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THE PATH
OF PURIFICATION
(VISUDDHIMAGGA)
Chapter XVII: Conclusion
DESCRIPTION OF THE SOIL IN WHICH
UNDERSTANDING GROWS
(Panna-bhumi-niddesa)
[Section B. -
Exposition]
[III. Detailed Exposition]
[i. Ignorance]
58. (cont'd.) According to the Suttanta
method [530] ignorance is unknowing about the four instances
beginning with suffering. According to the Abhidhamma method it is
unknowing about the eight instances [that is to say, the above-mentioned
four] together with [the four] beginning with the past; for this is
said 'Herein, what is ignorance? It is unkowing about suffering, [unknowing
about the origin of suffering, unknowing about the cessation of
suffering, unknowing about the way leading to the cessation of suffering,]
unknowing about the past, unknowing about the future, unknowing about
the past and future, unknowing about specific conditionality and conditionally-arisen
states' (cf. Dhs.1162).
59. Herein, while ignorance about any instance
that is not the two supramundane truths can also arise as object
(see §102), nevertheless here it is only intended [subjectively]
as concealment. For when [thus] arisen it keeps the truth of suffering
concealed, preventing penetration of the true individual function
and characteristic of that truth. Likewise, origin, cessation, and
the path, bygone five aggregates called the past,
coming five aggregates called the future, both of these
together called the past and future, and both
specific conditionality and conditionally-arisen states together
called specific conditionality and conditionally-arisen
states - all of which it keeps concealed, preventing their
true individual functions and characteristics being penetrated thus:
This is ignorance, these are formations. That is why it is said,
'It is unknowing about suffering ... unknowing about specific conditionality
and conditionally-arisen states'.
60. Formations are
the six mentioned in brief above thus 'the three, namely, formations
of merit, etc., and the three, namely, the bodily formation, etc.'
(§44); but in detail here the [first] three formations are
twenty-nine volitions, that is to say, the formation of merit consisting
of thirteen volitions, counting the eight sense-sphere profitable
volitions that occur in giving, in virtue, etc., and the five fine-material
profitable volitions that occur in development [of meditation]; then
the formation of demerit consisting of the twelve unprofitable
volitions that occur in killing living things, etc.; then the formation
of the imperturbable consisting in the four profitable volitions associated
with the immaterial sphere, which occur in development [of those
meditations].
61. As regards the other three, the bodily
formation is bodily volition, the verbal formation is verbal volition,
and the mental formation is mental volition. This triad is mentioned
in order to show that at the moment of the accumulation of the kamma
the formations of merit, etc., occur in these [three] kamma doors.
For the eight sense-sphere profitable and twelve unprofitable volitions,
making twenty, are the bodily formation when they occur in the body
door and produce bodily intimation. Those same volitions [531] are called
the verbal formation when they occur in the speech door and produce verbal
intimation. But volition connected with direct-knowledge is not included
here in these two cases because it is not a condition for [resultant
rebirth-linking] consciousness later. And like direct-knowledge volition,
so also volition connected with agitation is not included; therefore
that too should not be included as a condition for [rebirth-linking]
consciousness. However, all these have ignorance as their condition.
And all the twenty-nine volitions are the mental formation when they
arise in the mind door without originating either kind of intimation.
So this triad comes within the first triad, and accordingly, as far as
the meaning is concerned, ignorance can be understood as condition simply
for formations of merit and so on.
62. Herein, it might be [asked]: How can
it be known that these formation have ignorance as their condition?
- By the fact that they exist when ignorance exists. For when
unknowing - in other words, ignorance - of suffering, etc., is unabandoned
in a man, owing firstly to his unknowing about suffering and about the
past, etc., then he believes the suffering of the round of rebirths
to be pleasant and he embarks upon the three kinds of formations which
are the cause of that very suffering. Owing to his unknowing about suffering's
origin he embarks upon formations that, being subordinated to craving,
are actually the cause of suffering, imagining them to be the cause
of pleasure. And owing to his unknowing about cessation and the path,
he misperceives the cessation of suffering to be in some particular destiny
[such as the Brahma world] that is not in fact cessation; he misperceives
the path to cessation, believing it to consist in sacrifices, mortification
for immortality, etc., which are not in fact the path to cessation; and
so while aspiring to the cessation of suffering, he embarks upon the
three kinds of formation in the form of sacrifices, mortification for
immortality, and so on.
63. Furthermore, his non-abandonment of
that ignorance about the four truths in particular prevents
him from recognizing as suffering the kind of suffering called
the fruit of merit, which is fraught with the many dangers beginning
with birth, ageing, disease and death, and so he embarks upon the
formation of merit classed as bodily, verbal, and mental formations
in order to attain that [kind of suffering], like one desiring celestial
nymphs [who jumps over] a cliff. Also not seeing how that fruit of
merit reckoned as pleasure eventually breeds great distress owing to
the suffering in its change and that it gives little satisfaction, he
embarks upon the formation of merit of the kinds already stated, which
is the condition for that very [suffering in change], like a moth that
falls into a lamp's flame, and like the man who wants the drop of honey
and licks the honey-smeared knife-edge. Also not seeing the danger in
the indulgence of sense-desires, etc., with its result, [wrongly] perceiving
pleasure and overcome by defilements, he embarks upon the formation
of demerit that occurs in the three doors [of kamma], like a child who
plays with filth, and like a man who wants to die and eats poison. Also,
unaware of the suffering due to formations and the suffering-in-change
[inherent] in kamma-results in the immaterial sphere, owing to the perversion
of [wrongly perceiving them as] eternal, etc., he embarks upon the formation
of the imperturbable which is a mental formation, like one who has lost
his way and takes the road to a goblin city.
64. So formations exist only when ignorance
exists, [532] not when it does not; and that is how it can be
known that these formations have ignorance as their condition.
This is said too 'Not knowing, bhikkhus,
in ignorance, he forms the formation of merit, forms the formation
of demerit, forms the formation of the imperturbable. As soon as
a bhikkhu's ignorance is abandoned and clear vision arisen, bhikkhus,
with the fading away of ignorance and the arising of clear vision he
does not form even formations of merit' (cf.S.ii,82).
65. Here it might be said: Let us then
firstly agree that ignorance is a condition for formations. But
it must now be stated for which formations, and in which way it
is a condition.
Here is the reply: Twenty-four conditions
have been stated by the Blessed One as follows.
66. '(1)
Root-cause condition, (2) object condition, (3) predominance
condition, (4) proximity condition, (5) contiguity condition, (6)
conascence condition, (7) mutuality condition, (8) support condition,
(9) decisive-support condition, (10) prenascence condition, (11)
postnascence condition, (12) repetition condition, (13) kamma condition,
(14) kamma-result condition, (15) nutriment condition, (16) faculty
condition, (17) jhana condition, (18) path condition, (19) association
condition, (20) dissociation condition, (21) presence condition, (22)
absence condition, (23) disappearance condition, (24) non-disappearance
condition' (Ptn1.1).
67. (1) Herein it is a root-cause
and a condition, thus it is root-cause condition.
It is by its being a root-cause that it is a condition; what is
meant is that it is a condition owing to its status as root-cause. The
same method applies in the case of object condition and the rest.
Herein, 'cause (hetu)' is a term
for a part of a syllogism, for a reason, and for a root. For with
the words 'proposition (patinna)', 'cause (=
hetu = middle term)', etc., in the world it is a
member of a syllogism that is called a 'cause'. But in the Dispensation,
in such passages as 'Those states that are produced from a cause'
(Vin.i,40) it is a reason (karana); and in such passages as
'Three profitable [root-]causes, three unprofitable [root-]causes'
(Dhs.1053) it is a root (mula) that is called
a 'cause'. The last is intended here.
68. As to 'condition (paccaya)'
, the word-meaning here is this: It [the fruit,] comes from that,
depending thereon (paticca etasma eti), thus
that is a condition (paccaya see note 2); the meaning is, [a
state] occurs by not dispensing with that. What is meant is: when a
state is indispensable to another state's presence or arising, the
former is a condition for the latter. But as to characteristic, a condition
has the characteristic of assisting; for any given state [533] that
assists the presence or arising of a given state is called the latter's
condition. The words, condition, cause, reason, source, originator,
producer, etc., are one in meaning though different in the letter. So,
since it is a cause in the sense of a root, and a condition in the sense
of assistance, briefly a state that is assistantial in the sense of
a root is a [root-]cause condition.
69. The intention of [some] teachers is
that it establishes the profitable, etc., state in what is profitable,
etc., as paddy seeds, etc., do for paddy, etc., and as the colour
of gems, etc., do for the lustre of gems, and so on.
{10}
But if that is so, then [it follows that] the state
of root-cause condition does not aply to the kinds of materiality
originated by it, for it does not establish any profitableness, etc.,
in them. Nevertheless it is a condition for them, for this is said
'Root-causes are a condition, as root-cause condition, for the states
associated with a root-cause and for the kinds of materiality originated
thereby' (Ptn1.1). Again, the indeterminateness of root-cause-less
consciousness is established without it. And the profitableness, etc.,
of those with root-cause is bound up with wise attention, etc., not with
the associated root-causes. And if the profitableness, etc., resided
in the associated root-causes as an individual essence, then either
the non-greed bound up with the root-cause in the associated states
would be only profitable or it would be only indeterminate; but since
it can be both, profitableness, etc., in the root-causes must still
be sought for, just as in the associated states [such as wise attention,
and so on].
70. But when the root-causes' sense of
root is taken as establishing stableness, rather than as establishing
profitableness, etc., there is no contradiction. For states that
have obtained a root-cause condition are firm, like trees, and stable;
but those without root-cause are, like moss [with roots no bigger
than] sesamum seeds, etc., unstable. So an assistantial state may
be understood as a root-cause condition, since it establishes stableness
through being of assistance in the sense of a root.
71. (2) As to the others that follow,
a state that assists by being an object is an object condition.
Now there are no states that are not object conditions; for
the passage beginning 'The visible-data base [is a condition,
as object condition,] for the eye-consciousness element' concludes
thus 'When any states, as states of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants,
arise contingent upon any states, these [latter] states are conditions,
as object condition, for those [former] states' (Ptn1.1).
{11}
For just as a weak man both gets up and stands by hanging
on to (alambitva) a stick or rope, so states of
consciousness and consciousness-concomitants always arise and
are present contingent upon visible data, etc., as their object
(arammana = alambana). Therefore all states that are objects
of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants should be understood
as object condition. [534]
72. (3) A state that assists in the sense
of being foremost is a predominance condition.
It is of two kinds as conascent and as object. Herein, because
of the passage beginning 'Predominance of zeal is a condition, as
predominace condition, for states associated with zeal and for the
kinds of materiality originated thereby' (Ptn1.2), it is the four
states called zeal, [purity of] consciousness, energy, and inquiry,
that should be understood as predominance condition; but not simultaneously,
for when consciousness occurs with emphasis on zeal and putting zeal
foremost, then it is zeal not the others, that is predominant. So
with the rest. But the state, by giving importance to which, immaterial
states occur, is their object-predominance. Hence
it is said 'When any states, as states of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants
arise by giving importance to any states, these [latter] states are
a condition, as predominance condition, for those [former] states'
(Ptn1.2).
73. (4), (5) A state that assists by being
proximate is a proximity condition. A state that
assists by being contiguous is a contiguity condition.
The explanation of this pair of conditions is very diffuse,
but substantially it is this:
{12}
the regular order of consciousness begins thus, mind element
is proximate (next) after eye consciousness, mind-consciousness
element is proximate (next) after eye consciousness, mind-consciousness
element is proximate (next) after mind element, and this is established
only by each preceding consciousness, not otherwise; consequently
a state that is capable of arousing an appropriate kind of consciousness
proximate (next) to itself is a proximity condition. Hence it is said
'Proximity condition: eye consciousness and the states associated
therewith are a condition, as proximity condition, for mind-element
and for the states associated therewith' (Ptn1.2).
74. (5) Proximity condition is the same
as contiguity condition. The difference
here is only in the letter, there is none in the meaning; just
as in the case of the words 'growth' and 'continuity' (Ch.XIV,§66),
etc., and as in the case of the 'terminology dyad', 'language dyad'
(Dhs.1306), and so on.
75. The opinion of [certain] teachers
{13}
is that proximity condition refers to proximity of
aim (fruit) and contiguity condition refers to proximity of time.
But that is contradicted by such statements as 'The profitable [consciousness]
belonging to the base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception
in one who emerges from cessation is a condition, as contiguity condition,
for fruition attainment [consciousness]' (Ptn1.160).
76. Now they say in this context that
'The ability of states to produce [their fruit] is not diminished,
but the influence of meditative development prevents states from
arising in proximity'. But that only establishes that there is no
proximity of time; and we also say the same, namely, that there is
no proximity of time there owing to the influence of development. [535]
But since there is no proximity of time, the state of contiguity condition
is therefore impossible [according to them] since their belief is
that the contiguity condition depends on proximity of time (cf.MA.ii,363).
Instead of adopting any such misinterpretation the difference should
be treated as residing in the letter only, not in the meaning. How?
There is no interval (antara) between them, thus
they are proximate (an-antara); they are quite
without interval because [even the distinction of] co-presence
is lacking, thus they are contiguous (samanantara).
{14}
77. A state that, while arising, assists
[another state] by making it arise together with itself is a
conascence condition, as a lamp is for illumination.
With the imaterial aggregates, etc., it is sixfold, according as
it is said '(i)The four immaterial aggregates are a condition, as
conascence condition, for each other; (ii) the four great primaries
are ... for each other; (iii) at the moment of descent into the womb
mentality and materiality are ... for each other; (iv) states of consiousness
and its concomitants are ... for the kinds of materiality originated
by consciousness; (v) the great primaries are ... for derived materiality;
(vi) material states are sometimes [as at rebirth-linking] a condition,
as conascence condition, and sometimes [as in the course of an existence]
not a condition as conascence condition, for immaterial states' (Ptn1.3).
This refers only to the heart basis.
78. (7) A state that assists by means
of mutual arousing and consolidating is a mutuality condition,
as the three sticks of a tripod give each other consolidating
support. With the immaterial aggregates, etc., it is threefold,
according as it is said 'The four immaterial aggregates are a condition
as mutuality condition, [for each other;] the four great primaries
are conditions, as mutuality condition, [for each other;] at the
moment of descent into the womb mentality and materiality are conditions,
as mutuality condition, [for each other]' (Ptn1.3).
79. (8) A state that assists in the mode
of foundation and in the mode of support is a support condition,
as the earth is for trees, as canvas is for paintings,
and so on. It should be understood in the way stated for conascence
thus 'The four immaterial aggregates are a condition, as support
condition, for each other' (Ptn1.3), but the sixth instance has been
set forth in this way here 'The eye base [is a condition, as support
condition,] for the eye-consciousness element [and for the states
associated therewith]; the ear base ...; the nose base ...; the tongue
base ...; the body base is a condition, as support condition, for
the body-consciousness element and for the states associated therewith;
the materiality with which as their support the mind element and the
mind-consciousness element occur is a condition, as support condition,
for the mind element, and for the states associated therewith' (Ptn1.4).
80. (9) Decisive support condition;
firstly here is the word-meaning: [536] it is treated as support,
not dispensed with, by its own fruit because [its own fruit's]
existence is dependent on it, thus it is the support. But just as
great misery is despair, so great support is decisive support. This
is a term for a cogent reason. Consequently a state that assists
by being a cogent reason should be understood as a decisive support
condition.
It is threefold, namely (a) object-decisive-support,
(b) proximate-decisive-support, and (c) natural-decisive-support,
condition.
81. (a) Herein, firstly object-decisive-support-condition
is set forth without differentiating it from object-predominance
in the way beginning 'Having given a gift, having undertaken the
precepts of virtue, having done the duties of the Uposatha, a man
gives that importance and reviews it; he gives importance to former
things well done and reviews them. Having emerged from jhana, he
gives jhana importance and reviews it. Trainers give importance to
change-of-lineage and review it. They give importance to cleansing
and review it.
{15}
Trainers, having emerged from a path, give importance to
the path and review it' (Ptn1.165). Herein, the object, in giving importance
to which, consciousness and consciousness-concomitants arise, is
necessarily a cogent one among these objects. So their difference
may be understood in this way: object-predominance is in the
sense of what is to be given importance to, and object-decisive-support
is in the sense of a cogent reason.
82. (b) Also proximate-decisive-support
condition is set forth without differentiating it from
the proximity condition in the way beginning 'Any preceding profitable
aggregates are conditions, as decisive-support condition, for
any succeeding aggregates' (Ptn1.165). But in the exposition there
is a distinction, because in the exposition of the schedule (matika-nikkhepa)
they are given as proximity in the way beginning 'Eye-consciousness
element and the states associated therewith are conditions,
as proximity condition, for mind element and for the states associated
therewith' (Ptn1.2) and as decisive-support in the way beginning
'Any preceding profitable states are a condition as decisive-support
condition, for any succeeding profitable states' (Ptn1,4), though
it comes to the same thing as regards the meaning. Nevertheless
proximity may be understood as the ability to cause
the ocurrence of an appropriate consciousness arising proximate (next)
to itself, and decisive support as the preceding consciousness's
cogency
83. in the arousing of the succeeding consciousnesses.
For while in the cases of root-cause and other such conditions
consciousness can arise actually without any of those conditions,
however, there is no arising of consciousness without a proximate
consciousness [to precede it], so this is a cogent condition. Their
difference, then, may be understood in this way proximity
condition arouses an appropriate consciousness proximate (next)
to itself, while proximity-decisive-support condition is
a cogent reason.
84. (c) As to natural-decisive-support:
the decisive-support is natural, thus it is a natural-decisive-support.
Faith, virtue, etc., produced in, or climate, food, etc., habitual
to, one's own continuity, are called natural. Or else, it is a decisive-support
by nature, [537] thus it is a natural-decisive-support. The meaning
is that it is unmixed with object and proximity. It should be understood
as variously divided up in the way beginning 'Natural-decisive-support:
with faith as decisive support a man gives a gift, undertakes the
precepts of virtue, does the duties of the Uposatha, arouses jhana,
arouses insight, arouses the path, arouses direct knowledge, arouses
attainment. With virtue ... With learning ... With generosity ... With
understanding as decisive-support a man gives a gift ... arouses an
attainment. Faith, virtue, learning, generosity, understanding, are
conditions, as decisive-support condition, for [the repeated arising
of] faith, virtue, learning, generosity, understanding' (Ptn1.165).
So these things beginning with faith are natural-decisive-support since
they are both natural and decisive-supports in the sense of a cogent
reason.
85. (10) A state that assists by being
present, having arisen previously, is a prenascence condition.
It is elevenfold as physical basis and object in the five doors,
and as the heart basis, according as it is said 'The eye base is a
condition, as prenascence condition, for the eye-consciousness element
and for the states associated therewith. The ear base ... The nose base
... The tongue base ... The body base ... The visible-data base ... The
sound base ... The odour base ... The flavour base ... The tangible-data
base is a condition, as prenascence condition, for the body-consciousness
element and for the states associated therewith. The visible-data base
... The sound base ... The odour base ... The flavour base ... the tangible
data base [is a condition, as prenascence condition,] for the mind element.
The materiality with which as their support the mind element and mind-consciousness
element occur is a condition, as prenascence condition, for the mind-element
and for the states associated therewith, and it is sometimes [as in
the course of an existence] a condition, as prenascence condition,
sometimes [as at rebirth linking] not a condition as prenascence condition,
for the mind-consciousness element and for the states associated therewith'
(Ptn1.4-5).
86. (11) An immaterial state that [while
present] assists prenascent material states [also present] by
consolidating them is a postnascence condition, like
the volition of appetite for food, which assists the bodies of vultures'
young. Hence it is said 'Postnascent [538] states of consciousness
and its concomitants are a condition, as postnascence condition, for
the prenascent [copresent] body' (Ptn1.5).
87. (12) A state that assists the efficiency
and power of the proximate (next) in the sense of repetition is
a repetition condition, like repeated application
to books and so on. It is threefold as profitable, unprofitable,
and functional, impulsion; for it is said 'Preceding profitable
states are a condition, as repetition condition, for succeeding profitable
states ... Preceding unprofitable ... Preceding functional indeterminate
states are a condition as repetition condition, for succeeding
functional indeterminate states' (Ptn1.5)
88. (13) A state that assists by means
of the action called intervening of consciousness is a kamma
condition. It is twofold as (a) profitable and unprofitable
volition acting from a different time and (b) as all conascent volition
(see Ptn1.172), according as it is said 'Profitable and unprofitable
kamma is a condition, as kamma condition, for resultant aggregates
and for the kinds of materiality due to kamma performed. Conascent
volition is a condition, as kamma condition, for associated states
and for the kinds of materiality originated thereby' (Ptn1.5).
89. (14) A resultant state that, by effortless
quiet, assists effortless quiet [in other states] is a kamma-result
condition. In the course of an existence it is a condition
for states originated by it, and at rebirth-linking for the kinds
of materiality due to kamma performed, and in both cases for the
associated states, according as it is said 'One resultant indeterminate
aggregate is a condition, as kamma-result condition, for three aggregates
and for the kinds of materiality originated by consciousness ... At
the moment of rebirth linking one resultant indeterminate aggregate [is
a condition ...] for three aggregates ... Three aggregates are a condition,
as kamma-result condition, for two aggregates and for the kinds of materiality
due to kamma performed. Aggregates are a condition as kamma-result condition,
for the physical basis' (Ptn1.173).
90. (15) The four kinds of nutriment,
which assist material and immaterial states by consolidating
them, are nutriment conditions, according
as it is said 'Physical nutriment is a condition, as nutriment condition,
for this body. Immaterial nutriments are conditions, as nutriment
condition, for associated states and for the kinds of materiality
originated by them' (Ptn1.5). But in the Question Section it is said
'At the moment of rebirth-linking resultant indeterminate nutriments
are conditions, as nutriment condition, for aggregates associated therewith
and for the kinds of materiality due to kamma performed' (Ptn1.175).
91. (16) Leaving out the femininity and
masculinity faculties, the twenty remaining faculties (see Ch.
XVI,§1), which assist in the sense of predominance, [539]
are faculty conditions. Herein, the five, namely,
the eye-faculty, etc., are conditions only for immaterial states,
the rest are conditions for material and immaterial states, according
as it is said 'The eye faculty [is a condition, as faculty condition,]
for eye-consciousness element and for the states associated therewith.
The material life faculty is a condition, as faculty condition, for
the body-consciousness element and for the states associated therewith.
The material life faculty is a condition, as faculty condition, for
the kinds of materiality due to kamma performed. The immaterial faculties
are a condition, as faculty condition, for the states associated therewith
and for the kinds of materiality originated thereby' (Ptn1.5-6). But
in the Question Section it is said 'At the moment of rebirth-linking
resultant indeterminate faculties are a condition, as faculty condition,
for associated aggregates and for the kinds of materiality due to kamma
performed' (Ptn1.175).
92. (17) All the seven jhana factors classed
as profitable, etc. - leaving out the pair, pleasant and painful
feeling, in the case of the two sets of five consciousness -, which
factors assist in the sense of constituting a state of jhana, are
jhana conditions, according as it is said 'The
jhana factors are a condition, as jhana condition, for the states associated
with jhana and for the kinds of materiality originated thereby' (Ptn1.6).
But in the Question Section it is said 'At the moment of rebirth-linking
resultant indeterminate jhana factors are condition, as jhana condition,
for associated aggregates and for the kinds of materiality due to kamma
performed' (Ptn1.175).
93. (18) The twelve path factors classed
as profitable, etc., which assist in the sense of an outlet from
whatever it may be, are path conditions, according
as it is said, 'The path factors are a condition, as path condition,
for states associated therewith and the kinds of materiality originated
thereby' (Ptn1.6). But in the Question Section it is said 'At the
moment of rebirth-linking resultant indeterminate path factors are
a condition, as path condtion, for aggregates associated therewith
and for the kinds of materiality due to kamma performed' (Ptn1.176).
But these two, namely, jhana and path
conditions, should be understood as inapplicable to the two sets
of five consciousnesses and to the consciousness without root-cause
((34)-(41), (50)-(56), (70)-(72)).
94. (19) Immaterial states that assist
by the kind of association consisting in having the same physical
basis, same object, same arising, same cessation are association
conditions, according as it is said 'The four immaterial
aggregregates are a condition, as association condition, for each
other' (Ptn.1.6).
95. (20) Material states that assist immaterial
states, and immaterial states that assist material states by
not having sameness of physical basis, etc., are dissociation
conditions. This is threefold as conascent, postnascent,
and prenascent, for this is said 'Conascent profitable aggregates
are a condition, as dissociation condition, for the kinds of materiality
originated by consciousness. Postnascent [540] profitable [mental]
aggregates are a condition, as dissociation condition, for this prenascent
body' (Ptn1.176). But in the analysis of the conascent in the indeterminate
clause it is said 'At the moment of rebirth-linking resultant indeterminate
aggregates are a condition, as dissociation condition, for the kinds
of materiality due to kamma performed. The aggregates are a condition,
as dissociation condition, for the physical basis, and the physical
basis for the aggregates' (Ptn1.176). But the prenascent should be understood
as the eye faculty, etc., and the physical basis, according as it is
said 'The prenascent eye base [is a condition, as dissociation condition,]
for eye consciousness ... The body base is a condition, as dissociation
condition, for body consciousness. The physical basis [is a condition,
as dissociation condition,] for resultant-indeterminate and functional-indeterminate
aggregates ... The physical basis [is a condition, as dissociation
condition,] for profitable aggregates ... The physical basis [is a
condition, as dissociation condition,] for unprofitable aggregates'
(Ptn1.176-7).
96. (21) A state that, by means of existingness
characterized by presence, assists a like state by consolidating
it is a presence condition. A sevenfold summary is
laid down for it according to immaterial aggregates, great primaries,
mentality-materiality, consciousness and consciousness-concomitant,
great primaries, bases, and physical [heart] basis, according as
it is said 'The four immaterial aggregates are a condition, as presence
condition, for each other. The four great primaries ... are ... for
each other. At the time of descent into the womb mentality and materiality
[are a condition, as presence condition,] for each other. States
of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants are ... for the
kinds of materiality originated by consciousness. The four great primaries
are ... for derived materiality. The eye base is ... for the eye-consciousness
element [and for the states associated therewith]. The [ear base
... nose base ... tongue base ...] body base is ... for body-consciousness
element ... The visible-data base [is ... for the eye-consciousness
element ... The sound base ... odour base ... flavour base ...] The
tangible-data base is a condition, as presence condition, for the
body-consciousness element and for the states associated therewith.
The visible-data base ... The [sound base ... odour base ... flavour
base ...] tangible-data base is a condition, as presence condition,
for the mind element and for the states associated therewith. The
materiality with which as their support the mind element and mind-consciousness
element occur is a condition, as presence condition, for the mind
element, for the mind-consciousness element, and for the states
97. associated therewith' (Ptn1.6). But in the
Question Section, after setting forth conascence, prenascence,
postnascence, nutriment, and faculty, the description is given first
under conascence in the way beginning 'One aggregate is a condition,
as presence condition, for three aggregates and for materiality
originated thereby' (Ptn1.178). Under prenascence the description
is given according to the prenascent eye and so on. Under prenascence
the description is given according to the prenascent eye and so on.
Under postnascence the description is given according to postnascent
consciousness and consciousness-concomitants as conditions for
this body. Under nutriments and faulties [respectively] the description
is given thus 'Physical nutriment is a condition, as presence condition,
for this body' [541] and 'The material life faculty is a condition,
as presence condition, for materiality due to kamma performed' (Ptn1.178).
{16}
98. (22) Immaterial states that, by their
ceasing in contiguity [before], assist by giving opportunity
to immaterial states that arise proximately (next) after them are
absence conditions, according as it is said
'States of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants that have
ceased in contiguity before are a condition, as absence condition,
for present states of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants' (Ptn1.7).
99. (23) Those same states, because they
assist by their disappearance, are a disappearance condition,
according as it is said 'States of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants
that have disappeared in contiguity are a condition, as disappearance
condition, for present states of consciousness and consciousness-concomitants'
(Ptn1.7).
100. (24) The same states that are presence
condition, because they assist by their non-disappearance, should
be understood as a non-disappearance-condition. Or
this dyad is stated as an embellishment of teaching to suit the needs
of those who are teachable, just as, [in the Matika of the Dhammasangani,]
the 'dissociated-from-cause dyad' is given after the 'causeless
dyad.'
[How Ignorance is a Condition for Formations]
101. Now as regards these
twenty-four conditions,
For those
of merit ignorance
Is
a condition in two ways
And
for the next in many ways
But
for the last kind only once.
102. Herein, for those of merit ignorance is a condition in
two ways: it is a condition in two ways, namely as object condition
and as support condition. For ignorance is a condition, as object condition,
for formations of merit of the sense sphere at the time of comprehending
[by means of insight] ignorance as liable to destruction and fall; and
it is likewise for those of the fine-material sphere at the time of knowing
a confused mind by means of direct-knowledge consciousness [through penetrating
others' minds and so on]. But it is a condition, as decisive support condition,
in two cases, that is to say, [for the sense-sphere formation] in one
who, for the purpose of surmounting ignorance, fulfils the various instances
of sense-sphere merit-making consisting in giving, etc., and [for the
fine-material-sphere formation] in one who arouses the fine-material jhanas
[for the same purpose]. Likewise in one who effects that merit while
aspiring to the delight of sense-sphere becoming and fine-material becoming
because he is confused by ignorance.
103. And for the next in many ways: it is a condition
for formations of demerit in many ways. How? As object condition at the
time of the arising of greed, etc., contingent upon ignorance; as object-predominance
and object-decisive-support respectively at the times of giving importance
[to ignorance] and enjoying [it]; as decisive-support in one who, being
confused by ignorance and unaware of danger, kills living things, etc.;
as proximity, contiguity, proximity-decisive-support, repetition, absence,
and disappearance, for the second impulsion and those that follow; as
root-cause, conascence, mutuality, support, association, presence, and
non-disappearance, in one doing anything unprofitable. It is thus a condition
in many ways.
104. But for the last kind only once: [542] it
is reckoned as a condition in one way, namely, as decisive-support condition
only, for formations of the imperturbable. But its relation as decisive-support
condition should be understood as stated under the formations of merit.
[No Single Fruit from Single Cause]
105. Here it may be asked: But how is this?
Is ignorance the only condition for formations, or are there other conditions?
What is the position here? For firstly, if it is the only one, there
follows the assertion of a single cause;
{17}
but then if there are others, the description of it as a single
cause, namely, 'With ignorance as condition there are formations' is incorrect.
- It is not incorrect. Why not? Here is the reason:
Nor from a
single cause arise
One
fruit or many, nor one fruit from many;
'Tis
helpful, though, to utilize
One
cause and fruit as representative.
106. Here there is no single or multiple fruit of any kind from
a single cause, nor a single fruit from multiple causes, but only multiple
fruit from multiple causes. So from multiple cause, in other words, from
temperature, earth, seed and moisture, is seen to arise a multiple fruit,
in other words, the shoot, which has visible form, odour, taste and so
on. But one representative cause and fruit given in this way 'With ignorance
as condition there are formations; with formations as condition,
107. consciousness' have a meaning and a use. For the Blessed
One employs one representative cause and fruit when it is suitable for
the sake of elegance in instruction and to suit the idiosyncrasies of
those susceptible of being taught. And he does so in some instances because
it is the most obvious, and in some instances because it is not common to
all.
In the passage 'with contact as condition, feeling'
(M.i,261) he mentions a single cause and fruit because they are basic
factors. For contact is the basic cause of feeling since the kinds of
feeling are defined according to the kinds of contact [as 'eye-contact-born
feeling' and so on], and feeling is contact's basic fruit since contact
is defined according to the kinds of feeling [that it produces]. He mentions
a single cause in the passage 'Disease due to phlegm' (A.v.110) because
that is the most obvious. For here what is obvious is the phlegm, not
the kamma, etc., [mentioned later in the same sutta]. He mentioned a single
cause in the passage 'Bhikkhus, any states whatever that are unprofitable
are all rooted in unwise attention' (cf.S.v,91) because it is not common
to all. For unwise attention to unprofitable things is not common to all
[states] in the way that, say, physical basis and object are common to
108. all. Consequently although other causes of formations such
as physical basis and object, conascent states, etc., are actually existent,
still ignorance may be understood as the representative cause of formations
[firstly] because it is the basic factor as the cause of other causes
of formations such as craving, etc., as it is said 'Craving increases
in one who dwells seeing enjoyment' (S.ii,84) and 'With the arising of
ignorance there is the arising of cankers' (M.i,55), and again because
it is the most obvious, 'Not knowing, bhikkhus, in ignorance, he forms
the formation of merit' (cf.S.ii,82), and lastly because it is not common
to all. [543] So the use of one representative cause and fruit should in
each instance be understood according to this explanation of it.
{18}
109. Here it may be asked: We admit that. But ignorance
is reprehensible and has entirely undesirable fruit. How then can it
rightly be a condition for formations of merit and of the imperturbable?
Sugarcane does not grow from [bitter] nimba seeds. - Why should it not
be right? For in the world [that is, even among thinkers outside the
dispensation it is recognized that]
Both
as opposed and unopposed
A state's
conditions may be found,
And
both as like and unlike too:
That
does not make it their result.
110. It is established in the world that when states have a condition,
it may be opposed or unopposed to them as to presence, individual essence,
function, and so on. For a preceding consciousness is a condition, opposed
to presence, for the succeeding consciousness; and the preceding training
is a condition likewise for the plying of crafts, etc., which take place
subsequently. Kamma is a condition, opposed as to individual essence, for
materiality; and so are milk, etc., for curds, and so on. Light is a condition,
opposed as to function, for eye consciousness; and so are molasses, etc.,
for intoxicants, and so on. But eye-cum-visible-data, etc., are respectively
a condition, unopposed as to presence, for eye consciousness, and so on.
And the first impulsion, and those that follow, are a condition, unopposed
as to individual essence and function, for the impulsions that follow them.
And just as conditions operate as opposed and unopposed, so also they operate
as like and unlike. Materiality - for example, temperature and nutriment
- is a condition for materiality: the like for the like. And so are paddy
seeds, etc., for paddy crops, and so on. The material is a condition for
the immaterial, and so is the immaterial for the material: the unlike for
the like. And so are ox hair and ram's hair, horns, curd, and sesamum flour,
etc., respectively for dabba grass, reeds, bhutinaka
grass, and so on.
{19}
And those states for which these are the opposed and unopposed,
like and unlike, conditions are not the
111. results of these states as well. So although this
ignorance has entirely undesirable fruit for its result and is reprehensible
in its individual essence, yet it should be understood as a condition,
opposed or unopposed and like or unlike as the case may be, as to presence,
function, and individual essence, for all these formations of merit and
so on. And its state as a condition has already been given in the way
beginning 'For when unknowing - in other words, ignorance - of suffering,
etc., is unabandoned in a man, owing firstly to his unknowing about suffering
and about the past, etc., then he believes the suffering of the round of
rebirths to be pleasant and the embarks upon the three kinds of formations,
which are the cause of that very suffering' (§62).
112. Moreover there is this way of explanation as well:
Now
when a man is ignorant
Of
death and rebirth and the round,
The
characteristics of the formed
Dependently
arisen states, [544]
And
in his ignorance he forms
Formations
of this triple kind,
Then
ignorance itself will be
Condition
for each of the three.
113. But how does a man who is confused about these things perform
these three kinds of formations? Firstly when he is confused about death,
instead of taking death thus, 'Death in every case is break-up of aggregates,
he figures that it is a [lasting] being that dies, that it is a [lasting]
being's transmi-
114. gration to another incarnation, and so on. When he is confused
about reappearance, instead of taking rebirth thus, 'Birth in every case
is manifestation of aggregates', he figures that it is a lasting being's
manifestion in a new body.
115. When he is confused about the round of rebirths,
instead of taking the round of rebirths as pictured thus,
The
endless chain of aggregates,
Of
elements, of bases too,
That
carries on unbrokenly
Is
what is called 'the round of births',
he figures that it is a lasting being that goes from this world
to another world, that comes from another world to this world.
116. When he is confused about the characteristic of formations,
instead of apprehending their specific and general characteristics,
he figures that formations are self, belong to a self, are
117. lasting, pleasant, beautiful. When he is confused about
dependently arisen states, instead of taking the occurrence of formations
to be due to ignorance, etc., he figures that it is a self that knows
or does not know, that acts and causes action, that appears in rebirth-linking,
and he figures that atoms, an Overlord, etc., shape its body in the various
states of the embryo and endow it with faculties, and that when it has been
endowed with faculties it touches, feels, craves, clings, and endeavours,
and that it becomes anew in the next becoming; or he figures thus, 'All beings
... [are] moulded by fate, coinci-
118. dence and nature' (D.i,53). Thus he figures, blinded by
ignorance. He is like a blind man who wanders about the earth, encountering
now right and now wrong paths, now heights and now hollows, now even
and uneven ground, and so he forms formations now of merit, now of demerit
119. and now imperturbable. Hence this is said:
As one born
blind, who gropes along
Without
assistance from a guide,
Chooses
a road that may be right
At
one time, at another wrong,
So
while the foolish man pursues
The
round of births without a guide,
Now
to do merit he may choose
And
now demerit in such plight.
But
when the Law he comes to know
And
penetrates the Truths beside,
Then
ignorance is put to flight
At
last, and he in peace may go.
This is the detailed explanation of the clause 'With ignorance as condition
there are formations'. [545]
[Footnotes]
{10)
'This refers to the teacher Revata' (Pm. 582)
{11}
"Which are contingent upon other such states":
because it is said without distinction of all visible-data bases,
... and of all mental-data bases, there is consequently no dhamma
(state) among the formed, unformed, and conceptual, dhammas, classes
as sixfold under visible data, etc., that does not become an object
condition' (Pm. 584).
{12}
'Proximity and contiguity conditions are not stated in
accordance with the distinction between making occur and giving
opportunity, as the absence and disappearance conditions are; rather
they are stated as the causes of the regular order of consciousness
[in the cognitive series]' (Pm. 585).
{13}
'This refers to the Elder Revata too' (Pm. 586).
{14}
'The state of proximity condition is the ability
to cause arising proximately (without interval) because there is
no interval between the cessation of the preceding and the arising
of the subsequent. The state of contiguity condition is the
ability to cause arising by being quite proximate (without interval)
through approaching, as it were, identity with itself owing to absence
of any distinction that "this is below, above, or around, that", which
is because of lack of any such co-presence as in the case of the [components
of the] material groups, and because of lack of any co-positionality
of the condition and the conditionally arisen. And [in general], because
of the uninterestedness of [all] states (dhamma), when a given [state]
has ceased, or is present, in a given mode and [other] states (dhamma)
come to be possessed of that particular mode, it is that [state's]
mode that must be regarded as what is called "ability to cause arising"'
(Pm.586).
{15}
'Reviewing change-of-lineage' (the consciousness that
precedes the path consciousness) applies to Stream-enterers. 'Reviewing
cleansing' (the 'cleansing' that consists in attaining a higher
path than the first) applies to Once-returners and Non-returners
(see Pm.589).
{16}
'The presence (atthi) condition is not applicable
to nibbana. For a presence condition is that which is unhelpful
by its absence of existingness (atthi-bhavabhava) and
becomes helpful by obtaining existingness. And nibbana does not,
after being unhelpful by its own absence of existingness to those
states that have nibbana as their object, become helpful to them
by obtaining existingness. Or alternatively, the presence condition,
which by its non-existingness is the opposite of helpfulness to those
states that are associated with arising, etc., is helpful to them by its
existingness. So nibbana is not a presence condition' (Pm.597).
It may be noted that atthi has more than
one use, among which the following two may be mentioned: (1)
atthi (is) = upalabbhaniya
(is (a) 'apprehendable', and (b) not a self-contradictory impossibility)
- 'atthi bhikkhave, ajatam - There is an unborn' (Ud.80)
and the discussion on the existence of nibbana (Vis.Ch.XVI,§67ff.).
(2) Atthi (is) = uppanna (arisen) - see
' Yam, bhikkhave, rupam jatam patubhutam atthi ti tassa sankha
- Of the materialtiy that is born, manifested, it is said that
"It is"' (S.ii,71-2). The atthi-paccaya (presence
condition), being implicitly equated with the latter, cannot be
applied to nibbana because nibbana is not subject to arising (A.i.,152).
{17}
'The assertion of a single cause (karana) is undesirable
because it follows that there would be production of everything all
the time, and because it follows that there would be a single homogenous
state' (Pm.599), cf. Ch.XIX,§3.
{18}
'Parihara-vacana - explanation': not in P.T.S. Dict.
in this sense.
{19}
'Avi - a goat or sheep': not in P.T.S. Dict.
The Vis. text reads 'golomavilomavisana-dadhitilapitthadini
ca dubbasarabhutanakadinam'. Pm. explains thus: 'Golomavilomadi
ti adisu golomavilomani dubbaya avi ti ratta elaka veditabba visanam
sarassa dadhitilapitthagulani bhutinakassa sevalam tanduleyykassa
kharavalava assatarassa ti evam adi adisaddena sangahito', which
renders thus: 'As to "Ox hair and ram's hair etc.", and the rest;
ox hair and ram's hair [are conditions for the unlike] dubba (dabba)
grass - a ram (avi) should be understood as a red sheep
(elaka); horn is for reeds (rasa);
curds, sesamum flour and molasses are for bhutinaka
grass; moss is for the landuleyyaka plant; a she donkey
is for a mule; and so on in this way as included by the word
"etc."' (Pm.601). Except for the last-mentioned, it seems
problematical why these things, if rightly interpreted, should be conditions
for the things mentioned.
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