- The Wheel of Life
- Dr. C. George Boeree
Shippensburg University
Samsara
Samsara is this world, filled as it is
with so much pain and sorrow. All beings in this world are subject to the law of karma. Karma
means volitional act, that is, something you do, say, or think that is in fact in your
control. Any such act has moral consequences, called vipaka, which means fruit. In
traditional Buddhism, this consequences can occur in this life, or in a future life.
Most Buddhists believe in rebirth.
For many, rebirth is no different from what the Hindus believed, i.e. reincarnation or
transmigration -- moving from one's old body at death to a new body at birth or
conception. A little more precisely, rebirth is nothing more than the transmission of
one's karma. Buddha likened it to the flame that passes from one candle to another. So the
idea of an immortal soul, a continuing personality, is definitely not part of the rebirth
idea.
Rebirth and similar concepts are not a
part of most westerners' cultures, so many western Buddhists, as well as some eastern
Buddhists, take rebirth as a metaphor, rather than literally. Buddhism has never been a
particularly literalist religion, so this is not at all taboo. In fact, Buddha often
avoids discussing the reality of one metaphysical idea or another as irrelevant to the
practice of the Dharma.
The image to the right is the Tibetan Wheel
of Life, which represents Samsara. In the very center, there is a rooster chasing a
pig chasing a snake chasing the rooster -- craving, hatred, and ignorance. Around that are
people ascending the white semicircle of life, and others descending the black semicircle
of death. The greatest portion of the Wheel is devoted to representations of the six
realms -- the realm of the gods, the realm of the titans, the realm of humans, the realm
of animals, the realm of the hungry ghosts, and the realm of demons -- each realm looked
over by its own boddhisattva. The outermost circle is the 12 steps of dependent
origination. The entire Wheel is held by Yama, the Lord of Death.
Pratitya-Samutpada
This is dependent origination, also known
as conditioned arising, interdependent arising, conditional nexus, causal nexus.... It
refers to the idea that, as long as we remain ignorant, clinging, and hateful, we will
continue to create karma, and so continue to be reborn into this world full of suffering
and pain. It is described using the metaphor of a wheel of life, wherein one thing
inevitably leads to another.
"All psychological and physical
phenomena constituting individual existence are interdependent and mutually condition each
other..." which is what entangles us in samsara. (The Encyclopedia of Eastern
Philosophy and Religion)
1. Ignorance (avidya).
"A" is ignorant of the dharma. The blind man cannot see the truth
2. Impulses (samskara).
"A" therefore has intentions (karma), good, bad, or neutral, and acts on them. A
potter creates a new pot from clay and water.
3. Consciousness (vijñana). These
create a new conscious being, "B," who enters a womb. A monkey, with no self
control, jumps from one branch to another.
4. Name and form (namarupa).
"B" takes form. Three or four men in a boat: The body is the vehicle that
carries us through life.
5. The six bases (shadayatana).
"B" comes into a world of objects ready to be experienced. House with doors and
windows: The senses let in the world, like windows let light into a house.
6. Contact (sparsha). "B"
has contact with that world of objects. Lovers symbolize the intimate contact between
world and mind.
7. Sensation (vedana).
"B" has perceptions of that world of objects. A man with an arrow in his eye:
Sensations can be so strong that they blind us to the truth.
8. Craving (trishna).
"Bs" perceptions give rise to desires. A man drinking: The promise of
satisfaction only leads to intoxication.
9. Clinging (upadana). Desire leads
"B" to cling to life, even at death. Like a monkey clinging to a fruit tree, we
cling to things.
10. Becoming (bhava). And another
conscious being, "C," is begun. A pregnant woman: A new life has begun.
11. Birth (jati). Thus,
"C" is born. A woman gives birth.
12. Old age and death (jara-maranam).
And "Cs" birth leads inevitably to his or her old age and death. An old
man carries a corpse to its resting place.
And the cycle continues, one thing leading
to another....
Samyojana
The Ten Fetters (Samyojana) bind us
to samsara.
1. Belief in a separate personality or
individuality (drishti)
2. Doubt that has no desire for satisfaction (vichikitsa)
3. Uncritical attachment to rules and rituals (silabbata-paramasa)
4. Sensuous craving (kama-raga)
5. Ill will, wishing harm on others (vyapada)
6. Craving for a higher material existence (rupa-raga)
7. Craving for non-material existence (arupa-raga)
8. Conceit or egotism (mana)
9. Restlessness (udhacca)
10. Ignorance (avidya)
Dharmas
Dharmas are the ultimate elements or
particles of the universe . A little like atoms, they are very small, but they exist for
only a split second, in keeping with the doctrine of impermanence. And while atoms are
purely material, dharmas include all phenomena, mental and physical. I like to think of
them as little flashes of colored light, and I would translate the word as scintilla.
Dont get confused between these and the Dharma, meaning the teachings
of the Buddha!
Like the ancient Greeks, the ancient
Buddhists thought there were four basic elements: earth, water, air, and fire. The dharma
theory turns these elements into qualities, or even verbs: fire becomes hot becomes
burning; air becomes cool becomes blowing.... Ultimately, then, all "things" are
nothing more than bundles of these qualities or actions, and are "empty" inside.
This led to one of the most important ideas of the Madhyamaka School of Mahayana Buddhism:
Shunyata, which means emptiness.
In Mahayana Buddhism, the dharmas were
considered something more like phenomena than atoms, and the Yogachara School took the
change even further, and considered them something more like ideas in the universal mind.
The
Skandhas
Skandhas or aggregates are the parts
of the self. Sometimes they are called the aggregates of attachment, which bring about
suffering. Just like a car is nothing more than the sum of its parts, so we are nothing
more than the sum of our parts. There is no atman, meaning soul, self, or ego,
holding the pieces together. Nevertheless, just like the car can run despite being nothing
but a collection of pieces, so we can live as a person.
Traditionally, there are five skandhas:
1. The body, matter or form (rupa).
Includes the body and the sense organs.
2. Feelings or sensations (vedana).
Pleasant, unpleasant, and neutral feelings, coming out of contact between sense organs and
objects, plus out of the contact between mind (manas) and mental objects (ideas,
images...).
3. Thoughts or perceptions (samjña).
Recognition of objects -- form, sound, smell, taste, bodily impressions, mental objects.
4. Will, mental acts, or mental
formations (samskara). Volition, attention, discrimination, joy, happiness,
equanimity, resolve, exertion, compulsion, concentration, etc.
5. Consciousness (vijñana).
Awareness prior to recognition -- seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, kinesthesia,
ideation.
The last four are called naman,
name, meaning the psyche. Namarupa (name-form) is therefore the buddhist term for
the person, mental and physical, which is nevertheless anatman, without soul or essence.
Ayatana is the six fields of naman:
sight, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching, and mind, as well as the objects of these six
senses.
The Yogachara school adds alaya-vijñana,
a "storehouse" consciousness, similar to Jungs idea of the collective
unconscious. What is stored there are called bijas or seeds, which are inborn and
result from our karmic history. They combine with manas or ego-mind to form the
illusion of ordinary existence. By stilling mind, storehouse consciousness becomes
identical with tathagata, "suchness," or the Buddha-mind.
Chitta means mind or consciousness.
In Yogachara, everything is ultimately chitta. For this reason, Yogachara is also called
the chitta-matra, "nothing but consciousness," or idealistic school.
- Snelling, John (1991). The Buddhist Handbook.
Rochester, VT: Inner Traditions.
- Rahula, Walpola (1959). What the Buddha Taught. NY:
Grove Press.
- Gard, Richard (1962). Buddhism. NY: George
Braziller.
- The Encyclopedia of Eastern Philosophy and Religion
(1994). Boston: Shambhala.
- The Encyclopaedia Britannica CD (1998). Chicago:
Encyclopaedia Britannica.