GLOSSARY
ANATTA, not-self,
the fact that all things, without exception and including nibbana, are not-self
and lack any essence or
substance that could properly be regarded as a
"self." This fact does not deny the existence of things, but denies that they
can be
owned or controlled, that they can be the owner or controller, in any
but a relative, conventional sense.
ANICCA, impermanent (or aniccata,
impermanence), flux, instability. Conditioned things are ever-changing,
constantly arising,
manifesting, and ceasing. This is the first fundamental
characteristic of conditioned things.
ANUSAYA, tendencies: familiarity
with defilement. When a defilement occurs, it makes the later occurrence of a
similar
defilement more likely. The more these tendencies build up, the more
we react to experiences in defiled ways. Sometimes the
pressure is strong
enough for something to escape even without some external cause (excuse), that
something is called a
"nivarana."
ARAHANT, Worthy One, one far from
defilement, one who has broken the wheel of birth and death, one without
secrets: the
mind totally and finally free of greed, anger, and delusion;
void of "I" and "mine"; which has ended kamma; which is unaffected by
dukkha.
The Arahant should not be regarded as a "person" or
"individual."
ARIYASACCA, noble truth: truth which frees one from all
enemies (ari), namely, defilements and dukkha. Usually expressed in
the
fourfold formula: the fact that dukkha exists; the truth that there is an origin
of dukkha, namely, tanha (desire); the truth of the
quenching of dukkha, by
quenching desire; and the truth of the practice leading to the quenching of
dukkha. Although the
traditional formula is fourfold, "Truth is but One,
there is no second."
ATTA, self, ego, soul, (Sanskrit, atman): the
instinctual feeling (and illusion) that there is some "I" who does all the
things to be
done in life. Through ignorance and wrong understanding this
instinctual sensibility is attached to and becomes "ego." No
personal,
independent, self-existing, free-willing, lasting substance or
essence can be found anywhere, whether within or without human life
and
experience, not even in "God." (Cf. anatta, idappaccayata, and
sunnata.)
AVIJJA, ignorance, not-knowing, wrong knowledge: the lack,
partial or total, of vijja (correct knowledge) regarding the things that
need
to be known (e.g., the four noble truths, sunnata, tathata), as well as knowing
things in the wrong way, i.e., as permanent,
satisfying, and self. The most
original cause of all dukkha. Without Dhamma practice, ignorance grows into
increasingly wrong
knowledge.
ANAPANASATI, mindfulness with breathing
in and out: the only meditation or vipassana system practiced and taught by
the
Buddha, it covers all four foundations of mindfulness and perfects the
seven factors of awakening, leading to liberation. Ajarn
Buddhadasa considers
it the best way to realize sunnata.
CITTA, mind, heart, consciousness,
mind-heart: that which thinks, knows, and experiences. In a more limited sense,
citta is what
"thinks," can be defiled by kilesa, can be developed, and can
realize nibbana. Although we cannot know citta directly, it is where
all
Dhamma practice occurs.
DHAMMA, thing, nature, natural thing: all
things, mental and physical, conditioned and unconditioned, are
dhammas.
DHAMMA, Truth, Nature, Law, Natural Truth, Duty, Order, "the way
things are": this impossible to translate word has many
meanings, the most
important of which are Nature, the Law of Nature, our Duty according to Natural
Law, and the Fruits of doing
that Duty correctly according to Natural Law.
(See paticca-samuppada.)
DUKKHA, pain, hurt, ill-being, suffering,
misery, (or dukkhata, unsatisfactoriness, imperfection): the spiritual dilemma
of human
beings. Etymologically, dukkha can be translated "hard to endure,
difficult to bear"; "once seen, it is ugly"; and "horribly, wickedly
void."
In its experiential sense, dukkha is the quality of experience that results when
the mind is concocted by avijja into desire,
attachment, egoism, and
selfishness. This feeling takes on many forms -- from the crudest to the most
subtle levels -- such as
disappointment, dissatisfaction, frustration,
agitation, anguish, dis-ease, despair. In its universal sense, dukkhata is the
inherent
condition of unsatisfactoriness, imperfection, and misery in all
impermanent, conditioned things (sankhara). To fully understand the
meaning
of dukkha, one must realize that sukha (happiness, bliss) is also dukkha.
Nibbana (i.e. sunnata) is the only thing which is
not
dukkhata.
KHANDA, aggregates, groups: the five subsystems or basic
functions which constitute the human being. These groups are not
entities in
themselves, they are merely categories into which all aspects of our lives can
be analyzed. None of them are "self," "of
self," "in self," or "my self";
they have nothing to do with "selfhood" and there is no "self" apart from them.
When they attach or are
attached to the five are known as the
"upadana-khandha" (aggregates of attachment). The five are:
-rupa-khandha,
form-aggregate, particularly the body, its nervous system, and
sense objects (the world); -vedana-khandha,
feeling-aggregate;
-sanna-khandha, recognition-aggregate, the discrimination,
labelling, and evaluation of sense experience;
-sankhara-khandha,
thought-aggregate, thought processes and
emotions,including volition, desire, attachment, and "birth";
-vinnana-khandha,
consciousness-aggregate, the bare knowing of a sense
object, the most primitive function of mind through which physical
sense
stimulation becomes conscious (although often without
awareness).
KARUNA, compassion: wanting to help due to awareness and
understanding of dukkha, both one's own and that of others.
KILESA,
defilements, impurities: the harmful thoughts and emotions which tarnish, dirty,
and pollute the mind. Merely passing
clouds obscuring the sun's light. The
three primary categories of kilesa are greed, hatred, and
delusion.
MANUSAYA, human being, high-minded being: a mind above the ebb
and flow of worldly conditions.
NIBBANA, coolness, quenching: the
Absolute, the Supreme, the Ultimate Reality in Buddhism; the "goal" of Buddhist
practice and
highest potential of humanity. Nibbana manifests when the fires
of defilement, attachment, selfishness, and dukkha are cooled.
When they are
permanently cooled, nibbana manifests perfectly, totally, timelessly. Not a
place, for nibbana is beyond existence
and non-existence, not even a state of
mind, for nibbana is neither mental nor physical, but a dhamma the mind can
realize and
experience. To be realized in this life.
NIVARANA,
hindrances, obstacles: disturbing moods and mental qualities which interfere
with the mind's task, whether worldly
or spiritual. Half-strength
defilements, they arise from the tendencies toward defilement built up through
carelessness and need not
be triggered by outside objects. To overcome them,
correct samadhi is needed. The traditional list of five are sensual
desire,
aversion, sloth and torpor, restlessness and distraction, and
doubt.
PANNA, wisdom, insight, intuitive understanding: correct seeing,
knowing, understanding, experiencing of the things we must
know in order to
quench dukkha, namely, the four noble truths, the three characteristics,
dependent origination, and voidness. The
various terms used for "knowing" are
not meant to express an intellectual activity, although the intellect has its
role. The emphasis
is on direct, intuitive, non-conceptual comprehending of
life as it is here and now. Memory, language, and thought are not
required.
Panna, rather than faith or will power, is the characteristic
quality of Buddhism.
PATICCA-SAMUPPADA, interdependent origination,
co-conditioned arising: the profound and detailed causal process or flow,
and
its description, which concocts dukkha. Due to ignorance, there arises,
dependent on sense organ and sense object,
consciousness (vinnana). These
three things working together are contact (phassa). Upon this ignorant contact
there arises feeling
(vedana), desire (tanha), attachment (upadana), becoming
(bhava), birth (jati), decay and death (jaramarana), and all the forms
of
dukkha.
PHASSA, the meeting and working together of sense organ,
sense object, and sense consciousness (vinnana). When a sensual
stimulus
makes enough of an impact upon the mind -- that is, has "meaning" -- to draw a
response, either ignorant or wise,
beginning with vedana.
SAMPAJANNA,
wisdom-in-action, functional wisdom, ready comprehension, clear comprehension.
While panna (wisdom) is
developed, or "stored up," through introspection and
insight, sampajanna is the immediate and specific application of wisdom to,
and
into, a particular situation or experience. While panna understands that
"everything is void," sampajanna understands that "this is
void." All
understanding relies on mindfulness for its appearance, recall, and
application.
SAMADHI, concentration, collectedness: secure establishment
of the mind, the gathering together of the mental flow. Proper
samadhi has
the qualities of purity, clarity, stability, calmness, readiness, and
gentleness. It is perfected in one-pointedness
(ekaggata). The supreme
samadhi is the one-pointed mind (ekaggata-citta) which has nibbana as its sole
concern. In a broader
sense, samadhi can be translated "meditation," meaning
development of the mind through the power of samadhi.
SANKHARA,
concoction, compound, conditioned thing; concocting, compounding, conditioning.
As a verb, sankhara is the endless
activity of concocting and change in which
new things arise, manifest, and cease. As a noun, sankhara are impermanent,
created
things acting both as the products of the concocting and the causes
of ever new concoctions.
SANNA, recognition, classification, evaluation,
perception: once the mind has made contact (phassa) with a sense object and
then
feels it (vedana), a concept, label or image is attached to the
experience, which involves recognizing similarities with past
experience and
discriminating the value of the object.
SATI, mindfulness, attention,
awareness, recall, recollection: the mind's ability to know and observe itself.
Sati is the vehicle and
transport mechanism for panna, without sati wisdom
cannot be developed, retrieved, or applied. Sati is not memory
or
remembering, although related to them. Nor is it mere heedfulness or
carefulness. Sati allows us to be aware of what we are
about to do. It is
characterized by speed and agility.
SATI-PANNA, mindfulness and wisdom:
sati and panna must work together. Panna depends on sati. It arises through
mindfulness
of life's experiences and is applied to present experience
through mindfulness. Yet, without sufficient wisdom, mindfulness would
be
misused.
TATHATA, thusness, suchness, just-like-that-ness: neither this
nor that, the reality of non-duality. Things are just as they are (void
and
dependently originated) regardless of our perceptions, likes and dislikes,
suppositions and beliefs, hopes and memories.
TILAKKHANA, three
characteristics, three marks of existence: inherent features of all conditioned
things, namely, the facts of
impermanence (aniccata), dukkha-ness (dukkhata),
and not-self (anattata).
UPADANA, attachment, clinging, grasping: to hold
onto something foolishly, to regard things as "I" and "mine," to take
things
personally. Not the things attached to, but the lustful-satisfaction
(chandaraga) regarding them. The Buddha distinguished four
kinds of upadana:
attachment to sensuality, to views, to precepts and practices, and to words
concerning self. (To hold something
wisely is samadana.)
VEDANA,
feeling: the mental reaction to or coloring of sense experience (phassa).
Feeling comes in three forms: pleasant or
agreeable (sukhavedana), unpleasant
or painful (dukkhavedana), and indeterminate,
neither-unpleasant-nor-pleasant
(adukkhamasukhavedana). Vedana is a mental
actor. Sometimes, however, a more loose sense of the term is used
regarding
physical sensations. This primitive activity of mind is not
emotion, which is far more complex and involves thought, or the
more
complicated aspects of the English "feeling."
VINNANA,
consciousness: knowing sense objects through the six doors (eyes, ears, etc.).
The most basic mental activity required
for participation in the sensual
world (loka), without it there is no experience.
VITAKKA, thought
conception, thinking.
Updated 16 November 1998 © by
Evolution/Liberation.
http://www.suanmokkh.org/