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The Buddhist Teaching on Physical Phenomena
Chapter 5
Subtle Rupas produced by Kamma

The
objects which can be experienced through the sense-doors and also the sense-organs
themselves are gross rupas, the other rupas are subtle rupas. The sense-organs
are produced solely by kamma, not by the other three factors of citta,
temperature and nutrition which can produce rupas. There are also subtle
rupas which are produced solely by kamma. They are: the femininity-faculty,
the masculinity-faculty, the life-faculty and the heart-base. With regard
to the femininity-faculty (itthindriyam) and the masculinity-faculty (purisindriyam),
which are collectively called bhavarupa or sex, these are rupas produced
by kamma from the first moment of our life and throughout life. Thus, it
is due to kamma whether one is born as a male or as a female. The “Atthasalini”
(II, Book II, Ch III, 322) explains that birth as a male and birth as a
female are different kinds of vipaka. Being born as a human being is kusala
vipaka, but since good deeds have different degrees also their results
have different degrees. Birth as a female is the result of kusala kamma
which is of a lesser degree than the kusala kamma which conditions birth
as a male. In the course of life one can notice the difference between
the status of men and that of women. It is a fact that in society generally
men are esteemed higher than women. Usually women cannot so easily obtain
a position of honour in society. But as regards the development of wisdom,
both men and women can develop it and attain arahatship. We read in the
“Kindred Sayings” (IV, Salayatana-vagga, Part III, Kindred Sayings about
Womankind, 3, § 34, Growth):
Increasing in five growths, monks, the ariyan
woman disciple increases in the ariyan growth, takes hold of the essential,
takes hold of the better. What five?
She grows in confidence (saddha), grows in virtue (sila),
in learning, in generosity, in wisdom. Making such growth, monks, she takes
hold of the essential, she takes hold of the better....
The “Atthasalini” (II, Book II, Ch III, 321) explains that
women and men have different features, that they are different in outer
appearance, in occupation and deportment. But the feminine features, etc.
are not identical with the rupa which is the femininity faculty. The “Atthasalini”
states:
...They are produced in course of process because
of that faculty. When there is seed the tree grows because of the seed,
and is replete with branch and twig and stands filling the sky; so when
there is the feminine controlling faculty called femininity, feminine features,
etc., come to be....
The same is said about the masculinity faculty. The “Atthasalini”
(same section, 322) gives the following definitions of the femininity faculty
and the masculinity faculty:
Of these two controlling faculties the feminine has the
characteristic of (knowing) the state of woman, the function of showing
“this is woman”, the manifestation which is the cause of femininity
in feature, mark, occupation, deportment.
The masculinity controlling faculty has the characteristic
of (knowing) the state of man, the function of showing “this is man”, the
manifestation which is the cause of masculinity in feature, etc. (See also
Dhammasangani § 633, 634 and Visuddhimagga XIV, 58.).
These two faculties which, as the Visuddhimagga (XIV,
58) explains, are “coextensive with” or pervade the whole body, are not
known by visual cognition but only by mind-cognition. But, as the “Atthasalini”
(321) states, their characteristic features, etc., which are conditioned
by their respective faculties, are known by visual cognition as well as
by mind-cognition.
Seeing experiences only visible object, it does not know
“This is a woman” or “This is a man”. The citta which recognizes feminine
or masculine features does so through the mind-door, but this recognizing
is conditioned by seeing. When the commentary states that these characteristic
features are known by visual cognition as well as by mind-cognition, it
does not speak in detail about the different processes of cittas which
experience objects through the eye-door and through the mind-door.
Generally, women like to emphasize their femininity in
make up and clothes and men like to emphasize their masculinity. One clings
to one’s feminine or masculine features, one’s way of walking and deportment.
We should not forget that it is the femininity faculty or masculinity faculty,
only a rupa produced by kamma, which conditions our outward appearance
or deportment to be specifically feminine or masculine. We take our sex
for self, but it is only a conditioned element devoid of self.
Life faculty, the rupa which is jivitindriya, is also
a subtle rupa produced by kamma from the first moment of life and throughout
life (There is nama-jivitindriya and rupa-jivitindriya. Nama-jivitindriya
is a cetasika among the “universals”, cetasikas which accompany every citta.).
Since this kind of rupa is produced solely by kamma, it arises only in
living beings, not in plants (Plants consist of rupas produced by temperature
or the element of heat.). It is a “controlling faculty” (indriya), it has
a dominating influence over the other rupas it arises together with since
it maintains their life. The “Visuddhimagga” (XIV, 59) states about life
faculty (See also Dhammasangati § 635. The Atthasalini (I Part IV,
Ch I, 123, 124) refers to its definition of nama-jivitindriya.):
The life faculty has the characteristic of maintaining
conascent kinds of matter (The rupas arising together with it.). Its function
is to make them occur. It is manifested in the establishing of their presence.
Its proximate cause is primary elements that are to be sustained.
Life faculty maintains the other rupas it arises together
with in one group, and then it falls away together with them. The “Visuddhimagga”
(in the same section) states:
It does not prolong presence at the moment of
dissolution because it is itself dissolving, like the flame of a lamp when
the wick and the oil are getting used up....
We cling to our body as something alive. Rupas of a “living
body” have a quality which is lacking in dead matter or plants, they are
supported by the life faculty. We are inclined to take this quality for
“self”, but it is only a rupa produced by kamma. The heart-base (hadayavatthu)
is another rupa produced solely by kamma. In the planes of existence where
there are nama and rupa cittas have a physical place of origin, a base
(vatthu). Seeing-consciousness has as its base the eye-base, the rupa which
is eyesense, and evenso have the other sense-cognitions their appropriate
bases where they arise. Apart from the sense-bases there is another base:
the heart-base. This is the place of origin for all cittas other than the
sense-cognitions.
At the first moment of life the rebirth-consciousness
(patisandhi-citta) which arises is produced by kamma. If this citta arises
in a plane of existence where there are nama and rupa it must have a base:
this is the heart-base, which is produced by kamma. Kamma produces this
rupa from the first moment of life and throughout life.
The rupa which is the heart-base has not been classified
in the “Dhammasangani”, but it is referred to in the “Book of Conditional
Relations” ( Patthana), the Seventh Book of the Abhidhamma. In the section
on “Dependance Condition” (Part II, Analytical Exposition of Conditions)
it is said that dependant on the five sense-bases the five sense-cognitions
arise, and dependant on “this matter” mind-element and mind-consciousness-element
arise. “This matter” is the rupa which is the heart-base and the mind-element
and mind-consciousness-element comprise all cittas other than the five
sense-cognitions (Mind-element are the five-sense-door adverting-consciousness
and the two types of receiving-consciousness which are kusala vipaka and
akusala vipaka. Mind-consciousness-element are all cittas other than the
sense-cognitions and mind-element, a group of ten rupas including the heart-base
in Book II, Ch III, 316. As I shall explain later on, from the first moment
of our life kamma produces three decads, groups of ten rupas: the bodysense-decad,
the sex-decad and the heart-base-decad.).
The “Visuddhimagga” (XIV, 60) gives the following definition
of the heart-base (The Atthasalini does not classify the heart-base separately,
but it mentions the “basis-decad”):
The heart-basis has the characteristic of being
the (material) support for the mind-element and for the mind-consciousness-
element. Its function is to observe them. It is manifested as the carrying
of them....
The “Visuddhimagga” (VIII, 111,112) states that the heart-base
is to be found on dependance on the blood, inside the heart. It is of no
use to speculate where exactly the heart-base is. It is sufficient to know
that there is a rupa which is base for all cittas other than the sense-cognitions.
We may not experience the heart-base, but if there would be no heart-base
we could not think at this moment, we could not know which objects we are
experiencing, we could not feel happy or unhappy. In the planes of existence
where there are nama and rupa all cittas must have a physical base, they
cannot arise outside the body. When we, for example, are angry, cittas
rooted in aversion arise and these originate at the heart-base. If we had
not studied the Abhidhamma we would have thought that all cittas originate
in what we call in conventional language “brain”. One may cling to a concept
of brain and take it for self. The Abhidhamma can clear up misunderstandings
about bodily phenomena and mental phenomena and the way they function.
It explains how physical phenomena and mental phenomena are interrelated.
Mental phenomena are dependant on physical phenomena and physical phenomena
can have mental phenomena as conditioning factors.
The conditioning factors for what we call body and mind
are impermanent. Why then do we take body and mind for something permanent?
We read in the “Kindred Sayings” (III, Khandha-vagga, Kindred Sayings
on Elements, First Fifty, Ch 2, § 18, Cause) that the Buddha said
to the monks at Savatthi:
Body, monks is impermanent. That which is the
cause, that which is the condition for the arising of body, that also is
impermanent. How, monks, can a body which is compounded of the impermanent
come to be permanent?....
The same is said about the mental phenomena (classified as
four aggregates or khandhas). We then read:
Thus seeing, the welltaught ariyan disciple (An
ariyan is a person who has attained enlightenment.) is repelled by body,
is repelled by feeling, by perception, by the “activities” (Cetasikas other
than feeling and perception are classified as one khandha, that of the
activities or formations, sankharakkhandha.). He is repelled by consciousness.
Being repelled by it he lusts not for it: not lusting he is set free. Thus
he realizes: ”Rebirth is destroyed, lived is the righteous life, done is
my task, for life in these conditions there is no here-after.”
Questions
1. Why can life faculty not arise in plants?
2. What is the base for citta rooted in aversion?
3. Does the brain have the function of base for cittas?
4. What is the base for rebirth-consciousness in the
human plane of existence?

26 January, 2002

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