The Lankavatara Sutra
Translated
by Suzuki and Goddard
---o0o---
Chapter I
Discrimination
Thus I have heard. The Blessed One once
appeared in the Castle of Lanka which is on the summit of Mt. Malaya in
the midst of the great Ocean. A great many Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas had
miraculously assembled from all the Buddha-lands, and a large number of
bhikshus were gathered there. The Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas with Mahamati
at their head were all perfect masters of the various Samadhis, the
tenfold Self-mastery, the ten Powers, and the six Psychic Faculties.
Having been anointed by the Buddha's own hands, they all well understood
the significance of the objective world; they all knew how to apply the
various means, teachings and disciplinary measures according to the
various mentalities and behaviors of beings; they were all thoroughly
versed in the five Dharmas. The three Svabhas, the eight Vijnanas, and
the twofold Egolessness.
The Blessed One, knowing the mental
agitations going on in the minds of those assembled (like the surface of
the ocean stirred into waves by the passing winds), and his great heart
moved by compassion, smiled and said: In the days of old the Tathagatas
of the past who were Arhats and fully-enlightened Ones came to the
Castle of Lanka on Mount Malaya and discoursed on the Truth of Noble
Wisdom that is beyond the reasoning knowledge of the philosophers as
well as being beyond the understanding of ordinary disciples and
masters; and which is realizable only within the inmost consciousness;
for your sakes, I too, would discourse on the same Truth. All that is
seen in the world is devoid of effort and action because all things in
the world are like a dream, or like an image miraculously projected.
This is not comprehended by the philosophers and the ignorant, but those
who thus see things see them truthfully. Those who see things otherwise
walk in discrimination and, as they depend upon discrimination, they
cling to dualism. The world as seen by discrimination is like seeing
one's own image reflected in a mirror, or one's shadow, or the moon
reflected in water, or an echo heard in a valley. People grasping their
own shadows of discrimination become attached to this thing and that
thing and failing to abandon dualism they go on forever discriminating
and thus never attain tranquility. By tranquility is meant Oneness, and
Oneness gives birth to the highest Samadhi which is gained by entering
into the realm of Noble Wisdom that is realizable only within one's
inmost consciousness.
Then all Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas rose from
their seats and respectfully paid homage and Mahamati the Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas
sustained by the power of the Buddhas drew his upper garment over one
shoulder, knelt and pressing his hands together, praised him in the
following verses:
As though reviewest the world with thy
perfect intelligence and compassion, it must seem to thee like an
ethereal flower of which one cannot say: it is born, it is destroyed,
for the terms beings and non-beings do not apply to it.
As though reviewest the
world with thy perfect intelligence and compassion, it must seem to thee
like a dream of which it cannot be said: it is permanent or it is
destructible, for the being and non-being do not apply to it.
As though reviewest all things by the perfect
intelligence and compassion, they must seem to thee like visions beyond
the reach of the human mind, as being and non-being do not apply to
them.
With thy perfect intelligence and compassion
which are beyond all limit, thou comprehendest the egolessness of things
and persons, and art free and clear from the hindrances of passion and
learning and egoism.
Thou dost not vanish into Nirvana, nor does
Nirvana abide in thee, for Nirvana transcends all duality of knowing and
known, of being and non-being.
Those who see thee thus, serene and beyond
conception, will be emancipated from attachment, will be cleansed of all
defilements, both in this world and in the spiritual world beyond.
In this world whose nature is like a dream,
there is place for praise and blame, but in the ultimate Reality of
Dharmakaya which is far beyond the senses and the discriminating mind,
what is there to praise? O Thou most Wise!
Then said Mahamati the Bodhisattva-Mahasattva:
O blessed One, Sugata, Arhat and Fully-Enlightened One, pray tell us
about the realization of Noble Wisdom which is beyond the path and usage
of philosophers; which is devoid of all predicates such as being and
non-being, oneness and otherness, bothness and non-bothness, existence
and non-existence, eternity and non-eternity; which has nothing to do
with individuality and generality, nor false-imagination, nor any
illusion arising from the mind itself; but which manifests itself as the
Truth of Highest Reality. By which, going up continuously by the stages
of purification, one enters at last upon the stage of Tathagatahood,
whereby, by the power of his original vows unattended by any striving,
one will radiate its influence to infinite worlds, like a gem reflecting
its variegated colors, whereby I and other Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas will
be enabled to bring all beings to the same perfection of virtue.
Said the Blessed One: Well done, well done,
Mahamati! And again, well done, indeed! It is because of your compassion
for the world, because of the benefit it will bring upon many people
both human kind and celestial, that you have presented yourself before
us to make this request. Therefore, Mahamati, listen well and truly
reflect upon what I shall say, for I will instruct you.
Then Mahamati and the other Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas
gave devout attention to the teaching of the Blessed One.
Mahamati, since the ignorant and
simple-minded, not knowing that the world is only something seen of the
mind itself, cling to the multitudiousness of external objects, cling to
the notions of being and non-being, oneness and otherness, bothness and
non-bothness, existence and non-existence, eternity and non-eternity,
and think that they have a self-nature of their own, and all of which
rises from the discriminations of the mind and is perpetuated by
habit-energy, and from which they are given over to false imagination.
It is all like a mirage in which springs of water are seen as if they
were real. They are thus imagined by animals who, made thirsty by the
heat of the season, run after them. Animals not knowing that the springs
are an hallucination of their own minds, do not realize that there are
no such springs. In the same way, Mahamati, the ignorant and
simple-minded, their minds burning with the fires of greed, anger and
folly, finding delight in a world of multitudinous forms, their thought
obsessed with ideas of birth, growth and destruction, not well
understanding what is meant by existence and non-existence, and being
impressed by erroneous discriminations and speculations since
beginningless time, fall into the habit of grasping this and that and
thereby becoming attached to them.
It is like the city of the Gandharvas which the unwitting take to be a
real city though it is not so in fact. The city appears as in a vision
owing to their attachment to the memory of a city preserved in the mind
as a seed; the city can thus be said to be both existent and
non-existent. In the same way, clinging to the memory of erroneous
speculations and doctrines accumulated since beginningless time, the
hold fast to such ideas as oneness and otherness, being and non-being,
and their thoughts are not at all clear as to what after all is only
seen of the mind. It is like a man dreaming in his sleep of a country
that seems to be filled with various men, women, elephants, horses,
cars, pedestrians, villages, towns, hamlets, cows, buffaloes, mansions,
woods, mountains, rivers and lakes, and who moves about in that city
until he is awakened. As he lies half awake, he recalls the city of his
dreams and reviews his experiences there; what do you think, Mahamati,
is this dreamer who is letting his mind dwell upon the various
unrealities he has seen in his dream,- is he to be considered wise or
foolish? In the same way, the ignorant and simple-minded who are
favorably influenced by the erroneous views of the philosophers do not
recognize that the views that are influencing them are only dream-like
ideas originating in the mind itself, and consequently they are held
fast by their notions of oneness and otherness, of being and non-being.
It is like a painter's canvas on which the ignorant imagine they see the
elevations and depressions of mountains and valleys.
In the same way there are people today being brought up under the
influence of similar erroneous views of oneness and otherness, of
bothness and not-bothness, whose mentality is being conditioned by the
habit-energy of these false-imaginings and who later on will declare
those who hold the true doctrine of no-birth, to be nihilist and by so
doing will bring themselves and others to ruin. By the natural law of
cause and effect these followers of pernicious views uproot meritorious
causes that otherwise would lead unstained purity. They are to be
shunned by those whose desires are for more excellent things.
It is like the dim-eyed ones who seeing the
hairnet exclaim to one another: "It is wonderful! Look, Honorable sirs,
it is wonderful!" But the hairnet has never existed; in fact; it is
neither an entity, nor a non-entity, for it has both been seen and has
not been seen. In the same manner those whose minds have been addicted
to the discriminations of the erroneous views cherished by the
philosophers which are given over to the unrealistic views of being and
non-being, will contradict the good Dharma and will end in the
destruction of themselves and other.
It is like a wheel made by a revolving
firebrand which is no wheel but which is imagined to be one by the
ignorant. Nor is it a not-a-wheel because it has not been seen by some.
By the same reasoning, those who are in the habit of listening to the
discriminations and views of the philosophers will regard things born as
non-existent and those destroyed by causation as existent. I is like a
mirror reflecting colors and images as determined by conditions but
without any partiality. It is like the echo of the wind that gives the
sound of a human voice. It is like a mirage of moving water seen in a
desert. In the same way the discriminating mind of the ignorant which
has been heated by false-imaginations and speculations is stirred into
mirage-like waves by the winds of birth, growth and destruction. It is
like the magician Pisaca, who by means of his spells makes a wooden
image or a dead body to throb with life, though it has no power of its
own. In the same way the ignorant and the simple-minded, committing
themselves to erroneous philosophical views become thoroughly devoted to
the ideas of oneness and otherness, but their confidence is not well
grounded. For this reason, Mahamati, you and other Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas
should cast off all discriminations leading to the notions of birth,
abiding, and destruction, of oneness and otherness, of bothness and not-bothness,
of being and non-being and thus getting free of the bondage of
habit-energy become able to attain reality realizable within yourselves
of Noble Wisdom.
Then said Mahamati to the Blessed One: Why is
it that the ignorant are given up to discrimination and the wise are
not?
The Blessed One replied: It is because the
ignorant cling to names, signs and ideas; as their minds move along
these channels they feed on multiplicities of objects and fall into the
notion of an ego-soul and what belongs to it; they make discriminations
of good and bad among appearances and cling to the agreeable. As they
thus cling there is a reversion to ignorance, and karma born of greed,
anger and folly, is accumulated. As the accumulation of karma goes on
they become imprisoned in a cocoon of discrimination and are thenceforth
unable to free themselves from the round of birth and death.
Because of folly they do not understand that all things are like maya,
like the reflection of the moon in water, that there is no
self-substance to be imagined as an ego-soul and its belongings, and
that all their definite ideas rise from their false discriminations of
what exists only as it is seen of the mind itself. They do not realize
that things have nothing to do with qualify and qualifying, nor with the
course of birth, abiding and destruction, and instead they assert that
they are born of a creator, of time, of atoms, of some celestial spirit.
It is because the ignorant are given up to discrimination that they move
along with the stream of appearances, but it is not so with the wise.
Chapter II
False-Imaginations and Knowledge of Appearances
Then Mahamati the Bodhisattva-Mahasattva
spoke to the Blessed One, saying: You speak of the erroneous views of
the philosophers, will you please tell us of them, that we may be on our
guard against them?
The Blessed One replied, saying: Mahamati,
the error in these erroneous teachings that are generally held by the
philosophers lies in this: they do not recognize that the objective
world rises from the mind itself; they do not understand that the whole
mind-system also arises from the mind itself; but depending upon these
manifestations of the mind as being real they go on discriminating them,
like the simple-minded ones that they are, cherishing the dualism of
this and that, of being and non-being, ignorant to the fact that there
is but one common Essence.
On the contrary, my teaching is based upon
recognition that the objective world, like a vision, is a manifestation
of the mind itself; it teaches the cessation of ignorance, desire, deed
and casualty; it teaches the cessation of suffering that arises from the
discriminations of the triple world.
There are some Brahman scholars who, assuming
something out of nothing, assert that there is substance bound up with
causation which abides in time, and that the elements that make up
personality and its environment have their genesis and continuation in
causation and after thus existing, pass away. Then there are other
scholars who hold a destructive and nihilistic view concerning such
subjects as continuation, activity, breaking-up, existence, Nirvana, the
Path, karma, fruition and Truth. Why? Because they have not attained an
intuitive understanding of Truth itself and therefore they have no clear
insight into the fundamentals of things. They are like a jar broken into
pieces which is no longer able to function as a jar; they are like a
burnt seed which is no longer capable of sprouting. But the elements
that make up personality and its environment which they regard as
subject to change are really incapable of uninterrupted transformations.
Their views are based upon erroneous discriminations of the objective
world; they are not based upon true conceptions.
Again, if it is true that something comes out
of nothing and there is the rise of the mind-system by reason of the
combinations of the three effect-producing causes, we could say the same
of any non-existing thing: for instance, that a tortoise could grow
hair, or sand produce oil. This proposition is of no avail; it ends up
in affirming nothing. It follows that the deed, work and cause of which
they speak is of no use, and so also is their reference to being and
non-being, if they argue that there is a combination of the three
effect-producing causes, they must do it on the principle of cause and
effect, that is, that something comes out of something and not out of
nothing. As long as a world of relativity is asserted, there is an ever
recurring chain of causation which cannot be denied under any
circumstance, therefore we cannot talk of anything coming to an end or
of cessation. As long as these scholars remain on their philosophical
ground their demonstration must conform to logic and their textbooks,
and the memory habit of erroneous intellection will ever cling to them.
To make the matter worse, the simple-minded ones, poisoned by these
erroneous views, will declare this incorrect way of thinking taught by
the ignorant, to be the same as that presented by the All-knowing One.
But the way of instruction presented by the Tathagatas is not based on
assertions and refutations by means of words and logic. There are four
forms of assertion that can be made concerning things not in existence,
namely, assertions made about individual marks that are not in
existence; about objects that are not in existence, about a cause that
is non-existent; and about philosophical views that are erroneous. By
refutation is meant that one, because of ignorance, has not examined
properly the error that lies at the base of these assertions.
The assertion about individual marks that
really have no existence concerns the distinctive marks as perceived by
the eye, ear, nose, etc., as indicating individuality and generality in
the elements that make up personality and its external world; and then,
taking these marks for reality and getting attached to them, to get into
the habit of affirming that things are just so and not otherwise.
The assertion about objects that are
non-existent is an assertion that rises from attachment to these
associated marks of individuality and generality. Objects in themselves
are neither in existence nor in non-existence and are quite devoid of
the alternative of being and non-being; and should only be thought of as
one thinks of the horns of a hare, a horse, or a camel, which never
existed. Objects are discriminated by the ignorant who are addicted to
assertion and negation, because their intelligence has not been acute
enough to penetrate into the truth that there is nothing but what is
seen of the mind itself.
The assertion of a cause that is non-existent assumes the causeless
birth of the first element of the mind-system which later comes to have
only a maya-like non-existence. That is to say, there are philosophers
who assert that an originally unborn mind-system begins to function
under the conditions of eye, form, light and memory, which functioning
goes on for a time and then ceases. This is an example of a cause that
is non-existent.
The assertion of philosophical views
concerning the elements that make up personality and its environing
world that are non-existent, assume the existence of an ego, a being, a
soul, a living being, a "nourisher", or a spirit. This is an example of
philosophical views that are not true. It is this combination of
discrimination of imaginary marks of individuality, grouping them and
giving them a name and becoming attached to them as objects, by reason
of habit-energy that has been accumulated since beginningless time, that
one builds up erroneous views whose only basis is false-imaginations.
For this reason Bodhisattvas should avoid all discussions relating the
assertions and negations whose only basis is words and logic.
Word-discrimination goes on by the
coordination of brain, chest, nose, throat, palate, lips, tongue, teeth
and lips. Words are neither different nor not-different from
discrimination. Words rise from discrimination as their cause; if words
were different from discrimination they could not have discrimination
for their cause; then again, if words are not different, they could not
carry and express meaning. Words, therefore, are produced by causation
and are mutually conditioning and shifting and, just like things, are
subject to birth and destruction.
There are four kinds of word discrimination,
all of which are to be avoided because they are alike unreal. First
there are words indicating individual marks which rise from
discriminating forms and signs as being real in themselves and, then,
becoming attached to them. There are memory-words which rise from the
unreal surroundings which come before the mind when it recalls some
previous experience. Then there are words growing out of attachment to
the erroneous distinctions and speculations of the mental processes. And
finally, there are words growing out of inherited prejudices as seeds of
habit-energy accumulated since beginningless time, or which had their
origin in some long forgotten clinging to false-imagination and
erroneous speculation.
Then there are words where there are no
corresponding objects, as for instance, the hare's horns, a barren
woman's child, etc., - there are no such things but we have the words,
just the same. Words are an artificial creation; there are Buddha-lands
where there are no words. In some Buddha-lands ideas are indicated by
looking steadily, in other gestures, in still others by a frown, by a
movement of the eyes, by laughing, by yawning, by the clearing of the
throat, or by trembling. For instance, in the Buddha-land of the
Tathagata Samantabhadra, Bodhisattvas, by a dhyana transcending words
and ideas, attain recognition of all things as un-born and they, also
experience various most excellent Samadhis that transcend words. Even in
this world such specialized beings as ants and bees carry on their
activities very well without recourse to words. No, Mahamati, the
validity of things is independent of the validity of words.
Moreover, there are other things that belong
to words, namely, the syllable-body of words, the name-body of words,
and the sentence-body of words. By the syllable-body is meant that by
which words and sentences are set up or indicated: there is a reason for
some syllables, some are mnemonic, and some are chosen arbitrarily. By
the name-body is meant the object depending upon which name-words
obtains its significance, or in other words, name-body is the
"substance" of a name-word. By sentence-body is meant the completion of
the meaning by expressing the word more fully in a sentence. The name
for this sentence-body is suggested by the footprints left in the road
by elephants, horses, people, deer, cattle, goats, etc. But neither
words nor sentences can exactly express meaning, for words are only
sweet sounds that are arbitrarily chosen to represent things, they are
not the things themselves, which in turn are only manifestations of
mind. Discrimination of meaning is based upon false-imagination that
these sweet sounds which we call words and which are dependent upon
whatever subjects they are supposed to stand for, and which subjects are
supposed to be self-existent, all of which is based on error. Disciples
should be on their guard against the seductions of words and sentences
and their illusive meanings, for by them the ignorant and the
dull-witted become entangled and helpless as an elephant floundering
about in the deep mud.
Words and sentences are produced by the law
of causation and are mutually conditioning, - they cannot express
highest Reality. Moreover, in highest Reality there are no
differentiations to be discriminated and there is nothing to be
predicated in regards to it. Highest Reality is an exalted state of
bliss, it is not a state of word-discrimination and it cannot be entered
into by mere statements concerning it. The Tathagatas have a better way
of teaching, namely, through self-realisation of Noble Wisdom.
Mahamati asked the Blessed One: Pray tell us
about the causation of all things whereby I and other Bodhisattvas may
see into the nature of causation and may no more discriminate it as to
the gradual or simultaneous rising of all things?
The Blessed One replied: There are two
factors of causation by reason of which all things come into seeming
existence: external and internal factors. The external factors are a
lump of clay, a stick, a wheel, a thread, water, a worker, and his
labor, the combination of all which produces a jar. As with a jar which
is made from a lump of clay, or a piece of cloth made from thread, or
matting made from fragrant grass, or a sprout growing out of a seed, or
fresh butter made from sour milk by a man churning it; so it is with all
things which appear one after another in continuous succession. As
regards the inner factors of causation, they are of such kinds as
ignorance, desire, purpose, all of which enter into the idea of
causation. Born of these two factors there is a manifestation of
personality and the individual things that make up its environment, but
they are not individual and distinctive things: they are only so
discriminated by the ignorant.
Causation may be divided into six elements:
indifferent-cause, dependance-cause, possibility-cause, agency-cause,
objective-cause, manifesting-cause. Indifference-cause means that if
there is no discrimination present, there is no power of combination
present and so no combination takes place, or of present there is
dissolution. Dependance-cause means that the elements must be present.
Possibility-cause means that when a cause is to become effective there
must be a suitable meeting of conditions both internal and external.
Agency-cause means that there must be a principle vested with supreme
authority like a sovereign king present and asserting itself.
Objectivity-cause means that to be a part of the objective world the
mind-system must be in existence and must be keeping up its continuous
activity. Manifesting-cause means that as the discriminating faculty of
the mind-system becomes busy individual marks will be revealed as forms
are revealed by the light of a lamp.
All causes are thus seen to be the outcome of
discrimination carried on by the ignorant and simple-minded, and there
is, therefore, no such thing as gradual or simultaneous rising of
existence. If such a thing as the gradual rising of existence is
asserted, it can be disapproved showing that there is no basic substance
to hold the individual signs together which makes gradual rising
impossible. If simultaneous rising of existence is asserted, there would
be no distinction between cause and effect and there will be nothing to
characterize a cause as such. While a child is not yet born, the term
father has no significance. Logicians argue that there is that which is
born and that which gives birth by the mutual functioning of such casual
factors as cause, substance, continuity, acceleration, etc., and so they
conclude that there is a gradual rising of existence; but this gradual
rising does not obtain except by reason of attachment to the notion of a
self-nature.
When ideas of body, property and abode are
seen, discriminated and cherished in what after all is nothing but what
is conceived of the mind itself, and external world is perceived under
the aspect of individuality and generality which, however, are not
realities and, therefore, neither a gradual nor a simultaneous rising of
things is possible. It is only when the mind-system comes into activity
and discriminates the manifestations of mind that existence can be said
to come into view. For these reasons, Mahamati, you must get rid of
notions of graduation and simultaneity in the combination of casual
activities.
Mahamati said: Blessed One; To what kind of
discrimination and to what kind of thoughts should the term,
false-imagination, be applied?
The Blessed One replied: So long as people do not understand the true
nature of the objective world, they fall into the dualistic view of
things. They imagine the multiplicity of external objects to be real and
become attached to them and are nourished by their habit-energy. Because
of this system of mentation - mind and what belongs to it - is
discriminated and is thought of as real; this leads to the assertion of
an ego-soul and its belongings, and thus the mind-system goes on
functioning. Depending upon and attaching itself to the dualistic habit
of mind, they accept the views of the philosophers founded upon these
erroneous distinctions, of being and non-being, existence and
non-existence, and there evolves what we call, false-imaginations. But
Mahamati, discrimination does not evolve nor is it put away because,
when all that is seen is truly recognized to be nothing but the
manifestation of mind, how can discrimination as regards being and
non-being evolve? It is for the sake of the ignorant who are addicted to
the discriminations of the multiplicity of things which are of their own
mind, that it is said by me that discrimination takes rise owing to
attachment to the aspect of multiplicity which is characteristic of
objects. How otherwise the ignorant and simple-minded recognize that
there is nothing but what is seen of the mind itself, and how otherwise
can they gain an insight into the true nature of mind and be able to
free themselves from wrong conceptions of cause and effect? How
otherwise can they gain a clear conception of the Bodhisattva stages,
and attain and "turning-about" in the deepest seat of their
consciousness, and finally attain an inner self-realization of Noble
Wisdom which transcends the five Dharmas, the three Self-natures, and
the whole idea of a discriminated Reality? For this reason it is said by
me that discrimination takes rise from the mind becoming attached to the
multiplicities of things which in themselves are not real, and that
emancipation comes from thoroughly understanding the meaning of Reality
as it truly is.
False-imaginations rise from the
consideration of appearances; things are discriminated as to form, signs
and shape; as to having color, warmth, humidity, mobility or rigidity.
False-imagination consists in becoming attached to these appearances and
their names. By attachment to objects is meant, the getting attached to
inner and outer things as if they were real. By attachment to names is
meant, the recognition in these inner and outer things of the
characteristic marks of individuation and generality, and to regard them
definitely belonging to the names of the objects. False-imagination
teaches that because all things are bound up with causes and conditions
of habit-energy that has been accumulating since beginningless time by
not recognizing that the external world is of mind itself, all things
are comprehensible under the aspects of individuality and generality. By
reason of clinging to these false-imaginations there is
multitudinousness of appearances which are imagined to be real but which
are only imaginary. To illustrate: when a magician depending on grass,
wood, shrubs and creepers, exercises his art, many shapes and beings
take form that are only magically created; sometimes they even make
figures that have bodies and that move and act like human beings; they
are variously and fancifully discriminated but there is no reality in
them; everyone but children and the simple-minded know that they are not
real. Likewise based upon the notion of relativity false-imagination
perceives a variety of appearances which the discriminating mind
proceeds to objectify and name and become attached to, and memory and
habit-energy perpetuate. Here is all that is necessary to constitute the
self-nature of false-imagination.
The various features of false imaginations can be distinguished as
follows: as regards to words, meaning, individual marks, property,
self-nature, cause, philosophical views, reasoning, birth, no-birth,
dependence, bondage and emancipation. Discrimination of words is the
becoming attached to various sounds carrying familiar meanings.
Discrimination of meaning comes when one imagines that words rise
depending upon whatever subjects they express, and which subjects are
regarded as self-existent. Discrimination of individual marks is to
imagine that whatever is denoted in words concerning the multiplicities
of individual marks (which in themselves are like a mirage) is true, and
clinging tenaciously to them, to discriminate all things according to
such categories as warmth, fluidity, motility, and solidity.
Discrimination of property is to desire a state of wealth, such as gold,
silver, and various precious stones. Discrimination of self-nature is to
make discriminations according to the views of the philosophers in
reference to the self-nature of all things which they imagine and
stoutly maintain to be true, saying: "This is just what it is and it
cannot be otherwise." Discrimination of cause is to distinguish the
notion of causation in reference to being and non-being and to imagine
that there are such things as "cause-signs". Discrimination of
philosophical views means considering different views relating to the
notions of being and non-being, oneness and otherness, bothness and not-bothness,
existence and non-existence, all of which are erroneous, and becoming
attached to particular views. Discrimination of reasoning means the
teaching whose reasoning is based on the grasping of the notion and
ego-substance and what belongs to it. Discrimination of birth means
getting attached to the notion that things come into existence and pass
out of existence by reason of causation. Discrimination of no-birth is
to see that causeless substances which were not, come into existence by
reason of causation. Discrimination of dependence means the mutual
dependence of gold and the filaments made of it. Discriminations of
bondage and imagination is like imagining that there is something bound
because something binding, as in the case of a man who ties a knot and
then loosens one. These are the various features of false-imagination to
which all the ignorant and simple-minded cling. Those attached to the
notions of relativity are attached to the notions of the
multitudinousness of things which arises from false-imagination. It is
like seeing varieties of objects depending on maya, but these varieties
thus revealing themselves are discriminated by the ignorant as something
other than maya itself, according to their way of thinking.
Now the truth is, maya and varieties of
objects are neither different nor not different; if they were different,
varieties of objects would have no maya for their characteristic; if
they were not different there would be no distinction between them. But
as there is a distinction these two - maya and variety of objects - are
neither different nor not different, for the very good reason: they are
one thing.
Mahamati said to the Blessed One: Is error an
entity or not? The Blessed One replied: Error has no character in it
making for attachment; if error had such a character no liberation would
be possible from its attachment to existence, and the chain of
origination would only be understood in the sense of creation as upheld
by the philosophers. Error is like maya, also, and as maya is incapable
from producing other maya, so error in itself cannot produce error; it
is discrimination and attachment that produce evil thoughts and faults.
Moreover, maya has no power of discrimination in itself; it only rises
when invoked by the charm of a magician. Error has in itself no
habit-energy; habit-energy only rises from discrimination and
attachment. Error in itself has no faults; faults are due to the
confused discriminations fondly cherished by the ignorant concerning
ego-soul and its mind. The wise have nothing to do either with maya or
error.
Maya, however, is not an unreality because it
only has the appearance of reality; all things have the nature of maya.
It is not because all things are imagined and clung to because of the
multitudinousness of individual signs, that they are like maya; it is
because they are alike unreal and as quickly appearing and disappearing.
Being attached to erroneous thoughts they confuse and contradict
themselves and others. As they do not clearly grasp the fact that the
world is no more than mind itself, they imagine and cling to causation,
work, birth and individual signs, and their thoughts are characterized
by error and false-imaginations. The teaching that all things are
characterized by the self-nature of maya and a dream is meant to make
the ignorant and simple-minded cast aside the idea of self-nature in
anything.
False-imagination teaches that such things as
light and shade, long and short, black and white are different and are
to be discriminated; but they are not independent of each other; they
are only different aspects of the same thing, they are terms of relation
and not of reality. Conditions of existence are not of a mutually
exclusive character; in essence things are not two but one. Even Nirvana
and Samsara's world of life and death are aspects of the same thing, for
there is no Nirvana except where is Samsara, and Samsara except where is
Nirvana. All duality is falsely imagined.
Mahamati, you and all Bodhisattvas should
discipline yourselves in the realization and patience acceptance of the
truths of the emptiness, un-bornness, no self-natureness, and the
non-duality of all things. This teaching is found in all the sutras of
all the Buddhas and is presented to meet the varied dispositions of
being, but it is not the Truth itself. These teachings are only a finger
pointing towards Noble Wisdom. They are like a mirage with its springs
of water which the deer take to be real and chase after. So with the
teachings in all the sutras: They are intended for the consideration and
guidance of the discriminating minds of all people, but they are not the
Truth itself, which can only be self-realized within one's deepest
consciousness.
Mahamati, you and all
the Bodhisattvas must seek for this inner self-realisation of Noble
Wisdom, and not be captivated by word-teachings.
Chapter
III
Right Knowledge or Knowledge of Relations
Then Mahamati said: Pray
tell us, Blessed One, about the being and non-being of all things?
The Blessed One replied: People of this world
are dependent in their thinking on one of two things: on the notion of
being whereby they take pleasure in realism, or in the notion of
non-being whereby they take pleasure in nihilism; in either case they
imagine emancipation where there is no emancipation. Those who are
dependent upon notions of being, regard the world as rising from a
causation that is really existent, and that this actually existing and
becoming world does not take its rise from a causation that is
non-existent. This is the realistic view as held by some people. Then
there are other people who are dependent on the notion of the non-being
of all things. These people admit the existence of greed, anger and
folly, and at the same time they deny the existence of things that
produce greed, anger and folly. This is not rational, for greed anger
and folly are no more to be taken hold as real; they neither have
substance nor individual marks. Where there is a state of bondage, there
is binding and means for binding; but where there is emancipation, as in
the case of Buddhas, Bodhisattvas, masters and disciples, who have
ceased to believe in both being and non-being, there is neither bondage,
binding nor means for binding.
It is better to cherish the notion of an
ego-substance than to entertain the notion of emptiness derived from the
view of being and non-being, for those who so believe fail to understand
the fundamental fact that the external world is nothing but a
manifestation of mind. Because they see things as transient, as rising
from cause and passing away from cause, now dividing, now combining into
the elements which make up the aggregates of personality and its
external world and now passing away, they are doomed to suffer every
moment from the changes that follow one after another, and finally are
doomed to ruin.
Then Mahamati asked the Blessed One, saying:
Tell us, Blessed One, how all things can be empty, un-born, and have no
self-nature, so that we may be awakened and quickly realize highest
enlightenment?
The Blessed One replied: What is emptiness,
indeed! It is a term whose very self-nature is false-imagination, but
because of one's attachment to false-imagination we are obliged to talk
of emptiness, no-birth, and no self-nature. There are seven kinds of
emptiness: emptiness of mutuality which is non-existent; emptiness of
individual marks; emptiness of self-nature; emptiness of no-work;
emptiness of work; emptiness of all things in the sense that they are
unpredictable, and emptiness in its highest sense of Ultimate Reality.
By emptiness of mutuality which is non-existent is meant that when a
thing is missing here, one speaks of it being empty here. For instance:
in the lecture hall of Mrigarama there are no elephants present, nor
bulls, nor sheep; but as to monks there are many present. We can rightly
speak of the hall being empty as far as animals are concerned. It is not
asserted that the hall is empty of its own characteristics, or that the
monks are empty of that which makes their monkhood, nor that in some
other place there are no elephants, bulls, nor sheep to be found. In
this case we are speaking of things in their aspect of individuality and
generality, but from the point of view of mutuality some things do not
exist somewhere. This is the lowest form of emptiness and is to be
sedulously put away.
By emptiness of individual marks is meant
that all things have no distinguishing marks of individuality and
generality. Because mutual relations and interactions things are
superficially discriminated but when they are further and more carefully
investigated and analyzed they are seen to be non-existent and nothing
as to individuality and generality can be predicated of them. Thus when
individual marks can no longer be seen, ideas of self, otherness and
bothness, no longer hold good. So it must be said that all things are
empty of self-marks.
By emptiness of self-nature is meant that all
things in their self-nature are un-born; therefore, it is said that
things are empty as to self-nature. By emptiness of no-work is meant
that the aggregate of elements that makes up personality and its
external world is Nirvana itself and from the beginning there is no
activity in them; therefor, one speaks of the emptiness of no-work. By
emptiness of work is meant that the aggregates being devoid of an ego
and its belongings, go on functioning automatically as there is mutual
conjunction of causes and conditions; thus one speaks of the emptiness
of work. By emptiness of all things in the sense that they are
unpredictable is meant that, as the very self-nature of
false-imagination is inexpressible, so all things are unpredictable,
and, therefore, are empty in that sense. By emptiness in the highest
sense of the emptiness of Ultimate Reality is meant that in the
attainment of inner self-realization of Noble Wisdom there is no trace
of habit-energy generated by erroneous conceptions; thus one speaks of
the highest emptiness of Ultimate Reality.
When things are examined by right knowledge
there are no signs obtainable which could characterize them with marks
of individuality and generality, therefore, they are said to have no
self-nature. Because these signs of individuality and generality are
both seen as existing and yet are known to be non-existent, are seen as
going out and yet are known not to be going out, they are never
annihilated. Why is this true? For this reason; because individual signs
that should make up the self-nature of all things are non-existent.
Again in their self-nature things are both eternal and non-eternal.
Things are not eternal because the marks of individuality appear and
disappear, that is, the marks of self-nature are characterized by
non-eternality. On the other hand, because things are un-born and are
only mind-made, they are in a deep sense eternal. That is, things are
eternal because of their very non-eternality.
Further, besides understanding the emptiness
of all things both in regard to substance and self-nature, it is
necessary for Bodhisattvas to clearly understand that all things are
un-born. It is not asserted that things are not born in a superficial
sense, but that in a deep sense they are not born of themselves. All
that can be said, is this, that relatively speaking, there is a constant
stream of becoming, a momentary and uninterrupted change from one state
of appearance to another. When it is recognized that the world as it
presents itself is no more than a manifestation of mind, then birth is
seen as no-birth, and all existing objects, concerning which
discrimination asserts that they are and are not, are non-existent and,
therefore, un-born; being devoid of agent and action things are un-born.
If things are not born of being and non-being, but are simply
manifestations of mind itself, they have no reality, no self-nature:
they are like the horns of a hare, a horse, a donkey, a camel. But the
ignorant and simple-minded, who are given over to their false and
erroneous imaginings, discriminate things where they are not. To the
ignorant the characteristic marks of the self-nature of
body-property-and-abode seem to be fundamental and rooted in the very
nature of mind itself, so they discriminate their multitudiousness and
become attached to them.
There are two kinds of attachment: attachment
to objects as having a self-nature, and attachment to words as having
self-nature. The first takes place by not knowing that the external
world is only a manifestation of mind itself; and the second arises from
one's clinging to words and names by reason of habit-energy. In the
teaching of no-birth, causation is out of place because, seeing that all
things are like maya and a dream, one does not discriminate individual
signs. That all things are un-born and have no self-nature because they
are like maya is asserted to meet the thesis of the philosophers that
birth is by causation. They foster the notion that the birth of all
things is derived from the concept of being and non-being, and fail to
regard it as it truly is, as caused by attachments to the
multitudiousness which arises from discriminations of the mind itself.
Those who believe in the birth of something
that has never been in existence and, coming into existence, vanishes
away, are obliged to assert that things come to exist and vanish away by
causation - such people find no foothold in my teachings. When it is
realized that there is nothing born, and nothing passes away, then there
is no way to admit being and non-being, and the mind becomes quiescent.
Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: The
philosophers declare that the world rises from casual agencies according
to the law of causation; they state that their cause is unborn and is
not annihilated. They mention nine primary elements: Ishvara the
Creator, the Creation, atoms, etc., which being elementary are unborn
and not to be annihilated. The Blessed One, while teaching that all
things are un-born and that there is no annihilation, also declares that
the world takes its rise from ignorance, discrimination, attachment,
deed, etc., working according to the law of causation. Though the two
sects of elements may differ in form and name, there does not appear to
be any essential difference between the two positions. If there is
anything that is distinctive and superior in the Blessed One's teaching,
pray tell us, Blessed One, what is it?
The Blessed One replied: My teaching of
no-birth and no-annihilation is not like that of the philosophers, nor
is it like their doctrine of birth and impermanency. That to which the
philosophers ascribe the characteristic of no-birth and no-annihilation
is the self-nature of all things, which causes them to fall into the
dualism of being and non-being. My teaching transcends the whole
conception of being and non-being; it has nothing to do with birth,
abiding and destruction; nor with existence and non-existence. I teach
that the multitudiousness of objects have no reality in themselves but
are only seen of mind and, therefore, are of the nature of maya and a
dream. I teach the non-existence of things because they carry no signs
of any inherent self-nature. It is true that in one sense they are seen
and discriminated by the senses as individualized objects; but in
another sense, because of the absence of any characteristic marks of
self-nature, they are not seen but are only imagined. In one sense they
are graspable, but in another sense, they are not graspable.
When it is clearly understood that there is
nothing in the world but what is seen of the mind itself, discrimination
no more rises, and the wise are established in their true abode which is
the realm of quietude. The ignorant discriminate and work trying to
adjust themselves to external conditions, and are constantly perturbed
in mind; unrealities are imagined and discriminated, while realities are
not seen and ignored. It is not so with the wise. To illustrate: What
the ignorant see is like the magically-created city of the Gandharvas,
where children are shown, street and houses, and phantom merchants, and
people going in and coming out. This with its streets and houses and
people going in and coming out, are not thought of as being born or
annihilated, because in their case there is no question as to their
existence or non-existence. In like manner, I teach that there is
nothing made nor unmade; that there is nothing that has connection with
birth and destruction except as the ignorant cherish falsely imagined
notions as to the reality of the external world. When objects are not
seen and judged as they truly are in themselves, there is discrimination
and clinging to the notions of being and non-being, and individualized
self-nature, and as long as these notions of individuality and
self-nature persist, the philosophers are bound to explain the external
world by a law of causation. This position rises the question of a first
cause which the philosophers meet by asserting that their first cause,
Ishvara and the primal elements, are un-born and un-annihilate; which
position is without evidence and is irrational.
Ignorant people and worldly philosophers
cherish a kind of no-birth, but it is not the no-birth which I teach. I
teach the unbornness of the unborn essence of all things which teaching
is established in the minds of the wise by their self-realization of
Noble Wisdom. A ladle, clay, a vessel, a wheel, or seeds, or elements -
these are external conditions; ignorance, discrimination, attachment,
habit, karma, - these are inner conditions. When this entire universe is
regarded as concatenation and as nothing else but concatenation, then
the mind, but its patient acceptance of the truth that all things are
unborn, gains tranquility.
Chapter
IV
Perfect Knowledge or Knowledge of Reality.
Then Mahamati asked the Blessed One: Pray
tell us, Blessed One, about the five Dharmas, so that we may fully
understand perfect knowledge?
The Blessed One replied: The five Dharmas
are: appearance, name, discrimination, right-knowledge, and Reality. By
appearance is meant that which reveals itself to the senses and to the
discriminating-mind and is perceived as form, sound, odor, taste, and
touch. Out of these appearances ideas are formed, such as clay, water,
jar, etc., by which one says: this is such and such a thing and no
other,- this is name. When appearances are contrasted and names
compared, as when we say: this is an elephant, this is horse, a cart, a
pedestrian, a man, a woman, or, this is mind and what belongs to it, -
the things thus named are said to be discriminated. As these
discriminations come to be seen as mutually conditioning, as empty of
self-substance, as un-born, and thus come to be seen as they truly are,
that is, as manifestations of the mind itself, - this is
right-knowledge. By it the wise cease to regard appearances and names as
realities.
When appearances and names are put away and
all discrimination ceases, that which remains is the true and essential
nature of things and, as nothing can be predicated as to the nature of
essence, it is called the "Suchness" of Reality. This universal,
undifferentiated, inscrutable, "Suchness" is the only Reality but it is
variously characterized by Truth, Mind-essence, Transcendental
Intelligence, Noble Wisdom, etc. This Dharma of the imagelessness of the
Essence-nature of Ultimate Reality is the Dharma which has been
proclaimed by all the Buddhas, and when all things are understood in
full agreement with it, one is in possession of Perfect Knowledge, and
is on his way to the attainment of the Transcendental Intelligence of
the Tathagatas.
Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: Are
the three self-natures, of things, ideas, and Reality, to be considered
as included in the Five Dharmas, or as having their own characteristics
complete in themselves.
The Blessed One replied: The three
self-natures, the eightfold mind-system, and the twofold egolessness are
all included in the Five Dharmas. The self-natures of things, of ideas,
and of the sixfold mind-system, correspond with the Dharma of
appearance, name and discrimination; the self-nature of Universal Mind
and Reality corresponds to the Dharmas of right-knowledge and "Suchness".
By becoming attached to what is seen of the
mind itself, there is an activity awakened which is perpetuated by
habit-energy that becomes manifest in the mind-system, from the
activities of the mind-system there rises the notion of an ego-soul and
its belongings; the discriminations, attachments, and notion of an
ego-soul, rising simultaneously like the sun and its rays of light.
By the egolessness of things is meant that
the elements that make up the aggregates of personality and its
objective world being characterized by the nature of maya and destitute
of anything that can be called self-substance, are therefore un-born and
have no self-nature. How can things be said to have an ego-soul? By the
egolessness of persons is meant is that in the aggregates that make up
personality there is no ego-substance, nor anything that is like an
ego-substance nor that belongs to it. The mind-system, which is the most
characteristic mark of personality, originated in ignorance,
discrimination, desire and deed; and its activities are perpetuated by
perceiving, grasping and becoming attached to objects as if they were
real. The memory of these discriminations, desires, attachments and
deeds is stored in Universal Mind since beginningless time, and is still
being accumulated where it conditions the appearance of personality and
its environment and brings about constant change and destruction from
moment to moment. The manifestations are like a river, a seed, a lamp, a
cloud, the wind; Universal mind in its voraciousness to store up
everything, is like a monkey never at rest, like a fly ever in search of
food and without partiality, like a fire that is never satisfied, like a
water-lifting machine that goes on rolling. Universal mind as defiled by
habit-energy is like a magician that causes phantom things and people to
appear and move about. A thorough understanding of these things is
necessary to an understanding of the egolessness of persons.
There are four kinds of Knowledge:
Appearance-knowledge, relative-knowledge, perfect-knowledge, and
Transcendental Intelligence. Appearance-knowledge belongs to the
ignorant and simple-minded who are addicted to the notion of being and
non-being, and who are frightened at the thought of being un-born. It is
produced by the concordance of the triple combination and attaches
itself to the multiplicities of objects; it is characterized by
attainability and accumulation; it is subject to birth and destruction.
Appearance-knowledge belongs to word-mongers who revel in
discriminations, assertions and negations.
Relative-knowledge belongs to the mind-world
of the philosophers. It rises from the mind's ability to arrange,
combine and analyze these relations by its powers of discursive logic
and imagination, by reason of which it is able to peer into the meaning
and significance of things.
Perfect-knowledge belongs to the world of the
Bodhisattvas who recognize that all things are but manifestations of
mind; who clearly understand the emptiness, the un-borness, the
egolessness of all things; and who have entered into an understanding of
the Five Dharmas, the twofold egolessness, and into the truth of
imagelessness. Perfect-knowledge differentiates the Bodhisattva stages,
and is the pathway and entrance into the exalted state of
self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
Perfect-knowledge (jnana) belongs to the
Bodhisattvas who are entirely free from the dualism of being and
non-being, no-birth and no-annihilation, all assertions and negations,
and who, by reason of self-realization, have gained an insight into the
truth of egolessness and imagelessness. They no longer discriminate the
world as subject to causation: they regard the causation that rules the
world as something like the fabled city of the Gandharvas. To them the
world is like a vision and a dream, it is like the birth and death of a
barren-woman's child; to them there is nothing evolving and nothing
disappearing.
The wise who cherish Perfect-knowledge, may
be divided into three classes, disciples, masters and Arhats. Common
disciples are separated from masters as common disciples continue to
cherish the notion of individuality and generality; masters rise from
common disciples when, forsaking the errors of individuality and
generality, they still cling to the notion of an ego-soul by reasons of
which they go off by themselves into retirement and solitude. Arhats
rise when the error of all discrimination is realized. Error being
discriminated by the wise turns into Truth by virtue of the
"turning-about" that takes place within the deepest consciousness. Mind,
thus emancipated, enters into perfect self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
But, Mahamati, if you
assert that there is such a thing as Noble Wisdom, it no longer holds
good, because anything of which something is asserted thereby partakes
of the nature of being and is thus characterized with the quality of
birth. The very assertion: "All things are un-born" destroys the
truthfulness of it. The same is true of the statements: "All things are
empty", and "All things have no self-nature",- both are untenable when
put in the form of assertions. But when it is pointed out that all
things are like a dream and a vision, it means that in one way they are
perceived, and in another way they are not perceived; that is, in
ignorance they are perceived but in Perfect-knowledge they are not
perceived. All assertions and negations being thought-constructions are
un-born. Even the assertion that Universal Mind and Noble Wisdom are
Ultimate Reality, is thought construction and, therefore, is un-born. As
"things" there is no Universal Mind, there is no Noble Wisdom, there is
no Ultimate Reality. The insight of the wise who move about in the realm
of imagelessness and its solitude is pure. That is, for the wise all
"things" are wiped away even the state of imagelessness ceases to exist.
Chapter V
The Mind System
Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: Pray
tell us, Blessed One, what is meant by mind (citta)?
The Blessed One replied: All things of this
world, be they seemingly good or bad, faulty or faultless,
effect-producing or not effect-producing, receptive or non-receptive,
may be divided into two classes: evil out-flowings and the non
out-flowing good. The five grasping elements that make up the aggregates
of personality, namely, form, sensation, perception, discrimination, and
consciousness, and that are imagined to be good and bad, have their rise
in the habit-energy of the mind-system,- they are the evil out-flowings
of life. The spiritual attainments and the joys of the Samadhis and the
fruitage of the Samapatis that come the wise through their
self-realization of Noble Wisdom and that culminate in their return and
participation in the relations of the triple world are called the non
out-flowing good.
The mind-system which is the source of the evil out-flowings consists of
the five sense-organs and their accompanying sense-minds (vijnanas) all
of which are unified in the discriminating-mind (manovijnana). There is
an unending succession of sense-concepts flowing into this
discriminating or thinking-mind which combines them and discriminates
them and passes judgement upon them as to their goodness or badness.
Then follows aversion to or desire for them and attachment and deed;
thus the entire system moves on continuously and closely bound together.
But it fails to see and understand that what it sees and discriminates
and grasps is only a manifestation of its own activity and has no other
basis, and so the mind goes on erroneously perceiving and discriminating
differences of forms and qualities, not remaining still even for a
minute.
In the mind-system there are three modes of activity distinguishable:
the sense-minds functioning while remaining in their original nature,
the sense-minds as producing effects, and the sense-minds as evolving.
By normal functioning the sense-minds grasp appropriate elements of
their external world, by which sensation and perception arise at once
and by degrees in every sense-organ and every sense-mind, in the pores
of the skin, and even in the atoms that make up the body, by which the
whole field is apprehended like a mirror reflecting objects, and not
realizing that the external world itself is only a manifestation of
mind. The second mode of activity produces effects by which these
sensations react on the discriminating mind to produce perceptions,
attractions, aversions, grasping, deed and habit. The third mode of
activity has to do with the growth, development and passing of the
mind-system, that is, the mind-system is in subjection to its own
habit-energy accumulated from beginningless time time, as for instance:
the "eyeness" in the eye that predisposes it to grasp and become
attached to multiple forms and appearances. In this way the activities
of the evolving mind-system by reason of its habit-energy stirs up waves
of objectivity in the face of Universal Mind which in turn conditions
the activities and evolvement of the mind-system. Appearances,
perception, attraction, grasping, deed, habit, reaction, condition one
another incessantly, and the functioning sense-minds, the
discriminating-mind and Universal Mind are thus bound up together. Thus,
by reason of discrimination of that which by nature maya-like and unreal
false-imagination and erroneous reasoning takes place, action follows
and its habit-energy accumulates thereby defiling the pure face of
Universal Mind, and as a result the mind-system comes into functioning
and the physical body has its genesis. But the discriminating-mind has
not thought that by its discriminations and attachments it is
conditioning the whole body and so the sense-minds and
discriminating-mind go on mutually related and mutually conditioned in a
most intimate manner and building up a world of representations out of
the activities of its own imagination. As a mirror reflects forms, the
perceiving senses perceive appearances which the discriminating-mind
gathers together and proceeds to discriminate, to name and become
attached to. Between these two functions there is no gap, nevertheless,
they are mutually conditioning. The perceiving sense grasp that for
which they have an affinity, and there is a transformation takes place
in their structure by reason of which the mind proceeds to combine,
discriminate, apprise, and act; then follows habit-energy and the
establishing of the mind and its continuance.
The discriminating-mine because of its
capacity to discriminate, judge, select and reason about, is also called
the thinking-mind, or intellectual-mind. There are three divisions of
its mental activity: mentation which functions in connection with
attachment to objects and ideas, mentation that functions in connection
with general ideas, and mentation that examines into the validity of
these general ideas. The mentation which functions in connection with
attachment to objects and ideas derived from discrimination,
discriminates the mind from its mental processes and accepts the ideas
from it as being real and becomes attached to them. A variety of false
judgements are thus arrived at as to being, multiplicity, individuality,
value, etc., a strong grasping takes place which is perpetuated by
habit-energy and thus discrimination goes on asserting itself.
These mental processes give rise to general conceptions of warmth,
fluidity, motility, and solidity, as characterizing the objects of
discrimination, while the tenacious holding to these general ideas gives
rise to proposition, reason, definition, and illustration, all of which
lead to the assertions of relative knowledge and the establishment of
confidence in birth, self-nature, and an ego-soul.
By mentation as an examining function is
meant the intellectual act of examining into these general conclusions
as to their validity, significance, and truthfulness. This is the
faculty that leads to understanding, right-knowledge and points the way
to self-realization.
Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: Pray tell us, Blessed One, what
relation ego-personality bears to the mind-system?
The Blessed One replied: To explain it, it is
first necessary to speak of the self-nature of the five grasping
aggregates that make up personality, although as I have already shown
they are empty, un-born, and without self-nature. These five grasping
aggregates are: form, sensation, perception, discrimination,
consciousness. Of these, form belongs to what is made of the so-called
primary elements, whatever they may be. The four remaining aggregates
are without form and ought not to be reckoned as four, because they
merge imperceptibly into one another. They are like space which cannot
be numbered; it is only due to imagination that they are discriminated
and likened to space. Because things are endowed with appearances of
being, characteristic-marks, perceivableness, abode, work, one can say
that they are born of effect-producing causes, but this cannot be said
of these four intangible aggregates for they are without any form of
marks. These four mental aggregates that make up personality are beyond
calculability, they are beyond the four propositions, they are not to be
predicated as existing or as not existing, but together they constitute
what is known as mortal-mind. They are even more maya-like and
dream-like than are things, nevertheless, as discriminating mortal-mind
they obstruct the self-realization of Noble Wisdom. But it is only by
the ignorant that they are enumerated and thought of as an
ego-personality; the wise do not do so. This discrimination of the five
aggregates that make up personality and that serve as a basis for an
ego-soul and ground for its desires and self-interests must be given up,
and in its place the truth of imagelessness and solitude should be
established.
Then said Mahamati to the Blessed One: Pray tell us, Blessed One, about
Universal Mind and its relation to the lower mind-system?
The Blessed One replied: The sense-minds and
their centralized discriminating-mind are related to the external world
which is a manifestation of itself and is given over to perceiving,
discriminating, and grasping its maya-like appearances. Universal Mind (Alaya-vijnana)
transcends all individuation and limits. Universal Mind is thoroughly
pure in its essential nature, subsisting unchanged and free from faults
of impermanence, undisturbed by egoism, unruffled by distinctions,
desires and aversions. Universal Mind is like a great ocean, its surface
ruffled by waves and surges but its depths remaining forever unmoved. In
itself it is devoid of personality and all that belongs to it, but by
reason of the defilements upon its face it is like an actor a plays a
variety of parts, among which a mutual functioning takes place and the
mind-system arises. The principle of intellection becomes divided and
mind, the functions of mind, the evil out-flowings of mind, take on
individuation. The sevenfold gradation of mind appears: namely,
intuitive self-realization, thinking-desiring-discriminating, seeing,
hearing, tasting, smelling, touching, and all their interactions and
reactions take their rise.
The discriminating-mind is the cause of the sense-minds and is their
support and with them is kept functioning as it describes and becomes
attached to a world of objects, and then, by means of its habit-energy,
it defiles the face of Universal Mind. Thus Universal Mind becomes the
storage and clearing house of all the accumulated products of mentation
and action since beginningless time.
Between Universal Mind and the individual
discriminating-mind is the intuitive-mind (manas) which is dependent
upon Universal Mind for its cause and support and enters into relation
with both. It partakes of the universality of Universal Mind, shares its
purity, and like it, is above form and momentariness. It is through the
intuitive-mind that the good non out-flowing emerge, are manifested and
are realized. Fortunate it is that intuition is not momentary for if the
enlightenment which comes by intuition were momentary the wise would
loose their "wiseness" which the do not. But the intuitive-mind enters
into relations with the lower mind-system, shares its experiences and
reflects upon its activities.
Intuitive-mind is one with Universal Mind by
reason of its participation in Transcendental Intelligence (Arya-jnana),
and is one with the mind-system by its comprehension of differentiated
knowledge (vijnana). Intuitive-mind has no body of its own nor any marks
by which it can be differentiated. Universal Mind is its cause and
support but it is evolved along with the notion of an ego and what
belongs to it, to which it clings and upon which it reflects. Through
intuitive-mind, by the faculty of intuition which is a mingling of both
identity and perceiving, the inconceivable wisdom of Universal Mind is
revealed and made realizable. Like Universal Mind it can not be the
source of error.
Then said Mahamati to the Blessed One: Pray
tell us, Blessed One, what is meant by the cessation of the mind-system?
The Blessed One replied: The five
sense-functions and their discriminating and thinking function have
their risings and complete ending from moment to moment. They are born
with discrimination as cause, with form and appearance and objectivity
closely linked together as condition. The will-to-live is the mother,
ignorance is the father. By setting up names and forms greed is
multiplied and thus the mind goes on mutually conditioning and being
conditioned. By becoming attached to names and forms, not realizing that
they have no more basis than the activities of the mind itself, error
rises, false-imagination as to pleasure and pain rises, and the way to
emancipation is blocked. The lower system of sense-minds and the
discriminating-mind do not really suffer pleasure and pain - they only
imagine they do. Pleasure and pain are the deceptive reactions of
mortal-mind as it grasps an imaginary objective world.
There are two ways in which the ceasing of
the mind-system may take place: as regards form, and as regards
continuation. The sense-organs function as regards form by the
interaction of form, contact and grasping; and they cease to function
when this contact is broken. As regards continuation,- when these
interactions of form, contact and grasping cease, there is no more
continuation of the seeing, hearing and other sense functions; with the
ceasing of these sense functions, the discriminations, graspings and
attachments of the discriminating-mind cease; and with their ceasing act
and deed and the habit-energy cease, and there is no more accumulation
of karma-defilement on the face of Universal Mind.
If the evolving mortal-mind were of the same nature as Universal Mind
the cessation of the lower mind-system would mean the cessation of
Universal Mind, but they are different for Universal Mind is not the
cause of mortal-mind. There is no cessation of Universal Mind in its
pure and essence-nature. What ceases to function is not Universal Mind
in its essence-nature, but is the cessation of the effect-producing
defilements upon its face that have been caused by the accumulation of
the habit-energy of the activities of the discriminating and thinking
mortal-mind. There is no cessation of Divine Mind which, in itself, is
the abode of Reality and the Womb of Truth.
By the cessation of the sense-minds is meant, not the cessation of their
perceiving functions, but the cessation of their discriminating and
naming activities which are centralized in the discriminating
mortal-mind. By the cessation of the mind-system as a whole is meant,
the cessation of discrimination, the clearing away of the various
attachments, and, therefore, the clearing away of the defilements of
habit-energy in the face of Universal Mind which have been accumulating
since beginningless time by reason of these discriminations,
attachments, erroneous reasonings, and following acts. The cessation of
the continuation aspect of the mind-system, namely, the discriminating
mortal-mind the entire world of maya and desire disappears. Getting rid
of the discriminating mortal-mind is Nirvana.
But the cessation of the discriminating-mind
can not take place until there has been a "turning-about" in the deepest
seat of consciousness. The mental habit of looking outward by the
discriminating-mind upon an external objective world must be given up,
and a new habit of realizing Truth within the intuitive-mind by becoming
one with the Truth itself must be established. Until this intuitive
self-realization of Noble Wisdom is attained. The evolving mind-system
will go on. But when an insight into the five Dharmas, the three
self-natures, and the twofold egolessness is attained, then the way will
be opened for this "turning-about" to take place. With the ending of
pleasure and pain, of conflicting ideas, of the disturbing interests of
egoism, a state of tranquilization will be attained in which the truths
of emancipation will be fully understood and there will be no further
evil out-flowings of the mind-system to interfere with the perfect
self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
Chapter VI
Transcendental Intelligence
Then said Mahamati: Prey tell us, Blessed
One, what constitutes Transcendental Intelligence?
The Blessed One replied: Transcendental Intelligence is the inner state
of self-realization of Noble Wisdom. It is realized suddenly and
intuitively as the "turning-about" takes place in the deepest seat of
consciousness; it neither enters nor goes out - it is like the moon seen
in water. Transcendental Intelligence is not subject to birth nor
destruction; it has nothing to do with combination nor concordance; it
is devoid of attachment and accumulation; it transcends all dualistic
concepts.
When Transcendental Intelligence is
considered, four things must be kept in mind: words, meanings, teachings
and Noble Wisdom (Arya-prajna). Words are employed to express meanings
but they are dependent upon discriminations and memory as cause, and
upon the employment of sounds and letters by which a mutual transference
of meaning is possible. Words are only symbols and may and may not
clearly and fully express the meaning intended and, moreover, words may
be understood quite differently from what was intended by the speaker.
Words are neither different nor not different from meaning and meaning
stands in the same relation to words.
If meaning is different from words it could
not be made manifest by means of words; but meaning is illumined by
words as things are by a lamp. Words are just like a man carrying a lamp
to look for his property, by which he can say: this is my property. Just
so, by means of words and speech originating in discrimination, the
Bodhisattva can enter into the meaning of the teachings of the
Tathagatas and through the meaning he can enter the exalted state of
self-realization of Noble Wisdom, which, in itself, is free from word
discrimination. But if a man becomes attached to the literal meaning of
words and holds fast to the illusion that words and meaning are in
agreement, especially such things as Nirvana which is un-born and
un-dying, or as to distinctions of the Vehicles, the five Dharmas, the
three self-natures, the he will fail to understand the true meaning and
will become entangled in assertions and refutations. Just as varieties
of objects are seen and discriminated in dreams and in visions, so ideas
and statements are discriminated erroneously and error goes on
multiplying.
The ignorant and simple-minded declare that
meaning is not otherwise than words, that as words are, so is meaning.
They think that as meaning has no body of its own that it cannot be
different from words and, therefore, declare meaning to be identical to
words. In this they are ignorant of the nature of words, which are
subject to birth and death, where as meaning is not; words are dependent
upon letters and meaning is not; meaning is apart from existence and
non-existence, it has no substratum, it is un-born. The Tathagatas do
not teach a Dharma that is dependent upon letters. Anyone who teaches a
doctrine that is dependent upon letters and words is a mere prattler,
because Truth is beyond letters and words and books.
This does not mean that letters and books
never declare what is in conformity with meaning and truth, but it means
that words and books are dependent upon discriminations, while meaning
and truth are not; moreover, words and books are subject to the
interpretation of individual minds, while meaning and truth are not. But
if Truth is not expressed in words and books, the scriptures which
contains the meaning of Truth would disappear, and when the scriptures
there will be no more disciples and masters and Bodhisattvas and Buddhas,
and there will be nothing to teach. But no one must become attached to
the words of the scriptures because even the canonical texts sometimes
deviate from their straightforward course owing to the imperfect
functioning of sentient minds. Religious discourses are given by myself
and other Tathagatas in response to the varying needs and faiths of all
manner of being, in order to free them from dependence upon the thinking
function of the mind-system, but they are not given to take the place of
self-realization of Noble Wisdom. When there is recognition that there
is nothing in the world but what is seen of the mind itself, all
dualistic discriminations will be discarded and the truth of
imagelessness will be understood, and will be seen to be in conformity
with the meaning rather than with words and letters.
The ignorant and simple-minded being
fascinated with their self-imaginations and erroneous reasonings, keep
on dancing and leap about, but are unable to understand the discourse by
words about the truth of self-realization, much less are they able to
understand the Truth itself. Clinging to the external world, they cling
to the study of books which are a means only, and do not know properly
how to ascertain the truth of self-realization, which is Truth unspoiled
by the four propositions. Self-realization is an exalted state of inner
attainment which transcends all dualistic thinking and which is above
the mind-system with its logic, reasoning, theorizing, and
illustrations. The Tathagatas discourse to the ignorant, but sustain
Bodhisattvas as they seek self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
Therefore, let every disciple take good heed
not to become attached to words as being in perfect conformity with
meaning, because Truth is not in the letters. When a man with his
finger-tip points to something to somebody, the finger-tip may be
mistaken for the thing pointed at; in the like manner the ignorant and
simple-minded, like children, are unable even to the day of their death
to abandon the idea that the finger-tip of words where there is meaning
itself. They cannot realize Ultimate Reality because of their intent
clinging to words where intended to be no more than a pointing finger.
Words and their discrimination bind one to the dreary round of rebirths
into the world of birth-and-death.; meaning stands alone and is a guide
to Nirvana. Meaning is attained by much learning, and much learning is
attained by becoming conversant with the meaning and not with words;
therefore, let seekers for truth reverently approach those who are wise
and avoid the sticklers for particular words.
As for teachings: there are priests and
popular preachers who are given to ritual and ceremony and who are
skilled in the various incantations and in the art of eloquence; they
should not be honored nor reverently attended upon, for what one gains
from them is emotional excitement and worldly enjoyment; it is not the
Dharma. Such preachers, by their clever manipulation of words and
phrases and various reasonings and incantations, being the mere prattle
of a child, as far as one can make out and not at all in accordance with
truth nor in unison with meaning, only serves to awaken sentient and
emotion, while it stupefies the mind. As he himself does not understand
the meaning of all things, he only confuses the minds of his hearers
with his dualistic views. Not understanding himself, that there is
nothing but what is seen of the mind, and himself attached to the notion
of self-nature in external things, and unable to know one path from
another, he has no deliverance to offer others. Thus these priests and
popular preachers who are clever in various incantations and skilled in
the art of eloquence, themselves never being emancipated from such
calamities as birth, old age, disease, sorrow, lamentation, pain and
despair, lead the ignorant to bewilderment by means of their various
words, phrases, examples, and conclusions.
Then there are the materialistic
philosophers. No respect nor service is to be shown to them because
their teaching, though they may be explained using hundred of thousands
of words and phrases, do not go beyond the concerns of this world and
this body and in the end they lead to suffering. As the materialistic
recognize no truth existing by itself, they are split up into many
schools, each which clings to its own way of reasoning.
But there is that which does not belong to materialism and which is not
reached by the knowledge of the philosophers who cling to
false-imaginations and erroneous reasonings because they fail to see
that, fundamentally, there is no reality in external objects. When it is
recognized that there is nothing beyond what is seen of the mind itself,
the discrimination of being and non-being ceases and, as there is thus
no external world of object of perception, nothing remains but the
solitude of Reality. This does not belong to the materialistic
philosophers, it is the domain of the Tathagatas. If such things are
imagined as the coming and going of the mind-system, vanishing and
appearing, solicitation, attachment, intenses affection, a philosophic
hypothesis, a theory, an abode, a sense-concept, atomic attraction,
organism, growth, thirst, grasping,- these things belong to materialism,
they are not mine. These are things that are the object of worldly
interest, to be sensed, handled and tasted; these are the things that
appear in the elements that make up the aggregates of personality where,
owing to the procreative force of lust, there arise all kinds of
disaster, birth, sorrow, lamentation, pain, despair, disease, old age,
death. All these things concerns worldly interests and enjoyment; they
lie along the path of the philosophers, which is not the path of the
Dharma. When true egolessness of things and persons is understood,
discrimination ceases to assert itself; the lower mind-system ceases to
function; the various Bodhisattva stages are followed one after another;
the Bodhisattva is able to utter his ten inexhaustible vows and is
anointed by all the Buddhas. The Bodhisattva becomes master of himself
and of all things by virtue of a life of spontaneous and radiant
effortlessness. Thus the Dharma, which is Transcendental Intelligence,
transcends all discriminations, all false-reasonings, all philosophical
systems, all dualism.
Then Mahamati said to the Blessed One: In the
Scriptures mention is made of the Womb of Tathagatahood and it is taught
that that which is born of it is by nature bright and pure, originally
unspotted and endowed with the thirty-two marks of excellence. As it is
described it is a precious gem but wrapped in a dirty garment soiled by
greed, anger, folly and false-imagination. We are taught that this
Buddha-nature immanent in everyone is eternal, unchanging, auspicious.
It is not this which is born of the Womb of Tathagatahood the same as
the soul-substance that is taught by the philosophers? The Divine Atman
as taught by them is also claimed to be eternal, inscrutable,
unchanging, imperishable. It there, or is there not a difference?
The Blessed One replied: No, Mahamati, my
Womb of Tathagatahood is not the same as the Divine Atman as taught by
the philosophers. What I teach is Tathagatahood in the sense of
Dharmakaya, Ultimate Oneness, Nirvana, emptiness, unbornness,
unqualifiedness, devoid of will-effort. The reason why I teach the
doctrine of Tathagatahood is to cause the ignorant and simple-minded to
lay aside their fears as they listen to the teaching of egolessness and
come to understand the state of non-discrimination and imagelessness.
The religious teaching of the Tathagatas are just like a potter making
various vessels by his own skill of hand with the aid of rob, water and
thread, out of the one mass of clay, so the Tathagatas by their command
of skillful means issuing from Noble Wisdom, by various terms,
expressions, and symbols, preach the twofold egolessness in order to
remove the last trace of discrimination that is preventing disciples
from attaining a self-realization of Noble Wisdom. The doctrine of the
Tathagata-womb is disclosed in order to awaken philosophers from their
clinging to the notion of a Divine Atman as a transcendental
personality, so that their minds that have become attached to the
imaginary notion of a "soul" as being something self-existing, may be
quickly awakened to a state of perfect enlightenment. All such notions
as causation, succession, atoms, primary elements, that make up
personality, personal soul, Supreme Spirit, Sovereign God, Creator, are
all figments of the imagination and manifestations of mind. No,
Mahamati, the Tathagata's doctrine of the Womb of Tathagatahood is not
the same as the philosopher's Atman.
The Bodhisattva is said to have well grasped the teaching of the
Tathagatas when, all alone in a lonely place, by means of his
Transcendental Intelligence, he walks the path leading to Nirvana.
Thereon his mind will unfold by perceiving, thinking, meditating, and,
abiding in the practice of concentration until he attains the
"turning-about" at the source of habit-energy, he will thereafter lead a
life of excellent deeds. His mind concentrated on the state of
Buddhahood, he will become thoroughly conversant with the noble truth of
self-realization; he will become perfect master of his own mind; he will
be like a gem radiating many colors; he will be able to assume bodies of
transformation; he will be able to enter into the minds of all to help
them; and; finally, by gradually ascending the stages he will become
established in the perfect Transcendental Intelligence of the
Tathagatas.
Nevertheless, Transcendental Intelligence
(Arya-jnana) is not Noble Wisdom (Arya-prajna) itself; only an intuitive
awareness of it. Noble Wisdom is a perfect state of imagelessness; it is
the Womb of "Suchness"; it is the all-conserving Divine Mind
(Alaya-vijnana) which in its pure Essence forever abides in perfect
patience and undisturbed tranquility.
Chapter VII
Self-Realization
Then said Mahamati: Pray tell us, Blessed
One, what is the nature of Self-realization by reason of which we shall
be able to attain Transcendental Intelligence?
The Blessed One Replied: Transcendental Intelligence rises when the
intellectual-mind reaches its limit and, if things are to be realized in
their true and essence nature, its processes of mentation, which are
based on particularized ideas, discriminations and judgements, must be
transcended by an appeal to some higher faculty of cognition, if there
be such a higher faculty. There is such a faculty in the intuitive-mind
(Manas), which as we have seen is the link between the intellectual-mind
and Universal Mind. While it is not an individualized organ like the
intellectual-mind, it has that which is much better,- direct dependence
upon Universal Mind. While intuition does not give information that can
be analyzed and discriminated, it gives that which is far superior,-
self-realization through identification.
Mahamati then asked the Blessed One, saying:
Pray tell us, Blessed One, what clear understandings an earnest disciple
should have if he is to be successful in the discipline that leads to
self-realization?
The Blessed One replied: There are four
things by the fulfilling of which an earnest disciple may gain
self-realization of Noble Wisdom and become and Bodhisattva-Mahasattva:
First, he must have a clear understanding that all things are only
manifestations of mind itself; second, he must discard the notion of
birth, abiding and disappearance; third, he must clearly understand the
egolessness of both things and persons; and fourth, he must have a true
conception of what constitutes self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
Provided with these four understandings, earnest disciples may become
Bodhisattvas and attain Transcendental Intelligence.
As to the first; he must recognize and be
fully convinced that this triple world is nothing but a complex
manifestation of one's mental activities; that is devoid of selfness and
its belongings; that there are no striving, no comings, no goings. He
must recognize and accept the fact that this triple world is manifested
and imagined as real only under the influence of habit-energy that has
been accumulated since beginningless past by reason of memory,
false-imagination, false-reasoning, and attachments to the
multiplicities of objects and reactions in close relationship and in
conformity to ideas of body-property-and-abode.
As the to second; he must recognize and be convinced that all things are
to be regarded as forms seen in a vision and a dream, empty of
substance, un-born and without self-nature; that all things exist only
by reason of a complicated network of causation which owes its rise to
the discrimination and attachment and which eventuates in the rise of
the mind-system and its belongings and evolvements.
As to the third; he must recognize and
patiently accept the fact that his own mind and personality is also
mind-constructed, that it is empty of substance, unborn and egoless.
With these three things clearly in mind, the Bodhisattva will be able to
enter into the truth of imagelessness.
As to the fourth; he must have a true
conception of what constitutes self-realization of Noble Wisdom. First,
it is not comparable to the perceptions attained by the sense-mind, and
neither is comparable to the cognition of the discriminating and
intellectual-mind. Both of these presuppose a difference between self
and not-self and the knowledge so attained is characterized by
individuality and generality. Self-realization is based on identity and
oneness; there is nothing to be discriminated nor predicated concerning
it. But to enter into it the Bodhisattva must be free from all
presuppositions and attachments to things, ideas and selfness.
Then said Mahamati to the Blessed One: Prey
tell us, Blessed One, concerning the characteristics of deep attachments
to existence and as to how we may become detached from existence?
The Blessed One replied: When one tries to
understand the significance of things by means of words and
discriminations, there follow immeasurably deep-seated attachments to
existence. For instance: there are the deep-seated attachments to signs
of individuality, to causation, to the notion of being and non-being, to
the discrimination of birth and death, of doing and of not-doing, to the
habit of discrimination itself upon which philosophers are so dependent.
There are three attachments that are
especially deep-seated in the minds of all: greed, anger and
infatuation, which are based on lust, fear and pride. Back to these lies
discrimination and desire which is procreative and is accompanied with
excitement and avariciousness and love of comfort and desire for eternal
life; and, following, is a succession of rebirths on the five paths of
existence and a continuation of attachments. But if these attachments
are broken off, no signs of attachment nor of detachment will remain
because they are based on things that are non-existent; when this truth
is clearly understood the net of attachment is cleared away.
But depending upon and attaching itself to to
the triple combination which works in unison there is the rising and the
continuation of the mind-system incessantly functioning, and because of
it there is the deep-felt and continuous assertion of the will-to-live.
When the triple combination that causes the functioning of the
mind-system ceases to exist, there is the triple emancipation and there
is no further rising of any combination. When the existence and the
non-existence of the external world are recognized as rising from the
mind itself, then the Bodhisattva is prepared to enter into the state of
imagelessness and therein to see into the emptiness which characterizes
all discrimination and all the deep-seated attachments resulting
therefrom. Therein he will see no signs of deep-rooted attachment nor
detachment; therein he will see no one in bondage and no one in
emancipation, expect those who themselves cherish bondage and
emancipation, because in all things there is no "substance" to be taken
hold of.
But so long as these discriminations are cherished by the ignorant and
simple-minded they go on attaching themselves to them and, like the
silkworms, go on spinning their thread of discrimination and enwrapping
themselves and others, and are charmed with their poison. But to the
wise there are no signs of attachment nor of detachment; all things are
seen as abiding in solitude where there is no evolving of
discrimination. Mahamati, when you and other Bodhisattvas understand
well the distinction between attachment and detachment, you will be in
possession of skillful means for avoiding becoming attached to words
according to which one proceeds to grasp meanings. Free from the
domination of words you will be able to establish yourselves where there
will be a "turning-about" in the deepest seat of consciousness by means
of which you will attain self-realization of Noble Wisdom and be able to
enter into all the Buddha-lands and assemblies. There you will be
stamped with the stamp of powers, self-command, the psychic faculties,
and will be endowed with the wisdom and the power of the ten
inexhaustible vows, and will become radiant with the variegated rays of
the Transformation Bodies. Therewith you will shine without effort like
the moon, the sun, the magic wishing-jewel, and at every stage will view
things as being of perfect oneness with yourself, uncontaminated by any
self-consciousness. Seeing that all things are like a dream, you will be
able to enter into the stage of the Tathagatas and be able to deliver
discourses on the Dharma to the world of beings in accordance with their
needs and be able to free them from all dualistic notions and false
discriminations.
Mahamati, there are two ways of considering self-realization: namely,
the teachings about it, and the realization itself. The teachings as
variously given in the nine divisions of the doctrinal works, for the
instructions of those who are inclined toward it, by making use of
skillful means and expedients, are intended to awaken in all beings a
true perception of the Dharma. The teachings are designed to keep one
away from all dualistic notions of being and non-being and oneness and
otherness.
Realization itself is within the inner consciousness. It is an inner
experience that has no connection with the lower mind-system and its
discriminations of words, ideas and philosophical speculations. It
shines out with its own clear light to reveal the error and foolishness
of mind-constructed teachings, to render impotent evil influences from
without, and to guide one unerringly to the realm of the good
non-outflowings. Mahamati, when the earnest disciple and Bodhisattva is
provided with these requirements, the way is open to his perfect
attainment of self-realization of Noble Wisdom, and to the full
enjoyment of the fruits that arise therefrom.
Then Mahamati asked the Blessed One, saying:
Pray tell us, Blessed One, about the One Vehicle which the Blessed One
has said characterizes the attainment of the inner self-realization of
Noble Wisdom?
The Blessed One replied: In order to discard
some easily discriminations and erroneous reasonings, the Bodhisattva
should retire by himself to a quiet, secluded place where he may reflect
within himself without relying on anyone else, and there let him exert
himself to make successive advances advances along the stages; this
solitude is the characteristic feature of the inner attainment of
self-realization of Noble Wisdom.
I call this the One Vehicle, not because it is the One Vehicle, but
because it is only in solitude that one is able to recognize and realize
the path of the One Vehicle. So long as the mind is distracted and is
making conscious effort, there can be no culmination as regards the
various vehicles; it is only when the mind is alone and quiet that it is
able to forsake the discriminations of the external world and seek
realization of an inner realm where there is neither vehicle nor one who
rides in it. I speak of the three vehicles in order to carry the
ignorant. I do not speak much about the One Vehicle because there is no
way by which earnest disciples and masters can realize Nirvana, unaided.
According to the discourses of the Tathagatas earnest disciples should
be segregated and disciplined and trained in meditation and dhyana
whereby they are aided by many devices and expedients to realize
emancipation. It is because earnest disciples and masters have not fully
destroyed the habit-energy of karma and the hindrances of discriminative
knowledge and human passion that they are often unable to accept the
twofold egolessnesss and the inconceivable transformation death, that I
preach the triple vehicle and not the One Vehicle. When earnest
disciples have gotten rid of all their evil habit-energy and been able
to realize the twofold egolessnesss, then they will not be intoxicated
by the bliss of the Samadhis and will be awakened into the super-realm
of the good non-outflowings. Being awakened into the realm of the good
non-outflowings, they will be able to gather up all the requisites for
the attainment of Noble Wisdom which is beyond conception and is of
sovereign power. But really, Mahamati, there are no vehicles, and so I
speak of the One Vehicle. Mahamati, the full recognition of the One
Vehicle has never been attained by either earnest disciples, masters, or
even by the great Brahma; it has been attained only by the Tathagatas
themselves. That is the reason that it is known as the One Vehicle. I do
not speak much about it because there is no way by which earnest
disciples can realize Nirvana unaided.
Then Mahamati asked the Blessed One, saying:
What are the steps that will lead an awakened disciple toward the
self-realization of Noble Wisdom?
The Blessed One replied: The beginning lies
in the recognition that the external world is only a manifestation of
the activities of the mind itself, and that the mind grasps it as an
external world simply because of its habit of discrimination and
false-reasoning. The disciple must get into the habit of looking at
things truthfully. He must recognize the fact that the world has no self
nature, that it is un-born, that it is like a passing cloud, like an
imaginary wheel made by a revolving firebrand, like the castle of the
Gandharvas, like the moon reflected in the ocean, like a vision, a
mirage, a dream. He must come to understand that mind in its
essence-nature has nothing to do with discrimination nor causation; he
must not listen to discourses based on the imaginary terms and
qualifications; he must understand that Universal Mind in its pure
essence is a state of imagelessness, that it is only because of the
accumulated defilements on its face that body-property-and-abode appear
to be its manifestations, that in its own pure nature it is unaffected
and unaffecting by such changes as rising, abiding and destruction; he
must fully understand that all these things come with the awakening of
the notion of an ego-soul and its conscious mind. Therefore, Mahamati,
let those disciples who wish to realize Noble Wisdom by following the
Tathagata Vehicle desist from all discrimination and erroneous reasoning
about personality and its sense-world or about such ideas as causation,
rising, abiding and destruction, and exercise themselves in the
discipline of dhyana that leads to the realization of Noble Wisdom.
To practice dhyana, the earnest disciple
should retire to a quiet and solitary place, remembering that life-long
habits of discriminative thinking cannot be broken off easily nor
quickly. There are four kinds of concentrative meditation (dhyana): The
dhyana practiced by the ignorant; the dhyana devoted to the examination
of meaning; the dhyana with "suchness" (tathata) for its object; and the
dhyana of the Tathagatas.
The dhyana practiced by the ignorant is the one resorted to by those who
are following the example of the disciples and masters but who do not
understand its purpose and, therefore, it becomes "still-sitting" with
vacant minds. This dhyana is practiced, also, by those who, despising
the body, see it as a shadow and a skeleton full of suffering and
impurity, and yet who cling to the notion of an ego, seek to attain
emancipation by the mere cessation of thought.
The dhyana devoted to the examination of
meaning, is the one practiced by those who, perceiving the untenability
of such ideas as self, other and both, which are held by the
philosophers, and who have passed beyond the twofold-egolessnesss,
devote dhyana to an examination of the significance of egolessnesss and
the differentiations of the Bodhisattvas stages.
The dhyana with Tathata, or "Suchness", or
Oneness, or Divine Name, for its object is practiced by those earnest
disciples and masters who, while fully recognizing the twofold
egolessnesss and the imagelessness of Tathata, yet cling to the notion
of ultimate Tathata.
The dhyana of the Tathagatas is the dhyana of those who are entering
upon the stage of Tathagatahood and who, abiding in the triple bliss
which characterizes the self-realization of Noble Wisdom, are devoting
themselves for the sake of all beings to the accomplishment of
incomprehensible works for their emancipation. This is the pure dhyana
of the Tathagatas. When all lesser things and ideas are transcended and
forgotten, and there remains only a perfect state of imagelessness where
Tathagata and Tathata are merged into perfect Oneness, then the Buddhas
will come together from all their Buddha-lands and with shining hands
resting on his forehead will welcome a new Tathagata.
Chapter VIII
The Attainment of Self-Realization
Then said Mahamati to the Blessed One: Pray
tell us more as to what constitutes the state of self-realisation?
The Blessed One replied: In the life of an
earnest disciple there are two aspects that are to be distinguished:
namely, the state of attachment to the self-natures arising from
discrimination of