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ISSN 1076-9005
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Nidāna | Khandha |
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viññāṇa | viññāṇa |
nāma-rūpa | all five khandhas |
saḷāyatana | rūpa |
phassa | rūpa |
vedanā | vedanā |
ditto | saññā |
taṇhā | sa"nkhāras |
upādāna | sa"nkhāras |
bhava | sa"nkhāras |
A key point, here, is his idea that viññāṇa, as the fifth khandha, completes a circle by going on to condition the first khandha by allowing the arising of sensory contact (phassa). In general, this is acceptable, though one could argue (I do not have space here), that bhava, at least in part, includes the operation of viññāṇa. One can, in any case, explain the logic of the khandha ordering as follows:
CONDITIONING SEQUENCE IN PERCEPTUAL PROCESS | KHANDHA |
---|---|
Dependent upon eye and visual form: arises eye-viññāṇa; | rūpa |
the meeting of the three is phassa; from phassa arises vedanā; | vedanā |
saññā then processes the visual object; | saññā |
the sa"nkhāras respond to it; | sa"nkhāras |
mind-viññāṇa takes in the fully labelled andresponded-to object | viññāṇa |
In discussion of these issues, Boisvert sees the nāma-rūpa nidāna as equivalent to all five khandhas (p.129). While this is true for some commentarial passages, it is not true in the Suttas, where rūpa in it is equivalent to the rūpakkhandha, and nāma is "vedanā, saññā, phassa, manasikāra" (S.Ī.3-4): more or less equivalent to vedanā, saññā and sa"nkhāra khandhas. Boisvert discusses the differences in meaning of nāma-rūpa (p.133) but resolves it in an unsatisfactory way: because nāma-rūpa conditions viññāṇa (in some Sutta passages), it includes it. Yet the same logic would mean that phassa includes vedanā, because it conditions it.
Boisvert is right to see saññā as implied as operating between the vedanā and taṇhā nidānas (pp.136-42), though one can also see (unwholesome) saññā as equivalent to spiritual ignorance (avijjhā), the first of the twelve nidānas. This can be seen from S.732, which says "all sa"nkhāras are calmed from the stopping of saññā: i.e. the second nidāna is transcended by the transcending of the first. Boisvert is wrong, though, in saying, without reservation, "actions performed with wisdom as their foundation do not result in sa"nkhāra" (p.141, cf. 144). This is for two reasons. Firstly, the action of an unenlightened person may be rooted in non-delusion (wisdom). In such a case, the action would generate goodness-power (puñña), and be a puññābhisa"nkhāra -- still a sa"nkhāra. In the second case, when a liberated person dies, the sa"nkhārakkhandha comes to an end (S.ĪI.112), which implies it still existed for the wisdom-imbued liberated person prior to his or her death. A liberated person still has action-producing volitions-typical sa"nkhāras, but not ones which can produce future karmic results. This must surely be because he or she lacks latent tendencies, the root of all karma-producing sa"nkhāras.
Boisvert also asserts (p.142) that paṭicca-samuppāda in reverse order -- where all the nidānas cease/stop -- is "one version of the path leading to the eradication of misery". This is not quite correct. It is quite clear from S.Ī.43 that it is itself the end of dukkha, itself what the path leads to.
Within his conclusion, Boisvert says "All the sense-organs except the mental organ (mano) belong to the six sense-doors, while the sense-objects along with the mental organ are included in contact (phassa)" (p.147). Here one can object: a) mano is in fact the sixth of the six sense-doors, b) phassa is part of nāma, and so cannot include physical sense-objects, c) mano is not the same as phassa, though it can condition its arising.
So, overall, The Five Aggregates is a useful study which brings together much material needed for an understanding of the khandhas. In a number of ways it is an improvement on earlier studies, but it is not an exhaustive study, and should be used with reservation, or as a basis of discussion.
Other recent studies -- which Boisvert had no chance to consult -- are Sue Hamilton's Identity and Experience: the Constitution of the Human Being According to Early Buddhism (Luzac Oriental, London, early 1996), and my own The Selfless Mind: Personality, Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism (Curzon Press, London, October 1995; available from Hawai'i Press). The latter is, I believe, soon to be reviewed in this journal.
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