Introduction
The
following discourse is based on a collection of lectures on the Anattā doctrine
given by Sayadaw U Silananda. Anattā is a Pali word consisting of a negative
prefix, ‘an’ meaning not, plus atta, soul, and is most literally translated as
no-soul. The word atta, however has a wide range of meanings, and some of those
meanings cross over into the fields of psychology philosophy and everyday
terminology as, for example, when atta can mean self, being, ego, and
personality.
Therefore,
in this preface, we will examine and elucidate the wide range of meanings which
atta can signify in order to determine exactly what the Buddha denied when He
proclaimed that He teaches Anattā, that is, when He denied the existence of
atta. We will examine both Buddhist and non-Buddhist definitions of the term
soul, and we will also examine modern definitions of terms such as ego and
self.
Most
writers in the field of religion, when writing about soul or Anattā
specifically uses the terms self, ego, being and soul interchangeably, while
psychologists define those terms as totally different entities. If we define
atta as including the terms self ego, personality, and being, we may make the
mistake of claiming that Buddha denied the phenomena of individual differences,
individual personalities, individual kamma and other features of individuality
in people.
But
if we say that Buddha denied only the theological entity of a soul, while
leaving intact a psychological entity such as an ego or self, then we are also
mistaken. The resolution of this dilemma lies in the fact that we must deal
with two levels of reality simultaneously, the ultimate level and the
conventional level.
In
the absolute sense, the Anattā doctrine denies any and all psychological
entities or agents inside the person. In the absolute sense, all phenomena,
including what is called a person, are composed of elements, forces, and a
stream of successive states.
The
Buddha organized these phenomena into conceptual groups, known as khandhas
(aggregates), and they are: (1) material processes, also known as bodily form,
corporeality or matter; (2) feeling; (3) perception; (4) mental formations; and
(S) consciousness. Most important ý when all mental and physical phenomena are
analyzed into those elements, no residual entity, such as a soul, self, or ego,
can be found. In short, there are actions executed by these groups, but no
actor The workings of these groups of forces and elements appear to us as an
ego or personality but in reality the ego or self or agent of the actions has
only an illusory existence.
However
on the conventional level, the workings of these forces, elements, and states
are organized by causal laws, and, although they in no way constitute any
extra-phenomenal self or soul, they do produce a human individual, a person -
if we want to call a certain combination of material and mental processes a
person.
This
complex combination of material and mental processes is dependent entirely on
previous processes, especially the continuity of kamma, which is the process of
ethical volitions and the results of those volitions. Thus individual
differences are accounted for even though the self or ego or personality is, in
the ultimate sense, denied.
An
individual may be an angry, hot-tempered person, for example, because in the
past he or she has performed actions, which leave conditions for traits, which
are kamma results, to arise in the present. But this happens because kamma
leaves a potential for those traits of anger and ill will to arise, not because
any kind of self of the person is continuing. Actually the human individual
does not remain the same for two consecutive moments; everything is a
succession of forces and elements, and there is nothing substantial.
Therefore,
on the conventional level, we may say that individual differences have an
illusory existence. Common everyday conceptions, such as ego, self, and
personality seem to be very real, obvious, and well-defined by psychologists
and laymen alike, but they are, on the absolute level and in the eyes of those
who have achieved enlightenment, illusory.
Another
way to approach Buddhist psychology is to examine the very complex and
technical psychological system known as Abhidhamma. The Abhidhamma is, in the
words of Narada Maha Thera, "a psychology without a psyche. Abhidhamma
teaches that ultimate reality consists of four elementary constituents.
One,
Nibbāna (in Sanskrit, Nirvana) is unconditioned, and the other three, citta,
cetasika, and rupa - consciousness, mental factors, and matter respectively -
are conditioned. These elementary constituents, called Dhammas, alone possess
ultimate reality. The familiar world of objects and persons, and the interior
world of ego and self are only conceptual constructs created by the mind out of
the elemental Dhammas.
Abhidhamma
thus restricts itself to terms that are valid from the standpoint of ultimate
realities: it describes reality in terms of ultimate truth. Thus it describes
Dhammas, their characteristics, their functions, and their relations. All
conceptual entities such as self or being or person, are resolved into their
ultimate, into bare mental and material phenomena, which are impermanent,
conditioned, dependently arisen, and empty of any abiding self or substance.
Consciousness,
for example, which seems like one continual flow, is described as a succession
of discrete evanescent mental events, the cittas, and a complex set of mental
factors, the cetasikas, which perform more specialized tasks in the act of
consciousness. There is no self, soul, or any kind of agent inside a person
involved in this process.
Now
let us examine some of the terms related to atta that we find in various
sources. The definition of Soul, Spirit given in the Abingdon Dictionary of
Living Religions is as follows: "That which gives life to any animate
thing; or the inner essential, or non-corporeal part or dimension of any
animate thing; or a non-corporeal but animate substance or entity; or a
non-corporeal but individuated personal being."
Another
definition of soul comes from Richard Kennedy in The international Dictionary
of Religion: "Many religions teach that man is composed of a physical
body, which does not survive death, and an eternal, invisible core which is the
true self or soul.
Donald
Watson, in A Dictionary of Mind and Spirit, writes, in the entry Soul/:
"It goes by many names: jiva (Jain), Atman (Hindu), Monad, Ego, Self,
Higher Self, Over-self, elusive self, psyche, or even Mind." In these
non-Buddhist definitions of soul, we see many terms inter-changed, such as
core, ego, and essence. Sayadaw U Silananda will elaborate on these meanings in
his lectures.
Two
Buddhist definitions of atta are here given. The first is from Nyanatiloka’s
Buddhist Dictionary. "...Anything that in the ultimate sense could be
regarded as a self existing, real ego-entity soul or any other abiding
substance. " In The Truth of Anattā, Dc G.P Malalasekera states that atta
is "self, as a subtle metaphysical entity soul."’ These definitions
also cover a wide range of meanings of the term atta and of the usual
translations of atra as soul and self.
The
above definitions of atta, soul, sometimes cross over into the realm of
psychology when the authors define soul as self, ego, psyche or mind. Did the
Buddha deny that such conceptions as ego and self are real when He proclaimed
the Anattā doctrine? Once again, the answer depends on whether we are speaking
of absolute or conventional reality. But first we will examine some definitions
from psychology to see what was actually denied both implicitly and explicitly
by the Anattā doctrine.
According
to the Dictionary of Psychology self is: "(1) the individual as a
conscious being. (2) The ego or I. (3) the personality or organization of
traits." The definition of ego is "the self, particularly the
individual’s conception of himself." Personality is defined as "the
dynamic organization within the individual of those psycho physical systems
that determine his characteristic behavior and thought."
Another
definition of personality is "that which permits a prediction of what a
person will do in a given situation."" These psychological terms
correspond to some of the terms used in Buddhism to deal with the conventional
life of sentient beings. They have a useful purpose as labels, but in the
ultimate sense, these labels are, as we shall see, mere designations, which
have only an illusory reality,
In
Pali, we have the terms satta, puggala, jiva and atta to describe the
conventional psychology of beings. Satta, according to Nyanatiloka, means,
"living being." Puggala means "individual, person, as well as
the synonyms: personality individuality being (satta), self (atta). Tiva is
"life, vital principle, individual soul."
Some
uses of atta also fall within the realm of psychology Atta can mean, according
to Dr. Malalasekera, "one’s self or one’s own, e.g. attahitaya patipanno
no parahitaya (acting in one’s own interest, not in the interest of others) or
attana va akatam sadhu (what is done by one’s own self is good)."
Atta
can also mean "one’s own person, the personality including body and mind,
e.g. in atrabhava (life), attapatilabha (birth in some form of life)."
Pali
has some terms, which correspond to the psychological notions of traits. For
example, the concept of nature or character is called carita. Using this term,
we can speak of different types of persons. For example. we may describe a
person as raga-carita (greedy-natured), dosa-carica (hateful-natured),
moha-carita (dull-natured), saddha-carita (faithful-natured), buddhi-carita
(intelligent-natured), and vitakka-carita (ruminating-natured) - six types
altogether Different people are at different stages of development, according
to their kamma. Buddhism does not deny that such conceptions of individuality
have validity but they have validity only in the conventional sense.
Dr
Malalasekera writes: "Buddhism has no objection to the use of the words
atta, or satta, or puggala to indicate the individual as a whole, or to
distinguish one person from another where such distinction is necessary,
especially as regards such things as memory and kamma which are private and
personal and where it is necessary to recognize the existence of separate lines
of continuity (santana).
But,
even so, these terms should be treated only as labels, binding-conceptions and
conventions in language, assisting economy in thought and word and nothing
more. Even the Buddha uses them sometimes: ‘these are worldly usages worldly
terms of communication, worldly descriptions, by which a Tathāgata communicates
without misapprehending them".
Nyanatiloka
adds to this idea when writing about the term satta: "This term, just like
atta, puggala, jiva and all other terms denoting ‘ego-entity,’ is to be
considered as a merely conventional term (vohara-vacana), not possessing any
reality value.
All
of the various conceptions of psychology and religion regarding a self or soul
of any kind were indeed denied existence in the ultimate sense by the Buddha.
But we may use terms such as self and ego to describe a particular arrangement
of the five khandhas (aggregates), which give the illusory appearance of an
individual. As Sister Vajira, an Arahant at the time of the Buddha, said:
When
all constituent parts are there,
the designation ‘cart’ is used;
just so, where the five groups exist,
of ‘living being’ do we speak.
Impermanence, Suffering and No-Soul
"Mere suffering exists, no sufferer is found;
The deed is, but no doer of the deed is there;
Nibbāna is, but not the man who enters it;
The path is, but no traveler on it is seen."
Direct Experience of Anattā
Analysis of the Discourse on the Characteristic of No-Soul
Understanding Anattā
2 feelings;
3 perceptions;
4 metal formations; and
5 consciousness.
The four primary elements and corporeality depending thereon....
There are six classes of feeling: due to visual impression, to sound
impression, to odor impression, to taste impression, to bodily impression, and
to mind impression....
There are six classes of perception: perception of visual objects, of sounds,
of odors, of tastes, of bodily impressions, and of mental impressions....
There are six classes of volitional states: with regard to visual objects, to
sounds, to odors, to tastes, to bodily impressions, and to mind objects....
There are six classes of consciousness: eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness.
nose-consciousness, tongue-consciousness. body-consciousness, and
mind-consciousness."
Misunderstanding Anattā
Questions and Answers
Q: When you feel pain, you think that it is more permanent than thought. It
is not permanent, but it does seem to be continuous.
Yes, it seems to be continuous and to last for a long time, but actually the
pain arises and disappears at every moment. Because we cannot see it arising
every moment, we think that it is one solid thing. But when you practice
meditation and keep noticing the pain, you will get concentration, and then you
will come to see that there are gaps in that pain.
Anattalakkhana Sutta
Thus have I heard: The Exalted One was at one time residing at Benares in the
Deer Park at Isipatana. There the Exalted One addressed the group of five monks
saying: "Monks," and they replied to Him, "Venerable Sir"
"Impermanent, Venerable Sir."
"Unsatisfactory Venerable Sir"
"No, Venerable Sir"
"Impermanent, Venerable Sir"
"Unsatisfactory, Venerable Sir"
"No, Venerable Sir"
"Impermanent, Venerable Sir."
"Unsatisfactory Venerable Sir "
"No, Venerable Sir"
"Impermanent, Venerable Sir "
"Unsatisfactory, Venerable Sir."
"No, Venerable Sir."
"Impermanent, Venerable Sir "
"Unsatisfactory, Venerable Sir"
"No, Venerable Sir."
In
conclusion, the Sayadaw U Silananda has given us lectures on the Anattā
doctrine in which he uses terms such as soul and self interchangeably. This is
because the doctrine of Anattā was taught by the Buddha from the point of view
of the Fully Enlightened One, a view which saw that all things are Anattā. It
is with this wisdom that the lectures are given.
The
doctrine of Anattā is very important to Buddhists. No realization of Truth can
occur without the knowledge of the Anattā (no-soul) nature of things. To
realize Truth, one must practice meditation, and during meditation, the
knowledge of Anattā must arise. One needs the knowledge of anicca, dukkha, and Anattā,
that is, the knowledge of impermanence, of suffering, and of the no-soul nature
of things. Until one experiences these characteristics in meditation, not just
intellectually, but directly, one cannot make progress. Vipassana (Insight)
meditation deals directly with these characteristics.
These
characteristics run through all stages of vipassana. I will discuss Vipassana
later, but first we must explain what conceals the three characteristics from
perception during meditation.
Impermanence
is concealed by continuity If one looks at a candle flame, one may think that
it is the same flame from moment to moment. Actually, the flame is constantly
disappearing and arising again every second. We have the illusion of one flame
because of the idea and appearance of continuity.
The
nature of suffering is concealed by changing into different postures. When we
are sitting and feel some pain, we change posture and the pain goes away.
Actually we are changing postures constantly at every moment of our lives, but
this is not apparent to us. The moment a tiny unpleasant sensation is felt, we
change postures. The characteristic of no-soul is concealed by the perception
that things are compact and solid. We look at things and at ourselves as solid,
compact things. Until we can break through the false perception that we are
compact, we will not see the no-soul nature of things.
That
is why there are meditational practices in which the four elements, earth,
water, fire, and air are contemplated. Actually the primary Qualities of those
elements are contemplated: earth is characterized by hardness or softness,
water by fluidity or cohesion, fire by heat, and air by extending or
supporting. If we can have the insight into phenomena as being composed of
elements and their characteristics, then the idea of compactness will be
weakened.
We
think that we are substantial, but if we have insight into our real nature, the
nature of being composed of nama and rupa, or more precisely of elements and
forces mutually dependent and interacting with each other then the idea of a
coherent, abiding, substantial self is weakened, and nothing we can call a self
is found.
The
Anattā doctrine is of primary importance to a Buddhist. In fact, Anattā can
only be understood when there is a Buddha or a Buddha’s teaching in the world.
No one but a Buddha can penetrate into the Anattā nature of things because only
through Vipassana meditation, discovered by Buddha, can insight into Anattā be
realized. Even though great and profound thinkers are around, they still cannot
penetrate into Anattā, and other kinds of meditation, such as Samatha
(Tranquility), may give you psychic powers or higher states of consciousness,
but they cannot lead you to the insight into Anattā.
As
I mentioned earlier, the belief in a soul was described by the Buddha as a
major cause of suffering. The belief in atta of any kind, whether belief in a
personal ego or in a spiritual self, is the cause of all dukkhas in this rounds
of rebirth; the belief in atta is the root of greed, hatred, and delusion.
Atheists may not believe in a spiritual soul, but they serve the desires of
their personal ego and thus may commit deeds of greed, hatred, and delusion.
The idea of atta is very hard to conquer but still we must try because
realization of Anattā is the way to deliverance, while the persistence of the
idea of atta is a major cause of misery.
One
cannot over-emphasize the importance of Anattā, as Nyanatiloka explains:
"Whosoever
has not penetrated this impersonality of all existence, and does not comprehend
that in reality there exists only this continually self consuming process of
arising and passing bodily and mental phenomena, and that there is no separate
ego-entity within or without this process, he will not be able to understand
Buddhism, i.e., the teaching of the Four Noble Truths... in the right light.
He
will think that it is his ego, his personality, that experiences suffering, his
personality that performs good and evil actions and will be reborn according to
these actions, his personality that will enter Nibbāna, his personality that
walks on the Eightfold Path."
The
words of Nyanatiloka bring up a very important point often asked about Nibbāna:
In the absence of a soul, who or what is it that enters Nibbāna? This is a
difficult subject. From what has been said so far in this lecture, we can
certainly say that there is no atta or self, which realizes Nibbāna What,
realizes Nibbāna is insight-wisdom, Vipassana-paññā. It is not the property of
a personal or universal self, but is rather a power developed ‘ through
meditative penetration of phenomena.
Yet
another even more difficult Question is: What happens to a Tathāgata (here in
the sense of one who has realized Nibbāna) after death? Once again, Buddha gave
his answer without recourse to any kind of spiritual entity such as atta.
Buddha essentially replied that no words could possibly describe what happens
to a Tathāgata after death: "A Tathāgata released from what is called body
etc., is profound, immeasurable, hard to fathom, like the great ocean.
It
does not fit the case to say that he is reborn or not reborn, or reborn and not
reborn, or neither reborn nor not reborn." Then He goes on to say, after
being Questioned further: "Profound is this doctrine, hard to see, hard to
comprehend, calm, excellent, beyond the sphere of reasoning, subtle,
intelligible only to the wise.
Thus
Nibbāna, the Absolute Noble Truth, the extinction of all continuity and
becoming, the "Unborn, Un-originated, Uncreated, Unformed". Reality
is affirmed without reference to atta. Likewise, the Arahant who realizes Nibbāna
does so by means of a flash of insight, which destroys forever all illusions of
the existence of atta. I will conclude with some well-written words from
Nyanatiloka:
One
cannot too often and too emphatically stress the fact that not only for the
actual realization of the goal of Nibbāna, but also for a theoretical
understanding of it, it is an indispensable preliminary condition to grasp
fully the truth of Anattā, the ego-less-ness and insubstantiality of all forms
of existence. Without such an understanding, one will necessarily misconceive
Nibbāna - according to one’s either materialistic or metaphysical leanings -
either as annihilation of an ego, or an eternal state of existence into which
an ego or self enters or with which it merges. Hence it is said:
The
Anattā doctrine is extremely difficult to comprehend. One can speculate or
ponder about it - that is one kind of knowledge, acquired by listening to a
lecture or by reading. One may also ponder over it more deeply in
contemplation. But one can only really penetrate into it during vipassana
meditation.
When
yogis practice, they keep themselves aware of everything. When they see
something, there are two things: the mind which sees and the object seen, apart
from these, there is nothing. More specifically, seeing is a process, which
depends on four things: the eye, the visible object, light, and attention to
the object. If one of these conditions is lacking, no seeing occurs. If one
does not have eyes, no atta can make one see. Only when all conditions are met
does seeing consciousness arise. No agent like atta is a part of this.
Likewise,
when yogis note themselves thinking during meditation, they note
"thinking, thinking, thinking," and they find only thinking and the
mind which notes it - they do not find a self or ego or atta. They do not find
that "I am thinking," unless they add this idea as an afterthought.
They really only find that thinking is occurring. In this process, yogis can
see the impermanence of mind and thought: one thought comes, then goes; another
thought comes and goes, and this goes on and on.
A
new thought comes every moment, arising and disappearing. They directly see the
impermanence of thought. They can also notice the impermanence of material
things, such as physical pain, by noting the arising and disappearing of the
pain in the body. They can see that all things are oppressed by rise and fall,
by arising and disappearing. This oppression of phenomena by arising and
disappearing is the characteristic of dukkha (suffering).
Unwisely,
we desire for things to be permanent, yet we realize that we have no power to
make impermanent things permanent; we realize that we have no control or
authority over things. No inner core, no atta, can be found in any observed
phenomena. Yogis can discover this Anattā nature of things in Vipassana
meditation, because gradually they bring awareness and concentration to a high
degree and then they have penetrative knowledge into the true nature of mind
and body.
Let
us now study in more detail the Sutra, which teaches the doctrine of Anattā,
known as the Anattalakkhana
Sutta, "The Discourse on the Characteristic of No-Soul." (Read
another version of this Sutta at the bottom of this text. BIONA ED.) This
was the second sermon of the Buddha.
At
the end of the first sermon, the Venerable Kondanna became a Sotāpanna (a
person at the first stage of enlightenment) and then, according to the
Commentaries, for example, the Commentary on Vinaya, the other four disciples
became Sotāpanna’s, one on each of the four following days. On the first
day after the full-moon day in July, the monk Vappa became a Sotāpanna; on the
second day, Bhaddiya; on the third day, Mahanama; and on the fourth day,
Assaji. After they became Sotāpanna’s, they all asked Buddha for ordination.
Buddha ordained each of them by calling to them, "Come monks." On the
fifth day after the full-moon day, the Buddha assembled them and preached to
them this discourse on no-soul.
This
discourse’ is even shorter than the first sermon on the Four Noble Truths. It
was delivered at the Deer Park at Benares. Buddha called the disciples by
saying, "Monks," and they replied, "Venerable Sir" and then
the Buddha started.
We
can divide the Sutta into five parts. In the first part, Buddha says that the
five aggregates are not atta, not self or soul. In the second section, Buddha
asks the monks if the five aggregates are permanent or impermanent, pleasurable
or painful, and then He arrives at the conclusion that the nature of the five
aggregates is Anattā. In the third section, Buddha teaches that the five
aggregates should not be taken as a soul or self or as belonging to one-self.
In the fourth section, Buddha explains briefly the progress of Vipassana
meditation.
The
last section records that all five monks had attained the stage of Arahant. By
the end of the Sutta, all five monks became Arahants, which is the highest
stage of enlightenment.
Buddha
says, "Bhikkhus, form is Anattā, (form is not soul or self. Were form
soul, then this form would not lead to affliction, and one could have it of
form: ‘Let my form be thus; let my form be not thus.’ And since form is not
soul, so it leads to affliction, and none can have it of form: ‘Let my form be
thus; let my form be not thus."’ Here the Pali word rupa is translated as
form. The word forms here used in the sense of material properties or
just matter.
The
reader may recall that the first of the five aggregates is form or corporeality
But form cannot be atta because it is subject to affliction. Atta (self or
soul) must have the meaning, which we discussed earlier: that of vasavattana,
something, which has the power and autonomy to change the nature of things. No
one likes pain and affliction in the body, but it cannot be changed. If form
were atta, people could abolish pain, disease, and ugliness by merely wishing.
But there is no core or director or soul inside or outside of people, which has
the power to accomplish such actions.
Buddha
considered the second aggregate and says: "Feeling is not soul. Were
feeling soul, then this feeling would not lead to affliction, and one could
have it of feeling: ‘Let my feeling be thus; let my feeling be not thus."’
Then Buddha takes the third, fourth, and fifth aggregates:
"Perception
is not soul... Mental formations are not soul.... Consciousness is not soul.
Were consciousness soul, then this consciousness would not lead to affliction,
and one could have it of consciousness: ‘Let my consciousness be thus; let my
consciousness be not thus."’ Consciousness cannot be atta because it is
not under our control. Consciousness is unavoidably subject to afflictions - to
sorrow, depression, and frustration. We cannot avoid being conscious of ugly
sights, sounds, and sensations in the world, although we would like to arrange
coming into contact with pleasant sensual objects only.
Likewise,
in meditation, we would like to be conscious only of the meditation object, and
we would like to achieve stillness of mind and concentration, but this is not
easy, and we cannot will it. If consciousness were atta, we could will our
consciousness to be still and concentrated, and then we could proceed to the
higher states of mind - perhaps it would only take one day to advance to the
higher stages of meditation!
But
in all cases, consciousness arises completely determined by circumstances and
conditions, conditions that are not under our control. Therefore, consciousness
cannot be atta. In the second section of the Sutta, Buddha asks the monks some
Questions, which they answer. Buddha says: "Bhikkhus, how do you conceive
it: Is form permanent or impermanent!" Since they were already sotāpanna’s,
they had already seen that the five aggregates are impermanent, suffering, and
no-soul, so they answered, "Impermanent, Venerable Sir." Now Buddha
asks, "Is what is impermanent, painful, and subject to change fit to be
regarded thus:
‘This
is mine. This is I. This is my soul?"’ They answered, "No, Venerable
Sir" Form is impermanent because it disappears. It comes into being and
then vanishes. It has a beginning and an end. The monks had already realized by
means of Vipassana knowledge that form is impermanent. They had already seen
the three marks of impermanence, which are the three phases of existence:
arising, continuation, and dissolution.
Another
way to state this process is to call it non-existence after having been in
existence, in Pali - hutva abhavato. Buddha then proceeds to explain that
whatever is impermanent is also painful. The mark of pain (dukkha) is constant
oppression by rise and fall, by arising and dissolution. This can be seen
during meditation, when yogis take thoughts as objects and look at them
closely. They see that the moment a thought is observed as an object, it
disappears, and another thought takes its place.
As
meditators observe very closely with concentration, they see all objects in the
mind arising and disappearing constantly, and this is seen as a kind of
oppression by arising and disappearing. Phenomena are called oppressed by rise
and fall because nothing is ever at peace; everything is menaced by an endless
flux. In this sense, whatever is impermanent is dukkha.
Dukkha
means more than just painful. Dukkha also comes from our desire for
permanence. Dukkha means difficult to bear mentally and physically, and thus we
call the impermanence of all phenomena dukkha (suffering).
In
the third part of Buddha’s Questioning, He asks, "Is that which is
impermanent and painful fit to be called ‘mine, I, my self or soul?""
Buddha is here leading the monks to the discovery of Anattā. Is something that
is disappearing fit to be called atta? No. From anicca (impermanence) to dukkha
(suffering, and finally to Anattā (no-soul) the monks are led.
Let
us review again the processes, which hide impermanence, suffering, and no-soul.
We, as unenlightened people, fail to see impermanence because we do not see the
arising and disappearing of things. We are tricked by continuity, which hides
the nature of impermanence. We look at things or at consciousness and see them
as continuous.
In
order to see impermanence, we must observe closely the arising and disappearing
of phenomena. We must penetrate, by means of concentration and insight
developed in meditation, through the impression of continuity, which acts as a
cover of impermanence. Let us think of a ring of fire. Someone has a
torch and twirls it to create an impression of a circle of fire. But we know
that there is really no ring of fire; it is just the impressions of individual
positions of the fire at different places and at different times. But our mind
takes the impressions as something continuous; rather, our mind connects the
impressions and we deceive ourselves.
If
we could take a moving picture of the process and watch it at a slow speed, we
would see the individual parts of the sequence of the apparent ring of fire. We
would only see light at different places and not a circle. If we cannot
pinpoint the components of things in order to see them arising and
disappearing, we will continue to see things as whole entities.
Let
us note here that impermanence in this context means momentary impermanence. If
we drop a cup, which breaks, we say that it is impermanent. Or if a person
dies, we say that the person is impermanent. These examples of impermanence are
easy to see.
But
when we use that term in the context of Vipassana meditation, we mean the
constant arising and disappearing of phenomena, and this can only be observed
during Vipassana meditation. Similarly by dukkha, we do not mean ordinary pain
or illness. We mean the constant oppression by arising and disappearing, and
this can also be seen only in Vipassana meditation, even in phenomena we call
pleasurable.
Please
recall that dukkha is concealed by postures; more specifically, there is always
dukkha in the body but we conceal that pain by changing postures. That is
why we instruct meditators to sit very still while they are meditating. If
yogis avoid changing postures often, they will achieve mindfulness and
concentration, and they will observe the nature of dukkha directly. Anattā,
the no-soul nature of all things, is concealed by compactness. We usually see
things as solid and compact. We have to train our minds through Vipassana
meditation to look at and analyze that compactness more closely.
Just
as a scientist uses a microscope to look at things in a laboratory so yogis
must use concentration in Vipassana meditation to penetrate into the
unsubstantial, Anattā nature of things. We must try to see through the
apparently solid mass of mental and physical phenomena.
Regarding
material things, we try to analyze and observe them as earth, water fire, air
and other material properties. Regarding mental phenomena, we try to see that,
for example, one phenomena is contact, another feeling, and another perception,
although these may have been experienced very rapidly as only one mental event.
Both mental and physical phenomena are composed of only elements and forces,
and thus have the nature of being Anattā (unsubstantial). That is why we must
try to observe everything very slowly in meditation in order to see that
phenomena are not held together with a core, an atta.
For
example, all mental states and material properties have their own functions.
Contact has one function, feeling another, and perception still another. If we
see these mental phenomena as one connected whole, we fail to see them as parts
with specific functions, and we fail to see them as void of a central core,
atta.
These
mental states actually have different ways of taking objects and responding to
them. Lobha (attachment) has one kind of response; dosa (hatred) another. We
must see the individual differences of these mental states. We need to analyze
and observe deeply to see that mind and matter have individual functions and
responses. On superficial observation and analysis, everything seems to be
compact, whole, and substantial. All of us think that a book is very solid, but
if we could look at this book under a microscope, it would appear full of
holes, with empty spaces, like a sieve.
Vipassana
is like using a microscope to see that all things are only elements and forces,
which are not unified by any kind of core, by any kind of atta. In the
third section of the Sutta, Buddha states that: ‘Any kind of form, whether
past, future, or presently arisen; whether in oneself or external; whether
inferior or superior; whether far or near; must with right understanding be
regarded thus:
‘This
is not mine; this is not I; this is not my self or soul."’ There can be
different kinds of form, different kinds of matter, but none of them can be
regarded as atta or as having atta. The same is true for feelings, perceptions,
mental formations, and consciousness.
Next,
Buddha explains to the monks the progress made by a meditator:
"When
a noble follower who has heard the truth sees thus, he finds estrangement in
form, finds estrangement in feeling, finds estrangement in perceptions...
in mental formations... in consciousness." This means that the meditator
becomes weary of form, dispassionate about matter. The meditator realizes that
the aggregates are impermanent, suffering, and no-soul.
"When
he finds estrangement, passion fades out." Buddha is here describing
stages of Vipassana meditation in a very brief form with many stages left, out.
The disciple wants to be free from the five aggregates, so this person makes
more effort. The meditator then arrives at equanimity about formations. When
Buddha uses the phrase "finds estrangement," He is referring to all
of the stages of Vipassana up to the very highest stage. After finding
estrangement, passion fades out in one moment, the moment of enlightenment.
That is the moment known as Path consciousness when some defilement of the mind
are eradicated.
Buddha
continues, "With the fading of passion, he is liberated." This means
that the meditator has reached the two or three moments after Path
consciousness known as Fruition consciousness.
"When
liberated there is knowledge that he is liberated." Here the meditator
reflects on the Path, on Fruition, on Nibbāna, on defilements destroyed, and on
defilements that are remaining.
He
understands: ‘Birth is exhausted. The holy life has been lived out. What need
to be done is done. Of this there is no more beyond."’ Like Buddha when He
became enlightened, the meditator says similar words. The discourse ends:
"This is what the Blessed One said. The Bhikkhus were glad, and they
approved His words. Now during this utterance, the hearts of the Bhikkhus of
the group of five were liberated from taints, through clinging no more."
This means that they had become Arahants. By under-standing the doctrine of Anattā,
they were now free of all fetters, defilements, and impurities. They had
reached the highest state of enlightenment. They had realized Nibbāna and were
free from all rebirth.
The
Anattā doctrine is one of the most important teachings of Buddhism. It is the
most distinctive feature of Buddhism, for as many scholars have recognized, it
makes Buddhism different from all other religions. Scholars write that all
other religions accept the existence of some kind of spiritual, metaphysical,
or psychological entity or agent or being inside and, in some cases,
simultaneously outside of sentient beings. That is, most religions accept the
existence of a soul or self.
Donald
Watson writes: "Of the world’s major religions, only Buddhism denies or is
agnostic about the existence of a soul."
Another
scholar Richard Kennedy writes: "According to Christianity, Islam, and
Judaism, each soul will be judged at the end of the world.... It is the soul,
which will determine whether the individual is punished by hell or rewarded by
eternal life in heaven.... Buddhism teaches that there is no such thing as a
soul or true, permanent self."
The
Encyclopedia Americana writes: "In Buddhism there is no perduring or
surviving self such as the atman. Meditation leads to the awareness that the
idea of self, or atman, is mere illusion."
In
A Dictionary of Comparative Religion, the teaching of the existence of the soul
is traced through every major religion throughout history: primitive animistic,
Egyptian, Mesopotamian, Hebrew, Greek religion in Homeric, Orphic, Pythagorean,
and Platonic versions; Hindu, Zoroastrian, Chinese, Muslim, Japanese, and
Christian. But, as the writers state, "Buddhism, in its classic form,
rejected the Hindu concept of atman as the essential, immortal self...."
As
we can see, Buddhism is the only major religion that denies the existence of a
metaphysical entity which is usually called a self or soul.
Buddhism
is divided into two major schools, Theravada and Mahayana, which have, in some
cases, major differences. But both schools adhere to the Anattā doctrine. H.
von Glasenapp writes: "The negation of an imperishable Atman is the common
characteristic of all dogmatic systems of the Lesser as well as the Great
Vehicle (meaning here Theravada and Mahayana, respectively], and, there is,
therefore, no reason to assume that Buddhist tradition which is in complete
agreement on this point has deviated from the Buddha’s original teaching."
Although
the Anattā doctrine is so important, so distinctive, and supposedly so
universally accepted by Buddhists, it is still the most misunderstood, the most
misinterpreted, and the most distorted of all the teachings of the Buddha.
Some
scholars who have written on Buddhism had a great respect for the Buddha, liked
His teachings, revered Him, and honored Him, but they could not imagine that
such a profound thinker had actually denied the existence of a soul.
Consequently they have tried to find apparent loopholes in the teachings
through which they have tried to insert the affirmation of atta by the Buddha.
For
example, two modern scholars, Ānanda K. Coomaraswamy and I B. Horner in their
book, The Living Thoughts of Gotama the Buddha, have devoted much of the book
to the idea that Buddha taught a doctrine of two selves, the great Self,
spelled with an upper case ‘S’ to signify the spiritual self or soul, and a
small self, the personal ego, spelled with a lower case ‘s’.
They
claim that Buddha denied only this personal self or ego when He spoke of Anattā.
These scholars base their ideas on mistranslation of Pali terms, and later in
these lectures I will devote considerable time to analyzing the Pali passages,
which they have mistranslated.
Another
scholar John Blofeld, also claims that Buddha was really teaching a doctrine of
two selves, one true Self or Soul, and one false personal self or ego. Notice
in the following quote how he must clarify that the Zen doctrine of Self or One
Mind is not in the reality the Atman of the Hindu Brahmins:-
The
doctrine of Atman has always been the center of Buddhist controversy. There is
no doubt that Gautama Buddha made it one of the central points of his teaching,
but the interpretations of it are various. The Theravadins interpret it not
only as "no self," but also as "no Self," thereby denying
man both an ego and all participation in something of the nature of Universal
Spirit or the One Mind. The Mahayanists accept the interpretation of
"ego-less-ness," holding that the real "Self" is none other
than that indescribable "non-entity," the One Mind; something far
less of an "entity" than the Ãtman of the Brahmins.
The
"Universal Spirit," "One Mind," and "Self" which
Blofeld finds within the Anattā doctrine are really an Atman, an atta, of a
finer substance, "less of an entity " as he says, but nevertheless an
Atman. These ideas of atta are therefore in conflict with the Anattā doctrine
of the Buddha. As mentioned before, most Mahayanists accept the doctrine of Anattā,
but later schools of Mahayana, such as the Chinese Zen of which Blofeld writes,
may have drifted into a soul-like theory.
The
controversy over the Anattā doctrine seems to be based on a deep fear of the
denial of the existence of a soul. People are often very attached to their
lives, so they like to believe that there exists something everlasting,
eternal, and permanent inside them. When someone comes along and tells them
that there is nothing permanent in them, nothing by which they will continue
eternally such as a soul, they may become frightened. They wonder what will
become of them in the future - they have the fear of extinction.
Buddha
understood this, as we can see in the story of Vacchagotta, who, like many
other people, was frightened and confused by the Anattā doctrine. Vacchagotta
was an ascetic who once went to the Buddha to discuss some important matters.
He asked the Buddha, "Is there atta?" Buddha remained
silent. Vacchagotta then asked, "Is there no atta" But Buddha again
remained silent. After Vacchagotta went away Buddha explained to Ānanda
why he had remained silent.
Buddha
explained that He knew that Vacchagotta was very confused in his thinking about
atta, and that if He were to respond that there does exist atta then He would
be expounding the eternalist view the eternal soul theory with which He did not
agree. But if He were to say that atta did not exist, then Vacchagotta might
think that He was expounding the annihilationist view, the view that a person
is nothing but a psychophysical organism which will be completely annihilated
at death.
Since
this latter view denies kamma, rebirth, and dependent origination, Buddha did
not agree with this. Buddha teaches, in fact, that people are reborn with
patisandhi, "re-linking consciousness," a rebirth consciousness which
does not transmigrate from the previous existence, but which comes into
existence by means of conditions included in the previous existences,
conditions such as kamma.
Thus
a reborn person is not the same as the one who has died, nor is the reborn
person entirely different from the one who has died. Most importantly no
metaphysical entity no soul, and no kind of spiritual self continues from one
existence to another in Buddha’s teaching.
But
this teaching was too difficult for Vacchagotta, and Buddha wanted to wait for
a time when Vacchagotta would mature in intellect. Buddha was not a computer
who gave automatic answers to every Question. He taught according to the
circumstances and temperaments of the people, for their benefit.
As
it happened, Vacchagotta advanced spiritually through Vipassana meditation,
which allowed him to realize the suffering, impermanent, and no-soul nature of
all things, and he later became an Arahant. Unfortunately, this story is used
by some scholars to try to prove that Buddha did not really deny the existence
of atta.
Let
us now examine the ideas contained in the term atta, Before Buddha appeared in
this world, Brahmanism, which was later to be called Hinduism, prevailed in
India. Brahmanism teaches the doctrine of the existence of atta (in Sanskrit,
atman), which is usually translated as soul or self. When Buddha appeared, He
claimed that there is no atman. This doctrine was so important that Buddha
proclaimed it only five days after His first sermon, the sermon on the Four
Noble Truths.
The
five disciples who heard that first sermon became "stream-winners"
(Sotāpanna’s) persons who have attained the first stage of enlightenment. Five
days later, Buddha assembled the five disciples and taught them the Anattā
doctrine. By the end of that Sutta, all five became Arahants, persons who have
attained the highest stage of enlightenment.
What
is this atta, which the Buddha negated? The word Anattā is a combination of two
words: an (< na) and atta. An means not or no, and atta is usually
translated as soul or self (sometimes with upper case ‘S’ to signify a
spiritual entity). But atta has a wide range of meanings, which we will now
examine. These terms are discussed in two famous books of Hindu scripture, the
Upanishads and the Bhagavad Gita. Many views of atta are found in the Buddhist
Brahmajala Sutta, which I will discuss later.
Atta
is the inner core of anything. The inner core of a tree is the hardest part and
thus the core of something can imply permanency The core may also imply the
best part of something, the part which is the essence, the part which is pure,
real, beautiful, and enduring. The idea of atta as the core of things is found
in the Chandogya and Brihadaranyaka Upanishads.’
Another
implication of atta is that of authority. Authority is the ability to make
others follow orders. If anything is to be called atta, it must have the power
to exercise authority over the nature of things, as stated in the Kena
Upanishad. In addition, atta is not subject to any other authority: it is the
highest authority (sayamvasi) one who is his own master. It is like a lord or
owner (sami). Atta is the lord of ourselves. It is distinct from ourselves and
abides in ourselves.
It
is the dweller (nivasi), which is not part of the five aggregates. Atta is also
the agent of action, a doer (karaka) and it is atta, which actually does
everything, good, or bad. Atta is that by which we act, that by which we enjoy
or suffer In ignorance we identify ourselves with the body and ego, forgetting
that we are really atta.
When
we do something, it is really at the command of atta, but we ignorantly believe
that we as individuals actually control our lives. Atta is thus a
director and an experiencer."
Another
meaning of atta is that of soul, a spiritual entity inside of all people. The
soul, called atman in Hindu scriptures, is the individual self, and it is
identical with the Universal Self, the Supreme Being, called Brahman.
Atman resides in everyone and in every living being. Like Brahman, atman is
eternal. When the body dies, atman moves to another body and makes that body
its new home.
In
this way it moves from one body to another discarding the worn-out body and
taking a new one. Liberation is, according to Hinduism, the realization that
atman is identical with the Universal Atman or Brahman, or that the individual
atman is part of Brahman’.
Atman
is eternal - no one can kill or wound atman. In the Bhagavad Gita, Krishna, one
incarnation of the god Vishnu, has this in mind when he instructs the great
warrior Arjuna, to go into battle. Arjuna was at first reluctant to go into
battle in order to fight against his own cousins, but Krishna tells him that no
weapon can cut atman, no fire can burn atman. Even if you kill someone, you
kill only the body:
"If
any man thinks he slays, and if another thinks he is slain, neither knows the
way of truth, The Eternal in man cannot kill; the Eternal in man cannot die. He
is never born, and he never dies. He is in Eternity: he is forever more."
Krishna
then urges Arjuna to do his honorable duty as a member of the warrior caste and
go into battle, which Arjuna does. Buddha denied the atman theory
According to Buddha, there is nothing we can call an inner core, which is
eternal and blissful. There is also nothing we can call upon to exercise
authority over the nature of things. In Buddhism, there is no doer apart from
doing, and no experiencer apart from the experiencing. There is nothing or no
one, which is omnipotent because everything is at the mercy of the constant
creation and dissolution of conditioned things.
Buddha
taught that there are only five aggregates (khandhas):
1
Corporeality (material process, or form)
Less
specifically we may say that there are only two groups of phenomena in this
existence: mind and matter, nama and rupa. Apart from mind and matter there
exists nothing whatsoever that we can call atta. The only thing that exists
outside of the realm of nama and rupa is the unconditioned (asankhata) Nibbāna,
Absolute Truth, but. as I will discuss later in these lectures, even Nibbāna is
Anattā.
Buddha
taught that, for us, there are only the five aggregates. We are a compound of
five aggregates, and after we analyze and observe them one by one with the deep
insight of meditation, we will realize that there remains nothing: no soul, no
self, apart from the aggregates. The combination of the five aggregates is what
we call a person, a being, a man, or a woman.
There
is nothing apart from the five aggregates - corporeality feelings, perceptions,
mental formations, and consciousness - which are interacting and dependent upon
each other. No director, no doer no experiencer, and no essence can be found.
Atta is merely an idea, which has no corresponding reality whatsoever.
In
the sutras, we find a story of a very famous ascetic-scholar named Saccaka. One
day he heard that Buddha taught the Anattā doctrine. Since he was a very sharp
debater he decided that he would go to the Buddha and convince Him that the Anattā
doctrine was wrong. He was very confident; he claimed that if he were to debate
with a stone pillar, that pillar would sweat from fear. He claimed that, just
as a strong man takes a goat and flings it around his shoulders, so he would
take hold of Gotama and fling Him around in debate.
Saccaka
and his followers went to the Buddha and there exchanged greetings. He asked
Buddha to explain the doctrines He taught. Buddha replied that He taught Anattā.
Saccaka countered, "No. There is atta. The five aggregates are atta."
Buddha replied, "Do you really think that rupa (corporeality) is
atta?" As it happened, Saccaka was very ugly, and if he said that
corporeality was atta, then Buddha could counter, "Then why don't you make
yourself more handsome!"
Thus
Saccaka was forced to say that rupa is not atta. Here we can see Buddha
striking down several characteristics that are attributed to the atta. If
Saccaka had an atta, he could call upon it to exercise authority and power in
order to change his appearance. After all, atta is identical to Brahman, the
supreme ruler the infinite, omnipotent creator and source of all things, as
explained in the Bhagavad Gita.
But,
according to Buddha, there exist only the five aggregates, the five khandhas,
and these are not atta because they are subject to the laws of impermanence,
suffering, and no-soul. Rupa (material form) is not atta; it is not master and
ruler of itself, and it is subject to affliction. The other khandhas - feeling,
perception, mental formations, and consciousness - are also subject to the same
laws. Sacccaka was therefore defeated.
Although
it may be easy to understand that rupa (material form) is not atta, some people
may find it difficult to understand why the other khandhas - feeling,
perception, mental formations, and consciousness - which we may summarize as
simply nama (mind) do not constitute an entity which can be called atta. After
all, many people believe that mind and soul are identical or interrelated, and
they define mind and/or soul as that part of a person which gives life and
consciousness to the physical body and they further believe that, as such, it
is the spiritual and psychological center of the person.
But,
according to the Buddha, nama is not atta for the same reasons that rupa is not
atta: nama is equally subject to the laws of impermanence, suffering, and
no-soul, as we shall study further when we analyze the Anattā Lakkhana Sutta in
depth. Buddha treats nama and rupa equally, and they are mutually dependent
upon each other:
"Just
as a wooden puppet, though unsubstantial, lifeless, and inactive, may by means
of pulling strings be made to move about, stand up, and appear full of life and
activity; just so are mind and body, as such, something empty, lifeless and
inactive; but by means of their mutual working together, this mental and bodily
combination may move about, stand up, and appear full of life and activity.
Furthermore,
we must remember that nama-rupa or khandhas are merely abstract classifications
made by the Buddha, and, as such, they have no real existence as groups. That
is, there is never the functioning of an entire entity or group known as
corporeality or feeling or perception or mental formations or consciousness,
but only the functioning of individual representatives of these groups.
For
example, with one unit of consciousness, only one single kind of feeling can be
associated. Two different units of perception cannot arise at the same moment,
and only one kind of consciousness, for example seeing consciousness, can arise
at one time. A smaller or larger number of mental formations can arise with
every state of consciousness.
The
groups never arise as a totality; only constituents or bits from a certain
group can arise depending on conditions. There are no integrally functioning
groups that can be called a self or a mind. Moreover the single constituents of
these apparent groups are all equally subject to the laws of impermanence,
suffering, and no-soul.
Another
way to study the Question of why nama is not atta is simply to go back to the
definition of khandhas given by the Buddha in Samyutta Nikāya XX, 56. Here we
will see that the four khandhas, which can be classified simply as nama (mind)
are in no way to be understood as an abiding mind substance or as anything that
can be called atta. Rather, the khandhas are completely interdependent, and the
constituents of each group condition the arising of the others. There is no
self-existing, abiding entity in any part of the following definition, but only
constituents, which mutually condition each other and arise only when they
interact:
"What,
0 monks, is the corporeality-group?
What,
0 monks, is the feeling-group?
What,
0 monks, is the perception-group?
What,
0 monks, is the group of mental formations?
What,
0 monks, is the consciousness-group?
Based
on the above definitions, it is easy to see that nothing, which can be called
atta, can be found in the workings of rupa or nama. Still another way in which
the nature of nama and rupa is analyzed is to be found in the Abhidhamma, which
is highly recommended for anyone who wants to understand Buddhism thoroughly.
This
is the most comprehensive and analytical study of all phenomena given by the
Buddha. Here Buddha analyses nama and rupa into three groups of absolute
realities, which are 89 types of consciousness (cittas), 52 mental factors
(cetasikas), and 28 material properties (rupa). Here too, there is no abiding
mind substance or atta, but only the interdependent workings of the
constituents of these groups.
We
will now discuss some of the attempts to place a doctrine of atta into
Buddhism. Some scholars have tried to, in the words of Dr. Walpola Rahula,
"smuggle" the idea of atta into the teachings of the Buddha."
Let
us now see how two scholars, Ānanda K. Coomaraswamy and I. B. Horner,
already discussed briefly have mistranslated certain Pali terms to demonstrate
that Buddha affirmed the existence of atta. They argue that Buddha did indeed
claim that the five aggregates are not atta, but that He never directly denied
the existence of atta. The five aggregates are not atta, but there is something
apart from the five aggregates that we can call atta, self or soul, these
scholars claim."’ Whenever Coomaraswamy and Horner see the word atta, they
try to imagine that it means eternal self or soul.
One
of the passages they point to is found in Dhammapada (verse I60): "Atta hi
attano natho." They translate is as "Self is the lord of self."
They say that it means that the big Self is the lord of the little self.
Actually, it means, "One is one’s own lord or refuge," or, "One
is one’s own support." The second line of the verse reads, "Ko hi
natho paro siya,?" or "Who else can be the lord or refuge?" In
Pali, the word atta can mean self, soul, or eternal self, in the Hindu sense,
or it can simply be a part of a reflexive pronoun like himself, yourself, or
myself. Thus when Buddha says "Atta hi attano natho, ko hi natho paro
siya?" mean "One is one’s own lord or refuge; who else can be the
lord or refuge", it is clear that atta means oneself, not soul.
Buddha
urges people to rely on themselves, on their own effort, and not to rely on
others in their spiritual practice. Another passage, which is misinterpreted in
the book by Coomaraswamy and Horner, is from the 'Maha
Parinibbāna Sutta’: "Attadipa viharatha anannasarana." The
meaning is, "Dwell having yourself as an island, having yourself as a
refuge and not anyone else as a refuge." Here also they interpret atta to
mean soul or eternal self.
They
claim that Buddha was instructing us to make the soul our island or refuge. But
in the next line, Buddha says, "Dhammadipa viharatha dhammasarana
anannasarana," which means, "Dwell having the Dhamma (Buddha’s
teachings) as an island, having the Dhamma as a refuge, nothing else as a
refuge." Buddha is instructing his followers to rely on their own effort
and on the teachings, especially as He was soon to be gone from this earth.
The
idea of atta as soul is completely foreign to this passage. Moreover Buddha
went on to say, "How is the monk to dwell making himself an island?"
He then went on to describe the practice of the four foundations of
mindfulness. The Buddha really meant that one should make Satipatthāna
meditation (contemplation of the body, feelings, mind, and Dhamma objects)
one’s refuge.
There
is no mention of soul whatsoever. Another passage Coomaraswamy and Horner point
to is the story in which Buddha spoke to some princes. There were thirty
princes who were cousins of King Pasenadi of Kosala. Twenty-nine of them had
wives, but one did not.
One
day, they went to a park to amuse themselves, and they hired a woman for the
unwed prince. When they were drunk and having fun, the hired woman took all of
the valuables and ran away with them. They looked for her and met the Buddha.
They asked Buddha if He had seen her and He said,
"What
do you think, young men! Which is better for you? To search after the woman or
to search after yourselves (attanam gaveseyyatha)?" They replied that it
would be better to search after themselves, and so Buddha told them to sit down
and listen to a Dhamma talk.
Coomaraswamy
and Horner interpret the word atta in that passage to mean higher self or soul,
and they want it to mean that Buddha told the princes to search after atta. But
Buddha is telling the princes to turn away from chasing after worldly pleasures
and to practice the self-discipline of the Noble Path. In that Dhamma talk,
Buddha spoke about giving (Dana), moral conduct (síla), the celestial world
(sagga), the peril, vanity and depravity of ‘sense pleasures (kamanam adinavam,
etc.), and the advantages of renunciation (nekkhamme anisamsam). There is no
mention whatsoever of searching for a soul, for atta.
Another
passage mistranslated by Coomaraswamy and Horner is one found in Visuddhimagga:
"buddhatta ... Buddho." They translate it as, "Buddha is
awakened Self." But the correct translation of the Pali is, "He is
the Buddha because he knows or he has known." The word buddhatta is not a
compound so of Buddha and atta, but one word, Buddha, with the suffix - tta
combined with the ablative case termination, a, which means `because of'. The
word buddhatta therefore means ‘because of the state of being one who knows’.
It
would be better to say that one does not believe in the Anattā doctrine and
that Buddha was wrong about it than to try to say that Buddha taught a religion
with atta in it. It is not accurate to say that Buddha did not deny atta.
In fact, there are many places in the Pali canon where atta is denied by
Buddha. For example, Buddha once said, "I do not see a soul theory which,
if accepted, does not lead to the arising of grief, lamentation, suffering,
distress, and tribulations." Buddha also said, "Since neither self
nor anything pertaining to self can truly be found, is not the speculative view
that the universe is atta wholly and completely foolish?"
Buddha
teaches that belief in atta is a wrong view (ditthi or miccha-ditthi) which
will lead to misery. Wrong views must be rejected because they are a source of
wrong and evil aspirations and conduct.
In
Majjhima Nikāya, Buddha describes the belief in atta as an idea which leads to
selfishness and pride: "The Perfect One is free from any theory
(ditthigata), for the Perfect One has seen what corporeality is, and how it
arises and passes away. He has seen what feeling... perception... mental
formations…consciousness are, and how they arise and pass away. Therefore I say
that the Perfect One has won complete deliverance through the extinction,
fading away disappearance, rejection and casting out of all imaginings and conjectures,
of all inclinations to the vainglory of ‘I’ and ‘mine’."
In
the famous Brahmajala
Sutta, which is recommended for those who want to study an explanation of
wrong views, Buddha describes and classifies all conceivable wrong views and
speculations about reality. One of those wrong views is the belief that there
exists an eternal self. Buddha says of this view:
"Therein,
Bhikkhus, when those recluses and Brahmins who are eternalists proclaim on four
grounds the self and the world to be eternal - that is only the agitation and
vacillation of those who do not know and do not see; that is only the agitation
and vacillation of those who are immersed in craving."
Coomaraswamy
and Horner argue that Buddha’s denial of atta refers only to the phenomenal
self, and that His denial is really an affirmation of what they call the Great
Self (mah’atta) . They argue that Buddha stated that the five aggregates are
not atta, but that He never categorically stated that there is no atta, or
Self.
They
claim that Buddha was only directing us not to see the real Self in the
personal ego - a view identical to the Hindu view. They reason that Buddha’s
denial of certain things being atta indicates that He affirmed a true atta of a
different nature. When Buddha said, "This is not atta," these
scholars insert the following argument: "But a moment’s consideration of
the logic of the words will show that they assume the reality of a Self that is
not any one or all of the ‘things’ that are denied of it."
But
let us say, for the sake of argument, that I have five animal horns here. If I
say, "None of these horns is the horn of a rabbit," does it mean that
there exists somewhere else or in another form such a thing as a horn of a
rabbit?
No.
A horn of a rabbit is just a designation, an abstraction, without any
corresponding reality. Similarly Buddha often said, "This is not atta.
That is not atta. Nothing here is atta." Does that indicate that Buddha
means that there exists somewhere something that can be called atta? No.
I
will conclude this section by explaining a very important statement found in
Patisambhidamagga and in Majjhima Nikāya: "Sabbe sankhārā
anicca; sabbe sankhārā dukkha (not in M.N.); sabbe dhamma anatta." The
first sentence means, "AII conditioned things are impermanent." The
second means, ‘All conditioned things are suffering."
The
third sentence however is different. Here, Buddha does not use the word
sarckhara, but He uses Dhamma instead. Dhamma here means all things without
exception. So the third sentence means, ‘AII things, conditioned or
unconditioned, are Anattā, are void of self and soul." This means that
even Nibbāna, which is asankhara, unconditioned, is not atta or is void of
atta. This statement unequivocally denies atta of any kind, even in ultimate
Truth and Enlightenment, even in Nibbāna.
The
same applies to sound, for example. If you note sound in your mind as it
occurs, you will get concentration, and you will come to experience gaps in
that sound: there is not really one continuous sound.
A
person once told me about this level of concentration, which he achieved while
he was meditating. Music was playing very loudly the whole night, so he could
do nothing except concentrate on the sound by noting "hearing, hearing,
hearing." He then achieved concentration and experienced the music in
small bits; in other words, he was able to detect gaps in what seemed to be one
continuous sound. The elements of the music actually arise and disappear every
moment; nothing is ever the same for even two tiny milliseconds.
Q:
When I look at my own mental pain, I see a whole pattern of pain which; I
interpret according to psychology, which I have studied. I think I have a
pretty good knowledge of what it is, but is than an obstacle to seeing the
nature of pain?
All
that is needed to see the nature of pain is to dwell with awareness on it, to
make mental notes of it, and when you get enough concentration, you will
penetrate into the nature of pain and see that it is impermanent.
Q:
Even if I were to lose a lot of weight, cut my hair, and develop all new
interests, others and myself would still know me as myself. Why is that, if
there is no continuity?
That
continuity is created only in our minds. Actually, there is no continuity, but
there is the relationship of cause and effect. Many people ask: ‘If there is no
atman to go to different worlds, how do Buddhists say that we have past and
future lives?’ The answer is that mental and physical phenomena arise and
disappear at every moment. They arise, and then disappear, and in their place,
other new phenomena arise. But the new phenomena that arise are not totally
different or new because they have arisen due to some cause
Kamma
causes the next life, and that next life is not totally new and different;
neither is it the same or identical. The cause causes the effect to arise, and
that effect is not the result of just any cause, but of a specific cause: a
strong relationship exists between the cause and the effect. The cause
can impart some of its similar Qualities to the effect, impart in the sense of
causing certain qualities to arise.
In
this way we have the notion of continuity but actually everything is newly
arisen at every moment. There is a Buddhist formula describing rebirth:
neither that person nor another. This means a person is reborn in a future
life, but that person is not the identical person who died here; neither is
that person reborn as a totally new person.
The
commentaries, such as Visuddhimagga, XVII, give some similes as examples.
Suppose someone shouts into a cave. When the sound comes back, it is not the
original sound, but without the original sound, there can be no echo. Or
suppose one lights a candle from another candle. It cannot be said that the
flame has transferred itself to another candle. The flame in the second candle
is not the same as that in the first one, but it came into being with the help
of the first candle. Similarly, a seal leaves an impression on paper. The
impression is not the same as the original seal, but neither is it unrelated to
it.
We
Buddhists do not accept permanence, but we accept a connection as cause and
effect. Cause and effect go on and on, even in this lifetime, from moment to
moment. This gives a person the impression of continuity, the impression of
being the same person continually. Cause and effect go on and on throughout the
life span until old age and death.
But
death is just a conventional term for the disappearance of a certain
psychophysical life process. But actually we are dying and being reborn at
every moment. Thoughts likewise die and come into being at every moment, as do
physical properties. Thus, even when we are living as we do now, we are dying,
but we do not call it dying. We call it dying only when we come to the end of
one life. Immediately after the end of this life, there is the next life.
Immediately after death, there is rebirth; there is no interim between death
and rebirth.
Think
of the midnight hour of the previous day only one second after that, we call it
a new day the next day. Actually time is just going on and on. One moment we
call Sunday, and the next moment we call Monday. Similarly life and death
and rebirth go on continually."
Q:
How does rebirth cease?
It
ceases only when a person cuts off the root of this process. The roots are
lobha (attachment), dosa (anger) and moha (ignorance). The Arahants have cut
off this process altogether so for them, no future rebirth occurs. They have no
desire for the life-death process to continue. It is like a lamp: when the oil
is used up, the flame just disappears. Desire is like the oil; when
desire is cut off there is no new becoming.
Q:
But why does not an Arahant disappear at the moment of
enlightenment?"
That
is because the present life, by which I mean the present body and mind, is the
result of past kamma. Past kamma gives rise to this present life, and it must
run its course. The Arahant does not acquire new kamma, but past kamma must
have its effect.
Then
the Exalted One said:
"Form
(rupa or matter) is not soul (Anattā). If form, monks, were soul, then this
form would not lead to affliction, and one would be able to say, ‘Let my form
be thus. Let my form not be thus.’ But since form is not soul, so it leads to
affliction, and no one can say ‘Let my form be thus. Let my form be not
thus."
"Feeling
(vedana) is not soul. If feeling, monks, were soul, then this feeling would not
lead to affliction, and one would be able to say, ‘Let my feeling be thus. Let
my feeling not be thus.’ But since feeling is not soul, so it leads to
affliction, and no one can say ‘Let my feeling be thus. Let my feeling not be
thus."
"Perception
(sañña) is not soul. If perception, monks, were soul, then this perception
would not lead to affliction, and one would be able to say, ‘Let my perception
be thus. Let my perception not be thus.’ But since perception is not soul, so
it leads to affliction, and no one can say, ‘Let my perception be thus. Let my
perception not be thus."
"Mental
formations (sankhārās) are not soul. If mental formations, monks, were soul,
then these mental formations would not lead to affliction, and one would be
able to say, ‘Let my mental formations be thus. Let my mental formations not be
thus.’ But since mental formations are not soul, so they lead to affliction,
and no one can say, ‘Let my mental formations be thus. Let my mental formations
not be thus."
"Consciousness
(vinnana) is not soul. If consciousness, monks, were soul, then this
consciousness would not lead to affliction, and one would be able to say ‘Let
my consciousness be thus. Let my consciousness not be thus.‘ But since
consciousness is not soul, so it leads to affliction, and no one can say ‘Let
my consciousness be thus. Let my consciousness not be thus."
"Monks,
what do you think? Is form permanent or impermanent?"
"Now
what is impermanent, is it unsatisfactory (dukkha) or satisfactory
(sukha)?"
"Now
what is impermanent, what is unsatisfactory, what is transitory - is it fit to
be perceived thus: ‘This is mine; this is I; this is my soul’?"
"Monks,
what do you think? Is feeling permanent or impermanent?"
"Now
what is impermanent, is it unsatisfactory or satisfactory!"
"Now
what is impermanent, what is unsatisfactory what is transitory - is it fit to
be regarded thus: ‘This is mine. This is I. This is my soul?"
"Monks,
what do you think? Is perception permanent or impermanent?"
"Now
what is impermanent, is it unsatisfactory or satisfactory?"
"Now
what is impermanent, what is unsatisfactory what is transitory - is it fit to
be regarded thus: ‘This is mine. This is I. This is my soul?"
"Monks,
what do you think? Are mental formations permanent or impermanent."
"Now
what is impermanent, is it unsatisfactory or satisfactory?"
"Now
what is impermanent, what is unsatisfactory what is transitory - is it ft to be
regarded thus: ‘This is mine. This is I. This is my soul"
"Monks,
what do you think? Is consciousness permanent or impermanent?"
"Now
what is impermanent, is it unsatisfactory or satisfactory?"
"Now
what is impermanent, what is unsatisfactory, what is transitory is it fit to be
regarded thus: ‘This is mine. This is I. This is my soul’?"
"So,
monks, whatever perception, whether past, future, or present: whether gross or
subtle; whether in oneself or in others; whether inferior or superior; whether
far or near; must with right understanding of things as they really are, be
regarded thus:
‘This
is not mine. This is not I. This is not my soul."
"So,
monks, whatever mental formations, whether past, future, or present; whether
gross or subtle; whether in oneself or in others; whether inferior or superior;
whether far or near; must, with right understanding of things as they really
are. be regarded thus: ‘This is not mine. This is not I.
This
is not my soul."
"So,
monks, whatever consciousness, whether past, future, or present; whether gross
or subtle; whether in oneself or in others; whether inferior or superior:
whether far or near; must, with right understanding of things as they really
are, be regarded thus: ‘This is not mine. This is not I. This is not my soul.
"
"Seeing
thus, monks, the learned disciple of the Noble Ones becomes weary of form,
weary also of feelings, weary also of perception, weary also of mental
formations, and weary also of consciousness. Being weary, he becomes detached;
being detached, he becomes free; being free, the knowledge arises, ‘I am
free."
"And
he knows, ‘Rebirth is no more; I have finished practicing the life of purity;
done is what should be done; of this there is no more beyond."
This
is what the Exalted One said. Delighted, the group of five monks rejoiced at
the Exalted One’s words.
And while this discourse was being given, the minds of the group of five monks were liberated from defilements through clinging no more.

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