Rūpa Kalāpa (Grouping of Matter)

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Rūpa Kalāpa (Grouping of Matter)

Revised September 15, 2020; September 6, 2022; October 17, 2022 (#7); December 3, 2022 (#7)

1. There are 28 rūpa types discussed in Abhidhamma: “Rūpa (Material Form) – Table.” They are not found separately in nature. The four causes produce them through tiny material groups called rūpa kalāpā or “elementary groups of matter.”

All rūpā have origins in the four great elements of pathavī, āpo, tejo, and vāyo. However, they all arise together in the smallest unit of matter, a suddhaṭṭhaka. See “The Origin of Matter – Suddhaṭṭhaka.” Four more rūpā (vaṇṇa, gandha, rasa, oja) derived from the great elements are in a suddhaṭṭhaka, making it an octad (composed of eight or an aṭṭaka.)

There are 15 other elementary units (rūpa kalāpā) that derive from suddhaṭṭhaka. All 16 types of rūpa kalāpā are not further divisible. They are avinibbhoga rūpa.

Let us briefly discuss them.

2. There are three rūpa kalāpā that have nine units: A suddhaṭṭhaka “energized” by kammic energy becomes a jīvita navaka (vital nonad) of nine units. That added unit is an “energy unit” called a jīvita rūpa. That jīvita rūpa keeps a physical body alive. Another element of nine units, a sadda navaka (sound nonad) is responsible for the sound created by utu, i.e., an utuja rūpa. Another is kāyaviññatti navaka created by cittā responsible for bodily intimation.

Eight types of rūpa kalāpā have ten units (dasaka or decad) created by kammic energy: Here a suddhaṭṭhaka combines with a jīvita rūpa and another unit created by kammic energy to become a dasaka. Those eight types of dasaka are vital parts of a living being. For example, a cakkhu pasāda rūpa (together with the other nine units) creates a cakkhu dasaka responsible for seeing. In the same way sota dasaka, ghana dasaka, jivhā dasaka, kāya dasaka arise. itthibhāva rūpa and purisabhāva rūpa give rise to itthibhāva dasaka and purisabhāva dasaka. The seat of the mind, vatthu dasaka arises with the hadaya vatthu.

The following are created only by citta (thoughts): One is vacīviññatti-sadda-dasaka (vocal intimation decad) responsible for speech. Kāyaviññatti-lahutādi-dvadasaka (dodecad of bodily intimation) of 12 units with kāyaviññatti and three lahutādi rūpa. Another is vaciviññatti-sadda-lahutādi-terāsaka (tricad of sound) of 13 units with vaciviññatti, three lahutādi rūpa, and sadda.

Then there is lahutādi-ekadasaka (suddhaṭṭhaka + lahuta + muduta + kammaññata) with 11 units created by citta. There is also saddalahutādi-dvadasaka (suddhaṭṭhaka + lahuta + muduta + kammaññata + sadda) with 12 units created by utu.

3. All rūpa kalāpā have the following characteristics.

1.All the rūpā in a rūpa kalāpa arise together, i.e., they have a common genesis.

2.They also cease or dissolve together, i.e. they have a common cessation.

3.They all depend on the four great essentials present in the kalāpa for their arising, i.e. they have a common dependence.

4.They are so thoroughly mixed that they cannot be distinguished, i.e. they co-exist.

4. It should be noted that kalāpā are so small that they are indistinguishable from pure energy. The origin of rūpa is a javana citta, which is formless and mass-less. Science has shown that the smallest “particle” detected, the Higgs boson, is indistinguishable from energy. See, “The Origin of Matter – Suddhaṭṭhaka.”

5. There are 17 types of kalāpā produced in 21 ways:

9 kammaja kalāpā 6 cittaja kalāpā 4 utuja kalāpā 2 āhāraja kalāpā as shown below:

 

Kamma Born

Citta Born

Utu Born

Āhāra Born

Cakkhu dasaka

(eye decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Sota dasaka

(ear decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Ghana dasaka

(nose decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Jivhā dasaka

(tongue decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Kāya dasaka

(body decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Itthi dasaka

(female decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Purisa dasaka

(male decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Vatthu dasaka

(base decad)

Yes

 

 

 

Jivita navaka

(vital nonad)

Yes

 

 

 

Suddhaṭṭaka

(pure octad)

 

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kāyaviññati navaka

(body intimation nonad

 

Yes

 

 

Vacī viññati sadda dasaka (vocal intimation decad)

 

Yes

 

 

Lahutādi eka dasaka

(undecad of mutability)

 

Yes

Yes

Yes

Kayaviññati Lahutādi

dva dasaka

(undecad of mutability)

 

Yes

Yes

 

Vaciviññati Sadda Lahutādi terasaka

(tridecad of mutability)

 

Yes

 

 

Sadda navaka

(sound decad)

 

 

Yes

 

6. Internal and External Kalāpā

All the 21 rūpa kalāpā mentioned above occur internally in living beings. Itthibhāva-dasaka does not occur in males. Similarly, pumbhava-dasaka (or purisabhāva-dasaka) does not occur in females. For those who are born blind or deaf, cakkhu-dasaka or sota-dasaka are not present.

In the external (bahiddha) world, only the two utuja-kalāpā are found. All inanimate things, such as trees, stones, earth, water, fire, corpses, etc., are made up of utuja-suddhaṭṭhaka kalāpā. The sounds produced by beating two sticks together, rubbing branches in the wind, or by instruments such as violin, piano, radio, cassettes, etc., are utuja-sadda-navaka kalāpā.

From the internal rūpas, kāya-pasāda, bhava-rūpa (femininity and masculinity), cittaja-rūpa, utuja-rūpa and āhāraja-rūpa spread all over the body. So they will be present in the eye, the ear, the nose, the tongue and in every part of the body.

7. Rūpa in Kamaloka

If circumstances permit, all 28 material qualities occur undiminished in an individual during a lifetime in kāmaloka (sense-sphere).

In womb-born creatures, only three kammaja-kalāpā comprising body-decad, sex-decad and heart decad are manifested at the moment of conception (at paṭisandhi).

Here again, the sex-decad may not be manifested in some particular individuals. After conception, during life, the eye-decad and the rest are manifested slowly in due order. Of the groups of material qualities produced in four ways, kammaja-rūpa starts to form at the moment of conception and forms incessantly at every minor instant. Cittaja-rūpa begins to form from the second moment of consciousness, i.e., from the arising instant of the first bhavaṅga, which follows the rebirth-consciousness. Cittaja-rūpa continues to be formed for a lifetime.

Utuja-rūpa starts to form from the existing instant of rebirth consciousness. The reason is that the tejo-dhātu (utu) present in the first kammaja-kalāpā comes to the static stage (ṭhiti) at that instant. From that time onward, the tejo-dhātu produces utuja-rūpa at every moment. Since tejo-dhātu is present in every kalāpa, every kalāpa, from the time it reaches the static stage, produces new utuja-kalāpā at every minor instant. And the new utuja- kalāpā, from the time they reach the static stage, again produce new utuja-kalāpā at every minor instant. So this process goes on forever.

Every kalāpa also contains the nutritional essence of oja. But āhāraja-rūpa forms when internal oja meets external oja at the time of diffusion of nutritional essence, and the combination of internal and external oja comes to the static stage. From that instant, āhāraja-rūpa is also formed at every minor instant. Old groups dissolve and disappear as new groups of material qualities are incessantly produced. Thus, the material phenomena go on uninterruptedly in the sense-sphere till the end of life like the flame of a lamp, or river stream.

Material Phenomena at Death: At the time of death, psychic life and physical life must cease together. This means that all kammaja rūpa that contains physical life must cease at the time of death. So at the beginning of the seventeenth citta, reckoned backward from the death-consciousness (cuti citta), the last kammaja rūpa is formed. This last kammaja rūpa will cease at the dissolving instant of the death-consciousness. Cittaja rūpa is formed till the arising instant of the cuti citta. This last cittaja rūpa will have lasted for a conscious-moment at the dissolution of cuti citta and thus will perish in another sixteen conscious-moments, which happens almost instantly. āhāraja rūpa is formed till the dissolving instant of the cuti citta because the support required for the formation of āhāraja rūpa can be furnished by citta up to that time. So at death, that last-formed āhāraja rūpa lasted only one minor instant. However in another fifty minor instants (rūpa lifespan – 51 minor instants or 17 conscious-moments), that āhāraja rūpa also ceases. Thus at the time of death, kammaja rūpa, cittaja rūpa and āhāraja rūpa cease almost instantly.

But utuja-rūpa form and dissolve intill the corpse is converted into dust. A corpse consists of only utuja-rūpa.

So when a person dies and is reborn in another life, material phenomena similarly arise from the instant of conception and go on arising till the time of death.

Arising of Material Phenomena in Rūpa-planes

In the rūpa-plane, nose-decad, tongue-decad, and āhāraja-kalāpā do not arise. At the opapātika rebirth, five kammaja-kalāpā (vatthu, bhāva, kāya, cakkhu, and sota) arise. During life, however, cittaja kalāpā and utuja kalāpā also arise. For the Asañña Brahmā, hadaya vatthu is there, but it is shielded by the “physical body,” which has no mana indriya. Thus, it cannot interact with dhammā (or viññāṇa dhātu,) and cittā cannot arise. Therefore, cittaja kalāpā do not arise.

Thus in kāma loka and rūpa loka, the process of the arising of material phenomena should be understood in two ways, that is (1) at rebirth and (2) during life.

For details, see “Body Types in 31 Realms – Importance of Manomaya Kaya,” and “Bhūta and Yathābhūta – What Do They Really Mean.