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{{Short description|Basic framework of Buddhist thought}} | |||
] | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=September 2024}} | |||
] manuscript, c. 700-1100 CE. ], ], ].]] | |||
{{Buddhist term | {{Buddhist term | ||
|title=Four Noble Truths | |title=Four Noble Truths | ||
|ru=Четыре благородные истины<br />(Chetyre blagorodnyye istiny) | |||
|pi=cattāri ariyasaccāni | |||
|sa=चत्वार्यार्यसत्यानि<br />(catvāryāryasatyāni) | |||
|sa=चत्वारि आर्यसत्यानि<br/>(catvāri āryasatyāni) | |||
|pi=caturāriyasaccāni | |||
|si=චතුරාර්ය සත්ය | |||
|bn=চতুরার্য সত্য<br />(Chôturarjô Sôtyô) | |||
|si={{ill|චතුරාර්ය සත්යය|si|vertical-align=sup}} | |||
|si-Latn=Chaturarya Satya | |||
|bo=འཕགས་པའི་བདེན་པ་བཞི་ | |bo=འཕགས་པའི་བདེན་པ་བཞི་ | ||
| bo-Latn=]: 'phags pa'i bden pa bzhi<br />]: pakpé denpa shyi | |||
|zh=四聖諦(T) / ](S) | |||
|zh={{linktext|四聖諦}}(T) / {{linktext|四圣谛}}(S) | |||
|zh-Latn=sìshèngdì | |zh-Latn=sìshèngdì | ||
|ja= |
|ja={{ill|四諦|ja|vertical-align=sup}} | ||
|ja-Latn=shitai | |ja-Latn=shitai | ||
|km= {{ill|អរិយសច្ចបួន|km|អរិយសច្ច៤|vertical-align=sup}}<br /> (areyasachak buon) | |||
|ko=]<br/>(sa-seong-je) | |||
|ko={{ill|사성제|ko|vertical-align=sup}}(四聖諦)<br />(sa-seong-je) | |||
|vi=] | |||
|mn={{ill|Хутагтын дөрвөн үнэн|mn|vertical-align=sup}}<br />(Khutagtiin durvun unen)<br />({{MongolUnicode|ᠬᠤᠲᠤᠭᠲᠤ ᠢᠢᠨ ᠳᠥᠷᠪᠡᠨ ᠦᠨᠡᠨ}}) | |||
|th=]<br />(ariyasaj sii) | |||
|vi={{ill|Tứ Diệu Đế|vi|vertical-align=sup}} (四妙諦) | |||
|th={{ill|อริยสัจ 4|lt=อริยสัจสี่|th|vertical-align=sup}}<br />(ariyasat sii) | |||
|my=သစ္စာလေးပါး | |my=သစ္စာလေးပါး | ||
|my-Latn=θɪʔsà lé bá | |my-Latn=θɪʔsà lé bá | ||
|id=Empat Kebenaran Mulia | |||
}} | |||
|tl=Ang mga Apat na Maharlikang Katotohanan | |||
The '''Four Noble Truths''' (]: ''catvāri āryasatyāni''; ]: ''cattāri ariyasaccāni'') are the central teachings of the ] tradition. They were taught repeatedly by the ] throughout his lifetime. The Buddha first taught the four noble truths in the very first teaching he gave after he attained enlightenment, recorded in the discourse ''Setting in Motion the Wheel of the Dharma (])''. The Buddha further clarified the meaning of the four noble truths in many subsequent teachings. The teachings on the four noble truths explain the nature of "unease" (Pali: '']''; Sanskrit: ''duhkha''), its causes, and how it can be overcome. | |||
|Russian=Четыре благородные истины<br />(Chetyre blagorodnyye istiny)}} | |||
{{Buddhism}} | |||
In ], the '''Four Noble Truths''' ({{Langx|sa|चत्वार्यार्यसत्यानि|translit=catvāryāryasatyāni}}; {{langx|pi|cattāri ariyasaccāni}}; "The Four ] ]") are "the truths of the noble one (the Buddha),"{{efn|K.R. Norman, as quoted by {{harvnb|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}}; see also {{harvnb|Keown|2013|pp=48–62}}}}{{efn|name="EB-Arhat"}} a statement of ] when they are ].{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}}{{refn|group=note|name="Mingyur"}} The four truths are | |||
==Pali terms== | |||
* '']'' (not being at ease, 'suffering',{{refn|group=note|name=dukkha}} from ''dush-stha'', standing unstable).{{sfn|Monier-Williams|1899|p=483, entry note: }}{{sfnp|Analayo|2013b}}{{sfnp|Beckwith|2015|p=30}}{{sfnp|Alexander|2019|p=36}} ''Dukkha'' is an innate characteristic of ];<ref group=web name="EB-4NTa">, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Quote: "The first truth, suffering (Pali: dukkha; Sanskrit: duhkha), is characteristic of existence in the realm of rebirth, called samsara ({{literally|wandering}})."</ref>{{efn|{{harvtxt|Anderson|2004|pp=295–297}}: "This, bhikkhus, is the noble truth that is suffering. Birth is suffering; old age is suffering; illness is suffering; death is suffering; sorrow and grief, physical and mental suffering, and disturbance are suffering. In short, all life is suffering, according to the Buddha's first sermon."}}{{sfn|Keown|2013|pp=50–52}} nothing is forever, this is painful; | |||
The Pali terms for the four noble truths are as follows:<ref group=web>[http://www.aimwell.org/Books/Pesala/Dhammacakka/dhammacakka.html Bhikkhu Pesala: An Exposition of the Dhammacakka Sutta</ref> | |||
* ''samudaya'' (origin, arising, combination; 'cause'): together with this transient world and its pain, there is also ], craving ''for'' and ] ''to'' this transient, unsatisfactory existence;<ref group=web name="EB-4NTb">, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Quote: "The second truth is the origin (Pali and Sanskrit: samudaya) or cause of suffering, which the Buddha associated with craving or attachment in his first sermon."</ref>{{efn|{{harvnb|Anderson|2004|pp=295–297}}: "The second truth is samudaya (arising or origin). To end suffering, the four noble truths tell us, one needs to know how and why suffering arises. The second noble truth explains that suffering arises because of craving, desire, and attachment."}}{{sfn|Keown|2013|pp=53–55}}{{efn|When taking ''dukkha'' literal as suffering, ''taṇhā'' is often interpreted in western languages as the "cause" of "suffering," but ''tanha'' can also be interpreted as the factor tying us to physical and emotional suffering, or as a response to physical and emotional suffering, trying to escape it;{{sfn|Brazier|2001}}}}{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|pp=95–97}} | |||
# '']'' | |||
* '']'' (cessation, ending, confinement): the attachment to this transient world and its pain can be severed or contained by the confinement{{sfn|Brazier|2001}}{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|pp=95–97}} or letting go of this craving;{{sfn|Buswell|Lopez|2014|page="nirodha"}}{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=96}}{{efn|{{harvnb|Anderson|2004|pp=295–297}}: "The third truth follows from the second: If the cause of suffering is desire and attachment to various things, then the way to end suffering is to eliminate craving, desire, and attachment. The third truth is called nirodha, which means 'ending' or 'cessation'. To stop suffering, one must stop desiring."}}{{sfn|Keown|2013|pp=56–58}} | |||
# ''Dukkhasamudayam ariyasaccam'' | |||
* '']'' (road, path, way): the ] is the path leading to the confinement of this desire and attachment, and the ] from ''dukkha''.{{efn|{{harvnb|Anderson|2004|pp=295–297}}: "This, bhikkhus, is the noble truth that is the way leading to the ending of suffering. This is the eightfold path of the noble ones: right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. The Buddha taught the fourth truth, maarga (Pali, magga), the path that has eight parts, as the means to end suffering."}}{{sfn|Keown|2013|pp=58–60}}{{sfn|Norman|2003|pp=219, 222}} | |||
# ''Dukkhanirodham ariyasaccam'' | |||
# '']'' | |||
The four truths appear in many grammatical forms in the ancient ],{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=56, Quote: "There are different grammatical forms in which the four noble truths appear throughout the canonical corpus; there is no one formula for the four noble truths."}} and are traditionally identified as the first teaching given by ].{{refn|group=note|name="Moksha"}} While often called one of the most important teachings in Buddhism,{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=55, Quote: "As the context of the Buddha's first talk on ''dhamma'', the four noble truths are recognized as perhaps the most important teaching of the Buddha."}} they have both a symbolic and a propositional function.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=223–231}} Symbolically, they represent the awakening and liberation of the Buddha, and of the potential for his followers to reach the same liberation and freedom as him.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=56}} As propositions, the Four Truths are a conceptual framework that appear in the ] and early Hybrid ] Buddhist scriptures,{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=55, Quote: "The four noble truths are an important part of the Buddha's biography that is recorded partially in the Pali Tipitaka as well as in the Tripitaka recorded in Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit. were at the center of a specific set of teaching about the Buddha, his teachings, and the path."}} as a part of the broader "network of teachings"{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=85}} (the "'']'' matrix"),{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=86}} which have to be taken together.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=85}} They provide a conceptual framework for introducing and explaining Buddhist thought, which has to be personally understood or "experienced".{{sfn|Makransky|1997|pp=27–28}}{{refn|group=note|name="Gethin_framework"}} | |||
These terms can be translated as: | |||
# ''Dukkha'' - "uneasy"; "unsteady, disquieted"{{sfn|Monier-Williams|1899, 1964|p=483}}{{refn|group=lower-alpha|Entry for "{{IAST|duḥkha}}", a ]ized form of ''{{IAST|duh-stha}}''{{sfn|Monier-Williams|1899, 1964|p=483}}}}; unsatisfactoriness. | |||
# ''Dukkha Samudaya'' - "arising", "coming to existence"<ref group=web name=DigitalLibrary></ref>{{refn|group=lower-alpha|sam+ud+i-<ref group=web name=DigitalLibrary />}}; the origination of Dukkha. | |||
# ''Dukkha Nirodha'' - to confine{{sfn|Brazier|2001}}, release<ref group=web name=Attitude></ref>{{refn|group=lower-alpha|Buddhism with Attitude: "Both meanings, cessation and ‘escaping,’ are supported by common usages and the etymology of nirodha. To begin, the prefix ni- / nir- is the same as the English ex-. It usually means ‘outside’, ‘out of,’ ‘without’, or ‘free from.’ This is frequently a sort of reversal of the base word, but not always. To complicate matters, it can also be used as an intensifier. Worse yet, it has a positive sense of ‘into.’<br> | |||
Rodha consists of ro, possibly meaning ‘go up,’ grow, increase, or expand; plus dha, meaning hold. In common use, rodha can mean ‘ to sprout,’ or ‘to grow upward.’ Or it can mean a far opposite; holding back growth, checking, restraining, impeding, terminating — a confinement. From this latter sense, rodha can mean a prison or jail.<br> | |||
Those who support the meaning of nirodha as a release, read it as ‘out of confinement or prison,’ no longer being held back or impeded.<ref group=web name=Attitude />}}; "control or restraint"<ref group=web></ref>; the cessation of Dukkha. | |||
# ''Dukkha Nirodha Gamini Patipada'' - Gamini: leading to, making for<ref group=web></ref> - Patipada: road, path, way; the means of reaching a goal or destination<ref group=web></ref> - The way of practice leading to the cessation of Dukkha. | |||
As a proposition, the four truths defy an exact definition, but refer to and express the basic orientation of ]:{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=59}} unguarded sensory contact ] to ] and ] to ],{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}} which are ''dukkha'',{{sfn|Khantipalo|2003|p=41}} "unsatisfactory,"{{sfnp|Analayo|2013b}} "incapable of satisfying"<ref group=web name="Sumedho-first"/> and painful.{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}}{{sfn|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}}{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|pp=74–75}}{{refn|group=note|name=dukkha}} This craving keeps us caught in '']'',{{refn|group=note|name="Samudaya"}} "wandering", usually interpreted as the endless cycle of repeated ],{{refn|group=note|name="ego-rebirth|] and some Theravadins have reinterpreted these teachings as "birth of ego". See, for example Payutto,<ref name="Payutto">Payutto, ''Dependent Origination: the Buddhist Law of Causality</ref><ref group=web name="Buddhadasa">{{cite web |last=Buddhadasa |first=Bhikkhu |title=Paticcasamuppada: Practical dependent Origination |url=http://www.dhammatalks.net/Books6/Bhikkhu_Buddhadasa_Paticcasamuppada.htm |via=DhammaTalks.net}}</ref> and ].}} and the continued ''dukkha'' that comes with it,{{refn|group=note|name="Samsara"}} but also referring to the endless cycle of attraction and rejection that perpetuates the ego-mind.{{refn|group=note|name="ego-rebirth}} There is a way to ],{{sfn|Warder|1999|pp=45–46}}{{refn|group=note|name="Pleasure"}} namely by attaining '']'', cessation of craving, whereafter rebirth and the accompanying ''dukkha'' will no longer arise again.{{refn|group=note |name="Nirodha"}}{{sfn|Buswell|Lopez|2003|p=304}} This can be accomplished by following the ],{{refn|group=note|name="Moksha"}} confining our automatic responses to sensory contact by restraining oneself, cultivating discipline and wholesome states, and practicing ] and '']'' (meditation).{{sfn|Raju|1985|pp=147–151}}{{sfn|Eliot|2014|pp=39–41}} | |||
The Pali terms ''ariya sacca''(Sanskrit: ''arya satya'') are commonly translated as "noble truths". | |||
* ''Arya'' means "noble", "not ordinary" | |||
* '']'' means "truth" or "reality" | |||
The function of the four truths, and their importance, developed over time and the Buddhist tradition slowly recognized them as the Buddha's first teaching.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=55, Quote: "However, the four noble truths do not always appear in the stories of the Buddha's enlightenment where we might expect to find them. This feature may indicate that the four noble truths emerged into the canonical tradition at some point and slowly became recognized as the first teaching of the Buddha, ."}} This tradition was established when '']'', or "liberating insight", came to be regarded as liberating in itself,{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=99–100, 102–111}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} instead of or in addition to the practice of ''dhyana''.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=99–100, 102–111}} This "liberating insight" gained a prominent place in the sutras, and the four truths came to represent this liberating insight, as a part of the ] story of the Buddha.{{sfn|Gombrich|1997|pp=99–102}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=93–111}} | |||
==Centrality== | |||
The Four Noble Truths are central to the teachings of ].<ref name=w1>Walpola Rahula (1974), Kindle Locations 514-524.</ref><ref name=ringu1>Ringu Tulku (2005), p. 22</ref><ref name=gold1>Goldstein (2002), p. 24</ref><ref>Chogyam Trungpa (2009), p. viii (preface by Judith Leif)</ref><ref name=than1></ref><ref name=bodhi1></ref><ref>Thich Nhat Hanh (1999), p. 9</ref><ref>Ajahn Sumedho (eBook), p. 5</ref> | |||
The four truths grew to be of central importance in the ] tradition of Buddhism by about the 5th-century CE,{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=55–56}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=230–231}} which holds that the insight into the four truths is liberating in itself.{{sfn|Carter|1987|p=3179}} They are less prominent in the ] tradition, which sees the higher aims of insight into '']'', emptiness, and following the ] as central elements in their teachings and practice.{{sfn|Carter|1987|pp=3179–3180}} The Mahayana tradition reinterpreted the four truths to explain how a liberated being can still be "pervasively operative in this world".{{sfn|Makransky|1997|pp=346–347}} Beginning with the exploration of Buddhism by ] in the 19th century and the development of ], they came to be often presented in the west as the central teaching of Buddhism,{{sfn|Harris|2006|pp=72–73}}{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=196}} sometimes with novel modernistic reinterpretations very different from the historic Buddhist traditions in Asia.{{sfn|Keown|2009|pp=60–63, 74–85, 185–187}}{{sfn|Konik|2009|p=ix}}{{sfn|Lopez|2012|pp=39–43, 57–60, 74–76, 122–124}} | |||
] states: | |||
{{TOC limit}}{{Example needed|plural|date=December 2022}} | |||
:The heart of the Buddha’s teaching lies in the Four Noble Truths (Cattāri Ariyasaccāni) which he expounded in his very first sermon to his old colleagues, the five ascetics, at Isipatana (modern Sarnath) near Benares. In this sermon, as we have it in the original texts, these four Truths are given briefly. But there are innumerable places in the early Buddhist scriptures where they are explained again and again, with greater detail and in different ways. If we study the Four Noble Truths with the help of these references and explanations, we get a fairly good and accurate account of the essential teachings of the Buddha according to the original texts.<ref name=w1/> | |||
==The Four Truths== | |||
] states: | |||
:The four noble truths are the most basic expression of the Buddha's teaching. As ] once said, they encompass the entire teaching, just as the footprint of an elephant can encompass the footprints of all other footed beings on earth.<ref name=than1/> | |||
===Full set – Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta=== | |||
Ringu Tulku states: | |||
The four truths are best known from their presentation in the '']'' text,{{refn|group=note|name="best-known"}} which contains two sets of the four truths,{{sfn|Anderson|2003|p=295}}{{sfn|Norman|2003}} while various other sets can be found in the ], a collection of scriptures in the ] Buddhist tradition.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} The full set, which is most commonly used in modern expositions,{{refn|group=note|name="best-known"|For example: | |||
:The first instruction of the Buddha was the teaching on the Four Noble Truths... They are everything. Apart from the Four Noble Truths, there is nothing else in Buddhism. So they are the most important thing. The Buddha taught the Four Noble Truths in accordance with the way a person would normally solve a problem. That is, when a problem arises, first we try to find out what the problem is, we try to see its nature and depth and how much of it is actually there. Once this is seen clearly, we can look further and find its causes. The first teaching of the Buddha is very down to earth. No matter what kind of problem we have, first we need to see it clearly. Then we have to recognize its causes, and after recognizing these we have to find a way to eliminate them in order to achieve the result, which is freedom from the problem. This is the most important part. In this context mere understanding is not enough. We have to learn how to make use of our understanding and apply it to our lives.<ref name=ringu1/> | |||
* Ven. Dr. Rewata Dhamma: The Four Noble Truths are: 1. The Noble Truth of Suffering (''dukkha''); 2. The Noble Truth of the origin of suffering (''samudaya''); 3. The Noble Truth of the cessation of suffering (''nirodha''); 4. The Noble Truth of the path leading to the cessation of suffering (''marga'').{{sfn|Dhamma|1997|p=55}} | |||
* Bhikkhu Bodhi: "The Four Noble Truths are as follows: 1. The truth of Dukkha; 2. The truth of the origin of Dukkha; 3. The truth of the cessation of Dukkha; 4. The truth of the path, the way to liberation from Dukkha".<ref group=web name=bodhi1/> | |||
* Geshe Tashi Tsering: "The four noble truths are: 1. The noble truth of suffering; 2. The noble truth of the origin of suffering; 3. The noble truth of the cessation of suffering and the origin of suffering; 4. The noble truth of the path that leads to the cessation of suffering and the origin of suffering."{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 246–250}} | |||
* Joseph Goldstein: "The four noble truths are the truth of suffering, its cause, its end, and the path to that end.{{sfn|Goldstein|2002|p=24}}}} contains grammatical errors, pointing to multiple sources for this set and translation problems within the ancient Buddhist community. Nevertheless, they were considered correct by the Pali tradition, which did not correct them.{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=220}} | |||
According to the Buddhist tradition, the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'', "Setting the Wheel of Dhamma in Motion",<ref group=web name="Dhammacakka">{{Cite web|url=https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn56/sn56.011.than.html|title=Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta: Setting the Wheel of Dhamma in Motion|website=www.accesstoinsight.org}}</ref> contains the first teachings that the ] gave after attaining ], and liberation from rebirth. According to ], many scholars are of the view that "this discourse was identified as the first sermon of the Buddha only at a later date,"{{sfn|Cousins|2001|p=38}} and according to professor of religion Carol S. Anderson{{refn|group=note |Professor of religion, Kalamazoo College; Co-Editor of the Journal of Buddhist–Christian Studies.<ref group=web>{{Cite web|url=https://www.society-buddhist-christian-studies.org/partners|title=Governing Board|date=12 May 2021|website=The Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies}}</ref><ref group=web>{{Cite web|url=https://www.society-buddhist-christian-studies.org/carol-anderson|title=Carol Anderson|website=The Society for Buddhist-Christian Studies}}</ref>}} the four truths may originally not have been part of this sutta, but were later added in some versions.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=68}} Within this discourse, the four noble truths are given as follows ("]" is normally translated as "Buddhist monks"): | |||
==Explanation== | |||
{{Blockquote| Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of suffering: birth is suffering, aging is suffering, illness is suffering, death is suffering; union with what is displeasing is suffering; separation from what is pleasing is suffering; not to get what one wants is suffering; in brief, the ] subject to clinging are suffering. | |||
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the origin of suffering: it is this craving ]'', "thirst"] which ], accompanied by delight and lust, seeking delight here and there; that is, craving for sensual pleasures, craving for becoming, craving for disbecoming. | |||
===Formulation=== | |||
In the Buddhist discourses, the Buddha is often referred to as a doctor, and the four noble truths are formulated according to the ancient Indian medical model as follows: | |||
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the cessation of suffering: it is the remainderless fading away and cessation of that same craving, the giving up and relinquishing of it, freedom from it, non-reliance on it. | |||
# There is an illness | |||
# There is a cause(s) of the illness (the diagnosis) | |||
# There is a possibility of a cure of the illness (the prognosis) | |||
# There is a prescription or treatment for the illness that can bring about a cure<ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref><ref></ref> | |||
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the way leading to the cessation of suffering: it is this noble eightfold path; that is, right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.<ref group=web name="BB">{{Cite web|url=https://www.budsas.org/ebud/ebsut001.htm|title=Setting the wheel of dhamma in motion|website=www.budsas.org}}</ref>}} | |||
] explains: | |||
: The Buddha sets out the Four Truths as a formula a doctor uses to deal with a patient. The Buddha first sets out the basic affliction of human life, the problem of '']'' . Thereafter he makes the diagnosis, explaining the cause for the disease; this is the second truth as ]. As a third step the doctor gives a prognosis. He determines the possibility of a cure, the cessation of dukkha. The Buddha says that suffering can be ended . As the fourth step the doctor prescribes the course of treatment. So too Buddha prescribed the fourth truth, the ].<ref name=bodhi1/> | |||
According to this sutra, with the complete comprehension of these four truths release from ''samsara'', the cycle of rebirth, was attained: | |||
] writes: | |||
{{Blockquote|Knowledge & vision arose in me: 'Unprovoked is my release. This is the last birth. There is now no further becoming.<ref group=web name="Dhammacakka"/>}} | |||
:These four truths are best understood, not as beliefs, but as categories of experience. They offer an alternative to the ordinary way we categorize what we can know and describe–in terms of ''me/not me'', and ''being/not being''.<ref>Emphasis added</ref> These ordinary categories create trouble, for the attempt to maintain full being for one's sense of "me" is a stressful effort doomed to failure, in that all of the components of that "me" are inconstant, stressful, and thus not worthy of identifying as "me" or "mine." | |||
The comprehension of these four truths by his audience leads to the opening of the ''Dhamma Eye'', that is, the attainment of right vision: | |||
:To counter this problem, the four noble truths drop ideas of ''me/not me'', and ''being/not being'', and replace them with two sets of variables: cause and effect, skillful and unskillful. In other words, there is the truth of stress and suffering (unskillful effect), the truth of the origination of stress (unskillful cause), the truth of the cessation of stress (skillful effect), and the truth of the path to the cessation of stress (skillful cause). Each of these truths entails a duty: stress is to be comprehended, the origination of stress abandoned, the cessation of stress realized, and the path to the cessation of stress developed. When all of these duties have been fully performed, the mind gains total release... | |||
{{Blockquote|Whatever is subject to origination is subject to cessation.<ref group=web name="Dhammacakka"/>}} | |||
===Basic set=== | |||
:Thus the study of the four noble truths is aimed first at understanding these four categories, and then at applying them to experience so that one may act properly toward each of the categories and thus attain the highest, most total happiness possible.<ref name=than1/> | |||
According to ], the basic set is as follows:{{sfn|Norman|2003|pp=219, 222}} | |||
* ''idam dukkham'', "this is pain" | |||
* ''ayam dukkha-samudayo'', "this is the origin of pain" | |||
* ''ayam dukkha-nirodha'', "this is the cessation of pain" | |||
* ''ayam dukkha-nirodha-gamini patipada'', "this is the path leading to the cessation of pain." The key terms in the longer version of this expression, ''dukkha-nirodha-gamini Patipada'', can be translated as follows: | |||
:* ''Gamini'': leading to, making for<ref group=web>{{Cite web|url=http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/search3advanced?dbname=pali&query=g%C4%81min%C4%AB&matchtype=exact&display=utf8|title=Pali Text Society Dictionary|access-date=22 February 2023|archive-date=11 December 2012|archive-url=https://archive.today/20121211112457/http://dsal.uchicago.edu/cgi-bin/philologic/search3advanced?dbname=pali&query=g%C4%81min%C4%AB&matchtype=exact&display=utf8|url-status=bot: unknown}}</ref> | |||
:* ''Patipada'': road, path, way; the means of reaching a goal or destination<ref group=web name="auto">{{Cite web|url=https://www.accesstoinsight.org/glossary.html|title=A Glossary of Pali and Buddhist Terms|website=www.accesstoinsight.org}}</ref> | |||
===Mnemonic set=== | |||
] writes: | |||
According to ], the Pali canon contains various shortened forms of the four truths, the "mnemonic set", which were "intended to remind the hearer of the full form of the NTs."{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=213}} The earliest form of the mnemonic set was "dukkham samudayo nirodho marga", without the reference to the ] terms ''sacca''{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=219}} or ''arya'',{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=220}} which were later added to the formula.{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=220}} The four mnemonic terms can be translated as follows: | |||
:The four noble truths are divided into two sections. The first two truths–the truth of suffering and the origin of suffering–are studies in the ] versions of ourselves and the reasons we arrived in certain situations or came to particular conclusions about ourselves. The second two truths–the truth of cessation and the truth of the path–are studies of how we could go beyond or overcome it. They are related with the journey and the potentiality of ], freedom, and emancipation. Suffering is regarded as the result of samsara, and the origin of suffering as the cause of samsara. The path is regarded as the cause of nirvana, and the cessation of suffering is the result. In this regard, samsara means ongoing agony, and nirvana means transcending agony and such problems as bewilderment, dissatisfaction, and anxiety. <ref>Chogyam Trunpa (2010), p.13-14</ref> | |||
# '']'' – "incapable of satisfying",<ref group=web name="Sumedho-first">{{Cite web|url=http://www.buddhanet.net/4noble4.htm|title=THE FIRST NOBLE TRUTH|website=www.buddhanet.net}}</ref> "the unsatisfactory nature and the general insecurity of all ]"; "painful".{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}}{{sfn|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}} ''Dukkha'' is most commonly translated as "suffering". According to Khantipalo, this is an incorrect translation, since it refers to the ultimately unsatisfactory nature of temporary states and things, including pleasant but temporary experiences.{{sfn|Khantipalo|2003|p=46}} According to Emmanuel, ''Dukkha'' is the opposite of ''sukha'', (non-transient) "pleasure", and it is better translated as "pain".{{sfn|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}} | |||
# ''Samudaya'' – "origin", "source", "arising", "coming to existence";<ref group=web name=DigitalLibrary>{{Cite web|url=http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/DBLM/olcourse/sanskrit/heart/heart16.htm|title=na duhkha-samudaya-nirodha-margah|date=11 June 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120611220213/http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/DBLM/olcourse/sanskrit/heart/heart16.htm |archive-date=11 June 2012 }}</ref> "aggregate of the constituent elements or factors of any being or existence", "cluster", "coming together", "combination", "producing cause", "rising".<ref group=web></ref> Conjunct of: | |||
## ''sam'' - "with, together with";<ref>DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary, at Wisdom Library </ref> | |||
## ''udaya'' - "rising," "swelling up";<ref>Dictionary of Spoken Sanskrit, </ref> "rising up, coming forth"; "elevation, exaltation, rise; growth"; "result, consequence";<ref>DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary, at Wisdom Library </ref> | |||
# '']'' – cessation; release; to confine;{{sfn|Brazier|2001}} "prevention, suppression, enclosing, restraint"<ref group=web></ref> | |||
# '']'' – "path".<ref group=web name="auto"/> | |||
=== |
===Alternative formulations=== | ||
According to L.S. Cousins, the four truths are not restricted to the well-known form where ''dukkha'' is the subject. Other forms take "the world, the arising of the world" or "the ], the arising of the āsavas" as their subject. According to Cousins, "the well-known form is simply shorthand for all of the forms."{{sfn|Cousins|2001|p=36}} "The world" refers to the ]s, that is, all compounded things,<ref group=web>{{Cite web |url=http://dharmafarer.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/7.2-Rohitassa-S-s2.26-piya.pdf |title=The Dharmafarers, ''Rhitassa Sutra'' (Samyutta Nikaya 2.26) |access-date=14 May 2016 |archive-date=29 March 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160329024911/http://dharmafarer.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/12/7.2-Rohitassa-S-s2.26-piya.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> or to the ].{{sfn|Choong|2000|p=84}} | |||
The first noble truth is the truth of suffering. The term "suffering" is used as a translation of the Sanskrit term '']'' (Pali: ''dukkha''), which has a broader meaning than the typical use of the word "suffering" in English. | |||
The various terms all point to the same basic idea of Buddhism, as described in ] and ]. In the five skandhas, sense-contact with objects leads to sensation and perception; the ] ('inclinations', c.q. craving etc.) determine the interpretation of, and the response to, these sensations and perceptions, and affect consciousness in specific ways. The ''twelve nidānas'' describe the further process: craving and clinging ('']'') lead to '']'' (becoming) and '']'' (birth). | |||
] explains: | |||
: The word ''dukkha'' has often been translated as suffering, pain and misery. But ''dukkha'' as used by the Buddha has a much wider and a deeper meaning. It suggests a basic unsatisfactoriness pervading all existence, all forms of life, due to the fact that all forms of life are changing, impermanent and without any inner core or substance. The term, ''dukkha'', indicates a lack of perfection, a condition that never measures up to our standards and expectations.<ref name=bodhi1/> | |||
In the orthodox interpretation, ''bhava'' is interpreted as ''kammabhava'', that is , '']'', while ''jāti'' is interpreted as rebirth: from sensation comes craving, from craving comes karma, from karma comes rebirth. The aim of the Buddhist path is to reverse this causal chain: when there is no (response to) sensation, there is no craving, no karma, no rebirth.{{sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2000|p=840}}{{sfn|Harvey|2013|pp=55–59}} In Thai Buddhism, ''bhava'' is interpreted as behavior which serves craving and clinging, while ''jāti'' is interpreted as the repeated birth of the ego or self-sense, which perpetuates the process of self-serving responses and actions.<ref name="Payutto"/><ref group=web name="Buddhadasa"/> | |||
] writes: | |||
:The first of the Four Noble Truths is suffering, which is the usual translation of the Sanskrit word ''duhkha'' (Pali, ''dukkha''). We should qualify that translation by saying that this does not mean that the Buddha didn’t acknowledge the existence of happiness or contentment in life. The point that he was making is that there is happiness and also sorrow in the world; but the reason why everything we experience in our everyday life is said to be ''duhkha'' is that even when we have some kind of happiness, it is not permanent; it is subject to change. So unless we can gain insight into that truth and understand what is really able to give us happiness, and what is unable to provide happiness, the experience of dissatisfaction will persist. | |||
===Truths for the noble ones=== | |||
:Normally we think our happiness is contingent upon external circumstances and situations, rather than upon our own inner attitude toward things, or toward life in general. The Buddha was saying that dissatisfaction is part of life, even if we are seeking happiness and even if we manage to find temporary happiness. The very fact that it is temporary means that sooner or later the happiness is going to pass. So the Buddha said that unless we understand this and see how pervasive dissatisfaction or duhkha is, it is impossible for us to start looking for real happiness. | |||
The Pali terms ''ariya sacca'' (Sanskrit: ''arya satya'') are commonly translated as "noble truths". This translation is a convention started by the earliest translators of Buddhist texts into English. According to K.R. Norman, this is just one of several possible translations.{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}} According to ],{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}} | |||
{{Blockquote|here is no particular reason why the Pali expression ariyasaccani should be translated as 'noble truths'. It could equally be translated as 'the nobles' truths', or 'the truths for nobles', or 'the nobilising truths', or 'the truths of, possessed by, the noble ones' In fact the Pali expression (and its Sanskrit equivalent) can mean all of these, although the Pali commentators place 'the noble truths' as the least important in their understanding.{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}}}} | |||
The term "arya" was later added to the four truths.{{sfn|Norman|2003|p=220}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}}{{sfn|Analayo|2013|p=15}} The term '']'' (Sanskrit: ''arya'') can be translated as "noble", "not ordinary", "valuable", "precious".{{refn|group=note|Ajahn Sucitto states: "So the four truths (ariya sacca) are generally called "noble" truths, although one might also translate ariya as "precious", "{{sfn|Ajahn Sucitto|2010|loc=loc. 122}} }} "pure".{{sfn|Mingyur Rinpoche|2007|p=70}} Paul Williams: | |||
:According to the Buddha, even when we think we are trying to find real happiness, we are not doing it effectively, because we don’t have the right attitude and we don’t know where to look for it. The Buddha was not against happiness; rather, he gave us a method of finding out how to overcome that sense of dissatisfaction, and this method is part of the last Noble Truth.<ref name=traleg1></ref> | |||
{{Blockquote|The Aryas are the noble ones, the saints, those who have attained 'the fruits of the path', 'that middle path the Tathagata has comprehended which promotes sight and knowledge, and which tends to peace, higher wisdom, enlightenment, and Nibbana'.{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=52}}}} | |||
The term '']'' (Sanskrit: '']'') is a central term in Indian thought and religion. It is typically translated as "truth"; but it also means "that which is in accord with reality", or "reality". According to ], the four truths are "four 'true things' or 'realities' whose nature, we are told, the Buddha finally understood on the night of his awakening."{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=60}} They function as "a convenient conceptual framework for making sense of Buddhist thought."{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=60}}{{refn|group=note|name="Gethin_framework"|Gethin: "The word satya (Pali sacca) can certainly mean truth, but it might equally be rendered as 'real' or 'actual thing'. That is, we are not dealing here with propositional truths with which we must either agree or disagree, but with four 'true things' or 'realities' whose nature, we are told, the Buddha finally understood on the night of his awakening. This is not to say that the Buddha's discourses do not contain theoretical statements of the nature of suffering, its cause, its cessation, and the path to its cessation, but these descriptions function not so much as dogmas of the Buddhist faith as a convenient conceptual framework for making sense of Buddhist thought."{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=60}}}} According to K. R. Norman, probably the best translation is "the truth of the noble one (the Buddha)".{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}} It is a statement of how things are seen by a Buddha, how things really are when seen correctly. It is the truthful way of seeing.{{refn|group=note|'"Truth", ''satya'' (Sanskrit), ''sacca'' (Pali), derived from ''sat'', being, how it is.{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}}}} Through not seeing things this way, and behaving accordingly, we suffer.{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=41}}{{refn|group=note|name="Mingyur"|Contemporary Buddhist teacher ] describes the four ''arya satya'' as "Four Pure Insights into the Way Things Are".{{sfn|Mingyur Rinpoche|2007|p=70}} Contemporary scholar Peter Harvey translates ''arya satya'' as "True Realities for the Spiritually Ennobled".{{sfn|Harvey|2013|p=52}}}} | |||
] explains: | |||
:It is important to reflect upon the phrasing of the First Noble Truth. It is phrased in a very clear way: "There is suffering", rather than "I suffer". Psychologically, that reflection is a much more skilful way to put it. We tend to interpret our suffering as "I’m really suffering. I suffer a lot–and I don’t want to suffer." This is the way our thinking mind is conditioned. | |||
===Symbolic and propositional function=== | |||
: "I am suffering" always conveys the sense of "I am somebody who is suffering a lot. This suffering is mine; I’ve had a lot of suffering in my life." Then the whole process, the association with one’s self and one’s memory, takes off. You remember what happened when you were a baby...and so on. | |||
], often used to represent the Noble Eightfold Path]] | |||
According to Anderson, the four truths have both a symbolic and a propositional function: | |||
:But note, we are not saying there is someone who has suffering. It is not personal suffering anymore when we see it as "There is suffering". . . To let go of suffering, we have to admit it into consciousness. But the admission in Buddhist meditation is not from a position of: "I am suffering" but rather, "There is the presence of suffering" because we are not trying to identify with the problem but simply acknowledge that there is one. <ref>Ajahn Sumedho (eBook), p. 14</ref> | |||
{{Blockquote|... the four noble truths are truly set apart within the body of the Buddha's teachings, not because they are by definition sacred, but because they are both a symbol and a doctrine and transformative within the sphere of right view. As one doctrine among others, the four noble truths make explicit the structure within which one should seek enlightenment; as a symbol, the four noble truths evoke the possibility of enlightenment. As both, they occupy not only a central but a singular position within the Theravada canon and tradition.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=230–231}}}} | |||
As a symbol, they refer to the possibility of awakening, as represented by the Buddha, and are of utmost importance: | |||
===Second truth: origin of suffering=== | |||
{{Blockquote|hen the four noble truths are regarded in the canon as the first teaching of the Buddha, they function as a view or doctrine that assumes a symbolic function. Where the four noble truths appear in the guise of a religious symbol in the ''Sutta-pitaka'' and the ''Vinaya-pitaka'' of the Pali canon, they represent the enlightenment experience of the Buddha and the possibility of enlightenment for all Buddhists within the cosmos.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=55}}}} | |||
The second noble truth is the truth of the origin of suffering. | |||
As a proposition, they are part of the matrix or "network of teachings", in which they are "not particularly central",{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=85}} but have an equal place next to other teachings,{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=127–128}} describing how release from craving is to be reached.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=230–231}} A long recognized feature of the Theravada canon is that it lacks an "overarching and comprehensive structure of the path to ''nibbana''."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=131}} The sutras form a network or matrix, and the four truths appear within this "network of teachings", which have to be taken together.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=85}}{{refn|group=note|name="Gethin_framework"}} Within this network, "the four noble truths are one doctrine among others and are not particularly central",{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=85}} but are a part of "the entire ''dhamma'' matrix".{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=86}} The four noble truths are set and learnt in that network, learning "how the various teachings intersect with each other",{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=86–87}} and refer to the various Buddhist techniques, which are all explicitly and implicitly part of the passages which refer to the four truths.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=132}} According to Anderson, | |||
] explains: | |||
:Buddha declares that the origin of Dukkha is craving, in Pali ']'. The Buddha recognizes that there are three types of craving. There can be wholesome desires such as desire to practise the Dhamma, the desire to give, etc. There are also neutral desires, the desire to take a walk, the desire to sleep, etc. And there are unwholesome desires. Tanha means the unwholesome desire - the desire grounded in ], the drive for personal gratification. | |||
{{Blockquote|There is no single way of understanding the teachings: one teaching may be used to explain another in one passage; the relationship may be reversed or altered in other talks.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=86}}}} | |||
:Although desire is singled out as the cause of dukkha, it is not the only factor involved in the origination of suffering. However, it is the chief factor. But craving always works within a complex of factors. It is conditioned by ignorance, by the psycho-physical organism and it requires objects. <ref name=bodhi1/> | |||
==Explanation of the Four Truths== | |||
===Third truth: cessation of suffering=== | |||
The third Noble Truth is the truth of the cessation of suffering. This is the goal of one's spiritual practice in the Buddhist tradition. In the first truth, we find out about the human condition, how it is pervaded by a sense of dissatisfaction, then–in the second truth–we look at the cause of that dissatisfaction, and after that we look at the goal, which is the cessation of suffering–the attainment of ].<ref name=traleg1/> | |||
===''Dukkha'' and its ending=== | |||
] states: | |||
As a proposition, the four truths defy an exact definition, but refer to and express the basic orientation of ]:{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=59}} sensory contact ] to ] to temporary states and things, which is ultimately unsatisfactory, ''dukkha'',{{sfn|Warder|2000|pp=45–46}} and sustains '']'', the repeated cycle of '']'' (becoming, habitual tendencies) and '']'' ("birth", interpreted as either ], the coming to be of a new existence; or as the arising of the sense of self as a mental phenomenon<ref name="Payutto"/><ref group=web name="Buddhadasa"/>). | |||
:Nirvana is the cessation of all the unsatisfactory experiences and their causes in such a way that they can no longer occur again. It’s the removal, the final absence, the cessation of those things, their non-arising.<ref> ]. . Dharma Friendship Foundation. (The Twelve Links, part 2 of 5)</ref> | |||
<!--** START OF NOTE ("SAMSARA") **-->{{refn|group=note|name="Samsara"|On samsara, rebirth and redeath:<br /><br />* Mahasatipatthana-sutta: "And what, ''bhkkhus'', is the noble truth that is the arising of pain? This is craving that leads to rebirth."{{sfn|Anderson|2013|p=91}}<br /><br />* accesstoisight.org: "Because of our ignorance (avijja) of these Noble Truths, because of our inexperience in framing the world in their terms, we remain bound to samsara, the wearisome cycle of birth, aging, illness, death, and rebirth."<ref group=web>accestoinsight.org, </ref><br /><br />* Paul Williams: "All rebirth is due to karma and is impermanent. Short of attaining enlightenment, in each rebirth one is born and dies, to be reborn elsewhere in accordance with the completely impersonal causal nature of one's own karma. The endless cycle of birth, rebirth, and redeath, is samsara."{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|pp=74–75}}<br /><br />* Buswell and Lopez on "rebirth": "An English term that does not have an exact correlate in Buddhist languages, rendered instead by a range of technical terms, such as the Sanskrit PUNARJANMAN (lit. "birth again") and PUNABHAVAN (lit. "re-becoming"), and, less commonly, the related ] (lit. 'redeath')."{{sfn|Buswell|Lopez|2003|p=708}}{{sfn|Schmidt-Leukel|2006|pp=32–34}}{{sfn|Makransky|1997|p=27}}<br /><br />The term ''Agatigati'' or ''Agati gati'' (plus a few other terms) is generally translated as 'rebirth, redeath'; see any Pali-English dictionary; e.g. p. 94-95 of Rhys Davids & William Stede, where they list five Sutta examples with rebirth and re-death sense.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=0Guw2CnxiucC&pg=PA94|title=Pali-English Dictionary|first1=Thomas William Rhys|last1=Davids|first2=William|last2=Stede|date=23 May 1993|publisher=Motilal Banarsidass Publ.|isbn=9788120811447 |via=Google Books}}</ref><br /><br />See also '']''}}<!--** END OF NOTE ("SAMSARA") **--> | |||
By following the Buddhist path, craving and clinging can be confined, peace of mind and real happiness{{sfn|Warder|2000|pp=45–46}} | |||
<!--** START OF NOTE ("PLEASURE") **-->{{refn|group=note|name="Pleasure"|Warder refers to Majjhima Nikaya 75: "I gave up the desire for pleasure I did not long for them Now what was the cause? That delight, Māgandiya, which is apart from pleasures, apart, from bad principles, which even stands completely surpassing divine happiness, enjoying that delight I did not long for inferior ones, did not take pleasure in them."{{sfn|Warder|2000|pp=45–46}}}}<!--** END OF NOTE ("PLEASURE") **--> | |||
can be attained, and the repeated cycle of repeated becoming and birth will be stopped. | |||
<!--** START OF NOTE ("MOKSHA") **-->{{refn|group=note|name="Moksha"|Graham Harvey: "Siddhartha Gautama found an end to rebirth in this world of suffering. His teachings, known as the dharma in Buddhism, can be summarized in the Four Noble truths."{{sfn|Harvey|2016}} Geoffrey Samuel (2008): "The Four Noble Truths describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth."{{sfn|Samuel|2008|p=136}} See also {{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}}{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxi, xxxi–xxxii}}{{sfn|Makransky|1997|pp=27–28}}{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|pp=74–75}}{{sfn|Lopez|2009|p=147}}{{sfn|Harvey|2016}}{{sfn|Kingsland|2016|p=286}}<ref group=web name="EB-DL Four Truths" /><ref group=web>Thanissaro Bhikkhu, </ref><br /><br />The Theravada tradition holds that insight into these four truths is liberating in itself.{{sfn|Carter|1987|p=3179}} This is reflected in the Pali canon.{{sfn|Anderson|2013}} According to Donald Lopez, "The Buddha stated in his first sermon that when he gained absolute and intuitive knowledge of the four truths, he achieved complete enlightenment and freedom from future rebirth."<ref group=web name="EB-DL Four Truths">{{Cite web|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Four-Noble-Truths|title=Four Noble Truths|website=www.britannica.com}}</ref><br /><br />The '']'' also refers to this liberation.<ref group=web name="ati_Maha-parinibbana_Sutta"/> Carol Anderson: "The second passage where the four truths appear in the ''Vinaya-pitaka'' is also found in the ''Mahaparinibbana-sutta'' (D II 90–91). Here, the Buddha explains that it is by not understanding the four truths that rebirth continues."{{sfn|Anderson|2013|p=162 with note 38, for context see pp. 1–3}} ''Mahaparinibbana-sutta'': | |||
{{Blockquote|Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths,<br />Long was the weary path from birth to birth.<br />When these are known, removed is rebirth's cause,<br />The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth.<ref group=web name="ati_Maha-parinibbana_Sutta"/>}}On the meaning of moksha as liberation from rebirth, see Patrick Olivelle in the Encyclopædia Britannica.<ref group=web name="Brittanica">] (2012), Encyclopædia Britannica, </ref>}}<!--** END OF NOTE ("MOKSHA") **--> | |||
The truth of '']'', "incapable of satisfying",<ref group=web name="Sumedho-first"/> "painful",{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}}{{sfn|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}}{{refn|group=note|name=dukkha}} from ''dush-stha'', "standing unstable,"{{sfn|Monier-Williams|1899|p=483, entry note: }}{{sfnp|Analayo|2013b}}{{sfnp|Beckwith|2015|p=30}}{{sfnp|Alexander|2019|p=36}} is the basic insight that '']'', life in this "mundane world",<ref group=web name="EB-DL Four Truths" /> with its clinging and craving to ]"{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}} is ''dukkha'',{{sfn|Khantipalo|2003|p=41}} unsatisfactory and painful.<ref group=web name="Sumedho-first" />{{sfn|Nyanatiloka|1980|p=65}}{{sfn|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}}{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|pp=74–75}}{{sfn|Lopez|2009|p=147}}<ref group=web name="EB-DL Four Truths" /> We expect happiness from states and things which are impermanent, and therefore cannot attain real happiness. | |||
] states: | |||
:The truth of cessation is a personal discovery. It is not mystical and does not have any connotations of religion or psychology. It is simply your experience... Likewise, cessation is not just a theoretical discovery, but an experience that is very real to you–a sudden gain. It is like experiencing instantaneous good health: you have no cold, no flu, no aches, and no pains in your body. You feel perfectly well, absolutely refreshed and wakeful! Such an experience is possible.<ref>Chögyam Trungpa (2009), p. 64</ref> | |||
The truth of '']'', "arising", "coming together", or ''dukkha-samudaya'', the origination or ] of ''dukkha'', is the truth that ''samsara'', and its associated ''dukkha'' ], or continues,{{refn|group=note|name="continues"|Gogerly (1861): "1. That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms. 2. That its continuance results from a continued desire of existence."{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=72}}}} with ], "thirst", craving for and clinging to these impermanent states and things. | |||
] states: | |||
<!--**START OF NOTE "SAMUDAYA"**-->{{refn|group=note|name="Samudaya"|See:<br />* Gogerly (1861): "1. That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms. 2. That its continuance results from a continued desire of existence."{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=72}}<br />*Perry Schmidt-Leukel: "Thirst can be temporarily quenched but never brought to final stillness. It is in this sense that thirst is the cause of suffering, duhkha. And because of this thirst, the sentient beings remain bound to samsara, the cycle of constant rebirth and redeath: it is this craving which leads to renewed existence as the Second Noble Truth."{{sfn|Schmidt-Leukel|2006|pp=32–34}}<br />* See also Williams & Wynne,{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2012|pp=32–34}} Spiro.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}}}}<!--**END OF NOTE "SAMUDAYA"**--> In the orthodox view, this clinging and craving produces ], which leads to ], keeping us trapped in ] and renewed dissatisfaction.{{sfn|Rahula|2007a|loc=loc. 791–809}}<ref group=web name=bodhi1>{{Cite web |url=http://www.beyondthenet.net/dhamma/fourNoble.htm |title=''The Four Noble Truths'' - By Bhikkhu Bodhi |access-date=2 January 2012 |archive-date=26 August 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180826212523/http://www.beyondthenet.net/dhamma/fourNoble.htm |url-status=dead }}</ref>{{refn|group=note|According to Schmitthausen, as cited by James egge,{{sfn|Egge|2013|p=124, note 37}} the four truths do not mention karma, but solely declare craving to be the cause of misery and rebirth.{{sfn|Schmithausen|1986|p=205}}}} Craving includes ''kama-tanha'', craving for sense-pleasures; '']-tanha'', craving to continue the cycle of life and death, including rebirth; and ''vibhava-tanha'', craving to not experience the world and painful feelings.{{sfn|Rahula|2007a|loc=loc. 791–809}}{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=70}}{{sfn|Ajahn Sucitto|2010|loc=loc. 943–946}} While ''dukkha-samudaya'', the term in the basic set of the four truths, is traditionally translated and explained as "the origin (or cause) of suffering", giving a causal explanation of ''dukkha'', Brazier and Batchelor point to the wider connotations of the term ''samudaya'', "coming into existence together": together with ''dukkha'' arises '']'', thirst. Craving does not cause ''dukkha'', but comes into existence together with ''dukkha'', or the five skandhas.{{sfn|Brazier|2001}}{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|pp=95–97}} It is this craving which is to be confined, as Kondanna understood at the end of the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'': "whatever arises ceases".{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|p=97}} | |||
:], a well-known Thai master of the last century, said that when village people in India were cooking rice and waiting for it to cool, they might remark, “Wait a little for the rice to become nibbana.” So here, ] means the cool state of mind, free from the fires of the ]. As Ajahn Buddhadasa remarked, “The cooler the mind, the more Nibbana in that moment.” We can notice for ourselves relative states of coolness in our own minds as we go through the day... | |||
The truth of '']'', "cessation," "suppression,"{{sfn|Buswell|Lopez|2014|page="nirodha"}} "renouncing," "letting go",{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=96}} or ''dukkha-nirodha'', the cessation of ''dukkha'', is the truth that ''dukkha'' ceases, or can be confined,{{sfn|Brazier|2001}} when one renounces or confines craving and clinging, and ] is attained.{{sfn|Buswell|Lopez|2003|p=304}}{{sfn|Brazier|2001}} Alternatively, ''tanha'' itself, as a response to ''dukkha'', is to be confined.{{sfn|Brazier|2001}}{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|pp=95–97}} ''Nirvana'' refers to the moment of attainment itself, and the resulting peace of mind and happiness (''khlesa-nirvana''), but also to the final dissolution of the five skandhas at the time of death (''skandha-nirvana'' or '']''); in the Theravada-tradition, it also refers to a transcendental reality which is "known at the moment of awakening".{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=77}}{{sfn|Hick|1994|p=436}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=96–97}}{{sfn|Geisler|Amano|2004|p=32}} According to Gethin, "modern Buddhist usage tends to restrict 'nirvāṇa' to the awakening experience and reserve 'parinirvāṇa' for the death experience.{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=76}} When ''nirvana'' is attained, no more karma is being produced, and rebirth and dissatisfaction will no longer arise again.<!--** START OF NOTE ("NIRODHA") **-->{{refn|group=note |name="Nirodha"|Ending rebirth:<br />* Graham Harvey: "The Third Noble Truth is nirvana. The Buddha tells us that an end to suffering is possible, and it is nirvana. Nirvana is a "blowing out", just as a candle flame is extinguished in the wind, from our lives in samsara. It connotes an end to rebirth"{{sfn|Harvey|2016}}<br />* Spiro: "The Buddhist message then, as I have said, is not simply a psychological message, i.e. that desire is the cause of suffering because unsatisfied desire produces frustration. It does contain such a message to be sure; but more importantly it is an eschatological message. Desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth; and the extinction of desire leads to deliverance from suffering because it signals release from the Wheel of Rebirth."{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}}<br />* John J. Makransky: "The third noble truth, cessation (''nirodha'') or nirvana, represented the ultimate aim of Buddhist practice in the Abhidharma traditions: the state free from the conditions that created samsara. Nirvana was the ultimate and final state attained when the supramundane yogic path had been completed. It represented salvation from samsara precisely because it was understood to comprise a state of complete freedom from the chain of samsaric causes and conditions, i.e., precisely because it was unconditioned (''asamskrta'')."{{sfn|Makransky|1997|pp=27–28}}<br />* Walpola Rahula: "Let us consider a few definitions and descriptions of Nirvana as found in the original Pali texts 'It is the complete cessation of that very thirst (tanha), giving it up, renouncing it, emancipation from it, detachment from it.' 'The abandoning and destruction of craving for these Five Aggregates of Attachment: that is the cessation of ''dukkha''. 'The Cessation of Continuity and becoming (''Bhavanirodha'') is Nibbana.'"{{sfn|Rahula|2007|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}}}}<!--** END OF NOTE ("NIRODHA") **--> Cessation is '']'', "blowing out", and peace of mind.{{sfn|Rahula|2007a|loc=loc. 904–923}}{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=75}}{{sfn|Goldstein|2002|p=158}} ] explains: | |||
:Ajahn Buddhadasa spoke of how the coolness of Nibbana continuously nourishes and sustains our life because it puts out the mental fires of greed, anger, and delusion.<ref>See ]</ref> It would be impossible to live if these fires raged all the time. Temporary Nibbana is the temporary absence of defilements. The supreme state of Nibbana is when all forces of the defilements are extinguished. It’s helpful for us to see and experience this temporary Nibbana, because it inclines us to experience absolute reality, the Unconditioned, the “Ultimate Cool.”<ref>Goldstein, Joseph (2011-03-15). One Dharma: The Emerging Western Buddhism (p. 158). Harper Collins, Inc.. Kindle Edition.</ref> | |||
{{Blockquote|], a well-known Thai master of the last century, said that when village people in India were cooking rice and waiting for it to cool, they might remark, "Wait a little for the rice to become nibbana". So here, ] means the cool state of mind, free from the fires of the '']''. As Ajahn Buddhadasa remarked, "The cooler the mind, the more Nibbana in that moment". We can notice for ourselves relative states of coolness in our own minds as we go through the day.{{sfn|Goldstein|2002|p=158}}}} | |||
The truth of '']'', refers to the path to the cessation of, or liberation from ''dukkha'' c.q. ''tanha''. By following the ], to '']'', liberation,{{sfn|Samuel|2008|p=136}} restraining oneself, cultivating discipline, and practicing ] and meditation, one starts to disengage from craving and clinging to impermanent states and things, and rebirth and dissatisfaction will be ended.{{sfn|Raju|1985|pp=147–151}}{{sfn|Eliot|2014|pp=39–41}} The term "path" is usually taken to mean the ], but ] of "the path" can also be found in the Nikayas.{{sfn|Bucknell|1984}} The Theravada tradition regards insight into the four truths as liberating in itself.{{sfn|Carter|1987|p=3179}} | |||
===Fourth truth: path to the cessation of suffering=== | |||
The fourth noble truth is the path to the cessation of suffering. | |||
The well-known eightfold path consists of the understanding that this world is fleeting and unsatisfying, and how craving keeps us tied to this fleeting world; a friendly and compassionate attitude to others; a correct way of behaving; mind-control, which means not feeding on negative thoughts, and nurturing positive thoughts; constant awareness of the feelings and responses which arise; and the practice of ''dhyana'', meditation.{{sfn|Bucknell|1984}} The tenfold path adds the right (liberating) insight, and liberation from rebirth.{{sfn|Bucknell|1984}}{{refn|group=note|Another variant, which may be condensed to the eightfold or tenfold path, starts with a Tathagatha entering this world. A layman hears his teachings, decides to leave the life of a householder, starts living according to the moral precepts, guards his sense-doors, practices mindfulness and the four jhanas, gains the three knowledges, understands the Four Noble Truths and destroys the ], and perceives that he's liberated.{{sfn|Bucknell|1984}}}} | |||
] states: | |||
:The fourth Noble Truth is the path, and this is the essence of Buddhist practice. Known as the ], it is oriented toward developing three things in an individual: moral sensitivity, meditation or the concentrated mind, and wisdom. Through the practice of moral sensitivity we become better individuals, able to overcome our egocentric tendencies. We become more compassionate and more sensitive to the needs of others. Through the practice of meditation our mind becomes more focused, more resilient, and more aware, which in turn gives rise to wisdom.<ref name=traleg1/> | |||
The four truths are to be internalised, and understood or "experienced" personally, to turn them into a lived reality.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} | |||
] states: | |||
: Just as the arising of suffering is a compound of ] and ], and the ceasing is a mix of doing and not-doing, likewise the path isn’t made up of a single track. It consists of eight interconnected factors. Even though it’s called a path, it challenges the temporal and spatial metaphors of “I’m here and I’m going to get there.” We are presented with a path out of suffering, but it’s not about going to another location. It’s about widening and exploring our psychological space, to include it all. . . | |||
===Ending rebirth=== | |||
:The eightfold path has eight limbs but it is only one path, not eight paths going in different directions. It weaves the general understanding of cause and effect into guidance over the way we speak and act and make a living; it blends the application of effort with the balanced composure of concentration. It starts in the resolve and consideration of our own mind, goes out with a sense of scrupulousness and integrity in our relationships with others, and penetrates the workings of our unconscious reflexes and assumptions. It’s a mandala of interconnected factors that support and moderate each other.<ref>Sucitto, Ajahn (2010). pp. 87-88</ref> | |||
] or "Wheel of Life"]] | |||
The four truths describe ''dukkha'' and its ending as a means to reach peace of mind in this life, but also as a means to end rebirth. | |||
] states: | |||
:The nature of the path is more like an exploration or an expedition than following a path that has already been built. When people hear that they should follow the path, they might think that a ready-made system exists, and that individual expressions are not required. They may think that one does not have to surrender or give or open. But when you actually begin to tread on the path, you realize that you have to clear out the jungle and all the trees, underbrush, and obstacles growing in front of you. You have to bypass tigers and elephants and poisonous snakes.<ref>Chögyam Trungpa (2009), p. 91</ref> | |||
According to Geoffrey Samuel, "the Four Noble Truths describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth."{{sfn|Samuel|2008|p=136}} By understanding the four truths, one can stop this clinging and craving, attain a pacified mind, and be freed from this cycle of rebirth and redeath.<ref group=web name="EB-DL Four Truths"/>{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|pp=74–75}}{{refn|group=note|name="Moksha"}} Patrick Olivelle explains that ] is a central concept in Indian religions, and "literally means freedom from samsara."<ref group=web name="Brittanica" />{{refn|group=note|Patrick Olivelle: "], also spelled mokṣa, also called mukti, in Indian philosophy and religion, liberation from the cycle of death and rebirth (samsara). Derived from the Sanskrit word muc ("to free"), the term moksha literally means freedom from samsara. This concept of liberation or release is shared by a wide spectrum of religious traditions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.<ref group=web name="Brittanica"/>}} Melvin E. Spiro further explains that "desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth."{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}} When desire ceases, rebirth and its accompanying suffering ceases.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}}{{refn|group=note|Melvin E. Spiro: "Desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth; and the extinction of desire leads to deliverance from suffering because it signals release from the Wheel of Rebirth."{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}}}} Peter Harvey explains: | |||
] said: | |||
:I have shown you the path that leads to liberation | |||
:But you should know that liberation depends upon yourself. | |||
{{Blockquote|Once birth has arisen, "ageing and death", and various other dukkha states follow. While saying that birth is the cause of death may sound rather simplistic, in Buddhism it is a very significant statement; for there is an alternative to being born. This is to attain Nirvāna, so bringing an end to the process of rebirth and redeath. Nirvāna is not subject to time and change, and so is known as the ]; as it is not born it cannot die, and so it is also known as the "deathless". To attain this state, all phenomena subject to birth – the ] and ] – must be transcended by means of ].{{sfn|Harvey|2013|pp=71–72}}}} | |||
==Textual accounts== | |||
The last sermon, the '']'' (Last Days of the Buddha, Digha Nikaya 16)", states it as follows: | |||
===Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta=== | |||
{{Blockquote| it is through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by me as well as by you But now, bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming , and there is no fresh becoming.<ref group=web name="ati_Maha-parinibbana_Sutta"/>}} | |||
The Buddha taught on the four noble truths repeatedly throughout his lifetime. The four truths are presented within his first discourse, ''Setting in Motion the Wheel of the Dharma (])''. An English translation is as follows:<ref></ref> | |||
===Other interpretations=== | |||
:"This is the noble truth of dukkha: ] is dukkha, ] is dukkha, ] is dukkha, ] is dukkha; sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are dukkha; union with what is displeasing is dukkha; separation from what is pleasing is dukkha; not to get what one wants is dukkha; in brief, the ] subject to ] are dukkha." | |||
According to Bhikkhu ], "birth" does refer not to physical birth and death, but to the birth and death of our self-concept, the "emergence of the ego". According to Buddhadhasa, | |||
{{Blockquote|... dependent arising is a phenomenon that lasts an instant; it is impermanent. Therefore, Birth and Death must be explained as phenomena within the process of dependent arising in everyday life of ordinary people. Right Mindfulness is lost during contacts of the Roots and surroundings. Thereafter, when vexation due to greed, anger, and ignorance is experienced, the ego has already been born. It is considered as one 'birth'".<ref group=web name="Buddhadasa"/>}} | |||
Some contemporary teachers tend to explain the four truths psychologically, by taking ''dukkha'' to mean mental anguish in addition to the physical pain of life,{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|p=94}}{{sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2016|p=10}} and interpreting the four truths as a means to attain happiness in this life.{{sfn|Kingsland|2016|p=280}} In the contemporary ] that emerged out of the Theravada Buddhism, freedom and the "pursuit of happiness" have become the main goals, not the end of rebirth, which is hardly mentioned in their teachings.{{sfn|Fronsdal|1998|pp=164–166}}{{refn|group=note|The Vipassana-movement originated in colonial Burma, in response to the British colonial regime. While traditional Theravada saw little room for meditation practice, a subordinate role for lay Buddhists, and the attainment of ''nirvana'' as impossible in our times, reformists advocated the practice of meditation by lay Buddhists, as a means to preserve the pre-colonial order, which was based on Buddhism. ''Nirvana'' was suddenly deemed attainable, also for lay Buddhists. The Burmese reformists had a profound influence in the Theravada world, and also in the US since the 1970s, shaping the popular understanding of Buddhism.<ref group=web name="Braun2014">Eric Braun (2014), </ref>}} | |||
:"This is the noble truth of the origin of dukkha: it is this ] which leads to ], accompanied by delight and lust, seeking delight here and there, that is, craving for ], craving for ], craving for extermination." | |||
Yet, though freedom and happiness is a part of the Buddhist teachings, these words refer to something different in traditional Asian Buddhism. According to ], "when Asian teachers do talk about freedom, it is primarily in reference to what one is free from – that is, from greed, hate, delusion, grasping, attachment, wrong view, self, and most significantly, rebirth".{{sfn|Fronsdal|1998|p=172}} ''Nibbana'' is the final freedom, and it has no purpose beyond itself. In contrast, freedom in the creative modern interpretation of Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path means living happily and wisely, "without drastic changes in lifestyle".{{sfn|Fronsdal|1998|p=172}} Such freedom and happiness is not the goal of Four Noble Truths and related doctrines within traditional Buddhism, but the vipassana teachings in the West make no reference to traditional Theravada doctrines, instead they present only the pragmatic and experiential goals in the form of therapy for the audience's current lives.{{sfn|Fronsdal|1998|pp=172–174}} The creative interpretations are driven in part because the foundational premises of Buddhism do not make sense to audiences outside of Asia.{{refn|group=note|Stephen Batchelor states, "Such craving is at the root of greed, hatred, and bewilderment that prompt one to commit acts that cause one to be reborn after death in more or less favourable conditions in samsara. Although I have presented this formulation of the existential dilemma and its resolution in Buddhist terms, the same soteriological framework is shared by Hindus and Jains. (...) So embedded is this Indian soteriological framework in Buddhism that Buddhists might find it unintelligible that one would even consider questioning it. For to dispense with such key doctrines as rebirth, the law of kamma, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death would surely undermine the entire edifice of Buddhism itself. Yet for those who have grown up outside of Indian culture, who feel at home in a modernity informed by the natural sciences, to then be told that one cannot 'really' practise the dharma unless one adheres to the tenets of ancient Indian soteriology makes little sense. The reason people can no longer accept these beliefs need not be because they reject them as false, but because such views are too much at variance with everything else they know and believe about the nature of themselves and the world. They simply do not work anymore, and the intellectual gymnastics one needs to perform to make them work seem casuistic and, for many, unpersuasive. They are metaphysical beliefs, in that (like belief in God) they can neither be convincingly demonstrated nor refuted."{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|pp=89–90}}}}{{refn|group=note|name="Wallace"|B. Alan Wallace states, "The Theravada Buddhist worldview is originally based on the Pali Buddhist canon, as interpreted by the great fifth-century commentator Buddhaghosa and later Buddhist scholars and contemplatives. For the immigrant Theravada Buddhist laity, the central feature of this worldview is the affirmation of the reality of reincarnation and karma. The possibility of achieving nirvana is primarily a concern for Buddhist monastics, while the laity are more concerned with avoiding karma that would propel them to a miserable rebirth, and with accumulating meritorious karma that will lead to a favorable rebirth and, in the long run, to ultimate liberation. (...) As a direct result of their belief in the efficacy of karma, Theravada lay Buddhists commonly make offerings of food, goods, and money to the ordained Sangha. Such meritorious conduct is thought to lead to a better rebirth either for themselves or for their deceased loved ones, depending on how the merit is dedicated by the person who performs this service."{{sfn|Wallace|2002|pp=36–37}}}} According to Spiro, "the Buddhist message is not simply a psychological message", but an eschatological message.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=42}} | |||
:"This is the noble truth of the cessation of dukkha: it is the remainderless fading away and cessation of that same craving, the giving up and relinquishing of it, freedom from it, nonreliance on it." | |||
==Historical development in early Buddhism== | |||
:"This is the noble truth of the way leading to the cessation of dukkha: it is the ]; that is, right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, ], right ] and right ]." {{sfn|Bikkhu Bodhi (translator)|2000|p=1844}}{{refn|group=lower-alpha|In this translation, Bodhi elides the six middle factors of the Noble Eightfold Path (between right view and right concentration). Thus Bodhi's translation for the six middle factors was taken from his translation of Samyutta Nikaya 45.1 {{sfn|Bikkhu Bodhi (translator)|2000|p=1523-24}}{{sfn|Feer|1976|p=421f}}}}{{refn|group=lower-alpha|In ] 3.61, the Buddha provides an alternate elaboration on the second and third noble truths identifying the arising and cessation of suffering in accordance with ]'s ], from ] to ]<ref group=web></ref>}} | |||
{{See also|Pre-sectarian Buddhism}} | |||
According to Anderson, "the four truths are recognized as perhaps the most important teaching of the Buddha."{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=55}} Yet, as early as 1935 ] wrote that for a teaching so central to Theravada Buddhism, it was missing from critical passages in the Pali canon.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=ix}} According to Gethin, the four truths and the eightfold path are only two lists of "literally hundreds of similar lists covering the whole range of the theory and practice of ancient Buddhism."{{sfn|Gethin|2003|p=20}} The position of the four truths within the canon raises questions, and has been investigated throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=168–211}} | |||
===Mahaparinibbana Sutta === | |||
The ] was given near the end of the Buddha's life. The four noble truths are presented within this discourse as follows: | |||
===Scholarly analysis of the oldest texts=== | |||
:And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: | |||
According to academic scholars, inconsistencies in the oldest texts may reveal developments in the oldest teachings.{{sfn|Vetter|1988|p=ix}}{{refn|group=note|name="development of teachings"}} While the Theravada-tradition holds that the Sutta Pitaka is "the definitive recension of the Buddha-word",{{sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|1995a|p=13}} and Theravadins argue that it is likely that the sutras date back to the Buddha himself, in an unbroken chain of oral transmission,<ref group=web>{{cite web |last1=Payutto |first1=P.A. |title=The Pali Canon What a Buddhist Must Know |url=http://www.watnyanaves.net/uploads/File/books/pdf/the_pali_canon_what_a_buddhist_must_know.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304023143/http://www.watnyanaves.net/uploads/File/books/pdf/the_pali_canon_what_a_buddhist_must_know.pdf |archive-date=4 March 2016 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref group=web name="BS_BB">{{citation |last1=Sujato |first1=Bhante |author-link1=Bhante Sujato |last2=Brahmali |first2=Bhikkhu |title=The Authenticity of the Early Buddhist Texts |url=https://ocbs.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/authenticity.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151224032237/http://ocbs.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/authenticity.pdf |archive-date=24 December 2015 |url-status=live |year=2015 |publisher=Chroniker Press |isbn=978-1312911505}}</ref>{{refn|group=note|] & Bhikkhu Brahmali, p. 4: "Most academic scholars of Early Buddhism cautiously affirm that it is possible that the EBTS contain some authentic sayings of the Buddha. We contend that this drastically understates the evidence. A sympathetic assessment of relevant evidence shows that it is very likely that the bulk of the sayings in the EBTS that are attributed to the Buddha were actually spoken by him. It is very unlikely that most of these sayings are inauthentic.<ref group=web name="BS_BB"/>}} academic scholars have identified many such inconsistencies, and tried to explain them. Information of the oldest teachings of Buddhism, such as on the Four Noble Truths, has been obtained by analysis of the oldest texts and these inconsistencies, and are a matter of ongoing discussion and research.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}}{{sfn|Vetter|1988}}{{sfn|Schmithausen|1981}}{{sfn|Gombrich|1997}} According to Schmithausen, three positions held by scholars of Buddhism can be distinguished regarding the possibility to retain knowledge of the oldest Buddhism:{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=vii}} | |||
::"Bhikkhus, it is through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by me as well as by you. What are these four? They are the noble truth of suffering; the noble truth of the origin of suffering; the noble truth of the cessation of suffering; and the noble truth of the way to the cessation of suffering. But now, bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming, and there is no fresh becoming." | |||
# "Stress on the fundamental homogeneity and substantial authenticity of at least a considerable part of the Nikayic materials;"{{refn|group=note|Well-known proponents of the first position are:<br />* ]. According to A.K. Warder, in his 1970 publication "Indian Buddhism", from the oldest extant texts a common kernel can be drawn out,{{sfn|Warder|1999|loc=inside flap}} namely the ]. According to Warder, c.q. his publisher: "This kernel of doctrine is presumably common Buddhism of the period before the great schisms of the fourth and third centuries BC. It may be substantially the Buddhism of the Buddha himself, although this cannot be proved: at any rate it is a Buddhism presupposed by the schools as existing about a hundred years after the parinirvana of the Buddha, and there is no evidence to suggest that it was formulated by anyone else than the Buddha and his immediate followers."{{sfn|Warder|1999|loc=inside flap}}<br />* ]: "I have the greatest difficulty in accepting that the main edifice is not the work of a single genius. By "the main edifice" I mean the collections of the main body of sermons, the four Nikāyas, and of the main body of monastic rules."{{sfn|Gombrich|1997}}}} | |||
# "Scepticism with regard to the possibility of retrieving the doctrine of earliest Buddhism;"{{refn|group=note|A proponent of the second position is Ronald Davidson: "While most scholars agree that there was a rough body of sacred literature (disputed)(sic) that a relatively early community (disputed)(sic) maintained and transmitted, we have little confidence that much, if any, of surviving Buddhist scripture is actually the word of the historic Buddha."{{sfn|Davidson|2003|p=147}}}} | |||
# "Cautious optimism in this respect."{{refn|group=note|Well-known proponent of the third position are:<br />* J.W. de Jong: "It would be hypocritical to assert that nothing can be said about the doctrine of earliest Buddhism the basic ideas of Buddhism found in the canonical writings could very well have been proclaimed by him , transmitted and developed by his disciples and, finally, codified in fixed formulas."{{sfn|Jong|1993|p=25}}<br />* Johannes Bronkhorst: "This position is to be preferred to (ii) for purely methodological reasons: only those who seek may find, even if no success is guaranteed."{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=vii}}<br />* Donald Lopez: "The original teachings of the historical Buddha are extremely difficult, if not impossible, to recover or reconstruct."{{sfn|Lopez|1995|p=4}}}} | |||
===Development=== | |||
:Thus it was said by the Blessed One. And the Happy One, the Master, further said: | |||
::Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths, | |||
::Long was the weary path from birth to birth. | |||
::When these are known, removed is rebirth's cause, | |||
::The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth.<ref name=maha1></ref> | |||
=== |
====Growing importance==== | ||
Buddhologist Eviatar Shulman proposes that in its original form the Four Truths were rooted in meditative perception of mental events, building on his analysis of the Pāli term ayam which is equivalent, he claims, to an immediate perception, such as this here right now in front of me.<ref>Shulman, Eviatar Rethinking the Buddha (Cambridge University Press, 2017), p. 140 ff.</ref> | |||
The ] is a highly regarded sutra in the ] tradition, particularly within Chinese Buddhism, and within the ] tradition of Japan. It has been pictured as the "king of sutras"{{sfn|Snelling|1987|p=154}} that "included the essence of all the other teachings"{{sfn|Snelling|1987|p=154}}, and "downgraded the early discourses as mere fodder for the unintelligent disciples who surrounded the Buddha".{{sfn|Kalupahana|1992|p=161}} The text of the Lotus Sūtra views the Four Noble Truths as the first teaching of the Buddha, but not the final teaching. In the third chapter, ''Similes and Parables'', the sūtra introduces what it calls "the most wonderful and unsurpassed great ]": {{sfn|Watson|1993|p=55}}<ref group=web ></ref> | |||
According to Bronkhorst, the four truths may already have been formulated in earliest Buddhism, but did not have the central place they acquired in later buddhism.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=107}} According to Anderson, only by the time of the commentaries, in the fifth century CE, did the four truths come to be identified in the Theravada tradition as the central teaching of the Buddha.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=55–56}}{{refn|group=note|Anderson: "However, the four noble truths do not always appear in stories of the Buddha's enlightenment where we might expect to find them. This feature may indicate that the four noble truths emerged into the canonical tradition at a particular point and slowly became recognized as the first teaching of the Buddha. Speculations about early and late teachings must be made relative to other passages in the Pali canon because of a lack of supporting extratextual evidence. Nonetheless, it is still possible to suggest a certain historical development of the four noble truths within the Pali canon. What we will find is a doctrine that came to be identified as the central teaching of the Buddha by the time of the commentaries in the fifth century C.E."{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=55–56}}}} According to Anderson, | |||
<blockquote>In the past at ], you turned the wheel of the Darma of the Four Noble Truths, making distinctions and preaching that all things are born and become extinct, being made up of the five components ('']s''). Now you turn the wheel of the most wonderful, the unsurpassed great Dharma. This Dharma is very profound and abstruse; there are few who can believe it. Since times past often we have heard the World-Honored One's preaching, but we have never heard this kind of profound, wonderful and superior Dharma. Since the World-Honored One preaches this Dharma, we all welcome it with joy.</blockquote> | |||
{{Blockquote|... the four noble truths were probably not part of the earliest strata of what came to be recognized as Buddhism, but that they emerged as a central teaching in a slightly later period that still preceded the final redactions of the various Buddhist canons.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=21}}}} | |||
], in his letter "Comparison of the Lotus and Other Sūtras", stated that the doctrine of the Four Noble Truths was only a specific teaching expounded especially for the ]s disciples, while the Lotus Sūtra was taught equally for all.<ref name=Nichiren group=web></ref> | |||
According to Feer and Anderson, the four truths probably entered the Sutta Pitaka from the Vinaya, the rules for monastic order.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=74, 77}}{{refn|group=note|Anderson refers to Léon Feer, who already in 1870 "suggested the possibility that the four noble truths emerged into Buddhist literature through ''vinaya'' collections."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=183}} She also refers to Bareau, who noticed the consistency between the two versions in the ''Mahavagga'', part of the ''Vinaya'', and the ''Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta'' of the Buddha's enlightenment: "As Bareau noted, the consistency between these two versions of the Buddha's enlightenment is an indication that the redactors of the Theravada canon probably brought the two accounts into agreement with each other at a relatively late point in the formation of the canon.<br />Leon Feer had already suggested in 1870 that the versions of the four noble truths found in the sutras and suttas were derived from the vinaya rescensions in the larger body of Buddhist literature; Bareau's conclusion builds on this claim."{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=74}}}} They were first added to enlightenment-stories which contain the Four Jhanas, replacing terms for "liberating insight".{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=148}}{{refn|group=note|According to Schmithausen, in his often-cited article ''On some Aspects of Descriptions or Theories of 'Liberating Insight' and 'Enlightenment' in Early Buddhism'', the mention of the four noble truths as constituting "liberating insight", which is attained after mastering the Rupa Jhanas, is a later addition to texts such as Majjhima Nikaya 36.{{sfn|Schmithausen|1981}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}}{{sfn|Vetter|1988}}}} From there they were added to the biographical stories of the Buddha.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=17}}{{refn|group=note|Anderson refers to research by K.R. Norman, Bareau, Skilling, Schmithausen and Bronkhorst.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=19–20}}}} | |||
===Textual differences=== | |||
Some versions of the ] contain elaborate descriptions of the Four Noble Truths, while other versions do not. In the Theravada version and the version translated by ],{{Citation needed|date=December 2011}} the Four Noble Truths are given elaborate descriptions. The ] versions portray the truths as principles to be contemplated in various methods, and no definitions are given.<ref name=SamyuktaDCS group=web></ref> | |||
====Substituting "liberating insight"==== | |||
In the version of the Dharmacakra Pravartana Sūtra contained in the extant ], there is no mention of the ]. Instead, contemplation of the Four Noble Truths is taken to be the path itself.<ref name=SamyuktaDCS group=web /> | |||
Scholars have noted inconsistencies in the presentations of the Buddha's enlightenment, and the Buddhist path to liberation, in the oldest sutras. They argue that these inconsistencies show that the Buddhist teachings evolved, either during the lifetime of the Buddha, or thereafter.<!--**START OF NOTE**-->{{refn|group=note|name="development of teachings"|See: | |||
* La Vallee Possin (1937), ''Musila et Narada''; reprinted in Gombrich (2006), ''How Buddhism Began'', appendix | |||
* Erich Frauwallner (1953), ''Geschichte der indischen Philosophie'', Band ''Der Buddha und der Jina'' (pp. 147–272) | |||
* Andre Bareau (1963), ''Recherches sur la biographiedu Buddha dans les Sutrapitaka et les Vinayapitaka anciens'', Ecole Francaise d'Extreme-Orient | |||
* Schmithausen, ''On some Aspects of Descriptions or Theories of 'Liberating Insight' and 'Enlightenment' in Early Buddhism''. In: Studien zum Jainismus und Buddhismus (Gedenkschrift für Ludwig Alsdorf), hrsg. von Klaus Bruhn und Albrecht Wezler, Wiesbaden 1981, 199–250. | |||
* {{Citation | last =Griffiths | first =Paul | year =1981 | title =Concentration or Insight; The Problematic of Theravada Buddhist Meditation-theory | journal =The Journal of the American Academy of Religion| issue =4 | pages =605–624 | doi =10.1093/jaarel/XLIX.4.605 }} | |||
* K.R. Norman, | |||
* {{harvnb|Bronkhorst|1993|loc=chapter 8}} | |||
* Tilman Vetter (1988), | |||
* {{cite book | author =Richard F. Gombrich | title =How Buddhism Began: The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=hQOAAgAAQBAJ | year =2006 | orig-year =1996 | publisher =Routledge | isbn =978-1-134-19639-5}}, chapter four | |||
* {{harvnb|Anderson|1999}} | |||
* {{harvnb|Wynne|2007}}}}<!--**END OF NOTE**--> According to the Japanese scholar Ui, the four truths are not the earliest representation of the Buddha's enlightenment. Instead, they are a rather late theory on the content of the Buddha's enlightenment.{{sfn|Hirakawa|1990|p=28}} According to Vetter and Bronkhorst, the earliest Buddhist path consisted of a set of practices which culminate in the practice of ''dhyana'',{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxi–xxxvii}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=93–111}} leading to a calm of mind and ] (mindfulness){{sfn|Vetter|1988|p=xxv}} which according to Vetter ''is'' the liberation which is being sought.{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxi–xxxvii}}{{refn|group=note|Note that ''dhyana'' is not the same as ''samatha'', the calming of the mind by one-pointedly concentration. While ''dhyana'' also leads to a calm of mind, it aids in developing mindfulness, which is necessary to be aware of the arising of disturbing, selfish, thoughts and emotions, and to counter them. Wynne: "...the Buddha taught a 'middle way' between pure meditation and cognitive practices. The states of absorption induced by meditation were considered useful and necessary, but, in distinction from the meditative mainstream, their ultimate aim was insight. For the Buddha, it was vitally important that the meditative adept should apply his concentrative state to the practice of mindfulness (Sn 1070: ''satima''; Sn 1111: ''ajjhattañ ca bahiddha ca nabhinandato''; Sn 1113: ''ajjhattañ ca bahiddha ca natthi ti passato''), and work towards the attainment of insight. According to this view, meditation alone, the goal of the meditative mainstream, would have been harshly criticized in the earliest Buddhism."{{sfn|Wynne|2007|p=105}}}} Later on, "liberating insight" came to be regarded as equally liberating.{{sfn|Gombrich|1997|pp=99–102}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=93–111}} This "liberating insight" came to be exemplified by ''prajna'', or the insight in the "four truths",{{sfn|Gombrich|1997|pp=99–102}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=93–111}} but also by other elements of the Buddhist teachings.{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxi–xxxvii}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|loc=chapter 7}} According to Vetter and Bronkhorst, this growing importance of "liberating insight" was a response to other religious groups in India, which held that a liberating insight was indispensable for '']'', liberation from rebirth.{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxxii, xxxiii}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=54–55, 96, 99}}{{refn|group=note|Tillmann Vetter: "Very likely the cause was the growing influence of a non-Buddhist spiritual environment·which claimed that one can be released only by some truth or higher knowledge. In addition the alternative (and perhaps sometimes competing) method of discriminating insight (fully established after the introduction of the four noble truths) seemed to conform so well to this claim."{{sfn|Vetter|1988|p=xxxiii}}<br /><br />According to Bronkhorst, this happened under influence of the "mainstream of meditation", that is, Vedic-Brahmanical oriented groups, which believed that the cessation of action could not be liberating, since action can never be fully stopped. Their solution was to postulate a fundamental difference between the inner soul or self and the body. The inner self is unchangeable, and unaffected by actions. By insight into this difference, one was liberated. To equal this emphasis on insight, Buddhists presented insight into their most essential teaching as equally liberating. What exactly was regarded as the central insight "varied along with what was considered most central to the teaching of the Buddha."{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=54–55, 96, 99}}}} This change is reflected in the canon, where, according to Bronkhorst, | |||
{{Blockquote|...the accounts which include the Four Noble Truths had a completely different conception of the process of liberation than the one which includes the Four Dhyanas and the destruction of the intoxicants.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=110}}}} | |||
==Summaries and interpretations== | |||
According to Vetter and Bonkhorst, the ideas on what exactly constituted this "liberating insight" was not fixed but developed over time.{{sfn|Vetter|1988|pp=xxi–xxxvii}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|loc=chapter 7}} According to Bronkhorst, in ] the four truths did not serve as a description of "liberating insight".{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=107}} Initially the term ''prajna'' served to denote this "liberating insight". Later on, ''prajna'' was replaced in the suttas by the "four truths".{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=99–100, 102–111}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} This happened in those texts where practicing the four jhanas preceded the attainment of "liberating insight", and where this practice of the four jhanas then culminates in "liberating insight".{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=108}} This "liberating insight" came to be defined as "insight into the four truths", which is presented as the "liberating insight" which constituted the ], or "enlightenment" of the Buddha. When he understood these truths he was "enlightened" and liberated,{{refn|group=note|"Enlightenment" is a typical western term, which bears its own, specific western connotations, meanings and interpretations.{{sfn|Cohen|2006}}{{sfn|Sharf|1995}}{{sfn|Sharf|2000}}}} as reflected in Majjhima Nikaya 26:42: "his taints are destroyed by his seeing with wisdom."{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|p=268}} | |||
===Traditional summaries=== | |||
The four noble truths were summarized by the Buddha in the the '']'' of the ] canon. This summary is translated by Ajahn Sumedho and other Pali translators<ref name=maha1/> as follows: | |||
:The Noble Truth of Suffering, | |||
:The Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering, | |||
:The Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering, and | |||
:The Noble Truth of the Way Leading to the Cessation of Suffering.<ref name=maha1/><ref>Ajahn Sumedho (eBook), p. 6 (excerpted from ''Digha Nikaya, Sutta 16'')</ref> | |||
Bronkhorst points to an inconsistency, noting that the four truths refer here to the eightfold path as the means to gain liberation, while the attainment of insight into the four truths is portrayed as liberating in itself.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} According to Bronkhorst, this is an inconsistency which reveals a change which took place over time in the composition of the sutras.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} An example of this substitution, and its consequences, is Majjhima Nikaya 36:42–43, which gives an account of the awakening of the Buddha.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=102–103}} | |||
Contemporary translators have used a number of variations on this summary. Joseph Goldstein informally summarizes the truths as: | |||
{{quote|The four noble truths are the truth of suffering, its cause, its end, and the path to that end.<ref name=gold1/>}} | |||
Ajahn Sumedho summarizes the truths as: | |||
{{quote|...there is suffering; there is a cause or origin of suffering; there is a end of suffering; and there is path out of suffering which is the Eightfold Path.<ref>Ajahn Sumedho (eBook), p. 9</ref>}} | |||
According to Schmithausen, the four truths were superseded by '']'', and still later, in the Hinayana schools, by the doctrine of the ].{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=100–101}} Schmithausen further states that still other descriptions of this "liberating insight" exist in the Buddhist canon: | |||
In the Mahayana tradition, a summary of the four truths is included within the first teaching of the Buddha. This summary is translated as follows: | |||
{{Blockquote|"that the five Skandhas are impermanent, disagreeable, and neither the Self nor belonging to oneself";{{refn|group=note|Majjhima Nikaya 26}} "the contemplation of the arising and disappearance (''udayabbaya'') of the five Skandhas";{{refn|group=note|Anguttara Nikaya II.45 (PTS)}} "the realisation of the Skandhas as empty (''rittaka''), vain (''tucchaka'') and without any pith or substance (''asaraka'').{{refn|group=note|Samyutta Nikaya III.140–142 (PTS)}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=101}}}} | |||
* Thich Nhat Hanh translates: | |||
{{quote|Brothers, there are four truths: the existence of suffering, the cause of suffering, the cessation of suffering, and the path which leads to the cessation of suffering. I call these the Four Noble Truths.<ref name=thich1>Thich Nhat Hanh (1991), p. 25 (translated the first teaching of the Buddha according to the Mahayana tradition)</ref>}} | |||
Ringu Tulku translates: | |||
{{quote|There is suffering in this world. There are causes of this suffering. There is cessation of suffering, and there are ways to reach this cessation of suffering."<ref name=ringu2>Ringu Tulku (2005), p. 22 (translated from the first teaching of the Buddha according to the Mahayana tradition)</ref>}} | |||
In contrast, Thanissaro Bikkhu presents the view that the four truths, ] and anatta are inextricably intertwined.<ref group=web>{{cite web |website=accestoinsight.org |title=Wings to Awakening Part 3 |url=https://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/thanissaro/wings/part3.html#part3-h-1}}</ref> | |||
===The meaning of dukkha=== | |||
Some translators, such as Walpola Rahula and Bikkhu Bodhi, suggest that the use of the English word ''suffering'' is an inadequate translation for the Pali term ''dukkha'', which can lead to a misunderstanding of the first noble truth.<ref name=w1/><ref name=bodhi1/> These translators prefer to leave the Pali term ''dukkha'' untranslated within their commentaries of the four noble truths. For example, Walpola Rahula summarizes the four noble truths as follows:<ref name=w1/> | |||
# Dukkha, | |||
# Samudaya, the arising or origin of dukkha, | |||
# Nirodha, the cessation of dukkha, | |||
# Magga, the way leading to the cessation of dukkha. | |||
===Acquiring the ''dhamma-eye'' and destroying the ''āsavās''=== | |||
The traditional translations of ''samudhaya'' and ''nirodha'' are "origin" and "cessation". Coupled with the translation of ''dukkha'' as "suffering", this gives rise to a causal explanation of suffering, and the impression that suffering can be totally terminated. The translation given by ]{{sfn|Brazier|2001}} gives a different interpretation to the Four Noble Truths: | |||
In their symbolic function, the sutras present the insight into the four truths as the culmination of the Buddha's path to awakening. In the ''Vinayapitaka'' and the ''Sutta-pitaka'' they have the same symbolic function, in a reenactment by his listeners of the Buddha's awakening by attaining the ''dhamma-eye''. In contrast, here this insight serves as the starting point to path-entry for his audience.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=126, 132, 143}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2000|pp=79, 80}} These sutras present a repeated sequence of events:{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=132–134}} | |||
# ''Dukkha'': existence is imperfect, it's like a wheel that's not straight into the axis; | |||
# ''Annupubbikathā'' ("graduated talk"), in which the Buddha explains the four truths; this talk frees the listener from the hindrances; | |||
# ''Samudhaya:'' simultaneously with the experience of dukkha there arises ], thirst: the dissatisfaction with what is and the ''yearning'' that life should be different than it is. We keep imprisoned in this yearning when we don't see reality as it is, namely imperfect and ever-changing; | |||
# This talk opens the ''dhammacakkhu'' ("dhamma eye"), and knowledge arises: "all that has the nature of arising has the nature of ending";{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=132}}{{refn|group=note|In effect to the exposition of the four truths, as presented in the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'', the "dustless, stainless Dhamma eye" arose to Kondañña, stating: "Whatever is subject to origination is all subject to cessation."<ref group=web name="Dhammacakka"/>}} | |||
# ''Nirodha:'' we can confine this yearning (that reality is different than it is), and perceive reality as it is, whereby our ''suffering from the imperfectness'' becomes confined; | |||
# The request to become a member of the Buddhist order; | |||
# ''Marga:'' this confinement is possible by following the ]. | |||
# A second talk by the Buddha, which destroys the ''āsavās'', impurities; | |||
In this translation, ''samudhaya'' means that the uneasiness that's inherent to life ] the craving that life's event would be different. The translation of ''nirodha'' as confinement means that this craving is a natural reaction, which cannot be totally escaped or ceased, but can be limited, which gives us freedom.{{sfn|Brazier|2001}} | |||
# The statement that "there are now ''x arahats'' in the world." | |||
Yet, in other sutras, where the four truths have a propositional function, the comprehension of the four truths destroys the corruptions.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=146}} They do so in combination with the practice of the ''jhanas'' and the attainment of the divine eye, with which past lives and the working of rebirth are being seen.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=146–147}} | |||
===The meaning of Arya satya=== | |||
The Sanskrit '']'' (Pali: '']'') means "truth" and "real" or "actual thing." With that in mind, ] argues{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=60}} that the four noble truths are not asserted as propositional truths or creeds. Instead, they can be seen as "true things" or "realities" that the Buddha experienced. The original ] (Sanskrit: locchāwa; Tibetan: lo ts'a ba), translators who studied Sanskrit grammar thoroughly, used the Tibetan term ''bden pa,'' which reflects this understanding. This understanding is also reflected by ], who states that the Four Noble Truths are best understood not as beliefs, but as categories of experience. | |||
According to Anderson, following Schmithausen and Bronkhorst, these two presentations give two different models of the path to liberation, reflecting their function as a symbol and as a proposition.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=149}} Most likely, the four truths were first associated with the culmination of the path in the destruction of the ''āsavās'', where they substituted the unspecified "liberating insight"; as the canon developed, they became more logically associated with the beginning of the Buddhist path.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=149}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|2000|pp=79, 80}} | |||
===Contemporary interpretations=== | |||
Sylvia Boorstein summarizes the four truths as follows:<ref>http://www.shambhalasun.com/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=1644</ref> | |||
:I. Life is challenging. For everyone. Our physical bodies, our relationships-all of our life circumstances-are fragile and subject to change. We are always accommodating. | |||
:II. The cause of suffering is the mind’s struggle in response to challenge. | |||
:III. The end of suffering-a non-struggling, peaceful mind-is a possibility. | |||
:IV. The program for ending suffering is the Eightfold Path. It is: | |||
::1. Wise Understanding: realizing the cause of suffering; | |||
::2. Wise Intention: motivation to end suffering; | |||
::3. Wise Speech: speaking in a way that cultivates clarity; | |||
::4. Wise Action: behaving in ways that maintain clarity; | |||
::5. Wise Livelihood: supporting oneself in a wholesome way; | |||
::6. Wise Effort: cultivating skillful (peaceful) mind habits; | |||
::7. Wise Concentration: cultivating a steady, focused, ease-filled mind; | |||
::8. Wise Mindfulness: cultivating alert, balanced attention. | |||
===Popularisation in the west=== | |||
==See also== | |||
According to Anderson there is a strong tendency within scholarship to present the four truths as the most essential teaching of Buddhism.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=196}} According to Anderson, the four truths have been simplified and popularized in western writings, due to "the colonial project of gaining control over Buddhism."{{sfn|Crosby|2013}}{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=197}} According to Crosby, the Buddhist teachings are reduced to a "simple, single rationalized account", which has parallels in the reinterpretation of the Buddha in western literature.{{sfn|Crosby|2013}} | |||
{{wikisource|Saṃyukta Āgama 379: Dharmacakra Pravartana Sūtra}} | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
The presentation of the four truths as one of the most important teachings of the Buddha "has been to reduce the four noble truths to a teaching that is accessible, pliable, and therefore readily appropriated by non-Buddhists."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=197}} There is a great variety of teachings in the Buddhist literature, which may be bewildering for those who are unaware of this variety.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=196}} The four truths are easily accessible in this regard, and are "readily by those outside the Buddhist traditions."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|pp=196–197}} For example Walpola Rahula's ''What the Buddha Taught'', a widely used introductory text for non-Buddhists, uses the four truths as a framework to present an overview of the Buddhist teachings.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=197}} | |||
==Commentaries== | |||
The following commentaries have been written on the four noble truths: | |||
According to Harris, the British in the 19th century crafted new representations of Buddhism and the Buddha.{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=169}} 19th century missionaries studied Buddhism, to be more effective in their missionary efforts.{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=120}} The Buddha was de-mystified, and reduced from a "superhuman" to a "compassionate, heroic human", serving "western historical method and the missionary agenda of situating the Buddha firmly below the divine."{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=169}} The four truths were discovered by the British by reading the Buddhist texts, and were not immediately granted the central position they later received.{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=169}} | |||
In book form: | |||
* ] (2010). ''Turning the Wheel of Truth: Commentary on the Buddha's First Teaching''. Shambhala. | |||
* Ajahn Sumedho (eBook). ''The Four Noble Truths''. Amaravati Publications. (also available online) | |||
* Bhikkhu Bodhi (2006)''The Noble Eightfold Path: Way to the End of Suffering''. Pariyatti Publishing. | |||
*] (2009). ''The Truth of Suffering and the Path of Liberation''. Shambhala. | |||
* Dalai Lama (1998). ''The Four Noble Truths''. Thorsons. | |||
* Ringu Tulku (2005). ''Daring Steps Toward Fearlessness: The Three Vehicles of Tibetan Buddhism''. Snow Lion. (Part 1 of 3 is a commentary on the four truths) | |||
* Thich Nhat Hanh (1999). ''The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching''. Three Rivers Press. | |||
The writings of British missionaries show a growing emphasis on the four truths as being central to Buddhism, with somewhat different presentations of them.{{sfn|Harris|2006|pp=72–73}}{{refn|group=note| Whereas Gogerly wrote in 1861 "That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms hat its continuance results from a continued desire of existence", Spencer Hardy wrote in 1866 that "there is sorrow connected with every mode of existence; that the cause of sorrow is desire."{{sfn|Harris|2006|pp=72–73}} Childers, drawing on Gogerly and Hardy, writes that "existence is suffering; human passion (''tanhã'' – desire) is the cause of continued existence."{{sfn|Harris|2006|p=120}}}} This colonial project had a strong influence on some strands of Buddhism, culminating in so-called ], which incorporated several essentially Protestant attitudes regarding religion, such as the emphasis on written texts.{{sfn|Gombrich|Obeyesekere|1988}}{{sfn|McMahan|2008}} According to Gimello, Rahula's book is an example of this Protestant Buddhism, and "was created in an accommodating response to western expectations, and in nearly diametrical opposition to Buddhism as it had actually been practised in traditional Theravada."{{refn|group=note|Gimello (2004), as quoted in Taylor (2007).{{sfn|Taylor|2007|p=361}}}} | |||
Online commentaries: | |||
* http://www.urbandharma.org/udharma2/fourtruths.html - Ajahn Chah | |||
* http://www.buddhanet.net/4noble.htm - Ajahn Sumedho | |||
* http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/study/truths.html - Thanissaro Bhikkhu | |||
* http://www.beyondthenet.net/dhamma/fourNoble.htm - Bhikkhu Bodhi | |||
* http://www.shambhala.com/html/learn/features/buddhism/basics/four-truths.cfm - Traleg Kyabgon (brief commentary) | |||
* http://nyimc.org/index.php/site/article/the_four_noble_truths/ - Tamara Engel (brief commentary) | |||
* http://www.dharmanet.org/lc4nobletruths.htm - Dharmanet, links to several online commentaries | |||
] proposed in 1882 that the model of the four truths may be an analogy with classical Indian medicine, in which the four truths function as a medical diagnosis, and the Buddha is presented as a physician.{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=189}}{{refn|group=note|Kern's model:{{sfn|Keown|2000|loc=loc. 909–911}}{{sfn|Lopez|2001|p=52}}{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=42}} | |||
Eightfold path: | |||
* http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/bodhi/waytoend.html - Bhikkhu Bodhi | |||
# ''The truth of dukkha:'' identifying the illness and the nature of the illness (the ]) | |||
* http://dharmastudy.org/the-four-noble-truths/ - Bhikkhu Bodhi, Richard Blumberg | |||
# ''The truth of origin:'' identifying the ] | |||
# ''The truth of cessation:'' identifying a cure for the illness (the ]) | |||
# ''The truth of the path:'' recommending a treatment for the illness that can bring about a cure (the ])}} Kern's analogy became rather popular,{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=189}}{{refn|group=note|See,{{sfn|Keown|2000|loc=loc. 909–911}}{{sfn|Lopez|2001|p=52}}{{sfn|Williams|Tribe|Wynne|2002|p=42}}}} but "there is not sufficient historical evidence to conclude that the Buddha deliberately drew upon a clearly defined medical model for his fourfold analysis of human pain."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=189}} | |||
According to Anderson, those scholars who did not place the four truths at the center of Buddhism, either "located the four truths in a fuller reading of the Theravada canon and the larger context of South Asian literature", or "located the teaching within an experience of Buddhism as practiced in a contemporary setting."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=198}} According to Anderson, "these autors suggest a more complex reading of the four noble truths than those who locate the teaching as the key to or as a crucial element within the grand scheme of Buddhism."{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=198}} | |||
==Appearance within the discourses== | |||
The developing Buddhist tradition inserted the four truths, using various formulations, at various sutras.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p={{page needed|date=November 2020}}}} They are being used both as a symbol of all dhammas and the Buddha's awakening, and as a set of propositions which function within a matrix of teachings.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=86}} According to Anderson, there is no single way to understand the teachings; one teaching may be used to explain another teaching, and vice versa. The teachings form a network, which should be apprehended as such to understand how the various teachings intersect with each other.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=86–87}} | |||
===Symbolic function=== | |||
====''Mahasaccaka Sutta''==== | |||
The ''Mahasaccaka Sutta'' ("The Greater Discourse to Saccaka", Majjhima Nikaya 36) gives one of several versions of the Buddha's way to liberation.{{refn|group=note|Majjhima Nikaya 26, "The Noble Search", also gives an account, which is markedly different, omitting the ascetic practices and the four truths.}} He attains the three knowledges, namely knowledge of his former lifes, knowledge of death and rebirth, and knowledge of the destruction of the taints,{{refn|group=note|Which keep one trapped in ''samsara''.}} the Four Noble Truths.{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|p={{page needed|date=October 2020}}}} After going through the four dhyanas, and gaining the first two knowledges, the story proceeds: | |||
{{Blockquote|I directed my mind to the knowledge of the destruction of the intoxicants My mind was liberated the knowledge arose that it was liberated.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=102–103}}}} | |||
Bronkhorst dismisses the first two knowledges as later additions, and proceeds to notice that the recognition of the intoxicants is modelled on the four truths. According to Bronkhorst, those are added the bridge the original sequence of "I directed my mind to the knowledge of the destruction of the intoxicants. My mind was liberated", which was interrupted by the addition of the four truths. Bronkhorst points out that those do not fit here, since the four truths culminate in the knowledge of the path to be followed, while the Buddha himself is already liberated at that point.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=103–104}} | |||
====''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta''==== | |||
{{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304000844/http://art.thewalters.org/detail/21971 |date=4 March 2016 }}, ]</ref> The Walters Art Museum. The Buddha's hand can be seen at right.]] | |||
According to the Buddhist tradition, the first talk of ] after he attained ] is recorded in the '']'' ("Setting in Motion the Wheel of Dhamma", Samyutta Nikaya 56.11). The ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'' provides details on three stages in the understanding of each truth, for a total of twelve insights. The three stages for understanding each truth are:{{sfn|Rahula|2007a|loc=loc. 3935–3939}}{{sfn|Ajahn Sucitto|2010|pp=99–100}}{{sfn|Ajahn Sumedho|2002|p=9}}{{sfn|Moffitt|2008|loc=loc. 225–226}}{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 303–306}} | |||
# ''sacca-ñāṇa'' – knowing the nature of the truth (e.g., acknowledgement, view, reflection) | |||
# ''kicca-ñāṇa'' – knowing what needs to be done in connection with that truth (e.g., practice; motivation; directly experiencing) | |||
# ''kata-ñāṇa'' – accomplishing what needs to be done (e.g., result, full understanding, knowing) | |||
These three stages of understanding are emphasized particularly in the Theravada tradition, but they are also recognized by some contemporary Mahayana teachers.{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 303–306}}{{sfn|Thich Nhat Hanh|1999|pp=28–46}} | |||
According to Cousins, many scholars are of the view that "this discourse was identified as the first sermon of the Buddha only at a later date."{{sfn|Cousins|2001|p=38}} According to Stephen Batchelor, the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'' contains incongruities, and states that | |||
{{Blockquote|The First Discourse cannot be treated as a verbatim transcript of what the Buddha taught in the Deer Park, but as a document that has evolved over an unspecified period of time until it reached the form in which it is found today in the canons of the different Buddhist schools.{{sfn|Batchelor|2012|p=91}}}} | |||
According to Bronkhorst this "first sermon" is recorded in several sutras, with important variations.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=110}} In the Vinaya texts, and in the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'' which was influenced by the Vinaya texts, the four truths are included, and Kondañña is enlightened{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=110}}{{sfn|Anderson|2001|p=69}} when the "vision of Dhamma"{{sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2000|p=1846}} arises in him: "whatever is subject to origination is all subject to cessation."{{refn|group=note|Translation Bhikkhu Bodhi (2000), ''Samyutta Nikaya'', SN 56.11, p. 1846. See also Anderson (2001), ''Pain and its Ending'', p. 69.}} Yet, in the ''Ariyapariyesanā Sutta'' ("The Noble Search", Majjhima Nikaya 26) the four truths are not included,{{refn|group=note|MN 26.17 merely says "This will serve for the striving of a clansman intent on striving.' And I sat down there thinking: 'This will serve for striving.'{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|p=259}} According to Bhikkhu Bodhi Majjhima Nikaya 36 then continuous with the extreme ascetic practices, which are omitted in MN 26.{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|p=1216, note 403}} In verse 18, the Buddha has attained Nirvana, being secured from bondage by birth, ageing, sickness and death, referring to the truths of dependent origination and "the stilling of all formations, the relinquishing of all attachments, the destruction of craving, dispassion, cessation."{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|pp=259–260}}}} and the Buddha gives the five ascetics personal instructions in turn, two or three of them, while the others go out begging for food. The versions of the "first sermon" which include the four truths, such as the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'', omit this instruction, showing that | |||
{{Blockquote|...the accounts which include the Four Noble Truths had a completely different conception of the process of liberation than the one which includes the Four Dhyanas and the subsequent destruction of the intoxicants.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=110}}}} | |||
According to Bronkhorst, this indicates that the four truths were later added to earlier descriptions of liberation by practicing the four dhyanas, which originally was thought to be sufficient for the destruction of the arsavas.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=110}} Anderson, following Norman, also thinks that the four truths originally were not part of this sutta, and were later added in some versions.{{sfn|Anderson|1999|p=68}}{{refn|group=note|According to Cousins, Anderson misunderstands Norman in this respect, but does "not think that this misunderstanding of Norman's position critically affects Anderson's thesis. Even if these arguments do not prove that the four truths are definitely a later insertion in the Dhammacakkapavattana-sutta, it is certainly possible to take the position that the sutta itself is relatively late."{{sfn|Cousins|2001|p=38}}}} | |||
According to Bronkhorst, the "twelve insights" are probably also a later addition, born out of unease with the substitution of the general term "prajna" for the more specific "four truths".{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=106}} | |||
====''Maha-parinibbana Sutta''==== | |||
According to the Buddhist tradition, the '']'' (Last Days of the Buddha, Digha Nikaya 16) was given near the end of the Buddha's life. This sutta "gives a good general idea of the Buddha's Teaching:"<ref group=web name="ati_Maha-parinibbana_Sutta">{{Cite web|url=https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/dn/dn.16.1-6.vaji.html|title=Maha-parinibbana Sutta: Last Days of the Buddha|website=www.accesstoinsight.org}}</ref> | |||
{{Blockquote|And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: "Bhikkhus, it is through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by me as well as by you. What are these four? They are the noble truth of suffering; the noble truth of the origin of suffering; the noble truth of the cessation of suffering; and the noble truth of the way to the cessation of suffering. But now, bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming, and there is no fresh becoming." | |||
Thus it was said by the Blessed One. And the Happy One, the Master, further said: | |||
{{poemquote|Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths, | |||
Long was the weary path from birth to birth. | |||
When these are known, removed is rebirth's cause, | |||
The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth.}} | |||
}} | |||
===Propositional function=== | |||
====''Maha-salayatanika Sutta''==== | |||
The ''Maha-salayatanika Sutta'', Majjhima Nikaya 149:3 plus 149:9, give an alternative presentation of the four truths: | |||
{{Blockquote|When one abides inflamed by lust, fettered, infatuated, contemplating gratification, ne's bodily and mental troubles increase, one's bodily and mental torments increase, one's bodily and mental fevers increase, and one experiences bodily and mental suffering.<br /><br />...when one does not know and see as it actually is felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition, then one is inflamed by lust for the eye, for forms, for eye-consciousness, for eye-contact, for felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition .<br /><br />When one abides uninflamed by lust, unfettered, uninfatuated, contemplating danger one's craving is abandoned. One's bodily and mental troubles are abandoned, one's bodily and mental torments are abandoned, one's bodily and mental fevers are abandoned, and one experiences bodily and mental pleasure.<br /><br />...when one knows and see as it actually is felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition, then one is not inflamed by lust for the eye, for forms, for eye-consciousness, for eye-contact, for felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition .{{sfn|Bhikkhu Nanamoli (translator)|1995|p=1137}}}} | |||
==Emphasis within different traditions== | |||
===Early Indian Buddhism=== | |||
The ] sect emphasized the transcendence of the ], asserting that he was eternally enlightened and essentially non-physical. According to the Ekavyāvahārika, the words of the Buddha were spoken with one transcendent meaning, and the Four Noble Truths are to be understood simultaneously in one moment of insight.{{sfn|Rockhill |1884|pp=187–188}} According to the ] sect, the Four Noble Truths should be meditated upon simultaneously.{{sfn|Potter|2004|p=106}} | |||
===Theravada=== | |||
{{See also|Vipassana movement}} | |||
According to Carol Anderson, the four truths have "a singular position within the Theravada canon and tradition."{{sfn|Anderson|1999|pp=230–231}} The Theravada tradition regards insight in the four truths as liberating in itself.{{sfn|Carter|1987|p=3179}} As Walpola Rahula states, "when the Truth is seen, all the forces which feverishly produce the continuity of ] in ] become calm and incapable of producing any more ] he is free from the 'thirst' for becoming."<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/>{{refn|group=note|Walpola Rahula: | |||
* "When wisdom is developed and cultivated according to the Fourth Noble Truth (the next to be taken up), it sees the secret of life, the reality of things as they are. When the secret is discovered, when the Truth is seen, all the forces which feverishly produce the continuity of saṃsāra in illusion become calm and incapable of producing any more karma-formations, because there is no more illusion, no more 'thirst' for continuity."<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/> | |||
* "The remaining two factors, namely Right Thought and Right Understanding go to constitute Wisdom."<ref group=web name="WP_ch5">{{cite web |website=Walpola Rahula: What the Buddha Taught |title=CHAPTER V. THE FOURTH NOBLE TRUTH: ''MAGGA'': THE PATH |url=https://sites.google.com/site/rahulawhatthebuddha/the-fourth-noble-truth}}</ref> | |||
* "Right Understanding is the understanding of things as they are, and it is the Four Noble Truths that explain things as they really are. Right Understanding therefore is ultimately reduced to the understanding of the Four Noble Truths. This understanding is the highest wisdom which sees the Ultimate Reality."<ref group=web name="WP_ch5"/>}} This liberation can be attained in one single moment, when the four truths are understood together.{{sfn|Carter|1987|p=3179}} Within the ] tradition, great emphasis is placed upon reading and contemplating '']'', and other suttas, as a means to study the four noble truths and put them into practice.{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 275–280}} For example, Ajahn Sumedho states: | |||
{{Blockquote|The ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'', the Buddha's teaching on the Four Noble Truths, has been the main reference that I have used for my practice over the years. It is the teaching we used in our monastery in Thailand. The Theravada school of Buddhism regards this sutta as the quintessence of the teachings of the Buddha. This one sutta contains all that is necessary for understanding the Dhamma and for enlightenment."{{sfn|Ajahn Sumedho| 2002|p=5}}}} | |||
Within the Theravada-tradition, three different stances on '']'' and the question what happens with the ''Arhat'' after death can be found.{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=77}}{{sfn|Hick|1994|p=436}}{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|pp=96–97}}{{sfn|Geisler|Amano|2004|p=32}} ''Nirvana'' refers to the cessation of the defilements and the resulting peace of mind and happiness (''khlesa-nirvana''); to the final dissolution of the five skandhas at the time of death (''skandha-nirvana'' or '']''); and to a transcendental reality which is "known at the moment of awakening".{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=77}}{{refn|group=note|Gethin: "(I) it is the extinguishing of the defilements of greed, hatred, and delusion; (2) it is the final condition of the Buddha and arhats after death consequent upon the extinction of the defilements; (3) it is the unconditioned realm known at the moment of awakening.{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=77}}}} According to Gethin, "modern Buddhist usage tends to restrict 'nirvāṇa' to the awakening experience and reserve 'parinirvāṇa' for the death experience.{{sfn|Gethin|1998|p=76}} According to Geisler and Amano, in the "minimal Theravada interpretation", ''nirvana'' is a psychological state, which ends with the dissolution of the body and the total extinction of existence.{{sfn|Hick|1994|p=436}}{{sfn|Geisler|Amano|2004|p=32}} According to Geisler and Amano, the "orthodox Theravada interpretation" is that nirvana is a transcendent reality with which the self unites.{{sfn|Geisler|Amano|2004|p=32}} According to Bronkhorst, while "Buddhism preached liberation in this life, i.e. before death",{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=96}} there was also a tendency in Buddhism to think of liberation happening after death. According to Bronkhorst, this | |||
{{Blockquote|...becomes visible in those canonical passages which distinguish between Nirvana—qualified in Sanskrit and pali as "without a remainder of upadhi/upadi" (anupadhisesa/anupadisesa)—and the "highest and complete enlightenment" (anuttara samyaksambodhi/sammasambodhi). The former occurs at death, the latter in life.{{sfn|Bronkhorst|1993|p=97}}}} | |||
According to ], the cessation of ''dukkha'' is ''nirvana'', the ''summum bonum'' of Buddhism, and is attained in this life, not when one dies.<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/> ''Nirvana'' is "perfect freedom, peace, tranquility and happiness",<ref group=web>{{cite web|website=Walpola Rahula: What the Buddha Taught |url=https://sites.google.com/site/rahulawhatthebuddha/the-first-noble-truth |title=CHAPTER II. THE FIRST NOBLE TRUTH: ''DUKKHA''}}</ref><ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/> and "Absolute Truth", which simply ''is''.<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4">{{cite web |website=Walpola Rahula: What the Buddha Taught |url=https://sites.google.com/site/rahulawhatthebuddha/the-third-noble-truth |title=CHAPTER IV. THE THIRD NOBLE TRUTH: ''NIRODHA'': THE CESSATION OF ''DUKKHA''}}</ref><!-- **START OF NOTE** -->{{refn|group=note|According to Rahula, in '']'', | |||
{{Blockquote|... if Nirvāṇa is to be expressed and explained in positive terms, we are likely immediately to grasp an idea associated with those terms, which may be quite the contrary. Therefore it is generally expressed in negative terms."<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/>}} According to Gombrich this distinction between ] and cataphatic approaches can be found in all religions.{{sfn|Gombrich|2009|pp=150–152}} Rahula gives an overview of negative statements of ''nirvana,'' whereafter he states: | |||
{{Blockquote|Because Nirvana is thus expressed in negative terms, there are many who have got a wrong notion that it is negative, and expresses self-annihilation. Nirvāṇa is definitely no annihilation of self, because there is no self to annihilate. If at all, it is the annihilation of the illusion of the false idea of self.<br /> | |||
It is incorrect to say that Nirvāṇa is negative or positive. The ideas of 'negative' and 'positive' are relative, and are within the realm of duality. These terms cannot be applied to Nirvāṇa, Absolute Truth, which is beyond duality and relativity <br /><br /> | |||
Nirvāṇa is neither cause nor effect. It is beyond cause and effect. Truth is not a result nor an effect. It is not produced like a mystic, spiritual, mental state, such as dhyāna or samādhi. TRUTH IS. NIRVĀṆA IS.<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/>}} | |||
Rahula refers to the ''Dhātuvibhaṅga-sutta'' (the Majjhima-nikāya 140) for his interpretation of "Nirvāṇa as Absolute Truth", which, according to Rahula, says: | |||
{{Blockquote|O bhikkhu, that which is unreality (mosadhamma) is false; that which is reality (amosadhamma), Nibbāna, is Truth (Sacca). Therefore, O bhikkhu, a person so endowed is endowed with this Absolute Truth. For, the Absolute Noble Truth (paramaṃ ariyasaccaṃ) is Nibbāna, which is Reality.'<ref group=web name ="WP_ch4"/>}} | |||
While Jayatilleke translates ''amosadhamma'' as "ineffable",{{sfn|Jayatilleke|2009|p=306}} Thanissaro Bhikkhu gives a somewhat different translation: | |||
{{Blockquote|His release, being founded on truth, does not fluctuate, for whatever is deceptive is false; Unbinding—the undeceptive—is true. Thus a monk so endowed is endowed with the highest determination for truth, for this—Unbinding, the undeceptive—is the highest noble truth.<ref group=web>{{Cite web|url=https://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.140.than.html|title=Dhatu-vibhanga Sutta: An Analysis of the Properties|website=www.accesstoinsight.org}}</ref>}} | |||
In response to Rahula, ] states that: | |||
{{Blockquote|In proclaiming (in block capitals) that 'Truth is', Rahula has for a moment fallen into Upanisadic mode. Since truth can only be a property of propositions, which have subjects and predicates, and nirvana is not a proposition, it makes no sense in English to say that nirvana is truth. The confusion arises, perhaps, because the Sanskrit word satyam and the corresponding Pali word saccam can indeed mean either 'truth' or 'reality'. But in our language this will not work.{{sfn|Gombrich|2009|pp=156–157}}}} | |||
Richard Gombrich also states that Rahula's book would more aptly be titled ''What ] Taught''.{{sfn|Gombrich|2009|pp=156–157}} According to David Kalupahana, Buddhagosa was influenced by Mahayana Buddhism, and introduced "the substantialist as well as essentialist standpoints of the Sarvastavadins and Sautrantikas."{{sfn|Kalupahana|1992|pp=208, 210}}}}<!-- **END OF NOTE** --> Jayatilleke also speaks of "the attainment of an ultimate reality".{{sfn|Jayatilleke|2009|p=306}} According to Bhikkhu Bodhi, the "elimination of craving culminates not only in the extinction of sorrow, anguish and distress, but in the unconditioned freedom of nibbana, which is won with the ending of repeated rebirth."{{sfn|Bhikkhu Bodhi|2011|p=10}} | |||
According to Spiro, most (lay) Theravada Buddhists do not aspire for ''nirvana'' and total extinction, but for a pleasurable rebirth in heaven.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|pp=76–77}} According to Spiro, this presents a "serious conflict" since the Buddhist texts and teaching "describe life as suffering and hold up nirvana as the ''summum bonum.''"{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=78}} In response to this deviation, "monks and others emphasize that the hope for nirvana is the only legitimate action for Buddhist action."{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=78}} Nevertheless, according to Spiro most Burmese lay Buddhists do not aspire for the extinction of existence which is ''nirvana''.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|p=78}}{{refn|group=note|name="Wallace"}} | |||
According to ], the Indian Buddhist ] leader, the four truths were not part of the original teachings of the Buddha, but a later aggregation, due to Hindu influences.{{sfn|Karunyakara|2002|p=67}} According to Ambedkar, total cessation of suffering is an illusion; yet, the Buddhist Middle Path aims at the reduction of suffering and the maximizing of happiness, balancing both sorrow and happiness.{{sfn|Karunyakara|2002|pp=67–68}} | |||
===Mahayana=== | |||
The four truths are less prominent in the Mahayana traditions, which emphasize insight into ] and the ] as a central elements in their teachings.{{sfn|Carter|1987|pp=3179–3180}} If the sutras in general are studied at all, it is through various Mahayana commentaries.{{sfn|Williams|1989|p=103}} | |||
According to Makransky the Mahayana Bodhisattva ideal created tensions in the explanation of the four truths.{{sfn|Makransky|1997|p=345}} In the Mahayana view, a fully enlightened Buddha does not leave ''samsara'', but remains in the world out of compassion for all sentient beings.{{sfn|Makransky|1997|p=346}} The four truths, which aim at ending ''samsara'', do not provide a doctrinal basis for this view, and had to be reinterpreted.{{sfn|Makransky|1997|p=346}} In the old view, '']'' and ''karma'' are the cause of prolonged existence. According to Makransky, "o remove those causes was, at physical death, to extinguish one's conditioned existence, hence to end forever one's participation in the world (Third Truth)."{{sfn|Makransky|1997|p=346}} According to Makransky, the question of how a liberated being can still be "pervasively operative in this world" has been "a seminal source of ongoing doctrinal tension over Buddhahood throughout the history of the Mahayana in India and Tibet."{{sfn|Makransky|1997|pp=346–347}} | |||
====Tibetan Buddhism==== | |||
], in his '']'' ("A Lamp for the Path to Awakening"), which forms the basis for the ] tradition, discerns three levels of motivation for Buddhist practitioners.{{sfn|Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche|1996|p=17}} At the beginning level of motivation, one strives toward a better life in ''samsara''.{{sfn|Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche|1996|p=17}} At the intermediate level, one strives to a liberation from existence in samsara and the end of all suffering.{{sfn|Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche|1996|pp=17, 66–67}} At the highest level of motivation, one strives after the liberation of all living beings.{{sfn|Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche|1996|p=17}} In his commentary on the text, Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche explains that the four truths are to be meditated upon as a means of practice for the intermediate level.{{sfn|Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche|1996|pp=66–67}} | |||
According to ], within ], the four noble truths are studied as part of the Bodhisattva path. They are explained in Mahayana commentaries such as the '']'', a summary of and commentary on the ] sutras, where they form part of the lower ] teachings. The truth of the path (the fourth truth) is traditionally presented according to a progressive formula of ], rather than as the eightfold path presented in Theravada.{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 2187–2190}} According to Tsering, the study of the four truths is combined with the study of the ] of the four noble truths.{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 741–743}} | |||
Some contemporary Tibetan Buddhist teachers have provided commentary on the ''Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta'' and the noble eightfold path when presenting the dharma to Western students.{{sfn|Geshe Tashi Tsering|2005|loc=loc. 241}}{{sfn|Ringu Tulku|2005|pp=36–54}}{{sfn|Lama Surya Das|1997}} | |||
The truths are used extensively within ] (traditional Tibetan medicine) theory.{{source?|date=September 2024}} | |||
====Nichiren Buddhism==== | |||
] is based on the teaching of the Japanese priest and teacher ], who believed that the ] contained the essence of all of Gautama Buddha's teachings.<ref group=web>{{Cite web |title=Nichiren Shu Buddhist Temple of UK Newsletter |date=September–October 2008 |website=Nichiren Shu UK |url=http://www.nichiren-shu.org.uk/septoctnewsletter.html |access-date=30 October 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131031180446/http://www.nichiren-shu.org.uk/septoctnewsletter.html |archive-date=31 October 2013 |url-status=dead}}</ref> The third chapter of the Lotus Sutra states that the Four Noble Truths was the early teaching of the Buddha, while the Dharma of the Lotus is the "most wonderful, unsurpassed great Dharma".<ref group=web >{{Cite web |url=http://www.sokahumanism.com/nichiren-buddhism/Four_Noble_Truths_and_the_Lotus_Sutra.html |title=Quote from Watson (1993), The Lotus Sutra |access-date=2 April 2011 |archive-date=3 November 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131103150647/http://www.sokahumanism.com/nichiren-buddhism/Four_Noble_Truths_and_the_Lotus_Sutra.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> The teachings on the four noble truths are a provisional teaching, which Shakyamuni Buddha taught according to the people's capacity, while the Lotus Sutra is a direct statement of Shakyamuni's own enlightenment.<ref group=web name=nletter2> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131101041513/http://www.sgilibrary.org/view.php?page=1039&m=3&q=four%20noble%20truths%20for%20voice-hearers |date=1 November 2013 }}, see "Background" section</ref> | |||
===Western Buddhism=== | |||
For many western Buddhists, the rebirth doctrine in the Four Noble Truths teaching is a problematic notion.{{sfn|Konik|2009|p=ix}}{{sfn|Hayes|2013|p=172}}{{sfn|Lamb|2001|p=258}}<ref group=web name="BB-rebirth">Bhikkhu Bodhi, </ref>{{refn|group=note|See also:<br />* ], <br />* Manon Welles, <br />* Alan Peta, }} According to Lamb, "Certain forms of modern western Buddhism see it as purely mythical and thus a dispensable notion."{{sfn|Lamb|2001|p=258}} According to Coleman, the focus of most vipassana students in the west "is mainly on meditation practice and a kind of down-to-earth psychological wisdom."{{sfn|Coleman|2002|p=110}}{{refn|group=note|According to Coleman, the goal in Theravada Buddhism "is to uproot the desires and defilements in order to attain nibbana (nirvana in Sanskrit) and win liberation from the otherwise endless round of death and rebirth. But few Western Vipassana teachers pay much attention to the more metaphysical aspects of such concepts as rebirth and nibbana, and of course very few of their students are celibate monks. Their focus is mainly on meditation practice and a kind of down-to-earth psychological wisdom. "As a result," one respected Vipassana teacher writes, "many more Americans of European descent refer to themselves as Vipassana students rather than as students of Theravada Buddhism."{{sfn|Coleman|2002|p=110}}}} According to ], westerners find "the ideas of ] and rebirth puzzling."{{sfn|Keown|2009|pp=60–63, 74–85, 185–187}} According to Gowans, many Western followers and people interested in exploring Buddhism are skeptical and object to the belief in karma and rebirth foundational to the Four Noble Truths.{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 76–88}}{{refn|group=note|Gowans groups the objections into three categories. The first objection can be called "consistency objection", which asks if "there is no self (atman, soul), then what is reborn and how does karma work?". The second objection can be called "naturalism objection", which asks "can rebirth be scientifically proven, what evidence is there that rebirth happens". The third objection can be called "morality objection", which asks "why presume that an infant born with an illness, is because of karma in previous life" as seems implied by ''Majjhima Nikāya'' section 3.204 for example. Gowans provides a summary of prevailing answers, clarifications and explanations proffered by practicing Buddhists.{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 76–88}}}} According to Konik, | |||
{{Blockquote|Since the fundamental problems underlying early Indian Buddhism and contemporary western Buddhism are not the same, the validity of applying the set of solutions developed by the first to the situation of the second becomes a question of great importance. Simply putting an end to rebirth would not necessarily strike the western Buddhist as the ultimate answer, as it certainly was for early Indian Buddhists.{{sfn|Konik|2009|p=ix}}}} | |||
According to Keown, it is possible to reinterpret the Buddhist doctrines such as the Four Noble Truths, since the final goal and the answer to the problem of suffering is ], and not rebirth.{{sfn|Keown|2009|pp=60–63, 74–85, 185–187}} Some Western interpreters have proposed what is sometimes referred to as "naturalized Buddhism". It is devoid of rebirth, karma, nirvana, realms of existence, and other concepts of Buddhism, with doctrines such as the Four Noble Truths reformulated and restated in modernistic terms.{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 91–94}}{{sfn|Prothero|1996|p=128}}{{refn|group=note|Prothereo describes how Theosophist ] (1832–1907) reinterpreted Buddhism: "In addition to a restatement of the Four Noble Truths and the Five Precepts for lay Buddhists, the fourteen propositions included: an affirmation of religious tolerance and of the evolution of the universe, a rejection of supernaturalism, heaven or hell, and superstition, and an emphasis on education and the use of reason."{{sfn|Prothero|1996|p=128}}}}{{refn|group=note|According to Owen Flanagan, the proportion of people in North America that believe in heaven is about the same as the proportion of East and Southeast Asia who believe in rebirth. But, 'rebirth' is considered superstitious by many in the West while 'heaven' is not, adds Flanagan, though a reflective naturalistic approach demands that both 'heaven' and 'rebirth' be equally questioned".{{sfn|Flanagan|2011|pp=2–3, 68–70, 79–80}} According to Donald S. Lopez, Buddhist movements in the West have reconstructed a "Scientific Buddha" and a "modern Buddhism" unknown in Asia, "one that may never have existed there before the late 19-century".{{sfn|Lopez|2012|pp=39–43, 57–60, 74–76, 122–124}}}} This "deflated secular Buddhism" stresses compassion, impermanence, causality, selfless persons, no Boddhisattvas, no nirvana, no rebirth, and a naturalist's approach to well-being of oneself and others.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|pp=39–42}} | |||
According to Melford Spiro, this approach undermines the Four Noble Truths, for it does not address the existential question for the Buddhist as to "why live? why not commit suicide, hasten the end of ''dukkha'' in current life by ending life". In traditional Buddhism, rebirth continues the ''dukkha'' and the path to cessation of ''dukkha'' isn't suicide, but the fourth reality of the Four Noble Truths.{{sfn|Spiro|1982|pp=39–42}} The "naturalized Buddhism", according to Gowans, is a radical revision to traditional Buddhist thought and practice, and it attacks the structure behind the hopes, needs and rationalization of the realities of human life to traditional Buddhists in East, Southeast and South Asia.{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 91–94}} According to Keown, it may not be necessary to believe in some of the core Buddhist doctrines to be a Buddhist, but the rebirth, karma, ] and cyclic universe doctrines underpin the Four Noble Truths in Buddhism.{{sfn|Keown|2009|pp=60–63, 74–85, 185–187}} | |||
Traditional Buddhist scholars disagree with these modernist Western interpretations. Bhikkhu Bodhi, for example, states that rebirth is an integral part of the Buddhist teachings as found in the sutras, despite the problems that "modernist interpreters of Buddhism" seem to have with it.<ref group=web name="BB-rebirth"/>{{refn|group=note|Bhikkhu Bodhi: "Newcomers to Buddhism are usually impressed by the clarity, directness, and earthy practicality of the Dhamma as embodied in such basic teachings as the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path, and the threefold training. These teachings, as clear as day-light, are accessible to any serious seeker looking for a way beyond suffering. When, however, these seekers encounter the doctrine of rebirth, they often balk, convinced it just doesn't make sense. At this point, they suspect that the teaching has swerved off course, tumbling from the grand highway of reason into wistfulness and speculation. Even modernist interpreters of Buddhism seem to have trouble taking the rebirth teaching seriously. Some dismiss it as just a piece of cultural baggage, "ancient Indian metaphysics", that the Buddha retained in deference to the world view of his age. Others interpret it as a metaphor for the change of mental states, with the realms of rebirth seen as symbols for psychological archetypes. A few critics even question the authenticity of the texts on rebirth, arguing that they must be interpolations.<br />A quick glance at the Pali suttas would show that none of these claims has much substance. The teaching of rebirth crops up almost everywhere in the Canon, and is so closely bound to a host of other doctrines that to remove it would virtually reduce the Dhamma to tatters. Moreover, when the suttas speak about rebirth into the five realms—the hells, the animal world, the spirit realm, the human world, and the heavens—they never hint that these terms are meant symbolically. To the contrary, they even say that rebirth occurs "with the breakup of the body, after death," which clearly implies they intend the idea of rebirth to be taken quite literally."<ref group=web name="BB-rebirth"/>}} ], as another example, rejects the "modern argument" that "one can still obtain all the results of the practice without having to accept the possibility of rebirth." He states, "rebirth has always been a central teaching in the Buddhist tradition."<ref group=web name="TB_Rebirth">Thanissaro Bhikkhu, </ref>{{refn|group=note|Thanissaro Bhikkhu: "A second modern argument against accepting the canonical accounts of what's known in awakening—and in particular, the knowledge of rebirth achieved in awakening—is that one can still obtain all the results of the practice without having to accept the possibility of rebirth. After all, all the factors leading to suffering are all immediately present to awareness, so there should be no need, when trying to abandon them, to accept any premises about where they may or may not lead in the future.<br />This objection, however, ignores the role of appropriate attention on the path. As we noted above, one of its roles is to examine and abandon the assumptions that underlie one's views on the metaphysics of personal identity. Unless you're willing to step back from your own views—such as those concerning what a person is, and why that makes rebirth impossible—and subject them to this sort of examination, there's something lacking in your path. You'll remain entangled in the questions of inappropriate attention, which will prevent you from actually identifying and abandoning the causes of suffering and achieving the full results of the practice.<br /><br />In addition, the terms of appropriate attention—the four noble truths—are not concerned simply with events arising and passing away in the present moment. They also focus on the causal connections among those events, connections that occur both in the immediate present and over time. If you limit your focus solely to connections in the present while ignoring those over time, you can't fully comprehend the ways in which craving causes suffering: not only by latching on to the four kinds of nutriment, but also giving rise to the four kinds of nutriment as well.<ref group=web name="TB_Rebirth"/>}}{{refn|group=note|According to Konik: {{blockquote|No doubt, according to the early Indian Buddhist tradition, the Buddha's great discovery, as condensed in his experience of nirvana, involved the remembrance of his many former existences, presupposing as fact the reality of a never-ending process of rebirth as a source of deep anxiety, and an acceptance of the Buddha's overcoming of that fate as ultimate liberation.{{sfn|Konik|2009|p=ix}}}}}} | |||
According to Owen Flanagan, the Dalai Lama states that "Buddhists believe in rebirth" and that this belief has been common among his followers. However, the Dalai Lama's belief, adds Flanagan, is more sophisticated than ordinary Buddhists, because it is not the same as ]—rebirth in Buddhism is envisioned as happening without the assumption of an "atman, self, soul", but rather through a "consciousness conceived along the ] lines".{{sfn|Flanagan|2014|pp=233–234 with note 1}}{{refn|group=note|The Dalai Lama himself is regarded to be an incarnation of the thirteen previous Dalai Lamas, who are all manifestations of ].{{sfn|Chitkara|1998|p=39}}}} The doctrine of rebirth is considered mandatory in Tibetan Buddhism, and across many Buddhist sects.{{sfn|Flanagan|2014|pp=234–235 with note 5}} | |||
According to Christopher Gowans, for "most ordinary Buddhists, today as well as in the past, their basic moral orientation is governed by belief in karma and rebirth".{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 76–88}} Buddhist morality hinges on the hope of well being in this lifetime or in future rebirths, with nirvana (enlightenment) a project for a future lifetime. A denial of karma and rebirth undermines their history, moral orientation and religious foundations.{{sfn|Gowans|2014|pp=18–23, 76–88}} According to Keown, most Buddhists in Asia do accept these traditional teachings, and seek better rebirth.{{sfn|Keown|2009|pp=60–63, 74–85, 185–187}}{{refn|group=note|The vast majority of Buddhist lay people, states Kevin Trainor, have historically pursued Buddhist rituals and practices motivated with rebirth into Deva realm.{{sfn|Trainor|2004|p=62}} Fowler and others concur with Trainor, stating that better rebirth, not nirvana, has been the primary focus of a vast majority of lay Buddhists. This they attempt through merit accumulation and good ''kamma''.{{sfn|Fowler|1999|p=65}}{{refn|group=note|Merv Foweler: "For a vast majority of Buddhists in Theravadin countries, however, the order of monks is seen by lay Buddhists as a means of gaining the most merit in the hope of accumulating good karma for a better rebirth."{{sfn|Fowler|1999|p=65}}}}{{sfn|Gowans|2004|p=169}}}} | |||
===Navayana Buddhism=== | |||
The ], a modernistic interpretation of Buddhism by the Indian leader and Buddhist scholar ],<ref>Anne M. Blackburn (1993), , The Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 16 (1), p. 11</ref> rejected much of traditional Buddhism, including the Four Noble Truths, karma and rebirth, thus turning his new religion into a vehicle for ] and social action.<ref>{{cite book |author=Eleanor Zelliot |year=2015 |editor=Knut A. Jacobsen |title=Routledge Handbook of Contemporary India |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tPBWCgAAQBAJ |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-1-317-40357-9 |pages=13, 361–370}}</ref> According to Ambedkar, Four Noble Truths was "the invention of wrong-headed monks".<ref>{{cite book|editor-first1=Damien |editor-last1=Keown|editor-first2=Charles S. |editor-last2=Prebish|title= Encyclopedia of Buddhism |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NFpcAgAAQBAJ |year=2013 |publisher= Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-98588-1 |page=25}}, Quote: "(...)The Buddhism upon which he settled and about which he wrote in '']'' was, in many respects, unlike any form of Buddhism that had hitherto arisen within the tradition. Gone, for instance, were the doctrines of karma and rebirth, the traditional emphasis on renunciation of the world, the practice of meditation, and the experience of enlightenment. Gone too were any teachings that implied the existence of a trans-empirical realm (...). Most jarring, perhaps, especially among more traditional Buddhists, was the absence of the Four Noble Truths, which Ambedkar regarded as the invention of wrong-headed monks".</ref> | |||
==See also== | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Notes== | ==Notes== | ||
{{ |
{{Reflist|group=note|35em|refs= | ||
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{{refn|group=note|name=dukkha|''Dukkha'' is often translated as "suffering," but this translation only covers the general meaning. The exact translation is dependent on the context. | |||
* Peter Harvey, ''Dukkha, Non-Self, and the Teaching of the Four Noble Truths'', in Steven M. Emmanuel, ''A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy'', p.30: ""suffering" is an appropriate translation only in a general, inexact sense In the passage on the first ''True Reality'', ''dukkha'' in "birth is ''dukkha''" is an adjective The best translation here is by the English adjective "painful," which can apply to a range of things." | |||
* {{harvtxt|Analayo|2013b}}: "Dukkha is often translated as "suffering". Suffering, however, represents only one aspect of dukkha, a term whose range of implications is difficult to capture with a single English word. Dukkha can be derived from the Sanskrit kha, one meaning of which is "the axle-hole of a wheel", and the antithetic prefix duå (<nowiki>=</nowiki> dus), which stands for "difficulty" or "badness". The complete term then evokes the image of an axle not fitting properly into its hole. According to this image, dukkha suggests "disharmony" or "friction". Alternatively dukkha can be related to the Sanskrit stha, "standing" or "abiding", combined with the same antithetic prefix duå. Dukkha in the sense of "standing badly" then conveys nuances of "uneasiness" or of being "uncomfortable". In order to catch the various nuances of "dukkha", the most convenient translation is "unsatisfactoriness", though it might be best to leave the term untranslated." | |||
* Dalai Lama, Thubten Chodron, ''Approaching the Buddhist Path'', p.279 note 2: "''Duhkha'' (P. ''dukkha'') is often translated as "suffering," but this translation is misleading. Its meaning is more nuanced and refers to all unsatisfactory states and experiences, many of which are not explicitly painfull. While the Buddha says that life under the influence of afflictions and polluted karma is unsatisfactory, he does not say that life is suffering." | |||
* Gombrich, ''What the Buddha Thought'', p.10: "there has been a lot of argument over how to translate the word dukkha; and again, the choice of translation must depend heavily on the context. But what is being expressed is that life as we normally experience it is unsatisfactory." | |||
* According to {{harvtxt|Khantipalo|2003|p=46}}, "suffering" is an incorrect translation, since ''dukkha'' refers to the ultimately unsatisfactory nature of temporary states and things, including pleasant but temporary experiences. | |||
* According to {{harvtxt|Emmanuel|2015|p=30}}, ''Dukkha'' is the opposite of ''sukha'', "pleasure", and it is better translated as "pain". | |||
* {{harvtxt|Huxter|2016|p=10}}: "dukkha (unsatisfactoriness or suffering)..."; | |||
* {{harvtxt|Anderson|2013|pp=1, 22 with note 4}}: "(...) the three characteristics of samsara/sankhara (the realm of rebirth): anicca (impermance), dukkha (pain) and anatta (no-self)."}} | |||
}} | |||
{{noteslist|35em|refs= | |||
<!-- E --> | |||
<!-- "EB-Arhat" --> | |||
{{efn|name="EB-Arhat"| , '''Encyclopaedia Britannica''': "Although the term Four Noble Truths is well known in English, it is a misleading translation of the Pali term Chattari-ariya-saccani (Sanskrit: Chatvari-arya-satyani), because noble (Pali: ariya; Sanskrit: arya) refers not to the truths themselves but to those who recognize and understand them. A more accurate rendering, therefore, might be "four truths for the noble" ";<br /> , '''Encyclopædia Britannica'''}} | |||
}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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{{refend}} | |||
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{{div col end}} | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
== |
====Web sources==== | ||
{{Reflist|group=web|35em}} | |||
'''Theravada''' | |||
* (by Thanissaro Bhikkhu) | |||
* (translated by Thanissaro Bhikkhu) | |||
* by ] | |||
* | |||
* '': '' | |||
** | |||
* | |||
==Further reading== | |||
'''Chinese''' | |||
{{Refbegin}} | |||
* {{As of|2008-10-28}} | |||
===Historical background and development=== | |||
'''Tibetan''' | |||
* {{Citation|ref=none | last =Vetter | first =Tilmann | year =1988 | title =The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism | publisher =Brill}} | |||
* by ] | |||
* {{Citation|ref=none | last =Bronkhorst | first =Johannes | author-link = Johannes Bronkhorst | year =1993 | title =The Two Traditions of Meditation in Ancient India | publisher =Motilal Banarsidass Publishers}}, chapter 8 | |||
* | |||
* {{Citation|ref=none | last =Anderson | first =Carol | year =1999 | title =Pain and Its Ending: The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon | publisher =Routledge}} | |||
* | |||
* | |||
===Theravada commentaries=== | |||
'''Nichiren''' | |||
* ] (1974), ''What the Buddha Taught'', Grove Press | |||
* | |||
* ] (2010), ''Turning the Wheel of Truth: Commentary on the Buddha's First Teaching'', Shambhala. | |||
* ] (2002), '''', Amaravati Publications. | |||
* ] (2006), '''', Pariyatti Publishing. | |||
===Tibetan Buddhism=== | |||
'''Western''' | |||
* ] (2009), ''The Truth of Suffering and the Path of Liberation'', Shambhala. | |||
* , a poem in ] by ] | |||
* ] (1998), ''The Four Noble Truths'', Thorsons. | |||
* | |||
* Geshe Tashi Tsering (2005), ''The Four Noble Truths: The Foundation of Buddhist Thought, Volume I'', Wisdom, Kindle Edition | |||
* Ringu Tulku (2005), ''Daring Steps Toward Fearlessness: The Three Vehicles of Tibetan Buddhism'', Snow Lion. (Part 1 of 3 is a commentary on the four truths) | |||
===Modern interpretations=== | |||
{{Buddhism topics}} | |||
* {{Citation|ref=none | last =Brazier | first =David | year =2001 | title =The Feeling Buddha | publisher =Robinson Publishing}} | |||
* ] (2004), ''Thoughts Without A Thinker: Psychotherapy from a Buddhist Perspective.'' Basic Books. Kindle Edition. (Part 1 examines the four truths from a Western psychological perspective) | |||
* Moffitt, Phillip (2008), ''Dancing with Life: Buddhist Insights for Finding Meaning and Joy in the Face of Suffering'', Rodale, Kindle Edition. (An explanation of how to apply the Four Noble Truths to daily life) | |||
* ] (1999), ''The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching'', Three Rivers Press | |||
===Other scholarly explanations=== | |||
] | |||
* ] (1998), ''Foundations of Buddhism'', Oxford University Press (Chapter 3 is a commentary of about 25 pages). | |||
] | |||
* ] (2001), ''The Story of Buddhism'', HarperCollins (pp. 42–54). | |||
] | |||
{{Refend}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
==External links== | |||
{{Wikiquote}} | |||
{{Wikisource|Saṃyukta Āgama 379: Dharmacakra Pravartana Sūtra}} | |||
* | |||
* , Berzin Archives | |||
* , Thanissaro Bikkhu | |||
* , ] Wiki | |||
{{Buddhism topics}} | |||
{{Gautama Buddha}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 19:05, 21 November 2024
Basic framework of Buddhist thought
Translations of Four Noble Truths | |
---|---|
Sanskrit | चत्वार्यार्यसत्यानि (catvāryāryasatyāni) |
Pali | caturāriyasaccāni |
Bengali | চতুরার্য সত্য (Chôturarjô Sôtyô) |
Burmese | သစ္စာလေးပါး (MLCTS: θɪʔsà lé bá) |
Chinese | 四聖諦(T) / 四圣谛(S) (Pinyin: sìshèngdì) |
Indonesian | Empat Kebenaran Mulia |
Japanese | 四諦 (Rōmaji: shitai) |
Khmer | អរិយសច្ចបួន (areyasachak buon) |
Korean | 사성제(四聖諦) (sa-seong-je) |
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In Buddhism, the Four Noble Truths (Sanskrit: चत्वार्यार्यसत्यानि, romanized: catvāryāryasatyāni; Pali: cattāri ariyasaccāni; "The Four arya satya") are "the truths of the noble one (the Buddha)," a statement of how things really are when they are seen correctly. The four truths are
- dukkha (not being at ease, 'suffering', from dush-stha, standing unstable). Dukkha is an innate characteristic of transient existence; nothing is forever, this is painful;
- samudaya (origin, arising, combination; 'cause'): together with this transient world and its pain, there is also thirst, craving for and attachment to this transient, unsatisfactory existence;
- nirodha (cessation, ending, confinement): the attachment to this transient world and its pain can be severed or contained by the confinement or letting go of this craving;
- marga (road, path, way): the Noble Eightfold Path is the path leading to the confinement of this desire and attachment, and the release from dukkha.
The four truths appear in many grammatical forms in the ancient Buddhist texts, and are traditionally identified as the first teaching given by the Buddha. While often called one of the most important teachings in Buddhism, they have both a symbolic and a propositional function. Symbolically, they represent the awakening and liberation of the Buddha, and of the potential for his followers to reach the same liberation and freedom as him. As propositions, the Four Truths are a conceptual framework that appear in the Pali canon and early Hybrid Sanskrit Buddhist scriptures, as a part of the broader "network of teachings" (the "dhamma matrix"), which have to be taken together. They provide a conceptual framework for introducing and explaining Buddhist thought, which has to be personally understood or "experienced".
As a proposition, the four truths defy an exact definition, but refer to and express the basic orientation of Buddhism: unguarded sensory contact gives rise to craving and clinging to impermanent states and things, which are dukkha, "unsatisfactory," "incapable of satisfying" and painful. This craving keeps us caught in saṃsāra, "wandering", usually interpreted as the endless cycle of repeated rebirth, and the continued dukkha that comes with it, but also referring to the endless cycle of attraction and rejection that perpetuates the ego-mind. There is a way to end this cycle, namely by attaining nirvana, cessation of craving, whereafter rebirth and the accompanying dukkha will no longer arise again. This can be accomplished by following the eightfold path, confining our automatic responses to sensory contact by restraining oneself, cultivating discipline and wholesome states, and practicing mindfulness and dhyana (meditation).
The function of the four truths, and their importance, developed over time and the Buddhist tradition slowly recognized them as the Buddha's first teaching. This tradition was established when prajna, or "liberating insight", came to be regarded as liberating in itself, instead of or in addition to the practice of dhyana. This "liberating insight" gained a prominent place in the sutras, and the four truths came to represent this liberating insight, as a part of the enlightenment story of the Buddha.
The four truths grew to be of central importance in the Theravada tradition of Buddhism by about the 5th-century CE, which holds that the insight into the four truths is liberating in itself. They are less prominent in the Mahayana tradition, which sees the higher aims of insight into sunyata, emptiness, and following the Bodhisattva path as central elements in their teachings and practice. The Mahayana tradition reinterpreted the four truths to explain how a liberated being can still be "pervasively operative in this world". Beginning with the exploration of Buddhism by western colonialists in the 19th century and the development of Buddhist modernism, they came to be often presented in the west as the central teaching of Buddhism, sometimes with novel modernistic reinterpretations very different from the historic Buddhist traditions in Asia.
The Four Truths
Full set – Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta
The four truths are best known from their presentation in the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta text, which contains two sets of the four truths, while various other sets can be found in the Pāli Canon, a collection of scriptures in the Theravadan Buddhist tradition. The full set, which is most commonly used in modern expositions, contains grammatical errors, pointing to multiple sources for this set and translation problems within the ancient Buddhist community. Nevertheless, they were considered correct by the Pali tradition, which did not correct them.
According to the Buddhist tradition, the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, "Setting the Wheel of Dhamma in Motion", contains the first teachings that the Buddha gave after attaining full awakening, and liberation from rebirth. According to L. S. Cousins, many scholars are of the view that "this discourse was identified as the first sermon of the Buddha only at a later date," and according to professor of religion Carol S. Anderson the four truths may originally not have been part of this sutta, but were later added in some versions. Within this discourse, the four noble truths are given as follows ("bhikkus" is normally translated as "Buddhist monks"):
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of suffering: birth is suffering, aging is suffering, illness is suffering, death is suffering; union with what is displeasing is suffering; separation from what is pleasing is suffering; not to get what one wants is suffering; in brief, the five aggregates subject to clinging are suffering.
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the origin of suffering: it is this craving which leads to re-becoming, accompanied by delight and lust, seeking delight here and there; that is, craving for sensual pleasures, craving for becoming, craving for disbecoming.
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the cessation of suffering: it is the remainderless fading away and cessation of that same craving, the giving up and relinquishing of it, freedom from it, non-reliance on it.
Now this, bhikkhus, is the noble truth of the way leading to the cessation of suffering: it is this noble eightfold path; that is, right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.
According to this sutra, with the complete comprehension of these four truths release from samsara, the cycle of rebirth, was attained:
Knowledge & vision arose in me: 'Unprovoked is my release. This is the last birth. There is now no further becoming.
The comprehension of these four truths by his audience leads to the opening of the Dhamma Eye, that is, the attainment of right vision:
Whatever is subject to origination is subject to cessation.
Basic set
According to K.R. Norman, the basic set is as follows:
- idam dukkham, "this is pain"
- ayam dukkha-samudayo, "this is the origin of pain"
- ayam dukkha-nirodha, "this is the cessation of pain"
- ayam dukkha-nirodha-gamini patipada, "this is the path leading to the cessation of pain." The key terms in the longer version of this expression, dukkha-nirodha-gamini Patipada, can be translated as follows:
- Gamini: leading to, making for
- Patipada: road, path, way; the means of reaching a goal or destination
Mnemonic set
According to K. R. Norman, the Pali canon contains various shortened forms of the four truths, the "mnemonic set", which were "intended to remind the hearer of the full form of the NTs." The earliest form of the mnemonic set was "dukkham samudayo nirodho marga", without the reference to the Pali terms sacca or arya, which were later added to the formula. The four mnemonic terms can be translated as follows:
- Dukkha – "incapable of satisfying", "the unsatisfactory nature and the general insecurity of all conditioned phenomena"; "painful". Dukkha is most commonly translated as "suffering". According to Khantipalo, this is an incorrect translation, since it refers to the ultimately unsatisfactory nature of temporary states and things, including pleasant but temporary experiences. According to Emmanuel, Dukkha is the opposite of sukha, (non-transient) "pleasure", and it is better translated as "pain".
- Samudaya – "origin", "source", "arising", "coming to existence"; "aggregate of the constituent elements or factors of any being or existence", "cluster", "coming together", "combination", "producing cause", "rising". Conjunct of:
- sam - "with, together with";
- udaya - "rising," "swelling up"; "rising up, coming forth"; "elevation, exaltation, rise; growth"; "result, consequence";
- Nirodha – cessation; release; to confine; "prevention, suppression, enclosing, restraint"
- Marga – "path".
Alternative formulations
According to L.S. Cousins, the four truths are not restricted to the well-known form where dukkha is the subject. Other forms take "the world, the arising of the world" or "the āsavas, the arising of the āsavas" as their subject. According to Cousins, "the well-known form is simply shorthand for all of the forms." "The world" refers to the saṅkhāras, that is, all compounded things, or to the six sense spheres.
The various terms all point to the same basic idea of Buddhism, as described in five skandhas and twelve nidānas. In the five skandhas, sense-contact with objects leads to sensation and perception; the saṅkhāra ('inclinations', c.q. craving etc.) determine the interpretation of, and the response to, these sensations and perceptions, and affect consciousness in specific ways. The twelve nidānas describe the further process: craving and clinging (upādāna) lead to bhava (becoming) and jāti (birth).
In the orthodox interpretation, bhava is interpreted as kammabhava, that is , karma, while jāti is interpreted as rebirth: from sensation comes craving, from craving comes karma, from karma comes rebirth. The aim of the Buddhist path is to reverse this causal chain: when there is no (response to) sensation, there is no craving, no karma, no rebirth. In Thai Buddhism, bhava is interpreted as behavior which serves craving and clinging, while jāti is interpreted as the repeated birth of the ego or self-sense, which perpetuates the process of self-serving responses and actions.
Truths for the noble ones
The Pali terms ariya sacca (Sanskrit: arya satya) are commonly translated as "noble truths". This translation is a convention started by the earliest translators of Buddhist texts into English. According to K.R. Norman, this is just one of several possible translations. According to Paul Williams,
here is no particular reason why the Pali expression ariyasaccani should be translated as 'noble truths'. It could equally be translated as 'the nobles' truths', or 'the truths for nobles', or 'the nobilising truths', or 'the truths of, possessed by, the noble ones' In fact the Pali expression (and its Sanskrit equivalent) can mean all of these, although the Pali commentators place 'the noble truths' as the least important in their understanding.
The term "arya" was later added to the four truths. The term ariya (Sanskrit: arya) can be translated as "noble", "not ordinary", "valuable", "precious". "pure". Paul Williams:
The Aryas are the noble ones, the saints, those who have attained 'the fruits of the path', 'that middle path the Tathagata has comprehended which promotes sight and knowledge, and which tends to peace, higher wisdom, enlightenment, and Nibbana'.
The term sacca (Sanskrit: satya) is a central term in Indian thought and religion. It is typically translated as "truth"; but it also means "that which is in accord with reality", or "reality". According to Rupert Gethin, the four truths are "four 'true things' or 'realities' whose nature, we are told, the Buddha finally understood on the night of his awakening." They function as "a convenient conceptual framework for making sense of Buddhist thought." According to K. R. Norman, probably the best translation is "the truth of the noble one (the Buddha)". It is a statement of how things are seen by a Buddha, how things really are when seen correctly. It is the truthful way of seeing. Through not seeing things this way, and behaving accordingly, we suffer.
Symbolic and propositional function
According to Anderson, the four truths have both a symbolic and a propositional function:
... the four noble truths are truly set apart within the body of the Buddha's teachings, not because they are by definition sacred, but because they are both a symbol and a doctrine and transformative within the sphere of right view. As one doctrine among others, the four noble truths make explicit the structure within which one should seek enlightenment; as a symbol, the four noble truths evoke the possibility of enlightenment. As both, they occupy not only a central but a singular position within the Theravada canon and tradition.
As a symbol, they refer to the possibility of awakening, as represented by the Buddha, and are of utmost importance:
hen the four noble truths are regarded in the canon as the first teaching of the Buddha, they function as a view or doctrine that assumes a symbolic function. Where the four noble truths appear in the guise of a religious symbol in the Sutta-pitaka and the Vinaya-pitaka of the Pali canon, they represent the enlightenment experience of the Buddha and the possibility of enlightenment for all Buddhists within the cosmos.
As a proposition, they are part of the matrix or "network of teachings", in which they are "not particularly central", but have an equal place next to other teachings, describing how release from craving is to be reached. A long recognized feature of the Theravada canon is that it lacks an "overarching and comprehensive structure of the path to nibbana." The sutras form a network or matrix, and the four truths appear within this "network of teachings", which have to be taken together. Within this network, "the four noble truths are one doctrine among others and are not particularly central", but are a part of "the entire dhamma matrix". The four noble truths are set and learnt in that network, learning "how the various teachings intersect with each other", and refer to the various Buddhist techniques, which are all explicitly and implicitly part of the passages which refer to the four truths. According to Anderson,
There is no single way of understanding the teachings: one teaching may be used to explain another in one passage; the relationship may be reversed or altered in other talks.
Explanation of the Four Truths
Dukkha and its ending
As a proposition, the four truths defy an exact definition, but refer to and express the basic orientation of Buddhism: sensory contact gives rise to clinging and craving to temporary states and things, which is ultimately unsatisfactory, dukkha, and sustains samsara, the repeated cycle of bhava (becoming, habitual tendencies) and jāti ("birth", interpreted as either rebirth, the coming to be of a new existence; or as the arising of the sense of self as a mental phenomenon). By following the Buddhist path, craving and clinging can be confined, peace of mind and real happiness can be attained, and the repeated cycle of repeated becoming and birth will be stopped.
The truth of dukkha, "incapable of satisfying", "painful", from dush-stha, "standing unstable," is the basic insight that samsara, life in this "mundane world", with its clinging and craving to impermanent states and things" is dukkha, unsatisfactory and painful. We expect happiness from states and things which are impermanent, and therefore cannot attain real happiness.
The truth of samudaya, "arising", "coming together", or dukkha-samudaya, the origination or arising of dukkha, is the truth that samsara, and its associated dukkha arises, or continues, with taṇhā, "thirst", craving for and clinging to these impermanent states and things. In the orthodox view, this clinging and craving produces karma, which leads to renewed becoming, keeping us trapped in rebirth and renewed dissatisfaction. Craving includes kama-tanha, craving for sense-pleasures; bhava-tanha, craving to continue the cycle of life and death, including rebirth; and vibhava-tanha, craving to not experience the world and painful feelings. While dukkha-samudaya, the term in the basic set of the four truths, is traditionally translated and explained as "the origin (or cause) of suffering", giving a causal explanation of dukkha, Brazier and Batchelor point to the wider connotations of the term samudaya, "coming into existence together": together with dukkha arises tanha, thirst. Craving does not cause dukkha, but comes into existence together with dukkha, or the five skandhas. It is this craving which is to be confined, as Kondanna understood at the end of the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta: "whatever arises ceases".
The truth of nirodha, "cessation," "suppression," "renouncing," "letting go", or dukkha-nirodha, the cessation of dukkha, is the truth that dukkha ceases, or can be confined, when one renounces or confines craving and clinging, and nirvana is attained. Alternatively, tanha itself, as a response to dukkha, is to be confined. Nirvana refers to the moment of attainment itself, and the resulting peace of mind and happiness (khlesa-nirvana), but also to the final dissolution of the five skandhas at the time of death (skandha-nirvana or parinirvana); in the Theravada-tradition, it also refers to a transcendental reality which is "known at the moment of awakening". According to Gethin, "modern Buddhist usage tends to restrict 'nirvāṇa' to the awakening experience and reserve 'parinirvāṇa' for the death experience. When nirvana is attained, no more karma is being produced, and rebirth and dissatisfaction will no longer arise again. Cessation is nirvana, "blowing out", and peace of mind. Joseph Goldstein explains:
Ajahn Buddhadasa, a well-known Thai master of the last century, said that when village people in India were cooking rice and waiting for it to cool, they might remark, "Wait a little for the rice to become nibbana". So here, nibbana means the cool state of mind, free from the fires of the defilements. As Ajahn Buddhadasa remarked, "The cooler the mind, the more Nibbana in that moment". We can notice for ourselves relative states of coolness in our own minds as we go through the day.
The truth of magga, refers to the path to the cessation of, or liberation from dukkha c.q. tanha. By following the Noble Eightfold Path, to moksha, liberation, restraining oneself, cultivating discipline, and practicing mindfulness and meditation, one starts to disengage from craving and clinging to impermanent states and things, and rebirth and dissatisfaction will be ended. The term "path" is usually taken to mean the Noble Eightfold Path, but other versions of "the path" can also be found in the Nikayas. The Theravada tradition regards insight into the four truths as liberating in itself.
The well-known eightfold path consists of the understanding that this world is fleeting and unsatisfying, and how craving keeps us tied to this fleeting world; a friendly and compassionate attitude to others; a correct way of behaving; mind-control, which means not feeding on negative thoughts, and nurturing positive thoughts; constant awareness of the feelings and responses which arise; and the practice of dhyana, meditation. The tenfold path adds the right (liberating) insight, and liberation from rebirth.
The four truths are to be internalised, and understood or "experienced" personally, to turn them into a lived reality.
Ending rebirth
The four truths describe dukkha and its ending as a means to reach peace of mind in this life, but also as a means to end rebirth.
According to Geoffrey Samuel, "the Four Noble Truths describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth." By understanding the four truths, one can stop this clinging and craving, attain a pacified mind, and be freed from this cycle of rebirth and redeath. Patrick Olivelle explains that moksha is a central concept in Indian religions, and "literally means freedom from samsara." Melvin E. Spiro further explains that "desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth." When desire ceases, rebirth and its accompanying suffering ceases. Peter Harvey explains:
Once birth has arisen, "ageing and death", and various other dukkha states follow. While saying that birth is the cause of death may sound rather simplistic, in Buddhism it is a very significant statement; for there is an alternative to being born. This is to attain Nirvāna, so bringing an end to the process of rebirth and redeath. Nirvāna is not subject to time and change, and so is known as the 'unborn'; as it is not born it cannot die, and so it is also known as the "deathless". To attain this state, all phenomena subject to birth – the khandhas and nidānas – must be transcended by means of non-attachment.
The last sermon, the Maha-parinibbana Sutta (Last Days of the Buddha, Digha Nikaya 16)", states it as follows:
it is through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by me as well as by you But now, bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming , and there is no fresh becoming.
Other interpretations
According to Bhikkhu Buddhadasa, "birth" does refer not to physical birth and death, but to the birth and death of our self-concept, the "emergence of the ego". According to Buddhadhasa,
... dependent arising is a phenomenon that lasts an instant; it is impermanent. Therefore, Birth and Death must be explained as phenomena within the process of dependent arising in everyday life of ordinary people. Right Mindfulness is lost during contacts of the Roots and surroundings. Thereafter, when vexation due to greed, anger, and ignorance is experienced, the ego has already been born. It is considered as one 'birth'".
Some contemporary teachers tend to explain the four truths psychologically, by taking dukkha to mean mental anguish in addition to the physical pain of life, and interpreting the four truths as a means to attain happiness in this life. In the contemporary Vipassana movement that emerged out of the Theravada Buddhism, freedom and the "pursuit of happiness" have become the main goals, not the end of rebirth, which is hardly mentioned in their teachings.
Yet, though freedom and happiness is a part of the Buddhist teachings, these words refer to something different in traditional Asian Buddhism. According to Gil Fronsdal, "when Asian teachers do talk about freedom, it is primarily in reference to what one is free from – that is, from greed, hate, delusion, grasping, attachment, wrong view, self, and most significantly, rebirth". Nibbana is the final freedom, and it has no purpose beyond itself. In contrast, freedom in the creative modern interpretation of Four Noble Truths and the Eightfold Path means living happily and wisely, "without drastic changes in lifestyle". Such freedom and happiness is not the goal of Four Noble Truths and related doctrines within traditional Buddhism, but the vipassana teachings in the West make no reference to traditional Theravada doctrines, instead they present only the pragmatic and experiential goals in the form of therapy for the audience's current lives. The creative interpretations are driven in part because the foundational premises of Buddhism do not make sense to audiences outside of Asia. According to Spiro, "the Buddhist message is not simply a psychological message", but an eschatological message.
Historical development in early Buddhism
See also: Pre-sectarian BuddhismAccording to Anderson, "the four truths are recognized as perhaps the most important teaching of the Buddha." Yet, as early as 1935 Caroline Rhys Davids wrote that for a teaching so central to Theravada Buddhism, it was missing from critical passages in the Pali canon. According to Gethin, the four truths and the eightfold path are only two lists of "literally hundreds of similar lists covering the whole range of the theory and practice of ancient Buddhism." The position of the four truths within the canon raises questions, and has been investigated throughout the 19th and 20th centuries.
Scholarly analysis of the oldest texts
According to academic scholars, inconsistencies in the oldest texts may reveal developments in the oldest teachings. While the Theravada-tradition holds that the Sutta Pitaka is "the definitive recension of the Buddha-word", and Theravadins argue that it is likely that the sutras date back to the Buddha himself, in an unbroken chain of oral transmission, academic scholars have identified many such inconsistencies, and tried to explain them. Information of the oldest teachings of Buddhism, such as on the Four Noble Truths, has been obtained by analysis of the oldest texts and these inconsistencies, and are a matter of ongoing discussion and research. According to Schmithausen, three positions held by scholars of Buddhism can be distinguished regarding the possibility to retain knowledge of the oldest Buddhism:
- "Stress on the fundamental homogeneity and substantial authenticity of at least a considerable part of the Nikayic materials;"
- "Scepticism with regard to the possibility of retrieving the doctrine of earliest Buddhism;"
- "Cautious optimism in this respect."
Development
Growing importance
Buddhologist Eviatar Shulman proposes that in its original form the Four Truths were rooted in meditative perception of mental events, building on his analysis of the Pāli term ayam which is equivalent, he claims, to an immediate perception, such as this here right now in front of me.
According to Bronkhorst, the four truths may already have been formulated in earliest Buddhism, but did not have the central place they acquired in later buddhism. According to Anderson, only by the time of the commentaries, in the fifth century CE, did the four truths come to be identified in the Theravada tradition as the central teaching of the Buddha. According to Anderson,
... the four noble truths were probably not part of the earliest strata of what came to be recognized as Buddhism, but that they emerged as a central teaching in a slightly later period that still preceded the final redactions of the various Buddhist canons.
According to Feer and Anderson, the four truths probably entered the Sutta Pitaka from the Vinaya, the rules for monastic order. They were first added to enlightenment-stories which contain the Four Jhanas, replacing terms for "liberating insight". From there they were added to the biographical stories of the Buddha.
Substituting "liberating insight"
Scholars have noted inconsistencies in the presentations of the Buddha's enlightenment, and the Buddhist path to liberation, in the oldest sutras. They argue that these inconsistencies show that the Buddhist teachings evolved, either during the lifetime of the Buddha, or thereafter. According to the Japanese scholar Ui, the four truths are not the earliest representation of the Buddha's enlightenment. Instead, they are a rather late theory on the content of the Buddha's enlightenment. According to Vetter and Bronkhorst, the earliest Buddhist path consisted of a set of practices which culminate in the practice of dhyana, leading to a calm of mind and awareness (mindfulness) which according to Vetter is the liberation which is being sought. Later on, "liberating insight" came to be regarded as equally liberating. This "liberating insight" came to be exemplified by prajna, or the insight in the "four truths", but also by other elements of the Buddhist teachings. According to Vetter and Bronkhorst, this growing importance of "liberating insight" was a response to other religious groups in India, which held that a liberating insight was indispensable for moksha, liberation from rebirth. This change is reflected in the canon, where, according to Bronkhorst,
...the accounts which include the Four Noble Truths had a completely different conception of the process of liberation than the one which includes the Four Dhyanas and the destruction of the intoxicants.
According to Vetter and Bonkhorst, the ideas on what exactly constituted this "liberating insight" was not fixed but developed over time. According to Bronkhorst, in earliest Buddhism the four truths did not serve as a description of "liberating insight". Initially the term prajna served to denote this "liberating insight". Later on, prajna was replaced in the suttas by the "four truths". This happened in those texts where practicing the four jhanas preceded the attainment of "liberating insight", and where this practice of the four jhanas then culminates in "liberating insight". This "liberating insight" came to be defined as "insight into the four truths", which is presented as the "liberating insight" which constituted the awakening, or "enlightenment" of the Buddha. When he understood these truths he was "enlightened" and liberated, as reflected in Majjhima Nikaya 26:42: "his taints are destroyed by his seeing with wisdom."
Bronkhorst points to an inconsistency, noting that the four truths refer here to the eightfold path as the means to gain liberation, while the attainment of insight into the four truths is portrayed as liberating in itself. According to Bronkhorst, this is an inconsistency which reveals a change which took place over time in the composition of the sutras. An example of this substitution, and its consequences, is Majjhima Nikaya 36:42–43, which gives an account of the awakening of the Buddha.
According to Schmithausen, the four truths were superseded by pratityasamutpada, and still later, in the Hinayana schools, by the doctrine of the non-existence of a substantial self or person. Schmithausen further states that still other descriptions of this "liberating insight" exist in the Buddhist canon:
"that the five Skandhas are impermanent, disagreeable, and neither the Self nor belonging to oneself"; "the contemplation of the arising and disappearance (udayabbaya) of the five Skandhas"; "the realisation of the Skandhas as empty (rittaka), vain (tucchaka) and without any pith or substance (asaraka).
In contrast, Thanissaro Bikkhu presents the view that the four truths, pratityasamutpada and anatta are inextricably intertwined.
Acquiring the dhamma-eye and destroying the āsavās
In their symbolic function, the sutras present the insight into the four truths as the culmination of the Buddha's path to awakening. In the Vinayapitaka and the Sutta-pitaka they have the same symbolic function, in a reenactment by his listeners of the Buddha's awakening by attaining the dhamma-eye. In contrast, here this insight serves as the starting point to path-entry for his audience. These sutras present a repeated sequence of events:
- Annupubbikathā ("graduated talk"), in which the Buddha explains the four truths; this talk frees the listener from the hindrances;
- This talk opens the dhammacakkhu ("dhamma eye"), and knowledge arises: "all that has the nature of arising has the nature of ending";
- The request to become a member of the Buddhist order;
- A second talk by the Buddha, which destroys the āsavās, impurities;
- The statement that "there are now x arahats in the world."
Yet, in other sutras, where the four truths have a propositional function, the comprehension of the four truths destroys the corruptions. They do so in combination with the practice of the jhanas and the attainment of the divine eye, with which past lives and the working of rebirth are being seen.
According to Anderson, following Schmithausen and Bronkhorst, these two presentations give two different models of the path to liberation, reflecting their function as a symbol and as a proposition. Most likely, the four truths were first associated with the culmination of the path in the destruction of the āsavās, where they substituted the unspecified "liberating insight"; as the canon developed, they became more logically associated with the beginning of the Buddhist path.
Popularisation in the west
According to Anderson there is a strong tendency within scholarship to present the four truths as the most essential teaching of Buddhism. According to Anderson, the four truths have been simplified and popularized in western writings, due to "the colonial project of gaining control over Buddhism." According to Crosby, the Buddhist teachings are reduced to a "simple, single rationalized account", which has parallels in the reinterpretation of the Buddha in western literature.
The presentation of the four truths as one of the most important teachings of the Buddha "has been to reduce the four noble truths to a teaching that is accessible, pliable, and therefore readily appropriated by non-Buddhists." There is a great variety of teachings in the Buddhist literature, which may be bewildering for those who are unaware of this variety. The four truths are easily accessible in this regard, and are "readily by those outside the Buddhist traditions." For example Walpola Rahula's What the Buddha Taught, a widely used introductory text for non-Buddhists, uses the four truths as a framework to present an overview of the Buddhist teachings.
According to Harris, the British in the 19th century crafted new representations of Buddhism and the Buddha. 19th century missionaries studied Buddhism, to be more effective in their missionary efforts. The Buddha was de-mystified, and reduced from a "superhuman" to a "compassionate, heroic human", serving "western historical method and the missionary agenda of situating the Buddha firmly below the divine." The four truths were discovered by the British by reading the Buddhist texts, and were not immediately granted the central position they later received.
The writings of British missionaries show a growing emphasis on the four truths as being central to Buddhism, with somewhat different presentations of them. This colonial project had a strong influence on some strands of Buddhism, culminating in so-called Protestant Buddhism, which incorporated several essentially Protestant attitudes regarding religion, such as the emphasis on written texts. According to Gimello, Rahula's book is an example of this Protestant Buddhism, and "was created in an accommodating response to western expectations, and in nearly diametrical opposition to Buddhism as it had actually been practised in traditional Theravada."
Hendrik Kern proposed in 1882 that the model of the four truths may be an analogy with classical Indian medicine, in which the four truths function as a medical diagnosis, and the Buddha is presented as a physician. Kern's analogy became rather popular, but "there is not sufficient historical evidence to conclude that the Buddha deliberately drew upon a clearly defined medical model for his fourfold analysis of human pain."
According to Anderson, those scholars who did not place the four truths at the center of Buddhism, either "located the four truths in a fuller reading of the Theravada canon and the larger context of South Asian literature", or "located the teaching within an experience of Buddhism as practiced in a contemporary setting." According to Anderson, "these autors suggest a more complex reading of the four noble truths than those who locate the teaching as the key to or as a crucial element within the grand scheme of Buddhism."
Appearance within the discourses
The developing Buddhist tradition inserted the four truths, using various formulations, at various sutras. They are being used both as a symbol of all dhammas and the Buddha's awakening, and as a set of propositions which function within a matrix of teachings. According to Anderson, there is no single way to understand the teachings; one teaching may be used to explain another teaching, and vice versa. The teachings form a network, which should be apprehended as such to understand how the various teachings intersect with each other.
Symbolic function
Mahasaccaka Sutta
The Mahasaccaka Sutta ("The Greater Discourse to Saccaka", Majjhima Nikaya 36) gives one of several versions of the Buddha's way to liberation. He attains the three knowledges, namely knowledge of his former lifes, knowledge of death and rebirth, and knowledge of the destruction of the taints, the Four Noble Truths. After going through the four dhyanas, and gaining the first two knowledges, the story proceeds:
I directed my mind to the knowledge of the destruction of the intoxicants My mind was liberated the knowledge arose that it was liberated.
Bronkhorst dismisses the first two knowledges as later additions, and proceeds to notice that the recognition of the intoxicants is modelled on the four truths. According to Bronkhorst, those are added the bridge the original sequence of "I directed my mind to the knowledge of the destruction of the intoxicants. My mind was liberated", which was interrupted by the addition of the four truths. Bronkhorst points out that those do not fit here, since the four truths culminate in the knowledge of the path to be followed, while the Buddha himself is already liberated at that point.
Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta
According to the Buddhist tradition, the first talk of Gautama Buddha after he attained enlightenment is recorded in the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta ("Setting in Motion the Wheel of Dhamma", Samyutta Nikaya 56.11). The Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta provides details on three stages in the understanding of each truth, for a total of twelve insights. The three stages for understanding each truth are:
- sacca-ñāṇa – knowing the nature of the truth (e.g., acknowledgement, view, reflection)
- kicca-ñāṇa – knowing what needs to be done in connection with that truth (e.g., practice; motivation; directly experiencing)
- kata-ñāṇa – accomplishing what needs to be done (e.g., result, full understanding, knowing)
These three stages of understanding are emphasized particularly in the Theravada tradition, but they are also recognized by some contemporary Mahayana teachers.
According to Cousins, many scholars are of the view that "this discourse was identified as the first sermon of the Buddha only at a later date." According to Stephen Batchelor, the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta contains incongruities, and states that
The First Discourse cannot be treated as a verbatim transcript of what the Buddha taught in the Deer Park, but as a document that has evolved over an unspecified period of time until it reached the form in which it is found today in the canons of the different Buddhist schools.
According to Bronkhorst this "first sermon" is recorded in several sutras, with important variations. In the Vinaya texts, and in the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta which was influenced by the Vinaya texts, the four truths are included, and Kondañña is enlightened when the "vision of Dhamma" arises in him: "whatever is subject to origination is all subject to cessation." Yet, in the Ariyapariyesanā Sutta ("The Noble Search", Majjhima Nikaya 26) the four truths are not included, and the Buddha gives the five ascetics personal instructions in turn, two or three of them, while the others go out begging for food. The versions of the "first sermon" which include the four truths, such as the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, omit this instruction, showing that
...the accounts which include the Four Noble Truths had a completely different conception of the process of liberation than the one which includes the Four Dhyanas and the subsequent destruction of the intoxicants.
According to Bronkhorst, this indicates that the four truths were later added to earlier descriptions of liberation by practicing the four dhyanas, which originally was thought to be sufficient for the destruction of the arsavas. Anderson, following Norman, also thinks that the four truths originally were not part of this sutta, and were later added in some versions.
According to Bronkhorst, the "twelve insights" are probably also a later addition, born out of unease with the substitution of the general term "prajna" for the more specific "four truths".
Maha-parinibbana Sutta
According to the Buddhist tradition, the Maha-parinibbana Sutta (Last Days of the Buddha, Digha Nikaya 16) was given near the end of the Buddha's life. This sutta "gives a good general idea of the Buddha's Teaching:"
And the Blessed One addressed the bhikkhus, saying: "Bhikkhus, it is through not realizing, through not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that this long course of birth and death has been passed through and undergone by me as well as by you. What are these four? They are the noble truth of suffering; the noble truth of the origin of suffering; the noble truth of the cessation of suffering; and the noble truth of the way to the cessation of suffering. But now, bhikkhus, that these have been realized and penetrated, cut off is the craving for existence, destroyed is that which leads to renewed becoming, and there is no fresh becoming."
Thus it was said by the Blessed One. And the Happy One, the Master, further said:
Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths,
Long was the weary path from birth to birth.
When these are known, removed is rebirth's cause,
The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth.
Propositional function
Maha-salayatanika Sutta
The Maha-salayatanika Sutta, Majjhima Nikaya 149:3 plus 149:9, give an alternative presentation of the four truths:
When one abides inflamed by lust, fettered, infatuated, contemplating gratification, ne's bodily and mental troubles increase, one's bodily and mental torments increase, one's bodily and mental fevers increase, and one experiences bodily and mental suffering.
...when one does not know and see as it actually is felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition, then one is inflamed by lust for the eye, for forms, for eye-consciousness, for eye-contact, for felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition .
When one abides uninflamed by lust, unfettered, uninfatuated, contemplating danger one's craving is abandoned. One's bodily and mental troubles are abandoned, one's bodily and mental torments are abandoned, one's bodily and mental fevers are abandoned, and one experiences bodily and mental pleasure.
...when one knows and see as it actually is felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition, then one is not inflamed by lust for the eye, for forms, for eye-consciousness, for eye-contact, for felt as pleasant or painful or neither painful-nor-pleasant that arises with eye-contact as condition .
Emphasis within different traditions
Early Indian Buddhism
The Ekavyāvahārika sect emphasized the transcendence of the Buddha, asserting that he was eternally enlightened and essentially non-physical. According to the Ekavyāvahārika, the words of the Buddha were spoken with one transcendent meaning, and the Four Noble Truths are to be understood simultaneously in one moment of insight. According to the Mahīśāsaka sect, the Four Noble Truths should be meditated upon simultaneously.
Theravada
See also: Vipassana movementAccording to Carol Anderson, the four truths have "a singular position within the Theravada canon and tradition." The Theravada tradition regards insight in the four truths as liberating in itself. As Walpola Rahula states, "when the Truth is seen, all the forces which feverishly produce the continuity of samsara in illusion become calm and incapable of producing any more karma-formations he is free from the 'thirst' for becoming." This liberation can be attained in one single moment, when the four truths are understood together. Within the Theravada tradition, great emphasis is placed upon reading and contemplating The Discourse That Sets Turning the Wheel of Truth, and other suttas, as a means to study the four noble truths and put them into practice. For example, Ajahn Sumedho states:
The Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, the Buddha's teaching on the Four Noble Truths, has been the main reference that I have used for my practice over the years. It is the teaching we used in our monastery in Thailand. The Theravada school of Buddhism regards this sutta as the quintessence of the teachings of the Buddha. This one sutta contains all that is necessary for understanding the Dhamma and for enlightenment."
Within the Theravada-tradition, three different stances on nirvana and the question what happens with the Arhat after death can be found. Nirvana refers to the cessation of the defilements and the resulting peace of mind and happiness (khlesa-nirvana); to the final dissolution of the five skandhas at the time of death (skandha-nirvana or parinirvana); and to a transcendental reality which is "known at the moment of awakening". According to Gethin, "modern Buddhist usage tends to restrict 'nirvāṇa' to the awakening experience and reserve 'parinirvāṇa' for the death experience. According to Geisler and Amano, in the "minimal Theravada interpretation", nirvana is a psychological state, which ends with the dissolution of the body and the total extinction of existence. According to Geisler and Amano, the "orthodox Theravada interpretation" is that nirvana is a transcendent reality with which the self unites. According to Bronkhorst, while "Buddhism preached liberation in this life, i.e. before death", there was also a tendency in Buddhism to think of liberation happening after death. According to Bronkhorst, this
...becomes visible in those canonical passages which distinguish between Nirvana—qualified in Sanskrit and pali as "without a remainder of upadhi/upadi" (anupadhisesa/anupadisesa)—and the "highest and complete enlightenment" (anuttara samyaksambodhi/sammasambodhi). The former occurs at death, the latter in life.
According to Walpola Rahula, the cessation of dukkha is nirvana, the summum bonum of Buddhism, and is attained in this life, not when one dies. Nirvana is "perfect freedom, peace, tranquility and happiness", and "Absolute Truth", which simply is. Jayatilleke also speaks of "the attainment of an ultimate reality". According to Bhikkhu Bodhi, the "elimination of craving culminates not only in the extinction of sorrow, anguish and distress, but in the unconditioned freedom of nibbana, which is won with the ending of repeated rebirth."
According to Spiro, most (lay) Theravada Buddhists do not aspire for nirvana and total extinction, but for a pleasurable rebirth in heaven. According to Spiro, this presents a "serious conflict" since the Buddhist texts and teaching "describe life as suffering and hold up nirvana as the summum bonum." In response to this deviation, "monks and others emphasize that the hope for nirvana is the only legitimate action for Buddhist action." Nevertheless, according to Spiro most Burmese lay Buddhists do not aspire for the extinction of existence which is nirvana.
According to B.R. Ambedkar, the Indian Buddhist Dalit leader, the four truths were not part of the original teachings of the Buddha, but a later aggregation, due to Hindu influences. According to Ambedkar, total cessation of suffering is an illusion; yet, the Buddhist Middle Path aims at the reduction of suffering and the maximizing of happiness, balancing both sorrow and happiness.
Mahayana
The four truths are less prominent in the Mahayana traditions, which emphasize insight into Śūnyatā and the Bodhisattva path as a central elements in their teachings. If the sutras in general are studied at all, it is through various Mahayana commentaries.
According to Makransky the Mahayana Bodhisattva ideal created tensions in the explanation of the four truths. In the Mahayana view, a fully enlightened Buddha does not leave samsara, but remains in the world out of compassion for all sentient beings. The four truths, which aim at ending samsara, do not provide a doctrinal basis for this view, and had to be reinterpreted. In the old view, klesas and karma are the cause of prolonged existence. According to Makransky, "o remove those causes was, at physical death, to extinguish one's conditioned existence, hence to end forever one's participation in the world (Third Truth)." According to Makransky, the question of how a liberated being can still be "pervasively operative in this world" has been "a seminal source of ongoing doctrinal tension over Buddhahood throughout the history of the Mahayana in India and Tibet."
Tibetan Buddhism
Atisha, in his Bodhipathapradīpa ("A Lamp for the Path to Awakening"), which forms the basis for the Lamrim tradition, discerns three levels of motivation for Buddhist practitioners. At the beginning level of motivation, one strives toward a better life in samsara. At the intermediate level, one strives to a liberation from existence in samsara and the end of all suffering. At the highest level of motivation, one strives after the liberation of all living beings. In his commentary on the text, Tsenshap Serkong Rinpoche explains that the four truths are to be meditated upon as a means of practice for the intermediate level.
According to Geshe Tashi Tsering, within Tibetan Buddhism, the four noble truths are studied as part of the Bodhisattva path. They are explained in Mahayana commentaries such as the Abhisamayalamkara, a summary of and commentary on the Prajna Paramita sutras, where they form part of the lower Hinayana teachings. The truth of the path (the fourth truth) is traditionally presented according to a progressive formula of five paths, rather than as the eightfold path presented in Theravada. According to Tsering, the study of the four truths is combined with the study of the sixteen characteristics of the four noble truths.
Some contemporary Tibetan Buddhist teachers have provided commentary on the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta and the noble eightfold path when presenting the dharma to Western students.
The truths are used extensively within Sowa Rigpa (traditional Tibetan medicine) theory.
Nichiren Buddhism
Nichiren Buddhism is based on the teaching of the Japanese priest and teacher Nichiren, who believed that the Lotus Sūtra contained the essence of all of Gautama Buddha's teachings. The third chapter of the Lotus Sutra states that the Four Noble Truths was the early teaching of the Buddha, while the Dharma of the Lotus is the "most wonderful, unsurpassed great Dharma". The teachings on the four noble truths are a provisional teaching, which Shakyamuni Buddha taught according to the people's capacity, while the Lotus Sutra is a direct statement of Shakyamuni's own enlightenment.
Western Buddhism
For many western Buddhists, the rebirth doctrine in the Four Noble Truths teaching is a problematic notion. According to Lamb, "Certain forms of modern western Buddhism see it as purely mythical and thus a dispensable notion." According to Coleman, the focus of most vipassana students in the west "is mainly on meditation practice and a kind of down-to-earth psychological wisdom." According to Damien Keown, westerners find "the ideas of karma and rebirth puzzling." According to Gowans, many Western followers and people interested in exploring Buddhism are skeptical and object to the belief in karma and rebirth foundational to the Four Noble Truths. According to Konik,
Since the fundamental problems underlying early Indian Buddhism and contemporary western Buddhism are not the same, the validity of applying the set of solutions developed by the first to the situation of the second becomes a question of great importance. Simply putting an end to rebirth would not necessarily strike the western Buddhist as the ultimate answer, as it certainly was for early Indian Buddhists.
According to Keown, it is possible to reinterpret the Buddhist doctrines such as the Four Noble Truths, since the final goal and the answer to the problem of suffering is nirvana, and not rebirth. Some Western interpreters have proposed what is sometimes referred to as "naturalized Buddhism". It is devoid of rebirth, karma, nirvana, realms of existence, and other concepts of Buddhism, with doctrines such as the Four Noble Truths reformulated and restated in modernistic terms. This "deflated secular Buddhism" stresses compassion, impermanence, causality, selfless persons, no Boddhisattvas, no nirvana, no rebirth, and a naturalist's approach to well-being of oneself and others.
According to Melford Spiro, this approach undermines the Four Noble Truths, for it does not address the existential question for the Buddhist as to "why live? why not commit suicide, hasten the end of dukkha in current life by ending life". In traditional Buddhism, rebirth continues the dukkha and the path to cessation of dukkha isn't suicide, but the fourth reality of the Four Noble Truths. The "naturalized Buddhism", according to Gowans, is a radical revision to traditional Buddhist thought and practice, and it attacks the structure behind the hopes, needs and rationalization of the realities of human life to traditional Buddhists in East, Southeast and South Asia. According to Keown, it may not be necessary to believe in some of the core Buddhist doctrines to be a Buddhist, but the rebirth, karma, realms of existence and cyclic universe doctrines underpin the Four Noble Truths in Buddhism.
Traditional Buddhist scholars disagree with these modernist Western interpretations. Bhikkhu Bodhi, for example, states that rebirth is an integral part of the Buddhist teachings as found in the sutras, despite the problems that "modernist interpreters of Buddhism" seem to have with it. Thanissaro Bhikkhu, as another example, rejects the "modern argument" that "one can still obtain all the results of the practice without having to accept the possibility of rebirth." He states, "rebirth has always been a central teaching in the Buddhist tradition."
According to Owen Flanagan, the Dalai Lama states that "Buddhists believe in rebirth" and that this belief has been common among his followers. However, the Dalai Lama's belief, adds Flanagan, is more sophisticated than ordinary Buddhists, because it is not the same as reincarnation—rebirth in Buddhism is envisioned as happening without the assumption of an "atman, self, soul", but rather through a "consciousness conceived along the anatman lines". The doctrine of rebirth is considered mandatory in Tibetan Buddhism, and across many Buddhist sects.
According to Christopher Gowans, for "most ordinary Buddhists, today as well as in the past, their basic moral orientation is governed by belief in karma and rebirth". Buddhist morality hinges on the hope of well being in this lifetime or in future rebirths, with nirvana (enlightenment) a project for a future lifetime. A denial of karma and rebirth undermines their history, moral orientation and religious foundations. According to Keown, most Buddhists in Asia do accept these traditional teachings, and seek better rebirth.
Navayana Buddhism
The Navayana, a modernistic interpretation of Buddhism by the Indian leader and Buddhist scholar B. R. Ambedkar, rejected much of traditional Buddhism, including the Four Noble Truths, karma and rebirth, thus turning his new religion into a vehicle for class struggle and social action. According to Ambedkar, Four Noble Truths was "the invention of wrong-headed monks".
See also
- List of Buddhist topics
- Buddhist paths to liberation
- Dependent Origination
- Noble Eightfold Path
- Pariyatti
- Three marks of existence
Notes
- ^ Contemporary Buddhist teacher Mingyur Rinpoche describes the four arya satya as "Four Pure Insights into the Way Things Are". Contemporary scholar Peter Harvey translates arya satya as "True Realities for the Spiritually Ennobled".
- ^ Dukkha is often translated as "suffering," but this translation only covers the general meaning. The exact translation is dependent on the context.
- Peter Harvey, Dukkha, Non-Self, and the Teaching of the Four Noble Truths, in Steven M. Emmanuel, A Companion to Buddhist Philosophy, p.30: ""suffering" is an appropriate translation only in a general, inexact sense In the passage on the first True Reality, dukkha in "birth is dukkha" is an adjective The best translation here is by the English adjective "painful," which can apply to a range of things."
- Analayo (2013b): "Dukkha is often translated as "suffering". Suffering, however, represents only one aspect of dukkha, a term whose range of implications is difficult to capture with a single English word. Dukkha can be derived from the Sanskrit kha, one meaning of which is "the axle-hole of a wheel", and the antithetic prefix duå (= dus), which stands for "difficulty" or "badness". The complete term then evokes the image of an axle not fitting properly into its hole. According to this image, dukkha suggests "disharmony" or "friction". Alternatively dukkha can be related to the Sanskrit stha, "standing" or "abiding", combined with the same antithetic prefix duå. Dukkha in the sense of "standing badly" then conveys nuances of "uneasiness" or of being "uncomfortable". In order to catch the various nuances of "dukkha", the most convenient translation is "unsatisfactoriness", though it might be best to leave the term untranslated."
- Dalai Lama, Thubten Chodron, Approaching the Buddhist Path, p.279 note 2: "Duhkha (P. dukkha) is often translated as "suffering," but this translation is misleading. Its meaning is more nuanced and refers to all unsatisfactory states and experiences, many of which are not explicitly painfull. While the Buddha says that life under the influence of afflictions and polluted karma is unsatisfactory, he does not say that life is suffering."
- Gombrich, What the Buddha Thought, p.10: "there has been a lot of argument over how to translate the word dukkha; and again, the choice of translation must depend heavily on the context. But what is being expressed is that life as we normally experience it is unsatisfactory."
- According to Khantipalo (2003, p. 46), "suffering" is an incorrect translation, since dukkha refers to the ultimately unsatisfactory nature of temporary states and things, including pleasant but temporary experiences.
- According to Emmanuel (2015, p. 30), Dukkha is the opposite of sukha, "pleasure", and it is better translated as "pain".
- Huxter (2016, p. 10): "dukkha (unsatisfactoriness or suffering)...";
- Anderson (2013, pp. 1, 22 with note 4): "(...) the three characteristics of samsara/sankhara (the realm of rebirth): anicca (impermance), dukkha (pain) and anatta (no-self)."
- ^ Graham Harvey: "Siddhartha Gautama found an end to rebirth in this world of suffering. His teachings, known as the dharma in Buddhism, can be summarized in the Four Noble truths." Geoffrey Samuel (2008): "The Four Noble Truths describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth." See also
The Theravada tradition holds that insight into these four truths is liberating in itself. This is reflected in the Pali canon. According to Donald Lopez, "The Buddha stated in his first sermon that when he gained absolute and intuitive knowledge of the four truths, he achieved complete enlightenment and freedom from future rebirth."
The Maha-parinibbana Sutta also refers to this liberation. Carol Anderson: "The second passage where the four truths appear in the Vinaya-pitaka is also found in the Mahaparinibbana-sutta (D II 90–91). Here, the Buddha explains that it is by not understanding the four truths that rebirth continues." Mahaparinibbana-sutta:
On the meaning of moksha as liberation from rebirth, see Patrick Olivelle in the Encyclopædia Britannica.Through not seeing the Four Noble Truths,
Long was the weary path from birth to birth.
When these are known, removed is rebirth's cause,
The root of sorrow plucked; then ends rebirth. - ^ Gethin: "The word satya (Pali sacca) can certainly mean truth, but it might equally be rendered as 'real' or 'actual thing'. That is, we are not dealing here with propositional truths with which we must either agree or disagree, but with four 'true things' or 'realities' whose nature, we are told, the Buddha finally understood on the night of his awakening. This is not to say that the Buddha's discourses do not contain theoretical statements of the nature of suffering, its cause, its cessation, and the path to its cessation, but these descriptions function not so much as dogmas of the Buddhist faith as a convenient conceptual framework for making sense of Buddhist thought."
- ^ See:
* Gogerly (1861): "1. That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms. 2. That its continuance results from a continued desire of existence."
*Perry Schmidt-Leukel: "Thirst can be temporarily quenched but never brought to final stillness. It is in this sense that thirst is the cause of suffering, duhkha. And because of this thirst, the sentient beings remain bound to samsara, the cycle of constant rebirth and redeath: it is this craving which leads to renewed existence as the Second Noble Truth."
* See also Williams & Wynne, Spiro. - ^ Buddhist modernism and some Theravadins have reinterpreted these teachings as "birth of ego". See, for example Payutto, and Buddhist modernism#West: Naturalized Buddhism.
- ^ On samsara, rebirth and redeath:
* Mahasatipatthana-sutta: "And what, bhkkhus, is the noble truth that is the arising of pain? This is craving that leads to rebirth."
* accesstoisight.org: "Because of our ignorance (avijja) of these Noble Truths, because of our inexperience in framing the world in their terms, we remain bound to samsara, the wearisome cycle of birth, aging, illness, death, and rebirth."
* Paul Williams: "All rebirth is due to karma and is impermanent. Short of attaining enlightenment, in each rebirth one is born and dies, to be reborn elsewhere in accordance with the completely impersonal causal nature of one's own karma. The endless cycle of birth, rebirth, and redeath, is samsara."
* Buswell and Lopez on "rebirth": "An English term that does not have an exact correlate in Buddhist languages, rendered instead by a range of technical terms, such as the Sanskrit PUNARJANMAN (lit. "birth again") and PUNABHAVAN (lit. "re-becoming"), and, less commonly, the related PUNARMRTYU (lit. 'redeath')."
The term Agatigati or Agati gati (plus a few other terms) is generally translated as 'rebirth, redeath'; see any Pali-English dictionary; e.g. p. 94-95 of Rhys Davids & William Stede, where they list five Sutta examples with rebirth and re-death sense.
See also punarmrityu - ^ Warder refers to Majjhima Nikaya 75: "I gave up the desire for pleasure I did not long for them Now what was the cause? That delight, Māgandiya, which is apart from pleasures, apart, from bad principles, which even stands completely surpassing divine happiness, enjoying that delight I did not long for inferior ones, did not take pleasure in them."
- ^ Ending rebirth:
* Graham Harvey: "The Third Noble Truth is nirvana. The Buddha tells us that an end to suffering is possible, and it is nirvana. Nirvana is a "blowing out", just as a candle flame is extinguished in the wind, from our lives in samsara. It connotes an end to rebirth"
* Spiro: "The Buddhist message then, as I have said, is not simply a psychological message, i.e. that desire is the cause of suffering because unsatisfied desire produces frustration. It does contain such a message to be sure; but more importantly it is an eschatological message. Desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth; and the extinction of desire leads to deliverance from suffering because it signals release from the Wheel of Rebirth."
* John J. Makransky: "The third noble truth, cessation (nirodha) or nirvana, represented the ultimate aim of Buddhist practice in the Abhidharma traditions: the state free from the conditions that created samsara. Nirvana was the ultimate and final state attained when the supramundane yogic path had been completed. It represented salvation from samsara precisely because it was understood to comprise a state of complete freedom from the chain of samsaric causes and conditions, i.e., precisely because it was unconditioned (asamskrta)."
* Walpola Rahula: "Let us consider a few definitions and descriptions of Nirvana as found in the original Pali texts 'It is the complete cessation of that very thirst (tanha), giving it up, renouncing it, emancipation from it, detachment from it.' 'The abandoning and destruction of craving for these Five Aggregates of Attachment: that is the cessation of dukkha. 'The Cessation of Continuity and becoming (Bhavanirodha) is Nibbana.'" - ^ For example:
- Ven. Dr. Rewata Dhamma: The Four Noble Truths are: 1. The Noble Truth of Suffering (dukkha); 2. The Noble Truth of the origin of suffering (samudaya); 3. The Noble Truth of the cessation of suffering (nirodha); 4. The Noble Truth of the path leading to the cessation of suffering (marga).
- Bhikkhu Bodhi: "The Four Noble Truths are as follows: 1. The truth of Dukkha; 2. The truth of the origin of Dukkha; 3. The truth of the cessation of Dukkha; 4. The truth of the path, the way to liberation from Dukkha".
- Geshe Tashi Tsering: "The four noble truths are: 1. The noble truth of suffering; 2. The noble truth of the origin of suffering; 3. The noble truth of the cessation of suffering and the origin of suffering; 4. The noble truth of the path that leads to the cessation of suffering and the origin of suffering."
- Joseph Goldstein: "The four noble truths are the truth of suffering, its cause, its end, and the path to that end.
- Professor of religion, Kalamazoo College; Co-Editor of the Journal of Buddhist–Christian Studies.
- Ajahn Sucitto states: "So the four truths (ariya sacca) are generally called "noble" truths, although one might also translate ariya as "precious", "
- '"Truth", satya (Sanskrit), sacca (Pali), derived from sat, being, how it is.
- Gogerly (1861): "1. That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms. 2. That its continuance results from a continued desire of existence."
- According to Schmitthausen, as cited by James egge, the four truths do not mention karma, but solely declare craving to be the cause of misery and rebirth.
- Another variant, which may be condensed to the eightfold or tenfold path, starts with a Tathagatha entering this world. A layman hears his teachings, decides to leave the life of a householder, starts living according to the moral precepts, guards his sense-doors, practices mindfulness and the four jhanas, gains the three knowledges, understands the Four Noble Truths and destroys the taints, and perceives that he's liberated.
- Patrick Olivelle: "Moksha, also spelled mokṣa, also called mukti, in Indian philosophy and religion, liberation from the cycle of death and rebirth (samsara). Derived from the Sanskrit word muc ("to free"), the term moksha literally means freedom from samsara. This concept of liberation or release is shared by a wide spectrum of religious traditions, including Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism.
- Melvin E. Spiro: "Desire is the cause of suffering because desire is the cause of rebirth; and the extinction of desire leads to deliverance from suffering because it signals release from the Wheel of Rebirth."
- The Vipassana-movement originated in colonial Burma, in response to the British colonial regime. While traditional Theravada saw little room for meditation practice, a subordinate role for lay Buddhists, and the attainment of nirvana as impossible in our times, reformists advocated the practice of meditation by lay Buddhists, as a means to preserve the pre-colonial order, which was based on Buddhism. Nirvana was suddenly deemed attainable, also for lay Buddhists. The Burmese reformists had a profound influence in the Theravada world, and also in the US since the 1970s, shaping the popular understanding of Buddhism.
- Stephen Batchelor states, "Such craving is at the root of greed, hatred, and bewilderment that prompt one to commit acts that cause one to be reborn after death in more or less favourable conditions in samsara. Although I have presented this formulation of the existential dilemma and its resolution in Buddhist terms, the same soteriological framework is shared by Hindus and Jains. (...) So embedded is this Indian soteriological framework in Buddhism that Buddhists might find it unintelligible that one would even consider questioning it. For to dispense with such key doctrines as rebirth, the law of kamma, and liberation from the cycle of birth and death would surely undermine the entire edifice of Buddhism itself. Yet for those who have grown up outside of Indian culture, who feel at home in a modernity informed by the natural sciences, to then be told that one cannot 'really' practise the dharma unless one adheres to the tenets of ancient Indian soteriology makes little sense. The reason people can no longer accept these beliefs need not be because they reject them as false, but because such views are too much at variance with everything else they know and believe about the nature of themselves and the world. They simply do not work anymore, and the intellectual gymnastics one needs to perform to make them work seem casuistic and, for many, unpersuasive. They are metaphysical beliefs, in that (like belief in God) they can neither be convincingly demonstrated nor refuted."
- ^ B. Alan Wallace states, "The Theravada Buddhist worldview is originally based on the Pali Buddhist canon, as interpreted by the great fifth-century commentator Buddhaghosa and later Buddhist scholars and contemplatives. For the immigrant Theravada Buddhist laity, the central feature of this worldview is the affirmation of the reality of reincarnation and karma. The possibility of achieving nirvana is primarily a concern for Buddhist monastics, while the laity are more concerned with avoiding karma that would propel them to a miserable rebirth, and with accumulating meritorious karma that will lead to a favorable rebirth and, in the long run, to ultimate liberation. (...) As a direct result of their belief in the efficacy of karma, Theravada lay Buddhists commonly make offerings of food, goods, and money to the ordained Sangha. Such meritorious conduct is thought to lead to a better rebirth either for themselves or for their deceased loved ones, depending on how the merit is dedicated by the person who performs this service."
- ^ See:
- La Vallee Possin (1937), Musila et Narada; reprinted in Gombrich (2006), How Buddhism Began, appendix
- Erich Frauwallner (1953), Geschichte der indischen Philosophie, Band Der Buddha und der Jina (pp. 147–272)
- Andre Bareau (1963), Recherches sur la biographiedu Buddha dans les Sutrapitaka et les Vinayapitaka anciens, Ecole Francaise d'Extreme-Orient
- Schmithausen, On some Aspects of Descriptions or Theories of 'Liberating Insight' and 'Enlightenment' in Early Buddhism. In: Studien zum Jainismus und Buddhismus (Gedenkschrift für Ludwig Alsdorf), hrsg. von Klaus Bruhn und Albrecht Wezler, Wiesbaden 1981, 199–250.
- Griffiths, Paul (1981), "Concentration or Insight; The Problematic of Theravada Buddhist Meditation-theory", The Journal of the American Academy of Religion (4): 605–624, doi:10.1093/jaarel/XLIX.4.605
- K.R. Norman, Four Noble Truths
- Bronkhorst 1993, chapter 8
- Tilman Vetter (1988), The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism, by Tilmann Vetter
- Richard F. Gombrich (2006) . How Buddhism Began: The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-19639-5., chapter four
- Anderson 1999
- Wynne 2007
- Bhikkhu Sujato & Bhikkhu Brahmali, p. 4: "Most academic scholars of Early Buddhism cautiously affirm that it is possible that the EBTS contain some authentic sayings of the Buddha. We contend that this drastically understates the evidence. A sympathetic assessment of relevant evidence shows that it is very likely that the bulk of the sayings in the EBTS that are attributed to the Buddha were actually spoken by him. It is very unlikely that most of these sayings are inauthentic.
- Well-known proponents of the first position are:
* A.K. Warder. According to A.K. Warder, in his 1970 publication "Indian Buddhism", from the oldest extant texts a common kernel can be drawn out, namely the Bodhipakkhiyādhammā. According to Warder, c.q. his publisher: "This kernel of doctrine is presumably common Buddhism of the period before the great schisms of the fourth and third centuries BC. It may be substantially the Buddhism of the Buddha himself, although this cannot be proved: at any rate it is a Buddhism presupposed by the schools as existing about a hundred years after the parinirvana of the Buddha, and there is no evidence to suggest that it was formulated by anyone else than the Buddha and his immediate followers."
* Richard Gombrich: "I have the greatest difficulty in accepting that the main edifice is not the work of a single genius. By "the main edifice" I mean the collections of the main body of sermons, the four Nikāyas, and of the main body of monastic rules." - A proponent of the second position is Ronald Davidson: "While most scholars agree that there was a rough body of sacred literature (disputed)(sic) that a relatively early community (disputed)(sic) maintained and transmitted, we have little confidence that much, if any, of surviving Buddhist scripture is actually the word of the historic Buddha."
- Well-known proponent of the third position are:
* J.W. de Jong: "It would be hypocritical to assert that nothing can be said about the doctrine of earliest Buddhism the basic ideas of Buddhism found in the canonical writings could very well have been proclaimed by him , transmitted and developed by his disciples and, finally, codified in fixed formulas."
* Johannes Bronkhorst: "This position is to be preferred to (ii) for purely methodological reasons: only those who seek may find, even if no success is guaranteed."
* Donald Lopez: "The original teachings of the historical Buddha are extremely difficult, if not impossible, to recover or reconstruct." - Anderson: "However, the four noble truths do not always appear in stories of the Buddha's enlightenment where we might expect to find them. This feature may indicate that the four noble truths emerged into the canonical tradition at a particular point and slowly became recognized as the first teaching of the Buddha. Speculations about early and late teachings must be made relative to other passages in the Pali canon because of a lack of supporting extratextual evidence. Nonetheless, it is still possible to suggest a certain historical development of the four noble truths within the Pali canon. What we will find is a doctrine that came to be identified as the central teaching of the Buddha by the time of the commentaries in the fifth century C.E."
- Anderson refers to Léon Feer, who already in 1870 "suggested the possibility that the four noble truths emerged into Buddhist literature through vinaya collections." She also refers to Bareau, who noticed the consistency between the two versions in the Mahavagga, part of the Vinaya, and the Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta of the Buddha's enlightenment: "As Bareau noted, the consistency between these two versions of the Buddha's enlightenment is an indication that the redactors of the Theravada canon probably brought the two accounts into agreement with each other at a relatively late point in the formation of the canon.
Leon Feer had already suggested in 1870 that the versions of the four noble truths found in the sutras and suttas were derived from the vinaya rescensions in the larger body of Buddhist literature; Bareau's conclusion builds on this claim." - According to Schmithausen, in his often-cited article On some Aspects of Descriptions or Theories of 'Liberating Insight' and 'Enlightenment' in Early Buddhism, the mention of the four noble truths as constituting "liberating insight", which is attained after mastering the Rupa Jhanas, is a later addition to texts such as Majjhima Nikaya 36.
- Anderson refers to research by K.R. Norman, Bareau, Skilling, Schmithausen and Bronkhorst.
- Note that dhyana is not the same as samatha, the calming of the mind by one-pointedly concentration. While dhyana also leads to a calm of mind, it aids in developing mindfulness, which is necessary to be aware of the arising of disturbing, selfish, thoughts and emotions, and to counter them. Wynne: "...the Buddha taught a 'middle way' between pure meditation and cognitive practices. The states of absorption induced by meditation were considered useful and necessary, but, in distinction from the meditative mainstream, their ultimate aim was insight. For the Buddha, it was vitally important that the meditative adept should apply his concentrative state to the practice of mindfulness (Sn 1070: satima; Sn 1111: ajjhattañ ca bahiddha ca nabhinandato; Sn 1113: ajjhattañ ca bahiddha ca natthi ti passato), and work towards the attainment of insight. According to this view, meditation alone, the goal of the meditative mainstream, would have been harshly criticized in the earliest Buddhism."
- Tillmann Vetter: "Very likely the cause was the growing influence of a non-Buddhist spiritual environment·which claimed that one can be released only by some truth or higher knowledge. In addition the alternative (and perhaps sometimes competing) method of discriminating insight (fully established after the introduction of the four noble truths) seemed to conform so well to this claim."
According to Bronkhorst, this happened under influence of the "mainstream of meditation", that is, Vedic-Brahmanical oriented groups, which believed that the cessation of action could not be liberating, since action can never be fully stopped. Their solution was to postulate a fundamental difference between the inner soul or self and the body. The inner self is unchangeable, and unaffected by actions. By insight into this difference, one was liberated. To equal this emphasis on insight, Buddhists presented insight into their most essential teaching as equally liberating. What exactly was regarded as the central insight "varied along with what was considered most central to the teaching of the Buddha." - "Enlightenment" is a typical western term, which bears its own, specific western connotations, meanings and interpretations.
- Majjhima Nikaya 26
- Anguttara Nikaya II.45 (PTS)
- Samyutta Nikaya III.140–142 (PTS)
- In effect to the exposition of the four truths, as presented in the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta, the "dustless, stainless Dhamma eye" arose to Kondañña, stating: "Whatever is subject to origination is all subject to cessation."
- Whereas Gogerly wrote in 1861 "That sorrow is connected with existence in all its forms hat its continuance results from a continued desire of existence", Spencer Hardy wrote in 1866 that "there is sorrow connected with every mode of existence; that the cause of sorrow is desire." Childers, drawing on Gogerly and Hardy, writes that "existence is suffering; human passion (tanhã – desire) is the cause of continued existence."
- Gimello (2004), as quoted in Taylor (2007).
- Kern's model:
- The truth of dukkha: identifying the illness and the nature of the illness (the diagnosis)
- The truth of origin: identifying the causes of the illness
- The truth of cessation: identifying a cure for the illness (the prognosis)
- The truth of the path: recommending a treatment for the illness that can bring about a cure (the prescription)
- See,
- Majjhima Nikaya 26, "The Noble Search", also gives an account, which is markedly different, omitting the ascetic practices and the four truths.
- Which keep one trapped in samsara.
- Translation Bhikkhu Bodhi (2000), Samyutta Nikaya, SN 56.11, p. 1846. See also Anderson (2001), Pain and its Ending, p. 69.
- MN 26.17 merely says "This will serve for the striving of a clansman intent on striving.' And I sat down there thinking: 'This will serve for striving.' According to Bhikkhu Bodhi Majjhima Nikaya 36 then continuous with the extreme ascetic practices, which are omitted in MN 26. In verse 18, the Buddha has attained Nirvana, being secured from bondage by birth, ageing, sickness and death, referring to the truths of dependent origination and "the stilling of all formations, the relinquishing of all attachments, the destruction of craving, dispassion, cessation."
- According to Cousins, Anderson misunderstands Norman in this respect, but does "not think that this misunderstanding of Norman's position critically affects Anderson's thesis. Even if these arguments do not prove that the four truths are definitely a later insertion in the Dhammacakkapavattana-sutta, it is certainly possible to take the position that the sutta itself is relatively late."
- Walpola Rahula:
- "When wisdom is developed and cultivated according to the Fourth Noble Truth (the next to be taken up), it sees the secret of life, the reality of things as they are. When the secret is discovered, when the Truth is seen, all the forces which feverishly produce the continuity of saṃsāra in illusion become calm and incapable of producing any more karma-formations, because there is no more illusion, no more 'thirst' for continuity."
- "The remaining two factors, namely Right Thought and Right Understanding go to constitute Wisdom."
- "Right Understanding is the understanding of things as they are, and it is the Four Noble Truths that explain things as they really are. Right Understanding therefore is ultimately reduced to the understanding of the Four Noble Truths. This understanding is the highest wisdom which sees the Ultimate Reality."
- Gethin: "(I) it is the extinguishing of the defilements of greed, hatred, and delusion; (2) it is the final condition of the Buddha and arhats after death consequent upon the extinction of the defilements; (3) it is the unconditioned realm known at the moment of awakening.
- According to Rahula, in What the Buddha Taught,
According to Gombrich this distinction between apophatic and cataphatic approaches can be found in all religions. Rahula gives an overview of negative statements of nirvana, whereafter he states:... if Nirvāṇa is to be expressed and explained in positive terms, we are likely immediately to grasp an idea associated with those terms, which may be quite the contrary. Therefore it is generally expressed in negative terms."
Because Nirvana is thus expressed in negative terms, there are many who have got a wrong notion that it is negative, and expresses self-annihilation. Nirvāṇa is definitely no annihilation of self, because there is no self to annihilate. If at all, it is the annihilation of the illusion of the false idea of self.
It is incorrect to say that Nirvāṇa is negative or positive. The ideas of 'negative' and 'positive' are relative, and are within the realm of duality. These terms cannot be applied to Nirvāṇa, Absolute Truth, which is beyond duality and relativity
Nirvāṇa is neither cause nor effect. It is beyond cause and effect. Truth is not a result nor an effect. It is not produced like a mystic, spiritual, mental state, such as dhyāna or samādhi. TRUTH IS. NIRVĀṆA IS.
Rahula refers to the Dhātuvibhaṅga-sutta (the Majjhima-nikāya 140) for his interpretation of "Nirvāṇa as Absolute Truth", which, according to Rahula, says:
O bhikkhu, that which is unreality (mosadhamma) is false; that which is reality (amosadhamma), Nibbāna, is Truth (Sacca). Therefore, O bhikkhu, a person so endowed is endowed with this Absolute Truth. For, the Absolute Noble Truth (paramaṃ ariyasaccaṃ) is Nibbāna, which is Reality.'
While Jayatilleke translates amosadhamma as "ineffable", Thanissaro Bhikkhu gives a somewhat different translation:
His release, being founded on truth, does not fluctuate, for whatever is deceptive is false; Unbinding—the undeceptive—is true. Thus a monk so endowed is endowed with the highest determination for truth, for this—Unbinding, the undeceptive—is the highest noble truth.
In response to Rahula, Richard Gombrich states that:
In proclaiming (in block capitals) that 'Truth is', Rahula has for a moment fallen into Upanisadic mode. Since truth can only be a property of propositions, which have subjects and predicates, and nirvana is not a proposition, it makes no sense in English to say that nirvana is truth. The confusion arises, perhaps, because the Sanskrit word satyam and the corresponding Pali word saccam can indeed mean either 'truth' or 'reality'. But in our language this will not work.
Richard Gombrich also states that Rahula's book would more aptly be titled What Buddhagosa Taught. According to David Kalupahana, Buddhagosa was influenced by Mahayana Buddhism, and introduced "the substantialist as well as essentialist standpoints of the Sarvastavadins and Sautrantikas."
- See also:
* James Ford, The Karma and Rebirth Debate Within Contemporary Western Buddhism: Some Links to Follow
* Manon Welles, Secular Buddhism vs. Traditional Buddhism: 6 Key Differences
* Alan Peta, Reincarnation and Buddhism: Here We Go Again - According to Coleman, the goal in Theravada Buddhism "is to uproot the desires and defilements in order to attain nibbana (nirvana in Sanskrit) and win liberation from the otherwise endless round of death and rebirth. But few Western Vipassana teachers pay much attention to the more metaphysical aspects of such concepts as rebirth and nibbana, and of course very few of their students are celibate monks. Their focus is mainly on meditation practice and a kind of down-to-earth psychological wisdom. "As a result," one respected Vipassana teacher writes, "many more Americans of European descent refer to themselves as Vipassana students rather than as students of Theravada Buddhism."
- Gowans groups the objections into three categories. The first objection can be called "consistency objection", which asks if "there is no self (atman, soul), then what is reborn and how does karma work?". The second objection can be called "naturalism objection", which asks "can rebirth be scientifically proven, what evidence is there that rebirth happens". The third objection can be called "morality objection", which asks "why presume that an infant born with an illness, is because of karma in previous life" as seems implied by Majjhima Nikāya section 3.204 for example. Gowans provides a summary of prevailing answers, clarifications and explanations proffered by practicing Buddhists.
- Prothereo describes how Theosophist Henry Steel Olcott (1832–1907) reinterpreted Buddhism: "In addition to a restatement of the Four Noble Truths and the Five Precepts for lay Buddhists, the fourteen propositions included: an affirmation of religious tolerance and of the evolution of the universe, a rejection of supernaturalism, heaven or hell, and superstition, and an emphasis on education and the use of reason."
- According to Owen Flanagan, the proportion of people in North America that believe in heaven is about the same as the proportion of East and Southeast Asia who believe in rebirth. But, 'rebirth' is considered superstitious by many in the West while 'heaven' is not, adds Flanagan, though a reflective naturalistic approach demands that both 'heaven' and 'rebirth' be equally questioned". According to Donald S. Lopez, Buddhist movements in the West have reconstructed a "Scientific Buddha" and a "modern Buddhism" unknown in Asia, "one that may never have existed there before the late 19-century".
- Bhikkhu Bodhi: "Newcomers to Buddhism are usually impressed by the clarity, directness, and earthy practicality of the Dhamma as embodied in such basic teachings as the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path, and the threefold training. These teachings, as clear as day-light, are accessible to any serious seeker looking for a way beyond suffering. When, however, these seekers encounter the doctrine of rebirth, they often balk, convinced it just doesn't make sense. At this point, they suspect that the teaching has swerved off course, tumbling from the grand highway of reason into wistfulness and speculation. Even modernist interpreters of Buddhism seem to have trouble taking the rebirth teaching seriously. Some dismiss it as just a piece of cultural baggage, "ancient Indian metaphysics", that the Buddha retained in deference to the world view of his age. Others interpret it as a metaphor for the change of mental states, with the realms of rebirth seen as symbols for psychological archetypes. A few critics even question the authenticity of the texts on rebirth, arguing that they must be interpolations.
A quick glance at the Pali suttas would show that none of these claims has much substance. The teaching of rebirth crops up almost everywhere in the Canon, and is so closely bound to a host of other doctrines that to remove it would virtually reduce the Dhamma to tatters. Moreover, when the suttas speak about rebirth into the five realms—the hells, the animal world, the spirit realm, the human world, and the heavens—they never hint that these terms are meant symbolically. To the contrary, they even say that rebirth occurs "with the breakup of the body, after death," which clearly implies they intend the idea of rebirth to be taken quite literally." - Thanissaro Bhikkhu: "A second modern argument against accepting the canonical accounts of what's known in awakening—and in particular, the knowledge of rebirth achieved in awakening—is that one can still obtain all the results of the practice without having to accept the possibility of rebirth. After all, all the factors leading to suffering are all immediately present to awareness, so there should be no need, when trying to abandon them, to accept any premises about where they may or may not lead in the future.
This objection, however, ignores the role of appropriate attention on the path. As we noted above, one of its roles is to examine and abandon the assumptions that underlie one's views on the metaphysics of personal identity. Unless you're willing to step back from your own views—such as those concerning what a person is, and why that makes rebirth impossible—and subject them to this sort of examination, there's something lacking in your path. You'll remain entangled in the questions of inappropriate attention, which will prevent you from actually identifying and abandoning the causes of suffering and achieving the full results of the practice.
In addition, the terms of appropriate attention—the four noble truths—are not concerned simply with events arising and passing away in the present moment. They also focus on the causal connections among those events, connections that occur both in the immediate present and over time. If you limit your focus solely to connections in the present while ignoring those over time, you can't fully comprehend the ways in which craving causes suffering: not only by latching on to the four kinds of nutriment, but also giving rise to the four kinds of nutriment as well. - According to Konik:
No doubt, according to the early Indian Buddhist tradition, the Buddha's great discovery, as condensed in his experience of nirvana, involved the remembrance of his many former existences, presupposing as fact the reality of a never-ending process of rebirth as a source of deep anxiety, and an acceptance of the Buddha's overcoming of that fate as ultimate liberation.
- The Dalai Lama himself is regarded to be an incarnation of the thirteen previous Dalai Lamas, who are all manifestations of Avalokitasvara.
- Merv Foweler: "For a vast majority of Buddhists in Theravadin countries, however, the order of monks is seen by lay Buddhists as a means of gaining the most merit in the hope of accumulating good karma for a better rebirth."
- The vast majority of Buddhist lay people, states Kevin Trainor, have historically pursued Buddhist rituals and practices motivated with rebirth into Deva realm. Fowler and others concur with Trainor, stating that better rebirth, not nirvana, has been the primary focus of a vast majority of lay Buddhists. This they attempt through merit accumulation and good kamma.
- K.R. Norman, as quoted by Williams, Tribe & Wynne 2002, p. 41; see also Keown 2013, pp. 48–62
- Four Noble Truths: BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY, Encyclopaedia Britannica: "Although the term Four Noble Truths is well known in English, it is a misleading translation of the Pali term Chattari-ariya-saccani (Sanskrit: Chatvari-arya-satyani), because noble (Pali: ariya; Sanskrit: arya) refers not to the truths themselves but to those who recognize and understand them. A more accurate rendering, therefore, might be "four truths for the noble" ";
Arhat (Buddhism), Encyclopædia Britannica - Anderson (2004, pp. 295–297): "This, bhikkhus, is the noble truth that is suffering. Birth is suffering; old age is suffering; illness is suffering; death is suffering; sorrow and grief, physical and mental suffering, and disturbance are suffering. In short, all life is suffering, according to the Buddha's first sermon."
- Anderson 2004, pp. 295–297: "The second truth is samudaya (arising or origin). To end suffering, the four noble truths tell us, one needs to know how and why suffering arises. The second noble truth explains that suffering arises because of craving, desire, and attachment."
- When taking dukkha literal as suffering, taṇhā is often interpreted in western languages as the "cause" of "suffering," but tanha can also be interpreted as the factor tying us to physical and emotional suffering, or as a response to physical and emotional suffering, trying to escape it;
- Anderson 2004, pp. 295–297: "The third truth follows from the second: If the cause of suffering is desire and attachment to various things, then the way to end suffering is to eliminate craving, desire, and attachment. The third truth is called nirodha, which means 'ending' or 'cessation'. To stop suffering, one must stop desiring."
- Anderson 2004, pp. 295–297: "This, bhikkhus, is the noble truth that is the way leading to the ending of suffering. This is the eightfold path of the noble ones: right view, right intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration. The Buddha taught the fourth truth, maarga (Pali, magga), the path that has eight parts, as the means to end suffering."
References
- ^ Williams, Tribe & Wynne 2002, p. 41.
- ^ Monier-Williams 1899, p. 483, entry note: .
- ^ Analayo (2013b).
- ^ Beckwith (2015), p. 30.
- ^ Alexander (2019), p. 36.
- Keown 2013, pp. 50–52.
- Keown 2013, pp. 53–55.
- ^ Brazier 2001.
- ^ Batchelor 2012, pp. 95–97.
- ^ Buswell & Lopez 2014, p. "nirodha".
- ^ Anderson 2001, p. 96.
- Keown 2013, pp. 56–58.
- Keown 2013, pp. 58–60.
- ^ Norman 2003, pp. 219, 222.
- Anderson 1999, p. 56, Quote: "There are different grammatical forms in which the four noble truths appear throughout the canonical corpus; there is no one formula for the four noble truths.".
- Anderson 1999, p. 55, Quote: "As the context of the Buddha's first talk on dhamma, the four noble truths are recognized as perhaps the most important teaching of the Buddha.".
- Anderson 1999, pp. 223–231.
- Anderson 1999, p. 56.
- Anderson 1999, p. 55, Quote: "The four noble truths are an important part of the Buddha's biography that is recorded partially in the Pali Tipitaka as well as in the Tripitaka recorded in Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit. were at the center of a specific set of teaching about the Buddha, his teachings, and the path.".
- ^ Anderson 2001, p. 85.
- ^ Anderson 2001, p. 86.
- ^ Makransky 1997, pp. 27–28.
- ^ Gethin 1998, p. 59.
- ^ Nyanatiloka 1980, p. 65.
- ^ Khantipalo 2003, p. 41.
- ^ Emmanuel 2015, p. 30.
- ^ Williams, Tribe & Wynne 2002, pp. 74–75.
- ^ Payutto, Dependent Origination: the Buddhist Law of Causality
- Warder 1999, pp. 45–46.
- ^ Buswell & Lopez 2003, p. 304.
- ^ Raju 1985, pp. 147–151.
- ^ Eliot 2014, pp. 39–41.
- Anderson 1999, p. 55, Quote: "However, the four noble truths do not always appear in the stories of the Buddha's enlightenment where we might expect to find them. This feature may indicate that the four noble truths emerged into the canonical tradition at some point and slowly became recognized as the first teaching of the Buddha, .".
- ^ Bronkhorst 1993, pp. 99–100, 102–111.
- ^ Anderson 1999, p. .
- ^ Gombrich 1997, pp. 99–102.
- ^ Bronkhorst 1993, pp. 93–111.
- ^ Anderson 1999, pp. 55–56.
- ^ Anderson 1999, pp. 230–231.
- ^ Carter 1987, p. 3179.
- ^ Carter 1987, pp. 3179–3180.
- ^ Makransky 1997, pp. 346–347.
- ^ Harris 2006, pp. 72–73.
- ^ Anderson 2001, p. 196.
- ^ Keown 2009, pp. 60–63, 74–85, 185–187.
- ^ Konik 2009, p. ix.
- ^ Lopez 2012, pp. 39–43, 57–60, 74–76, 122–124.
- Anderson 2003, p. 295.
- Norman 2003.
- Dhamma 1997, p. 55.
- Geshe Tashi Tsering 2005, loc. 246–250.
- Goldstein 2002, p. 24.
- ^ Norman 2003, p. 220.
- ^ Cousins 2001, p. 38.
- ^ Anderson 1999, p. 68.
- Norman 2003, p. 213.
- Norman 2003, p. 219.
- Khantipalo 2003, p. 46.
- DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary, at Wisdom Library sam
- Dictionary of Spoken Sanskrit, udaya
- DDSA: The practical Sanskrit-English dictionary, at Wisdom Library udaya
- Cousins 2001, p. 36.
- Choong 2000, p. 84.
- Bhikkhu Bodhi 2000, p. 840.
- Harvey 2013, pp. 55–59.
- Analayo 2013, p. 15.
- Ajahn Sucitto 2010, loc. 122.
- ^ Mingyur Rinpoche 2007, p. 70.
- Williams, Tribe & Wynne 2002, p. 52.
- ^ Gethin 1998, p. 60.
- Harvey 2013, p. 52.
- ^ Anderson 1999, p. 55.
- Anderson 2001, pp. 127–128.
- Anderson 2001, p. 131.
- Anderson 2001, pp. 86–87.
- ^ Anderson 2001, p. 132.
- ^ Warder 2000, pp. 45–46.
- Anderson 2013, p. 91.
- Buswell & Lopez 2003, p. 708.
- ^ Schmidt-Leukel 2006, pp. 32–34.
- Makransky 1997, p. 27.
- Davids, Thomas William Rhys; Stede, William (23 May 1993). Pali-English Dictionary. Motilal Banarsidass Publ. ISBN 9788120811447 – via Google Books.
- ^ Harvey 2016.
- ^ Samuel 2008, p. 136.
- ^ Spiro 1982, p. 42.
- Vetter 1988, pp. xxi, xxxi–xxxii.
- ^ Lopez 2009, p. 147.
- Kingsland 2016, p. 286.
- Anderson 2013.
- Anderson 2013, p. 162 with note 38, for context see pp. 1–3.
- ^ Harris 2006, p. 72.
- Williams, Tribe & Wynne 2012, pp. 32–34.
- ^ Rahula 2007a, loc. 791–809.
- Egge 2013, p. 124, note 37.
- Schmithausen 1986, p. 205.
- Gethin 1998, p. 70.
- Ajahn Sucitto 2010, loc. 943–946.
- Batchelor 2012, p. 97.
- ^ Gethin 1998, p. 77.
- ^ Hick 1994, p. 436.
- ^ Bronkhorst 1993, pp. 96–97.
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- ^ Lamb 2001, p. 258.
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Web sources
- Four Noble Truths: BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Quote: "The first truth, suffering (Pali: dukkha; Sanskrit: duhkha), is characteristic of existence in the realm of rebirth, called samsara (lit. 'wandering')."
- Four Noble Truths: BUDDHIST PHILOSOPHY, Encyclopaedia Britannica, Quote: "The second truth is the origin (Pali and Sanskrit: samudaya) or cause of suffering, which the Buddha associated with craving or attachment in his first sermon."
- ^ "THE FIRST NOBLE TRUTH". www.buddhanet.net.
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Further reading
Historical background and development
- Vetter, Tilmann (1988), The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism, Brill
- Bronkhorst, Johannes (1993), The Two Traditions of Meditation in Ancient India, Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, chapter 8
- Anderson, Carol (1999), Pain and Its Ending: The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon, Routledge
Theravada commentaries
- Walpola Rahula (1974), What the Buddha Taught, Grove Press
- Ajahn Sucitto (2010), Turning the Wheel of Truth: Commentary on the Buddha's First Teaching, Shambhala.
- Ajahn Sumedho (2002), The Four Noble Truths, Amaravati Publications.
- Bhikkhu Bodhi (2006), The Noble Eightfold Path: Way to the End of Suffering, Pariyatti Publishing.
Tibetan Buddhism
- Chögyam Trungpa (2009), The Truth of Suffering and the Path of Liberation, Shambhala.
- Dalai Lama (1998), The Four Noble Truths, Thorsons.
- Geshe Tashi Tsering (2005), The Four Noble Truths: The Foundation of Buddhist Thought, Volume I, Wisdom, Kindle Edition
- Ringu Tulku (2005), Daring Steps Toward Fearlessness: The Three Vehicles of Tibetan Buddhism, Snow Lion. (Part 1 of 3 is a commentary on the four truths)
Modern interpretations
- Brazier, David (2001), The Feeling Buddha, Robinson Publishing
- Epstein, Mark (2004), Thoughts Without A Thinker: Psychotherapy from a Buddhist Perspective. Basic Books. Kindle Edition. (Part 1 examines the four truths from a Western psychological perspective)
- Moffitt, Phillip (2008), Dancing with Life: Buddhist Insights for Finding Meaning and Joy in the Face of Suffering, Rodale, Kindle Edition. (An explanation of how to apply the Four Noble Truths to daily life)
- Thich Nhat Hanh (1999), The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching, Three Rivers Press
Other scholarly explanations
- Gethin, Rupert (1998), Foundations of Buddhism, Oxford University Press (Chapter 3 is a commentary of about 25 pages).
- Lopez, Donald S. (2001), The Story of Buddhism, HarperCollins (pp. 42–54).
External links
- " What are the Four Noble Truths?"
- " The Four Noble Truths: an overview", Berzin Archives
- The Four Noble Truths. A Study Guide, Thanissaro Bikkhu
- Four Noble Truths, Rigpa Wiki
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