulness, and
right concentration; and (iii) the wisdom group
(paññakkhandha), made up of right view and right
intention. These three groups represent three stages
of training: the training in the higher moral
discipline, the training in the higher
consciousness, and the training in the higher
wisdom.[4]
The order of the
three trainings is determined by the overall aim and
direction of the path. Since the final goal to which
the path leads, liberation from suffering, depends
ultimately on uprooting ignorance, the climax of the
path must be the training directly opposed to
ignorance. This is the training in wisdom, designed
to awaken the faculty of penetrative understanding
which sees things "as they really are." Wisdom
unfolds by degrees, but even the faintest flashes of
insight presuppose as their basis a mind that has
been concentrated, cleared of disturbance and
distraction. Concentration is achieved through the
training in the higher consciousness, the second
division of the path, which brings the calm and
collectedness needed to develop wisdom. But in order
for the mind to be unified in concentration, a check
must be placed on the unwholesome dispositions which
ordinarily dominate its workings, since these
dispositions disperse the beam of attention and
scatter it among a multitude of concerns. The
unwholesome dispositions continue to rule as long as
they are permitted to gain expression through the
channels of body and speech as bodily and verbal
deeds. Therefore, at the very outset of training, it
is necessary to restrain the faculties of action, to
prevent them from becoming tools of the defilements.
This task is accomplished by the first division of
the path, the training in moral discipline. Thus the
path evolves through its three stages, with moral
discipline as the foundation for concentration,
concentration the foundation for wisdom, and wisdom
the direct instrument for reaching liberation.
Perplexity sometimes
arises over an apparent inconsistency in the
arrangement of the path factors and the threefold
training. Wisdom -- which includes right view and
right intention -- is the last stage in the
threefold training, yet its factors are placed at
the beginning of the path rather than at its end, as
might be expected according to the canon of strict
consistency. The sequence of the path factors,
however, is not the result of a careless slip, but
is determined by an important logistical
consideration, namely, that right view and right
intention of a preliminary type are called for at
the outset as the spur for entering the threefold
training. Right view provides the perspective for
practice, right intention the sense of direction.
But the two do not expire in this preparatory role.
For when the mind has been refined by the training
in moral discipline and concentration, it arrives at
a superior right view and right intention, which now
form the proper training in the higher wisdom.
Right view is the
forerunner of the entire path, the guide for all the
other factors. It enables us to understand our
starting point, our destination, and the successive
landmarks to pass as practice advances. To attempt
to engage in the practice without a foundation of
right view is to risk getting lost in the futility
of undirected movement. Doing so might be compared
to wanting to drive someplace without consulting a
roadmap or listening to the suggestions of an
experienced driver. One might get into the car and
start to drive, but rather than approaching closer
to one's destination, one is more likely to move
farther away from it. To arrive at the desired place
one has to have some idea of its general direction
and of the roads leading to it. Analogous
considerations apply to the practice of the path,
which takes place in a framework of understanding
established by right view.
The importance of
right view can be gauged from the fact that our
perspectives on the crucial issues of reality and
value have a bearing that goes beyond mere
theoretical convictions. They govern our attitudes,
our actions, our whole orientation to existence. Our
views might not be clearly formulated in our mind;
we might have only a hazy conceptual grasp of our
beliefs. But whether formulated or not, expressed or
maintained in silence, these views have a
far-reaching influence. They structure our
perceptions, order our values, crystallize into the
ideational framework through which we interpret to
ourselves the meaning of our being in the world.
These views then
condition action. They lie behind our choices and
goals, and our efforts to turn these goals from
ideals into actuality. The actions themselves might
determine consequences, but the actions along with
their consequences hinge on the views from which
they spring. Since views imply an "ontological
commitment," a decision on the question of what is
real and true, it follows that views divide into two
classes, right views and wrong views. The former
correspond to what is real, the latter deviate from
the real and confirm the false in its place. These
two different kinds of views, the Buddha teaches,
lead to radically disparate lines of action, and
thence to opposite results. If we hold a wrong view,
even if that view is vague, it will lead us towards
courses of action that eventuate in suffering. On
the other hand, if we adopt a right view, that view
will steer us towards right action, and thereby
towards freedom from suffering. Though our
conceptual orientation towards the world might seem
innocuous and inconsequential, when looked at
closely it reveals itself to be the decisive
determinant of our whole course of future
development. The Buddha himself says that he sees no
single factor so responsible for the arising of
unwholesome states of mind as wrong view, and no
factor so helpful for the arising of wholesome
states of mind as right view. Again, he says that
there is no single factor so responsible for the
suffering of living beings as wrong view, and no
factor so potent in promoting the good of living
beings as right view (AN 1:16.2).
In its fullest
measure right view involves a correct understanding
of the entire Dhamma or teaching of the Buddha, and
thus its scope is equal to the range of the Dhamma
itself. But for practical purposes two kinds of
right view stand out as primary. One is mundane
right view, right view which operates within the
confines of the world. The other is supramundane
right view, the superior right view which leads to
liberation from the world. The first is concerned
with the laws governing material and spiritual
progress within the round of becoming, with the
principles that lead to higher and lower states of
existence, to mundane happiness and suffering. The
second is concerned with the principles essential to
liberation. It does not aim merely at spiritual
progress from life to life, but at emancipation from
the cycle of recurring lives and deaths.
Mundane Right View
Mundane right view
involves a correct grasp of the law of kamma, the
moral efficacy of action. Its literal name is "right
view of the ownership of action" (kammassakata
sammaditthi), and it finds its standard
formulation in the statement: "Beings are the owners
of their actions, the heirs of their actions; they
spring from their actions, are bound to their
actions, and are supported by their actions.
Whatever deeds they do, good or bad, of those they
shall be heirs."[5]
More specific formulations have also come down in
the texts. One stock passage, for example, affirms
that virtuous actions such as giving and offering
alms have moral significance, that good and bad
deeds produce corresponding fruits, that one has a
duty to serve mother and father, that there is
rebirth and a world beyond the visible one, and that
religious teachers of high attainment can be found
who expound the truth about the world on the basis
of their own superior realization.[6]
To understand the
implications of this form of right view we first
have to examine the meaning of its key term,
kamma. The word kamma means action. For
Buddhism the relevant kind of action is volitional
action, deeds expressive of morally determinate
volition, since it is volition that gives the action
ethical significance. Thus the Buddha expressly
identifies action with volition. In a discourse on
the analysis of kamma he says: "Monks, it is
volition that I call action (kamma). Having
willed, one performs an action through body, speech,
or mind."[7]
The identification of kamma with volition makes
kamma essentially a mental event, a factor
originating in the mind which seeks to actualize the
mind's drives, dispositions, and purposes. Volition
comes into being through any of three channels --
body, speech, or mind -- called the three doors of
action (kammadvara). A volition expressed
through the body is a bodily action; a volition
expressed through speech is a verbal action; and a
volition that issues in thoughts, plans, ideas, and
other mental states without gaining outer expression
is a mental action. Thus the one factor of volition
differentiates into three types of kamma according
to the channel through which it becomes manifest.
Right view requires
more than a simple knowledge of the general meaning
of kamma. It is also necessary to understand: (i)
the ethical distinction of kamma into the
unwholesome and the wholesome; (ii) the principal
cases of each type; and (iii) the roots from which
these actions spring. As expressed in a sutta: "When
a noble disciple understands what is kammically
unwholesome, and the root of unwholesome kamma, what
is kammically wholesome, and the root of wholesome
kamma, then he has right view."[8]
(i) Taking these
points in order, we find that kamma is first
distinguished as unwholesome (akusala) and
wholesome (kusala). Unwholesome kamma is
action that is morally blameworthy, detrimental to
spiritual development, and conducive to suffering
for oneself and others. Wholesome kamma, on the
other hand, is action that is morally commendable,
helpful to spiritual growth, and productive of
benefits for oneself and others.
(ii) Innumerable
instances of unwholesome and wholesome kamma can be
cited, but the Buddha selects ten of each as
primary. These he calls the ten courses of
unwholesome and wholesome action. Among the ten in
the two sets, three are bodily, four are verbal, and
three are mental. The ten courses of unwholesome
kamma may be listed as follows, divided by way of
their doors of expression:
1. Destroying life
2. Taking what is not given
3. Wrong conduct in regard to sense pleasures
Verbal action
4. False speech
5. Slanderous speech
6. Harsh speech (vacikamma)
7. Idle chatter
8. Covetousness
9. Ill will
10. Wrong view
The ten courses of
wholesome kamma are the opposites of these:
abstaining from the first seven courses of
unwholesome kamma, being free from covetousness and
ill will, and holding right view. Though the seven
cases of abstinence are exercised entirely by the
mind and do not necessarily entail overt action,
they are still designated wholesome bodily and
verbal action because they center on the control of
the faculties of body and speech.
(iii) Actions are
distinguished as wholesome and unwholesome on the
basis of their underlying motives, called "roots"
(mula), which impart their moral quality to the
volitions concomitant with themselves. Thus kamma is
wholesome or unwholesome according to whether its
roots are wholesome or unwholesome. The roots are
threefold for each set. The unwholesome roots are
the three defilements we already mentioned -- greed,
aversion, and delusion. Any action originating from
these is an unwholesome kamma. The three wholesome
roots are their opposites, expressed negatively in
the old Indian fashion as non-greed (alobha),
non-aversion (adosa), and non-delusion
(amoha). Though these are negatively designated,
they signify not merely the absence of defilements
but the corresponding virtues. Non-greed implies
renunciation, detachment, and generosity;
non-aversion implies loving-kindness, sympathy, and
gentleness; and non-delusion implies wisdom. Any
action originating from these roots is a wholesome
kamma.
The most important
feature of kamma is its capacity to produce results
corresponding to the ethical quality of the action.
An immanent universal law holds sway over volitional
actions, bringing it about that these actions issue
in retributive consequences, called vipaka,
"ripenings," or phala, "fruits." The law
connecting actions with their fruits works on the
simple principle that unwholesome actions ripen in
suffering, wholesome actions in happiness. The
ripening need not come right away; it need not come
in the present life at all. Kamma can operate across
the succession of lifetimes; it can even remain
dormant for aeons into the future. But whenever we
perform a volitional action, the volition leaves its
imprint on the mental continuum, where it remains as
a stored up potency. When the stored up kamma meets
with conditions favorable to its maturation, it
awakens from its dormant state and triggers off some
effect that brings due compensation for the original
action. The ripening may take place in the present
life, in the next life, or in some life subsequent
to the next. A kamma may ripen by producing rebirth
into the next existence, thus determining the basic
form of life; or it may ripen in the course of a
lifetime, issuing in our varied experiences of
happiness and pain, success and failure, progress
and decline. But whenever it ripens and in whatever
way, the same principle invariably holds: wholesome
actions yield favorable results, unwholesome actions
yield unfavorable results.
To recognize this
principle is to hold right view of the mundane kind.
This view at once excludes the multiple forms of
wrong view with which it is incompatible. As it
affirms that our actions have an influence on our
destiny continuing into future lives, it opposes the
nihilistic view which regards this life as our only
existence and holds that consciousness terminates
with death. As it grounds the distinction between
good and evil, right and wrong, in an objective
universal principle, it opposes the ethical
subjectivism which asserts that good and evil are
only postulations of personal opinion or means to
social control. As it affirms that people can choose
their actions freely, within limits set by their
conditions, it opposes the "hard deterministic" line
that our choices are always made subject to
necessitation, and hence that free volition is
unreal and moral responsibility untenable.
Some of the
implications of the Buddha's teaching on the right
view of kamma and its fruits run counter to popular
trends in present-day thought, and it is helpful to
make these differences explicit. The teaching on
right view makes it known that good and bad, right
and wrong, transcend conventional opinions about
what is good and bad, what is right and wrong. An
entire society may be predicated upon a confusion of
correct moral values, and even though everyone
within that society may applaud one particular kind
of action as right and condemn another kind as
wrong, this does not make them validly right and
wrong. For the Buddha moral standards are objective
and invariable. While the moral character of deeds
is doubtlessly conditioned by the circumstances
under which they are performed, there are objective
criteria of morality against which any action, or
any comprehensive moral code, can be evaluated. This
objective standard of morality is integral to the
Dhamma, the cosmic law of truth and righteousness.
Its transpersonal ground of validation is the fact
that deeds, as expressions of the volitions that
engender them, produce consequences for the agent,
and that the correlations between deeds and their
consequences are intrinsic to the volitions
themselves. There is no divine judge standing above
the cosmic process who assigns rewards and
punishments. Nevertheless, the deeds themselves,
through their inherent moral or immoral nature,
generate the appropriate results.
For most people, the
vast majority, the right view of kamma and its
results is held out of confidence, accepted on faith
from an eminent spiritual teacher who proclaims the
moral efficacy of action. But even when the
principle of kamma is not personally seen, it still
remains a facet of right view. It is part and
parcel of right view because right view is concerned
with understanding -- with understanding our place
in the total scheme of things -- and one who accepts
the principle that our volitional actions possess a
moral potency has, to that extent, grasped an
important fact pertaining to the nature of our
existence. However, the right view of the kammic
efficacy of action need not remain exclusively an
article of belief screened behind an impenetrable
barrier. It can become a matter of direct seeing.
Through the attainment of certain states of deep
concentration it is possible to develop a special
faculty called the "divine eye" (dibbacakkhu),
a super-sensory power of vision that reveals things
hidden from the eyes of flesh. When this faculty is
developed, it can be directed out upon the world of
living beings to investigate the workings of the
kammic law. With the special vision it confers one
can then see for oneself, with immediate perception,
how beings pass away and re-arise according to their
kamma, how they meet happiness and suffering through
the maturation of their good and evil deeds.[9]
Superior Right View
The right view of
kamma and its fruits provides a rationale for
engaging in wholesome actions and attaining high
status within the round of rebirths, but by itself
it does not lead to liberation. It is possible for
someone to accept the law of kamma yet still limit
his aims to mundane achievements. One's motive for
performing noble deeds might be the accumulation of
meritorious kamma leading to prosperity and success
here and now, a fortunate rebirth as a human being,
or the enjoyment of celestial bliss in the heavenly
worlds. There is nothing within the logic of kammic
causality to impel the urge to transcend the cycle
of kamma and its fruit. The impulse to deliverance
from the entire round of becoming depends upon the
acquisition of a different and deeper perspective,
one which yields insight into the inherent
defectiveness of all forms of samsaric existence,
even the most exalted.
This superior right
view leading to liberation is the understanding of
the Four Noble Truths. It is this right view that
figures as the first factor of the Noble Eightfold
Path in the proper sense: as the noble right
view. Thus the Buddha defines the path factor of
right view expressly in terms of the four truths:
"What now is right view? It is understanding of
suffering (dukkha), understanding of the
origin of suffering, understanding of the cessation
of suffering, understanding of the way leading to
the cessation to suffering."[10]
The Eightfold Path starts with a conceptual
understanding of the Four Noble Truths apprehended
only obscurely through the media of thought and
reflection. It reaches its climax in a direct
intuition of those same truths, penetrated with a
clarity tantamount to enlightenment. Thus it can be
said that the right view of the Four Noble Truths
forms both the beginning and the culmination of the
way to the end of suffering.
The first noble
truth is the truth of suffering (dukkha), the
inherent unsatisfactoriness of existence, revealed
in the impermanence, pain, and perpetual
incompleteness intrinsic to all forms of life.
This is the noble
truth of suffering. Birth is suffering; aging is
suffering; sickness is suffering; death is
suffering; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and
despair are suffering; association with the
unpleasant is suffering; separation from the
pleasant is suffering; not to get what one wants is
suffering; in brief, the five aggregates of clinging
are suffering.[11]
The last statement
makes a comprehensive claim that calls for some
attention. The five aggregates of clinging
(pañcupadanakkandha) are a classificatory scheme
for understanding the nature of our being. What we
are, the Buddha teaches, is a set of five aggregates
-- material form, feelings, perceptions, mental
formations, and consciousness -- all connected with
clinging. We are the five and the five are us.
Whatever we identify with, whatever we hold to as
our self, falls within the set of five aggregates.
Together these five aggregates generate the whole
array of thoughts, emotions, ideas, and dispositions
in which we dwell, "our world." Thus the Buddha's
declaration that the five aggregates are dukkha
in effect brings all experience, our entire
existence, into the range of dukkha.
But here the
question arises: Why should the Buddha say that the
five aggregates are dukkha? The reason he
says that the five aggregates are dukkha is
that they are impermanent. They change from moment
to moment, arise and fall away, without anything
substantial behind them persisting through the
change. Since the constituent factors of our being
are always changing, utterly devoid of a permanent
core, there is nothing we can cling to in them as a
basis for security. There is only a constantly
disintegrating flux which, when clung to in the
desire for permanence, brings a plunge into
suffering.
The second noble
truth points out the cause of dukkha. From
the set of defilements which eventuate in suffering,
the Buddha singles out craving (tanha) as the
dominant and most pervasive cause, "the origin of
suffering."
This is the noble
truth of the origin of suffering. It is this craving
which produces repeated existence, is bound up with
delight and lust, and seeks pleasure here and there,
namely, craving for sense pleasures, craving for
existence, and craving for non-existence.[12]
The third noble
truth simply reverses this relationship of
origination. If craving is the cause of dukkha,
then to be free from dukkha we have to
eliminate craving. Thus the Buddha says:
This is the noble
truth of the cessation of suffering. It is the
complete fading away and cessation of this craving,
its forsaking and abandonment, liberation and
detachment from it.[13]
The state of perfect
peace that comes when craving is eliminated is
Nibbana (nirvana), the unconditioned
state experienced while alive with the extinguishing
of the flames of greed, aversion, and delusion. The
fourth noble truth shows the way to reach the end of
dukkha, the way to the realization of
Nibbana. That way is the Noble Eightfold Path
itself.
The right view of
the Four Noble Truths develops in two stages. The
first is called the right view that accords with the
truths (saccanulomika samma ditthi); the
second, the right view that penetrates the truths
(saccapativedha samma ditthi). To acquire the
right view that accords with the truths requires a
clear understanding of their meaning and
significance in our lives. Such an understanding
arises first by learning the truths and studying
them. Subsequently it is deepened by reflecting upon
them in the light of experience until one gains a
strong conviction as to their veracity.
But even at this
point the truths have not been penetrated, and thus
the understanding achieved is still defective, a
matter of concept rather than perception. To arrive
at the experiential realization of the truths it is
necessary to take up the practice of meditation --
first to strengthen the capacity for sustained
concentration, then to develop insight. Insight
arises by contemplating the five aggregates, the
factors of existence, in order to discern their real
characteristics. At the climax of such contemplation
the mental eye turns away from the conditioned
phenomena comprised in the aggregates and shifts its
focus to the unconditioned state, Nibbana, which
becomes accessible through the deepened faculty of
insight. With this shift, when the mind's eye sees
Nibbana, there takes place a simultaneous
penetration of all Four Noble Truths. By seeing
Nibbana, the state beyond dukkha, one gains a
perspective from which to view the five aggregates
and see that they are dukkha simply because
they are conditioned, subject to ceaseless change.
At the same moment Nibbana is realized, craving
stops; the understanding then dawns that craving is
the true origin of dukkha. When Nibbana is
seen, it is realized to be the state of peace, free
from the turmoil of becoming. And because this
experience has been reached by practicing the Noble
Eightfold Path, one knows for oneself that the Noble
Eightfold Path is truly the way to the end of
dukkha.
This right view that
penetrates the Four Noble Truths comes at the end of
the path, not at the beginning. We have to start
with the right view conforming to the truths,
acquired through learning and fortified through
reflection. This view inspires us to take up the
practice, to embark on the threefold training in
moral discipline, concentration, and wisdom. When
the training matures, the eye of wisdom opens by
itself, penetrating the truths and freeing the mind
from bondage.
Chapter III
[top]
Right Intention
(Samma Sankappa)
The second factor of
the path is called in Pali samma sankappa,
which we will translate as "right intention." The
term is sometimes translated as "right thought," a
rendering that can be accepted if we add the proviso
that in the present context the word "thought"
refers specifically to the purposive or conative
aspect of mental activity, the cognitive aspect
being covered by the first factor, right view. It
would be artificial, however, to insist too strongly
on the division between these two functions. From
the Buddhist perspective, the cognitive and
purposive sides of the mind do not remain isolated
in separate compartments but intertwine and interact
in close correlation. Emotional predilections
influence views, and views determine predilections.
Thus a penetrating view of the nature of existence,
gained through deep reflection and validated through
investigation, brings with it a restructuring of
values which sets the mind moving towards goals
commensurate with the new vision. The application of
mind needed to achieve those goals is what is meant
by right intention.
The Buddha explains
right intention as threefold: the intention of
renunciation, the intention of good will, and the
intention of harmlessness.[14]
The three are opposed to three parallel kinds of
wrong intention: intention governed by desire,
intention governed by ill will, and intention
governed by harmfulness.[15]
Each kind of right intention counters the
corresponding kind of wrong intention. The intention
of renunciation counters the intention of desire,
the intention of good will counters the intention of
ill will, and the intention of harmlessness counters
the intention of harmfulness.
The Buddha
discovered this twofold division of thought in the
period prior to his Enlightenment (see MN 19). While
he was striving for deliverance, meditating in the
forest, he found that his thoughts could be
distributed into two different classes. In one he
put thoughts of desire, ill will, and harmfulness,
in the other thoughts of renunciation, good will,
and harmlessness. Whenever he noticed thoughts of
the first kind arise in him, he understood that
those thoughts lead to harm for oneself and others,
obstruct wisdom, and lead away from Nibbana.
Reflecting in this way he expelled such thoughts
from his mind and brought them to an end. But
whenever thoughts of the second kind arose, he
understood those thoughts to be beneficial,
conducive to the growth of wisdom, aids to the
attainment of Nibbana. Thus he strengthened those
thoughts and brought them to completion.
Right intention
claims the second place in the path, between right
view and the triad of moral factors that begins with
right speech, because the mind's intentional
function forms the crucial link connecting our
cognitive perspective with our modes of active
engagement in the world. On the one side actions
always point back to the thoughts from which they
spring. Thought is the forerunner of action,
directing body and speech, stirring them into
activity, using them as its instruments for
expressing its aims and ideals. These aims and
ideals, our intentions, in turn point back a further
step to the prevailing views. When wrong views
prevail, the outcome is wrong intention giving rise
to unwholesome actions. Thus one who denies the
moral efficacy of action and measures achievement in
terms of gain and status will aspire to nothing but
gain and status, using whatever means he can to
acquire them. When such pursuits become widespread,
the result is suffering, the tremendous suffering of
individuals, social groups, and nations out to gain
wealth, position, and power without regard for
consequences. The cause for the endless competition,
conflict, injustice, and oppression does not lie
outside the mind. These are all just manifestations
of intentions, outcroppings of thoughts driven by
greed, by hatred, by delusion.
But when the
intentions are right, the actions will be right, and
for the intentions to be right the surest guarantee
is right views. One who recognizes the law of kamma,
that actions bring retributive consequences, will
frame his pursuits to accord with this law; thus his
actions, expressive of his intentions, will conform
to the canons of right conduct. The Buddha
succinctly sums up the matter when he says that for
a person who holds a wrong view, his deeds, words,
plans, and purposes grounded in that view will lead
to suffering, while for a person who holds right
view, his deeds, words, plans, and purposes grounded
in that view will lead to happiness.[16]
Since the most
important formulation of right view is the
understanding of the Four Noble Truths, it follows
that this view should be in some way determinative
of the content of right intention. This we find to
be in fact the case. Understanding the four truths
in relation to one's own life gives rise to the
intention of renunciation; understanding them in
relation to other beings gives rise to the other two
right intentions. When we see how our own lives are
pervaded by dukkha, and how this dukkha
derives from craving, the mind inclines to
renunciation -- to abandoning craving and the
objects to which it binds us. Then, when we apply
the truths in an analogous way to other living
beings, the contemplation nurtures the growth of
good will and harmlessness. We see that, like
ourselves, all other living beings want to be happy,
and again that like ourselves they are subject to
suffering. The consideration that all beings seek
happiness causes thoughts of good will to arise --
the loving wish that they be well, happy, and
peaceful. The consideration that beings are exposed
to suffering causes thoughts of harmlessness to
arise -- the compassionate wish that they be free
from suffering.
The moment the
cultivation of the Noble Eightfold Path begins, the
factors of right view and right intention together
start to counteract the three unwholesome roots.
Delusion, the primary cognitive defilement, is
opposed by right view, the nascent seed of wisdom.
The complete eradication of delusion will only take
place when right view is developed to the stage of
full realization, but every flickering of correct
understanding contributes to its eventual
destruction. The other two roots, being emotive
defilements, require opposition through the
redirecting of intention, and thus meet their
antidotes in thoughts of renunciation, good will,
and harmlessness.
Since greed and
aversion are deeply grounded, they do not yield
easily; however, the work of overcoming them is not
impossible if an effective strategy is employed. The
path devised by the Buddha makes use of an indirect
approach: it proceeds by tackling the thoughts to
which these defilements give rise. Greed and
aversion surface in the form of thoughts, and thus
can be eroded by a process of "thought
substitution," by replacing them with the thoughts
opposed to them. The intention of renunciation
provides the remedy to greed. Greed comes to
manifestation in thoughts of desire -- as sensual,
acquisitive, and possessive thoughts. Thoughts of
renunciation spring from the wholesome root of
non-greed, which they activate whenever they are
cultivated. Since contrary thoughts cannot coexist,
when thoughts of renunciation are roused, they
dislodge thoughts of desire, thus causing non-greed
to replace greed. Similarly, the intentions of good
will and harmlessness offer the antidote to
aversion. Aversion comes to manifestation either in
thoughts of ill will -- as angry, hostile, or
resentful thoughts; or in thoughts of harming -- as
the impulses to cruelty, aggression, and
destruction. Thoughts of good will counter the
former outflow of aversion, thoughts of harmlessness
the latter outflow, in this way excising the
unwholesome root of aversion itself.
The
Intention of Renunciation
The Buddha describes
his teaching as running contrary to the way of the
world. The way of the world is the way of desire,
and the unenlightened who follow this way flow with
the current of desire, seeking happiness by pursuing
the objects in which they imagine they will find
fulfillment. The Buddha's message of renunciation
states exactly the opposite: the pull of desire is
to be resisted and eventually abandoned. Desire is
to be abandoned not because it is morally evil but
because it is a root of suffering.[17]
Thus renunciation, turning away from craving and its
drive for gratification, becomes the key to
happiness, to freedom from the hold of attachment.
The Buddha does not
demand that everyone leave the household life for
the monastery or ask his followers to discard all
sense enjoyments on the spot. The degree to which a
person renounces depends on his or her disposition
and situation. But what remains as a guiding
principle is this: that the attainment of
deliverance requires the complete eradication of
craving, and progress along the path is accelerated
to the extent that one overcomes craving. Breaking
free from domination by desire may not be easy, but
the difficulty does not abrogate the necessity.
Since craving is the origin of dukkha, putting an
end to dukkha depends on eliminating craving, and
that involves directing the mind to renunciation.
But it is just at
this point, when one tries to let go of attachment,
that one encounters a powerful inner resistance. The
mind does not want to relinquish its hold on the
objects to which it has become attached. For such a
long time it has been accustomed to gaining,
grasping, and holding, that it seems impossible to
break these habits by an act of will. One might
agree to the need for renunciation, might want to
leave attachment behind, but when the call is
actually sounded the mind recoils and continues to
move in the grip of its desires.
So the problem
arises of how to break the shackles of desire. The
Buddha does not offer as a solution the method of
repression -- the attempt to drive desire away with
a mind full of fear and loathing. This approach does
not resolve the problem but only pushes it below the
surface, where it continues to thrive. The tool the
Buddha holds out to free the mind from desire is
understanding. Real renunciation is not a matter of
compelling ourselves to give up things still
inwardly cherished, but of changing our perspective
on them so that they no longer bind us. When we
understand the nature of desire, when we investigate
it closely with keen attention, desire falls away by
itself, without need for struggle.
To understand desire
in such a way that we can loosen its hold, we need
to see that desire is invariably bound up with
dukkha. The whole phenomenon of desire, with its
cycle of wanting and gratification, hangs on our way
of seeing things. We remain in bondage to desire
because we see it as our means to happiness. If we
can look at desire from a different angle, its force
will be abated, resulting in the move towards
renunciation. What is needed to alter perception is
something called "wise consideration" (yoniso
manasikara). Just as perception influences
thought, so thought can influence perception. Our
usual perceptions are tinged with "unwise
consideration" (ayoniso manasikara). We
ordinarily look only at the surfaces of things, scan
them in terms of our immediate interests and wants;
only rarely do we dig into the roots of our
involvements or explore their long-range
consequences. To set this straight calls for wise
consideration: looking into the hidden undertones to
our actions, exploring their results, evaluating the
worthiness of our goals. In this investigation our
concern must not be with what is pleasant but with
what is true. We have to be prepared and willing to
discover what is true even at the cost of our
comfort. For real security always lies on the side
of truth, not on the side of comfort.
When desire is
scrutinized closely, we find that it is constantly
shadowed by dukkha. Sometimes dukkha
appears as pain or irritation; often it lies low as
a constant strain of discontent. But the two --
desire and dukkha -- are inseparable
concomitants. We can confirm this for ourselves by
considering the whole cycle of desire. At the moment
desire springs up it creates in us a sense of lack,
the pain of want. To end this pain we struggle to
fulfill the desire. If our effort fails, we
experience frustration, disappointment, sometimes
despair. But even the pleasure of success is not
unqualified. We worry that we might lose the ground
we have gained. We feel driven to secure our
position, to safeguard our territory, to gain more,
to rise higher, to establish tighter controls. The
demands of desire seem endless, and each desire
demands the eternal: it wants the things we get to
last forever. But all the objects of desire are
impermanent. Whether it be wealth, power, position,
or other persons, separation is inevitable, and the
pain that accompanies separation is proportional to
the force of attachment: strong attachment brings
much suffering; little attachment brings little
suffering; no attachment brings no suffering.[18]
Contemplating the
dukkha inherent in desire is one way to incline
the mind to renunciation. Another way is to
contemplate directly the benefits flowing from
renunciation. To move from desire to renunciation is
not, as might be imagined, to move from happiness to
grief, from abundance to destitution. It is to pass
from gross, entangling pleasures to an exalted
happiness and peace, from a condition of servitude
to one of self-mastery. Desire ultimately breeds
fear and sorrow, but renunciation gives fearlessness
and joy. It promotes the accomplishment of all three
stages of the threefold training: it purifies
conduct, aids concentration, and nourishes the seed
of wisdom. The entire course of practice from start
to finish can in fact be seen as an evolving process
of renunciation culminating in Nibbana as the
ultimate stage of relinquishment, "the relinquishing
of all foundations of existence"
(sabb'upadhipatinissagga).
When we methodically
contemplate the dangers of desire and the benefits
of renunciation, gradually we steer our mind away
from the domination of desire. Attachments are shed
like the leaves of a tree, naturally and
spontaneously. The changes do not come suddenly, but
when there is persistent practice, there is no doubt
that they will come. Through repeated contemplation
one thought knocks away another, the intention of
renunciation dislodges the intention of desire.
The
Intention of Good Will
The intention of
good will opposes the intention of ill will,
thoughts governed by anger and aversion. As in the
case of desire, there are two ineffective ways of
handling ill will. One is to yield to it, to express
the aversion by bodily or verbal action. This
approach releases the tension, helps drive the anger
"out of one's system," but it also poses certain
dangers. It breeds resentment, provokes retaliation,
creates enemies, poisons relationships, and
generates unwholesome kamma; in the end, the ill
will does not leave the "system" after all, but
instead is driven down to a deeper level where it
continues to vitiate one's thoughts and conduct. The
other approach, repression, also fails to dispel the
destructive force of ill will. It merely turns that
force around and pushes it inward, where it becomes
transmogrified into self-contempt, chronic
depression, or a tendency to irrational outbursts of
violence.
The remedy the
Buddha recommends to counteract ill will, especially
when the object is another person, is a quality
called in Pali metta. This word derives from
another word meaning "friend," but metta
signifies much more than ordinary friendliness. I
prefer to translate it by the compound
"loving-kindness," which best captures the intended
sense: an intense feeling of selfless love for other
beings radiating outwards as a heartfelt concern for
their well-being and happiness. Metta is not
just sentimental good will, nor is it a
conscientious response to a moral imperative or
divine command. It must become a deep inner feeling,
characterized by spontaneous warmth rather than by a
sense of obligation. At its peak metta rises
to the heights of a brahmavihara, a "divine
dwelling," a total way of being centered on the
radiant wish for the welfare of all living beings.
The kind of love
implied by metta should be distinguished from
sensual love as well as from the love involved in
personal affection. The first is a form of craving,
necessarily self-directed, while the second still
includes a degree of attachment: we love a person
because that person gives us pleasure, belongs to
our family or group, or reinforces our own
self-image. Only rarely does the feeling of
affection transcend all traces of ego-reference, and
even then its scope is limited. It applies only to a
certain person or group of people while excluding
others.
The love involved in
metta, in contrast, does not hinge on
particular relations to particular persons. Here the
reference point of self is utterly omitted. We are
concerned only with suffusing others with a mind of
loving-kindness, which ideally is to be developed
into a universal state, extended to all living
beings without discriminations or reservations. The
way to impart to metta this universal scope
is to cultivate it as an exercise in meditation.
Spontaneous feelings of good will occur too
sporadically and are too limited in range to be
relied on as the remedy for aversion. The idea of
deliberately developing love has been criticized as
contrived, mechanical, and calculated. Love, it is
said, can only be genuine when it is spontaneous,
arisen without inner prompting or effort. But it is
a Buddhist thesis that the mind cannot be commanded
to love spontaneously; it can only be shown the
means to develop love and enjoined to practice
accordingly. At first the means has to be employed
with some deliberation, but through practice the
feeling of love becomes ingrained, grafted onto the
mind as a natural and spontaneous tendency.
The method of
development is metta-bhavana, the meditation
on loving-kindness, one of the most important kinds
of Buddhist meditation. The meditation begins with
the development of loving-kindness towards oneself.[19]
It is suggested that one take oneself as the first
object of metta because true loving-kindness
for others only becomes possible when one is able to
feel genuine loving-kindness for oneself. Probably
most of the anger and hostility we direct to others
springs from negative attitudes we hold towards
ourselves. When metta is directed inwards
towards oneself, it helps to melt down the hardened
crust created by these negative attitudes,
permitting a fluid diffusion of kindness and
sympathy outwards.
Once one has learned
to kindle the feeling of metta towards
oneself, the next step is to extend it to others.
The extension of metta hinges on a shift in
the sense of identity, on expanding the sense of
identity beyond its ordinary confines and learning
to identify with others. The shift is purely
psychological in method, entirely free from
theological and metaphysical postulates, such as
that of a universal self immanent in all beings.
Instead, it proceeds from a simple, straightforward
course of reflection which enables us to share the
subjectivity of others and experience the world (at
least imaginatively) from the standpoint of their
own inwardness. The procedure starts with oneself.
If we look into our own mind, we find that the basic
urge of our being is the wish to be happy and free
from suffering. Now, as soon as we see this in
ourselves, we can immediately understand that all
living beings share the same basic wish. All want to
be well, happy, and secure. To develop metta
towards others, what is to be done is to
imaginatively share their own innate wish for
happiness. We use our own desire for happiness as
the key, experience this desire as the basic urge of
others, then come back to our own position and
extend to them the wish that they may achieve their
ultimate objective, that they may be well and happy.
The methodical
radiation of metta is practiced first by
directing metta to individuals representing
certain groups. These groups are set in an order of
progressive remoteness from oneself. The radiation
begins with a dear person, such as a parent or
teacher, then moves on to a friend, then to a
neutral person, then finally to a hostile person.
Though the types are defined by their relation to
oneself, the love to be developed is not based on
that relation but on each person's common aspiration
for happiness. With each individual one has to bring
his (or her) image into focus and radiate the
thought: "May he (she) be well! May he (she) be
happy! May he (she) be peaceful!"[20]
Only when one succeeds in generating a warm feeling
of good will and kindness towards that person should
one turn to the next. Once one gains some success
with individuals, one can then work with larger
units. One can try developing metta towards
all friends, all neutral persons, all hostile
persons. Then metta can be widened by
directional suffusion, proceeding in the various
directions -- east, south, west, north, above, below
-- then it can be extended to all beings without
distinction. In the end one suffuses the entire
world with a mind of loving-kindness "vast, sublime,
and immeasurable, without enmity, without aversion."
The
Intention of Harmlessness
The intention of
harmlessness is thought guided by compassion
(karuna), aroused in opposition to cruel,
aggressive, and violent thoughts. Compassion
supplies the complement to loving-kindness. Whereas
loving-kindness has the characteristic of wishing
for the happiness and welfare of others, compassion
has the characteristic of wishing that others be
free from suffering, a wish to be extended without
limits to all living beings. Like metta,
compassion arises by entering into the subjectivity
of others, by sharing their interiority in a deep
and total way. It springs up by considering that all
beings, like ourselves, wish to be free from
suffering, yet despite their wishes continue to be
harassed by pain, fear, sorrow, and other forms of
dukkha.
To develop
compassion as a meditative exercise, it is most
effective to start with somebody who is actually
undergoing suffering, since this provides the
natural object for compassion. One contemplates this
person's suffering, either directly or
imaginatively, then reflects that like oneself, he
(she) also wants to be free from suffering. The
thought should be repeated, and contemplation
continually exercised, until a strong feeling of
compassion swells up in the heart. Then, using that
feeling as a standard, one turns to different
individuals, considers how they are each exposed to
suffering, and radiates the gentle feeling of
compassion out to them. To increase the breadth and
intensity of compassion it is helpful to contemplate
the various sufferings to which living beings are
susceptible. A useful guideline to this extension is
provided by the first noble truth, with its
enumeration of the different aspects of dukkha.
One contemplates beings as subject to old age, then
as subject to sickness, then to death, then to
sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair, and
so forth.
When a high level of
success has been achieved in generating compassion
by the contemplation of beings who are directly
afflicted by suffering, one can then move on to
consider people who are presently enjoying happiness
which they have acquired by immoral means. One might
reflect that such people, despite their superficial
fortune, are doubtlessly troubled deep within by the
pangs of conscience. Even if they display no outward
signs of inner distress, one knows that they will
eventually reap the bitter fruits of their evil
deeds, which will bring them intense suffering.
Finally, one can widen the scope of one's
contemplation to include all living beings. One
should contemplate all beings as subject to the
universal suffering of samsara, driven by
their greed, aversion, and delusion through the
round of repeated birth and death. If compassion is
initially difficult to arouse towards beings who are
total strangers, one can strengthen it by reflecting
on the Buddha's dictum that in this beginningless
cycle of rebirths, it is hard to find even a single
being who has not at some time been one's own mother
or father, sister or brother, son or daughter.
To sum up, we see
that the three kinds of right intention -- of
renunciation, good will, and harmlessness --
counteract the three wrong intentions of desire, ill
will, and harmfulness. The importance of putting
into practice the contemplations leading to the
arising of these thoughts cannot be overemphasized.
The contemplations have been taught as methods for
cultivation, not mere theoretical excursions. To
develop the intention of renunciation we have to
contemplate the suffering tied up with the quest for
worldly enjoyment; to develop the intention of good
will we have to consider how all beings desire
happiness; to develop the intention of harmlessness
we have to consider how all beings wish to be free
from suffering. The unwholesome thought is like a
rotten peg lodged in the mind; the wholesome thought
is like a new peg suitable to replace it. The actual
contemplation functions as the hammer used to drive
out the old peg with the new one. The work of
driving in the new peg is practice -- practicing
again and again, as often as is necessary to reach
success. The Buddha gives us his assurance that the
victory can be achieved. He says that whatever one
reflects upon frequently becomes the inclination of
the mind. If one frequently thinks sensual, hostile,
or harmful thoughts, desire, ill will, and
harmfulness become the inclination of the mind. If
one frequently thinks in the opposite way,
renunciation, good will, and harmlessness become the
inclination of the mind (MN 19). The direction we
take always comes back to ourselves, to the
intentions we generate moment by moment in the
course of our lives.
Chapter IV
[top]
Right Speech, Right Action, Right Livelihood
(Samma Vaca, Samma Kammanta, Samma Ajiva)
The next three path
factors -- right speech, right action, and right
livelihood -- may be treated together, as
collectively they make up the first of the three
divisions of the path, the division of moral
discipline (silakkhandha). Though the
principles laid down in this section restrain
immoral actions and promote good conduct, their
ultimate purpose is not so much ethical as
spiritual. They are not prescribed merely as guides
to action, but primarily as aids to mental
purification. As a necessary measure for human
well-being, ethics has its own justification in the
Buddha's teaching and its importance cannot be
underrated. But in the special context of the Noble
Eightfold Path ethical principles are subordinate to
the path's governing goal, final deliverance from
suffering. Thus for the moral training to become a
proper part of the path, it has to be taken up under
the tutelage of the first two factors, right view
and right intention, and to lead beyond to the
trainings in concentration and wisdom.
Though the training
in moral discipline is listed first among the three
groups of practices, it should not be regarded
lightly. It is the foundation for the entire path,
essential for the success of the other trainings.
The Buddha himself frequently urged his disciples to
adhere to the rules of discipline, "seeing danger in
the slightest fault." One time, when a monk
approached the Buddha and asked for the training in
brief, the Buddha told him: "First establish
yourself in the starting point of wholesome states,
that is, in purified moral discipline and in right
view. Then, when your moral discipline is purified
and your view straight, you should practice the four
foundations of mindfulness" (SN 47:3).
The Pali word we
have been translating as "moral discipline,"
sila, appears in the texts with several
overlapping meanings all connected with right
conduct. In some contexts it means action conforming
to moral principles, in others the principles
themselves, in still others the virtuous qualities
of character that result from the observance of
moral principles. Sila in the sense of
precepts or principles represents the formalistic
side of the ethical training, sila as virtue
the animating spirit, and sila as right
conduct the expression of virtue in real-life
situations. Often sila is formally defined as
abstinence from unwholesome bodily and verbal
action. This definition, with its stress on outer
action, appears superficial. Other explanations,
however, make up for the deficiency and reveal that
there is more to sila than is evident at
first glance. The Abhidhamma, for example, equates
sila with the mental factors of abstinence
(viratiyo) -- right speech, right action, and
right livelihood -- an equation which makes it clear
that what is really being cultivated through the
observance of moral precepts is the mind. Thus while
the training in sila brings the "public"
benefit of inhibiting socially detrimental actions,
it entails the personal benefit of mental
purification, preventing the defilements from
dictating to us what lines of conduct we should
follow.
The English word
"morality" and its derivatives suggest a sense of
obligation and constraint quite foreign to the
Buddhist conception of sila; this connotation
probably enters from the theistic background to
Western ethics. Buddhism, with its non-theistic
framework, grounds its ethics, not on the notion of
obedience, but on that of harmony. In fact, the
commentaries explain the word sila by another
word, samadhana, meaning "harmony" or
"coordination."
The observance of
sila leads to harmony at several levels --
social, psychological, kammic, and contemplative. At
the social level the principles of sila help
to establish harmonious interpersonal relations,
welding the mass of differently constituted members
of society with their own private interests and
goals into a cohesive social order in which
conflict, if not utterly eliminated, is at least
reduced. At the psychological level sila
brings harmony to the mind, protection from the
inner split caused by guilt and remorse over moral
transgressions. At the kammic level the observance
of sila ensures harmony with the cosmic law
of kamma, hence favorable results in the course of
future movement through the round of repeated birth
and death. And at the fourth level, the
contemplative, sila helps establish the
preliminary purification of mind to be completed, in
a deeper and more thorough way, by the methodical
development of serenity and insight.
When briefly
defined, the factors of moral training are usually
worded negatively, in terms of abstinence. But there
is more to sila than refraining from what is
wrong. Each principle embedded in the precepts, as
we will see, actually has two aspects, both
essential to the training as a whole. One is
abstinence from the unwholesome, the other
commitment to the wholesome; the former is called
"avoidance" (varitta) and the latter
"performance" (caritta). At the outset of
training the Buddha stresses the aspect of
avoidance. He does so, not because abstinence from
the unwholesome is sufficient in itself, but to
establish the steps of practice in proper sequence.
The steps are set out in their natural order (more
logical than temporal) in the famous dictum of the
Dhammapada: "To abstain from all evil, to cultivate
the good, and to purify one's mind -- this is the
teaching of the Buddhas" (v. 183). The other two
steps -- cultivating the good and purifying the mind
-- also receive their due, but to ensure their
success, a resolve to avoid the unwholesome is a
necessity. Without such a resolve the attempt to
develop wholesome qualities is bound to issue in a
warped and stunted pattern of growth.
The training in
moral discipline governs the two principal channels
of outer action, speech and body, as well as another
area of vital concern -- one's way of earning a
living. Thus the training contains three factors:
right speech, right action, and right livelihood.
These we will now examine individually, following
the order in which they are set forth in the usual
exposition of the path.
Right Speech (samma vaca)
The Buddha divides
right speech into four components: abstaining from
false speech, abstaining from slanderous speech,
abstaining from harsh speech, and abstaining from
idle chatter. Because the effects of speech are not
as immediately evident as those of bodily action,
its importance and potential is easily overlooked.
But a little reflection will show that speech and
its offshoot, the written word, can have enormous
consequences for good or for harm. In fact, whereas
for beings such as animals who live at the preverbal
level physical action is of dominant concern, for
humans immersed in verbal communication speech gains
the ascendency. Speech can break lives, create
enemies, and start wars, or it can give wisdom, heal
divisions, and create peace. This has always been
so, yet in the modern age the positive and negative
potentials of speech have been vastly multiplied by
the tremendous increase in the means, speed, and
range of communications. The capacity for verbal
expression, oral and written, has often been
regarded as the distinguishing mark of the human
species. From this we can appreciate the need to
make this capacity the means to human excellence
rather than, as too often has been the case, the
sign of human degradation.
(1) Abstaining from
false speech (musavada veramani)
Herein someone
avoids false speech and abstains from it. He speaks
the truth, is devoted to truth, reliable, worthy of
confidence, not a deceiver of people. Being at a
meeting, or amongst people, or in the midst of his
relatives, or in a society, or in the king's court,
and called upon and asked as witness to tell what he
knows, he answers, if he knows nothing: "I know
nothing," and if he knows, he answers: "I know"; if
he has seen nothing, he answers: "I have seen
nothing," and if he has seen, he answers: "I have
seen." Thus he never knowingly speaks a lie, either
for the sake of his own advantage, or for the sake
of another person's advantage, or for the sake of
any advantage whatsoever.[21]
This statement of
the Buddha discloses both the negative and the
positive sides to the precept. The negative side is
abstaining from lying, the positive side speaking
the truth. The determinative factor behind the
transgression is the intention to deceive. If one
speaks something false believing it to be true,
there is no breach of the precept as the intention
to deceive is absent. Though the deceptive intention
is common to all cases of false speech, lies can
appear in different guises depending on the
motivating root, whether greed, hatred, or delusion.
Greed as the chief motive results in the lie aimed
at gaining some personal advantage for oneself or
for those close to oneself -- material wealth,
position, respect, or admiration. With hatred as the
motive, false speech takes the form of the malicious
lie, the lie intended to hurt and damage others.
When delusion is the principal motive, the result is
a less pernicious type of falsehood: the irrational
lie, the compulsive lie, the interesting
exaggeration, lying for the sake of a joke.
The Buddha's
stricture against lying rests upon several reasons.
For one thing, lying is disruptive to social
cohesion. People can live together in society only
in an atmosphere of mutual trust, where they have
reason to believe that others will speak the truth;
by destroying the grounds for trust and inducing
mass suspicion, widespread lying becomes the
harbinger signalling the fall from social solidarity
to chaos. But lying has other consequences of a
deeply personal nature at least equally disastrous.
By their very nature lies tend to proliferate. Lying
once and finding our word suspect, we feel compelled
to lie again to defend our credibility, to paint a
consistent picture of events. So the process repeats
itself: the lies stretch, multiply, and connect
until they lock us into a cage of falsehoods from
which it is difficult to escape. The lie is thus a
miniature paradigm for the whole process of
subjective illusion. In each case the self-assured
creator, sucked in by his own deceptions, eventually
winds up their victim.
Such considerations
probably lie behind the words of counsel the Buddha
spoke to his son, the young novice Rahula, soon
after the boy was ordained. One day the Buddha came
to Rahula, pointed to a bowl with a little bit of
water in it, and asked: "Rahula, do you see this bit
of water left in the bowl?" Rahula answered: "Yes,
sir." "So little, Rahula, is the spiritual
achievement (samañña, lit. 'recluseship') of
one who is not afraid to speak a deliberate lie."
Then the Buddha threw the water away, put the bowl
down, and said: "Do you see, Rahula, how that water
has been discarded? In the same way one who tells a
deliberate lie discards whatever spiritual
achievement he has made." Again he asked: "Do you
see how this bowl is now empty? In the same way one
who has no shame in speaking lies is empty of
spiritual achievement." Then the Buddha turned the
bowl upside down and said: "Do you see, Rahula, how
this bowl has been turned upside down? In the same
way one who tells a deliberate lie turns his
spiritual achievements upside down and becomes
incapable of progress." Therefore, the Buddha
concluded, one should not speak a deliberate lie
even in jest.[22]
It is said that in
the course of his long training for enlightenment
over many lives, a bodhisatta can break all the
moral precepts except the pledge to speak the truth.
The reason for this is very profound, and reveals
that the commitment to truth has a significance
transcending the domain of ethics and even mental
purification, taking us to the domains of knowledge
and being. Truthful speech provides, in the sphere
of interpersonal communication, a parallel to wisdom
in the sphere of private understanding. The two are
respectively the outward and inward modalities of
the same commitment to what is real. Wisdom consists
in the realization of truth, and truth (sacca)
is not just a verbal proposition but the nature of
things as they are. To realize truth our whole being
has to be brought into accord with actuality, with
things as they are, which requires that in
communications with others we respect things as they
are by speaking th