The Central Conception of Buddhism

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 60

PRIZE PUBLICATION F U N D

VOL. VII

THE CENTRAL

CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM
AND THE

MEANING OF THE WORD "DHARMA"

TH. STCHERBATSKY, PH.D.,


PROFESSOR I N T H E UNIFERSITY OF PETRORRAD, MEMBER OF THE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF RUSSIA

PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THE

ROYAL ASIATIC SOCIETY


AND SOLD AT

74 GROSVENOR STREET, LONDON, W . l

CONTENTS

.
1 1 1 . IV.

PAGE

vii

6 7

STEPHEN AUSTIN AND

SONS, LTD PRINTERS, HERTFORD.

9 11 . 15 VI. . 20 VII. . 24 VIII. . 28 IX. . 31 X. . 37 XI. . 43 XII. . 48 XIII. . 54 XIV. . 65 XV. . 73 XVI. APPENDIX I. Vasubandhu on the fundamental principle of the Sarvistiv%da School . . . 76 APPENDIX 1 1 . Tables of the Elements according to the Sarvjstividins . . . . . 93 INDEX OF P ROPER NAMES . . . . . . 108 INDEX OF SANSCRIT TERMS . . . . . 109

v.

. .

PREFACE
HIS short treatise was originally conceived as
a contribution t o t h e Royal Asiatic Society's Journal: its size induced the Council to publish i t as are due t o the Council a monograph, and my Lest tl~anlia for this kind decision. I must also express my gratitude L o Mrs. C. A. F. Rhys Davids, who was alway.. ready to help with her vast lrnowledge of Pali literature. Professor H. Jacobi kindly went through the proofs, and to him I am indebted for many a valuable suggestion. Dr. McGovern contributed some of the references to Chinese sources. But my deepest gratitude is due to ? . W. Thomas, who devoted much of liis plecious Dr. I time to the revision of my work and to carrying it through the press. I n transliteration I have usually not distinguished the guttural, etc., nasals, when occurring before the consonants of their respective classes.

The central conception of Buddhism and the meaning of the term Dharma
I N a recent work Mrs. M. Geiger and Professor W. Geiger have made an attempt to solve the uncertainty which still prevails about the meaning of the term dhama.l They
haw drawn up a concordance of almost every case where the word occurs in Pali canonical literature, and established a great variety of meanings. Among them there is, indeed, only one that really matters, that is the speciiically Buddhistic technical term d h a m . The other significations which Buddhist literature shares with the Brahmanioal do not present any serious difficulty. About this meaning the authors rightly remark that it is a " central conception of the Buddhist doctrine which must be elucidated as far as possible ". They also contend that the method followed by them is " purely phiological ". This is also an indication of the limitations of their work, because the central conception of a highly complicated system, a conception which in its varied connotations includes almost the totality of the system, cannot be expected to be fully elucidated by " philological " methods only. We therefore propose, in addition to Mrs. and Professor Geiger's most ,valuable collections, to consider the matter from the philosophical standpoint, i.e. to give, with regard to this conception, a succinct account of the system in which it admittedly occupies the keystone position. Our chief source will be, not the Pali Canon, but, a later work, the Abhidliamtakoga of Vasubandh~.~Althaugh late, it is professedly
l Pali Dhumma, von &gdalene u. Wilhelm Geiger, Munich, 1921. A plan af an edition and translation of the whole work has been outlined and pilrtlg carried through by the Bibliotheca Buddhica at Petrograd. There have appeared, (1) Abhidhammkop-kririkc3 and Bh&sya, Tibetan

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION O F BUDDHISM

I.

PRELIMINARY

only a systematized exposition of a much earlier workthe Bbhidharma-dbZsci:-~Gtra, which, in its turn, is but a commentary on the abhidharma of the Sarvistividiu school. This school is one of the earliest, if not the earliest, of Buddhist sects. The question upon which it dissented and from which it received its name had a bearing on the essence of what was called a dharma, so that an exposition of its views will afford the best opportunity of examining the full connotation of this term.l It must be left to latcr investigation to determine the points where Vasubandhu's exposition may be at variance with the primitive doctrine; but, generally speaking, he seems to have rendered the original doctrine very faithfully. Since his age is about the same as that of the Pali c~mmentaries,~ the difference between him and the
text, pt. i, edited b y Professor Tb. Stoberbstsky, Petrograd, 1917; (2) Sphutrirthribhidbrnta-kop-vyrikhyri of Yapomitra, Smscrit text, pt. i, edited by S. LBvi and Th. Stoherbatsky, Petrograd, 1917. The second parts of both these works, Tibetan text edition by Professor Th. Stcherbatsky and Vyikhyl (Sanscrit) by Professor W. Wagihsra. of Tokyo, are being printed in the Bi6liotheca Buddhiea. An English translation of the ninth (additional) part has been published by Professor Th. Stcherbatsky under the title " The Soul Theory of the Buddhists" in t h e Bulletin de l'Acaddmie des Sciences de Russie, Petrograd, 1920 (pp. 823-54 and 937-58). A review of the system has been published by the late under the title Problems Professor 0. Rosenberg, of Petrograd Universit,~, of Buddhist Philosophy, Petrograd, 1918 (in Russian). This scholar has also issued s n index of Buddhist technical terms in Chinese and Japanese under the title An Introduction to the study of Bvddhismfrom Chinese and J a p n a e Sources, Tokyo, 1917. Professor de la V d C e Poussin has published in Brussels a. French translation of the third part, and is now engaged in.printing a translation af the &st and second parts of the Abhidharma-koca. BesideMrs. and Prof. Geiger the question has been treated by M r s .Rhys Davids, Bud. Pay. Ethics, xsxiii ; Walleser, Grundlage, 97-104 ; Wureu, Bgddhim i n Translations, 116, 209; S. Z. Aung, Compendium, 179 n., 254-9 ; S. LSvi, S?lt~ri2a?pkrira, 18, 21 ; I , . de la. VallBe'Poussin, hrotes suv les cmps du Bouddha, MuaCon, 1913, pp. 263, 287. The question has been put in tbe proper light and brilliantly treated by Professor 0. Rasenberg, Problems, chap. vi : but, since his workis writtenin Russian and inaccessible a t prasent, some of his results are repeated here. The date of Vasubsndhu is not yet quite settled; of. the references in V. Smith, Early History, 3rd ed., pp. 328 ff. A t the end of chap. viii Vasubandhu remarks t h a t in his time the dgama had had a n existence of

pali sources is not so much one of time as of school. Nothing is more instructive than the study of the divergent views of different schools, since it allows us to watch the builders of the Buddhist doctrine at work. The formula of the Buddhist Credo (ye dhnmmd, etc.)which professedly, contains the shortest statement of the essence and the spirit of Buddhism l--declares that Buddha discovered the elements (dharnm8) of existence, their causal connexion, and a method to suppress their efficicncy for cvcr (nirodho). Vasubandhu makes a similar statement about the essence of the doctrine : it is a method of converting the elements of existence into a condition of rest, out of which they never will emerge a g a h z From the first days of the Buddhist church the novices, before obtaining admittanoa into the order, went through a course of instruction in what may be termed the Buddhist catechism, i.e. an exposition of the elements (dharma) of existence and their different The same classifications into skandhas, Eyatanas, d h i t u ~ . ~ training was considered indispensable for the aspiring nuns.4 These conditions have not changed down to the present day in all Buddhist countries. I n the whole of Mongolia and Tibet, in those parts of Siberia where Buddhism is spreading against the primitive Shamanism among the Tungnz tribes of
1,000 (not 900) years, and the adhigama (=abhidharma) somewhat less than that. That there v e r s two Vasubmdhus is not " a guese with no solid basis"; the Kopa actually quotes the opinions of a uyiddMedryaVasubmdhu and rejects them (i, 13, Tibetan test, p. 23 ; cf. Yapomitra's comment). There remain t h e dates of the Chinese transl&ions of the works of Asanga and Vwubandhu, which alone, if correct, would be sufficient evidence t o assign them t o the fourth century. Otherwise one feels inclined t o bring Vasubandhu nearer t o Dignlga, whose teacher he was. ' Cf. Mahd.uagg.ga, i, 23. 1 . 12-13. Ab. K., i, I, Tib. text, p. 3, 1 Cf. Theragatlui, 1255 : l a s s r i h vaeanap sutvd khandhe dyatanrini Co dhjtuyo c a viditt&m pabbuji?p anrigariyam. 4 Cf. Geiger's references t o Therigdthjs, op. oit., p. 65 ; the d7uitus there mentioned are probably the eighteen dluitus (not tbe six) ; a number of other divisions into dMtus are mentioned in the Bahu-dluituka-eatra, of. Ab. K., i, 27, Tib. text, p. 46.

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTIOX OF BUDDHISM

I.

PRELIMINARY

Transbaikalia, in the governments of I r h t s k and Astrachan, where it is maintaining itself against orthodox Christianityeverywhere it invariably proceeds by starting religious schools (chos-grva), where manuals similar to the Dhamma-sa~gani containing tables of dhamzus are carefully studied, in the Tibetan original with explanations in vernacular, by the young generation aspiring to be admitted to the order and to be gradually promoted to the higher ecclesiastical ranks. Scholars of Buddhism in Europe will do well to follow this example. A school of Buddhists which claims as its fundamental doctrine the principle that " everything exists " has very naturally been supposed to uphold some ldnd of realistic views.l Tradition a h s that the question which gave rise to this sect had been discussed a t the time of Buddha himself. If a division arises in a community with the result that some of its members are declared to be, or claim to be, realists, one would naturally be led to suppose that there were others who were non-realists, i.e. idealists of some kind. But, as a matter of fact, we do not meet with views dehitely idealistic, i.e. with the denial of the existence of external objects, until a comparatively late date. Considering, on the other hand, that these would-be realists, like all Buddhists, denied the existence of a soul or a personality (&?man, pudgala), our uncertsinty increases, and the suspicion arises that the battle between the Sarv%stividins and their opponents was fought on an altogether different plane, about a question which had little 6 do with our conceptions of realism and idealism.2
So Takkakusu s.v. in Hastings' Encyclop~dia. Mr. S. Z. Aung and Mrs. C. Rhys Davids, Poimts of Controversy, p p 275-6, rightly observe t h a t the question bears upon the existence of future and past dkrmas, but this does not mean t h a t " they believed in continued or immutable existence of everything". This would be drifting into SZnkhys. doctrine, against which Buddhist philosophers were alwaya uttering warnings ; of. Appendix I. a The Buddhists themselves ascribe the origin of their idealistic philosophy t o Vasubandhu; of. my artiolein theMulupPon, 1906, ii. But this was evidently only a. revival of a tendency which, in a different form, was already revealed

The occasion upon which Rnddha himself is supposed to have put forward the watchword "everything exists " was a discussion with the Givikas, who flatly denied the influence of past deeds upon our destinies, since they were past and non-existent.' This sect upheld a kind of extreme determinism which served as excuse for moral incontinence ; it maintained that "all things are inalterably fixed. There is no cause, either proximate or remote, for the depravity of being, or . . for its purity . . . There is no such thing as power or energy or human exertion. Everything that thinks, has senses, is procreated, and lives, is destitute of force, power or energy. Their varying conditions, a t any time, are due to fate, to their environment and their own nature "."uddha's teaching, both in the moral domain and in ontology, was the reverse of this ; it maintained moral responsibility and at the same time transformed all existing thmgs into a congeries of subtle energies (sal?ulkCra-samcha). When pressed to say what was meant by the words " everything exists ", he answered " everything exists means that the twelve ciyatanas exist ".3 Now the twelve Zyatanas are merely one of the many classifications of the elements of existence of matter and mind. The Sarvistividin school admitted seventy-five such elements. These elements were called dharms. The full memirig of the term will emerge at the end of this article ;

in the works of A ~ v ~ g h o g and a Nigajuna. A6. K . bears witness that idealistic views were already diaoussed in the VibUgd-@stra; cf. i, 42, Tibetan text, p. 77, 10, and Yapomitra's comment. A6. K. a d v, 24; cf. Appendix I. Cf. R. Hoernle's article in Haetings' Encyclopmdia. This passage (flamyukfrigama, xiii, p. 16 (McGovern) ) cannot be traced in the Pali Canon. Evidently t h e Theravidins suppressed i t because i t did not agree with their particular tenets. They socused the Vit~iputriyas of having suppressed the passages which ran againinst their views (floul Theory, p. 840), and evidently did themselves the same. But even in their ~ c h o o the l word sabba seems to have been used rather like a teohnical term. It did not mean " everything", but every item of the aupposed t o be an " exhaustive Buddhist table of elements. This table w i ~ s division ": cf. Mrs. Rhys Dsvids, Buddhist Psychology, p. 41 ; Samyutta, iv, 15-27 ; Vimddhi-Magga, ch, x i v ; Warren, Buddhism in tramlation, P. 158 ; G. Grimm, Buddhismuq passim.

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION, OF BUDDHISM

1 1 .

SKANDHAB

at present we take it to mean an ultimate entity, the conception of which, in the domain of matter, excludes the reality of everything except sense-data, and in the field of mind, of everything except separate mental phenomena. We will begin by reviewing the different kinds of elements and their various classifications, and then proceed to determine what was the Buddhist conception of an element of existence. This will lead us to ascertain more precisely in what sense the older Buddhist doctrine may have a claim to be called a realistic system.

11. SKANDHAS The simplest classification of all elements of existence is represented by a division into five groups of elements : (1) matter, (2) feelings, (3) ideas, (4) volitions and other faculties, and (5) pure sensation or general consci~nsness.~ If we realize that the group of matter represents no other matter than sense-data, that a soul is excluded and replaced by feelings, ideas, volitions, and pure sensation, we cannot but be surprised that from under a cover of Oriental terminology an epitome of matter and mind emerges which very nearly approaches the standpoint of modern European science. Three of these groups, namely, feelings, ideas, and pure sensation, contain one element (dharma) each. They are, nevertheless, called groups because they include feelings, etc., as past, present, and future, proximate and remote, external and internal, morally pure or impure, etc.2 The group of matter includes ten elements, ten different varieties of sensedata.3 The group of volitions, etc., inclndes fifty-eight elements, various mental faculties and general force^.^
The reasons for these renderings of the terms repa, vedami, samjlid, samskta, and vijiibna will be given later on. Ab. K., i, 20. a Ibid., i, 14. * All the sawzskbras except vedanb and samjlid, ibid., i, 15. The three eternal elements-asawkrta-are not included in the skandhnr, ibid., i, 22. Together with auij6apti-rlipu this will make wventy-five element8 in all.

The physical elements of a personality, including its outer world-the external objects-are represented in this classification by one item-matter; 1 the mental ones are distributed among the four others. For "Matter and Mind " the old, pre-Buddhistic term ndma-rGpa is used, where rGpa represents the elements of matter and ndma includes t,he four mental classes. Rut the most general division of all elements is into matter (rGpa),mind (citta-caitta),and forces (samskQva). The fourth group (samskdra-skandha), which inclodes mental faculties and genersl forces, is here split into two parts; the mental faculties are then united to all other mental groups, and are brought under the head of mind ;the general forces or energies receive a separate place (citta-viprayukta-sam~kdra).~ This threefold division is very popular and known in Mongolia and Tibet to every ~choolboy.~ 1 1 1 . HYATANAS A second, more detailed, classification of the elements is made with a view to a division into cognitive faculties and their objects. There are six cognitive faculties and six categories of corresponding objects. They make the twelve Qyatanas or " bases " of cognition, viz. :I. S i r intsrnal bases (adhyitrnn1 1 . Six external besea (bbhyadyatana) or object3 (vipaya). dyatana) or rexptive faculties (indriya). 1. Sense of visim (cakgw-inllriya7. Colaur and shape (reppa-dyabptanz). tena). 2. Sense of audition (qrob-endriya8. Sound (qabda-byatam). dyatana). 1 Among the physics1 elements there is one called avijeapti which broadly corresponds t o what we might call the moral oharaoter of a peraon : for some speoial reasons i t is entered by theSarvlstividins in their physical olass (rlipa), but other schools include i t in mind (Ab. K., i, 11). I n the riyztana m d dluitlc clsssifioations i t is included not inthe physioalitema, but i n the genera olass dharmdh, i.e. dyatana or dhdtu No. 12. kthe following account we leave this special element unnoticed, cf. Appendix 1 1 , under Matter. a Or a slightly differing fivefold division: rlipa, citte, caitla, v@r~yukla-sa?p9kbra, and nirvdna ; cf. Ab. K., ii, 22, and Appendix 1 1 . lugs-~es-ldan-min-hdrc-byed.

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

111.

AYATANAS

3. Sense of smelling (ghrdwendriyaciyatana). 4. Sense of taste (jihv-endriyaayatana). 5. Sense of touch (!uiyedriyaciyatana). 6. Fsoulty of the intellect or consoiousness (mum-indriyadyatana).

9.

Odour (gandha4yatana).

10. Taste (rasa-dyatana). 11. Tangihles(spra+tauya.ciyatona). 12. Non-sensuousobjects(dharmaciyalana or dhawnlh).

synonym is " cverything " (sarvam). When the principle " everything exists " is set forth it has the meaning that nothing but the twelve bases of cognition are existent. An object which cannot be viewed as a separate object of cognition or a separate faculty of cognition is unreal, as e.g. the soul, or the personality. Being a congeries of separate elements it is declared to be a name, and not a reality, not a dharm? IV. D H ~ T U S The division of the elements of existence into eighteen d&tus, although very similar-it represents, indeed, in its fmt twelve items a repetition of the former oneis taken from a quite different view-point. Buddhist philosophy is an analysis of separate elements, or forces, which unite in the production of one stream (santtina) of events. The unphilosophic mind of common people supposPs this stream to represent a personality or an individual (pzidgaab). Viewed b s components of such a stream, the elements arc called dh6tus. Just as different metals (d&tus) might be extracted out of a mine, just so does the stream of an individual life reveal elements of eighteen different kinds (dhdtu = g o t ~ a ) .I~ t always includes six faculties (from cakgur-dhdtu up to mano-dhitu), six lddds of objective elements (from ?%pa-dhdtuup to dharmd&tu), and six kinds of consciousness, beginning with visual con~ciousness,or visual sensation (cak,yur-vt$%a-dhdtu), and ending with consciousness purely mental, i.e. non-sensuous (maw-&j%na-d&tu). Thus, in addition to the twelve components corresponding to the twelve bases of cognition, we have :I The right explanstion of the term ciyatana is given in 0.Rosenberg's Problems, p. 138 ff. The usual translation " sphere" ignores the fundamenturn diviaionia. S. Z. Aung, Compendium, p. 256, although containing the right suggestion, thinks it " might well be left untranslated". " A6. K., i, 20. I t may be noted that the number of component element6 (tattvaa) of the rudimentary body in Sankbya is likewise eighteen. That the term dhritu has been borrowed from medical science, where it means element of the body, can hardly be doubted.

I n this classification the eleven first items correspond to eleven elements (dharma), each includmg one. The twelfth item contains all the remaining sixty-four elements, and it is therefore called dharma-dyatana or simply dharmdh, i.e. the remining elements. The term dyatam means " entrance " ( d y a q tamti). It is an " entrance " for consciousness and mental phenomena (citta-caifiindm). Consciousness, it is stated, never arises alone, since it is pure sensation, without any content. I t is always supported or "introduced" by two elements : a cognitive faculty and a corresponding objective element. These are the supporters or the "doors " (dvdm) for consciousness to appear. Visual consciousness (cak~ur-VijGna) arises in correlation (patitya) with the sense of vision (cak8ur-idriya) and some colour (raps- ca). I n the case of the sixth cognitive faculty (manas), consciousness itself, i.e. its preceding moment, acts as a faculty for apprehending non-sensuous objects. The trend of this classification, which is a characteristic feature of Buddhism from its very beginnings, is unmistakable. It intends to give a division of all objects of cognition into sense-objects and non-sensuous ones. The first are then divided into ten groups according to the five senses and their five objects, and the second (dhawna-iyayatana, or simply dharmdh), including every non-sensuous object, is left undivided. There are six items corresponding to six cognitive faculties. Thus the twelve dyatanas, or " bases of cognition : , represent all elements of existence distributed withm six subjective and six corresponding objective items. Their

10

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

V.

MATTER

11

13. 14. 15. 16. 17.


18.

Visual cansoiousness (cak~r-uij7idna-dhdtu), Auditory ,. (qrotra-vifldna-dhitu). Olfactory ,, (gh~dw-vijiidna-dhitu). Gustatory ,, (jihvd-uijana-dhitu). Trotile ,, (Mya-vijlidna-dhdtu). Non-sensuous , , (mano-vijlirina-dhdtu).

Consciousness, which is but one element (dhawna), is split in this classification into seven items, since it enters into the composition of an individual life as a faculty (mano-dhdtu) and as six different kinds of sensations, differentiated by their origin, as from one of the senses, or from a purely mental non-sensuous source.l All these varieties of consciousness exist only in the ordinary plane of existence (kima-Dhdtu). I n higher worlds (rapaDhitu) sense-consciousness gradually disappears, in the immaterial worlds (arcpa-Dhdtu) only non-sensuous consciousness is left. A division of consCiousness into various kinds (dhdtu 13-18) is thus made necessary for the composition of formulas of elements corresponding to the denizens of various ~orlds.~ We will now proceed to consider the separate elements in the order of their most general classification into Matter, Mind, and Forces.
Dhdtu is often defined just as dharma: sva.snohh~va-dhdr&t, or sua-lak~ana-dhriratLdt (of. S. Z. Aung, Compendium, p. 265 ff.), but this is only pertly correot, since the dhitu No. 12 include8 sixty-four dharmas, and the seven dhribus, No. ti m d Nos. 13-18, correspond to one single dharma-the vijficinn (=manas=cittam). The definition in Ah. K., i, 20, is dhdtu=gotra. We can, accordingly, translate dhritu by " component ", " element ", or " class of elements ", just as the case may require. a When the three DI~dtusarementioned the term Dhdtu means world (loka) or plane of existence (auacara). It has nothing to do with the eighteen dhdtw. The worlds are divided into matsrb.1 (ripa-)and immaterial (mipa-) worlds, theformer again into worlds of carnal desire or defiled matterkdma-(ripe)-Dhitu, and those of pure, or reduced, matter-(&&ma.) nipa-Dhbtu. I n the kdma-Dhdtu life consists of eighteen components (dhdtua), in the ripa.DMtu of fourteen (excepted are Naa. 9-10 and of three (Nor. 6, 12, and 18). I n ripa. and 15-16), in the aripa-Dhat~c aripa-Dhdtus life is chsractarized by different degrees of perpetual trance (dhydna). Ordinary people o m be tmnsferred into these higher regions of trmce either through being reborn in them (utpatti) or through an effort of transic meditation (samcipatti).

V. ELEMENTS OF MATTER Matter (rcpa) or the physical elements (rcpino dharmib), which in the first classificati6n occupied one item (&pa-skandha),is otherwise distributed into ten items(Nos. 1-5 and 7-11). The term riipa-iyatam is reserved for visible matter or, more precisely, the phenomenon of visibility alone, this being matter par excelklzce? The general characteristic of matter, or material elements, is impenetrability (sa-pratighatva), which is defined as the fact that space occupied by one of them cannot, at the same time, be occupied by another? The elements of visibility are divided into two main groups, colours and shapes. There are eight colours and twelve different shapes. Another theory reduces all colours to two, light and darkness. All other varieties of visibility are represented as differences of lines. The opposite view, namely, that colours alone are realities and shapes (samsthdna) represent copstructions of the mind (wGnasam, parikalpitam) (superimposed upon the difference of coloration as an interpretation of it), was favoured by the Sa~trintikas.~ A line, say a line drawn by the motion of the hand, being an
1 Ab. K., i, 24. a The etymologid explannation is : rGpyccta iti rCpam, i.e. matter is what materislizes. Different meanings are then given of this materializing : pressure, p i n , disagpeartmee, or ohsnge. Thus matter is something t h a t disappears. The real meaning is impenetrability (85-pratiyhatva), which is further vmiausly explained. Kumaralibha gives to the phenomenon of impenetrability a n ideslistio interpretation: " t h e impossibility for the intellect t o imagine the presenoe of two suob objeots ocoupying the asme spaoe" (ibid., Tibetan text, p. 50, 17 ff.). Professor 0.Rosenberg strongly objects t o the interpretation of rzipa as matter. He maintains t h a t Buddhism from its very outset viewed the phenomenal world as s n illusion and relegated every reality to same transcendental world (cf. Problems, chap. x). He suggests "sense-elements" for riLpa. This would find a plsoe in a n idealistic system and would be supported by the above interpretation of Kumiralibha. But it is, evidently, not the view adopted by the school of the Sarvistivldins. I t is true that there is no other matter than sense-data. This should not prevent us, just as i t does not prevent modern philosophers who favour t h e same view, from using the term " matter" for faots characterized by impenetrability. Ab. K., i, 10, end Yap. oomment.

'

12

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

v.

MATTER

13

intimation of something (vzj'iiapti), is an element (raps-Warma) of length ; the line of the flight of a bird in the air is the same. They are interpreted as the apparitions of the element of length or of some colour, and all Buddhist matter must be conceived according to this pattern. They are material elements without any matter in them. A glance a t the ten items corresponding to matter in the Zyatana-division will convince us that no other matter except sense-data is recognized. I t is broadly divided into two categories, objective sense-data (visaya) constituting external objects, and sense?organs (indriya) conceived as a kind of translucent subtle matter which covers the body when it ie living. This division reminds us of the Sinkhya view that matter developed along two different lines, the one with predominance of the translucent intelligence-stuff (sattva) resulting in sense-organs, the other, with predominance of dead matter (tamas), resulting in sense-objects in their subtle (tan-mdtra) and gross CrnahEbhtita) forms. I n fact the concept of tan-mcitra comes very near to the Buddhist conception of an element of matter (rtipa-dharma). The fundamental difference between the two conceptions is that in the SBnkhya system these elements are modifications or appurtenances of an eternal substance. I n Buddhism they are mere sense-data without any substance. The translucent matter of the sense-organs (rtipa-pass) is very subtle ; it is like the shining of a jewel, it cannot be cut in two,%it cannot be burnt,3 it has no eight,^ and it disappears without a residue at death.5 It is, nevertheless,
Ab. If., i, 10, Tib. text, p. 17. If a member, or all members, are chopped off the body, the senae-organmatter is not out even in two parts, i.0. the parts that are cut o f f are senseless. The movements of a lizard's tail after i t is knocked off the m a n body are explained not by the presence of thia life-matter (indriya), but by theintensification of the vayu element, i.e. it is a, lifeless process (Ab. K., i, 30, Tibetan text, p. 63, and Yap. comment). Ab. K., i, 36, Tib. text, p. 63, 13. Ibid. Ab. K., i, 37, and Ysp. comment: mrtmya amneurtteh. This is a point of anslogy with the lingn-pvarira of the SSnkhyas.

atomic, and is represented by five different kinds of atoms. The atoms of the organ of sight (caksur-indriya)cover in concentric circles the eye-ball. The atoms of the organ of taste, or, more precisely, that matter which is supposed to convey the sensation of taste, covers in concentric semicircles the tongue. The atoms of the organ of touch (Ey-endriya) cover the whole body? The idea that all these different kinds of special matter are, indeed, the same translucent subtle stuff covering the whole living body and disappearing a t death had also its advocates, who consequently reduced all senses to one, the sense of touch, but this did not h d general acceptance. Being as subtle as the shining of a jewel, this matter cannot appear alone; it is supported by gross matter (mahdbhata); of which the eye-ball and flesh in general consist. The atoms of external matter are likewise divided into atoms of general, universal, or fundamental matter, and special atoms of colour-, sound-, tangibility-matter, etc. The fundamental elements are four in number; they are manifested by the facts of hardness or repulsion, cohesion br attraction, heat and m o t i ~ n . ~ Conventionally they are called earth, water, fire, qnd air; but it is specifled that these are only conventional appellations, and that in the name of the fourth general element (<raga)alone both the technical and the usual meanings coalesce, because the word %raw has both the significations of motion and air as well.3 The fact that the fourth element is motion is an indication of the trend of this division ; the general elements of matter, like all Buddhist elements, are more forces than substances. These four elements appear always together, always in equal proportion. There is as much element of heat in a blazing flame as there is in wood or in water, and vice versa, the difference is only in their inten~ity.~ The general elements of matter (mahdbhata)
Ab. K., i, 44, Tibetan text, p. 84, 15 ff. Ab. K., i, 13. Ab. K., i, 12. e.g. tbe taotile sensation may have a different degree of intensity as the touoh hy a bunch of steelneedles ia more intensely felt than the touch of a painter'^ brush, although thequantity may be thessme. Theexistence
1

14

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

V.

MATTER

15

are brought under the head of tangibles (Zyatana No. 11). Since there is only a limited number of general manifestations of tangibility, therefore their number is four? There is, apparently, a distinction between the elements in themselves and their manifestations, because the four facts of resistance, attraction, heat, and motion are clearly called manifestations (Zaksaw) of the elements (dharma), which, accordingly, must be something different, somet'hing mysterious or transcendental, similar in this respect to the gunas of the Sinkhyas. The other five kinds of objective matter (Zyatanas Nos. 7-11) were not general, but special, corresponding to each of the five senses ; the tangibility-matter alone (ayatana No. 11) includes both the general (mahZhht~ta)and the special (hhautika) elements of matter.% They were also atomic, but could not appear independently without being combined with the fundamental ones, in the ratio of four atoms of primary matter to one of secondary. Thus the minimum number of atoms indispensable for their actual appearance in life was eight : four atoms of general materiality combined with each atom of colour, odour, taste, and secondary tangibility-matter (such as smoothness, coarseness, etc.). If the particular piece of matter resounded, atoms of sound were added and the combination consisted then of nine different atoms.s The combined atoms (sanghita-paramZnu) alone appear in phenomenal reality, the simple ones, or infraatomic elements, presumably, were relegated to trauscendental reality, in accordance with the general character
of cohesiveness, i.e. oi the element "water" in a. flame, is proved by its keeping a shape; the presence of repulsion, i.e. of the element " earth ", in water, is proved by the fact of its supporting a ship, etc. (cf. Ab. K., ii, 22, and Yapom.). Ab. If.,i, 35, Tibetan text, p. 61, 5 ff. ,Ibid. The actual number of atoms in 8 sang7uita.paramci?zuwill be much greater, since each atom of secondary (hhautika) matter needs a aat of four primmy stoms of its own, hut if d7uitus alone are reckoned the number will express the clesses (dhrite) of elements (dlmma) represented (cf. Ab. K.. ii, 22).

of a Buddhist element. This device made it an easy task for Buddhists to oppose the indivisibility of atoms.1 In the Zyatana classification two items (Nos. 6 and 12) are devoted to the elements of mind (citta-eaitta-dharmEh, arapiizo dharmEh) and, according to the principle of this classification, they represent two correlative groups : a subjective one (indriya) and an objective one (+aya). The principle of externality of one element in regard to another, i.e. the idea of separate elements (pythag-dharma),is maintained in the field of mind just as in the field of matter. Mind is split into two chief parts. The subjective part, or mind viewed as a receptive faculty, is represented by one element called, indiscriminately, & a , vzj'ddna, or m a n a ~ . ~ It represents pure consciousness, or pure sensation, without any content. Its content is placed in the objective part which contains the definite sensation (sparp), feelings (vedami), ideas (safljfid), volitions (eetanci), and various other mental phenomena up to the number of forty-six separate elemenh3 So it is that feelings come to be viewed as objects of the mind, a posit,ion which, for other reasons, they likewise possess in the Siukhya syst,em. The category in which they are entered is called the (general) group of elements (dhavma-Zyatana)or simply " the elements " (dharmZh). As stated above, the first eleven "bases" contain one element (dharma) each, but this last one contains the remaining sixty-four elements of the list. Beside the forty-six mental phenomena it contains the fourteen elementary forces (tgprayukta-samskdra),the element of character (avijriapti) and the three eternal elements (asamskm) : among the latter is Nirvipa, the chief dharma.
'

' Ab. K . , i; 43, Tibetan text, p. 83.


a Ab. K., ii, 34. The same terms in the P d i Canon, Sumgutla, ii, 94. The ThemvMa reckoned fifty-one. Cf. the fifty b7uivas of the Sinkhyas, some of them exhibiting an andogy with corresponding Buddhist caiftad h a r m . A full list of the fortysix caitta-dharnas is given below, App. 11.

16

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

VI.

MIND

17

For this reason the term " elements " (dharmdh)is a sufficient indication of this group, because the oiher categories, although also containing elements (dharmcih),have a special name each.l The common feature of all these elements is that they are apprehended by the intellect directly without any intermediate agency of the senses. I n the apprehension of senseobjects there is likewise participation by the intellect; but these d h a d h are non-sensuous objects, t,heyare the exclusive domain of the receptive intellect, just as colour is the exclusive domain of the sense of visfon.2 The de6nition 'of receptive consciousness is pregnant : vij'iiaam pratio@aptih, i.e. " consciousness is an intimation, or awareness, in every single case " (of what is now present to the senses, or to the mind dire~tly).~ I f an apprehension contains some, albeit quite indefinite, content, say some indefinite visual sensation, it will then
1 Every dyatana is thus a dharmriyatana, but No. 12 ia dharm@tana par exoellence. J u s t so is i t t h a t the ten material dyatanas all include matter. They are, consequelitly, all of them, ripriyatanas. But only one of them-the visible element, dyatana No. 7-retains the name of ri&atana as itu speoial designation, because i t represents the most characteristic and important among the elements of matter. Cf. Ah. K., i, 24, Tibetan text, p. 42, 17 ff. Prof. and M r s . Gcig-~r, op. eit., p. 80, have established for thedharmrih in the technied sense the signification " t h e empirical things Thin is a n example of the impotence of the "philological method" ! It has not escaped their attention that dharmdh is synonymous witL dharmdyatana and dharmadh&tu, in which Xirirvi?a is included (p. 83), whioh is anythiiig but empirical. The dharmdh are apprehended by manah (p. 81), but the emphasis is put on the fact t h a t they m e apprehended withut the cooperation of the senaes. Everything is apprehended by r n ~ ? bnt ~the , dharmrih are external with regard to manah; their plsoe in the system is among the s i r s i ~ a y ass , opposed t o the six indriya, one of which, the sixth, is manah. Concerning the meaning of the terms " external" and " internal" some remarks will be made later on, pp. 58-9, when discussing the theory of cognition. Cittam uijdndti, Asl., p. 42 = " is aware uariously " 3 Ab. K., i, 16. (M. Ting), must have the same import, if any. Cf. the Sinkhya d e h i t i o n of pmtyakga in Srinkhya-!&%kc% 5 : pratiui~ay-ridhyauasriyo drg.tam, where ~ve have likewise the distributive -ti-, but vij%ina=tijliapttih, since i t is i n the SLnkhya system represented by purwa (of. below, Theory of Copition, p. 63), is replaced by ndhyavas8ya-the fanotinn of the i n t m a l organ (synthesis).

".

t'he next degree, a real sensation (sprga).l The definite perception (parichitti) of a colour will be an " idea " (sanjgd), but consciousness as the perceptive faculty is pure sensation. Although quite undifferentiated in itself, this pure sensation is, nevertheless, distinguished from the standpoint of its origin or, more precisely,'its environment, i.e. the elements by which its appearance is accompanied. From this point of view, as stated above, there is a set of six diierent kinds (dhitu)of consciousness,correspondingto a set of six receptive faculties and a set of six k i d s of objects. We thus have six categoriesof consciousness (gad-vyfidna-kdydh), beginning with visual sensation or, more precisely, pure sensation arising in conuexion with some colour (caksur-vijfidna-dhdtu) and ending with consciousness accompanying a non-sensuous object (mano-vyEna-dhdtu). We have besides the same consciousness as a receptive faculty (dhdtu No. 6). As a receptive faculty mano-dhdtu is not different from consciousness arising in connexion with abstract objects (mano-.uzj'riCna-dhdtu) ; it is the same reality, the same dhamna. But for symmetrical arrangement it has been found necessary to have a set of three items for the purely mental elements, just as there is a threefold set of faculty, object, and sensation corresponding to each of the ~ e n s e s . The ~ difference between consciousness as a receptive faculty and the same consciousness accompanying an abstract object is then said to be a difference of time. Consciousness in the role corresponding to the place occupied in the system by the senses is the consciousness of the preceding moment? The Theravidins, evidently for the same purpose of symmetrical arrangement, introduced into
1 Three d h ~ r m 9 are engaged when this kind of sensation, sometimes transletad r s " oontsot ", iis produced : traydvdm sannipitah 8pvpah (tima? s a w a t i phuso) : the consciousness (citta), the sense-organ, and the sense-object. Cf. below under theory of cognition. * Ab. K., i, 16, Tibetan text, p. 29, 1. 17. 8 The mental phenomena (eaitta-dharma) also have their objeots ; they are sccording to Lhe current t e r m h l o g y sdlawbana, buL Lhey are themaelves cilaya s n d not indviya (Ah. K., i, 34, of. Tibetan text, p. 49.1. 19).

18

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION O F BUDDHISM

VJ.

MIND

19

the system a " heart-stuff " (hdaya-vatthu) which supports the non-sensuous cognitions, just as the .other sense-stuffs "support " sense-cognitions. It occupies in the s y s t e ~ the place of the sixth organ (dyatam or dhdtu No. 6)? Although external in regard to one another, consciousness and mental phenomena (citta-cailta)were conceived as being in a closer, more intimate, connexion than other combining elements. Pure sensatioa (&&!a) could never appear in life in its true separate condition ; it was always accompanied by some secondary mental phenomena (caiua)? Among these mental phenomena (cairn-dharma) or faculties ( s a m s k a ) three are especially conspicuous, namely, feelings (wdani), ideas (sanjlid), and volitions (cekcnd). I n the classification into groups (shndha)they occupy three separate items, all the remaining ones being included together with the volitions in the sa?nsk&a-skandha. Feelmgs (vedand) are defined as emotions pleasant, unpleasant, or neutraLs Ideas ( a a n j k )are defined as operations of abstract thought, as that. which "abstracts " (wEgrahawa)a common characteristic sign (nimitta) from the individual objeck4 Even the definite representation (parichitti) of a colour is brought under this head.4 It is exactly what in later Indian philosophy, Buddhist as well as Brahmanical, was understood by "definite" (sa-wikalpaka)cognition. Digngga and Dharmabirti introduced into Indian logic the distinction between pure sense knowledge, free from any operation of abstract thought (kalpanipodha), and definite cognition (savikalpaka).5 It was then adopted by Uddyotakara and
Cf. Mrs. C. Rhys Davids, B. Psych., pp. 32, 70. This heart-stuff had,
presumably, as little to do with the actual heart as the cakgur-indriya-stuff with the actusl eye. Indian medical science assumed the esiatenee of a, subtle dMp-food-stuffrm a vehicle of mental processes. I t is here called heart-stuff. a Ab. K., ii, 23. a Ab. K., i, 14. ' Ihid Cf. the delinition of patyak+a in inn'yyd-bind* 1.

the whole' of the Nyiya-Vai~egikaschool? I t now appears that Digniga was not the originator of this doctrine, he only adapted it to his system. From the very beginning Buddhism had established this difference : uzj'%na and its qmonyms citta, manah represent pure sensation, the same as the kalpawipo@a pratyaksa of Digniiga, and sanjiiii corresponds to definite ideas. Every construction (kalpawi), every abstraction (udgrahana),l every definite (parichinna) representation, such as blue and yellow, long and short, male and female, friend and enemy, happy and miserable-this is all brought under the head of ideas (sanjr?.d) as distinguished from vijGna = pure sensation. Volition (cetani)is d e h e d as the mental effort that precedes action. I t is an element or a force which enters in the composition of a personal life (santzna). It must not be forgotten that, since there is no personality in the, Buddhist outlook of the universe, there certainly is no will in our sense, i.e. no personal will. There is a certain arrangement of elements, there is an element, or a force, or, still more precisely, the simple fact (dharma)that the elements are arranged in a certain way, according to certain laws. This fact is pointed to by the term oetaG. It " arranges " (sancetayati) the elements in " streams ", which simple folk deem to be personalities. It is synonymous with the law of moral causation (karma) and likewise with the force of vitality, the " Blan vital " (bhzuani, vikanli), which in the Buddhist system replaces any conscious agent, whether soul or God or even a conscious

' Cf. NyQ&wirttika, patyakpa-8Btra. LTdgrahana is literally " abstraction ", k a l p m i " imsgimtion ", " oonIt correspondsto the part taken in Kant's system by " prostruotion ductive imagination ", whereas t;ij%m, or the p a t y a k p of Digniga, corresponds to " reine Siunlichkeit Cf. my Logic of later Buddhists (chapter on kalpand). To be derived from the root ci from which the Buddhists derive citla as well (Ash.,p. 63); sancetayati is exactly, in form and meaning, the Russian sochetayeti; the PPli abhisalzdahati has the same import, cf. S. Z. Aung, Compendium, p. 235. 1 Thedebition of hrma is cetand cetayitwi ca karatban, Ab. K., iv, 1 ff., the same as in Anguttam, iii, 416; of. E b r s . C. Rhys Davids, B. Psych., p. 93.

".

".

20

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISX

VII.

FORCES

21

human being.' A moment of this kind of will accompanies every conscious moment (citta). There are, on the whole, ten mental elements which accompany every conscious moment ; they are called the "general " mental element^.^ There are ten others which are particularly " favourable " for progress towards the final appeasement of life ; they are faith, courage, equanimity, etc. Ten others have the contrary unfavourable or oppressive (klzsta) character. There we some others which have no definite moral character. All these mental elements are not general ; they accompany only some of the moments of consciousness, not all of them.3 VII. FORCES The definitions of the will (cetani)and of the force (sa@xZra) are indeed the same, " what produces the manifestations (abhi-sa~skaroti) of combining elements (saqzskrtam)" : it is a " concerted agency " . 6 Since all forces are agencies acting in some combination with other elements, we may in rendering this conception, for the sake of expediency, safely drop the word " combining " and use " forces " alone! There are some indications that originally there was only one s a & % r a in the Buddhist system, the will, and that gradually a whole catalogue of them was developed, some of the elements being ~ entered into this group rather forcibly, with e x c ~ s e s . The
A6. K., ix, Soul T h o r y , p. 942. Citta-mahdbhcmika. A full list of them wiU be found in 0. Rosenberg's Pwblems, p. 374, and st the end of this book. This de6nition we find already in the oldest souroes, e.g. Samyutta, iii, 87, and i t is repeated in numberless paasages of the A6. K.; cf. S. Z. Aung, Compendium, p. 236. 8ambhCya-kirituam, A6. K., i, 7. This the Buddhists themeelvee have also done in replacing saqtskrta by kytaka, of. Nyciyab. tika, pp. 47, 50, eta. A unity, without combining, e m produce nothing : na E m i d ekam eknsmrit (Dignlga). In the Ab. K., i, 15, there is a n interesting effort to prove t h a t dl samslniras (sixty) are inoluded in the somskirira-skandhaand notcetand alone, as it would he possible t o conclude from scriptural patlsages. AE tho ~ e c o n d member of the chain of causation, samakcira is equivalent t o karma.

'

most typical forces are the four forces of origination and decay, etc., which accompany every other element in life. Some details concerning them will be given in the sequel. I n general, all elements may be divided into substances and forces (dravya and sarczfikira). The forces are then divided into meGal faculties, with the will as chief among them, and non-mental (citta-viprayukta) forces, among which the origination and decay forces are the most typical. But even these latter forces are sometimes given a certain amount of substantiality (drayatopi santi).l The word and conception sa?zskira performs a conspicuous part in all Indian philosophical systems. It usually means some latent mysterious power, which later on reveals itself in some patent fact. I t sometimes is identified with the " unknown " (ndr~ta) conceived as a force sui genaris. Since every philosophy is but a search for the hidden reality as opposed to the patent surface of life, the importance of the conception of a sa?)ls&ra is quite natural. Every system had its own dehition and scope attributed to the connotation of this term. The -&jivikasect, as we have seen, was known by its denial of the existence of such forces. The Buddhists, on the contrary, converted all their elements into subtle forces of some degree. The subtler the element the more was it given the character of a force ; but even the coarsest elements, the rnahdbhtltas, look more like forces than substances. There is a constant fluctuation in Buddhist terminology between a force (sanzskira) and a substance influenced by these forces (sanaskrta). A force, it must be recalled, should not be regarded as a real influence of somethmg extendmg beyond its own existence in order to penetrate into another-this would be
Mrs. C. Rhys Davids oaUs my attention t o the following very illuminating words in Samyuita, iii, 60: Katamd ca 6hikkhave salikhrird ? Cha-y-ime cetancikciyci r~pa-sadda-gandha-rma~pha~!h~166a~aa~ictand dhammasafieetanci i m e uz~ceantiaadkhdvi. Acoording t o Yapomitre, l.e., the mental faculties are inoluded in the samskdva-skandha because they obey the will, tbe other forces because they are similar to the wi!! (cetand). Ab. K., ii, 2, 24.

22

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION

O F

BUDDHISM

VII.

FORCES

23

upakira-but simply as a condition, a fact, upon which another fact arises or becomes prominent (utkarsa) by itself -this is s a w k i r a in the Buddhist system.l The little we know of the history of Indian philosophy induces us to look to the Sinkhya system as the foundation of scientific thinking. I n that school the fundamental ideas were formed which sometimes unconsciously affected all later constructions. 11That do we find there 1 Three fundament l principles, Matter, find-stuff, and Energy-stuff, as interdependent moments in every real and substantial existence. Even energy is substantial in this sense. The infinitesimals of energy, present everywhere, are semi-material; although different from the inertia of Matter, and the luminosity of Mind, they are separate and ~ubstantial.~The Buddhist elements as infinitesimal realities, divided into elements of Matter, Mind, and Forces, look like a reply to the Sinkhya constructions from an architect of greater skill : " you maintain the realities are gunas, we say they are dharmas." The fundamental idea of infinitesimal realities may be recognized a in the dharmas, the idea of forces everywhere present can be traced to its origin in the Sankhya conception of rajas ; there are forces which are different from matter and mind (pipa-citla-vipayttkta).A pIura1istic view of the whole is added to make the originality of the new system, in contrast to the unitarian tendency of the old one. But, be the case as it may, every element of matter and mind may be called in Buddhism a sapskdra, which, in this case, will stand for samsk~ta-dharma.3 The Buddhist idea of a force
Cf. the paribhigas to Pilzini, ii, 3,53 : ri, 1, 139 ; andiv, 2, 16 ; iv, 4,3, in the KdgiM (not occurring in the M. bhdgya). Cf. below, p. 69. Cf. B. Seal, The Positive Sciences of the Hindus, and S. Dasgupt~,The Slndy of PataGjali. The interpretationof thegunae given there is entirely. based on Vy%a who, as will I?e seen below, p. 46, was strongly influeuoed by abhidbrma. Concerning their mythological origin of. Senart, J. Aa. 1915, v. ii, pp. 151 8. Yapomitra (Ab. K., i, 16) remarks that the name s a w b t a ia given in anticipation, since an element rill become samskrta only when the forces (sawEva) ahall have exhibited their efficiency. In the popular formula anitye6 sarve aamskcirih the word sawkrilo stande for sawkrta-db~rna.

seems to be that it is the subtle form of a substance, but even substance is here subtle enough. The order in which the elements appear in the first classification into groups is interpreted as a gradual progress from coarseness to smbtletp ; matter ( ~ B p ais ) coarser than feeling (uedanci),feeling more palpable than ideds( s a n j z ) ,the remaining energies (sanwkira) still more subtle.= The pure forces (viprayukta-samsk6ra) are the most subtle among the elements. In the loftiest, highest worlds, where existence is entirely spiritualized, their agency continues; they are the last to be suppressed before final extinction is reached. The chief among t,hem are the four forces of origination and destruction, etc., which are the very essence of every existence. Then there are two forces, pripti and uprapti, which are supposed to control the collection of elements composing a personal life or to prevent (aprlpti) the appearance in it of an element that is not in agreement with its general character. The Sautrintikas and Vasubandhu deny the reality of these forces; for them they are mere names (praihpti)? There are two forces supposed to be active in producing the highest degrees of trance-the unconscious trance (asanjfii-saGpatti)and the cessation (nirodha-) trance or catalepsy. They are also brought under the head of pure forces.3 They evidently could not be brought under the head of mind, because consciousness at that bime is supposed to be suppressed. Then there are three forces corresponding to the sphop of other systems. All Indian systems contain speculations about the nature of sound, its physical as well as its significative aspect. The physical sound was in Buddhism considered, in agreement with the whole system, as a production, i.e. (flash'mg)of soundatoms reposing on the atoms of fundamental matter. If
S a v s & ~ a etymologized as kara?~a-sddhamwould mean force, and as k a m a - s b d h m would be equal to sawkrta-dbrma. The individud life, which consists of all these phyaicd and mental element^ end forces, ia called samskira-aamiibb, of. Yapm. (Ab. K., ir), sa ccipi Cailra-abhidhcinah ea~h%ra-mmiha-saptdmb. Ibid., ii, 46. Ab. K., ii, 37. 1 Ab. K., i, 22.

24

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

simultaneously some atoms of translucent sound matter (pbda-rapa-pmsoidn) appeared in the ear, an auditory sensation (yotra-v;jGna) was produced. But the significance of the sounds of speech was given by special forces. The Mim8msaka school was known for its theory of transcendental, intelligible sounds which were eternal and nbiquitous, like Platonic ideas, and manifested themselves in the case of physical words being pronounced. Followingtheirfundamental principle of analysidg everything into minutest elements, the Buddhists imagined three separate forces which imparted to the sounds of speech their significativeness ; the force of sound (vyanjana), which would seem to correspond to the modem idea of a " phonema ",the force of words ( n & n a ) ,and the force of sentences (pada).l Generality, general ideas, are also conceived as a kind of force, and it is christened by the name of nikdya-sabhcigatd,a conccption intended to replace by a "force" the substantial reality of the samdnya of other sy~tems.~ In general this group of forces is a rather incongruous assemblage of elements which could not be placed elsewhere. As a separate group of elements it is absent in the Theravtida school. Some of its members seem to have found a place, for some reason, among the physical ( r ~ p agroup ) of that school.*

YIII. NON-SUBSTANTIALITY OF THE ELEMENTS After this succinct review of the elements of existence and their different classifications, we may consider the question as to what were they in their essence, what was the Buddhist
1 Ab. K., ii, 47 ff. Vyanjana here corresponds to varqa, mima to sanjvid, and ~ a d ta o udkya, a case exhibiting clearly the desire t o have a terminology n spho.la, of one's bwn, so common to Indian systems : " you maintain it i we say it is uyanjana-luima-pada-sawkdva." The real existence of these forces is admitted by the Sarvistividin done. For this reason they bring the Holy Scriptures under the head of sawE~a-skandha,whereas the Sautr%ntikas classify it under rcpa,m pbdn, and the VijEinavidins under vij8dm-skandha; of. Vinitadeva's introduotion to the Santdndntarasiddhi, edited by me in the BibL Buddhica. a Ab. K., ii, 41. a Cf. S. 2. Aung, Compendium, p. 157.

conception of an element. The elements had four salient feat,ures: (1) they were not-substance-this refers to all the seventy-five elements, whether eternal or impermanent ; (2) they had no duration--this refers only to the seventy-two impermanent elements of phenomenal existence ; (3) they were unres+thi refers only to one part of the latter class, that which roughly corresponds to the ordinary man as opposed to the purified condition of the elements of a saint (arya); and (4) their unrest had its end in final deliverance. Speaking technically: (I) all dharmns are andtman, ( 2 ) ail sa~skrta-dhrmas are anitya, (3) all sdsrava-dlzarmas are duhkha, and (4) t,heir nirv6?m alone is @eta. An element is non-substantial, it is evanescent, it is in a beginningless state of commotion, and its final suppression is the only Calm. These are what the Tibetans call the four " seals " of Buddha? We now proceed to examine them separately. Anatma The term andtman, is usually translated as " non-soul", but in reality itman is here synonymous with, a personality, an ego, a self, an individual, a living being, a conscious agent, etc2 The underlying idea is that, whatsoever be designated by all these names, it is not a real and ultimate fad, it is a mere name for a multitude of interconnected facts, which Buddhist philosophy is attempting to analyse byreducing them to real elements (dharma). Thus " soullessness " (nair6tmyz) is but the negative expression, indeed a synonym, for the existence of ultimate realities (dharrnnt~?).~ Buddhism
1 The Southerns reokoned three "marks ", evidently includingthe fourth in duhkha, as its cessation ; cf. 8. 2. Aung, Compendium, p. 210. The whole issue with every detail is admirably expounded by Vasubandhu in a concluding, ninth, ohapter of Ab. K., translated in my S o d Theory of t h Bouddhists. The terms dtma, jivaa, saftva, pdgala are hereusedsssynonyms ; of. SoulThory, p. 838, and Katkvatthu-atthakathd, p. 8. The Vitsiputriyas made some difference hetweenpdgalaand dtman ; they were pudga2auddins, hut not dtmrbdins. Although admitting a limited, very shady, reality of pudqala, they denied it the ultimate reality of a dharma; ef. Soul T h m y and below, p. 70 ff. Pravacanadharmki punar atra nairdtmyam buddknupdsani vd, Yapom. ad Ab. K., ix, in fine.

26

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

VIII.

NON-SUBSTANTIALITY

27

never denied the existence of a personality, or a soul, in the empirical sense, it only maintained that it was no ultimate reality (not a dharma). The Buddhist term for an individual, a term which is intended t,o suggest the difference between the Buddhist view and other theories, is sankina, i.e. a "stream ", via. of interconnected facts. I t includes the mental elements and the physical ones as well, the elements of one's own body and the external objects, as far as they constitute the experience of a given personality. The representatives of eighteen classes (dhEtu) of elements combine together to produce this interconnected stream. There is a special force, .called priipti, which holds these elements combined. It operates only within the limits of a single stream and not beyond. This stream of elements kept together, and not limited to present life, but having its roots in past existences is the Buddhist counterand its continuation in future onespart of'the Sod or the Self of other systems. Consequent upon the denial of substance is the denial of every difference between the categories of substanceand quality. There is no " inherence " of qualities in substance ; in this respect all real elements are equally independent. As separate entities they then become substances sui generis. " Whatsoover exists is a substance," says Vasubandhu.l " A n element is something having an essence of its own," 2 is the current definition. To every unit of quality there is a corresponding subtle element (dharma) which either directly manifests itself or, according to the Sarvistividins, remaining for ever a transcendental reality, produces a reaction (kiritvo, lrzk~ana)which we wrongly interpret as bdng a quality. All sense-data @pa) are substances ir. that sense that there is no stuff t,hey belong to. If we say "earth has odour, etc.", it is only an inadequate expression ; we ought to say "earth is odour, etc.", since beside these sense-data
A6. K.,ix, vidyaminam dravyam; Yapom. adds svahkaanato vidyamdnam dravyanz. Cf. Soul Theory, p. 943. a Suahk?ana-dhirazarid dharmh, Yagom. a d 96. K., i, 3.

there is absolutely nothing the name could be applied to? The same principle is applied to the mental sphere ; there is no spiritual snbstance apart from mental elements, or faculties, that are conceived as subtle realities or substances sui generis, 1-erymuch on the same pattern as the elements of matter.= There is nK soul apart from feelings, ideas, volitions, etc.$ Therefore an element technically means " non-self ".4
P$hivi gandhavatity ukte rcpa-gadha-rasa-sparpebhyo n&yb dmpayibm pakyate, Yapam. a d Ab. K., i a ; of. Sou2 Theory, p. 742. In his History of Indian Philosophy (Camhridga, 1922), p. 244, Profesnor S. Dssgupta maintains t h a t in Sankhys philosophy there is likewise no separate existence of qualities (i.e. no inherence of qualities in s, substance). This is based (as the learned author informs me in a letter) on Vycisa, iii, 12 (scippekgilw dharma-dharmi-bhrive) and VBcasp&ti's comment. There are other passages suggestive of a. similar idea, e.g. dharmi-svarfipa-mbtro hi dharmah (ibid.,iii, 13). But i t is addeddharmi-vilrriyaiva esb dhprma-dvrirri prapaficyate. I n Buddhism there cannot be any change of dharmin, s h o e everything is new a t every moment. Besid~s it must not be forgotten t h a t VyLa, aa will he shown hter, was strongly influenoed by the Ahhidharmists. I f Professor S. Dasgupta's view t h a t the ultimate entities in S-khya were called gwaa, probably t o suggest tlist they are the entities which by their various modifications manifest themselves as g u w s or qualities, is accepted, this would constitute a very strong analogy between t h e Pankhya gu%asand the Buddhist dhavnas. I n his Vi;"iidnanuitra-siddhi Vasubandhu applies the term dharma t o the tattvas of the Sankhyas (0. Ronenberg). It ia 8 matter of surprise how long i t bas taken European science to realize this doctrine, which is so clearly ststed in numberless passages of Buddhist writ, and in one of them even in terms very nearly approaching to Hume's statement (Sarnyutfa, iii, 46) : " all Brahmanas or ?ramanas who attentivelv consider the soul. which so variouslv has been described t o them. nud cithw tht t i w groups of phenomena Iplnyslcnl, feelmga, idcns, rohtinns, or a w e senentionl or one of thrm." erc. 'l'hr stumllmg-blocl. has nlnnya been the supposed theory of transmigration of souls and ita " &ring " oontr~diotion with t h e depial of soul. Buddhism always had two languages, one for the learned (nitttha) and one for the simple (neyr2rtha). Ab. K., ix, cf. Soul Theory, p. 840, where i t is stated t h a t amitma is synonymous with 5 skandhas, 12 riyatanas, and 18 dhritus, i.e. with all d h a r m s ; a single d h a r m is likewise synonymous with nihsattua. I t is, therefore, misleading t o translate Buddhaghoga's interpretation of d h a r m = nissatta, nijjiva, as meaning " inanimate thing ", as Mrs. and Prof. Geiger have done, op. oit., p. 4 (Unbelebtes, Ding, Sache). Since oonsoiousness itself and all mental. phenomena and even NirvZna. are dharma, Bnddhaghoga could not have meant t h a t they are "inmimate things" in the ordinary sense of the word. The oompound nisaatfa must beexplained either a s s madhyama.pada.1opi-nirgatahsattuah,or as n 6ahuwihi-nirptab sattuo yam&.

'

'

28

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OX BUDDHISM

IX.

C-4URALJTY

29

Althou& the separate e!ements (dharmas)are not connected with one another, either by a pervading ~ t u B in space or by duration in time, there is, nevertheless, a eonnexion between them ; their manifestations in time, as well as in space, are subject to definite laws, the laws of causation. These laws bear tahegeneral name pmtit!/a-samutpdda. We have seen that the connotation of the word dharma implies the meaning of elements operating together with others. This concerted is a) but another name for the life of the elements ( s a ~ s t ~ t a t v laws of causation-the combined origination (sum-utpdda) of some elements with regmd (pratitya) to other e1ements.l Thus it is that the fundamental idea of Buddhism-the conception of a plurality of separate elemenk-includes the idea of the most strict causality controlling their operation in the worlil-procesb. The "theory of elements "-the dharnzasanteta, says Vasubandhu, means that "if something appears, such and such result will follow "-asmin sati h q r bhavati.2 The most popular form of the laws of causation is represented by the theory of the twelve consecutive stages in the ever revolving stream of life from birth to death ; it is, so to say, the vertical line of causation, while other relations represent the horizontaL3
Yaqom. a d Bb. K., ii, 46 : na?nskrkztvam patitya-aamutpannatvam iti p r y d y d v elau; sametyn 8aMhCya patyayaih krkzm salnsktam ; tam tam patyayam p a t i t y a samutpannam, pratitya-samutpannam iti. Ab. K., iii, 18 and 28, of. also ii, 47, and ii, 50. The interpretation of this formula has been the crux of European ssholars, while in Buddhist countries, as Professor 0. Rosenherg certifies, i t is supposed t o bo very plain and sooessible t o the simplest understanding. The right explanation, in the light of t h e dharma theory, will be found i n 0. Rosenberg's Problems, chap. xvi. The stumbling-hloek to every explanation came from the supposition t h a t the formula was meant t o represent some evolution in which one member was producing the other; i t was then impossible t o deduce e.g. n d m a - r a p from vij7irina, unless the lstter he taken in the senne of the bsddhi of t h e Sinkhyas. I n reality, as Soan as t h e first moment of life (vijiui-third nidrina) appears, all the eighteen d h i t w are already present, according t o the prinoiple " there is no citkz withont caitta, and no bhlita without bhautika On vijvljlidna as the first moment in the life of the embryo cf. Ab. K., i, 35, Tibetan, p. 62, 6, m d i, 22, Tibetan, p. 47, 18, and also Mrs. C. Rhya Davids, B. Psych., p. 25. The number of tattvns in a n embryo, according t o SBnkhya, is likewise

'

I n the popular literature of the SCtras the term pmtityasamutpida is almost exclusively applied to this formula of the " wheel of life ",although the general meaning of it must have been present to the mind of all Buddhists. It. is implied in the division of dharmas into dyatanas, which is founded on the theory that &nowledge arises (samutpadyatc)when conditioned (prat<t!ja) by an object and a receptive faculty. "All ahhidharma is but an interpretation of the siitras " the current says definition. Therefore the general meaning of the idea of " interconnected origination of elements " may have appeared in the ahhidharma by a sort of generalization founded on actual conceptions that are to be found in the siitras in a somewhat different form. This question is directly asked by Vasubandhu. "Why is it," says he, "that the twelve members of interconnected origination of the elements are differently treated in the Scripture and in the Exegesis 2 e.g. it is stated in the latter that the interconnected origination of elements (pratitya-samutpzda) is a term equivalent to all the active elements (savkyta-dharma) 2 " And he answers : "Because in the siitras this relation is treated intentionally (in a popular way, with reference to the development of an individual's life), whereas the exegetical worksexplain its essence (in regardof allelements ingeneral)."l Some of the causal relationships have already been mentioned. Thus the relation of simultaneity (sahabha)
eighteen, though there is difference in oounting. According to Cmsks. (pivasthbna, iv) the sperm-cell of the father contains minute pmtioles of all the organs. Consequently vi;"lidna,as the third member in the " wheel of life ",is a technical term indioating the first moment of a, new life arising out of pre-natal foroes (auidyd, sawkcim). The next seven members mark the stages of the development of the embryo into a, child, youth, and grownup man. The tlpmi-stage corresponds t o sexual maturity, when new karma begins to be formed. The two last members refer briefly to future life. The l elements m e present through the whole prooess, the difference ides. that d being only in the relative " prominence" (utlcargas tu abhivya6jaknh, cf. Supruta, S&tmsthrina, xii) of one element over the others, points out t o Sinkhya habits of thought, where everything was considered immutable, always existing (aarvap nityam), d l things entering in one another (sarvaq sarvdtmakam), the difference being only a passing manifestation of some element, while the others contioued to assist in a. latent state. Ab. K., iii, 25. Cf. 0. Rosenberg, Problems, p.223.

".

30

THE CENTRAL COXCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

IX.

CAUSALITY

31

ties together the four fundamental and the secondary elements of matter-4hCta and bhautika. The same relation applies to the simultaneous origination of consciousness and mental phenomena (citta and caittu). But for the vice versa conjunction--one would be tempted to say " inherence " if it was not so grave a mistake against the fundamental principle of Buddhism-of the mental elements with pure consciousness (citta), a specific, more intimate, association was imagined. Evidently there was a feeling that the various mental facts were more closely united with consciousness thau'the atoms of matter with one another. This fact received the nalhe of sampmyoga, i.e. a thorough and intensive union, it was explained as anuparivartana, i.e. a following +d enveloping of, consciousness by concornitant mental phenomena or the secondary mental elements (caitta). I t must not be imagined that this close conneiion of consciousness wit,h other mental elements means any uuity between them, allowing only a logical distinction for purposes of analysis, as in modern psychologies. A Buddhist element is always a separate entity, it is neither " compound " nor " phenomenon ", but an element (dhavmn). The close connexion, " envelopment " of consciousness by other mental elements only means that they are its satellites, they appear and disappear together, they are produced by the same causes, and have the same moral aspect.l Ten such satellites are the minimum number to accompany consciousuess (citta) a t every moment ; a feeling, an idea, a volition, some attention, some understanding (mati = p a j k i ) , some concentration (samdhi), etc., are always present in every conscious m ~ m e n t . They ~ are

conjoined, but conjoined by the law of " satellites " (~amprayoga).~ The Sarvistividin school reckons in all six different causal relations, but in these details the schooh varied a great deal, and they evidently represent a later development of the- original idea. The detailed account given in the Abhidharma-koga represents the doctrine in its final form which it received in the abhidharma of the Sarvistividins.

a/nd

X. KARMA One of the most illuminating features of Buddhist philosophy is its deep research into the phenomenon of moral causation. All Indian systems contain an appeal to the " unknown " (ad?&a, apCrva) as a transcendental cause which has to be posited in explaining the origin and the ultimate goal of life. The Buddhists distinguish between (1)causation among elements of dead matter, where the law of homogeneity (sabhiga-hetu) between cause and result reigns, (2) causation in the organic world, whwe we have the phenomenon of growth (upacaya), and (3) causation in the animate world, where the operation of moral causation (viflka-hetu) is superimposed upon the natural. The elements constituting the ktream of our present life are conditioned, in addition to the natural course of events, by the mysterious efficiency of past elements or deeds, if the latter have possessed a moral character of some force or prominence. The indifferent activities of everyday life have no such efficiency. But a prominent deed, whether good or bad, will affect the whole stream and may carry its result either a t an early or very remote date. The resulting event (uiflka-phala) is always indifferent (awjcikrta) in the
The figurative words of Bnddhaghosa (quoted by M r s . Rhys Devids, B. Psych., p. 54) are apparently intended to describe this kind of unioq. That uzj'lidnais the mostgeneralmentel element is admitted byaUBuddhists; but that it " includes and involves " other elements, let alone aggregates, has never besn admitted in abhidharma--it would be pure uij6bna-uda. The samproynga oonnexionisknown to Bnddhaghosa ; ef. Ad., p. 42. The Ab. K., i, 36, Tibetan, p. 62,9, argues that, if the mental phenomena were not different from citta, they would not have been called caitfa.

Ab. K., ii, 52, reckons ten different ties of the " satellites " with citta. The Thsravsda seems to reckon only four, of. Ad., p. 42 : ekuppbdbdinam vasena sampayogntlb vutto. a The number is then increased by the four aawkrta-lakppae of eaoh element, and by the four lakpanas and four anulaksanas of citta itself, thus making fifty.oight satellites the minimum number to unite in every single kgaw with citta, the fiftyninth (Ab. K., ii, 52).

32

THE CBNTRAL CONCEPTI ON OF BUDDHISM

X. KARXA

33

moral sense, because it is a natural outflow of a previous cause, and is supposed not to be produced voluntarily. This moral law is also called karma The influence of karma is not in the Buddhist outlook so overwhelming, controlling the whole universe, as it is in other non-Buddhist systems, and as it also becomes, under t,he name of vEsanE, in the later idealistic systems of Buddhism also. I n abhidharma it is one of the forces controlling the worldprocess : it. is the chief force so far as it controls its gradual progress towards Final Deliverance. Its operation is subject to the following conditions. Every fact produced by the "maturing influence " (vipEkw) of moral or intellectual antecedents (karma) necessarify belongs to animate life (sattcEkhyaA), but is by itself morally indifferent (avyEk~to dhavmah). I t is indifferent because it is a natural outcome of antecedents, it always arrives involuntarily, automatically. If something is produced voluntarily, it may become the starting-point of a new development. When it has an outspoken strong moral character, whether good or bad, it becomes lcdrma, and will have corresponding consequences which, again, will appear automatically, since they are fully foreshadowed by their antecedent and are not voluntary acts. This explains the definition of Karma, as given by Vasubandhu : K w m a is will (cetanu) and voluntary action (ceta@tvE karaqarn).' Exactly the same definition is found in the Pali canon, and evidently was current in Buddhism from the beginning." When a new life is produced, its component elements, i.e. the eighteen classes (dhitus)of elements, are present, although in an undeveloped condition. The first moment of the new life is conventionally called v@Zina. I t constitutes the third member (nidzna) of the ever revolving " wheel of life ". Its antecedents are karma, i.e. the good or bad instincts sticking to it from the beginning. In the formula of the ';wheel.of life " this member appears under the name of samskGra, i.e.
-.

' Ab. K . , iv, 18.

Akguttara, 701. iv, 415.

pre-natal forces. Another, more general, antecedent is avid:yE, the first member of the wheel, representing the defiling inWuence ( k l e ~ aof ) ignorance and other vices, the absence of discriminating knowledge (prajiid). Among the components (dfitu) of the new life ten represent matter. They are atomic. The atoms are compound atoms, they contain the usual eight components with addition of particles of sensibility-stuff (rtipa-prasZa) or " organic " stuff (= indriya). The " tangibility "-stuff (kEyendriya) pervades the whole body. I n some parts of the body, e.g. in the organ of vision, the atoms have a still more complicated structure. But not only does matter consist of compound atoms, it consists of momentary appearances of atoms. I n dead, inorganic matter one moment follows the other, obeying solely the law of uniformity or homogeneous production (sabh?gaja). The next moment follows automatically (ni$yayanda)on the former one. There is neither growth nor decay. This uniform course would represent the Buddhist counterpart of what we might call eternity of matter. Although the same matter is also present in the organic body, nevertheless the term " uniform course" (sabh?p-hetu) cannot be applied to it in that condition. I t is reserved for those cases where there are no other causes in addition to the uniform sequence of moments constituting inorganic matter. When other processes-the process of growth (upcaya), the influence of intellectual and moral causes (vipcika)-are superimposed upon the uniform course oi the existence of matter, when it becomes organic and living, the consecution of its moments receives other names (zcpacayaja, vipcikaja). The pure " uniformity-reltion " between consecutive moments-the sccbhiga-ni$yarnda-relation -obtains only in the realm of inorganic, dead matter. When the atoms of organic matter have assembled, the phenomenon of growth (upacayu) becomes the controlling principle of development, the atoms increase in number. This process of growth is supported by favourable circ;lmstances : good food (anna-vipsa), quiet sleep ( s v a p - v i p z ) , physical
3

34

THE CENTRAL

CONCEPTION

OF BUDDHISM

S.

KARMA

35

tidiness (samslccira-vi~esa), and careful behaviour (samadhivigesa). But this growth is not the only factor which controls the development of living bodies. The influence of what we may term heredity steps in, and is superimposed upon the natural process of growth. This is the influence of liarmu, the maturing (vip8k.a)iduence of moral antecedents. When the organs of the body are being formed, or are developing, this influence conditions their final constitution. The question is then raised, what is the mntual relation of these two different agencies, natural development and heredity ? The answer is that the first process constitutes the " vanguard ", or a rampart, under the protection of which the second, the vipCka, may safely 0perate.l It is not quite easy to realize what such an answer may exactly mean. At any rate, it suggests a more subtle, spiritual, or semispiritual character of the second force. K a m is not quite physical (paudgalika) with the Buddhists, as it is with the Jains, but it seems to be semi-physical, since it interferes in the disposition of atoms along with the principle of growth that accumulates them. A very interesting illustration of the meaning of these Buddhist conceptions about heredity, retribution, etc.-all facts falling under the head of karma-uiypiika-is given by the following scholastic question. Voice is always produced voluntarily, consequently it cannot be the product of moral antecedents, of lcarnza. It is not vipdkaja, for all the facts of heredity are produced automatically (ni~yanda). But we know that the Great Man (mah8pru?a), i.e. a Buddha, has a captivating, melodious voice, a noble elocution. It is one of the characteristic gifts of a Buddha, and is due, like all his sublime qualities, to heredity, i.e. to a long course of moral progress running through generations. Therefore his extraordinary voice and elocution must likewise be a consequence of his moral antecedents (vipekaja). The puzzle is solved by

assuming a double causality. The configuration of atoms in his organs of speech was influenced by heredity, i.e. moral cawes (nipdhja), but his actual speech is a voluntary, not an automatical act, a,nd therefore could not be interpreted as a direct product of his sublime nature, or the result of his former achievements? The elements of moral defilement (kkga)are always present in a life (samtata), in a latent or patent condition. When latent they have the form of "residues" (anugaya), they stick to the other eIements, poIIute them, bring them into commotion and prevent their coming down to rest. This influence of the disquieting elements in life is termed " general cause " (sarvatraga-hetu) because it affects the whole of the stream of life (santcina), all its elements become soiled. The primary cause of this unhappy condition is " illusion " (avidyG), the first, fundamental member in the wheel of life. It continues to exist and exhibit its influence as long as the "wheel" turns, and is gradually neutralized and finally stopped by an antidote in the form of transcending wisdom ( ~ a j i i amala). d Some details about this process will be given later on when dealing with the "unrest " of the elements. This process of gradual extinction of the klepas and the consequent purification of life is the ultimate aim of the Buddhist doctrine. For the sake of it the analysis of life into elements, the research into their functions and connexions was undertaken : sar~klega-vyavaddr~ikamidam pdstram-this doctrine is a doctrine about defilement and purification, or, more exactly, about the commotion and final appeasement of life.= Although emphatically banned from the dwelling of Buddhist philosophy and replaced by the laws of interconnexion, the conceptions of substance and quality seem to have found a back-door through which padly to
Ab. K., i, 37, T i b . text, pp. 65 ff. The second part of the seoond Kopa-stkinacontains an exposition of the helu-pratyaya theory. Cf. also A6. K., i, 35-6, Tibetan text, p p 64 ff.
1

36

THE CENTR,&L CONCEPTI ON OF BUDDHISM

X.

KARMA

37

re-enter in their usual position. For the division of the elements of matter into primary and secondary (bhuta and bhautika) and of the mental elements into fundamental and derivative (citta and caitta) approaches very nearly the relation of substance and quality. The secondary are supported (%pita) l by the primary, and this connexion is inseparable; the one cannot appear without the other. I n the Buddhist interpretation they are, nevertheless, separate elements although linked together by the laws of causation. A special relation of simultaneous or reciprocal causation (sahabha) is then imagined to save the situation. In theory the one element is as much the eause of the other as the latter is the eause of the f o ~ m e r . ~ The mental phenomena are not included in consciousness (citta), but are standing by it, mutually they are enveloping (anup~ivartante) it, but, nevertheless, they are separate elements.3 Notwithstanding these efforts to maintain their equal rights, we see that the attempt has not been successful, since there is a primary and secondary position ; the secondary is spoken of as supported by the primary, and their connexion is inseparable. It is presumably for this reason that Buddhadeva, one of the celebrities of the Sautrantika school, revolted against such inequality of trcatmcnt, and denied the difference between primary and secondary elements ; he maintained that all were equally primary (bhuta and not bhautika).' But this stricture had no success ; it was disposed of by reference to the Scriptures and by pointing, as it would seem,
The derived elements of matter are called upriddya-rzipa, i.e. bhetdni upriddya ; of. the discussion under Ab. K., i, 36. a Ibid., ii, 51. It ie curious that the citta is related t o caitta by the sahabhzi ralatiop, which is defined as mutual musality, one member being the cause of the other as much as the latter is the cause of the former. Nevertheless, the caittas stand t o citla in another relation, called sanzprayoga. They "envelop" the cittn, hut do not enter into it, for this would mean " inherenoe", whioh is prohibited. Through the cobweb of these devices one can clearly watch the apparition of the ghost of the Soul, which i t has cost so much effort to ban. ' Tbid., i, 35.

to Lhs prominence of the tactile sensedata ; the general manifestations (lakava) of matter-repulsion, attraction, heat, and motion-are all tactile phenomena, and they are general? whereas colour, etc., can be apprehended by vision alone. Moreover, the translucent matter of the sense organs could not exist (i.e. appear) without being backed by some more consistent f o r ~ e s . ~

XI. IMPERMANENCE OF THE ELEMENTS The elements of existence are momentary appearances, momentary flashings into the phenomenal world out of an unknown source. Just as they are disconnected, so to say, in breadth, not bemg linked together by any pervading substance, just so are they disconnected in depth or in duration, since they last only one single moment (kpaw). They disappear as soon as they appear, in order to be followed the next moment by another momentary existence. Thus a moment becomes a bynonym of an element (dharma), two moments are two different elements. An element becomes something like a point in time-space. The SarvLtividin school makes an attempt mathematically to determine the duration of a m ~ m e n t . ~It, nevertheless, admittedly reprcscnts the smallcst partiole of time imaginable. Such computations of the size of the atom and of the duration of a moment are evidently mere attempts to seize the infinitesimal. The idea that two moments make two different elements
Cmakka. (QwiraslMna, chap. i ) likewise points out t h a t t h e lakgatbas of his five bhzitas are ttpttil phenomena-spar$-endriya-gocaram. 9 Buddhadeva i n his turn quotea the Ga<bMuakrbnti-8zih.a (not t o be traced in the P d i canon) and a passage stating t h s t a t the conception moment of Buddha (i.e. the th'ird ni&m, technicdly called vij+Bm) the embryo was gaddMtuka, i.e. consisting of six elements, vij-na, four mahabhzitas, anddlaipa : the bbutikas m e n o t mentioned. But i t ie answered t h a t the maMbhzitas are alone mentioned, since bhzita represents the bhautikas as well, and vijlibm is here equivdent t o citkz and caitta ( Ab. K., i ,35, Tibetan text, p. 62,6 8.). Sugruta (Rzitra-sthdna,sii) has thesame view as Buddhadeva. H e likewine shsras the view t h a t t h e prominence, utkarga, not thequantity, of one kind of atoms, determines the class of the compound. Ab. K., iii, 15 ; of. S. Z. Aung, Compendium, p. 25.

'

38

XI.
THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

IMPERMANENCE

39

remains. Consequently, the elements do not change, but disappear, the world becomes a cinema. Disappearance is the very essence of existence ; what does not disappear does not exist1 A cause for the Buddhists was not a real cause but a preceding moment, which likewise arose out of nothing in order to disappear into nothing. It is a t present impossible to determine the epoch when this theory was definitely framed. Some of the oldest schools, a t any rate, expressed it very ~ l e a r l y . ~ They maintained that mountains, trees, the elements of matter, ill elements in general, were momentary apparitions, like moments of thought. The schools differed on this point, and the complete logical demonstration was constructed, probably, at the time when logic had taken the place of abhidharma.3 But it is easy to realize that, given the fundamental Buddhist idea of the plurality and separateness (pflhaktua) of their elements, this idea, worked out with the characteristic Indian intrepidity in philosophical construction, must have been carried to its logical consequence, i.e. the assuming of no duration, since there was no stuff that could possess duration.
1 Thus existence becomes synonymous with non-existence, s h o e every fact disappems st the same moment when i t appears. This is t h e Indisn way of expressing t h e idea developed by K. Bergson, Creative Euolution, p. 2 : " t h e truth is t h a t we change without ceasing, and t h a t the state itsems nothing but change." The conclusion of Bergson is to theindivisibility of duration, whereas the Buddhists stick t o the separate moments and make a t p i d a h n d again disappear into them appear out of nothing-ata nothing-niranuaya-win*; of. .Nyd?labindut., p. 68. Vfd&nta-sictra, ii, 2, 6, and Srinkhya-oicba, i, 44-5, accuse t h e Buddhists of converting existence into non-existence. a Kathrivatthu, xxii, 8 : elm-citta-khazzikic sable dhammri. The ancient term seems t o have been anitya, which is rcceptnd by d l schools. It was replsead in t h e sequel by kgazzika. This may reflect some change in the definiteness of the view. The logical mgument is t h a t every . different determination, must be a separate entity: moment being s viruddha-dharm-samsargrid dhy anyad vastu, of. Nyriyahindu?ik& p. 5 (Bibl. Ind.). By the conversion of the proposition yat sat tat kga3ikam i t was proved that, if something did not disappear, i t did not exist. The doctrine ia folly expounded in Ratnskirti's K~agabhaxgasiddhi(Six Buddhist tracts, Bibl. Ind.), and it is controverted in numerous Brahmanioal works.

A consequence of this doctrine was a denial of motion: A really existing object, i.e. an element, cannot move, because it disappears as soon as itappears,there is no time for it to move. does not contradict the circumstance that one of the general characteristics of matter, the fourth mahibhiita, is motion. Every motion is resolved in a series of separate apparitions, or flashings, arising in cbntiguity to one another? Motion of physical objects, as explained in the abhidharma, gave the best support to the consideration of dead matter as a series of evanescent flashings. The phenomen of accelerpion of falling bodies is explained by a difference in the intpnsity of the element weight or motion ( i r a w ) a t every momknt of its downward course, since the object a t every moment is differently con~posed.~ An element is thus comparable to a fire, it consists of a series of separate flashings following one another, every moment representing a new fire. The Sarvistividins construe the theory of the momentary character of the elements in the following m a ~ n e r . ~ Every element appearing in phenomenal life is affected simultaneously by four different forces (sapskCras), the forces of origination (utpda), decay CjarC), maintenance (sthiti), destruction ( a n i t ~ a t c ) . ~ These forces affect every element at every moment of its existence, they are the most universal forces, the characteristic feature or the manifesting forces of phenomenal existence (sav&ta-lt&a~Cr~i). The elements affected by them are called the manifested elements (savzskfla-dharm). Unaffected by them are only the three
1 -Ab. K... iv. . 2, na qatir, mi@: i t is not kriyri, hut nirantara-ut@a, see below, under Theory of Cognition, p. 60. a Ah. K., ii, 46. The Vaigesika, admit one indivisible sawkrira till the cessation of a, motion. This would correspond t o Bergson's idea of the indivisibilitv of motion. The Naiysyikas, on the contrary, admit as many . . . - s a d a i r a s as there are momentary kriybs. 8 I t is expounded with all detail8 of the issue between Sautrlntikas and Sarvistivldim b y Vasubandhu in Ab. K., ii, 46. Professor 1'. de la V a W Poussin has kindly oommunioated t o me his French translation of this important text, which I compbred with my own English traml&tion. 4 Sometimesreduced t o three-birth, subsistence, and decay.

40

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XI.

IMPERMANEBCE

41

elements of eternal unchanging existence (asaly,*k&-dharma). The term samskta is therefore synonymous with ksacika, i.e. impermanent or momentary.' According to the laws of interconnexion between elements, these four forces always appear together and simultaneously. They are sahabhtx2 Being elements themselves, they are in ) order to display their need of secondary forces ( u p l a ~ a min efficiency. The realistic tendency of the Sarvistividins, if there was any, consisted in constructing some realities corresponding to onr ideas or habits of speech. This tendency they shared with the Nyiya-Vaiqesilm system. Just as the latter had a quality of conjunction (samyoga) as something real, additional to the things which were joining, just so the Sarvistividins had their origination, decay, existence, and destruction in addition to the elements originating and disappearing at the same moment. They insisted that these four forces, and the secondary potencies influencing them in their turn, were realities (dravyatah santi). Against this idea of an element which was simultaneously originating, existing, and disappearing, the very natural objection was raised by all the other Buddhist and n o n - B ~ d ~ s schools t that production and destruction could not be simultaneous. On the other hand, it was impossible to allow an element more than one single moment's duration, since two moments constituted two elements. The Samistividins met the objection by pointing to the difference between an element in itself, its real nature (svabhba) and its efficiency-moment, its function, or manifestation (Eritua, lakpaea). The elements or forces may be opposed to one another, yet their effect may result in some single real fact, as e.g., supposing three assassins have resolved together to kill a man hiding in some
The translation of satwkrtn-dharmo as " compound " is a contradido in adjecto. A dharma is never compound, it is always simple. Wherever there is cornpo~it~ion there are severd dharman. a Just as the citta never appears without simultaneously being acoompanied by c a i t l a - d h a r ~or , the four maMbhzitaa appearing simultamuslg with the bhautikas.

dark recess, one of them (utp&) pulls him out of his hidingplace (the future), the other seizes him, the third stabs him, all acting simultaneously. The victim (dhrma) appears only to disappear. The reality moment is the moment of action, of its being achieved. " We call a moment," the Sarvistividins maintain, "the point when an action ie fully achieved." We have here the germ oi the later idea that this moment is something transcendental, something that cannot be expressed in a discursive thought.= The moment was then raised to the position of the "thing in itself ",3 the transcendental foundation of reality ; indeed, the absolute reality itself 4-a conception which had great importance in the development of later Indian phil~sophy.~ The Sautrintika school takes a more simple and reasonable view of the question. They deny the reality of the four manifestation-forces of produdion, decay, etc? The corresponding notions of production, destruction, etc., refer, not to single moments, but to series of them (santcina).' Even if applied to one moment these notions do not imply the existence of corresponding realities, they are mere names for the fact that a momentary entity appears and disappears.? This entity itself appears and disappears, there is no need of supplementary forces for this. Consequent on that, a further very important, divergence between the two schools arises. As stated above, the Sarvistividins maintain that all elements
'

Kviyj.pisamipti.7akpana e p nab kpa?ah, Ab. K . , ii, 4 6 ; ef. eka-kriy6Ny%yabindu$ikL, p. 13 (Ribl. Ind.) : kgavike uastuni luiritvena sahaU.ri grhyale. Kpa~sya (jlirinnena) pipayitum qakyatuirt (ibid., p. 16). Svalakgana, ibid. Paramrirfhu-sat, ibid. Dharmakirti identified the moment with pure sensation, where aubject and object coaleaoe, and the Vedantiinsdeemed that we have in thia moment a direct peroeption of tahrna. The Indian astronomers and mathematicians knew the Merentid conception of inst,antaneous mot.ion of a. planet. tatkriliki gat& n motion constant during an inhitesimally amall interval; cf. R. Seal, Positive Sciences, p. 77. Drauyalo na santi, of. Ab. K., ii, 46. 7 Ibid.

...

42

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XI.

IMPERMANENCE

43

exist on two different planes, the real essence of the element (dharm-svabhiva)and its momentary manifestation (dharmalaksaw). The h s t exists always, in past, present, and future. I t is not eternal (lhitya) because eternali* means absence of change, but it represents the potential appearances of the element into phenomenal existence, and its past appearances as well. This potentiality is existing for ever (saw& asti). Even in the suppressed state of NirviLna, when all life is extinct, these elements are supposed to represent some entity, although its manifestation-power has been suppressed for ever. The future potential elements are, indeed, divided in this school into two different sets, those that will appear (utpatti-dharma)and those that are suppressed andnever will appear (anutpatti-dharma). Since the moment ( h a w ) is not something different from the element (dharma),time in general is not different from the elements taken collectively, as far as they have not lost their capacity of appearing in phenomenal life. I n fact, " the times " is one of the synonyms used to designate collectively the elements appearing in ordinary life.1 But the term "time" (kcila), implying the reality of one time, is carefully avoided; it is replaced by the t e r m " transition " (dhvan). When the Sarvistividin maintains that " everything exists ", it means that all elements exist, and the emphasis which is put on the reality of elements refers to the conception that their past as well as their future transition represents something real. From this fundamental tenet the school derives its name. Since the conception of an element answers rather to our conception of a subtle force than of a substance, the reality, i.e. effectiveness, of the past is not so absurd as it otherwise would appear. The Sautrintikas denied the reality of the past. and the future in the direct sense, they admitted the reality only of the present. The future, they contended, was not real before becoming present, and the past was not real after having been
upddrina-akandha, of. Ah. K . , i, 7, Tibetan tent, p. 12,6

present.1 They did not deny the influence of past fads upon present and remote future ones, but they explained it by a gradual change in an uninterrupted sequence of moments, this sequence having a starting-point in a conspicuous or strong impingeing fact ; it was for them one of the laws of interconnexion between separate element^.^ There was another school which occupied an intermediate position between the SautrHntikas and Samistividins ; it maintained the reality of the present facts and of that part of the past ones which had not already lost their influence, but the reality of the future ones and of that part of the past ones which had ceased to exhibit any influence it denied. Vasubandhu calls this school the Vibhajyavidins, or ~ whole argument between the Distinguishing S c h o ~ l . The rival schools is presented by Vasubandhu witb every detail in his usual masterly manner and need not be repeated here.4

XII. IMPERMANENCE IN SLNKHYA-YOGA The deprecation of " change and decay " and its contrast with something that " changes not" is a popular theme with many religions and philosophies. The merit of having worked it out up to the remotest logical consequenees appertains to Buddhism. It appears that in this work the Buddhists were assisted by the parallel work of Brahmanical p losophers of the Sinkhya-Yoga school. The starting-point of the latter was just the reverse of the Buddhistic one. They maintained a unity of existence, cause and effect were one in essence. But a corollary of the
1
2
3

Ah. K.. v. 24 8 . .cf. Appendix I. Ab. K., ix, cf. Soul Theory, p. 949. In the Kathicoatfhu,i, 8, such opinions are ascribed to the Ki~yapiyas.
A

. .

These also admitted the reality of that part of the future which was foreshadowed or fixed by the past or present. Hiuen Thsang states in hia Commontmy that the Kspyapiyas are here meant under the name of Vibhajyavsdins (MoCovern). The Theravedins seem to have shared the same opinions s n the Sautrlntikas. The explanation of vibhajya-vda as orthodoxy or anslytic school because Buddha himself waa aibhajya-vdin (ef. Kathavntthu, introduction) seems to be unknown to Vasubandhu. 4 Cf. tmnslation in Appendix I.

44

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION O F BUDDHISM

XII. IMPERMANENCE I N YOGA

45

unity of substance ( s a t k e y a - v d a ) was the constant change of its manifestations ; this change was also conceived as momentary (pratiksana-parinima). The moment is here defined as the infinitesimally small measure of time, just as the atom is the smallest imaginable fraction of matter.1 Two moments cannot coalesoe,2 therefore there is no real duration, Time is an idea without no time outside the m ~ r n e n t . ~ reality, an empty construction of the mind.4 The only reality is the momentary thing. The past and the future are not real directly, but, since the present cannot exist without a past, the latter is inherent in the fact of change.5 " Therefore," says Vyisa, "the whole universe is included in one single moment, all the real units of change you may imagine are merged in every single moment."? Concluding, Vyisa admits two kinds of eternity, immutable eternity belonging to the soul and eternity of mutation belonging to matter.8 The unit of change is termed d h a m , and it is identified with the moment (k;ana) in Yoga as well as in Buddhism. The change of manifestation was called a change of dharmaQ; but in the Brahmanical system it is quite natural to make use of this term, since an old and usual meaning of it is " quality ", and in the Sinkhya view the changing manifestations are appurtenances of some pervading stuff. It is therefore probable that the technical meaning of this term in Buddhism developed from one of its old meanings, with the difference that, quality being left without any support by the substance, it became an independent quality, or quality in the role of substance. As in the Buddhist system, these manifestations

are conceived as forces ($a&) l and even potential iorces (yogyatdvacchinna),2 corresponding to the Buddhist conception of a s a q k i r a . The difference is that they belong to some substance (dharmin). The reality of a " transition-time " (adhvan) as distinguished from a " duration-time " (kdla) was admitted ; the same term--adhvan-is used on both sides to express the first of these con~eptions.~ If we turn to the Sarvistividiu view, which admitted some transcendental everlasting reality of the elements along with their passing manifestations, the similarity becomes still more striking, and the difference is often restricted to the wording. A d h a m , says Vyisa, exists in aU the three times.4 The manifestation (dharma) and the manifested (dharmin) are quite the same, the manifestation represents only the way in which the manifested appears.= The reality\of the past and the future is then proved by Patanjali and Vyisa in almost 'the same expressions that are used by the Sarvistividins,6 with the difference that there is no mention of separate forces (samsk~ta-lalesan8ni) of production and destruction. When accused of drifting into Sinkhya, the Sarvistividins justified themselves by pointing to these momentary forces, which saved the Buddhist principle of detached entities.? The question of the relation between the permanent;essence of an element and its manifestation was thoroughly discussed

' Ibid., iii, 14.


Ibid. Ibid., iv, 12. Ibid., iii, 13. Ibid. The SarvistivBdin~argue that the past and the future must exist because we have a knowledge of the past and of the future objeots; this knowledge cannot be of non.existence, i.e. of nothing. We find quite the Same argument in Vyisa-bhri~ya, ad iv, 12, cf. Appendix I. Stress is laid upon the conception adhvan " transition ", when the reality of past and present are asserted : adi~va-vi&atayd sattvan trayd?ui& nipy avi~ig@m (Vioe.spsti ad Vy&sa-b7&~ya, iv, 12). This reality is inherent in the fact of transition : ye tu bh8ta-bfzivinah kgands te pa~inimdnvifd vydkhhyeydh (ibid., iii, 52). Otherwise there would be contradiction between iv, 12, and iii, 52, where it is said : na p8ruottara-kga?zrihaanti. Cf. Appendix I.
a
8

' Vy%sa'sBhdgya, ad iii, 52.


Ibid. Ksana-tatkamoyar ndsti vastu-snmderah, ibid. YastupZtqo buddhinirmdwh, ibid. Pari?zrimrinvit&, ibid. "bid., a m i same dhavmih. Ibid., tat&wznoparuddh,ih. Ibid., iv, 33. Ibid., iii, 13.
a

'

46

TEE CEXTRAL CONPEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XII.

IMPERMANENCE I N YOG.4

47

among Buddhists, and four solutions were suggested. The first belonged to Dharmatrital : it maintained unity of substance (dravya) along with a change in existence (bhiva). This was dismissed by simply pointing to the obvious fact that this was Sinkhya and not Buddhism. The second explanation belonged to Ghosa ; it assumed that elements, although existent in the past, present, and future, changed their aspect (lakana), or intensity, accordingly as they appeared at different times ; just as the passionate love for one woman is only an intensification of a feeling which is alive towards women in general ;it does not mean total absence of this feeling in other cases. This explanation was not accepted on the ground that it implied co-existence of the different aspects at the same time. Vasumitra advocated a change of condition (avasthc?), i.e. of efficiency (kiiritva) in the present, and nonefficiency in past and future. This view was accepted in the school as the correct one. It was illustrated by the ball of an Indian abacus : being thrown in the hole for units it means one, in the hole for hundreds--hundred, etc. Finally Buddhadeva thought that past, present, and future were contingent (ape,&%%) npon one another, just as the same woman may be a mother with respect to her child and a daughter with respect to her mother. This was dismissed as leading to a confusion of the times. The passage of the VibhdgB, where these opinions of four celebrated masters of the Sarvistividin and Sautrintika schools were reported, enjoyed apparently great popularity. Reference is made to it in later Buddhist works,%and it evidently was borrowed from the Buddhists by Patanjali and Vyisa. Yogaszitra, iii, 13, aims at giving an explanation of the time variations of one snbstance ; it adopts the suggested explanations not as exclusive of one another, but as subordinate and co-existent. The change of manifestation (dharma) is characterized further on as a change

of aspect (laksana) and condition (avasth6). The characteristic examples for illustrating the suggested explanations are repeated in Vyisa's Bhasya with slight modifications. As though answering the variety of the Buddhist theories, Vyisa emphatically maintains that the change of quality (dharma), aspect (laksana), and condition (avasthz) is but the same fact variously described. " There is, therefore," says he, " only one kind of mutation of matter, though variously described by us . . . The mutations of external aspect (dharma) and of time-variation (laksana) and of intensity (avasthc?),as here described, do not transcend the substance as such. Hence there is only one kind of mutation which includes all those varieties we have described." l Buddhadeva's theory tbat the time variations are contingent npon one another, which logically leads to the conclusion tbat essence and manifestation are interchangeable terms, may have influenced the somewhat similar theory of Patanjali and Vyasa that substance and quality are contingent (szpksika) terms? The doctrine of momentary universal change originated probably in the Sinkbya system. From this doctrine it receives the name of a Theory of Change-pari@m-vada, which is only a natural corollary of its fundamental principle of unity between cause and effect (satk6ya-vida). It isnatural to surmise that early Buddhism has been iduenced by it. But in a later period the Sarvistividin philosophers unquestionably exercised a considerable influence on the formation of the Sankhya-Yoga d ~ c t r i n e . ~
Cf. Professor J. R.Woods' translation in hie Yoga Syeiem oJ Pala6juli (Hmwwd O.S.), p. 217. 2 Vyisa, iii, 15. 3 The points of similarity between the Buddhist system and the SBnkhp-Yoga, espeoidly as presented in the Yoga-SCka and BhQya, are so overwhdmingly numerous that they could not escape the attention of the students of abhidherma. Some of them have been occasionally noticed above. The point deserves special treatment. Professor de la Val160 Poussin has kindly oornmunicated to me in MS. a paper prepared by him on the subject. He also informs me that Profemor Kimura in Japan has arrived at the same eancluaions inrlepeudently from him.

' Ibld.
As e.g. in Bhavya's aocolmt of the sects ; of. Rockhill's Life of Buddha.

48

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XIII.

UNREST OF THE ELEMENTS

49

XIII. UNREST OR THE ELEMENTS The third salient feature of Buddhist elements is that they represent duhkha, a term which has always been rendered by suffering, sorrow, etc. Sufficient as this interpretation may be for popular literature, it is evident that theoretically something else is meant. Such expressions as " the element of vision (caksuh) is sorrow ",I " all elements influenced (scisrava, i.e. influenced by desire to live) are sorrow" 2-an element " colour " might be brought under the head of " sorrow " as well3--could not be understood if our usual idea of sorrcw was brought in. The idea underlying it is that the elements described above are perpetually in a state of commotion, and the ultimate goal of the world process consists in their gradual appeasement and final extinction. The old Buddhist credo (ye dharmci hetu-prabhavGh)already expresses the idea very sharply: "the Great Recluse has indicated the (separate) elements, their interconnexion as causes and effects, and their h a 1 suppression." Vasubandhu likewise states that Buddha in his compassion for the troubles of mankind offered them a means of salvation which did not consist of magic or religious boons, but of the knowledge of a method of converting all utpatti-dharnzas into
Ab. K., i, 19, Tibetan text, p. 31, 5. Ibid., i, 9, Tibetan text, p. 13, 6. Beesuse i t is entered into the updddna-skandhaa, a synonym of which is duhkha and duhkha-samsdaya (Ab. K., i, 8. Tibetan text, B.W.). The tranalstion of &ya-satya by ''Aryan facts " (M. TingandXrs. Rhys Davids) is evidently better than the old translation " truth What is really meant is a distribution of the elements (dharma) into four stages, unrest (duhkha) and ita cause (samudava), final appeasement (mirodha) s n d its cause (lnicrga), a. formula of elements oomesponding t o every stage. The sisraaodharmas are the same as duhkha and snmudaya, the andarauadharmns the same as mirodha and mdrga ; cf. Ab. K., i, 3. Thusduhkha in this formula does not a t a l l mean orro row ", butitisasynonym of theseventy-twodhvmas, or the five upidrim-skandhas. I t s general meaning is exactly the same as the meaning of the formula ye dhammi. This duhkha is pari@rna-duhkha. Evidently Ledi Sadaw had this oonception in view when painting t o the difference between two kin* of dukkha; of. Mrs. Rhys Davids, R.Psych., p. 83. Cf. S. Sohayer, Mnhdyrinistische Erliisungslehrem, p. 6. a Ad Ab. K., i, 1.

".

anutpatti-dharmas, i.e. of stopping for ever the commotion created by the operation of the forces active in the process of life? Our conception of a Buddhist element (dharma) would not be complete if this connotation of a commotion to be suppressed (heya) were not included, along with its nousubstantiality and momentary evanescence. This feature ccnverts the dharmo-theory into a doctrine of salvation-the chief aim of theoretical as well as practical Buddhism. The doctrine amounts shortly to the following details. From the view-point of a gradual progress towards Final Deliverance all the elements of life may assume two different characters: they either are characterized by a tendency towards life, commotion and turmoil, and then they are called sE.srava,z i.e. " influenced " by passiouq ; or they are " uninfluenced " (ancisrava), i.e. they exhibit the opposite tendency towards reduction of life, appeasement of commotion and even annihilation.3 The passions (klep), being themselves separate .elements, i.e. represented as substantial entities, affect the stream of life (santci~~a) to which they belong. Roughly, the first set of elements (the scisrava-dharmm) correspond to the ordinary man, with all his enjoyments and bothers in life; the second make up the saint (cirya), who stands aloof from all interest in life and cares only for Final Deliverance. A thorough knowledge, a discriminatio~,~ of all elements of existence is essential for Salvation, since when they are known they can be singled out and gradually suppressed one after the other. The connotation of the term " element " ( d h a m ) thus includes three further conceptions : (1) it is something that can be well determined, i.e. distinguished in the complex stream of life as an ultimate
1 Ab. K., i, I. Cf. Ab. I., i, 3. The derivation of the word from the root sru is, n o doubt, correct, as is proved by the Jaina view of the karma mattnr " flowing " into the body through t h e pores of the skin. 8 The eternal esam&kz elements are included among the andsrava clsss (Ab. K., i, 3). Ab. K., i, 2, dhrna-provicaya-a thorough picking out of olemrnts one by one. 4

50

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XIII.

UNREST O F TEE ELEMENTS

51

reality ; (2) this something is in a state of eternal commotion ; (3) it is something that must and can be appeased, and brought to an eternal standstill? A special element received in this connexion extraordinary prominence. I t is termed prajfii, which may roughly be translatea "understanding ". It is one of the citta-mahibhzkika elements, i.e. a mental faculty always present, in every conscious moment. I n the ordinary plane of existence it is synonpous with mati and means simple understanding, the capacity of appreciating something. But it is capable of development and becomes then prajad amald, "immaculate wisdom," ancisravd prajfii, "understanding uninfluenced (by mundane considerations)." Its presence gives the whole stream (santdna) a special character, it becomes the central element of the stream, and its satellites-all other elements of the " stream "-feelings, ideas, volitions, become pnre.2 The presence of this element a d s as an antidote against other elements that are " unfavourable " (aktipla) for .progress ; they gradually disappear and cannot reappear in the same stream. The first thing to be realized in such a state is the theory of the elements (dharmatd), the idea that there is no permanent personality (pudgala, dtmE), that the supposed personality really is a congeries of eighteen components (dEtu). When the wrong view of an existing personality (satkdya-dy@i) is disposed of, the path that leads to Pins1 Deliverance is entered. Every vicious, or disquieting, " unfavourable " (aku~ala) element has a special antidote in the agency of wisdom ; when suppressed it becomes an alzupatti-dharma, an element which never will return, a blank is substituted for i t ; this blank (nirodha) is called " cessation through
I n the terminology of abhidharma "something to be suppressed" mems that i t is an element (dhrrna); cf. Ab. R., i, 15, Tibetan text, 27, 8. If something is not mentioned among the objects to be suppressed, that means that i t ia not a dharma; of. Ab. K., ix, Soul Theory, p. 844. Something to be "well known, thoroughly known" means likewise that it is a dhnrma (ibid., p. 837). Ab. K., i, 2, and Yapom. comment.

wisdom " (pratisankhyd-nirodha).' But .only the initial stages of saintliness can be reached through this so-called drsti-mdrga, i.e. through knowledge a certain. amount of dharmas has its flashings stopped. The remainder are stopped by mystical concentration, they are bhtiuand-heya,? i.e. to be suppressed by entering the realms of trance. I n all Indian systems the ultimate instrument of salvation is Yoga. This can not only do away with the intellectual and moral elements that are "unfavourable ", but can stop the existence or appearance of matter itself. We have seen that matter is reduced in this system to sense-data, which are conceived rather as forces, momentary flashings. Practical observation has shown to the philosophers that when a certain degree of intense concentration is reached the sensations of taste and smell disappear, hence, it is concluded, the objects, the sense-data of odour and taste, have likewise vanished. Founded on this practical observation, a plane of existence has been imagined,3 where living beings or "streams " (santdna) consist only of fourteen instead of eighteen components.* I n the Abhidharma-koga the question is raised, how many elements can be suppressed through knowledge and how many through ecstasy ? and it is anewered that some mental elements are suppressed by mere knowledge only, namely, the belief in a real personality (sat-kEyadrfti)and its
Pratisankhyi is synonymous with yrqjlici amali; i t is the same as the prajliri orprasankhyina in theSbkhya-Yoga system, an agency destroying the klepas. I t was probably the origin* meaning of the word sa&hyd, from which thesystemreoeivedits name. The Buddhist specification in the way of the prsposition prati- refers t o theseparateness of the elements, of which every one needs a separate action of wisdom in order to be supprwsed ; of. Ab. K., i, 4. The ssme tendency is probably responsible for the tarm pati-rnoksa instead of mokga, as prati-vijGzptib, cf. above, p. 16; the term prati-buddho, on the contrary, is used as a, designation of the " Enlightened One ", in the Upanisads (cf. H. Oldenberg, Die Lehere dur Upmishaden, p. 131), by Jains, Scnkhyas, but not by Buddhists. a Ab. K., i, 20. a db. K., bhziya, s d i, 30, Tibetan text, p. 63, 4, where this explanation is attributed to pilibha, and is, evidently, shared by Vasubandhu bimself. The dhdtus Nos. 8-7 and 14-15 are in abeyance.
,

'

XIII. UNREST OF THE ELEMENTS

52

53

THE CENTRAL COGCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

consequences-all the feelings, ideas, and volitions and forces connected-they disappear as soon as the antidote, i.e. the ancitma = dharma-theory, is realized. Other impure elements (sisrava), all the material elements (dhiitus 1-5 and 7-10), and all sensuous consciousness (dhitm 13-17 ; iifteen dhitus in all) can be suppressed only by ecstasy.l Since matter was conceived as a play of subtle forces, its disappearance in a manner similar to the suppression of passion and wrong views is not so illogical. The purified elements of the saint (anisrava-dharma) could not be suppressed a t all, but they likewise disappeared a t the time of Nirvana, through absence of new karma, i.e. elements of unrest (duhkha), to which the commotion of the world was due. Imagination has constructed whole wcrlds where these kinds of matter and sensations corresponding to them are absent, they are the worlds of reduced, or purified, matter.2 They can be entered either by rebirth in them (utpatti), or by an effort of concentration (samepatti), an absorption which transports into higher planes of existence not merely Buddhists. Working further on upon the same principle, higher worlds are constructed where the material s i d e t h e sense-data-experience further reduction and finally worlds purely spiritual are reached, where every matter, i.e. all sensations and sense-data are absent. Speaking technically, the formula of a living being in these planes of existence will reveal only three component terms (dktu): consciousness (mano-dGtu), mental phenomena and forces (dharma-dhitu), and abstract, non-sensuous cognition (mano-v@%?na-dhitu).3 These purely spiritual beings (or, more precisely, formulas of being) have their consciousness and mental phenomena ' brought to a standstill at some very high planes of transic existence : the unconscious trance (asanj6i-samepatti) and cessation trance (nirodhd-samiipatti). But this is, nevertheless,
a a

not an eternal extinction. At last the absolute stoppage of all the pure dharmnsof the highest spiritual beings is reached, an eternal blank is substituted for them. This is NirvLna, absolute annihilation of the sa~tskrta-dharm,which is tantamount to the presence of the asaykrta-dharmas. According to the Sarv%stiv%dins, this quite negative result is, nevertheless, an entity of some kind. They make a difference, as stated above, between the essence and the manifestations of the dharmns. At the time of Nirvina the manifestations have ceased for ever, there will be no rebirth, but this essence remains. It is, nevertheless, a kind of entity where there is no consciousness. Thus the ultimate goal of the world-process, the final result of all purifying, $piritualizingagencies and efforts is a complete extinction of consciousness and all mental processes. The absolute (niruina) is inanimate, even if it is something. It is sometimes, especially in popular literature, characterized as bliss, but this bliss consists in the cessation of unrest (duhkha). Bliss is a feeling, and in the absolute there neither is a feeling, nor conception, nor volition, nor even consciousness. The theory is that consciousness cannot appear alone without its satellites, the phenomena of feeling, volition, etc.,l and the last moment in the life of a bodhisattva, before merging into the absolute, is also the last moment of consciousness in his continuity of many 1ives.z The appeasement of wrongs and passions is the general ideal of humanity; but this appeasement carried further on and raised to the state of absolute insensibility is a peculiarity of the Hindu ideal. Philosophy has converted that into conceptual formulas, and the result may seem absurd, but "whosoever wishes to be a philosopher must learn not to be frightened by ~ absurdities ", says a distinguished modern a ~ t h o r .Buddhism was not the only Indian system of philosophy to arrive at
1

Ab. K., i, 40. Ab. K., i, 30, rzipa-Dhdtu Ab. K., i, 31.

-4b. K., ii. Ibid., i, 17, Tibetan text, p. 30, 5. Bertrand Russell, Problems of Philosophy, p. 31.

54

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XIV.

THEORY OF COGNITION

55

such a result: in the Vai~esikasystem the liberated soul is as inanimate as a stone (p&Gnavat), or as ether (dkd~avat), because cognition, feeling, etc., are not considered as of its essence, but as an accidental quality produced by special contacts, which cease when final deliverance is reached.l The absolute is spiritual only in those systems which accept the doctrine that consciousnessis of the essence of the absolute, i.e. the doctrine of self-luminosity (sva-prak6ga) of kno~ledge.~ XIV. THEORY OF COCNJTION The character of a philosophical system generally comes forth very clearly in its theory of cognition,; it enables us to assign it a place among either the realistic systems, maintaining the reality of the outer world, or among the idealistic ones, denying such reality. Among the Indian systems we find every variety of such theories repreiented. The Nyiya-Vaipepika system favoured a naively realistic view of a series of real contacts-of the object with the sense-organ, of the latter with an internal organ, which in its turn entered into contact with the soul, and thus cognition was produced. The Buddhist idealistic school of Digniga and Dharmakirti developed a transcendental theory which exhibited some striking points of similarity with the transcendental theory of Kant. The Sinkhya-Yoga system would explain the origin of knowledge through an assumed assimilatiou of the mind-stuff to the object through the medium of a sense-organ, compared with the attraction of an object by a magnet.3 Even later Vedinta, notwithstanding its strictly monistic principle, managed to establish some kind of realistic view about " seizing" the object by the sense^.^ What was, as compared with these views, the conception of earlier Buddhism, that part of Buddhist philosophy which
ha' BUddyitrnd. . . .
Cf. referenoes in A. B. Keith's Indian Logic, p. 261 n. Cle~rlyexpressed by Dhmmakirti in the celebrated verse : avibhdgo

admitted the existence of elements (dharma) as ultimate realities, i.e. the Sarvistividins and the Sautrintikas ? Their explanation of the origin of knowledge was in perfect agreement with their ontology, i.e. with the theory of a plurality of separate, though interdependent, elements (dharma). The phenomenon of knowledge was a compound phenomenon, resolvable into a number of elements simultaneously flashing into existence. Being conceived as momentary flashes, the elements could not move towards one another, could not come into contact, could not influence one another, there could be no " seieiif " or " grasping " of the object by the intellect. But, according to the laws of interconnexion (pratitya-samutpdda) prevailing between them, some elements are invariably appearing accompanied by others arising in close contiguity with them. A moment of colou; ( ~ C p a a ) , moment of the sense-of-vision-matter ( m k p h ) , and a moment of pure consciousness (citta), arising simultaneously in close contiguity, constitute what is called a sensation (spar~a) 1 of colour. The element of consciousness according to the same laws never appears alone, but always supported by an object (aipaya) and a receptive faculty (ind~iya).~ A very important, though somewhat scholastic, question is then raised : how is it that, if these three separate elementsthe element colour, the element visual sense, and the element consciousness-merely appear, or flash, together, without being appurtenances of some non-existingliving being, without being able to influence one another, to " grasp ", apprehend, or come into contact with one another-how is it, then, that there, nevertheless, is an " apprehending" of the object by the intellect '1 Why is it that the resulting knowledge is a cognition " of colour ", and not a cognition of the visual sense,
1

2'rayd~w ssannipdta?~ s p a q a h . It is mislerding to trmdete spar$& by

Yoga SCtra, i, 4, 7. Vedrinta-sicra, 29.

Cak& pratitya r l i p a p co caksur-vijGnan atpadyak. Here cakgurvij%m is not a visual sensation-thatwould bespargo-but apure aensation, arising acoornpanied by a moment of the visual-senae-matter.
a

" contact ",since it represents a caitta-dharma.

56

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTI ON OF BUDDHISM

XIV.

THEORY

O F COGNITION

57

which is supposed to enter the combination on terms of equality with the other elements ? The question about the relation between external (objective) and internal (subjective) element, and the " grasping " of the one by the other which was t o have been evaded by the construction of a plurality of interdependent, but separate and equal, elements, reverts in another form. The answer is that, although there is no real coming in contact between klements, no grasping of the objective element by the intellect, nevertheless the three elements do not appear on terms of absolute equality ; there is between two of them-consciousness and object-a special relation which might be termed " co-ordination " (sirzZpya),' a relation which makes it possible that the complex phenomenon-the resulting cognition-is a cognition of colour and not of the visual sense. Such an answer amounts, of course, to a confession of ignorance : this relation exists because it exists, i t is required by the system, without this patchwork the system collapses. I n all Indian-and, indeed, not only Indian-systems we always reach a point which must be acquiesced in without any possible justification. It must be assumed, not h a u s e it could be proved (na scidhayitu~gakyam), but .because there is no possibility of escape (auarjan;illata,ya), it is a postulate of the system (siddhcinta-prasiddham).
Thin same sdriripya reappears in the transcendental system of Digniga and Dhsrmskirti, as it would seem, in a different, but similar, role of a. salvage in extremis. Dharmakirti establishes an absolute reality, the thing in itself, the single moment of pure sensation (~uddhav~ pratyaksam = kalpandpodhan = smlakpananz = ksana = pramdrthasat); this single moment of reality is the transcendental (j*&nem pipayiturn na cabate) reality underlying every representation with its complex of qualities, oanstructed by imagination (kalpand). There ia a difficulty in supplying some explsmtion of how this quite indefinite moment of pure sensation combines with the definite omstruetion of reason, and stirepya steps in to save the situation. Its role ia consequently similar to Kant's sohematism, that was intended to supply a bridge between pure sensation (mine Sinnlichkeit) and reason. Cf. my Logic aecwding to later Btrddhists, chap. on pratykga. About sdriripga in Sinkhys-Yoga see below. p. 64.

I n the Abhdharma-koga we have the following account of the process of cognition 1 :Questwn.-We read in scripture, " Consciousness apprehends." What is conscionsness here meant to do 1 Answer.-Nothing at all ! (It simply appears in co-ordination with its objective elements, like a result which is homogeneous with its cause.) When a result appears in conformity with its own cause it is doing nothing at all; but we say that it does conform with it. Consciousness, likewise, appears in coordination (skrapya) with its objective elements. It is (properly speaking) doing nothing. Nevertheless, we say that consciousness does cognize its object. Question.--What is meant by " co-ordination " (between consciousness and its objective element) 2 Answer.A conformity between them, the fact owing to which cognition, although caused (also) by the activity of the sensea, is.not something homogeneous with them. It is said to cognize the object and not the senses. (It bears the reflection of the objective element which is its corollary.) And, again, the expression "consciousness apprehends" is not inadequate, inasmuch as here also a continuity o f conscious moments is the cause of every cognition. (" Consciousness apprehends " means that the previous moment is the cause of the following one.) The agent here also denotes simply the cause, just as in the current expression " the bell resounds " (the bell is doing nothing, hut connected with it every following moment o f sound is produced by the previous one). (We can give) another (illustration): consciousness apprehends similarly to the way in which a light moves. Question.And how does a light move 2 , Answer.The light o f a lamp is a common metaphorical designation for an uninterrupted production of a series o f flashing flames. When this production changes its place, we say that the light has moved, (but in reality other flames have appeared in another place). Similarly, consciousness is a conventional name for a chain of conscious moments. When it changes its place (i.e. appears in co-ordination with another objective element) we say that it apprehends that object. And in the same way Ke are speaking about the existence o f material elements. We
Ab. R., i x ; cf. Sod Thewy, pp. 937-8.

58

THE CENTRAL

CONCEPTION

O F BUDDHISM

XIV.

THEORY O F

COGNITION

59

sap matter "is produced ", it exists, but there is no difference between exist,enceof an element and the element itself that does exist. The same applies to consciousness, (there is nothing that does cognize, apart from the evanescent flashings of consciousuess itself). The question of the reality of an outer world is, strictly speaking, obviated. I n a system which denies the existence of a personality, splits everything into a plurality of separate elements, and admits of no real interaction between them, there is no possibility of distinguishing between an external and internal world. The latter does not exist, all elements are quite equally external towards one another. Nevertheless, the habit of distinguishing between internal and external, subjective and objective, could not be dropped altogether, and we meet with curious situations into which the philosopher is driven by logical deductions ; consciousness itself sometimes happens to be considered as a n external element with regard to other elements. Such elements as ideas (sanjlid), feelings (wedand), volitions (cetand), and all forces (savkdra) are, as a rule, considered to be external elements. The Abhidharmakoga gives the following account of the question : -1 Question.-IIow many among the eighteen categories o f elementary components (dhdtu) of life are internal, how many external ? Answer.-Internal are twelve, (the remaining six) colour, etc., are e.xterna1. Question.-Which are the twelve internal ones ? An,swer.-They are the six varieties of consciousness (gadtij'iidna-kzyih), i.e. consciousness (1) visual, (2) auditory, (3) olfactory, (4) gustatory, (5) tactile, (6) purely mental, and their six respective bases (dgraya): the sense-organs of vision, audition, smelling, tasting, touch, and consciousness itself, i.e. its preceding moment (being the basic element of the next moment) -are internal. The remaining six, comprising visibilitylmatter (sounds, smells, tastes, tangibles, and mental or abstract objects, e.g. ideas), are external.
Ab. K., i, 39.

Question.How is it possible for the elements of existence to be internal or external, if the Self (or the personality) in regard to which they should be external or internal does not exist at all ? Answer.-Cousciousuess is metaphoricallycalled a Self, because it yields some support to the (erroneous) idea o f a Self. Buddha himself uses such expressions. He sometimes mentions control of the Self, (sometimes control of consciousness),e.g. "the wise man who has suhmitt,ed his Self to strict cont.rol, migrates into heaven," and (in another place) He says : " the control of one's consciousness is a weal, the control of consciousnessleads to bliss." The sense of vision and other sense-organs are the basic elements for the corresponding sensations ; consciousness, on the other hand, is the basic element for the perception o f a Self. Therefore, as a consequence o f this close connexion with consciousness, the sense-organs are brought under the head of internal elements. A very characteristic question is then raised, namely, that this definition of an internal element does not apply to consciousness itself. If to be internal means merely to be the basic element of consciousness, as the organ of vision e.g. is the basic element (dgraya) for any visual consciousness, then, since consciousness could not be its own basis, it could neither be a n internal element. The question is solved by stating that the preceding moment of consciousness is the basis for the following one, and since time is irrelevant in this definition, consciousness must also be called internal. I n any case, the dharnuih or dharma-dhatu, i.e. ideas and all mental phenomena and forces, are supposed t c be external elements,l that is a postulate of the system. The theory sketched above does not by any means prevent our using the expressions of common life with regard to a n
The exaot division of the eighteen dluitus from this view-point is in(!) Six bases, dpraya-patka, cal;surddi : organs of sense and consoiounnese (mnnnh),otharwisecalledpad indripit& or thesix faoulties. (2)Six "baaed ", icprita-patka, cakgw-vijGnadi: five varieties of eensatian and intellectual oonsoiousness (mano-vijWna). (3) Six cognized objects (alambana-patka and vipaya-patkn): five varieties of sense objeots and mental objects; they are, with regard to the second set, ribmbanaa,and vipayaa with regard to the indriyas.

XIV.

THEORY OF COGNI TI ON

61

inter-action or contaot between sense-organ and object. We meet even with the comparison of this contaot to a clash of butting goats, but these expressions need not be taken literally. About the possibility of any real contact between the senseorgan and its object, we find the following explanations.1 The senses are divided into two sets according to their power of acting a t a distance, or through contact only. The senses of vision and audition apprehend their objects a t a distance. For the eye a distance is even a necessary condition, because e.g. a drop of mcdicine introduced into the eye cannot be seen by it. The three organs of smelling, tasting, and touch must be in immediate contact with the object. The question is then raised, how is contact possible if there is no movement, and it is answered that contact is only a name for production of two elements in immediate vicinity. The question of contact between object and organ of sense affords an opportunity for debating the question of contact between objects in general. The Vaibhisikas maintain that when there is a contact, i.e. simultaneous production of tvro things in close vicinity, their vicinity is absolute, there is nothing between, but Vasubandhu objects that absolute vicinity is impossible for many reasons. He quotes the opinion of two celebrated philosophers, Vasumitra and Bhadanta; the first says : "If the atoms of which the objects are composed could really come into contact, they would be existing during the next moment," i.e. since every atom is but a momentary flashing, its coming into contact is impossible; the contact will be achieved by another atom appearing in the next moment. Bhadanta says : " There is no such thing as'contact. Contact is only a name for the close vicinity (of two apparitions)." 2 With regard to matter (rcpa), the Abhidharma-koga gives two different standp0int.s from which to consider its position as either external or internal. I t is external if part of another's personality (samtzm), his faculties or his objects, internal if

part of my own personality, my faculties or my objects. Otherwise it may be distinguished according to the clas~ificationinto " bases " (ciyatana) of cognition. As we have seen, this classification divides everything acpording to the faculties by which it is perceived : the five sense-organs (indriya) are internal bases (adhyztma-yatana) and the objective' sense-data represent the external ones (bihy6yatana).l Since there is no real difference of external and internal, the senses do not really play any part in percept,ion; they are mere facts or elements that appear together with other elements according to laws of interconnexion. If we speak of the sense of vision as perceiving colour, this must not be taken literally. There is in the Abhidharma-koga a long discussion about the relative parts of the two elements, of the visual sense and of consciousness, in the process of perception. First an idealist opponent maintains that consciousness alone produces cognition, the part of the senses is nil. This opinion is disposed of by pointing to the fact that consciousness does not apprehend objects behind a wall, which it ought to have achieved if it were independent of the sense- organ^.^ The SarvLtividin then reviews several explanations of the difference between the parts of the sense-organ and consciousness in perception. " We find in Scripture," he says, " the following statement " :" This, 0 Brahmin, is the organ of vision ; it is a door through which to see colours and shapes." This means that consciousness perceives (colours) through the organ of vision (which is comparable to a door). It, strictly speaking, means that when we use

I
1

' Ab. K., ad i, 43, Tibetan text, p. 82, 6 ff.


a

Nirastam-utpQda, ibid., Tibetan text, p. 83, 9.

Cf. db. I ( . , i, 20. For the position in the Pafi canon el. Mrs. C. Rbys The idea. that externd matter is Davids, Buddhist Psychologg, p. 140 ff. the matter entering into the scope of another person's life may be tmced in the Vibhmya, where exteriorripa is said to be the interior raps of another person: ripam, bahidhd yam, ripam te-m, t e p p parasatkinam ( ? parasamkindnam,) parapggaltina- eto. Cf. likewise Majjhima, i, 421 ff. (KO. 2 M&sribulovid~eutta). Ab. K., i, 42, Tibetan text, p. 77, 10 ff. Ibid., Tibetan text, p. 78, 11 ff.

62

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTI ON OF BUDDHISM

XIV. THEORY OF COGNITION

63

the verb " to see " we only indicate that there is an (open) door (for the consciousness to apprehend a colour). I t is wrong to maintain that the organ of vision (cakguh) " looks" (pa~yati), with the result that it " sees ", (perception is produced only by the element of consciousness). Queslion.-If it is the element of consciousness that " sees ", .who is it that becomes conscious (of the thing seen) ? What is the difference between these txo expressions, " to see a colour " and " to become conscious of the presence of a colour " ? Answer.-Although that (element) which produces consciousness cannot, strictly speaking, be supposed " to see ", nevertheless both expressions are used indiscriminately: " he sees " and " he is conscious of ", just as with regard to understanding (prajiid) we may equally use the expressions " he sees it " and " he understands it ". The Sarviistividin then states that the elements of visual sense and consciousnessdo not exhibit any agency, they simply appear under certain conditions : the organ of sense and the object being present, consciousness arises, and the mere fact of its apparition is tantamount to a sensation of colour, just as the sun in arising produces the day ; it does nothing, but its appearance itself is the day. The SautrRntika adheres to the same opinion, and sinds up with the remark : " What is the ,use of this ,quarrel about 'who sees ' and 'who is conscious ' ? It is like chewing empty space ! A visual perception (sensation) is a f a d , conditioned by two other facts, an organ of vision and some colour. Which is the agent ? What is the agency ? Useless questions ! There is nothing but the elementary facts (dharma-mdtram)appearing as cause and effect. I n practice, according to the requirements of the case, we may use either the expression ' the eye sees ' or ' consciousness is being aware '. But we should not attach great importance to these expressions. Buddha himself has declared, 'do not stick to the expressions used by common people, do not attach any importance to usual terms ! ' ' The eye sees,' 'the ear hears,' 'the nose smells,' 'the tongue tastes,' ' the body feels,' 'the intellect becomes

conscious,' the Kagmirian BaibhRsikas make use of- these expressions (without taking them literally)." This sounds like an answer to the SBnkhya philosophers. They maintained that the sense organ " sees ", but consciousness " is conscious "."he Mimimsakas adopted the same view in admitting an indistinct sense-perception (dlocana) comparable to the perceptions of a child and the clear vision with participation by the ~nderstanding.~ The transcendental school of Dharmakirti denied the differcncc. It maintained that, distinct or indistinct, the fact of knowledge remained 'the same in its e~sence.~ There is no great disagreement between the Vaibhisikas (Sarviistiviidins) and the Sautrintikas on the interpretation of the origin of cognition. It is in their opinion a complex phenomenon in which several elements participate, interconnected, but separate, with the essential presence of the element of consciousness among them.6 I n the light of this theory of cognition it is surprising to see the family-likeness which reveals itself between the consciousness (kt, purusa) of the Sinkhyas and its Buddhist counterpart (vi@%na).Both are absolutely inactive, without any content, a knowledge without an object, a knowledge " of nothing ", pure sensation, mere awareness, a substance without either qualities or movements. Being the pure light of knowledge it " stands by " the phenomena, illuminates them, reflects them, without grasping them or being affected by them! The only difference is that in Sinkhya it represents an eternal principle, whereas in Buddhism momentary light - flashes appearing a t the time when certain other
Ab. K., i, 42, Tibetan text, p. 79, 18. Sdnkhya Philosophie, 2nd ed., pp. 319 ff., 326. ~Zoh~cirtika P,m t y a k p l i t r a . 4 Nyciyabindut., p. 4 8 . Theinformetion about the Sautrantika theory of cognition, contained in the Sam-darpno-sangraha and similar works (bdhyrirthbnumeyatua),reposes on a. oonfusion by Brahmmical authors between Seutrhtika and Vij%na.vlda, not seldom to be met with. Warhe, op. oit., pp. 358 ff.
a Gsrbe,

61

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XIV.

THEORY O F COGNITI ON

65

elements are present? The order which it occupies among the ~uddhist groups (skandhas) of elements is likewise suggestive. I t is not included in the mental groups. I t has a place of its own just a t the end of the list, similar to the position occupied by it as the twenty-fifth principle of SLnkhya.2 I n order to avoid the difficulty involved in the idea of one element " grasping " the other, it is imagined that there is the mere fact ~ that may mean of them being near one a n ~ t h e r .Whatsoever in Yoga, in Buddhism it refers to interconnected flashings into existence of two elements. Their relation of subject and object, nevertheless, remaim unexplained, and this fact is christened by the name of " co-ordination " (sCrCpya). We meet the same deus ex mahina performing an analogous task in both systems; subject and object stand aloof from one another, yet they are " co-ordinated " . 4 It can hardly be doubted that the emphatic denial of any difference between consciousness, mind, and intellect 5 in Buddhism is likewise a direct reply to the SBnkhya system, where we find such a gap between consciousness and mind, and the latter then divided into the threefold internal organ. The doctrine of identity between consciousness and an internal organ of knowledge is characteristic for Buddhism from its very beginning. It is, in fact, another manner of expressing the denial of a soul and is the direct consequence of its being replaced by separate elements. We find it clearly stated in the oldest texts.6 I t probably was, a t the time, a new doctrine, intended to replace an older one. The
Senkhya-kariM, 64, which has given an opportunity to impute to the system the negation of a soul, only proves that the consoious principle deprived of any chsracteristic or content, represents in SLnkhya nothing else than pure sensation, or pure consciousness. Cf. Garhe, op. cit., p. 364. About the order in which the skandhas stand we find a great many r s . C. Rhys Davids, R. Psych., p. 64. speculations in Ab. K., i, 2 2 ; cf. M Vyaa, ad i, 4 ; ii, 23. Professor J. H. Woods translates "correlation", which is much the srme (op. oit., p. 14, 160 8 . ) . Ab. If.,i l34 ; Mrs. C. Rhya Davids, R. Psych., p. 66. Samyuttg ii, 9 4 ; Majjhim., i, 256 ff.

4 1

pre-Buddhistic use of the terms is clearly discernible in the Pali texts. One or the other of these synonymous terms is used with preference in certain contexts? As an organ ( i d r i y a , Zyatana No. 6 ) and as a common resort (patisarana) fc.r the sense-organs, the term "mind " (manap) is preferred ; consciousness purely mental, non-sensuous, is called m n o uzj'EZna (dhatu No. 18), i.e. conscionsness alising, not from an nrgan of sense, but from consciousness itself, from its Preceding moment, when the preceding moment takes the place of a support ( C ~ m y a )or , an organ (indriya), for a nonsensuous idea. These distinctions are mere traces of older habits of thought. The philosophical atmosphere in the time of Buddha was in all probability saturated with SLnkhya idehs. Buddhism cannot be fully understood if these connexions are not taken into account.

XV. PRE-BTTDDHAIC BUDDHISM Can the theory sketched above be characterized as a system of realism ? It is certainly not the naive realism of NyiyaTai~aipesika. For the Brabmanical writers it was realism (bEhy6rthdstitca) because it was different from the later, more definite, idealism. But the difference between SarzrZsticZda and T'ijlianacZda consists rather in that the former is pluralistic and the latter converts all elements into aspects of one store-consciousness (Claya-t@Zna). The whole system of elements is retained with slight variations. Professor 0. Rosenberg is inclined to conclude that in thsory of cognition the Buddhists were idealists from the beginning, but they were realists so far as they accepted the real existence of a transcendental absolnte reality? It has, inany case, a position of its own, very far from ordinary realism, resembling perhapa some modern theories which accept the reality of external ss well as internal facts and a certain " co-ordin@ion " between
1 Mrs. C. Rhys Dsvids, op. oit., pp. li ff., has with very fine disorimination traced the different ahedes of meaning conveyed in the Pali canonical texts hv these terms, which am emphatically declared to be synonymous.

'

66

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTI ON OF BUDDHISM

XV.

PRE-BUDDHAIC BUDDHISM

67

them, without the one " grasp in^" the other. The cinematographic representation of the world and the converting of all the facts of the inner and outer world composing an individual stream of life into a complex play of interconnected momentary flashes, is anything but realism. The world is a mirage. The reality nnderljing it is heyond our cognition. Niigirjuna gave the right explanation in calling it an empty (@nya) illusion ( ~ a ~ i Professor ). 0. Rosenberg insists upon the illusionistic tendency of Buddhism from' the very 0ntset.l Even for Buddhagho;pa not only outer objects, but men were nothing but puppets trying to deceive us as to their r r a l i t ~ . ~ That Cankara established his illusionistic doctrine of Vedinta under Buddhist influence is a t present more or less generally accepted. But we must make the difference between the radical illusionism of Cankara and Nhgarjuna and the half-way illufiio&m of primitive Buddhism. The visible world was, as VPcaspatimipra says with reference to Shnkhya-Yoga, similar to an illusion, but not exactly an illusion (mnFzletia na tu mi@). The position of the Sinkhya, accepting the transcendental elements (gunas) as the only reality, was just the same. Whether the andtma-dhmna theory was the personal creation of Cikyamuni Buddha himself, or not, is a quite irrelevant question. I n any case, we do not know 01 any form
Op. cit., chaps. iv, viii, and xviii. Visuddhi-mgga, xi, Warren, Buddhism, p. 158. Mrs. C. Rhys Davide, op. cit., denies in primitive Buddhism both illusionism (p. G5) and idealism (p. 75). When the root of phenomenal existence is declnred to he illusion (asid@), and the process of life is "empty with a twelvefold emptiness" (Viat~ddfii-M., xvii, Warren, op. cit., p. 175), i t is di5eult t o deny illusionism altogether. A s to the different interpretations of illusion ef. 8. Dasgupts, Histmy, p. 354. Professor 0.Rosenberg's chief argument in favour of idealism was drawn from the fact that the ohjects of the outer world were components of one aawnna, i.e. internal to the p3rsonality. But, oonsidoriog that in primitive Buddhism all elements are equelly external to one another and samtrina is not a reality, not a dkarma, there is no idealism in the later sense. The interprotation admitted by Mra. Rhys Davids, p. 75, nsmely, that "the microcosm (i.e. pudgaln) apprehended the macrocosm by way of its sensc-doors ",looks dangerously like aatkliyadrsti I I'ydsa, iv, 13.

of Buddhism without this doctrine and its corollary clasaifications of elements into sknndha, Cyatana, and dhau, the laws of their interconnexion (prof2ya-.~amutp.ida), and the complicated constructions which these termini involve. This is also, as Professor 0.Rosenberg rightly remarks, the common foundation of all the forms of Buddhism in all the countries where this religion flourishes a t present. Failing to realize that, some superficial observers concluded that in the northern countries Buddhism was " degenerate " and altogether a diEerent religion. It is a salient feature of Indian philosophy that its history split,s into several independent lines of development which nin parallel from an early beginning down to modern times. Each development has its own fundamental idea to start with, and the development makes every effort to keep faithful to the start. Thus we have the realism (Brambha-uaa) of the Vaipesika, the pluralism (sanghdta-uda) of Buddhism, the evolutionism (parinimavidu) of Shnkhya-Yoga, and the illusionism (vivarta-oida) of Vedinta running in parallel lines of development from the remotest antiquity, each with its own ontology, its own theory of causation, its own theory of cognition, its own idea of salvation, and its own idea of the origin of the limitations (avidyd) of our experience. We know of celebrated philosophers who have been engaged in more than one line, but the lines were always kept separate. I n Buddhism the development began in the discussions of the early Hinayina schools. The Sarvistividins established a catalogue of seventy-five elementii., The Sautrintikas excluded a number of them as mere names ; the Midhyamikas viewed all of them as contingent ( p n y a ) upon one another, and therefore declared the world to be an illusion; the Vijfiinavidins converted them into ideas, aspects of one store-cousciousness (alaya-vijfidna), but the plnralistic fundament,alidea remained ; its idealistic and illusionistictendency, which was clear from the beginning, was elaborately worked out by later scholars.

68

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

XV.

PRE-BUDDHAIC BUDDHISM

69

The possibility is not precluded that the foundation stone of the ancitma-dharma theory was laid before Buddha. Just as MahAvira was not the first to proclaim Jainism, but only adopted and gave lustre to a doctrine which existed before him, just so Buddha may have adopted and spread a doctrine which he found somewhere in that philosophical laboratory which was the India of his time. He, indeed, is reported to have emphatically disowned the authorship of a new teaching, but claimed to be the follower of a doctrin'e established long ago by former Buddhas. This is usually interpreted as a kind of propaganda device, but it is not quite improbable that a real historical fact underliks these assertions. Among that oldest set of Upanisads which for many reasons are generally admitted to be pre-Buddhistic, but display some knowledge of the Sinkhya system, we find, along with Sinkhya conceptions, a statement that might be an indication of the existence of such a pre-Buddhistic form of the ancitma-dharma theory. In the Kci(hakopanisad, which belongs to this class, a doctrine is mentioned that is evidently strongly opposed to the monistic view of an immortal soul (citman),and favours instead a theory of separate elements (pythag-dhurm8mpqyati). This theory is repudiated with the following remark : " Just as rainwater that has fallen down in a desert is scattered and lost among the undulations of the ground, just so is (a philosopher) who maintains the existence of separate elements lost in running after nothing else but these (separate elements)." 1 Professor IE. Jacobi has shown that unorthodox opinions, opposed to the accepted soul-theory, are alluded to even in These indications are made the oldest set of the Upanigad~.~ in the usual Upanisad style and anything but precise. What emerges from the passage of the Kcithaka cited above is that there was a doctrine opposed to the reigning soulKdthakop., iv, 14; cf. Mrs. and ProfessorW.Geiger, op. cit., p. 9. I n another passage of the same text (i, 21) d h w m apparently also means an element, but a. subtle and immortal one. Emst Xuhn memorial volume (Munich, 1916), p. 38.

theory, that it maiatained the existence of subtle elements and separate elements (p~thagdharma), and that such a doctrine, in the opinion of the author, did not lead to salvation. Cankara, in his commentary, agrees that Buddhism is alluded to, but, very bluntly, he interprets dharma as meaning here in vidual soul? As a matter of fact, dharma never occurs with this meaning in the Upanisads. Its occurrence in the Kcitlda leaves the impression that it is a catchword, referring to a foreign and new doctrine, some adtma-dharma theory.2 Professor Jacobi,sin a recent work, arrives a t the conclusion that a t the epoch of which the K@haka is the most characteristic exponent the theory of an immortal individual di was a new idea which, in all probability, enjoyed great soul popularity as a novelty and met with general approval.
I n his commentary on the Oan&p?da KfirikE, where the term d h a m a aohurs, very clearly in tho sense the Mddkyamika interpretation h ~ given s it, namely, as something unreal, a. mere illusion, the r e d or the pseudoCankara likewise enforces the meaning of an individual soul. a There are no traces of the Buddhist meaning of dhmma having been knomn to PSoini, but there 818 some trams with regard to its CoroUary, the term saw&im or sawkyta. When omsation is to be expressed,,he makes a difference between real efficiency, i.e. one fact trsnsgressing its own existence and affecting the other, which he calls praliyaba, explained ap q+~njlntntddhilna (the same as atiprcyOdhdnu,parasparopakta, or simply umkciml. and s n efficienev whirh is contmated with it and conceived as duces ( = conditions) an enhancement in (some) existent." I n the tirstcaae, upakyta or zlpakyta is used, in the second samkyta. ef. ii, 3,63 ; vi, 1,139 : iv. 2, 16 ; iu; 4 , 3 ; cf. the Kdpikj. That the two paribhdpds, gu?~d&rddhinam and sate utkar&hilnam s a w M r a h , refer to the S b k h y a and Buddhist views respectively is probable. I n later litemtue the difference between u p k m and simple aamkina is kequantly referred to, cf. Nydyab'ndutiM, ed. Petwson (Bibl. I d . ) , p. 13 : dviuidhq ca s a h a k t i p-a8pzropkEri ; cf. SizBascklhiSt .Vyfi$/aTmcta, p. 48 ff., Sarvadavpnasangmlm, p. 10 (Ribl. Ind.) : sahakdriqah kim bkarasya vpakvrvanli na mi. That the philosophioal conceptions involved in this difference were known to Pi"ini would sppew from the suggestive word pratiyatna =.t~pakBra, as opposed to samskEva, but this is by no means certain. The conception M . bhi$yasya, ad v, 1, 2. A of qu?idntara-z/oga = v&ra is mentioned in . aimilclr contrast lies in adhitya- versuspratit~-samutpBdu, cf. Bh. jdla-sulfa. a Die indische Philoaophie in Dan Lichl des Ostens (StutQart, 1922).

...

XV.

PRE-BUDDHAIC BUDDHISM

71

There is, indeed, a wide gap between this class of Upani~ads and the older set, a difference in style, terminology, and the whole intellectual atmosphere. The idea of a surviving personanty, of a Self and even a UniversalSelf, is not unknown in the Veda: its essence and its relation to Brahma is the main topic of discussion in the Upanisads. But this Self is a psychophysical entity, different explanations of its nature are proposed, and materialistic views are not excluded. The idea of an immortal soul in our sense, a spiritual monad, a simple, nncomposite, eternal, immaterial substance is quite unknown in the Veda, inclusive of the older Upanisads. The new conception was .accepted by the Jains, the Sinkhyas, Mimi~psakas,and later by all philosophical systems except the materialists and the Buddhists. I n the Sinkhya the old theory survived, in the shape of the linga-prxra, along with the adoption of the new. The attitude of,Buddhism towards both the old and the new theories was that of a most emphatic denial. Scholars were always struck by the spirit of extreme animosity which undoubtedly reveals itself in the oldest Buddhist texts whenever the idea of a soul is mentioned. I n the light of Professor Jacobi's hypothesis this may find a natural explanation in the feeling of excitement with which the new theory was met and assailed by iLs chief opponents, for which mere theoretical considerations of abstract argument seem insufficient to account. I n Buddhist records we find the old and the new soul-theories clearly distinguished. The doctrine which maintains the reality of a Self corresponding to the psycho-physical individual is called itma-vida, whereas the view approaching the doctrine of a permanent Soul is pudgala-oMa. All Buddhists rejected the itrna-vMa, since Buddhism (buddEnup&anS), philosophiaally, means nothing else than the dhamati, the theory of dharmas, which is but another name for ana'tman, nair5tmya. But there are two schools-the Viitsiputriyas and the Sammitiyas-which are, nevertheless, adherents of the pudgala-uida. According to the exposition of Vasubandhu, this means that the internal

skandhas a t a given moment constitute a certain unity, which is related to them as fire to fuel? It had not the absolute reality of a dharma, it was not included in the lists of dharmas, but, nevertheless, it was not quite unreal. This pudgala was also regarded as surviving, since it is maintained that it assumes new elements at birth and throws them off at death.% The pdgala of a Buddha seems to be an Omniscient Eternal Spirit.3 The satra of the burden-bearer, where $gala is compared with the bearer and the skarcdhas with the burden, was invoked as a proof that Buddha himself admitted some reality of the p ~ d g a l a . ~ For all the other Buddhist schools &gala was but another name for iFtman, and they refuted both theories by the same arguments. That the position of the Vitsiputriyas was wrong, i.e. not in strict conformity with the dhama-theory, is evident, since this theory admits no real unity whatsoever between separate elements. Therefore Self, Soul, personality, individual, living being, human being-all these conceptions do not answer to ultimate realities : they are but names for some combinations of dharmas, i.e. formulas of elements.5 If our supposition that the amitma-dharma theory is mentioned in the Kdthakopanipad is correct, it evidently was directed against both the old and the new Soul-theories as equally unacceplable. But, on the other hand, the tenacious effort of some Buddhist schools to save the idea of some real unity between the elements of a personal life: or the idea of a spiritual principle governing it, is partly due to the difficulty of the problem and partly to an old tradition. We find, indeed, in the Brihmaaas and the
B o d Theory, p. 830. Ibid., p. 861. Ibid., p. 841. Ibid., p. 842. Udyotakma, in his exposition of d t m a - ? d a (pp. 33849), likewise mentions this s8tm as contradicting the doctrine of amitman. Ibid., p. 838. The Sarvistivadins explained the union of the elements i~ a personality by the operation of a special force (sawkcira), which they named p d p t i ; of. above, p. 23, and in tho tables of elements in the Appendix 11, where it is found under viprayukta-sawkdra, No. 1.
a

72

THE

CENTRAL CONCEPTION O F BUDDHISM

X T ' .

PRE-BUDDHA10

BUDDHISM

73

Upanisads something like a forerunner of the Buddhist slcandhas. The individual is also composed of elements ; during his lifetime they are united ; the union ceases a t death, and through a reunion of them a new life begins.l Curiously enough, the number of these elements, or factors, as Professor Jacobi prefers to translate the term pr@a, is the same as the number of the Buddhist skundhas. The elements themselves are quite different, and this difference bears witness of the enormous progress achieved by Indian philosophy during the time between the primitive Upaniqids and the rise of Buddhism. I n the Buddhist system we have n t o feeling, concept, will, and a division of mental faculties i pure sensation, in which modern psychology would not have much to change. I n the Upanisads it is a very primitive attempt, giving breath, speech, sense of vision, sense of audition and intellect as the elements. But one point of similarity remains : the last and, evidently, the most important element is in both cases manas. The makrocosm, or the Universal Soul, is likewise analysed by the Upanisads into five component elemenk2 I n the number of the Buddhist skandhas and in the position of manas (= vijlicina) among them we probably have the survival of an old tradition.3 I t is only by such an indirect influence that we can explain the astonishing fact of the simultaneous existence of different classi6cations of the elements for which there is no intrinsic requirement in the system. When the aGtma-dharma theory was definitely framed, with its theory of causation and theory of cognition, the cIass5cation of elements into " bases" of cognition (Eyatana)became quite natural and indispensable,
R. Jaoobi, op. cit., p. 146. Cf. H. Oldenberg, Die Weltalzschau~n~ der Bralnana-Tezte, pp. 88 ff., 234. a H. Jacobi, op. eit., p. 146. CY. H. Oldenherg, D i e Lehre der Upnniahade., p. 54. A similar relation, as is generally admitted, exists between the three elements tejas, a p 8 , annam of the C&nrEogya, vi, and the three gupm of the Sinkhyaa.

hut the classification into skandhas was useless. It, nevertheless, was retained in compliance with an old habit of thought, and such changes as were required by the progress of philosophic analysis were introduced. Thus it is that the fundamental idea of Buddhism-a plurality of separate elements without real unity-had its roots in the primitive speculations of the Upanieads. At the time when a new conception of the Soul was elaborated in Brahmanical circles, some kind of pre-Buddhaic Buddhism, under which we understand the aGttma-dharm theory, must have been already in existence. This time is the epoch of the K@hakopani$ad, which, as Professor Jacobi points out,l might also be the time of pre-Jinistic Jainism, the time of Pirgvanitha, i.e. the eighth century B.O.

'

XVI. SUMMARY To summarize:The conception of a rEharm is the central point of the Buddhist doctrine. I n the light of this conception Buddhism discloses itself as a metaphysical theory developed out of one fundamental principle, viz. the idea that existence is an interplay of a plurality of subtle, ultimate, not further analysable elements of Matter, Mind, and Forces. These elements are technically called dharmas, a meaning which this word has in this system alone. Buddhism, accordingly, can be characterized as a system of Radical Pluralism (sangMta-vaa)2 : the elements alone are realities, every combinatio~ of them is a mere name covering a plurality of separate elements. The moral teaching of a path towards Deliverance is not 'something additional or extraneous to this ontological doctrine, it is most intimately oonnected with it and, in fact, identical with it.
l

Op. cit., p. 160. As contrasted with the Irambha-ulda, which maintains the reality of

the whole as well as of t h e elements, and the priltam-v&da,which ascribes absolutc reality only to the whole.

74

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDIIISM

XVI.

SUMMARY

75

The connotation of the term dharma implies t h a t 1. Every element is a separate (prthak) entity or force. 2. There is no inherence of one element in another, hence no substance apart from its qualities, no Matter beyond the separate sense-data, and no Soul beyond the separate mental data (dharma =. amitman = nwjZva). 3. Elements have no duration, every moment represents a separate element; thopght is evanescent, there are no moving bodies, but congecutbe appearances, flashings, of new elements in new places (k~anvkatva). 4. The elements co-operate with one another (saekrta). 5. This co-operating activity is controlled by the laws of causation (pratitya-samutpctda). 6. The world-process is thus a process of co-operation between seventy-two kinbs of subtle, evanescent elements, and such is the nature of dharrnas that they proceed from causes (hetu-prabhava) and steer towards extinction (nirodha). 7. Influenced (sZsraua) by the element avidyci, the process is in full swing. Influenced by the element prajlc, it has a tendency towards appeasement and final extinction. I n the first case streams (sawtcina) of combining elements are produced which correspond to ordinary men (pthag-jana); in the second the stream represents a saint (Erya). The complete stoppage of the process of phenomenal life corresponds to a Buddha. 8. Hence the elements are broadly divided into unrest (duhkha), cause of unrest (duhkha-samudaya = avidyE), extinction (nirodha), and cause of extinction (mcirga = pajlci). 9. The final result of the world-process is its suppression, Absolute Calm : all co-opektion is extinct and replaced by immutability (asaekyta = miminu). Since all these particular doctrines are logically developed out of one fundamental principle, Buddhism can be resolved in a series of equations :dharmatG -- naircitmya = ksapikatua = sa~Fq.tatva =

pratDya-samutpannatva = scimava-amisravatva = samklegavyavad&atva = duhkha-nirodha = sa~cira-nirvEw. But, although the conception of an element of existence bas given rise to an imposing superstructure in the shape of a consistent system of philosophy, its inmost nature remains a riddle. What is dharma ? It is inconceivable! It is subtle ! No one will ever be able to tell what its real nature (dharmasvabhiva) ip, ! I t is transcendental !

APPENDIX APPENDIX I VASUBANDH~ ON FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLE SARV~~TIV S~ CHOOL DA


THE

I : VASUBANDAU O N

SARV~STIVADA 77

OF THE

The B t h chapter (kop-sthzna) of the dbhidharnm-kopa (v, 24-6) contains a detailed exposition of the argument between theSarvlstividins or Vaibhlsikas and theSautrlntikas upon the question of the reality of future and past elements (dharmas), written according to the method of later dialectics. It is divided in two parts, pzirwapakga and uttarapakga. I n the first the VaibhBsika makes a statement of his case, and he is attacked by the Sautrintika ; he answers the questions and triumphs over the opponent. I n the second the parts are reversed : the Vaibhl+iia puts the questions and the Sautrintika answers them and secures the h a l victory. As a conclusion the VaibhBsika gives voice to his despair a t the impossibility of conceiving the transcendentally deep essence of the elements of existence. The translation is made from the Tibetan text of the Peking edition of the Bstanhgyur, Mdo, vol. 64, fol. 279, b. 5-285, a. 2. Some explanations have been introduced from Yapomitra's Commentary, and the Tibetan commentary of Mchims-pa, which is the standard work for abhidharnm throughout Mongolia and Tibet. AN EPISODICAL INVESTIGATION INTO THE POSSIBILITY OF PAST AND F UTURE EFFICIENCY (Abhidhanne-ko~a, KErikG V, 24-6) (The author establishes that some passions exist only a t the time when the corresponding objects are present, such are love or disgust towards sense-objects. But there are other passions of a general scope, such as preconceived dogmaticalideas, delusion, a doubting turn of mind, etc. ; these have a bearing towards all objects whether past, present, or future. The following question is then raised,) But are this paat and this future really existent or not ? If they are, it would follow that the elementary forces (sa+skSra) (which are active in the process of life) must be permanent (i.e. immovable), since they exist through all h e . If they are not,

how is it to he explained that a man is attracted to (objects past and future) by such (passion a5 he experienced formerly, or will he subject to in future) ? The Vaibheikas do not admit those elements (which combine in the process of life) to he permanent, since they are subject (to the action of four energies which are) the characteristic appurtenance of such elements (viz. the forces of origination, decay, existence, and destruction) But, on the other hand, they emphatically declare that " the times " (i.e. everyone of the three times) are existent in reality. The Saulrdntika asks, for what reason 9 (PART I.--The case for Bverlasting Ekmtnts) The VaibhEpika answers: The times are always existent ~ i ~ i k s v, ., (1) becauae this has been declared in Scripture, (2) because of the double (cause of perception), (3) because of the existence of the perception's object, (4) because of the production of a result (by previous deeds). Since we maintain that all this exists, we profesa the theory that everything exists (Sawistivrida). (I) Because this has been declared in Scriplure.-Our Sublime 279, b. 7. Lord has declared : (" the elements of matter, 0 Brethren, the YSFO'~. past and the future ones, are impermanent, not to speak of the present ones. This is perceived by the perfect saint, endowed, as he is, with wisdom. Therefore, he is regardless of past senseobjects, he does not rejoice a t future enjoyments, he entertains disgust and aversion in regard to the present ones, he is engaged in keeping them off). 0 Brethren ! if some kiud of past matter Big, b. 7. did not exist, the perfect saint endowed with wisdom could not be regardless of past sense-objects, but, since they are existent, he (enjoys the privilege of) disregarding them. If some kiud of future matter were not existent, the wise and perfect saint could not be free from rejoicing a t future enjoyments (since his independence would have no object). But future sense-objects do exist, st&" (2) Because of the double (came o f perception).-It is declared 200, a, z in Scripture : " cousciousness, when operating, is conditioned by (elements) of a double kind." What are they 2 The sense of vision and colour (for a visual oonsciousness), and so on (an organ of perception and its respective object for each of the six kinds

24.

Rstim-ligyur, 64, f. Big, b. 5.

APPENDIX of consciousness, the last being) the intellect itself and its nonsensuous objects (for consciousness purely mental). Thus these first two reasons for admitting the existence of the past and the future are taken from Scripture, but there are others, too, which are founded on argument. (3) Becuuse o f the aistenee o f an object.If there is an object, its cognition can arise; if there is none, neither can its oognition be produced. If the past and the future were not existent, the objects (of the corresponding cognition) would be non-existent, and, as non-existent, they could not be cognized. (4) Becuuue o f the production o f a result (by former deeds).If the past did not exist, how could a deed, good or bad, attain, after some lapse of time, its fruition, since, a t the time when the latter appears, the cause which has produced retribution is gone. (-4 former deed, good or had, does exist in reality, because, when i t becomes ripe, i t produces fruition, just as a present one does.) For these reasons we Vaibheikas maintain that the past and the future necessarily exist. This leads to the theory that everything is existent, and our school is known by emphatically adhering to the principle of such universal existence (Sarcristida). Accordingly (it is said above in the mnemonic verse) : "since we maintain that all t,his exists, we profess the theory that everything existe." Those who maintain that everything, past, future, and present, exists are advocates of universal existence (Sarvristiaidins). On the other hand, those who make a distinction, partly admitting and partly denying this theory, are termed the Distinguishing School (Vt3hajyaaidius). They maintain that the present elements, and those among the past that have not yet produced their fruitions, are existent, but they deny the existence of the future ones and of those among the past that have already produced fruition.a Sautr5ntika.-And how many branches are there among these advocates of universal existence 1 [email protected] are four branches, inasmuch as they maintain (1) a change of existence (bhiva-paripim), (2) a change of aspect (lakgav-paripima), (3) a change of condition (avasthriparinrima), or (4) contingency (apekgi-prinima). The third is
Manah and dharmdb. Cf. above, p. 43, n . 3.

I:

VASUBANDHU

ON

SARV~STIV~DA 79

280, a. 4.

Yqvm.

280, a. 6.

280, b. 2. KBrdB, v, 26.

all right. The difference in time reposes on a difference of condition (i.e. function of the elements). (1) I t was the venerable Dharmatrlta who maintained the 280, b. 3. view that existence (bhzua) changes in the course of time, not substance ((lrauga). He is known to have been arguing thus : when an element enters different times, its existence changes, but not its essence, just as when a golden vessel is broken, its form changes, but not its colour. And when milk is turned into curds, its taste, consistency, and digestive value are gone, but not its colour? I n the same manner, when an element,,after having been future, enters into a present time, i t gets rid of its future existence, but not of the existence of its essence, and when from present i t becomes past, i t casts away its present existence, but not the existence of its substance. (2) It was the venerable Ghoga who assumed a change in the 280, b. 0. aspect of the elements (lakgana). He is known to have professed the theory that, when an element appears a t different times, the past one retains its past aspect, without being severed from its future and praent aspects, the future has its future aspect, without being altogether deprived of its past and present aspects, the present likewise retains its present aspect, without completely losing its past and future aspects. Just as, when a man f a b into passionate love with a female, he is not altogether deprived of his capacity of love towards other females (but this capacity is not prominent). (3) d change of condition (auastlui) is advocated by the 281, a. 1. venerable Vasnmitra. He is known to have maintained that, when one element manifests itself a t different times, i t changes in condition, and receives different designations according to the condition which i t has reached, without changing in substance. (When an element is in a condition in which i t does not yet pqo,. produce its function, i t is called future ; when i t produces it, i t is called present ; when, baring produced it,, i t ceases to work, i t is past, its substance remaining the same.) Just as in an abacus the same ball rrceives different significations according to the place i t is thrown in. If i t is thrown in the place for units i t means one, if in the place for hundreds i t means a hundred, if in the place for thousands i t meana one thousand.

' Or, if 7 C w p1tand8for s u a e p , "its essence.''

281, a. 3.

Yapom.

'281,

7.

281, b. I .

(4) -4n advocate of contingency (apekG) is the venerable Buddhadeva. He is known to have maintained the principle that an element in the course of time receives this or that denomination on account of its relation to the former and the next moment. (An element is future with respect to the former one, he i t past or present, it is present with respect to a former, i.e. past one or with respect to the next one, i.e. future one, i t is past with respect to the next one, be i t present or future.) Just as the same female may be called a mother (with respect to her children) and a daughter (with respect to her own mother). Thus i t is that all these four (lines of thought) are fio many varieties of the theory which maintains Universal Existence. As regards the first of them, i t is nothing else than the doctrine of the changing manifestations (of one eternal matter). Therefore i t must be included in the SHnkhya system (whioh has already been rejected). As to the second, i t is a confusion of all times, since i t implies co-existence of all the aspects (of an element) a t the same time. The passion of a man may be prominent towards one female, and merely existent (imperceptibly) towards another one, but what has this fact to do with the theory i t is supposed to illustrate ? According to the fourth explanation, i t would follow that all the three times are found together, included in one of them. Thus in the scope of the past timc we can distinguish a former and a following moment. They will represent a past and a future time. Between them tho intermediate momcnt will correspond to a present time. Thus i t is that among d l proposed explanations the (remaining one alone), the third in number, is right, that which maintains a ohange of condition (or function). According thereto the difference in time reposes on the difference in function: a t the time when a n element does not yet actually perform its function i t is future ; when performing it, i t becomes present; when, after having performed it, i t stops, i t becomes past. Sautri~~tiku.-Although I perfectly understand all this, I do not see my way to admit that i t implies a real existence of the past and of the future. Bor, if the past is really existent and the future likewise, what induces us (to make a distinction between them and) to call them past and future ?

Vaibh86ika.-But have we not already explained i t : the time of a n element is settled in accordance with the time of ila function. Soutrtintiku.-If this he the case, an eye wbich does not look a t the present moment will not he present, because i t does not perform its function ? Vaibhd#ika.-It is present (because i t performs its other functions) : i t iq the immediate cause (of the next moment of its existence a i d the remote cause) determining (its future character). (Although aneyethat doesnot look is not performing its function, bIoi~ims.pn,ii, 4' it, nevertheless, is efficient in immediately producing and fore- 16& casting the homogeneoumesa of its future with its past and in producing its, so-cnlled, co-operative result.' In that sense i t is present.) Sautr8ntika.-In that case the past will be the same as the present, since the past likewise produces such results-the past viewed as a cause of homogeneousness in consecutive moment^,^ as a general moral cause,s and as a cause requiring retribution a all these causes would be present since they may perform their actual functions a t the present moment. ' Vuibh&ika.-I call present a cause which exhibits a t the present moment a double function-that of giving an immediate result
1 The S a r ~ i s t i ~ i d i n establish e severs1 h k i of causal relation8 betwsen the elements. If e.g. a. moment of the sensn of vision produces in the next moment s . visual sensation, it is termed kbraphrtu and itn resnlt a d h i p t i - p h h . This relation will be absent in the case of an inefficient condition of the organ of vision. But there are other relations between ~ same t aa the momenla of this organ. When tho next moment is j ~ the the foregoing one, thw evoking in Lhe observer the idea of dumtion, thia relation ie termed so6l@d~etu as to s . ni+ynndn-phala. If this moment appears in a stream (sant&na)whioh is defiled by the presence of passions (kfqa),thisdefiling oharwterisinherited by thenext moments,if no stopping of it is produced. Such a. relation is called sawatraga-hetu as to nigyandaphla. FinaUy every moment in o stroam ie under the influenee of former deeda (karma) and may, in its turn, have an influence on future events. This relstion is termed uipirka-hetu ns to vipika.phla. The simultaneity of the inseparable elementa of matter nil1 produce a eo-operative result ( p w q a k j r a - p b h ) . These b s t three relations must be existent even in the ease of s . oon-operative moment of the sense of vision. Cf. Ah. K., ii, 50 R. ; 0. Rosenborg, Plobleme, chap. xs. Szbk@a-hetu. 8 Swualraga-hetfr. 4 VipiiB-kh.

'

and that of determining the character of its remote future. A past cause, although it may produce a result a t the present moment, does not, a t present, determine its general character (which has been previously determined). Therefore the past is not the same as the present. Saulrdniiha-If the time is settled according to eEciency, an element may he past inasmuch as its power of determining the general character of a remote result belongs to the past, and i t may be present nevertheless, since i t produces the result of the present moment. Thus a confusion of the characteristic signs of all the three times will arise, and I maintain that you are guilty of such confusion. Your standpoint leads to the absurdity of assuming actual or semi-actual past causes (i.e. semi-present elements), since the cause of homogeneousness and other past causes may produce a (present) result. A confusion of the essential natures of the three times is the consequence. The case against Euerlasting Elements) (PART 11.SautrEi~tika.-To this we must make the following reply :What is it that keeps (an element from exhibiting its action) ? And how is (the time of this action to he determined) ? If it, the time of an element's existence, does not differ from the essence of the element itself, there will altogether be no time. If the element in the future and in the past exist6 just in the same senae as in the present, why is i t future and past 2 The essence of the elements of existence (dharmdd) is deep ! If the essence alone of the elements of existence persists throughout all the three times, hut not their function, what is it that constitutes an impediment to this function ? What is it tbat sometimes induces them to perform and sometimes keeps them hack from performing their function ? Va'aibhdgika.-The function is performed when all the necessary conditions are present. Sau1rEntih.-This won't do! because (according to yo111 theory) these conditions are always present. Again, as to the functions themselves, they likewise may be past, future, and present. They then require an explanation in their turn. W i l l you admit the existence of a second function (which will

determine the time of the first) 9 or will you suppose tbat i t neither is past, nor future, nor present, but that it, nevertheless, does exist ? In this case this function will not be subject to the elementary forces of life (smmskyta) and will represent an immovable eternal entity (asavpsk?.ta). For this reason you cannot maintain that, as long as an element does not yet perform its function, i t is future. Vaib1uigika.-If the function of an element were something 281, b. 7. different from the element itself, your objections would be right. But since it is not different, they do not hold good. Saufrdntika.-Then there is no time a t all ! If the function is the same as the subst,ance, the elements will always remain identical. For what reason are they sometimes called past, sometimes future, and sometimes present 2 VaiMG#ika.-An element that has not yet appeared is future, one which has appeared and not yet disappeared is present, one which has disappeared is past. What is it you find unfounded in this explanation ? Sazrfr6ntika.-The followingpoint needs here to be established :if thb past and the future exist in the same sense as the present, as realities, why is it, then, that, being existent in the same sense, they are future and past ? If the substance of the same element is alone (permanently) existent, what is the reason that i t is spoken of as " having not yet appeared " or " gone " 2 What is i t that does not appear later on and whose absence makes us call i t " past " ? Thus it is that the notion of three times will altogether have no real foundation, as long as you don't accept the view tbat the elements appear into life out of non-existence and return again into non-existence after having been existing. (Your theory implies eternal existence of the elements.) VaibhE?ika.-It is absurd to maintain that it implies eternal existence ! There are the four force8 (of origination, decay, maintenance, and destruction) to which every element is subject, and the combination (of the permanent essence of an element with these forces produces its impermanent manifestations in life). Sautrd.tika.-Mere words ! They cannot explain the origination and decay (which are going on in the processof life). An element, according to this view, is permanent and impermanent a t the

same time. This, indeed, is something quite new ! I t has been said on this occasion:Maintained eternal essence; Denied eternal being ! And yet no difference between This essence and this being. 'Tis clearly a caprioe Of the Almighty ! 'Tis spoken by His order! (Vaibh&ika.-Rut Buddha has said that there " i s " a past and there " is " a future.) 8autrZntika.-We, likewise, maintain that there " i s " a past and there " is " a future. But this means that what has been formerly " is " past, and what, in the (presence of its causes), will happen " is " future. They exist in this sense only, not in reality. 7aibhSika.-Who has ever maintained that they exist just in the same sense in which the present exists ? Sautrrintika.-How can one exist otherwise ? Vaibh&ika.-The essence of the past and of the future is (always) existent. Sautrrintika.-If they are always existent, how is the (remarkable result) brought about that they are called past or future ? Therefore the words of our Sublime Lord, " there is a past, there is a future," must be understood in another sense. He proffered them when discussing with the Ajivikas (who dcnied moral responsibility for past deeds). He strongly opposed their doctrine, which denied the connexion between a past cause and a future result. I n order to make it known that a former cause and a future result are something which happened formerly and will happen in future, he categorically declared : " There is a past, there is a future." For the word " is " acts as a particle (which may reler to something existent and to nonexistence as well). As e.g. people will say : "there is absence of lieht" (before it has been kindled), "there is absence of tight after (it has been put out)," or the " light i.7 put out, but I did not put it out ". When Buddha declared that there " is " a past and there " is " a future, he used the word " is " in that sense.

282, b. 1.

Had it been otherwise, i t would be absolutely impossible to account for (the notions of) a past and a future. Vaib7uifika.-But, then, how are we to understand the words 282, b. 5. of our Sublime Lord when addressing the Ligudqikhipaka wandering ascetics (the hearers of a tress on the head and a stick in the hand) ? Why did he declare : " a deed (which requires immediate retribution) is past, is accomplished, is hished, is gone, has disappeared, but, nevertheless, i t does exist." What did these ascetics really deny ? Not that the accomplished deed was paat, (but that i t could have some actual existence, i.e. some efficiency. Hence the words of Buddha imply an actual existence of the past). Sautrintika.-(No !) He meant that a force to produce 29%b. 7. retribution is driven by a past deed into the run (of combined elements which constitute an individual). Were it existent in reality, it would not be past. This is the only way in which this passage needs be understood, because on another occasion, in the sermon about " Non-substantiality as the Ultimate Truth ",' the Sublime Lord has spoken thus : " when the organ of vision appears into life, there is absolutely nothing from which i t proceeds, and when i t vanishes, nought there is to which it retires. Therefore, O Brethren, this organ of vision has no former existence. Then i t appeara, and after having been existent it vanishea again." If a future organ of vision were existent, Buddha would never have declared that it appeared out of nonexistence (out of nothing). [email protected](This passage means that), as far as the present 283, a. 2. time is concerned, i t did not exist, and then appeared (in the scope of this time). Sautr6ntika.-Impossible ! Time is not something different Irom the object (existing in it). Vaihh8&z.-B11t may not its essence have not been present and then have appeared 2 Smutrintika.-This would only prove that i t had no (real) future existence. f the Sarv8sti~'a'dins refuted) (The second argumenf o Sautr6ntika.-Now your second argument is drawn from the 28.3, a. 3 circumstance that cognition, when arising, reposes on two factors :
Paranr&rib.$bnyaM-dGIIa, Smpyuktlgama, riii, 22 (MeGorern).

9 3 , a. 7.

283, a. 8.

a perceptive faculty and a corresponding object. Here we must a t first (consider the instance) of mental cognition reposing on the operation of the intellect and on a mental (not sensuous) object.' Is this object a real cause in the same sense as thr intellect 2 or is it a mere (passive) objpct realized by the intellect ? If it were a real active cause, how could events wh~ch must happen after the'lapse of a thousand seons, or those which never will happen, possibly constitute an active cause of the corresponding cognition ? And the Final Deliverance, which is synonymous with the total cessation of every operation of all the elements of existence, how can it constitute a really active cause of its own conception ? But if, on the other hand, such objects are mere passive objects of the operating mind, then I maintain that they may be future and may be past. Vaibh&&.-If they altogether do not exist, how can they possibly he objects ? Saufrhniika.-Their existence I admit, (understanding by existence) that very form in which they are conceived by us a t the present moment in the present place. VaibhWka.-And how are they conceived ? 8autrZntika.-As past and as future. If somebody remembers a past object or a former feeling, he has never been observed to say " it exists ",but only " it did exist ". (The third anpnei&t o f the SmLnistiuEdiits emmined) Saut~Zntika.--4s (to the cognition of past and future) sense objects, the past ones are remembered in that very form in which they were experienced when they were present, and the future oues are known to Buddhas just in that form in which they will appear a t the time when they will be present. Vaibhipka.-And if i t be just the sazne existence (as the present one) ? SautrEntika.-Then it is present. [email protected] not 1 SautrZrr1ika.-(It is absent : and thus) it is proved that absence can be cognized just as well (as presence). Vaibhlika.-Rut (will you not admit that tbe past and the future) are fragments of the present itself ?

283. b. 1.

Saa1rEntika.-No, because we are not comcious of apprehending fragments. Vaibhd&a-But, then, it may represent the ssme stuff, with the mere (difference that in the past and the future) its atoms may be disjoined ? SaulrZntika.-In that case, atoms will he eternally existent, and (all the process of life) will consist in their either combining , or disjoining. There will altogether be no new origination, no real extinction, and thus you will become guilty of adhering to the (heretical) doctrine 01 the djivikas. Moreover, you will he contradicted by the scriptural passa,ue 26.3, b. 4. (referred to above) : " when the organ of vision is produced, it does not come from some other place ; when it disappears, i t is not going t,o he stored up in another place, etc." On the other hand, it is impossible that feelings and other (mental phenomena), wbioh have no atomic structure, should be divided into fragments. I f remembered, they likewise are remembered in that very form in which they did appear and were experienced. And, if you suppose that they continue to exist in the same form, they must he eternal. I f they do not, it will be proved that (a non-existent feeling) may be apprehended (by memory) just as well (ae an existent one is apprehended by self-perception). VaibGika.-If non-existence is capable of being apprehended, m a , b. IJ. you must add to (the list of all things cognizable, i.e.) to the twelve bases of cognition (dyatana), a new category, the thirteenth, non-existence. Sau&Entika.-Su~nosing I think about the absence of a thirteenth category, what will be then the object corresponding to my thought ? Vaibh9ika.-It will be this very (category, i.e. i h ) name. Sautr6ntika.-And what is i t (generally speaking) that we apprehend, when we are expecting to hear a word which as yet is not pronounced ? Vaibhdsika.-It is nothing else than this very word. 8autrZntika.-Then a person who desires not to hear this word, will he obliged to pronounce i t ! Vaiblnisika.-It may be the future condition of this word ?
& A

284, a. 2.

254,

5.

8auhintika.-If it is something existent, why does it produce an idea of ahsence ? Vaibh4ika.-Then it may he its present ahsence ? 8autrEntika.-No ! i t is the same. (If this present ahsence is something existent, why does it produce an idea of non-existence?) Vaibhrj?ika.-Then i t may he the characteristic sign of a future; (this sign is absent a t present, and gives rise to the idea of non-existence). Sau1rEntika.-This sign consists (in the fllot that the future) will appear into existence out of a previoua non-existence. Thus it is that both existence and non-existence may he objects of cognition. [email protected] how do you explain the words of the future Buddha, who has spoken thus : " that theae persous know or perceive things which do not exist in the world-this is impossible ! " ? SautrEn1ika.-These words (do not mean that non-existence cannot he an object of cognition, hut they) have the following meaning :-" there are other, manifestly deluded, persons (who have not yet attained the divine power of vision: they) perceive things that never did exist. I perceive only existing (remote) things." If, on the contrary, every possible thought had only existing things for its ohject, what reason could there have been for doubting (the accuracy of the assertion of such people about what they were perceiving by their power of divine vision) ? or what would have been the difference (hetween the bodhisatttvl's real power of vision and the incomplete power of these men) ? It is inevitable that we should understand the passage in this sense, hewluse it is confirmed by another scriptural passage, which begins with the words : " come unto me, ye monks, my pupils ! " and gocs on until the following words are spoken : " what I am telling h i in the morning heeomes clearer a t night, what I am conversing about a t night heeomes clearer to him next morning. He will cognize the existence of what does exist, the non-existence of what does not exist. Where something still higher exists, he will know that there is something still higher ; and where nothing higher exists, he will know that (it is the Final Deliverance, that,) there is nothing higher than that ! " Therefore the argument (in favour of a real existence of the past,

that you have drawn from the supposed fact that) our intellect can have only existent things for ita ohjecethis argument is wrong. (The fourth argument of the Samtistiolidins examind) SautrEn1ika.-As to your next argument (in favour of the real 284, a. 7. existence of the past, viz. because it has a real) result-we must observe that we, the Santrintikas, never did maintain that a result can he produced from a past deed (directly). Vaibhd8ika.-How is it produced, then ? SautrCntiL.-(This deed) is the beginning of a peculiar chain of events (in the course of which the result appears sooner or later). A more detailed explanation of this point will he given later on, when we will refute the theorp (of the Vitaiputriyas. who) maintain the existence of an individual.' (Aa to your view, it is manifestly inconsistent.) What result can a past deed produce according to this vier ? If the past and the future are llotnally existent, the result will necessarily he pre-existent from all eternity. VaVaibhE$ika.-(But we assume the existence of the force of generation 2) 8nulrEntika.-Wdl, then, i t will be established that this force itself appears after having previounly been non-existent ! I n fact, if evorything withont any exception is pre-existent, there can be nothing that could have a force to produce anything ! In the end it comes to the same as the theory of the followersof Var:qaganya. m g new According to them there is neither production of sometk' nor extinction of something oxistent: what exists is always existent, what does not exist will never hecome existent. Vnibhdgiko.-But the force (of a past deed) may conist in " making present " (some already existing element) ? 8auWntika.-How is this " making present " to he understood? 284, b. 3. Vaib&ika.-It consists in removing (the result from one) place to another. 8aulrEntika.-Then the result would he eternally pre-existent. And, as to nou-existent elements, how can they (he made to change place) ? Moreover, such " removing " means production (of a motion, i.e. of something) which previously did not exist.
1

Ab. K., ia, translated i n my Saul T1,em.v.

284. b . 5.

VaibhEgika.-It may consist in a " specification " of the (everlasting) essence of an element ? SautrLintih.-This, again, would prove that there is production of what previously did not exist. To conclude : the principle of Universal Existence, as far as exegetical literature is concerned, where it implies an actual existence of the past and of the future, does not hold good. On the contrary, i t is all right if we strictly conform to the words of Scripture, where it is declared that' " everything exists ". Vaibluigika.-And in what sense has it been declared in Scripture that " everything exist3 " ? Sautr3ntih.-0 Brahmins ! it has been declared, " everything exists ": that meana no more than " the elements included in the twelve categories (Eyalunn) are existent ". [email protected] the three t.imes (are they not included among these elements) ? SautrEniika.-(No, they are not !). How their existence is to be understood we have already explained. (The SnmListiuUim reverts to his jrst arqumenl) Vaibluiika.-If the past and the future did not exist, how could it be possible that a man should he attracted by (a past and future passion) to a (past or future object of enjoyment) 2 Sautdn1ika.-This becomes possible because past passions leave residues (or produce seeds), which are the causes of new passions; these seeds are existent (and the saint has the capacity of keeping them dowu, of being independent of them). Therefore, a man can be bound by (past accesses of) passion. And i t is in this sense that he can be allured by (future or past) objects, because the seeds of these passions, which are directed towards (past and future enjoyments), are alwnpa present in him. Conclusion Vaibh@ika (does not feel discountenanced by this series of arguments, and says :) We VaibhB:ikas, nevertheless, maintain that the past and the future certainly do exist. But (regarding the everlasting essence of the elements of existence, we confess) that this is something we do not succeed in explaining, their essence is deep (it is traascendental), since its existence cannot

be established by rational methods.' (And a3 to the use we make of the notion of time in common life, it is contradictory. We use) the expression : " what appears vanishes " (implying that the same element appears and disappears, e.g.) " some matter appears and disappears But we, likewise, say " one thing appears, another disappears ",implying that one element, the future one, enters into life, and another one (the present one), stops. We also speak of the appearing of time (itself " t,he time is come "), because the element which enters into life is included in the notion of time. And we speak about being born "from time", since the future includes many moments (and only one of them actudly enters into life).

".

End of the Episodical Investigation


1 The Peking and Nmthang Rstan-hggur rend here &a;-bar armi nvs-80. This may mean that the remark of the \'nibh@ika applia to the elements of rnind done, i.e. the elements that cannot be carried from one plaoe to another. Rut Sabghabhadra's text points to s . reading b p d - p r n i nW4o. which nndouhtedly is the correct one,ainoe it is supported bythe translation of Hiuen-Taang. The corruption muat be very old, sines the block-print of the Ags monastery, w h i ~ h i s f o ~ n d e d o oldsouroes n coming from Derge, ropeats it and it is retained hg Mehims-ps.

284, b. 7.

286, a. 1.

APPENDIX I1

TABLES O F THE ELEMENTS ACCORDING TO THE

SARV&STIVhDINS

GENERAL VIEW
.411 elements of eu~stence (sarvam = 15 dlmnntta)
I

i 2 elements

aawk#a (72) " co-operating" in full swing

I
I

~ L r l (72) a the same elements, but "co-oper?tion2' abating

" non-co-opersting
"

asawkrfa (3)

upadina-skandha elements "attached" t o life


I

ancisrow-skandha the same elements, but attachment fading


I

I extinction
I

of the elements nirodha liuddha

dahklm ibcmvdaya

mdrga
drys I

I p?thog-jana I

sanaara

empirical existence
I

nirvana nbsolute existence


I

APPENDIX I1 : CLASSIFICATION OF ALL ELEMENTS


OF

TABLES O F

ELEMENTS,'% 1

97

EXISTENCE

(Sarvam = amitman = 12 Eyatanas = 18 d m u s =75 dharmas) I . F k t General Division


2.

1. a o w b k z aaowk~la

. .

. .

co-operating, impermanent non-co-oprating, imrnutsble

. .

. .

72 dhamas.

, ,

I. a&mw

11. Sewnd h r a l Division

2. a ~ a r o u o .

. .

"

" unintluenoed" by passions, process of life abating


and suppressed.

iduenced" by paaaiona, process of life in full . . swing.

I n this classification the eleven first items correspond to eleven elements (dharmz), each including one. The twelfth item contains all the remaining sixty-four elements, and it is therefore called dharma-Eyatana or simply dhamEh, i.e. the remining elements. V . Fyth General Division into eighteen classes (dhritu = gotra) of elements represented in the composition of an individual stream of life ( s a a l z a ) in the different planes of existence.
I. Six indriyaa. 11. Sin vipoyaa. 1. cekpur-druita,sense of vision. 7. rGpa.dGtu, colour. 2. polra.dhbh, , , sudition. 8. pbda.druilz, sound. 3. ghre?m-rdIrrit%, srnelliig. 9. gandh-dMtu, odour. 4. h d , , taste. 10. ram-Qbtu, taste. 6. kya-druitrr, ., tonoh. 11. aprq!auya-druitu, taogibhs. 6, marno-druitll, , , faculty of 12. dhavma-dGtu, or dharnzbp, nonmnauous objects. intellect. 111. Six vijiidnaa. 13. Visunl canscmusness (eakgur-vlj6dm.dhdhr). 14. A I ~ ~ L ~ ,, O ~( $~ rotra-"yana-dhdl~). 15. Olfactory ,, (ghrd~-vijrin'na-dhdl.). 16. Gustatory ,, (jshva-oijfi,iana.dhat.). 17. Tactile ,, (Icaya.v~6dsa-dhdt<~). 18. Non-senmow ,, (maw-uij6dna-dhatu).

The first item corresponds to the seventy-two samskytad h a s as far as they co-operate in the production of an ordinary life (prthgsjam), the second contains the three eternal elements ( a . s a ~ k % ) and the s a ~ k y t aas well, in those cases when l i e is being gradually suppressed and the individual becomes a saint ( d y a ) . 111. Third General Division, into four stages (satya)
duhkha 2. aomuhya 3. nirodha 4. mirgo
1.

,.

. . . .

. . . .

. u n r e s t its osuse} = the 72 a*4v(Idham. eternal peace = the 3 m a w W amamits cause -the remaining allrismJ dhorm.

IV. Fourth General Division


from the view-point of the part played by the elements in the process of cognition, into six subjective and six objective " bases " (Eyatana) of cognition.
I. Sir internal basea (adhydtma
I '
1.

2.
3.

4. 5.
fi.

11. Six external bases (bahpz. dyatana) or receptive faculties dyatma) or objeots (v4uya). (indrivo). .. Sense oi vismn (eakgw-indriya7. Colour and shape (ruga-dyiya. dyalana). tam). Senseof audition (@*a-indriya8. Sound (pbda-dyutana). dyatana). Senseof srnell~ng(ghrdnn.indviy~. 9. Odour (gondha-dyatana), ayiyatam). Sense af taste (jihw-indriya10. Taste (rasa-dynlan~). dyatann). Sense o i touch (kdyaindriya11. Tmgibles (aprag@~ya.aya. 6yatana). tam). Faculty of the intellect or con12. Non-sensuoos objects (dharsciousnens ( m u m -i n d r i p ma-riyatanaor d h m d & ) . liyolano).

Ten of these d&us contain one dharma each (Nos. 1-5 and 6-11); tbe dhElu No. 12 contains sixty-four d h w (forty-six caitta, fourteen citta-viprayukta, three asamskrta, and avijgapti) ; consciousness, representing a single d h a r m , is split into seven dluitus, No. 6 and Nos. 15-18. On the sensuous plane of existence ( k B m - D E t u ) the individual streams (sanBna) are composed of all the eighteen dX3us. I n the world of " Reduced Matter" (rtip&DMtu) the d7uitu.s Nos. 9-10 and 15-16 are absent, and the individuals are composed of only fourteen dhEtus. I n the Immaterial Worlds (arcpa-Dhdtu) they are composed of only three dhdtus, Nos. 6, 12, and 18, since all matter and sensuous consciousness does not exist there. The six vipayas are visaya in regard to the six indriyas, but dlambana in regard to the six vijGna8.
7

!i
VI. Sixth division, of the seventy-two active elements
1. r6~-akandha

APPENDIX

1 1:

TABLE8

OF.

ELEMENTS, VI, A

99

(samskyta-dhamza)into five groups (skandha). . the physical elements, mattar . Il dharmas.

2. & a - a k a n d h

3. aanjm-akandh
4.

sadnra-skandha. 5. vijGw-skondha

. . .

feeling oonception

. .

. . . .
.

will and other forces

. .

. .

1
58

pure ronseiousoem (without content) 1


Together

. .72

, , , , , ,

, ,

, ,

Group means collection, viz. of d h a m past, present, and future, remote and near, pure and defiled, etc. The asavpkfla are not included in this division, but the other an&ava, as well as the s ~ a ~are a included. , When the sZwava alone are meant, the groups are caUed u@&ina-skatdha, i.e. elements of "att9chment" to life. Other synonyms are r a w " struggle ", duhkha " unrest ", duhkha-samudaya " cause of unrest ", loka " mundane existence ", dg&-sthiti "the place where the belief in the existence of personality obtains", bhava " existence" simply, since by existence simply the usual existence of ordinary men is meant. When the skandhas embrace all the savpkyta-dhams, the slrava and anlraza as well, they receive, in contradistinction to the upZddna-skuadhas, other names : adhvdnah " the (three) times ", kathd-vastu " objects of speech ", sanibaraw " elements to be suppressed ",savastuka " having empirical reality ", or "being subject to causality The skandha No. 4 contains all the caitta-dharmas, except cedand and sanj%i, i.e. forty-four mental faculties with cetand, the will as the principal one, and fourteen general forces (&tta-viprayukta).

Matter is divided into primary (bhaa = mamhicta) and secondary (bhautika). Four atonm of primary matter, one from each maluibhata, are necessaq ta toupport one bhauskaatom. Only No. 10, the tactile class, contains both a11 the primary and some secondary kinds of tactibiity: aU the other classes contain only secondary, supported, kind of matter.

II .'?'
.

T k Four Universal Elements o f Matter (malui6hSa)


plhivi, element manifesting itself e a hmhtnff, or repulsion. , , , , viecoua-stuff,or attraction. 2. op, , , , ,, heat.stuff. 3 . tejan, 4. irana, ,, , motion-stuff.
1 .

,.

".

THE SINGLE ELEMENTS OF. MATTER (RCTPA), MIND (CITTACAITTA), FORCES (VIPRAYUKTA-SAMSK~A), AND ETERNITY (ASAMSKWTA) A. MATTER ( R ~ P A )
1. cakgur-indriya, trsnslucent matter ( r I p p a a i d a ) oon~e*g visual senea.tians. 2. $rotwinbiya, transluoent matter (rip-prase&) conveying auditory sensstiom.

AvijBapli is a variety of karma. Actions can be either mental (atan@ or physi~ll--oorporealand vocal acts (luiyikaand wicika-kaw). They are also divided into manifest acts (vijkpti) and unmanifested ones--avijEapti. The latter are, for our habits of thought, not acts, but their results, they are not physical, but moral. If a novice has taken the vows he has committed a physical, vocal action, which is vijriapti, but the lasting result is some moral excellence hidden in consciousness, and this is avijliapti. I t constitutes a link between the act and its future retribution ; it is, therefore, the same as sapsluira, ap%va, adr@ of the Brahmanical systems. Although by no means physical, since it lacks the general characteristic of matter which is impenetrability (sapratighalva), it nevertheless is brought by the SarvPstivLdii (not by others) under the head of rip,

APPENDIX because of its close connexion with the physical act upon which it follows as a shadow cast from an object always foUows that object.
5.

1 1 : TABLES OP

ELEMENTS, VI, C, a

101

.
(= m t i )

6. p a j %
7. amrji

B. CONSCIOUSNESS, PURE,

CONTENT (OITTA = M A N A S=VI~~~NA)


WITHOUT

8. manaaikda 9 . &imk?a 10. samcJhi

. . .

. .

1. moms, ooneciouaness in the rBle of an independent, sixth, perceptive faculty, cognizing the non-sensuous, or sbstraot, objects ( d h r m a ) : it represents the preceding momant with regard to the mano-upririina. 2. cokput-wij&ina, the same pure consciousness when associated with the ViPu*l~~ 3. pi~a-vij+iirna. the same pure consciousness when assooiated with the auditory same. 4. gkdw-vijana, the same pure oonsciouaness when ansooiated with the 0lfaotory sense. 6. jiht%uijCdno, the same pure oonsoiousness when associated with the taste sense. 6. kirya-vijl*ina, the aame pure oonsoiouane~when associated with the tactile s e w . 7. mano-uijam, the same pure consciousness when assooiated with e pmvioiaos moment of the same run of conriomsnese without prticipstion of any of the five senses.

faculty of desire (abhipele vastany abhiepa). , , understanding, discriminating (Yew saBktnb il?a d k a r d h pvfpirllivo F a uieiymlc). ., memory (cptoao'pramah). , , attention. ., imlination(dlonzbanarp guwto 'vdkiranam). , , oonoentration (!,em ciltam p n r 6 o n h 5 ekatnihmbonewartate).

b. Te* Universally "good" Moral Forces, present i n every fa~ourabk llaoment of Consciousness (Incph-n~lhiLhhami!a-

fwulty of belief in retributirm, tho purity of mind, the reverse of passiou (oittosya pmbdahl. ooumge in good actions (Lu(a2a-knyi@b

..

,,
5. 0~1rap.i

,,

C. THE FORTY-SIX MENTAL ELEMENTS (CAITTA-DHBRMA) OR FACULTIES INTIMATELY COMBINING WITH THE ELEMENT OF CONSOIOUSNESS (CI~TA-SAMPRAYUETA-SAMS~RA) They are divided into1. 10 citta-mfmbhlimika-dbm, Mental Faculties. 2. 10 kslpla-moMbhlmikndb~ma 3. 6 kle$a~mafmbhiLmika.dh~~ma 4. 1 ohpkr-maMbhpimikn.dbma i\foml FOICRO. 5. 10 u~k2e(a.(1~lilta-)bh4mika.dbrma 6. 8 wiyabr-bh4miktz.dhnm Together

.46

a. Ten General Mental Faoulties present i n every moment of Cmsciousness (citta-ma&bhlimika)1 . v~domi

2. 3.
4.

. . aan&%i . . oefami . . apnw . .

faculty of feeling (pleasant. unpleasant, indiEerent).+ ,, concepts (capable of coalescing with a word). ,, d l , conscious e8wt (citta-abhieagaMro, citlo-papanda). , , sensation (compare.bl.ble to r first " contact " between object, sense-organ, and consoiousness).

.
1

" " " ~hpess, mdesty, humility, being ashamed with reference t c oneself (gaurwam). The reverse of IV, 1. %version to things objeotionahle, feeling disgust with reference to other peoples' hhisctionableaotims[avndye bkaya&rgiW. . -, The wverae of N.2. absence of love. absence of hatred. omsing no injmy. mentaldexterity (eittosya kama22yak%oitt%'a Eghauam). aaquiring preserving good qualities (kucaedm d h e v & & wpratilambhmgevanam).
~

c.

8i.iz Universally " Obscured " Elemelats present i n every ufifaevurable moment of Consciousness (klep-mh&hCmika)1. mdho (= avid*)

2. prambda 3. knusidya 4. opddkE 5. alydna

.
.

faculty of ignormce, the reverse af prajlid (I, 6), and therefore the primordial muse of the commotion (duhkh) of the world-process. ,, omlessnes8, the reverse of ape* 1 1 , 10. , , mental heaviness, clumsiness, the reverse of pasrabdhi, 11, 9. ,, disturbed mind, the reverse of $~addfm,lI, 1. , . sloth, indolence, inactive temperament.

102

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTION OF BUDDHISM

6 . auddhaly.

faculty of being addicted to pleaaure and sporte, Sangaim0 temperament (cehao' n u p p m b , "nyogitridiqWCra.vq~dlhvlcli~a~Mynudd h l p - ~ 1 a n n ~ m y a . ~ w . E ~ 1mitosiko mhb dbrmh).

These six faculties are not always absolutely bad ; they sometimes may be indifferent ( a y z k f l a ) for the progress towards Final Deliverance, but they are nevertheless always " obscured " (nivyta = &7uidita = klista) by promoting the belief in a n existing personality (satkzya-anugrliha-drsti. s a m p a p k t a ) . AIways bad (akuplr6u eva) are the following two-

five varieties of sensuous consciousness (na panca-vijfinakiiyikiih), they cannot combine with the four alternatiog k l e p (r*, d w p , mrina, vicikitsli), but with lraoha = avidyd alone, the purely mental klep. They must be suppressed by knowledge ( d r & - h a ) , not by concentration (bhlivam5ha). For all these reasons they are classitied as vices of a limited scope (pritta-bhtimika).

f. Eight Elements not having any deJtnile @min the above system, but capable of enten'w into various combinations (aniyata-bh4ni-dhamaQ)I. h M p f m l t y of 2. m i d d h , , (= nidrir) 3. ,,ita&. ,, 4. viava ,, 6. ,. 0. dv&a ,. 7. , ,

d. TWO Universally " bad'' Elements present in every unfavmrable moment o f Consciousness (ahpla-mahzbhtimika4hapma)1. dhrikya

repenting. absentmindedness, dreamy s t &


&

of mind.

faculty of

2. aMPnb*PYa.

, ,

irmverenoe (agauvauar = oproliwe.1 ~ u g Z ~ ( ~wV Oo a~ ~ P ~~ ~ ~ o I ~ ? u PWmam na h h ' ) , arropnce, want of humility (abhaya-vqz.va~tiP).The reverse of 11, 4 (gowava-prolidvanduo ' d h m b ) . not feeling indignant at offences done by othera (avadye aadbhir garhite bhya.?. da~EibvomJ. The reverse of 11, 6 .

+tma

. . . . . . . . .

8. vicikitad

. ,, Kaukrtga is brought under this head because it neither has

~mcbing state of mind. fixing state of mind. love, pagsion. hatred. pride, an erqwated opinion of one's own ore.sminenoe by real or ima~ined qualifica. t % n o n s (of. d-, V, 1 0 ) . a douhti~~g turn of mind

I1

e . Ten Tioious Ekments o f limited occurrence (upaklepa(paritta-)bhtimiKadharma)1. b o d b


2. m t a h .

3. M t m y a
4 6. .

0. uihimari

7. U W * ~
8. 8.

MY^
@YL~

10, nmfa

. . .

. . . . . . .
.

faculty of anger, violence ( ~ ~ p a & . u i h i w E . w ~ j i l a ~ sQttuCaatlvaya r?gh&kzh). , , hypocrisy, deceit (of courtiers and others). , , envy. , , jealousy.

, , , , ,

sppraaing objeotiomble thio$a (88uodya.


voalu-pardmarp).

, ,

causing harm, menacing. bresking friendship. deceit. perfidy, trickery. comp~aoenoy, self-admiration (of. , 1 ' I 71.

dm,

These ten elements are described as purely mental (manobhImiE eva) ; they are never associated with any of the
pralip = gum-slh&*iniya.

a place among the universal faculties, nor has it a definitely or defmitely "bad" significance: it can mean repentance for a bad deed and being sorry for having e.g. overdone in charity. Middha can also have various moral aspects. Vitarka and o Z r a are universal only in the lilima-DMtu. R Z p , dwa, m z w , and sicikitsd are four k k p , the fifth being rnha placed in 111, 1. Moha is a universal " defiler ", entering in every unfavourable conscious moment, but the other four " defilers " cannot combine with one another; if there is rZga associated with one's consciousness, there can be no association with dvesa a t the same time. Thus it is that in every favourable, " good" moment, consciousness is associated with a t least twenty-two elements: the ten universal ones ( I , 1-10), the ten universally good ones, and vi&a (VI, 4-5). I f repentance (VI, 1) is added, the

THE CENTRAL

CONCEPTION O F

RUUDBISM

number will increase by one. I n every unfavourable or " bad" moment the minimum number will be twenty elements : the ten universal ones (I, 1-10), the six universal1 "obscured" (111, 1-6), the two universally bad (IV, 1-2) and vitarka, vicdra (VI, P5). If all the sawkrta-lak.?a~a , citta itself& l a h a w and upalakga~as are taken into acconn 99 the number will increase accordingly (cf. p. 30, n. 2). Vasubandhu remarks that it is very ditficult to distinguish d l these elements even in the long run, let alone in a momeit, but d a c u l t does not mean impossible. Contradictdry elements, as e.g. pleasure and pain, cn.nnot enter into the same combiiatiou, but contradiction is often only on the surface, e.g. stydna and auddhatya, an inactive and an exuberant element, are present 'in every vicious moment, it is some indulging in vice and some active participation. Whether the individual or the conscious state shall be more passive or more active depends on the occasional predominance of one element over the others. I n every moment, or mental state, there always is one predominant element, just as in material substances we have earth, water, fire, and air, according t o the predominance of one of the mah8hzitas (cf. p. 13). Among the universally good elements indifference (upekd, II,3) and incliition (adhimokga, 11, 9) are not contradictory: they are directed towards different objects : indifferencetowards pain and pleasure, and inclination toqards good deeds, they can go.together. But apram%ia (II,10) and pranuida (111, 2) are the reverse of one another, not mutual absence alone, and therefore they never can combine. Vitarka, VicZra. Vitarka and vi&a are sub-conscious operations of the mind (na nigcaya-dharwmu). Vitarka is " a n indistinct murmur of the mind " (mano-jalpa), which is searching (paryegaka) after its object. I n its initial stage (anatyzihaavasthdyEm) it is simply a move of will (atand-vipsa) ; when emerging into the conscious plane (atyliha-avasthdydm), it

becomes a certain thought (pajG-&@a). Viuira is also an " indistinct murmur of the mind ", but it is attempting to fix (pratyavekgaka) its object ; i t has the same two stages ; i t is also characterized as a refinement (stZk$matd) of the coarser (audZrika) zritarka. Since both these functions are associated with sense-consciousness, they very nearly approach the Kantian doctrine of synthesis of apprehension preceded by the mind running through a variety of sense-impressions, as far as tbey are sub-conscious operations of the mind preceding a definite sense perception. The Vaibhisikas maintain that there is some vitarka (= vikalpa) in every moment of consciousness ; they then call i t svabhba-vikalpa ; but Vasubandhu seems to admit " pure sensation " (reine Sinlichkeit) without any participation of discursive thought (vikdpa). Cf. Ab. K. i, 30; ii, 33. Vydsa-bhdsya in i, 44, according t o Professor B. Seal (Positive Scienws, p. 18), trans. pure intuition (nirvicdra-nirvikdpa-pajE) and " empirical 'l" intuition (sazriuiralzirvikalpa-prajrid) ; the latter contains tbe three relations of Space, Time, and Causation, in addition to pure consciousness. D. FORCES WHICH CAN NEITHER B E INCLUDED AMONG MATERIAL NOR AMONG SPIRITUAL ELEMENTS (ROPA-CITTAVIPRAYUKTA-SAMSK~R~)
a, force wbkh controls the collection af the elements

in an individual stream of life (aan+ino).


a. force which oooasionallg keeps some elements in

abeyance in sn individual aani6na. s force producing generality or homogeneity of erietanoes,the counterpart of the reehtio generality

rnnscious trance. a form topping consciousness and producing the uneansoious trance (through an effort). a force stopping oonsoiousness snd producing the highat, semi-conscious, dreamy tranoe. the force of life.duration, a farce which at the time of birth foreeasta the moment of death, just ae the force with an srrow ia discharged forecasts the moment when it will fall down.
~ ~

(-dvasthika or prikarsika pratitya-samutpcida)


1. avidyri 2. 8amaMra

. . . .

I . Fosr~a Lmg. delusion (caitta-dhomo, 1 1 1 , 1). (= korma)

INDEX

INDEX
L PROPER NAMES
AbYdham-%a, L20, 60, passim Abhidha~m.vib%uiaa-@al~a,2. Abhidharmists, 27. Ags. monastery (Trambaikalia), 91. Apvaghom, 5. Ajivika, 5, 21, 84, 87. Asanga, 3. Astrachan, 4. Bczhu-dhitrka-szitra, 3. Bergson, 38, 39. Bhadanta. 60. Bhavya, 46. Buddhqhoga, 27,31,61, 66. Buddhadeva, 36,37,46,47, 79,80. Caraka, 29. Fankara, 66. Qilibha, 51. Dhma.songani, 4. Dhamakirti, 16, 41, 54, 56, 63. Dhsrmatrlta, 46, 79. Derge, 91. Digniga, 3, 18, 19, 5%. Ga~bhivivakinti-Jlilra, 37. Gauda@da-kc%!&, 69. Chow, 46, 79. Hiuen-Thmng, 43, 91. Hume, 27. Jsina,, -ism, 34, 49, 51, 68, 70, 73. Ka$i!&-(wni), 69. Ki~ynpiya, 43. Kant,, 19, 54, 101. Kathb-uatthu, 38, 43. Kdlkakopani& 68 8. Kgana-bkanga-siddhi, 38. Kumlrdibha, 11. Ligudaqikhipka, 85. MMhyamika, 67, 69. Mahivim, 68. Mahi-Rkhulovdda-airt~a, 61. Mchims-pa, 76, 99. YimCqsska, 63. Nigirjuna, 5,01. N*~yipka,39.

Russell, &rtmnd, 53. Sammitiya, 70. Sanzhabhsdra. 91. ~a~~rkt@av 64,85. &, Sinkhya, 4, 12, 14, 16, 22, 27, 28, 47. 63. 64. 68. 69. 80.

S&&%&S, 11, 23, 24, 36, 40, 42, 63, 67, 76 ff. Supruts*, 29, 37. -~ Them-vMa. 5. 17. 30.
~

vaigeeik& 65, 67. Vimaganya, 89. Vasubandhu. the old. 3.

Vyisp, 44,45,46.47, paasirn. Yapomitm, 2, 3, 5, 21, passim Yoga, 44, 45.

110

THE CENTRAL OOWEPTION OF BUDDHISM

-, -. . ejas, 99. duhkha, 48 5.. 98. dubkhs*.s&mud~y% 98. dwti-mma, 51. drgti-sthiti, 98. &,ti-heya, 102. d r e . v y e . , 19, 26, 45. duira. 8. dvega, 103. dhammi, 3, 48. dhama, preliminary definition, 6. -full connototion, 74, .passim. dharma = tattve, 27, n. 2. dharms-igatans, 8, 15, 16, 96. dhnrme.t&, 25, 50, 74, 82. dhmma-dharmi-bhive., 27. dharrns-dhOu, 9, 59, 97.

..

dhLms-lakgap&; 42. dharma-sanketa, 28. dh-a-svabhlve., 42,95. dharmlh, 8 , 15, 16, 69, 78, 86, 94 dhsnnin, 27, 45. dhitu (the 18). 3, 9, 14, 32, 33, 97. D h l t u (the 31, 10, 97. nima. 7, 24. nlms-klya, 106. nima-rip&, 7, 107. nikiya-sabhigati, 24. ni&, 103. nitye., 42. nidim, 28, 52. nimilta, 18. nirantm.otp5d., 39, 60,n . 2. niranvap-vin+a. 38. nirodhs, 3,48,95. nirodha-samlpatti. 23, 105. nirjim (nijjivo), 27. nirvi~a7 , , 15,25.53.96:-icsra-nirvikalpa-prsjna, 105. niwb. 102. nivrta-arolkrta. 102. Zpyande.,"34.' ' nigyenda-phala, 81, 106. nitirtha (techniral senso), 27, n. 3. neyltha. (popular aenso), 27, n. 3. nairitmya, 25, 70, 74. p a n c a - v i j i i i n a - k i k 103. pad&, 24. pad.-kEp, 106. paramirths-sat, 41, 56. paraspara-upakla, -in, 69 n. paricchitti, 18, 19. pariqlma-du$!A% 48. pariqlma-vids, 47, 63, 73. pritta-bhimika, 103. paryegaka, 104. pudgals*,4 , 9, 25, 71. pudgala-"id&, -din, 25, 70. purusa, 16,63. purug~.kla-phda. 106. prthaktva, 38. pfthag-jans, 95. prthag-dharm, 15. prthivi (not c z substance), 27 ; element), 99. paudgdika, 34. prejiiapti, 23. prspii, 30, 33, 50, 95, 101. prajiii amali, 35, 50, 51. prajiil anisravl. 50. prajiii-vigegs, 104, 105. pratikwna-parinima, 44. pratibuddhs*,51. pratimokgr, 51.

112

THE CENTRAL CONCEPTIOI OF BUDDHISM

Printed bg Slephen Austia

Sons, Ltd., Helertford.

You might also like