VISUDDHIMAGGA; Chapter 10 (ARUPPA-NIDDESA);
BUDDHAGHOSA
VISUDDHIMAGGA; (The Path Of Purification); Chapter 10; Bhadantacariya
BUDDHAGHOSA; @A.D.350 Chapter Ten; Description of Concentration;
Material States (ARUPPA-NIDDESA) Translated from the Pali by Bhikkhu
Nanamoli ©(C) 1975; Buddhist Publication Society; Post Office Box 61,
Kandy, Sri Lanka
[(1) THE BASE CONSISTING OF BOUNDLESS SPACE]
1. [326] Now as to the four Immaterial States mentioned next to
the Divine Abidings (Ch. III, 105), one who wants firstly to develop the
base consisting of boundless space sees in gross physical matter danger
through the wielding of sticks, etc., because of the words ` "It is in
virtue of matter that wielding of sticks, wielding of knives, quarrels,
brawls and disputes take place; but that does not exist at all in the
immaterial state", and in this expectation he enters upon the way to
dispassion for only material things, for the fading and cessation of only
those` (M.i.410), and he sees danger in it too through the thousand
afflictions beginning with eye disease. So in order to surmount that he
enters upon the fourth jhana in any one of the nine kasinas beginning with
the earth kasina and omitting the limited-space kasina.
2. Now although he has already surmounted gross physical matter
by means of the fourth jhana of the fine-material sphere, nevertheless he
still wants also to surmount the kasina materiality since it is the
counterpart of the former. How does he do this?
3. Suppose a timid man is pursued by a snake in a forest and
flees from it as fast as he can, then if he sees in the place he has fled
to a palm leaf with a streak painted on it or a creeper or a rope or a
crack in the ground, he is fearful, anxious and will not even look at it.
Suppose again a man is living in the same village as a hostile man who
ill-uses him, and on being threatened by him with a flogging and the
burning down of his house, he goes away to live in another village, then
if he meets another man there of similar appearance, voice and manner, he
is fearful, anxious and will not even look at him.
4. Here is the application of the similes. The time when the
bhikkhu has the gross physical matter as his object is like the time when
the men were respectively threatened by the snake and by the enemy. [327]
The time when the bhikkhu surmounts the gross physical matter by means of
the fourth jhana of the fine-material sphere is like the first man's
fleeing as fast as he can and the other man's going away to another
village. The bhikkhu's observing that even the matter of the kasina is the
counterpart of that gross physical matter and his wanting to surmount that
also is like the first man's seeing in the place he had fled to the palm
leaf with a streak painted on it, etc., and the other man's seeing the man
who resembled the enemy in the village he had left, and their
unwillingness to look owing to fear and anxiety.
And here the similes of the dog attacked by a boar, and that of
the pisaca goblin and the timid man {1}
should be understood too.
5. So when he has thus become disgusted with (dispassionate
towards) the kasina materiality, the object of the fourth jhana, and wants
to get away from it, he achieves mastery in the five ways. Then on
emerging from the now familiar fourth jhana of the fine-material sphere,
he sees the danger in that jhana in this way `This makes its object the
materiality with which I have become disgusted', and `It has joy as its
near enemy', and `It is grosser than the Peaceful Liberations'. There is,
however, no [comparative] grossness of factors here [as in the case of the
four fine-material jhanas]; for the immaterial states have the same two
factors as this fine-material [jhana].
6. When he has seen the danger in that [fine-material fourth
jhana] in this way and has ended his attachment to it, he gives his
attention to the Base Consisting of Boundless Space as peaceful. Then,
when he has spread out the kasina to the limit of the world-sphere, or as
far as he likes, he removes the kasina [materiality] by giving his
attention to the space touched by it, [regarding that] as `space' or
`boundless-space'.
7. When he is removing it, he neither folds it up like a mat nor
withdraws it like a cake from a tin. It is simply that he does not advert
to it or give attention to it or review it; it is when he neither adverts
to it nor gives attention to it nor reviews it but gives his attention
exclusively to the space touched by it [regarding that] as `Space, space',
that he is said to `remove the kasina'.
8. And when the kasina is being removed, it does not roll up or
roll away. It is simply that it is called `removed' on account of his
non-attention to it, his attention being given to `space, space,'. This is
conceptualized as the mere space left by the removal of the kasina
[materiality]. Whether it is called `space left by the removal of the
kasina' or `space touched by the kasina' or `space secluded from the
kasina', it is all the same.
9. He adverts again and again to the sign of the space left by
the removal of the kasina [328] as `Space, space', and he strikes at it
with thought and applied thought. As he adverts to it again and again and
strikes at it with thought and applied thought the hindrances are
suppressed, mindfulness is established and his mind becomes concentrated
in access. He cultivates that sign again and again, develops and
repeatedly practises it.
10. As he again and again adverts to it and gives attention to it
in this way consciousness belonging to the Base Consisting of Boundless
Space arises in absorption with the space [as its object], as the
consciousness belonging to the fine-material sphere did in the case of the
earth kasina, and so on. And here too in the prior stage there are either
three or four sensual-sphere impulsions associated with equanimous
feeling, while the fourth or the fifth is of the immaterial sphere. The
rest is the same as in the case of the earth kasina (Ch. IV,74).
11. There is however, this difference. When the immaterial-
sphere consciousness has arisen in this way, the bhikkhu, who has been
formerly looking at the kasina disk with the jhana eye, finds himself
looking at only space after that sign has been abruptly removed by the
attention given in the preliminary work thus `Space, space'. He is like a
man who has plugged an opening in a [covered] vehicle, a sack or a pot {2}
with a piece of blue rag or with a piece of rag of some such colour as
yellow, red or white and is looking at that, and then when the rag is
removed by the force of the wind or by some other agency, he finds himself
looking at space.
[Text and Commentary]
12. And at this point it is said: With the complete surmounting
(samatikkama) of perceptions of matter, with the disappearance of
perceptions of resistance, with non-attention to per- ceptions of variety,
[aware of] . " Unbounded space ", he enters upon and dwells in the base
consisting of boundless space' (Vbh.245).
13. Herein, "complete" is in all aspects or of all [perceptions];
without exception, is the meaning. Of perceptions of matter: both (a) of
the fine-material jhanas mentioned [here] under the headihg of
`perception' and (b) of those things that are their object. For (a) the
jhana of the fine-material sphere is called `matter' in such passages as
`Possessed of visible matter he sees instances of matter' (D.ii,70
;M.ii,12), and (b) it is its object too [that is called `matter'] in such
passages as `He sees instances of visible matter externally, . . . fair
and ugly' (.D.ii,l 10; M.ii,13). {3}
Consequently here the words `perceptions of matter (r–pa-sa¤¤ƒ---lit.
matter-perceptions)', in the sense of `perceptions about matter', are used
(a) for fine-material jhana stated thus under the heading of
`perceptions'. [Also] (b) it has the label (sa¤¤ƒ) `matter (r–pa)', thus
it (the jhana's object) is `labelled matter (r–pa-sa¤¤ƒm)'; what is meant
is that `matter' is its name. So it should be understood that this is also
a term for (b) what is classed as the earth kasina, etc., which is the
object of that [jhana]. {4}
[329]
14. With the surmounting: with the fading away and with the
cessation. What is meant? With the fading away and with the cessation,
both because of the fading away and because of the cessation, either in
all aspects or without exception, of these perceptions of matter, reckoned
as jhana, which number fifteen with the [five each of the] profitable,
resultant and functional, {5}
and also of these things labeled matter, reckoned as objects [of those
perceptions], which number nine with the earth kasina, etc. ( 1), he
enters upon and dwells in the base consisting of boundless space. For he
cannot enter upon and dwell in that without completely surmounting
perceptions of matter.
15. Herein, there is no surmounting of these perceptions in one
whose greed for the object [of those perceptions] has not faded away; and
when the perceptions have been surmounted, their objects have been
surmounted as well. That is why in the Vibha¤ga only the surmounting of
the perceptions and not that of the objects is mentioned as follows:
`Herein, what are perceptions of matter? They are the perception,
perceiving, perceivedness, in one who has attained a fine-material-sphere
attainment or in one who has been reborn there or in one who is abiding in
bliss there in this present life. These are what are called perceptions of
matter. These perceptions of matter are passed, surpassed, surmounted.
Hence, "With the complete surmounting of perceptions of matter" is said'
(Vbh. 261). But this commentary should be understood to deal also with the
surmounting of the object because these attainments have to be reached by
surmounting the object; they are not reached by retaining the same object
as in the first and subsequent jhanas.
16. "With the disappearance of perceptions of resistance":
perceptions of resistance are perceptions arisen through the impact of the
physical base consisting of the eye, etc., and the respective objects
consisting of visible objects, etc.; and this is a term for perceptions of
visible objects (r–pa) and so on, according as it is said: `Here, what are
perceptions of resistance? Perceptions of visible objects, perceptions of
sounds, perceptions of odours, perceptions of flavours, perceptions of
tangible objects--these are called "perceptions of resistance" ' (Vbh.
261); with the complete disappearance the abandoning, the non-arising, of
these ten kinds of perceptions of resistance, that is to say, of the five
profitable-resultant and five unprofitab1e-resultant; {6}
causing their non-occurrence, is what is meant.
17. Of course, these are not to be found in one who has entered
upon the first jhana, etc., either; for consciousness at that time does
not occur by way of the five doers. Still [330] the mention of them here
should be understood as a recommendation of this jhana for the purpose of
arousing interest in it, just as in the case of the fourth jhana there is
mention of `the pleasure and pain already abandoned elsewhere, and in the
case of the third path there is mention of the [false] view of
personality, etc., already abandoned earlier.
18. Or alternatively, though these are also not to be found in
one who has attained the fine-material sphere, still their not being there
is not due to their having been abandoned; for development of the
fine-material sphere does not lead to fading of greed for materiality, and
the occurrence of those [fine-material jhanas] is actually dependent on
materiality. But this development [of the immaterial] does lead to the
fading of greed for materiality. Therefore it is allowable to say that
they are actually abandoned here; and not only to say it, but to maintain
it absolutely.
19. In fact it is because they have not been abandoned already
before this that it was said by the Blessed One that sound is a thorn to
one who has the first jhana (A. v, 135). And it is precisely because they
are abandoned here that the imperturbability (see Vbh. 135) of the
immaterial attainments and their state of peaceful liberation are
mentioned (M.i,33), and that lara Kƒlƒma neither saw the five hundred
carts that passed close by him nor heard the sound of them while he was in
an immaterial attainment (D.ii,1 30).
20. "With non-attention to perceptions of variety": either to
perceptions occurring with variety as their domain or to perceptions
themselves various. For `Perceptions of variety' are so called [for two
reasons:] firstly, because the kinds of perception included along with the
mind element and mind- consciousness element in one who has not
attained--which kinds are intended here as described in the Vibha¤ga thus:
`Herein, what are perceptions of variety. The perception, perceiving,
perceivedness, in one who has not attained and possesses either mind
element or mind-consciousness element: these are called "perceptions of
variety" ' (Vbh.26 1)-- occur with respect to a domain that is varied in
individual essence with the variety classed as visible-object, sound,
etc.; and secondly, because the forty-four kinds of perception-- that is
to say, eight kinds of sense-sphere profitable perception, twelve kinds of
unprofitable perception, eleven kinds of sense- sphere profitable
resultant perception, two kinds of un- profitable-resultant perception,
and eleven kinds of sense- sphere functional perception--themselves have
variety, have various individual essences, and are dissimiliar from each
other. With the complete non-attention to, non-adverting to, non- reaction
to, non-reviewing of, these perceptions of variety; what is meant is that
because he does not advert to them, give them attention or review them,
therefore...
21. And [two things] should be understood: firstly, that their
absence is stated here in the two ways as `surmounting' and
`disappearance' because the earlier perceptions of matter and perceptions
of resistance do not exist even in the kind of existence produced by this
jhana on rebirth, let alone when this jhana is entered upon and dwelt in
that existence; [331] and secondly, in the case of perceptions of variety,
`non-attention' to them is said because twenty-seven kinds of perception--
that is to say, eight kinds of sense-sphere profitable perception, nine
kinds of functional perception, and ten kinds of unprofitable
perception--still exist in the kind of existence produced by this jhana;
For when he enters upon and dwells in this jhana there too, he does so by
non-attention to them also, but he is not attained when he does give
attention to them.
22. And here briefly it should be understood that the abandoning
of all fine-material-sphere states is signified by the words "with the
surmounting of perceptions of matter", and the abandoning of and
non-attention to all sense-sphere consciousness and its concomitants is
signified by the words "with the disappearance of perceptions of
resistance with non-attention to perceptions ef variety".
23. "Unbounded space": here it is called `unbounded (ananta--
lit. endless)' because neither its end as its arising nor its end as its
fall are made known.{7}
It is the space left by the removal of the kasina that is called `space'.
And here unboundedness (endlessness) should be understood as [referring
to] the attention also, which is why it is said in the Vibha¤ga: `He
places, settles, his consciousness in that space, he pervades unboundedly
(anantain), hence "Unbounded (ananto) space-- is said' (Vbh. 262).
24. "He enters upon and dwells in the base consisting of
boundless space": it has no bound (anta), thus it is unbounded (ananta).
What is spacially unbounded (ƒkƒsam anantam) is unbounded space
(ƒkƒsƒnantam). Unbounded space is the same as boundless space
(ƒkƒsƒna¤cam-- lit. space-boundlessness). That `boundless space' is a
`base (ƒyatana)' in the sense of habitat for the jhana whose nature it is
to be associated with it, as the `deities' base' is for deities, thus it
is the `base consisting of boundless space (ƒkƒsƒna¤cƒyatana)'. "He enters
upon and dwells in": having reached that base consisting of boundless
space, having caused it to be produced, he dwells (viharati) with an
abiding (vihƒra) consisting in postures that are in conformity with
it.
This is. the detailed explanation of the base consisting of
boundless space as a meditation subject.
[(2) THE BASE CONSISTING OF BOUNDLESS CONSCIOUSNESS]
25. When he wants to develop the base consisting of boundless
consciousness, he must first achieve mastery in the five ways in the
attainment of the base consisting of boundless space. Then he should see
the danger in the base consisting of boundless space in this way: `This
attainment has fine-material jhana as its near enemy, and it is not as
peaceful as the base consisting of boundless consciousness'. So having
ended his attachment to that, he should give his attention to the base
consisting of boundless consciousness as peaceful, adverting again and
again as `Consciousness, consciousness' to the consciousness that occurred
pervading that space [as its object]; He should give it attention, review
it, and strike at it with applied and sustained thought; [332] but he
should not give attention [simply] in this way `Boundless, boundless'.{8}
26. As he directs his mind again and again on to that sign in
this way, the hindrances are suppressed, mindfulness is established, and
his mind becomes concentrated in access. He cultivates that sign again and
again, develops and repeatedly practises it. As he does so, consciousness
belonging to the base consisting of boundless consciousness arises in
absorption with the [past] consciousness that pervaded the space [as its
object], just as that belonging to the base consisting of boundless space
did with the space [as its object]. But the method of explaining the
process of absorption here should be understood in the way already
described.
[Text and Commentary]
27. And at this point it is said: `By completely surmounting
(samatikamma) the base consisting of boundless space, [aware of]
"unbounded consciousness , he enters upon and dwells in the base
consisting of boundless consciousness' (Vbh.245).
28. Herein, "completely" is as already explained. "By...
surmounting the base consisting of boundless space": the jhana is called.
the `base consisting of boundless space' in the way already stated (24),
and its object is so called too. For the object, too, is `boundless space
(ƒkƒsƒna¤cam)' in the way already stated (24), and then, because it is the
object of the first immaterial jhana, it is its `base' in the sense of
habitat, as the `deities' base' is for deities, thus it is the `base
consisting of boundless. space'. Likewise: it is `boundless space', and
then, because it is the cause of the jhana's being of that species, it is
its `base' in the sense of locality of the species, as Kamboja is the
`base' of horses, thus it is the `base consisting of boundless space `in
this way also. So it should be understood that the words `By...
surmounting the base consisting of boundless space' include both [the
jhana and its object] together, since this base consisting of boundless
consciousness is to be entered upon and dwelt in precisely by surmounting,
by causing the non-occurrence of, and by not giving attention to, both the
jhana and its object.
29. "Unbounded consciousness": What is meant is that he gives his
attention thus `Unbounded consciousness' to that same consciousness that
occurred in pervading [as its object the space] as Unbounded space'. Or
`unbounded' refers to the attention. For when he gives attention without
reserve to the consciousness that had the space as its object, then the
attention he gives to it is `unbounded'.
30. For it is said in the Vibha¤ga: '"Unbounded consciousness":
he gives attention to that same space pervaded by consciousness, he
pervades boundlessly, hence "Unbounded consciousness" is said' (Vbh. 262).
But in that passage (tam yeva ƒkƒsam vi¤¤ƒnena phutam) the instrumental
case 'by consciousness' must be understood in the sense of accusative; for
the teachers of the Commentary explain its meaning in that way. What is
meant by 'He prevades boundlessly' is that 'he gives attention to that
same consciousness which had pervaded that space (tam yeva ƒkƒsam phutam
vi¤¤anam)'.
31. "He enters upon and dwells in the base consisting of
boundless consciousness": [333] it has no bound (anta lit, end), thus it
is unbounded (ananta). What is unbounded is boundless (ƒna¤ca lit.
unboundedness), and unbounded consciousness is called 'boundless
consciousness' that is, 'vi¤¤ƒna¤cam' [in the contracted form] instead of
'vi¤¤ƒnƒnacam' [which is the full number of syllables]. This is an
idiomatic form. That boundless consciousness (vi¤¤ƒ¤a¤ca) is the base
(ƒyatana) in the sense of foundation for the jhana whose nature it is to
be associated with it, as the 'deities' base is for deities, thus it is
the 'base consisting of boundless conscious- ness (vi¤¤ƒ¤cƒyatana)'. The
rest is the same as before.
This is the detailed explanation of the base consisting of
boundless consciousness as a meditation subject.
[(3) THE BASE CONSISTING OF NOTHINGNESS]
32. When he wants to develop the base consisting of nothingness,
he must first achieve mastery in the five ways in the attainment of the
base consisting of boundless consciousness. Then he should see the danger
in the base consisting of boundless consciousness in this way: `This
attainment has the base consisting of boundless space as its near enemy,
and it is not as peaceful as the base consisting of nothingness`. So
having ended his attachment to that, he should give his attention to the
base consisting of nothingness as peaceful. He should give attention to
the [present] non-existence, voidness, secluded aspect, of that same
[past] consciousness belonging to the base consisting of boundless space
which became the object of [the consciousness belonging to] the base
consisting of boundless consciousness. How does he do this?
33. Without giving [further] attention to that consciousness, he
should [now] advert again and again in this way `There is not, there is
not' or `Void, void' or `Secluded, secluded', and give his attention to
it, review it, and strike at it with thought and applied thought.
34. As he directs his mind on to that sign thus, the hindrances
are suppressed, mindfulness is established, and his mind becomes
concentrated in access. He cultivates that sign again and again, develops
and repeatedly practises it. As he does so, consciousness belonging to the
base consisting of nothingness arises in absorption, making its object the
void, secluded, non-existent state of that same [past] exalted
consciousness that, occurred in pervading the space, just as the
[consciousness belonging to the] base consisting of boundless
consciousness did the [then past] exalted consciousness that had pervaded
the space. And here too the method of explaining the absorption should be
understood in the way already described.
35. But there is this difference. Suppose a man sees a community
of bhikkhus gathered together in a meeting hall or some such place and
then goes elsewhere; then after the bhikkhus have risen at the conclusion
of the business for which they had met and have departed, the man comes
back, and as he stands in the doorway looking at that place again, he sees
it only as void, he sees it only as secluded, he does not think `So many
bhikkhus have died, so many have left the district', but rather [334] he
sees only the non-existence thus, `This is void, secluded'--so too, having
formerly dwelt seeing with the jhana eye belonging to the base consisting
of boundless consciousness the [earlier] consciousness that had occurred
making the space its object, [now] when that consciousness has disappeared
owing to his giving attention to the preliminary work in the way beginning
`There is not, there is not', he dwells seeing only its non-existence, in
other words its departedness when this consciousness has arisen in
absorption..
[Text and Commentary]
36. And at this point it is said: `By completely surmounting the
base consisting of boundless consciousness, [aware that] "There is
nothing", he enters upon and dwells in the base consisting of nothingness'
(Vbh.245).
37. Herein, "completely" is as already explained. By "...
surmounting the base consisting of boundless consciousness:" here too the
jhana is called the `base consisting of boundless consciousness' in the
way already stated, and its object is so-called too. For the object too is
`boundless consciousness (vi¤¤ana¤cam)' in the way already stated, and
then, because it is the object of the second immaterial jhana, it is its
`base' in the sense of habitat, as the `deities' base' is for deities,
thus it is the `base consisting of boundless consciousness'. Likewise it
is `boundless consciousness', and then because it is the cause of the
jhana's being of that species, it is its `base' in the sense of locality
of the species, as Kamboja is the `base' of horses, thus it is the `base
consisting of boundless consciousness' in this way also. So it should be
understood that the words `By ... surmounting the base consisting of
boundless consciousness" include both [the jhana and its object] together,
since this base consisting of nothingness is to be entered upon and dwelt
in precisely by surmounting, by causing the non- occurrence of, not by
giving attention to, both jhana and its object.
38. "There is nothing (natthi ki¤ci)" : what is meant is that he
gives his attention thus `There is not, there is not' or `void, void' or
`secluded, secluded'. It is said in the Vibha¤ga `"There is nothing": he
makes that same consciousness non-existent, makes it absent, makes it
disappear, sees that "there is nothing", hence "There is nothing" is said'
(Vbh.262), which is expressed in a way that resembles comprehension [by
insight] of liability to destruction, nevertheless the meaning should be
understood in the way described above. For the words `He makes that same
consciousness non-existent, makes it absent, makes it disappear' are said
of one who does not advert to it or give attention to it or review it, and
only gives attention to its non-existence, its voidness, its secludedness;
they are not meant in the other way (cf.Ch.XXI. 17).
39. "He enters upon and dwells in the base consisting of
nothingness:" it has no owning (ki¤cana) {9}
thus it is non-owning (aki¤cana); what is meant is that it has not even
the mere act of its dissolution remaining. The state (essence) of
non-owning is nothingness (aki¤ca¤¤a). This is a term for the
disappearance of the consciousness belonging to the base consisting of
boundless space. [335] That nothingness is the `base' in the sense of
foundation for that jhana, as the `deities' base' is for deities, thus it
is the `base consisting of nothingness'. The rest is as before.
This is the detailed explanation of the base consisting of
nothingness as a meditation subject.
[(4) THE BASE CONSISTING OF NEITHER PERCEPTION NOR
NON-PERCEPTION]
40. When, however, he wants to develop the base consisting of
neither perception nor non-perception, he must first achieve mastery in
the five ways in the attainment of the base consisting of nothingness.
Then he should see the danger in the base consisting of nothingness and
the advantage in what is superior to it in this way, `This attainment has
the base consisting of boundless consciousness as its near enemy, and it
is not as peaceful as the base consisting of neither perception nor
non-perception' or in this way `Perception is a disease, `perception is a
boil, perception is a dart,.., this is peaceful, this is sublime, that is
to say, neither perception nor non- perception' (M.ii,23 1); So having
ended his attachment to the base consisting of nothingness, he should give
attention to the base consisting of neither perception nor non-percep-
tion as peaceful. He should advert again and again to that attainment of
the base consisting of nothingness that has occurred making non-existence
its object, adverting to it as `Peaceful, peaceful', and he should give
his attention to it, review it and strike at it with thought and applied
thought.
41. As he directs his mind again and again on to that sign in
this way the hindrances are suppressed, mindfulness is established, and
his mind becomes concentrated in access. He cultivates that sign again and
again, develops and repeatedly practises it. As he does so, consciousness
belonging to the base consisting of neither perception nor non- perception
arises in absorption, making its object the four [mental] aggregates that
constitute the attainment of the base consisting of nothingness, just as
the [consciousness belonging to the] base consisting of nothingness did
the disappearance of the [previous] consciousness. And here too the method
of explaining the absorption should be understood in the way already
described.
[Text and Commentary]
42. And at this point it is said: `By completely surmounting the
base consisting of nothingness he enters upon and dwells in the base
consisting of neither perception nor non- perception' (Vbh. 245).
43. Herein, "completely" is as already explained. By "...
surmounting the base consisting of nothingness:" here too the jhana is
called the `base consisting of nothingness' in the way already stated, and
its object is so called too. For the object too is nothingness
(ƒki¤ca¤¤am)' in the way already stated, and then, because it is the
object of the third immaterial jhana, it is its `base' in the sense of
habitat, as the `deities' base' is for deities, thus it is the `base
consisting of nothingness'. Likewise: it is `nothingness', and then,
because it is the cause of the jhana's being of that species, it is its
`base' in the sense of locality of the species, as Kamboja is the `base'
of horses, thus it is, the base consisting of nothingness' in this way
also. [336] So it should be understood that the words `By... surmounting
the base consisting of nothingness' include both [the jhana and its
object] together; since the base consisting of neither perception nor
non-perception is to be entered upon and dwelt in precisely by
surmounting, by causing the non- occurrence of, by not giving attention
to, both the jhana and its object.
44. "Base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception:"
then there is he who so practises that there is in him the perception on
account of the presence of which this [attain- ment] is called the `Base
Consisting of Neither Perception Nor Non-perception', and in the Vibha¤ga,
in order to point out that [person] firstly one specified as
`Neither-percipient-nor- non-percipient', it is said, `gives attention to
that same base consisting of nothingness as peaceful, he develops the
attainment with residual formations, hence "neither-percipient nor
non-percipient" is said' (Vbh.263).
45. Herein, "he gives attention... as peaceful," means that he
gives attention to it as `peaceful' because of the peacefulness of the
object thus: How peaceful this attainment is; for it can make even
non-existence its object and still subsist!
If he brings it to mind as `peaceful' then how does there come
to be surmounting? Because there is no actual desire to attain `it. For
although he gives his attention to it as `peaceful', yet there is no
concern in him or reaction or attention such as `I shall advert to this'
or `I shall attain this' or `I shall resolve upon [the duration of] this'
or `I shall emerge from this' or `I shall review this'. Why not? Because
the base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception is more
peaceful and better than the base consisting of nothingness.
46. Suppose a king is proceeding along a city street with the
great pomp of royalty, {10}
splendidly mounted on the back of an elephant, and he sees craftsmen
wearing one cloth tightly as a loin-cloth and another tied round their
heads, working at the various crafts such as ivory carving, etc., their
limbs covered with ivory dust, etc.; now while he is pleased with their
skill, thinking `How skilled these craft-masters are, and what crafts they
practise!', he does not, however, think `Oh that I might abandon royalty
and become a craftsman like that!'; why not? because of the great benefits
in the majesty of kings; he leaves the craftsmen behind and proceeds on
his way--so too, though this [meditator] gives attention to that
attainment as `peaceful', yet there is no concern in him or reaction or
attention such as `I shall advert to this attainment' or `I shall attain
this' or `I shall resolve upon [the duration of] it' or `I shall emerge
from it' or `I shall review it'.
47. As he gives attention to it as `peaceful' in the way already
described, [337] he reaches the ultra-subtle absorbed perception in virtue
of which he is called `neither percipient nor non-percipient' and it is
said of him that `He develops the attainment with residual
formations'.
"The attainment with residual formations" is the fourth
immaterial attainment whose formations have reached a state of extreme
subtlety.
48. Now in order to show the meaning of the kind of perception
that has been reached, on account of which [this jhana] is called the
`base consisting of neither perception nor non- perception', it is said:
`"base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception": states of
consciousness or its concomitants in one who has attained the base
consisting of neither perception nor non-perception or in one who has been
reborn there or in one who is abiding in bliss there in this present life'
(Vbh.263). Of these, what is intended here is the states of consciousness
and its concomitants in one who has attained.
49. The word meaning here is this: that jhana with its associated
states neither has perception nor has no perception because of the absence
of gross perception and presence of subtle perception, thus it is
`neither-perception-nor-non- perception (n'eva-sa¤¤ƒ-nasa¤¤ƒm)'. It is
`neither-perception- nor-non-perception' and it is a base (ƒyatana)
because it is included in the mind base (manƒyatana) and the mental-
object base (dhammƒyatana), thus it is the `base consisting of neither
perception nor non-perception (nevasa¤¤ƒnasa¤¤ƒya-tana)'.
50. Or alternatively: the perception here is neither perception,
since it is incapable of performing the decisive function of perception,
nor yet non-perception, since it is present in a subtle state as a
residual formation, thus it is `neither-perception-nor-non-perception'. It
is `neither-per- ception-nor-non-perception' and it is a `base' in the
sense of a foundation for the other states, thus it is the `base
consisting of neither perception nor non-perception'.
And here it is not only perception that is like this, but
feeling as well is neither-feeling-nor-non-feeling, consciousness is
neither-consciousness-nor-non-consciousness, and contact is
neither-contact-nor-non-contact, and the same description applies to the
rest of the associated states; but it should be understood that this
presentation is given in terms of percep- tion.
51. And the meaning should be illustrated by the similes
beginning with the smearing of oil on the bowl. A novice smeared a bowl
with oil, it seems, and laid it aside. When it was time to drink gruel, an
Elder told him to bring the bowl. He said `Venerable sir, there is oil in
the bowl'. But then when he was told `Bring the oil, novice, I shall fill
the oil tube', he replied `There is no oil, venerable Sir'. Herein, just
as `There is oil' is in the sense of incompatibility with the gruel
because it has been poured into [the bowl] and just as `There is no oil'
is in the sense of filling the oil tube, etc., so too this perception is
`Neither perception' since it is incapable of performing the decisive
function of perception and it is `Nor non-perception' because it is
present in a subtle form as a residual formation. [338]
52. But in this context what is perception's function? It is the
perceiving of the object, and it is the production of dispassion if [that
attainment and its object are] made the objective- field of insight. But
it is not able to make the function of perceiving decisive, as the heat
element in tepid {11}
water is not able to make the function of burning decisive; and it is not
able to produce dispassion by treatment of its objective field with
insight in the way that perception is in the case of the other
attainments.
53. There is in fact no bhikkhu capable of reaching dispassion by
comprehension of aggregates connected with the base consisting of neither
perception nor non-perception unless he has already done his interpreting
with other aggregates (see Ch. XX, 2f. and XXI, 23). And furthermore, when
the venerable Sariputta, or someone very wise and naturally gifted with
insight as he was, is able to do so, even he has to do it by means of
comprehension by groups (Ch.XX, 2) in this way, `So it seems, these
states, not having been, come to be; having come to be, they vanish' (M.
iii; 28) and not by means of [actual direct] insight into states one by
one as they arise, such is the subtlety that this attainment reaches.
54. And this meaning should be illustrated by the simile of the
water on the road, as it was by the simile of the oil-smearing on the
bowl. A novice was walking in front of an elder, it seems, who had set out
on a journey. He saw a little water and said `There is water, venerable
sir, remove your sandals'. Then the elder said `If there is water, bring
me the bathing cloth and let us bathe', but the novice said `There is
none, venerable sir'. Herein, just as `There is water' is in the sense of
mere wetting of the sandals, and `There is none' is in the sense of
bathing. So too, this perception is `neither perception' since it is
incapable of performing the decisive function of perception, and it is
`nor non-perception' because it is present in a subtle form as a residual
formation. And this meaning should be illustrated not only by these
similes but by other appropriate ones as well.
55. "Enters upon and dwells in" is as already explained.
This is the `detailed explanation of the base consisting of
neither perception nor non-perception as a meditation subject.
[GENERAL]
56.
Thus has the Peerless Helper told The fourfold Immaterial
State; To know these general matters too Will not be
inappropriate.
57.
For these immaterial states, While reckoned by
surmounting of The object they are four, the Wise Do not admit
surmounting of Factors that one can recognize.
58. Of these [four], the first is due to surmounting signs of
materiality, the second is due to surmounting space, the third is due to
surmounting the consciousness that occurred with that space as its object,
and the fourth is due to surmounting the disappearance of the
Consciousness that occurred with that space as its object. So they should
be understood, as four in number with the surmounting of the object in
each case. [339] But the wise do not admit any surmounting of [jhana]
factors; for there is no surmounting of factors in them as there is in the
case of the fine-material-sphere attainments. Each one has just the two
factors, namely, equanimity and unification of mind.
59. That being so,
They progress in refinement; each Is finer than the one
before. Two figures help to make them known The cloth lengths, and
each palace floor.
60. Suppose there were a four-storied palace: on its first floor
the five objects of sense pleasure were provided in a very fine form as
divine dancing, singing and music, and perfumes, scents, garlands, food,
couches, clothing, etc., and on the second they were finer than that, and
on the third finer still, and on the fourth they were finest of all; yet
they are still only palace floors, and there is no difference between them
in the matter of their state (essence) as palace floors; it is with the
progressive refinement of the five objects of sense pleasure that each one
is finer than the one below;--again suppose there were lengths of cloth of
quadruple, treble, double and single thickness, and [made] of thick, thin,
thinner, and very thin, thread spun by one woman, all of the same measure
in width and breadth; now although these lengths of cloth are four in
number, yet they measure the same in width and breadth, there is no
difference in their measurement; but in softness to the touch, fineness,
and costliness each is finer than the one before;--so too, although there
are only the two factors in all four [immaterial states]; that is to say,
equanimity and unification of mind, still each one should be understood as
finer than the one before with the progressive refinement of the factors
due to successful development.
61. And for the fact that each of them is finer than the last
[there is this figure:]
One hangs upon a tent that stands On filth; on him
another leans. Outside a third not leaning stands, Against the
last another leans Between the four men and these states The
correspondence then is shown, And so how each to each relates Can
by a man of wit be known.
62. This is how the meaning should be construed. There was a tent
in a dirty place, it seems. Then a man arrived, and being disgusted with
the dirt, he rested himself on the tent with his hands and remained as if
hung or hanging on to it. Then another man came and leant upon the man
hanging on to the tent. Then another man came and thought `The one who is
hanging on to the tent and the one who is leaning upon him are both badly
off and if the tent falls they will certainly fall. I think I shall stand
outside'. [340] So instead of leaning upon the one leaning upon the first,
he remained outside. Then another arrived, and taking account of the
insecurity of the one hanging onto the tent and the one leaning upon him,
and fancying that the one standing outside was well placed, he stood
leaning upon him.
63. Herein, this is how it should be regarded. The space from
which the kasina kas been removed is like the tent in the dirty place. The
[consciousness of the] base consisting of boundless space, which makes
space its object owing to disgust with the sign of the fine-material, is
like the man who hangs on to the tent owing to disgust with the dirt. The
[consciousness of the] base consisting of boundless consciousness, the
occurrence of which is contingent upon [the consciousness of] the base
consisting of boundless space whose object is space, is like the man who
leans upon the man who hangs on to the tent. The [consciousness of the]
base consisting of nothingness, which instead of making the [consciousness
of the] base consisting of boundless space its object has the
non-existence of that as its object, is like the man who, after
considering the insecurity of those two, does not lean upon the one
hanging on to the tent, but stands outside. The [consciousness of the]
base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception, the occurrence
of which is contingent upon [the consciousness of] the base consisting of
nothingness, which stands in a place outside, in other words, in the
non-existence of [the past] consciousness, is like the man who stands
leaning upon the last-named, having considered the insecurity of the one
hanging on to the tent and the one leaning upon him, and fancying that the
one standing outside is well placed.
64.
And while occurring in this way, It takes this for its
object since There is no other one as good; As men depend upon a
king, Whose fault they see, for livelihood.
65. For although this [consciousness of the] base consisting of
neither perception nor non-perception has seen the flaw in the base
consisting of nothingness in this way `This attainment has the base
consisting of boundless consciousness as its near enemy', notwithstanding
that fact it takes it as its object in the absence of any other. Like
what? As men for the sake of livelihood depend on kings whose faults they
see. For just as, for the sake of livelihood and because they cannot get a
livelihood elsewhere, people put up with some king, ruler of all quarters,
who is unrestrained, and harsh in bodily, verbal and mental behaviour,
though they see his faults thus `He is harshly behaved', so too the
[consciousness of the] base consisting of neither perception nor
non-perception takes that base consisting of nothingness as its object in
spite of seeing its faults in this way, and it does so since it cannot
find another [better] object.
66.
As one who mounts a lofty stair Leans on its railing for
a prop, As one who climbs an airy peak Leans on the mountain's
very top, As one who stands on a crag's ledge Leans for support on
his own knees-- Each jhana rests on that below; For so it is with
each of these.
The Tenth Chapter called `The Description of the Immaterial
States' in the Treatise on the Development of Concentration in the Path of
Purification composed for the purpose of gladdening good people.
NOTES
{1} 'A dog, it seems, was attacked in
the forest by a boar and fled. When it was dusk - he saw in the distance a
cauldron for boiling rice, and perceiving it as a boar, he fled in fear
and terror. Again, a man who was afraid of pisaca goblins saw a
decapitated palm stump at night in a place that was unfamiliar to him,.
and perceiving it as a pisaca goblin, he fell down in his fear, horror and
confusion' (Pm. 320).
{2}. P. T. S. Dict., this ref. reads
yƒnaputosƒ for yƒnapattoli, taking it as one compound (see under yƒna and
mutolŒ) but this does not fit the context happily. Pm. (p. 321) has "`
yƒnappatolikumbhimukhƒdŒnan" ti agunthana-sivikƒdi-yƒnam
mukhƒm=yƒna-mukhƒm; patoliyƒ kudda-kadvƒrassa mukhƒm=patoli-mukhƒm;
kumbhi-mukhƒm ti paccekam mukha-saddo sambandhitabbo'. This necessitates
taking yƒna separately.
{3}. These two quotations refer
respectively to the first of the Eight Liberations and the first of the
Eight Bases of Mastery (See MA. iii, 255ff.)
{4}. This explanation depends on a
play on the word sa¤¤ƒ as the (subjective) perception and as the
(objective) sign, signal or label perceived.
{5}. See Ch. XIV, 129, description of
perception aggregate, which is classified in the same way as the
consciousness aggregate. Those referred to here are the fifteen
fine-material kinds, corresponding to nos. (9)-(13), (57)-(61) and
(81)-(85) in Table II.
{6}. Sec Ch. XIV, 96f. nos. (34)-(38)
and (50)-(54) in Table II.
{7}. `A [formed] dhamma with an
individual essence is delimited by rise and fall because it is produced
after having not been, and because after having been it vanishes. But
space is called boundless since it has neither rise nor fall because it is
a dhamma without individual essence' (Pm. 323).
{8}. `He should not give attention to
it only as "Boundless, boundless"; instead of developing it thus, he
should give attention to it as "Boundless consciousness, boundless
consciousness" or as "Consciousness, consciousness" ' (Pm. 324).
{9}. There is a play on the words
`natthi ki¤ci (there is nothing) and `aki¤cana (non-owning)'. At M. i, 298
there occurs the expression `Rƒgo kho ƒvuso ki¤cano (greed, friend is an
owning)', which is used in connexion with this attainment. The commentary
(MA. ii, 354) says `Rƒgo uppajjitvƒ puggalam ki¤cati, maddati,
palibujjhati, tasma ki¤cano ti vutto (greed having arisen owns, presses,
impedes, a person, that is why it is called an owning)' (Cf.. MA. i, 27;
also Ch. XXI, 53 and note l9.) Pm. (p. 327) here says `Ki¤canan ti ki¤ci
pi'. The word ki¤cati is not in P. T. S. Dict.
{10}. Mahacca (see D. i. 49 and DA.
i, 148); the form is not given in P.T.S. Dict,; probably a form of
mahatjya.
{11}. `Sukhodaka--tepid water': see
Monier Williams Skr. Dict,; this meaning of sukha not given in P. T. S.
Dict.
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS USED
All editions Pali Text Society unless otherwise stated
- A.
- Anguttara Nikƒya
- AA.
- Anguttara Nikƒya Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Manorathapurani
- Cp.
- Cariyƒpitaka
- Dh.
- Dhammapada
- DhA.
- Dhammapáda Atthakathƒ (Commentary)
- Dhs.
- Dhammasa¤gani
- DhsA.
- Dhammasa¤gani Atthakatha (Commentary)=Atthasƒlini
- DhsAA.
- Dhammasa¤gani Tikƒ (Sub-commentary)=Mula Tikƒ (pt. I)
- Dhk.
- Dhƒtukathƒ
- D.
- Digha Nikƒya
- DA.
- Digha Nikaya Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Suma¤galavilasinŒ
- Iti.
- Itivuttaka
- Jƒ.
- Jƒtaka (Fausboll's ed.)
- Kv.
- Kathƒvatthu
- Mv.
- Mahƒvamsa
- M.
- Majjhima Nikƒya
- MA.
- Majjhima Nikƒya Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Papa¤casudani
- Miln.
- Milinda-pa¤hƒ
- Netti.
- Netti-pakarana
- Ndl.
- Mahƒ Niddesa
- Nd2.
- Cula Niddesa (Siamese ed.)
- Ps.
- Patisambhidƒmagga
- PsA.
- Patisambhidamagga Atthakatha (Commentary)=Saddhammappakƒsini
(Sinhalese Hewavitarne ed.).
- Ptnl.
- Patthƒna, Tika Patthƒna
- Ptn2.
- Patthƒna, Duka Patthƒna (Siamese and Burmese eds.)
- Pm.
- Paramattha-ma¤jusƒ, Visuddhimagga Atthakathƒ (Commentary) =Mahƒ Tikƒ
(Vis. Chs. I to XVII Sinhalese Vidyodaya ed.; Chs. XVIII to XXIII
Burmese ed.)
- Pe.
- Petakopadesa
- Pv.
- Petavatthu
- S.
- Samyutta Nikƒya
- SA.
- Samyutta Nikƒya Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Sƒratthappakƒsini
- Sn.
- Sutta-nipƒta
- SnA.
- Sutta-nipƒta Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Paramatthajotikƒ
- Thag.
- Thera-gƒthƒ
- Ud.
- Udƒna
- Vbh.
- Vibha¤ga
- VbhA.
- Vibha¤ga Atthakathƒ (Commentary)=Sammohavinodani
- VbhAA.
- Vibha¤ga Tikƒ (Sub-commentary)=Mula-Tikƒ (pt. 2)
- Vv.
- Vimƒna-vatthu
- Vin. i.
- Vinaya Pitaka (3)--Mahavagga (
- Vin. ii.
- Vinaya Pitaka (4)--Culavagga (
- Vin. iii.
- Vinaya Pitaka (l)--Suttavibha¤ga 1 (Oldenberg's ed.)
- Vin. iv.
- Vinaya Pitaka (2)--Suttavibha¤ga 2 (
- Vin. v.
- Vinaya Pitaka (5)--Parivƒra (
- Vis.
- Visuddhimagga (P.T.S. ed. and Harvard Oriental Series
ed.)
Numbers in square brackets in the text thus [333] refer to the
page numbers of the Pali Text Society's edition of the Pali.
Paragraph numbers on the left correspond to the paragraph
numbers of the Harvard ed. of the Pali.
Chapter and section headings and other numberings have been
inserted for clarity.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
PRINTED EDITIONS OF THE VISUDDHIMAGGA PALl
TEXT
- Sinhalese script: Hewavitarne Bequest edition, Colombo.
- Burmese script: Hanthawaddy Press edition, Rangoon, 1900.
- Siamese script: Royal Siamese edition, Bankok.
- Latin script: Pali Text Society's edition, London. Harvard
University Press edition, Harvard Oriental Series, Vol. 41, Cambridge;
Mass., 1950.
TRANSLATIONS OF THE VISUDDHIMAGGA
- English: `The Path of Purity' by Pe Maung Tin, P.T.S. 1922 (Vol. I),
1928 (Vol. II), 1931 (Vol. III), London.
- German: `Visuddhimagga (der Weg zur Reinheit)' by Nyƒnatiloka,
Verlag Christiani, Konstanz, 1952.
- Sinhalese: King Parakramabƒhu's translation (13th cent. A.C.), Chs.
I to XX, Colombo, 1948.
- Sinhalese: 'Sinhala Visuddhimargaya' by Pandita MAtara Sri
Dharmavamsa Sthavira, Mƒtara, Ceylon, 1953 (Ohs. I to IX). Etc.
OTHER WORKS
- Acariya Dhammapƒla's Paramatthama¤jusƒ, commentary to the
Visuddhimagga (Visuddhimagga-mahƒ-tikƒ). Vidyodaya edition in Sinhalese
script, Colombo (Chs. I to XVII only). P.C. Mundyne Pitaka Press edition
in Burmese script, Rangoon, 1909 (Chs. I to XI), 1910 (Chs. XII to
XXIII). Siamese edition in Siamese script, Bankok. No Latin-script
edition. No English translation.
- Mahƒvamsa or Great Chronicle of Ceylon, English trsln. by W. Geiger,
P.T.S.London.
- Culavamsa or Minor Chronicle of Ceylon (or Mahƒvamsa Part II),
English trsln. by W. Geiger, P.T.S. London.
- Dipavamsa (Chronicle of Ceylon), English trsln. by H. Oldenberg,
London,1879.
- The Pali Text Society's Pali-English Dictionary, P.T.S. London.
- Trenckner's Critical Pali Dictionary (Pali-English), Vol. 1 (letter
a), Commissioner Ejnar Munkagaard, Copenhagen, 1924-48.
- The Life and Work of Buddhaghosa, by B.C. Law, Thacker and Spink.
Calcutta and Simla, 1923.
- Vimuttimagga and Visuddhimagga--a Comparative Study, by P. V. Bapat,
Poona, 1937.
- History of Indian Literature, by M. Winternitz, English trsln. by
Mrs. S. Ketkar and Miss H. Kohn, University of Calcutta, 1933.
- Pali Literature and Language, by W. Geiger, English trsln. by
Batakrishna Ghosh, University of Calcutta, 1943.
- The Pali Literature of Ceylon, by G. P. Malalasekera, Royal Asiatic
Society,London, 1928.
- History of Pali Literature, by B. C. Law, London, 1933 (2 Vols.).
- The Early History of Buddhism in Ceylon, by E. W. Adikaram, Ceylon,
1946.
- Theravada Buddhism in Burma, by Niharranjan Ray, Calcutta
University, 1946 (pp. 24 if.).
- Buddhaghosuppatti, edited and translated into English, by J. Gray,
Luzac and Co., London, 1892.
- Vimuttimagga, Chinese text.
- Vimuttimagga, privately circulated English translation from the
Chinese by N. R. M. Ehara, V. E. P. Pulle and G. S. Prelis, new printed
edition Colombo 1961.
©(C) 1975; Bhuddist Publication Society; Post Office Box 61, Kandy, Sri
Lanka
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