Buddhist Analysis of Consciousness in Abhidhamma

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Buddhist Analysis of Consciousness in Abhidhamma

Analysis of Consciousness

One of the Abhidhamma's most important contributions to human thought, though


still insufficiently known and utilized, is the analysis and classification of
consciousness undertaken in the first of the Dhammasangani. Here the human
mind, so evanescent and elusive, has for the first time been subjected to a
comprehensive, thorough and unprejudiced scrutiny, which definitely disposes of the
notion that any kind of static unity or underlying substance can be traced in mind.
However, the basic ethical lay-out and purpose of this psychology effectively
prevents conclusions of ethical materialism or theoretical and practical amoralism
being derived from its realistic and unmetaphysical analysis of mind.

The method of investigation applied in the Abhidhamma is inductive, being based


exclusively on an unprejudiced and subtle introspective observation of mental
processes. The procedure used in the Dhammasangani for the analysis of
consciousness is precisely that postulated by the English philosopher and
mathematician, A. N. Whitehead: 'It is impossible to over-emphasize the point that
the key to the process of induction, as used either in science or in our ordinary life, is
to be found in the right understanding of the immediate occasion of knowledge in its
full concreteness...In any occasion of cognition, that which is known is an actual
occasion of experience, as diversified by reference to a realm of entities which
transcend that immediate occasion in that they have analogous or different
connections with other occasions of experience' ('Science and the Modern World').

Whitehead's term 'occasion' corresponds to the Abhidhamma concept samaya (time,


occasion, conjunction of circumstances), which occurs in all principal paragraphs of
the Dhammasangani, and there denotes the starting point of the analysis. The term
receives a detailed and very instructive treatment in the Atthasalini the commentary
to the aforementioned work.

The Buddha succeeded in reducing this 'immediate occasion' of an act of cognition


to a single moment of consciousness, which, however, in its subtlety and
evanescence, cannot be observed, directly and separately, by a mind untrained in
introspective meditation. Just as the minute living beings in the microcosm of a drop
of water become visible only through a microscope, so, too, the exceedingly short-
lived processes in the world of mind become cognizable only with the help of a very
subtle instrument of mental scrutiny, and that only obtains as a result of meditative
training. None but the kind of introspective mindfulness or attention (sati) that has
acquired, in meditative absorption, a high degree of inner equipoise, purity and
firmness (upekkha-sati-parisuddhi), will possess the keenness, subtlety and
quickness of cognitive response required for such delicate mental microscopy.
Without that meditative preparation only the way of inference from comparisons
between various complete or fragmentary series of thought moments will be open as
a means of research. But this approach too may yield important and reliable results,
if cautious and intelligent use is made of one's own introspective results and of the
psychological data of meditative experience found in Sutta and Abhidhamma.

In the Anupada Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya 111) it is reported that the Venerable
Sariputta Thera, after rising from meditative absorption (jhana) was able to analyse
the respective jhanic consciousness into its constituent mental factors. This may be
regarded as a precursor of the more detailed analysis given in the Dhammasangani.

Let us listen to a voice from Indian antiquity appreciating the difficulty of that
analytical work and the greatness of its achievement. We read in the 'Questions of
King Milinda'; "A difficult feat indeed was accomplished, O great King, by the Exalted
One" -- "Which was that difficult feat, O venerable Nagasena?" - "The Exalted One,
O king, has accomplished a difficult task when he analysed a mental process having
a single object as consisting of consciousness with its concomitants, as follows: 'This
is sense-impression, this is feeling, perception, volition, consciousness." - "Give an
illustration of it, venerable sir" - "Suppose, O king, a man has gone to the sea by
boat and takes with the hollow of his hand a little sea water and tastes it. Will this
man know, 'This is water from the Ganges, this is water from such other rivers as
Jamuna, Aciravati etc.?" - "He can hardly know that." - "But a still more difficult task,
O king, was accomplished by the Exalted One when he analysed a mental process
having a single object, as consisting of consciousness with its concomitants."

The rather terse and abstract form in which the Dhammasangani presents its subject
matter, the analysis of mind, should not mislead the reader into making him believe
that he is confronted with a typical product of late scholastic thought. When, in the
course of closer study, he notices the admirable inner consistency of the system,
and gradually becomes aware of many of its subtle points and far-reaching
implications, he will become convinced that at least the fundamental outlines and the
key notes of Abhidhamma psychology must be the result of a profound intuition
gained through direct and penetrative introspection. It will appear to him increasingly
improbable that the essence of the Abhidhamma should be the product of a
cumbersome process of discursive thinking and artificial thought-constructions. This
impression of the essentially intuitive origin of the Abhidhammic mind-doctrine will
also strengthen his conviction that the elements of the Dhammasangani and the
Patthana must be ascribed to the Buddha himself and his early great and holy
disciples. What is called 'scholastic thought', which has its merit in its own sphere
and does not deserve wholesale condemnation, may have had its share later in
formulating, elaborating and codifying the teachings concerned.

If we turn from the Abhidhamma to the highest contemporary achievements of non-


Buddhist Indian thought in the field of mind and 'soul', i.e. the early Upanishads and
the early Samkhya, we find that apart from single great intuitions, they teem with
mythological ritualistic terms, and with abstract speculative concepts. Against that
background the realistic sober and scientific spirit of Abhidhamma psychology (or its
nucleus extant in the Sutta period) must have stood out very strongly. To those who
could appreciate the import of that contrast, it will have sufficed to instil that high
esteem and admiration for the Abhidhamma of which we have spoken.

But even if compared with most of the later psychological teachings of the East or
the West, the distance from Abhidhamma psychology remains fundamentally the
same, for only the Buddha's teaching on mind keeps entirely free from the notions of
self, ego, soul, or any other permanent entity in, or behind, mind.

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