Abhidhamma in Daily lifeTHE FUNCTION OF BHAVANGA
One may wonder whether bhavanga-cittas often arise. There must be countless bhavanga-cittas arising at those moments when there are no sense-impressions, no thinking, no akusala cittas or kusala cittas. When we are asleep and dreaming there are akusala cittas or kusala cittas, but even when we are in a dreamless sleep, there still has to be citta. There are bhavanga-cittas at these moments. Also when we are awake there are countless bhavanga-cittas arising; they arise in between the different processes of citta. It seems that hearing, for example, can arise very shortly after seeing, but in reality there are different processes of citta and in between these processes there are bhavanga-cittas. The bhavanga-citta is the same type of citta as the first citta in life, the patisandhi-citta (rebirth-consciousness). When the patisandhi-citta falls away it conditions the next citta to arise which is the second citta in that life. This citta is the first bhavanga-citta in life. The bhavanga-citta is vipakacitta;
it is the result of the same kamma which produced the patisandhi-citta.
There is only one patisandhi-citta in a life, but there are countless bhavanga-cittas.
Not only the first bhavanga-citta, but all
There are nineteen types of patisandhi-citta
and thus there are nineteen types of bhavanga-citta. If the patisandhi-citta
is akusala vipaka, which is the case when there is birth in a woeful plane,
all bhavanga-cittas of that life are akusala vipaka as well. If the
patisandhi-citta is ahetuka kusala vipaka, in which case one is handicapped
from birth , all bhavanga-cittas of that life are ahetuka kusala vipaka
as well. If the patisandhi-citta is sahetuka (arising with sobhana hetus
or beautiful roots), the bhavanga-citta is sahetuka as well. All bhavanga-cittas
during a lifespan are of the same type as the patisandhi-citta of that
life. If one is born with two hetus, with alobha (non-attachment or generosity)
and adosa (non-aversion or kindness), but without wisdom, then all bhavanga-cittas
have only two hetus. Such a person can cultivate wisdom, but he cannot
become enlightened during that life. If one is born with three hetus, which
means that one is born with alobha, adosa and panna (wisdom), all bhavanga-cittas
are accompanied by these three sobhana hetus (beautiful roots) as well.
Thus that person is more inclined to cultivate wisdom and he can attain
enlightenment during that life. If one is born with somanassa (happy feeling),
all
Every citta must have an object and
thus the bhavanga-citta too has an object. Seeing has what is visible as
object; hearing has sound as object, but the bhavanga-citta has an object
which is different from the objects presenting themselves through the senses
and through the mind-door. The bhavang-acitta which is the same type of
citta as the patisandhi-citta also experiences
As we have seen (Ch. 10) the patisandhi-citta
experiences the same object as the akusala cittas or kusala cittas arising
shortly before the cuti-citta of the previous life. If akusala kamma is
going to produce the patisandhi-citta, akusala cittas arise shortly before
the cuti-citta and they experience an unpleasant object. If kusala kamma
is going to produce the patisandhi-citta, kusala cittas arise
The patisandhi-citta is succeeded by the first bhavanga-citta of that life and this citta experiences the same object as the patisandhi-citta. Moreover, all bhavanga-cittas of that life experience that object. The 'Visuddhimagga' (XIV, 114) states with regard to the bhavanga-citta:
When the patisandhi-citta has ceased, then, following
The bhavanga-cittas are like the
current of a river and this is interrupted when there is an object presenting
itself through one of the senses or through the mind-door. When the cittas
of the sense-door process or the mind-door process have fallen away, there
is again the current of bhavanga-cittas.
When an object contacts one of the
five senses the stream of bhavanga-citta is interrupted and there is a
sense-impression. However, there cannot be a sense-impression immediately.
When sound, for example, impinges on the ear-sense, there is not hearing
immediately. There are still some bhavanga-cittas
When a rupa impinges on one of the
senses bhavanga-cittas can be affected by it. First there is one moment
of bhavanga-citta arising and falling away which is denoted by the name
'atita-bhavanga' or 'past bhavanga'. Then it is succeeded by
The different names which denote these bhavanga-cittas do not represent different functions; bhavanga-cittas have as their only function to keep the continuity in the life of a being. The different names point only to the fact that these bhavanga-cittas are the last ones when the stream is interrupted and a new object is experienced by a process of cittas. When the sense-door process is over, the stream of bhavanga-cittas is resumed, so that the series of cittas succeeding one another in our life is not interrupted. The object which impinged on one of the senses is then experienced through the mind-door. In between the sense-door process and the mind-door process, however, there are bhavanga-cittas. When the cittas of the mind-door process have fallen away, the stream of bhavanga-cittas is resumed. An object which is experienced through
one of the five senses is rupa. Rupa arises and falls away, but it does
not fall away as rapidly as nama. One rupa can be experienced by several
cittas succeeding one another in a process. When, for
When the stream of bhavanga-cittas
has been arrested, the ear-door-adverting-consciousness
(sota-dvaravajjana-citta) adverts to the object through the ear-door. This
citta can be followed by other cittas which each perform their own
function in that process before it falls away. Rupa lasts as long as seventeen
moments of citta counting from the atita-bhavanga, the past bhavanga, there
can be seventeen moments of citta succeeding one another if the sense-door
process runs its full course. If the rupa which will be object has contacted
more than one atita bhavanga, it will have fallen away before the
process can be completed, since it cannot last longer than seventeen moment
of citta. A process can, after it has started, be interrupted, for
example, after the votthapana-citta, before kusala cittas or akusala cittas
can arise. It may also happen that the atita-bhavanga is succeeded
by the bhavanga-calana, but that
When a sense-door process of cittas
begins, the rupa which has impinged on that sense-door is experienced and
when the last citta of that process has fallen away there are bhavanga-cittas
again. The object, however, can be experienced through the mind-door. The
last two bhavanga-cittas arising before the
bhavanga-calana (vibrating bhavanga)
Before the arising of the bhavanga-calana of that mind-door process there are many bhavanga-cittas arising and falling away. There is no atita-bhavanga, past bhavanga, before the mind-door process. When the mind-door process is over,
the stream of bhavanga-cittas is resumed until there is again a process
of cittas experiencing an object through one of the sense-doors or through
the mind-door. There are countless bhavanga-cittas
What is the mind-door? It is different
from the sense-doors. The sense-doors are the following rupas: eye-sense,
ear-sense, smelling-sense, tasting-sense and body-sense. Body-sense is
all over the body. The mind-door is not one of these rupas. One may wonder
whether the mind-door is nama or rupa. We should
The study of the different sense-door
processes and mind-door processes which take their course according to
conditions will help us to see realities as elements which are beyond control,
devoid of self. We may, for example, be infatuated by a beautiful sound
we hear. What we take for a long moment of hearing are many different moments
which do not stay. Even when we do not know yet what kind of sound it is,
sound has already been experienced through the mind-door
We read in the 'Kindred Sayings' (IV, Salayatana-vagga, Kindred Sayings on Sense, Fourth Fifty, Ch.IV, par. 205, The Lute) that the Buddha said to the monks: ‘…Suppose, monks, the sound of a lute has never been heard by a rajah or royal minister. Then he hears the sound of a lute and says: 'Good man, pray, what is that sound so entrancing, so delightful, so intoxicating, so ravishing, of such power to bind?' Questions 1. At which moments do bhavanga-cittas
arise?
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