Yesterday I talked about the four methods by which the Doctrine of
Dependent Origination should be understood. I gave you the names of these four
methods. In order to understand these four methods let us go back to the
formula of Dependent Origination. With ignorance as condition there is
consciousness. With consciousness as condition there is mentality-materiality.
With mentality-materiality s condition there is the sixfold base. With the
sixfold bae as condition there is contact. With contact as condition there is
feeling. With feeling as condition there is craving. With craving as condition
there is clinging. With clinging as condition there is becoming. With becoming
as condition there is birth. With birth as condition there is ageing and death,
and sorrow, lamenttion, pain, grief and despair. Thus there is the arising of
this whole mass of suffering.
When we study something, it is important that we d not fall into some
wrong views. We must not understand incorrectly and fall into some wrong views.
In Buddhism some wrong views are mentioned which we must avoid.
The first of them is the eternalist view. This view takes everything to
be permanent. This view takes the world as permanent and the soul which abides
in beings as permanent. It takes it that this soul lives eternally purifying
itself from one life to another until it is reabsorbed into the universal soul
or Atman. This is one kind of wrong view.
The other wrong view is the annihilationist view. This view takes it
that every being is annihilated after death. So there is no rebirth for any
being. This life is the only life we have. After we die there will be no more
of us, no rebirth.
Then there is another view that everything comes out of nothing or there
is no cause for anything to arise. So this is the no-cause view. Also when it
denies the cause, it denies the effect.
There is another view that whatever action that you do does not amount
to the real action. It is the no-actin view. It is differently tanslated. In
this view there is no action to be spoken of, just phenomena rising and
disappearing.
Also there is another viw that takes it that everything is fixed.
Everything hppens or arises according to that fixed order. There can be no
changes at all even though there may be changes in the cause. This is fatalism
or predestination.
so there are these views. Whenever we study some teachings of the
Buddha, we must try not to fall into any of these views. We must understand the
doctrine of the Buddha correctly.
With regard to Dependent Origination we must understand it and undestand
it correctly so that we do not fall into these wrong views. In order not to
fall into these wrong views we have to understand Dependent Origination by
these four methods.
The first method is called the method of identity. In Dependent
Origination it says with ignorance as condition there are formations. With
formations as condition there is consciousness and so on. That does not mean
that the person at the moment of ignorance is totally different from the person
at the moment of formations. The person at the moment of formations is not
totally different from the person at the moment of consciousness and so on.
Although at every moment new phenomena arise there is some kind of identity
going through all this continuity. So we are to understand with reference to
this continuity when we say, 'This person is reborn as such and such a person
in a particular existence.' This kind of language we use following this method
of identity. Although things are always new at every moment, there is this
thread of identity going along this continuity. Since they belng to one and the
same continuity, they are said to be one and the same person or one and the
same thing.
It is explained with the simile of the seed and the shoot, and the small
tree, and the big tree. Suppose you grow a seed. And the seed grows into a
shoot. The shoot grows into a small tree. The small tree grows into a big tree.
We cannot say the shoot is totally different or totally disconnected from the
seed. The seed gows into a shoot; the shoot grows into a small tree and so on.
At every moment there are new things or new cells arising. Because it belongs
to the one continuity we say this seed grows into a big tree. In the same way
because of the unbroken continuity or uninterrupted continuity we say this
person is reborn in that state and so on. But we do not mean that this person
is permanent and that he just moves to another existence or anther place.
When one sees this rightly, one abandons the annihilationist view
because since there is identity and the cause and effect relationship between
them, we do not come to the conclusion that everything is annihilated at death.
So we avoid the annihilationist view if we see Dependent Origination by this
method of identity.
But if we do not understand it correctly or if we see it wrongly we
willcling to the eternity view because we find this person again and again in
different lives. What we are to understand here is that although there are
different new things coming at every moment, there is some identity going on in
this continuity. We are to understand in that way.
I think that for Buddhists that it is very likely they may fall into
this eternity view because we believe in rebirth and in different existences.
Also we think this same person goes from one life to another.
There was a monk named Sati during the time of the Buddha who had such a
view. He studied the Jàtakas. Jàtakas are the stories of the former rebirths of
the Bodhisatta. At the end of each Jàtaka there is an identification. The
Buddha will say for example, 'The king at that time was reborn as me in this
life.' He says something like that. So every being in that life is identified
with the Buddha or with Venerable Sàriputta, or sometimes Venerable Moggallàna
and so on. This monk did not think the physical body goes from one existence to
another because sometimes the Buddha was born as a king, sometimes as a human
being, sometimes as an animal. If the physical body persists, the Buddha would
have to have all these bodies in this life. So the physical body does not
persist. He thought the consciousness must be the same. The same consciousness
matured into the consciousness of a Buddha. Consciousness must be permanent. He
took that view. It was a wrong view and so he was taken to the Buddha. The
Buddha told him that it was wrong. At every moment consciousness is new,
consciousness is different.
Consciousness is called by the name of the obects it takes. For example
we say seing consciousness when we see something. When we hear something, we
call it hearing consciousness. Seeing consciousness is diffeent from hearing
consciousness. They ae not identical. In this way consciousness cannot be
permanent, cannot be eternal. So it is very important that we do not fall into
this eternity view. Although we say this person is reborn there, it is by way
of the method of identity that we use these terms.
It is very useful in explaining the Law of Kamma. If at every moment
there are new phenomena, then the one who does the deed here would be totally
different from the one who gets the results. In that case nobody needs to do
meritorious deeds. Nobody needs to refrin from unwholesome deeds because the
one who will get the result is a different person.
Although at every moment Nàma and Rùpa or the phenomena ae new and
different, there is this identity going along this continuity. Since they
belong to one and the same continuity, we say this person is reborn there and
reaps the fruits of his actions in the past lives and so on. We are to
understand in this way the Law of Dependent Origination so that we do not fall
into this view, the annihilationist view and also the eternalist view. This is
the first method.
The second method is the method of diversity. There are twelve factors.
Each factor has its own characteristic. Ignorance has the characteristic of
producing Kamma formations. Kamma formations have the characteristic of
producing consciousness and so on. They are new at different moments. Ignorance
is not Sankhàras. Sankhàras are not consciousness and so on. They are new at
every moment. One who sees this rightly abandons the eternity view. When one
sees that at every moment there is new phenomena, then one does not fall into
the eternalist view because nothing is permanent.
But if one sees it wrongly then one clings to the annihilationist view.
Sinc at every moment one sees a new thing, one believes that everything must be
new and that there is no continuity at all. In this case although there is
diversity, although at every moment everything is new, there is this continuity
going on.
So it is neither total identity nor total diversity. It is neither the
one nor the other. At every moment the one is elated to the other in different
ways as cause and effect. This relationship of cuse and effect runs through all
this continuity. We should understand the Doctrine of Dependent Origination by
this method of diversity also. If we understand by these two methods we will
not come to fall into either one fo these false views.
The third one is called the method of uninterest. The Pàli word is
Avyàpàra. Vyàpàra means effort. Here it may mean concern. Interest may also be
correct here. So the meaning of this method here is that ignorance has no interest
or concern that I will produce Kamma formations. Kamma formations have no
interest that we will produce consciousness and so on. This uninterestedness is
in all these factors.
When one sees this rightly, one abandons the self view by understanding
the absence of a maker. One sees that each factor has no interest or no concern
in producing the other and that there is this law of cause and effect which
makes ignorance produce mental formations and so on. When one sees this
correctly, then one will not fall into the wrong view that there is a maker of
this whole life or of this whole wheel of existence. There is no maker other
than these factors themselves. There is no maker of ignorance. There is no
maker of formations. Rightly seeing this one can avoid falling into the wrong
view that there is a maker.
But if one does not se it rightly, but sees it wrongly, then one clings
to moral inefficacy of action view. That means the non-action view. Since these
factors do not hve interest or do not have concern in producing others, then
there can be no action, no action that can be spoken of, no action which will
produce results. One can fall into this view because he does not see that the
causative function of ignorance etc. is established as a law by their
respective individual essence. That means although these factors have no
concern or no interest in producing their respective effects, there is this law
that ignorance etc. as causative factors of Kamma formations etc. - although
ignorance has no interest in producing Kamma formations, still Kamma formations
are produced by ignorance. This law of producing results is always there. So if
we do not see this, we will fall into the wrong view of non-action. This is the
third method.
The fourth method is called the method of ineluctable regularity. This
word has given us a lot of trouble. Yogis came to me and told me the meaning of
the word. I found this note on the table. I think this will be the best.
Ineluctable is from LUX or LUCIA, Latin words for light. Here there is an EX
meaning outside the region of. Then there is an N, a prefix intensifying the X.
So it means something outside the region which the light of reason can shine
on. Inexluctable becomes ineluctable. The meaning is therefore something which
cannot be understood no matter what reason tries to do. That mens something
that cannot be elucidated or something that cannot be described.
So there is this regularity, but it cannot be described. This is the
fourth method. The fourth method show us that ignorance produces Kamma
formations only and Kamma formations produce consciousness only and not any
other. When one sees this, one abandons the no cause view and the moral
inefficacy of action view. That means when one sees that ignorance causes Kamma
formations and Kamma formations cause consciousness and so on, then one des not
take the view that there is no cause for things to arise. Also one does not
fall into the wrong view that there is no action because there is action.
If one sees wrongly, one clings to the no cause view again and to the
doctrine of fatalism. That means one sees only half of this method. Ignorance
produces kamma formations only. Kamma formations produce consciousness only.
Then Kamma formations are not produced by others; consciousness is not produced
by Kamma formations and so on. One thinks in that way and comes to the
conclusion there is no cause for things to arise.
It is like oil cannot be produced from grains of sand. If oil cannot be
produced from grains of sand, but there is oil, then it must be produced by
nothing. It must come out of nothing. Understanding in this way or
understanding wrongly, he comes to or falls into the wrong view of no cause.
If ignorance produces Kamma formations only, there must be a fixed rule
that this cause must produce this effect only and no other. Taking that way one
falls into wrong view of fatalism where everything is fixed.
These are the four methods with which to understand correctly the
Doctrine of Dependent Origination. These are not so easy to understand. What we
should understand is the popular formula according to that formula - neither
one nor the other. So the one who is born in the other world is neither the one
nor the other. Nothing from this life moves to another life. But the one who is
reborn in another life is not totally different or disconnected from the one
who dies here. They have this connection as cause and effect. So they belong to the same continuity. That
is why my ignorance will produce my Kamma formations and not yours. Otherwise
there would be confusion of cause and effect. These are the four methods with
which to understand the Law of Dependent Origination.
There is some more to understand with regard to this doctrine. There are
how many factors? Do you remember? There are twelve factors - ignorance, Kamma
formations, consciousness, mentality-materiality, sixfold base, contact,
feeling, craving, clinging, becoming, rebirth, ageing and death. These are
called the twelve factors. Sorrow and others are not included in the twelve
factors because they are not the inevitable results of rebirth. So they are
outside these twelve factors.
This Doctrine of paticca Samuppàda covers three periods of time or three
lives - the past, the present and the future. If you look at the formula, the
third one is what? Consciousness. 'Consciousness' means rebirth consciousness
or resultant consciousness. So that consciousness must be the beginning of one
life because rebirth consciousness is the first conscious moment in one's life.
Then we have rebirth as a factor. Rebirth also means the first moment in one's
life. So we have the present life nd the future life. The one before the
present should be the past life. So this Doctrine of Paticca Samuppàda covers
three periods of time or three lives - the past, the present and the future.
The first two, ignorance and Kamma formations, belong to the past.
Consciousness and others belong to the present. Rebirth, old age and death
belong to the future. So we have three lives.
We are not to take it that Dependent Origination covers only three
lives. If we really see that rebirth in the future time is the same as the
consciousness in the present time or present life, then we can see the whole
round of rebirth is covered by this Doctrine of Dependent Origination.
There are what we call three rounds (Vatta). We call them rounds because
they go round and round, and they make others go round and round. These three
rounds are defilement round, Kamma round and resultant round. Can you figure
out which belong to the defilement round? Which factors belong to the
defilement round? Ignorance, craving and clinging. These three belong to the
defilement round because they are defilements themselves. Which belong to Kamma
round? Which are Kamma among these twelve? Kamma formations and Kamma-becoming.
These two are the Kamma round. The rest are the resultant round. So there ae
three rounds.
It is said that there are four sections. In Burmese we call it four
layers. Can you figure out these four sections? Cause-effect, cause-effect.
Cause in the past, effect in the present, cause in the present, effect in the
future. There are four sections. The first two, ignorance nd Kamma formations,
constitute the first section because they are the cause in the past.
Consciousness, mentality-materiality, sixfold base, contact and feeling, these
five are called effects in the present becuse they are the results of the past
causes. Then we have craving, clinging and Kamma-becoming. Craving, clinging and
kamma-becoming are called causes in this present life. Then the others -
rebirth, ageing and death - are called the effects in the future. So we have
four layers or four sections - past cause, present effect, present cause,
future effect.
It is said that there are five factors in the past cause. We found only
two - ignorance and Kamma formations. When you take ignorance, you also take
craving and clinging because they belong to the same round. That is why I told
you about the rounds before coming to this subject. When taking ignorance, you
also take craving and clinging. When you take Kamma formations, you also take
becoming. When you take ignorance and Kamma formations, you virtually take
ignorance, craving, clinging, Kamma formations and becoming. So we have five
causes in the past.
The five effects in the present - there is no problem with them. Then it
is said there are five causes in the present, but in this formula we only have
three - craving, clinging and becoming. When we take craving and clinging, we
also take ignorance because they belong to the same round. When we take
becoming, we also take the formations. Again they belong to the same round. So
the causes in the present are not three but five - craving, clinging, becoming,
ignorance and formations.
Then it is said that there are five effects in the future, but we find
only three - rebirth, ageing and death. How do they become five? They become
five because they are nothing but consciousness, mentality-materiality, sixfold
base, contact and feeling. When we say rebirth, ageing and death, we just mean
consciousness and so on. So we have five effects in the future. Atogether we
have twenty factors, twenty factors in four sections.
Then there are three connections. When we put four together, one after
the other, we get three connections. Where is the first connection? It is
between past cause and present effect. Then where is the second? It is between
the present effect and the present cause. And the third is between the present
cause and the future effect.
The first connection is cause-effect. The second is effect-cause
connection. The third is cause-effect connection.
Where is the first connection, between what? Between formations and
consciousness. Where is the second connection? Between feeling and craving.
This is the second connection. And the third connection is between becoming and
birth, ageing and death. So we have three connections: 1. cause and effect 2.
effect and cause 3. cause and effect.
There are two great roots of Dependent Origination or the Wheel of Life.
We can divide the Wheel of Life into two parts. One consists of past cause and
present effect. The second cnsists of present cause and future effect. Among
the factors of the first part ignorance is the foremost. Among the factors of
the second group craving is the foremost. Ignorance and craving are said to be
the two roots of the Wheel of Life. These are the two roots which cause ebirth
again and again. So long as we cannot get rid of these two roots, we will be
going around in this round of rebirths again and again and again. If we can get
rid of or destroy these two roots, then we will get out of the round of
rebirths.
Ignorance is put first or at the beginning of this doctrine, but it does
not mean that ignorance is the first cause because there are causes of
ignorance too. Here ignorance is put in the beginning because the Buddha wanted
to show that ignorance is the basic cause of all suffring, the basic cause of
the round of rebirth. It is like when you have ignorance, when you seize
ignorance, then you are beguiled by craving and clinging also. When you have no
ignorance, there will be no craving and clinging.
It is compared to taking a snake by the head. When you catch the snake
by the head. you are caught in the coils of the body. But when you cut the head
off, the body can do no more.
So because ignorance is the basis of the round of rebirth or the basic
cause of the round of ebirths, it is put in the beginning. It does not mean
that ignorance is the first cause.
In order to break this wheel of life what must we do? We must stop this
round of rebirth somewhere. That place is where? Between feeling and craving.
How do we do that? By being mindful. By noting the feelings or by being mindful
of the feelings. Even though we have painful feelings, we just make notes of
these feelings or we just keep ourselves mindful of these feelings. We must not
get attachment to good feelings and not get attachment to any other feelings.
By cutting at the connection between feeling and craving, we can cut this wheel
of rebirth nd get out of it.
The teaching here which we have studied is called the normal order. The
teaching of the cessation of ignorance and so on is called the reverse order.
Here 'reverse' does not mean going from the bottom to the head. It is just the
cessation. It would better to call the normal order the positive ordr and the
reverse order the negative order.
What is the negative order of the teaching of the Doctrine of Paticca
Samuppàda? With the remainderless fading and cessation of ignorance there is
cessation of Kamma formations. With the cessation of Kamma formations there is
the cessation of consciousness and so on. Thus there is the cessation of this
whole mass of suffering. It is to that end that we must aim or that we must go.
We must not run around in the round of rebirths. If we can keep ourselves from
being attached to any kind of feeling, there is the cessation of craving. Then
with the cessation of craving there is the cessation of clinging. With the
cessation of clinging there is the cessation of becoming and so on.ºIn this wy
we can cut the wheel of rebirth and get out of it. This is the teaching of
Dependent Origination or Conditioned Genesis or whatevr name you want to call
it.
This doctrinte is said to be profound and deep. Once the Venerable
Ànanda said, 'Although people say that Dependent Origination is deep, to me it
is not deep. It does not seem deep to me.' Venerable Ànanda was saying
something like that.
Then the Buddha said, 'Don't say that Ànanda. The Dependent Origination
looks deep and it is deep.' So it is difficult to understand.
It is profound in four ways. It is profound because it is difficult to
understand the effects. That means it is difficult to understand that Sankhàras
are produced by ignorance and that consciousness is produced by Sankhàras and
so on.
Also it is deep with regard to the causes. Ignorance produces Sankhàras
and Sankhàras produce consciousness and so on.
Also it is profound with regard to presentation. It is one of the
subjects which is difficult to understand and at the same time difficult to
teach.
Let me read this passage from The Path of Purification with regard to
the profundity of presentation. 'Then the teaching of this Dependent
Origination is profound since it needs to be given in various ways for various
reasons and none but the omniscient knowledge gets fully established in it.' So
only the Buddhas can understand it fully. Others may understand according to
their own capacity.
'For in some places in the Suttas it is taught in forward order, in some
in backwrd order, in some in forward and backward order, in some in forward or
in backward order starting in the middle. In some it is taught in four sections
and three links, in some in three sections and two links, and in some in two
sections and in one link. That is why this Wheel of Becoming is profound in
teaching.'
Buddha was very clever in teaching this. Maybe he would pick up in the
beginning and go to the end. Sometimes he may pick up at the end and go backe
to the beginning. Sometimes he would pick up in the middle and go backward or
forward. So in various ways this doctrine was taught by the Buddha. You may
read this especially in the Samyutta Nikàya (The Kindred Sayings). So this is
profound and difficult to understand.
Is it necessary to understand the Doctrine of Dependent Origination so
that we can practice meditation? In order to practice Vipassanà meditation do
we need a good knowledge of Dependent Origination? Let me read from a book by
Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw. It is a relief. There are some teachers in Myanmar
who say that you must have a thorough knowledge of Dependent Origination before
you practice Vipassanà meditation. If you don't have this knowledge, you cannot
practice Vipassanà meditation. Sayadaw was refuting their statements.
'If according to their proposition, meditation could be practiced only
after thoroughy mstering the Law of Dependent Origination together with its
circular diagrams etc.( We have three circular diagrams and all these things
are to help explain the doctrine. ) Some people who have no time nor the chance
to study the Law of Dependent Origination, or who are slow in learning it
comprehensivey are liable to lose the opportunity of gaining the Path or
Fruition even if they are endowed with Pàramis, (Pàramis means perfections.)
sufficient conditions and qualifications to attain them.'
'To set an example during the time of the Blessed One a Bhikkhu by the
name of Cùlapanthaka found it difficult to memorize a verse of only 44
syllables although he tried to do it for four months. To learn the whole Law of
Dependent Origination extensively would thus have been an impossible task for
him. Yet the same Bhikkhu attained Arahantship, was accomplished in Jhànas and
supernormal knowledge by practicing for one morning only the meditation
exercise prescribed by the Buddha. So we should like to take this opportunity
while giving this discourse on turning the Wheel of Dhamma on cautioning those
good learned persons to refrain from making asseertions which may discourage
and demoralize those engaged in or bent upon the practice of meditation. If one
intends to strive all alone for the practice of meditation, no doubt one needs
to have learned extensively all about the aggregates, the bases, the elements,
the truths, the faculties and the Law of Dependent origination. But if one is
going to work under the guidance of a good virtuous learned and wise teacher,
all that one needs to know is that all Dhammas are impermanent, subject to
suffering, insubstantial and not self. It is also sufficient if he has learned
through hearing that a worldling individual is governed by two mundane truths
of causal relations (cause and effect), namely the five aggregates which is the
truth of suffering and craving which is the truth of the origin of suffering.
The majority of Buddhists of Burma can be taken to be already equipped with
this much knowledge. Even if not they can pick this up just before starting
meditation or during the course of meditation by listening to the sermons of
their meditation teacher. There should be no wavering or uncertainty on this
score of Suttama??? (That means learned knowledge). All that is required is to
start practicing meditation in accordance with the instructions given by the
reliable, virtuous, learned and wise teacher.'
So actually we don't have to have a thorough knowledge of Dependent
Oigination to practice Vipassanà meditation. But if you are going to be alone
and doing it al by yourself, then you may need some knowledge of Dependent
Origination and also some knowledge of the Abhidhamma like aggregates, bases
and so on.
When we study Dependent Origination, we find sometimes factors belonging
to different times and sometimes to the same time. And so sometimes we want to
be very organized and very systematic, and have one clearly defined and
separate from another. We want all thes factors to be cause and effect clearly
and so on. But it cannot be so because Dependent Origination is not a logical
presentation or proposition. It is the description of the Wheel of Life which
is very complex. So it cannot be logical and it cannot be well organized.
As a conclusion I would like to read a footnote in a book by Venerable
Ñanamoli. 'The Dependent Origination or structure of conditions appears as a
flexible formula with the intention of describing the ordinary human situation
of a man in this world or indeed any conscious event where ignorance and
craving have not entirely ceased. That situation is always complex since it it
implicit that consciousness with no object or being (Bhava) or becoming or
however rendered without consciousness of it, is impssible except as an
artificial abstraction. The Dependent Origination being designed to portray the
essentials of that situation in the limited dimension of words and using only
elements recognizable in experience is not a logical proposition.' (In
parentheses Descret Cogito is not a logical proposition.) 'Nor is it a temporal
cause and effect chain. Each member has to be examined as to its nature in
order to determine what its relations to the others are. For example is it
successive in time or conascent, positive or negative etc. A pure cause and
effect chain would not represent the pattern of the situation. That is always
complex, always subjective-objective, static-dynamic, positive-negative and so
on. Again there is no evidence of any historical devlopment in the various
forms given within the limit of the Sutta Pitaka, leaving aside the
Patisambhidàmagga, a historical treatment within that particular limit is
likely to mislead if its hypothesis is with no foundation.'
I am very glad that I am able to finish tlking on this very difficult
Doctrine of Paticca Samuppàda or Dependent Origination. I hope that although
you may not understand all, that you may understand some of it. This has to be
studied from the beginning. Many of you have not heard the talks before and
also you need a knowledge of Abhidhamma to understand the Doctrine of Dependent
Origination. At least you have heard about Dependent Origination and so you
have a fairly good idea of what it is and how it is difficult to understand. I
hope that you would make a more detailed study of this important doctrine with
the help of the Commentary and maybe the help of a teacher. I hope you are able
to grasp its meaning as much as you can and then go on to prctice Vipassanà
meditation to see for yourself the teachings taught in this Doctrine of
Dependent Origination. Because through Vipassanà meditation many links can be
seen through self-experience. You need only to have a certain amount of learnt
knowledge and then you can apply this learnt knowledge to what you have
experienced in the actual practice of meditation. Only when you can relate to
your experience the knowledge you have gained through reading will this
knowledge become real knowledge. Otherwise it is just second-hand knowledge or
borrowed knowledge. In order to make the borrowed knowledge your own knowledge
then you have to practice meditation and see this working of the Dependent
Origination for yourself.
Thank you very much.
Sàdhu! Sàdhu! Sàdhu!