At the 15 day retreat last year I talked about the Doctrine of Paticca
Samuppàda or Dependent origination among other things. I thought I would be
able to finish the talks on Dependent Origination during that retreat, but I
was wrong. I could not finish. So I told the yogis that i would pick that up in
my future rtreats. Although I had some shorter retreats in between, I wnted to
talk about some other things which may be more useful for the yogis. So I put
off talking about Dependent Origination until now. As I promised last night I
will continue my talks on Dependent Origination.
For those who are not familiar with this doctrine, I will give a brief
sketch of this doctrine. The Doctrine is called in Pàli Paticca Samuppàda. It
is translated as Dependent Origination, or Conditioned Genesis, and there may
also be other translations.
This Doctrine teaches us that everything is conditioned by some other
thing. There is nothing which is absolute in this world. Everything is
relative. According to this Doctrine there is no first cause. Cause-effect
relationship goes on and on and on. It goes back ad infinitum.
This Doctrine of Dependent Origination was reflected upon by every
Bodhisatta before or on the eve of becoming Buddhas. So Gotama Buddha also before
becoming Buddha reflected upon this Doctrine back and forth, back and
forth. Also after becoming the
Buddha, he reflected upon this Doctrine again and again. All through his
ministry of 45 years he taught this Doctrine again and again to different
people on different occasions.
This Doctrine deals with cause-effect relationship. It deals with what
we call existence or life.
The beginning of this Doctrine is that ignorance conditions actions,
good or bad actions. Ignorance, although it is at the beginning of the formula
for Dependent Origination, is not the first cause of things. It is put at the
beginning just to show that there must be something where we can start.
'Ignorance' here means not knowing correctly and also knowing
incorrectly. Buddha said that things are impermanent, but people do not know
that things are impermanent. They know incorrectly that things are permanent.
And people do not know the Four Noble Truths. Because of this ignorance people
tend to do actions - mental actions, verbal actions and bodily ctions. Along
with these actions there is what we call 'volition'. This volition is what is known as kamma. So because of
ignorance people do or acquire Kamma. Sometimes it is good Kama and sometimes
it is bad Kamma.
Depending on this Kamma or as the result of this Kamma, good or bad,
there are results especially in future lives, in the form of resultant
consciousness. So conditioned or depending on Kamma or to use the technical
term depending on Sankhàras (formations) resultant consciousness arises. Along
with this consciousness there arise some mental states and material properties.
With these mentl states and material properties there are the six bases
- eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind. When these six bases come into contact
with six external objects there arise seeing consciousness, hearing
consciousness and so on.
Depending on the coming together of these three - the visible object,
the eye and seeing consciousness - there arises what we call 'contact'.
'Contact' relly means vividly perceiving the object. That is called contact.
Depending on contact there arises feeling or sensation. For example when
we see something which we want to see, which is desirable, there is a
pleasurable feeling. When we see something ugly, which we do not want to see,
there is displeasurable feeling. When we see neutral things, then we have
neutral feeling.
Speaking with reference to Abhidhamma, right at the moment of seeing and
so on, the feeling is just neutral. But after the moment of seeing there follow
moments of impulsions or Javanas. At the moments of Javana there cn be
pleasurable feeling, or displeasurable feeling or neutral feeling. So we can
generally say that when you see something pleasurable, you have pleasurable feeling
and so on.
Depending on these three kinds of feelings there arises craving or
attachment. When we have displeasurable feelings, we long for pleasurable
feelings. That longing for or craving for pleasurable feelings is conditioned
by the displeasurable feelings we are experiencing. When we experience
pleasurable feelings, we want more of them. So there is still this craving for
pleasurable feelings. And with respect to neutral feelings, because they are
tranquil, they are taken to be the same as pleasurable feelings. When we have
neutral feelings too, we want to have plesurable feelings. And so there is
craving.
Beginning with ignorance we have these factors in this Doctrine of
Dependent Origination. There are links between ignorance and Kamma formations,
between Kamma formations and resultant consciousness, between consciousness and
mind and matter, between mind and matter and six sense bases, between six sense
bases and contact, between contact and feeling, between feeling and craving.
This flow of cause and effect goes on and on and on in a round about
way. So it is called the wheel of existence or the wheel of becoming.
The wheel of becoming can be interrupted only at one place. That place
is between feeling and craving. Once we reach the state of craving we will go
on and on. There is no stopping of that. The only place where we can interfere
with this wheel of existence is between feeling and craving. Although we have
pleasurable feeling, we can develop our mind so that we do not have craving.
Although we have displeasurable feeling, we can control our minds so that we do
not have craving for pleasurable feelings. This is the place where we can break
this wheel of existence. That is done by the practice of Vipassanà meditation,
wtching each and every sensation or feeling with mindfulness. When we apply
mindfulness to these sensations, we come to see the arising and disappearing of
these sensations. When we see the arising and disappearing of these sensations,
we will not be craving for better sensations, since they are impermanent and so
on. This is the only place where we can break this wheel of existence.
Once we have reached the stge of craving, we will go on and on and on.
Today I will talk about the next link or the next stage. That is clinging or
Upàdàna. Conditioned by craving clinging arises. The Pàli word for clinging is
Upàdàna. It is composed of two parts 'Upa' and 'Àdàna'. Upa is a prefix. It
means firmness here. Àdàna means taking hold of. So Upàdàna means firmly taking
hold of something. Something that takes hold of something firmly is called
Upàdàna. It is translated as clinging or grasping.
There are four kinds of graspings or clingings mentioned in the Path of
Purification or Visuddhi Magga. Depending on or conditioned by craving one of
these four clingings arises. The first one is sense desire clinging. The second
one is false view clinging. The third one is rite and ritual clinging. The
fourth one is self doctrine clinging.
The first one, sense desire clinging, is clinging to sensual objects.
There are objects which re the objects of sense desires - desirable sights,
desirable sounds and so on. People are attracted to them or attached to them.
When we see something beautiful, we are attached to that visible object. We are
not only attached to that visible object but we are also attached to the base
of that visible object. If you know Abhidhamma, you will see that the visible
object is the only one of the 28 material properties which can be seen.
What you see is just the visible object or the
visible datum, not a person, not a man, not a woman. But when we like the
visible datum, we also like the base of this visible datum which is person or which may be a thing.
If we consider sound, it becomes clearer. We hear something, let us say
a song. Then we are attached to that voice. We like that voice. But we do not
stop there. We like the person who has that voice. We like the singer. We
become his or her fan. Then there is this clinging.
The first Upàdàna is clinging to sense objects, the six kinds of sense
objects. We talked about craving and clinging to sense objects or sense desire
which is itself clinging. Sense desire clinging really means sense desire. In
Pàli it is Kàmupàdàna. In Pàli the word 'Kàma' means the object of the senses
as well as the desire for these objects. In some cases the word 'Kàma' may mean
both and in other cases it may mean one or the other. Here it can mean in one
sense one thing and in another sense another thing. If it is translated as clinging
for sense objects, then the word 'Kàma' means sense objects. But if it is
translated as desire which is clinging then 'Kàma' means the desire for sense
objects. Whatever meaning we give to the word 'Kàma', Kàmupàdàna or the first
clinging is the desire for sense objects.
What is the difference between craving and clinging or grasping? Craving
is what? In Abhidhamma craving is Lobha. What is clinging, this sense desire
clinging? It is the same, Lobha. One and the same Lobha is described as craving
in one place or in one sense and clinging in another. The difference is that
when craving becomes strong, when craving becomes so strong that it cannot let
go of the object, then it is called clinging. Not so strong craving is craving
and strong craving is clinging. Firmness of craving is the name for the
subsequent craving itself. It becomes firm by the influence of the previous
craving which acts as its decisive support condition. That means craving and
clinging cannot be present at the same time. Craving precedes clinging. First
there is craving. First there is not so strong attachment. Then it develops
into very strong attachment. The not so strong attachment is related to the
later strong attachment by way of decisive support. Decisive support is one of
the 24 modes of causal conditions taught in the last book of Abhidhamma, the
Patthàna.
Craving is aspiring to an object which one has not yet reached. It is
like a thief stretching out his hand in the dark. Before you get something, you
want to get that thing. At that time it is called craving. It is like when a
thief stretches out his hand to take hold of something in the dark. So you have
not tken hold of anything, but you want to possess that thing. Before getting
that thing, before possessing tht thing, there is attachment or desire for that
thing. That is craving.
Clinging is the grasping of an object that one has reached, like the
thief's grasping of his objective. When
the thief has taken hold of something, then he will not let go of it. In
the same way when craving has developed into clinging, then it will not let go
of the objects. This is the difference between craving and clinging or
grasping.
Craving is said to be opposed to fewness of wishes. Monks are always
instructed to have few wishes. Craving is the opposite of fewness of wishes.
Clinging is the opposite of contentment. When you cling to something, you are
not content. They are the opposites of fewness of wishes and contentment
respectively.
Craving is the root of suffering due to seeking. Clinging is the root of
suffering due to guarding or protecting. That means with regard to property or
things we have two kinds of suffering. One is suffering through seeking and the
other is suffering through protecting.
For example, let us say you want a new car. Before you get that car you
have to suffer because you have to work to get enough money to buy that car. So
you have to suffer heat, cold and all sorts of things before you get that car.
That suffering is called suffering due to seeking.
Once you get that car the suffering due to seeking disappears, but there
is another suffering waiting for you. That is the suffering of protecting that
car. You hav to protect that car from being stolen or from being damaged by
someone or from being scratched by children and so on.
With regard to things or property there are these two kinds of
suffering. Craving is the root of suffering due to seeking. Grasping or
clinging is the root of suffering due to guarding. This is the difference
btween craving and clinging although in reality both are one and the sme mental
state which is Lobha or attachment.
What is the second one? It is false view clinging. According to the
teachings of the Buddha there re some false views or wrong views. Traditionally
the wrong view or false view is stated as ten based. That means there are ten
points of wrong view.
One wrong view is that there is no giving. 'No giving' means the wrong
view that there are no results of giving. Although you may give or you may
donate something, you will get no results from that giving. The only result you
will get is that you will lose what you have given away. You donate something,
so you lose that thing. This is a wrong view because there are results of
giving even in this life. When you give something, you feel happy. And the
person who accepts your donation is happy. Also you are liked by people. Your
fame is spread far and wide. Also according to the Law of Kamma you will get a
good result in the next life. This wrong view however takes it that there are
no results of giving. So people with this view may not give at all.
There is no offering. That means having a big-scale offering like a
sacrifice. The other one is there is no small-scale giving. 'Small-scale
giving' means entertining guests or giving presents at different times. It is
something like giving at Christmas or the New Year. So theere are n results
from these types of giving. Giving is divided into three here because it is
what people practiced in those days.
The fourth one is that there are no good or bad results of good or bad
Kammas. Whatever you do, there will just be the doing. You will not get any
good or bad results from your actions. Therefore you may do whatever you like
or you may not do whatever you do not like.
The fifth one is that there is no mother and the sixth one is that there
is no father. That means there is no mother or father to be respected or to
feel grateful towards. The children are born out of gratification of the senses
and there is just that. Therefore there is no need to thank your mother or
father. There is no need to pay respect to them or to look after them and so
on. This view is also a wrong view or false view. People who have this view may
feel something different when they become older and paents themselves, that is
when their children say to them, 'No father, no mother.'
There are no beings reborn in other existences and no beings who are
reborn as fully developed beings. When beings are reborn in the celestial
worlds, they are reborn s fully grown persons, unlike human beings. This view
does not accept that there are such beings. The only beings that there are, are
the beings that we see in this life. There are no other beings.
The next one is there is no this world. There is no other world. That
means there is no 'this world' for those from other worlds. That means this is
the only orld we have, the visible world. No beings are reborn from other
worlds. There is no this world for beings reborn in other worlds. Also there is
no other world for beings reborn in this world. That means there may be other
worlds like ceestial worlds and so on. Beings are born there and die there and
that is all there is to it. And we are born here and we die here and that is
the end of us. Taking this wrong view is called 'there is no this world and
there is no that world.'
Some people have the wrong view that there are no religious teachers or
holy persons who really see the truths of the world through their own wisdom
and proclaim it to the world. Such people believe all religious teachers are
false.
These are the ten kinds of wrong view stated in the Suttas and also in
the Abhidhamma. These wrong views are what we call here false view clinging.
When one clings to this wrong view and it becomes so strong that one cannot let
it go, it becomes a clinging or grasping. These wrong views can be very strong.
Once taken they are very difficult to give up. Only through the practice of
Vipassanà meditation can these wrong views be eliminated completely. This is
the second Upàdàna.
The third one is translated as rite and ritual clinging. I think this is
important. Sometimes I have met people. We monks have many rules to follow, 227
basic rules. Sometimes I tell people that I don't want to break my rule, so I
don't want this or that done to me. Then these people say, 'This is just
adherence to rites and rituals. Don't be too concerned about these rules. If
you stick to these rules, you are having this clinging.'
They something like that.
You have five precepts. Lay people have five precepts to follow. You
don't want to kill a being. You don't want to take what is not given to you.
Then some people may come to you
and say that this is adherence to rites and rituals; do whatever you
like. Such conversations are very irritating.
The difficulty springs from the loose translation of the word from Pàli.
I want to emphasize this. The original word in Pàli is Sìlabbatupàdàna. Sìla is
translated as rite and Vata is translated as ritual. So adherence to rite and
ritual or clinging to rite and ritual is this kind of clinging.
If we want to understand this word, we have to look for the explanation
given in the texts and in the Commentaries. We cannot ignore the explanations
given in these ancient books and then say whatever we like. That would not be
justifiable. So we have to find the explanation of this in our books and in the
Abhidhamma. This is an Abhidhamma term.
In Abhidhamma it is explained as misinterpretation that purification can
come about by habit and practice. In the text itself it doesn't say anything
more than that. It just says by habit and practice. So by habit and by prctice
there can be purification of mind or there can be escape from this round of
rebirth - that misinterpretation is called this clinging.
It is not so clear yet, right? In the Commentaries the Sìla and the Vata
or the habit nd practice is explained as the habit of dogs, the habit of oxen,
or the practice of dogs, or the practice of oxen.
What it means is that there were people in the past during the time of
the Buddha who thought that if you act s a dog - if you eat as a dog, if you
sleep as a dog, if you behave as a
dog - you will get free from this round of rebirth or from the Buddhist point
of view you will become an Arahant. There were other people who thought that if
you acted as an ox and so on, you will become an Arahant.
There were such people. It is to prevent such clingings or such wrong
views that his clinging is mentioned. This clinging should be translated as
wrong view or misinterpretation that purification can come about by habits and
practices of dogs and oxen etc. In other books not only the practices of dogs
and oxen were given, but there are many other practices which are mentioned
under this clinging or Upàdàna.
Do you think it is crazy to act like dogs with the hope that you will be
cleansed, that you will get purification? There are such persons in the time of
the Buddha. In one Sutta they were mentioned. In the translation of that Sutta
Venerable Ñànamoli wrote something. 'There were strange people around in the
Buddha's days believing some strange things. But that is no different from our
own days when people believe the most odd and off-balence ideas. In this Sutta
we meet some people who believed that by imitating animals they would be saved.
Maybe they are still with us too.' Even in these modern times there are people
who behave very strangely. Somene told me there are people who howl like
animals just to imitate them or to experience what the primitive people
experience. It is not so strange that there could be people who believe that if
they behave like a dog or some other animal that they would be freed from
greed, hatred and delusion.
Animals are not deceptive. They are straight-forward. They do what they
like. They may not have much of the wickedness that we human beings have. So
people may think that practicing the habits of dogs may take them nearer to
purification of mind.
There are such people in the past. So these practices are described in
the Suttas and it is given as a clinging here. It is not just adherence to
rites and rituals. You know Theravàda Buddhism has the least of rites and
rituals among the other types of Buddhism and among other religions. But still
we have some rites and rituals. For example I do chanting every morning.
Sometimes we share merits with other beings. If we are to take these as rites
and rituals and adherence to them as clinging, then there would be no Buddhism
and no religion at all.
Also if adhering to or following the rules is to be interpretted as rite
and ritual clinging, what would happen? There would be a lot of accidents on
the roads. Many people would die. Even this retreat would not come into being
because you have to follow some schedule here. If it is to be interpretted as
adherence to rites and rituals, then you may not come to sit here. Even when
the bell is rung, you may be out somewhere else. Sometimes we need to have some
limit on the interpretation of the words we find in the scriptures. And we
should follow the traditional interpretation of them rather than taking this
into our own hands.
So rite and ritual clinging is not adherence to rules and precepts and
other things, but it is taking any practice which is not accepted as leading to
the realiztion of truth to be the true path. In the Sub-Commentary it is stated
that even if you take it that the precepts alone are sufficient for your
attainment of realization of truth, that is also Sìlabbata. That is also clinging.
If you take it that Jhàna alone will lead you to deliverance, that is also
clinging.
Buddha met two teachers after he went into the forest and before he
became the Buddha. These two teachers had this kind of clinging that Jhàna
alone is sufficient to lead one to emancipation.
So anything part from the Noble Eightfold Path or Vipassanà meditation
which is taken to be the real path is this kind of clinging. So Vipassanà or
Satipatthàna is the only way for the purification of beings as is stated in the
MahàSatipatthàna Sutta.
I want to read a Sutta to you. This Sutta tells us there were two men
during the time of the Buddha. One was called Punna and the other was called
Senneya. Punna was the follower of the practices of oxen and Senneya was the follower
of the practices of dogs. One day they went to the Buddha. Punna asked the
Buddha, saying 'Venerable Sir, this Senneya has the dog practice; he practices
very well; what will his future be? What will he become after his death?'
Then the Buddha said, 'Do not ask me.' But Punna asked again and again.
The third time the Buddha said, 'I told you not to ask me, but I cannot
persuade you. So now I will tell you.' What the Buddha said was that if a
person practices the dog practice fully and unstintedly, if he develops the dog
mind fully and unstintedly, if he develops dog behaviour fully and unstintedly,
having done that, on the dissolution of the body after death, he reappears in
the company of dogs.' That means he will be reborn as a dog. 'But if his view
is such as this by this virtue, or this duty, or this asceticism, or holy life
I shall become a gret god or some lesser god, this is wrong view in this case.
Now there are two destinations for one with wrong view I say hell or the animal
world.'
'Punna if his dog practice is perfected, it will
lead him to the company of dogs. If it is not, it will lead him to hell.' So
there are only two destinations if it is perfected he will become a dog. If it
is not perfected he will go to hell.
When this was said Senneya cried. Then Senneya asked about Punna this
same question. Buddha gave the same answer because Punna was a follower of the
ox practice. Later on they asked
the Buddha to teach them. The Buddha taught them the four kinds of Kamma. At
the end of that teaching they both became disciples of the Buddha. Punna became
a follower of the Buddha. Senneya asked to be admitted to the Order. Buddha
admitted him into the Order. Later on he practiced meditation and became an
Arahant.
There were such people in the time of the Buddha. We are not sure
whether or not there are such people nowadays. This is the third of the
clingings, rite and ritual clinging or whatever you want to call it.
The fourth one is soul-theory clinging. ccording to the teachings of the
Buddha everything is Anatta, no-soul. Some people think there is something like
a soul, a permanent entity, an everlasting element in our bodies or in our
lives. They may think that it is a sul that does something. It is a soul that
experiences something. It is a soul that is the owner of this body. This soul
abides in the body always. Such opinions are called false view in the teachings
of the Buddha. When this false view becomes very strong, it becomes a clinging
or grasping.
These are the four clingings or graspings conditioned by craving. Every
type of wrong view is always accompanied by attachment. You have some
attachment to something and then you have wrong view about it. Wrong view is
always accompanied by attachment. If you know Abhidhamma you will understand it
more clearly. Among the eight types of consciousness accompanied by Lobha there
are four accompanied by wrong view or Ditthi. Whatever consciousness is
accompanied by Ditthi is also accompanied by Lobha as well.
Because there is some kind of attachment - attachment to the view
itself, or attachment to ourselves, attachment to an imagined everlasting thing
- there arises the view that there is a soul. This wrong view is conditioned by
attachment.
Among these four types of clingings the first one is attachment or
Lobha. The other three are just wrong view, wrong view in different aspects. In
reality there are only two clingings - attachment (Lobha) and wrong view
(Ditthi). These two or four are conditioned by craving.
How are craving and clinging related? In what way are they related? How
are they related according to the Doctrine or Patthàna? If you know Abhidhamma
you know that not so strong craving cannot arise at the same time as strong
craving. Craving and the first clinging cannot arise at the same time. They
must belong to different times. Since they belong to different times, they are
related by way of decisive support and not by way of conascence and so on. It
may not be understandable for many people.
What about the other three? The other three are wrong view. They can
arise simultaneously with craving. Therefore they are related by way of arising
together, by way of reciprocity, by way of being yoked together and so on. The
relationship between craving and the first Upàdàna is by way of decisive
support. There are many modes of relationship between craving and the other
three Upàdànas, like conascence, reciprocity, existence and so on.
These are the four kinds of clinging which spring from or are
conditioned by the different kinds of craving. There are six kinds of craving -
craving for visible object, craving for sounds and so on. When there is
craving, there is this clinging. Once we have reached this moment of craving,
we cannot just stop there. It will go over to clinging. And when there is
clinging, then there will be becoming, birth and so on. They will be the
subject for tomorrow.
Today what we learned is the eighth link, the link between craving and
clinging. Conditioned by craving clinging arises. There are four kinds of
clinging. Craving is related to clinging by way of decisive support, by way of
conascence and so on.
In this Doctrine of Paticca Samuppàda not every factor is the productive
cause of the other factor. Sometimes it is the productive cause and sometimes
it is just the support. Two factors arise together and support each other. This
is also explained in this doctrine of elating to each other. So do not expect
to explain that A causes B, B causes C, C causes D. Sometimes A may be the cause
of B, but B may not be the cause of C. B and C may arise together and support
each other. One is called condition and the other is called conditioned.
In this Doctrine of Paticca Samuppàda it is necessary to understand
these relationships between one factor and another. It is only through this
Doctrine of Patthàna, the doctrine of 24 modes of relationship, that we can
understand fully the meaning of Dependent Origination.
This explanation of Dependent Origination in reference to Patthàna is
not touched upon by many writers. You may find very few writings on Paticca
Samuppàda with reference to Patthàna. The source for this information is this
book, The Path of Purification, the chapter on Paticca Samuppàda. It is also
explained in the Buddhist Dictionary by Venerable Ñànatiloka. Those are the
only two books I know of where Paticca Samuppàda is explained with reference to
Patthàna.
Tomorrow we will go over Bhava or becoming. Thank you.
Sàdhu!
Sàdhu! Sàdhu!