<< Click to Display Table of Contents >> Navigation: Paṭicca Samuppāda > Paṭicca Samuppāda – Overview |
Revised November 4, 2018; August 27, 2022
1. Nothing can happen without a cause (“hetu” in Pāli or Sinhala). Everything happens for reasons or causes. Usually, many things simultaneously arise due to multiple causes.
▪However, if one cause dominates, it appears to have happened due to one cause.
2. Due to our ignorance of the true nature of this world, we keep initiating new causes. If we do not add more fuel to the fire, the fire will extinguish when existing fuel runs out.
▪Akusala kammā is fuel to the saṁsāric journey or the rebirth process.
▪Saṁsāric journey does not end because we keep adding “fuel to the fire,” i.e., keep doing akusala kamma.
3. The Paṭicca Samuppāda (let us shorten it as PS) describes that process. It explains the arising of future births due to accumulated kammic energies.
▪Ācariya Buddhaghosa understood only one aspect (the Akusala-Mūla PS) of the numerous applications of PS. Since Theravāda Buddhism adopted Visuddhimagga as the basis of Dhamma, this deep knowledge of PS went underground. [ācariya : [m.] teacher.]
▪Many variations of PS can be found in the WebLink: suttacentral: Paṭiccasamuppādavibhaṅga (Vb 6) of the Vibhaṅgappakarana in the Abhidhamma Piṭaka.
4. Here are the main subsections in this section:
▪Several PS cycles are discussed in this section: “Paṭicca Samuppāda Cycles.” However, please read #7 below before going there.
▪For those who want to avoid too many Pāli words: “Paṭicca Samuppāda in Plain English.”
▪What is meant by “paccayā” (conditions) and discussions on different types of conditions: “Paṭṭhāna Dhamma.” An introduction to “paccayā” is in #5 below.
▪“Imasmim Sati Idam Hoti – What Does It Really Mean?“
5. Even if there is a cause, its result (effect) does not manifest until the right conditions (“paccayā” in Pāli) appear.
▪For details, see “What Does “Paccayā” Mean in Paṭicca Samuppāda?.” We can get the basic idea from a few examples here.
▪A matchstick has the potential to bring about a fire. But unless it is heated by striking on a hard surface, fire does not ignite.
▪A bomb can explode and create much destruction. But it will not go off until triggered.
▪We all have bad habits, but they do not manifest until triggered by an ārammaṇa or a “thought object” (a picture, sound, smell, touch, or thought). See “Worldview of the Buddha.”
6. Therefore, if one acts mindfully, one can PREVENT many akusala vipāka and FORCE many kusala vipāka.
▪We all have innumerable akusala accumulated in this saṁsāra;
▪See, “What is Kamma? Is Everything Determined by Kamma?,” and “The Law of Attraction, Habits, Character (Gati), and Cravings (Āsavā).”
7. It is necessary to understand that the terms in the standard PS cycle: “avijjā paccayā saṅkhāra; saṅkhāra paccayā viññāṇa; viññāṇa paccayā nāmarūpa, nāmarūpa paccayā saḷāyatana, saḷāyatana paccayā phasso, phassa paccayā vedanā, vedanā paccayā taṇhā, taṇhā paccayā upādāna, upādāna paccayā bhavo, bhava paccayā jāti, jāti paccayā jarā, marana, soka-parideva-dukkha-domanassupāyāsā sambhavan’ti” are highly condensed.
▪One could write a book on each term.
▪At a minimum, one needs to get the basic idea of each keyword: avijjā, saṅkhāra, ..bhava, jāti.
8. Most modern texts in English translate those keywords to single words in English, which often leads to misinterpretations.
▪It is better to understand the meaning of each of those Pāli worlds and use those words. They can have different meanings based on the context.
9. In the following, I will provide a few posts to read to get an idea of what those Pāli words mean. The following terms are associated with the Akusala-Mūla PS.
Avijjā: “What is Avijjā (Ignorance)?.”
Saṅkhāra: In most cases, what comes to play is abhisaṅkhāra or “strong saṅkhāra.” But it is necessary to get the basic idea of “saṅkhāra” first: “Saṅkhāra – What It Really Means.”
Viññāna: One of the complex Pāli words: “Viññāṇa – What It Really Means.”
Nāmarūpa: Another complex word: “Viññāṇa paccayā Nāmarūpa.”
Saḷāyatana: Saḷāyatana (six āyatana) are not six sense faculties, “Nāmarūpa paccayā Saḷāyatana.”
Phassa: What comes into play in PS is not “phassa” but “defiled contact” or samphassa, “Difference between Phassa and Samphassa.”
Vedanā: Vedanā in PS does not mean “feelings,” but “samphassa jā vedana”: “Vedanā (Feelings) Arise in Two Ways.”
Tanhā: “Taṇhā – How We Attach Via Greed, Hate, and Ignorance.”
Upādāna: “Difference Between Taṇhā and Upādāna.”
Bhava and Jāti: “Bhava and Jāti – States of Existence and Births Therein” and “Gati to Bhava to Jāti – Ours to Control.”
▪Of course, gati is another key Pāli word not discussed much these days. See “The Law of Attraction, Habits, Character (Gati), and Cravings (Āsava).”
▪You can find more posts on each word using the “Search” box at the top. Note: only for online website.
10. It is clear from #7 above that all future suffering (jarā, maraṇa, soka-parideva-dukkha-domanassupāyāsā sambhavan’ti) will stop with the stopping of the Akusala-Mūla PS.
▪It is also clear that all future suffering ends when there is no rebirth, i.e., when the step “bhava paccayā jāti” stops and thus “jāti paccayā jarā, maraṇa, soka-parideva-dukkha-domanassupāyāsā” step stops.
▪As long as there are jāti (or births), the suffering will not end.
11. The Akusala-Mūla PS can be terminated by working on two main targets: avijjā and taṇhā.
▪It is pretty clear why we need to remove avijjā. If there is no avijjā (i.e., if one comprehends the Four Noble Truths), then an Akusala-Mūla PS will not even get started.
▪Taṇhā gradually reduces with changing our gati. That is discussed in the post: “Difference Between Taṇhā and Upādāna.”