Abhidhamma in Daily life
Chapter 22
JHANACITTAS

The
many different kinds of cittas arising in our daily life experience objects
through the five sense-doors and through the mind-door. We see, hear, receive
impressions through the other doors and think about these objects. Both
in the sense-door process and in the mind-door process of cittas there
are javana-cittas which are in the case of the non-arahat either kusala
cittas or akusala cittas. The javana-cittas are most of the time akusala
cittas because we cling to all the objects which are experienced through
the sense-doors and through the mind-door. We cling to visible object and
seeing, to sound and hearing, to all the objects we experience. We cling
to life we want to go on living and receiving sense-impressions. We may
not notice when there is clinging after the seeing or hearing, especially
when we do not feel particularly glad about what was seen or heard. But
there may be lobha-mula-cittas with indifferent feeling. There are likely
to be many moments of clinging which pass unnoticed, both in the sense-door
processes and in the mind-door processes. Time and again an object is experienced
through a sense-door and then through the mind-door and there are also
mind-door processes of cittas which think of concepts such as people, animals
or things. Clinging to concepts is likely to arise very often and thus
we think most of the time with akusala citta. When we do not apply ourselves
to dana, sila or bhavana, thinking is done with akusala citta. Even when
we perform good deeds there are bound to be akusala cittas shortly after
the kusala cittas since there is seeing and hearing time and again and
after the seeing or hearing attachment or aversion on account of what we
experience may arise. The kusala cittas and akusala cittas, all the cittas
which arise in our daily life are of the 'sensuous plane of consciousness'
or kamavacara cittas.
Cittas which experience sense-impressions
are bound up with defilements and therefore wise people, even those who
lived before the Buddha's time, who saw the disadvantages of sense-impressions,
developed jhana in order to be temporarily freed from sense-impressions.
Jhanacittas are not kamavacara cittas, they are of another plane of consciousness;
these cittas experience with absorption a meditation subject through the
mind-door. At the moment of jhana one is freed from sense-impressions and
from the defilements which are bound up with them. Jhanacittas comprise
rupavacara cittas (rupa-jhanacittas) and arupavacara cittas (arupa-jhanacittas).
Arupa-jhana is more refined than rupa-jhana, since the meditation subjects
of arupa-jhana are no longer dependent on materiality. Later on I will
deal with their differences.
Apart from the planes of citta which
are kamavacara cittas, rupavacara cittas and arupavacara cittas, there
is still another plane of citta: the lokuttara cittas (translated as supramundane
cittas) which have nibbana as their object. Those who attain enlightenment
have lokuttara cittas, experiencing nibbana.
As regards jhanacitta, jhanacittas
do not have as their object, visible object, sound, or any other sense-impression.
Jhanacittas arise in a process of cittas experiencing a meditation subject
through the mind-door. In this process there are first kamavacara cittas
which experience the meditation subject and then, in that same process,
the jhanacitta arises. The process is as follows:
mano-dvaravajjana-citta or
mind-door-adverting-consciousness
parikamma or preparatory consciousness
kamavacara cittas{ upacara,
which
means: proximatory or access
anuloma or adaptation
gotrabhu, which means: that which
overcomes the sense-sphere, or 'change of lineage'
jhanacitta
appana or absorption (the moment of citta
which attains jhana)
For some, 'parikamma' (preparatory
consciousness) is not necessary, and in this case there are, after the
mind-door-adverting-consciousness, only three kamavacara cittas arising,
instead of four, before the jhanacitta arises. Gotrabhu (which 'overcomes'
the sense-sphere) is the last citta in that process which is kamavacara
citta.
In the 'Visuddhimagga' (IV, 74) we
can read about the process of cittas in which jhana occurs for the first
time. The 'Visuddhimagga' (IV, 78) states that only one single moment of
jhanacitta arises, which is then succeeded by the bhavanga-citta (life-continuum).
After that there is a process of kamavacara cittas, reviewing, through
the mind-door, the jhana which has just occurred. Further on (IV, 123 ff.
) we read that absorption can 'last' only when it is absolutely purified
of states which obstruct concentration. One must first completely suppress
lust by reviewing the dangers of sense desires and also suppress the other
'hindrances'.
Jhanacittas are kusala kamma of a
high degree. When jhana has been attained the hindrances of sensuous desire,
ill-will, sloth and torpor, restlessness and worry, and doubt are temporarily
eliminated. Thus one is truly calm, at least at that moment.
As we have seen in the preceding
chapter, the person who wants to cultivate samatha so as to be able to
attain jhana, has to develop the five jhana-factors, which can inhibit
the hindrances, namely: applied thinking (vitakka), sustained
thinking (vicara), rapture (piti),
happy feeling (sukha), concentration (samadhi).
Jhana is developed in stages, with
each succeeding stage being more refined than the preceding one. There
are five stages of rupa-jhana in all. For the first stage of rupa-jhana
it is still necessary that all five jhana-factors arise with the jhanacitta,
but at each higher stage, when one has become more advanced, jhana-factors
are successively abandoned. When one attains to the rupa-jhana of the second
stage, one does not need the jhana-factor which is 'applied thinking' (vitakka).
At this point the jhanacitta can experience the meditation subject without
vitakka (which has the characteristic of directing the mind unto an object
and the function of 'touching' the object). The other jhana-factors still
arise with the jhanacitta of the second stage.
At the third stage of jhana 'sustained
thinking' (vicara) is abandoned. At this stage one does not need vitakka
or vicara any longer in order to become absorbed in the meditation subject.
Now there are three factors remaining: rapture (piti), happy feeling (sukha)
and concentration (samadhi). At the fourth stage rapture (piti) is abandoned.
There is still happy feeling accompanying the jhana-citta, but piti does
not arise. Without piti, the jhanacitta is more quiet, more refined. At
the fifth stage happy feeling (sukha) too is abandoned and there is neutral
feeling (upekkha vedana) accompanying the jhanacitta instead of happy feeling.
At this stage one is no longer attached to happy feeling. The jhana-factor
which is concentration (samadhi) remains.
Some people can, at the second stage
of jhana, abandon both 'applied thinking' and 'sustained thinking' (vitakka
and vicara). Consequently, they can, in the third stage, abandon rapture
(piti) and in the fourth stage happy feeling (sukha). Thus for them there
are only four stages of jhana instead of five. That is the reason why rupa-jhanas
can be counted as four stages or as five stages (the fourfold system or
the fivefold system). When we read in the suttas about four stages of jhana,
the fourfold system is referred to.
There can be up to five stages of
rupa-jhana in all and thus there are five types of rupavacara kusala cittas
(rupa-jhana kusala cittas). Jhanacitta is kusala kamma of a high degree
and thus its result is kusala vipaka of a high degree. Jhanacittas do not
produce vipaka in the same lifespan: their result is rebirth in higher
planes of existence: rebirth in rupa-brahma planes. If rupavacara kusala
citta is to produce the next rebirth, there are rupavacara kusala cittas
arising shortly before the dying-consciousness. The patisandhi-citta of
the next life is rupavacara vipakacitta which arises in the appropriate
rupa-brahma plane. It experiences the same meditation subject as the rupavacara
kusala cittas arising shortly before the dying-consciousness of the preceding
life. The five types of rupavacara kusala cittas produce five types of
rupavacara vipakacittas.
Rupavacara vipakacitta can only perform
the function of patisandhi, bhavanga and cuti.
There are five types of rupavacara
kiriyacittas which are the cittas of the arahats who attain rupa-jhana.
They do not have kusala cittas but kiriyacittas instead. Thus there are
fifteen rupavacara cittas in all. Summarizing them, they are:
5 rupavacara kusala cittas
5 rupavacara vipakacittas
5 rupavacara kiriyacittas
Those who have attained to the highest
stage of rupa-jhana and see the disadvantages of rupa-jhana which is still
dependent on materiality, might want to cultivate arupa-jhana or 'immaterial
jhana'. There are four stages of arupa-jhana. The first stage of arupa-jhana
is the 'Sphere of Boundless Space' (akasanancayatana). In order to attain
this stage of arupa-jhana one has to attain first the highest stage of
rupa-jhana in any one of the kasina meditations (The kasina meditations
are among the meditation subjects of rupa-jhana. They are, for example,
coloured disks or a piece of earth.) excepting the 'kasina of limited space'
and achieve mastery in it. We read in the 'Visuddhimagga' (X, 6):
When he has seen the danger
in that [fine-material
fourth jhana (The fourth rupa-jhana.
Here the counting
is according to the 'fourfold system.')]
in this way and has ended his attachment
to it, he gives attention to the
'Base consisting of
Boundless Space' as peaceful. Then,
when he has
spread out the kasina to the limit
of the world-sphere,
or as far as he likes, he removes
the kasina (materiality)
by giving his attention to the space
touched by it,
(regarding that) as 'space' or 'boundless
space'.
As regards the 'Sphere of Boundless
Space', the 'Visuddhimagga' (X, 6) explains the 'removing' of the kasina:
And when the kasina is being
removed, it does not
roll up or roll away. It is simply
that it is called 'removed'
on account of his non-attention
to it, his attention being
given to 'space, space'. This is
conceptualized as
the mere space left by the removal
of the kasina (materiality) ...
In this way he can surmount the materiality
of the kasina and attain the first arupa-jhana, the Sphere of Boundless
Space'. The second stage of arupa-jhana is: the 'Sphere of Boundless Consciousness'
(vinnanancayatana). The meditation subject of this stage of arupa-jhana
is the consciousness which is the first arupa-jhana. The person who wants
to attain this stage of arupa-jhana should first achieve 'mastery' in the
'Sphere of Boundless Space'; he should see the disadvantages of this stage
and end his attachment to it. We read in the 'Visuddhimagga' (X, 25):
...So having ended his attachment
to that, he should
give his attention to the base consisting
of boundless
consciousness as peaceful, adverting
again and again
as 'Consciousness, consciousness',
to the consciousness
that occurred pervading that space
(as its object)...
The third stage of arupa-jhana is the
'Sphere of Nothingness' (akincannayatana). We read in the 'Visuddhimagga'
(X, 32) that the person who wants to attain this stage should give his
attention to the present non-existence of the past consciousness which
pervaded the 'boundless space' and which was the object of the second stage
of arupa-jhana, the 'Sphere of Boundless Consciousness'. We read (X, 33):
Without giving further attention
to that consciousness,
he should (now) advert again and
again in this way
'There is not, there is not', or
'Void, void', or 'Secluded,
secluded', and give his attention
to it, review it, and
strike at it with thought and applied
thought.
Further on (X, 35) we read:
...he dwells seeing only
its non-existence, in other
words its departedness when this
consciousness has
arisen in absorption.
The fourth arupa-jhana is the 'Sphere
of Neither Perception Nor Non-Perception' (n'eva-sanna-n'asannayatana).
The object of this jhana is the third stage of arupa-jhana. We read in
the 'Visuddhimagga' (X, 49):
The word meaning here is
this: that jhana with its
associated states neither has perception
nor has no
perception because of the absence
of gross perception
and presence of subtle perception,
thus it is
'neither perception nor non-perception'
(n'eva-sanna-n'asannam).
Further on (X, 50) we read:
...Or alternatively: the
perception here is neither
perception, since it is incapable
of performing the
decisive function of perception,
nor yet non-perception,
since it is present in a subtle
state as a residual formation,
thus it is 'neither-perception-nor-non-perception'...
It is also explained that the feeling
arising with this jhana-citta is 'neither-feeling-nor-non-feeling' (since
it is present in a subtle state as a residual formation); the same applies
to consciousness, contact (phassa) and the other cetasikas arising with
the jhanacitta.
Since there are four stages of arupa-jhana,
there are four types of arupavacara kusala cittas. They produce vipaka
in the form of rebirth in the happy planes of existence which are the arupa-brahma
planes. The four types of arupavacara
kusala cittas produce four types
of arupavacara vipakacittas. Arupavacara vipakacitta can only perform the
functions of patisandhi, bhavanga and cuti.
There are four types of arupavacara
kiriyacittas which are the cittas of the arahats who attain arupa-jhana.
Thus, there are twelve arupavacara cittas in all. Summarizing them, they
are:
4 arupavacara kusalacittas
4 arupavacara vipakacittas
4 arupavacara kiriyacittas
Those who have cultivated jhana can
develop the various types of 'direct knowledge' (abhinna; Also translated
as 'supernormal powers' or 'higher intellectual powers'.). They should
attain the highest stage of rupa-jhana (the fourth or the fifth, according
as to whether they follow the fourfold system or the fivefold system) in
the kasina meditations, and they should exercise 'complete mind-control
in fourteen ways'; for example, the attainment of the jhana stages in the
different kasina meditations in order and in reverse order. In developing
the 'kinds of direct knowledge' or 'supernormal powers', one's concentration
will become more advanced. The 'supernormal powers' (abhinna) are the following:
1. Magical powers such as
passing through walls, walking on water,
travelling through
the air.
2. Divine Ear, by which one hears
sounds both heavenly and human,
far and near.
3. Knowledge of the minds of other
people.
4. Divine Eye, by which one sees
the deceasing and rebirth of beings.
5. Remembrance of one's former lives.
These are the five 'mundane supernormal
powers'. However, there is a sixth power, which is a Iokuttara citta, namely,
the eradication of all defilements, when arahatship is attained. The sixth
power is the greatest and in order to attain it insight has to be fully
developed.
Sometimes three kinds of knowledge
are mentioned, namely:
1. Remembrance of former
lives.
2. Heavenly Eye.
3. Destruction of the the Asavas.
Those who have cultivated the right
conditions, can achieve 'marvels'. In the 'Gradual Sayings' (Book of the
Threes, Ch. VI, par. 60, III, Sangarava) we read about the greatest 'marvel'.
The Budda asked the brahmin Sangarava about the topic of conversation of
the royal party, when they were together in the palace. The brahmin Sangarava
answered that they were talking about the fact that in former times the
monks were fewer in number, but those possessed of supernormal powers were
more numerous, and that now it was just the opposite. The Buddha said to
him:
'Now as to that, brahmin,
there are these three
marvels. What three?
The marvel of more-power, the marvel
of thought-
reading, the marvel of teaching.
And what, brahmin,
is the marvel of more-power?
In this case a certain one enjoys
sorts of more-power
in divers ways. From being one he
becomes many,
from being many he becomes one;
manifest or invisible
he goes unhindered through a wall,
through a rampart,
through a mountain, as if through
the air; he plunges
into the earth and shoots up again
as if in water; he
walks upon the water without parting
it as if on solid
ground; he travels through the air
sitting cross-legged,
like a bird upon the wing; even
this moon and sun,
though of such mighty power and
majesty,-- he handles
them and strokes them with his hand;
even as far as
the Brahma world he has power with
his body. This,
brahmin, is called 'the marvel of
more-power.'
And what, brahmin, is the
marvel of thought-reading?
In this case a certain one can declare
by means of
a sign 'Thus is your mind. Such
and such is your mind.
Thus is your consciousness...'
And what, brahmin, is the marvel
of teaching?
In this case a certain one teaches
thus: 'Reason thus,
not thus. Apply your mind thus,
not thus. Abandon
this state, acquire that state and
abide therein.' This,
brahmin, is called 'the marvel of
teaching'. So these
are the three marvels. Now of these
three marvels,
which appeals to you as the more
wonderful and excellent?'
'Of these marvels, master
Gotama, the marvel of
more-power...seems to me to be of
the nature of an
illusion. Then again as to the marvel
of thought-
reading... this also, master Gotama,
seems to me of
the nature of an illusion. But as
to the marvel of
teaching... of these three marvels
this one appeals to
me as the more wonderful and excellent.'
Sangarava then asked the Buddha whether
he possessed all three marvels and the Buddha told him that he did. Sangarava
also asked whether any other monk possessed them and the Buddha answered:
'Yes, indeed, brahmin. The
monks possessed of
these three marvellous powers are
not just one or two
or three, four, or five hundred,
but much more than
that in number.'
Sangarava then expressed his confidence
in taking refuge in the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha, and he asked
to be accepted as a lay-follower.
In the Buddha's time many monks had
cultivated conditions for 'marvellous powers'. The greatest 'marvel' of
these, however, is the 'marvel of teaching' since it can lead to the eradication
of all defilements, to the end of all sorrows.
For those who have accumulations
for jhana there are many benefits since jhana is kusala kamma of a high
degree. One of the benefits is a happy rebirth, even for those who can
attain only "access-concentration' or upacara samadhi. However, even rebirth
in a happy plane of existence is dukkha, since life in a happy plane may
be followed by rebirth in an unhappy plane. Therefore, no birth at all
is to be preferred to any kind of rebirth. This can be realized only by
developing the wisdom which eradicates defilements.
Jhana is called in the teachings
an 'abiding in ease, here, now' (for example, 'Discourse on Expunging',
Middle Length Sayings I, No. 8). Those who are advanced in the development
of calm can have many jhanacittas in succession, since they have cultivated
conditions for this. They truly are 'abiding in ease, here, now'. However,
the Buddha would point out that 'abiding in ease' is not the same as 'expunging'
(eradication).
We read in the 'Discourse on Expunging'
that the Buddha said to Cunda in regard to the monk who could attain rupa-jhana:
...It may occur to him:
'I fare along by expunging'.
But these, Cunda, are not called
expungings in the
discipline for an ariyan. These
are called 'abidings in
ease, here, now' in the discipline
for an ariyan.
With regard to the monk who could attain
arupa-jhuna, the Buddha said:
...It may occur to him:
'I fare along by expunging'.
But these, Cunda, are not called
'expungings' in the
discipline for an ariyan; these
are called 'abidings that
are peaceful' in the discipline
for an ariyan...
Those who have accumulated skill for
jhana and have developed vipassana can attain enlightenment with absorption.
Instead of a meditation subject of samatha, nibbana is the object which
is experienced with absorption. Lokuttara cittas can be accompanied by
jhana-factors of different stages of jhana according to one's accumulations.
In the process during which enlightenment is attained the magga-citta is
immediately followed by the phala-citta (result of magga-citta). When the
phalacittas have fallen away the process of cittas is over. The magga-citta
of that stage of enlightenment cannot arise again, but the phala-citta
can arise again, even many times in life, and it experiences nibbana with
absorption.
Those who have attained the fourth
stage of arupa-jhana, the 'Sphere of Neither Perception Nor Non-Perception'
and have also realized the stage of enlightenment of the anagami or of
the arahat, can attain 'cessation' (nirodha-samapatti) which is the temporary
ceasing of bodily and mental activities. The person who has attained 'cessation'
('the stopping of perception and feeling') is different from a corpse.
We read in the 'Greater Discourse of the Miscellany' (Middle Length Sayings
I, No. 43) that Maha-kotthita asked Sariputta a number of questions. He
also asked questions about the difference between the dead body and the
monk who has attained
cessation. We read that Maha-kotthita
asked:
'In regard to this body,
Your reverence, when how
many things are got rid of, does
this body lie cast
away, flung aside like unto a senseless
log of wood?'
'In regard to this body, Your reverence,
when three
things are got rid of: vitality,
heat and consciousness,
then does this body lie cast away,
flung aside like unto
a senseless log of wood.'
'What is the difference, your reverence,
between
that dead thing, passed away, and
that monk who
has attained to the stopping of
perception and feeling?'
'Your reverence, the bodily activities
of that dead
thing, passed away, have been stopped,
have subsided,
the mental activities have been
stopped, have subsided,
the vitality is entirely destroyed,
the heat allayed, the
sense-organs are entirely broken
asunder. But that monk
who has attained to the stopping
of perception and
feeling, although his bodily activities
have been stopped,
have subsided, although his vocal
activities have been
stopped, have subsided, although
his mental activities
have been stopped, have subsided,
his vitality is not
entirely destroyed, his heat is
not allayed, his sense-
organs are purified. This, your
reverence, is the
difference between a dead thing,
passed away, and
that monk who has attained to the
stopping of perception and feeling.'
For those who emerge from cessation,
the first citta which arises is a phala-citta (lokuttara vipakacitta),
having nibbana as its object. In the case of the anagami it is the phala-citta
of the anagami and in the case of the arahat it is the phala-citta of the
arahat. The 'Visuddhimagga' (XXIII, 50) states that their minds tend towards
nibbana. We read:
Towards what does the mind
of one who has
emerged tend? It tends towards nibbana.
For this is
said: 'When a bhikkhu has emerged
from the attainment
of the cessation of perception and
feeling, friend
Visakha, his consciousness inclines
to seclusion, leans
to seclusion, tends to seclusion.'
(Middle Length Sayings 1,302).
In the 'Lesser Discourse in Gosiriga'
(Middle Length Sayings I, No. 31) we read that the Buddha came to see Anuruddha,
Nandiya and Kimbila when they were staying in the Gosinga sal-wood. The
Buddha asked them about their life in the forest. They could attain all
stages of rupa-jhana and arupa-jhana and they could 'abide' in them for
as long as they liked. The Buddha said:
'It is good, Anuruddha ,
it is good. But did you,
Anuruddha , by passing quite beyond
this abiding, by
allaying this abiding, reach another
state of further-men,
an excellent knowledge and vision
befitting the ariyans,
an abiding in comfort?'
'How could this not be, Lord? Here
we, Lord, for
as long as we like, by passing quite
beyond the plane
of neither perception-nor-non-perception,
entering on
the stopping of perception and feeling,
abide in it, and
having seen through intuitive wisdom,
our cankers come
to be utterly destroyed. By passing
quite beyond that
abiding, Lord, by allaying that
abiding, another state
of further-men, an excellent knowledge
and vision
befitting the ariyans, an abiding
in comfort is reached.
But we, Lord, do not behold another
abiding in comfort
that is higher or more excellent
than this abiding in
comfort,'
'It is good, Anuruddha, it is good.
There is no
other abiding in comfort that is
higher or more excellent
than this abiding in comfort.'
Questions
1. What is the advantage of
arupa-jhana, compared to rupa-jhana?
2. What is the difference
between the fourth stage of arupa-ihana, the 'Sphere of neither perception-nor-non
perception', and cessation'?
3. Can anybody who has developed
the fourth stage of arupa-jhana attain
cessation?
4. What is the purpose of
the 'supernormal powers (abhinnas)?
5. When six abhinnas are mentioned,
which of those is the greatest? Why?
6. What benefit is there for
those who develop both jhana and vipassana and
attain enlightenment?
7. What is the object of citta
at the moment of jhana?
8. Through which door can
the jhanacitta experience an object?
9. What is the object of the
lokuttara citta?
10. What is the object of the lokuttara
citta which is accompanied by jhana-factors?
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