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Indriya

Indriya (literally "belonging to or agreeable to Indra") is the Sanskrit and Pali term for physical strength or ability in general, and for the senses more specifically. The term literally means "belonging to Indra," chief deity in the Rig Veda and lord of the Trāyastriṃśa heaven (also known as Śakra or Sakka in Buddhism) hence connoting supremacy, dominance and control, attested in the general meaning of "power, strength" from the Rig Veda.[1][2][3][4]

In Buddhism, the term refers to multiple intrapsychic processes and is generally translated as "faculty" or, in specific contexts, as "spiritual faculty" or "controlling principle."[5] In Buddhism, depending on the context, indriya traditionally refers to one of the following groups of faculties:

  • the 5 spiritual faculties
  • the 5 or 6 sensory faculties
  • the 22 phenomenological faculties

5 spiritual faculties

In the Pali Canon's Sutta Pitaka, indriya is frequently encountered in the context of the "five spiritual faculties" (Pali: pañc' indriyāni):

  1. faith or conviction or belief (saddhā)
  2. energy or persistence or perseverance (viriya)
  3. mindfulness or memory (sati)
  4. stillness of the mind (samādhi)
  5. wisdom or understanding or comprehension (pañña).

Together, this set of five faculties is one of the seven sets of qualities lauded by the Buddha as conducive to Enlightenment.[6]

SN 48.10 is one of several discourses that characterizes these spiritual faculties in the following manner:

In SN 48.51, the Buddha declares that, of these five faculties, wisdom is the "chief" (agga).[9]

Balancing the spiritual faculties

In AN 6.55, the Buddha counsels a discouraged monk, Sona, to balance or "tune" his spiritual faculties as one would a musical instrument:

"... what do you think: when the strings of your [lute] were neither too taut nor too loose, but tuned to be right on pitch, was your [lute] in tune & playable?"
"Yes, lord."
"In the same way, Sona, over-aroused persistence leads to restlessness, overly slack persistence leads to laziness. Thus you should determine the right pitch for your persistence, attune the pitch of the [five] faculties [to that], and there pick up your theme."[10][11]

Relatedly, the Visuddhimagga and other post-canonical Pali commentaries[12] caution against one spiritual faculty overpowering and inhibiting the other four faculties, and thus generally recommend modifying the overpowering faculty with the investigation of states (see dhamma vicaya) or the development of tranquillity (samatha). Moreover, these commentaries especially recommend that the five spiritual faculties be developed in counterbalancing dyads:

Mindfulness
  Faith Under-
standing
 
Energy Concen-
tration
Mindfulness
The balancing of the five spiritual faculties.
  • "For one strong in faith and weak in understanding has confidence uncritically and groundlessly. One strong in understanding and weak in faith errs on the side of cunning and is as hard to cure as one sick of a disease caused by medicine. With the balancing of the two a man has confidence only when there are grounds for it." (Vism. Ch. IV, §47, ¶1)
  • "... [I]dleness overpowers one strong in concentration and weak in energy, since concentration favours idleness. Agitation overpowers one strong in energy and weak in concentration, since energy favours agitation. But concentration coupled with energy cannot lapse into idleness, and energy coupled with concentration cannot lapse into agitation. So these two should be balanced ; for absorption comes with the balancing of the two." (Vism. Ch. IV, §47, ¶2)
  • "... One working on concentration needs strong faith, since it is with such faith and confidence that he reaches absorption." (Vism. Ch. IV, §48)
  • "... Then there is [balancing of] concentration and understanding. One working on concentration needs strong unification, since that is how he reaches absorption; and one working on insight needs strong understanding, since that is how he reaches penetration of characteristics; but with the balancing of the two he reaches absorption as well." (Vism. Ch. IV, §48)

The commentator Buddhaghosa adds:

  • "Strong mindfulness, however, is needed in all instances; for mindfulness protects the mind lapsing into agitation through faith, energy and understanding, which favour agitation, and from lapsing into idleness through concentration, which favours idleness." (Vism. Ch. IV, §49).[13]

Relation to the Five Powers

In SN 48.43, the Buddha declares that the five spiritual faculties are the Five Powers and vice versa. He uses the metaphor of a stream passing by a mid-stream island; the island creates two streams, but the streams can also be seen as one and the same.[14] The Pali commentaries remark that these five qualities are "faculties" when used to control their spheres of influence, and are "powers" when unshakeable by opposing forces.[15]

5 material or 6 sensory faculties

In the Sutta Pitaka, six sensory faculties are referenced in a manner similar to the six sense bases. These faculties consist of the five senses with the addition of "mind" or "thought" (manas).

  1. vision (cakkh-indriya)
  2. hearing (sot-indriya)
  3. smell (ghān-indriya)
  4. taste (jivh-indriya)
  5. touch (kāy-indriya)
  6. thought (man-indriya)

The first five of these faculties are sometimes referenced as the five material faculties (e.g., pañcannaṃ indriyānaṃ avakanti).[16]

22 phenomenological faculties

In the Abhidhamma Pitaka, the notion of indriya is expanded to the twenty-two "phenomenological faculties" or "controlling powers" (Pali: bāvīsati indriyāni)[17] which are:

  • six sensory faculties
  1. eye/vision faculty (cakkh-indriya)
  2. ear/hearing faculty (sot-indriya)
  3. nose/smell faculty (ghān-indriya)
  4. tongue/taste faculty (jivh-indriya)
  5. body/sensibility faculty (kāy-indriya)
  6. mind faculty (man-indriya)
  • three physical faculties
  1. femininity (itth-indriya)
  2. masculinity (puris-indriya)
  3. life or vitality (jīvit-indriya)
  • five feeling faculties[18]
  1. physical pleasure (sukh-indriya)
  2. physical pain (dukkh-indriya)
  3. mental joy (somanassa-indriya)
  4. mental grief (domanass-indriya)
  5. equanimity (upekhha-indriya)
  • five spiritual faculties
  1. faith (saddh-indriya)
  2. energy (viriy-indriya)
  3. mindfulness (sat-indriya)
  4. concentration (samādhi-indriya)
  5. wisdom (paññ-indriya)
  • three final-knowledge faculties
  1. thinking "I shall know the unknown" (anaññāta-ñassāmīt-indriya)
  2. gnosis (aññ-indriya)
  3. one who knows (aññātā-vindriya)

According to the post-canonical Visuddhimagga, the 22 faculties along with such constructs as the aggregates, sense bases, Four Noble Truths and Dependent Origination are the "soil" of wisdom (paññā).[19]

Other faculty groupings

At times in the Pali Canon, different discourses or Abhidhammic passages will refer to different subsets of the 22 phenomenological faculties. Thus, for instance, in the Abhidhamma there are references to the "eightfold form-faculty" (aṭṭhavidhaṃ indriya-rūpaṃ) which includes the first five sensory faculties (eye, ear, nose, tongue and body faculties) plus the three physical faculties (femininity, masculinity and vitality).[20]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Bodhi (2000), p. 1509
  2. ^ Conze (1993), n. 1
  3. ^ Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 122, entry "indriya"
  4. ^ Thanissaro (1998), Part II, sec. E, "The Five Faculties."
  5. ^ Bodhi (2000) translates indriya as "spiritual faculty" and, at times (particularly when referring to Abhidhammic sources), "faculty." Buddhaghosa & Ñāṇamoli (1999) consistently translate indriya simply as "faculty" both in the context of the five spiritual faculties (e.g., pp. 128-9) and the 22 phenomenological faculties (Ch. XVI). Conze (1993) mentions and uses translations of "faculty," "controlling faculty" and "spiritual faculty," and refers to the five indriya as "cardinal virtues." Thanissaro (1998) uses "faculty." Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 122-123, entry for "Indriya," (retrieved 2007-05-27) defines it as: "Indriya is one of the most comprehensive & important categories of Buddhist psychological philosophy & ethics, meaning 'controlling principle, directive force, élan, dynamis'...: (a) with reference to sense-perceptibility 'faculty, function'...."
  6. ^ While the Pali commentaries consistently use the term bodhipakkhiyā dhammā ("states conducive to enlightenment") to refer to seven sets of enlightenment qualities (i.e., the four frames of reference, four right exertions, four bases of power, five faculties, five powers, seven bojjhanga, and Noble Eightfold Path) (see, e.g., Bodhi, 2000, p. 1937, n. 235), a search of the Sinhala SLTP tipitaka (using La Trobe University's search engine at . Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-11-21.) finds the Pali phrase bodhipakkhiyā dhammā occurring only once in the early suttas: in the Sālā Sutta (SN 48.51) where the term references solely these five spiritual faculties of faith, energy, mindfulness, concentration and wisdom (Bodhi, 2000, p. 1695).
  7. ^ Alternatively, SN 48.8 and AN V.15 identify "faith" as referring to the four-fold faith of the stream-enterer which Conze (1993), n. 28, and Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999), p. 297, n. 9, identify as faith in the Triple Gem and "perfect morality."
  8. ^ Bodhi (2000), pp. 1671-73; and, Thanissaro (1997a).
  9. ^ Bodhi (2000), p. 1695.
  10. ^ Thanissaro (1997b). See also Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999), pp. 168-70. Following Nyanaponika & Bodhi, the Pali word vīṇā (which Thanissaro leaves untranslated) is translated here as "lute"; other square-bracketed phrases are from Thanissaro (1997b). In Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999), they translate this excerpt's last line as: "Therefore, Soa, keep your energy in balance, penetrate to a balance of the spiritual faculties, and there seize your object." In the associated end note (pp. 301-2, n. 31), they provide the commentary's interpretation of "object" (nimitta) as: "When such balance exists, the object can arise clearly, just like the reflection of the face in a mirror; and you should seize this object, be it of tranquillity, insight, path or fruition."
  11. ^ See also the Aggi Sutta ("Fire Discourse," SN 46.53) in which, within the context of the seven enlightenment factors, the Buddha counsels that one should develop energy (and other factors) when experiencing a sluggish mind and develop concentration (and other factors) when experiencing an excited mind (Bodhi, 2000, pp. 1605-7).
  12. ^ For instance, in an end note associated with AN 6.55, Nyanaponika & Bodhi (1999, pp. 301-2, n. 31) reference the Aṅguttara Aṭṭhakathā (AN commentary).
  13. ^ Direct quotes from the Visuddhimagga are from Buddhaghosa & Ñāṇamoli (1999), pp. 128-9. Also mentioned in Bodhi (2000), p. 1511; and, Conze (1993), Part II, sec. 5, "The Balance of the Faculties."
  14. ^ Bodhi (2000), pp. 1688-89.
  15. ^ Bodhi (2000), p. 1511.
  16. ^ Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), pp. 122-23.
  17. ^ Bodhi (2000), pp. 1508-1509, refers to these 22 faculties as "phenomenological faculties"; while Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 122-3, entry on "indriya" refers to these 22 faculties as "controlling powers."
  18. ^ The five feeling faculties are essentially an expanded scale of the three vedana, where pleasant and unpleasant feelings/sensations are divided between physical and mental experiences (see, e.g., Bodhi, 2000, p. 1510).
  19. ^ Buddhaghosa & Ñāṇamoli (1999), pp. 442-443.
  20. ^ See, for instance, Dhs. 709-717, 971-973 (Rhys Davids, 2003, pp. 215-217, 247); and, Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), pp. 122-123.

Sources

indriya, literally, belonging, agreeable, indra, sanskrit, pali, term, physical, strength, ability, general, senses, more, specifically, term, literally, means, belonging, indra, chief, deity, veda, lord, trāyastriṃśa, heaven, also, known, Śakra, sakka, buddhi. Indriya literally belonging to or agreeable to Indra is the Sanskrit and Pali term for physical strength or ability in general and for the senses more specifically The term literally means belonging to Indra chief deity in the Rig Veda and lord of the Trayastriṃsa heaven also known as Sakra or Sakka in Buddhism hence connoting supremacy dominance and control attested in the general meaning of power strength from the Rig Veda 1 2 3 4 In Buddhism the term refers to multiple intrapsychic processes and is generally translated as faculty or in specific contexts as spiritual faculty or controlling principle 5 In Buddhism depending on the context indriya traditionally refers to one of the following groups of faculties the 5 spiritual faculties the 5 or 6 sensory faculties the 22 phenomenological facultiesContents 1 5 spiritual faculties 1 1 Balancing the spiritual faculties 1 2 Relation to the Five Powers 2 5 material or 6 sensory faculties 3 22 phenomenological faculties 4 Other faculty groupings 5 See also 6 Notes 7 Sources5 spiritual faculties EditIn the Pali Canon s Sutta Pitaka indriya is frequently encountered in the context of the five spiritual faculties Pali panc indriyani faith or conviction or belief saddha energy or persistence or perseverance viriya mindfulness or memory sati stillness of the mind samadhi wisdom or understanding or comprehension panna Together this set of five faculties is one of the seven sets of qualities lauded by the Buddha as conducive to Enlightenment 6 SN 48 10 is one of several discourses that characterizes these spiritual faculties in the following manner Faith conviction is faith in the Buddha s awakening 7 Energy persistence refers to exertion towards the Four Right Efforts Mindfulness refers to focusing on the four satipatthana Stillness of the mind refers to achieving the four jhanas Wisdom understanding refers to discerning the Four Noble Truths 8 In SN 48 51 the Buddha declares that of these five faculties wisdom is the chief agga 9 Balancing the spiritual faculties Edit In AN 6 55 the Buddha counsels a discouraged monk Sona to balance or tune his spiritual faculties as one would a musical instrument what do you think when the strings of your lute were neither too taut nor too loose but tuned to be right on pitch was your lute in tune amp playable Yes lord In the same way Sona over aroused persistence leads to restlessness overly slack persistence leads to laziness Thus you should determine the right pitch for your persistence attune the pitch of the five faculties to that and there pick up your theme 10 11 Relatedly the Visuddhimagga and other post canonical Pali commentaries 12 caution against one spiritual faculty overpowering and inhibiting the other four faculties and thus generally recommend modifying the overpowering faculty with the investigation of states see dhamma vicaya or the development of tranquillity samatha Moreover these commentaries especially recommend that the five spiritual faculties be developed in counterbalancing dyads Mindfulness Faith Under standing Energy Concen trationMindfulnessThe balancing of the five spiritual faculties For one strong in faith and weak in understanding has confidence uncritically and groundlessly One strong in understanding and weak in faith errs on the side of cunning and is as hard to cure as one sick of a disease caused by medicine With the balancing of the two a man has confidence only when there are grounds for it Vism Ch IV 47 1 I dleness overpowers one strong in concentration and weak in energy since concentration favours idleness Agitation overpowers one strong in energy and weak in concentration since energy favours agitation But concentration coupled with energy cannot lapse into idleness and energy coupled with concentration cannot lapse into agitation So these two should be balanced for absorption comes with the balancing of the two Vism Ch IV 47 2 One working on concentration needs strong faith since it is with such faith and confidence that he reaches absorption Vism Ch IV 48 Then there is balancing of concentration and understanding One working on concentration needs strong unification since that is how he reaches absorption and one working on insight needs strong understanding since that is how he reaches penetration of characteristics but with the balancing of the two he reaches absorption as well Vism Ch IV 48 The commentator Buddhaghosa adds Strong mindfulness however is needed in all instances for mindfulness protects the mind lapsing into agitation through faith energy and understanding which favour agitation and from lapsing into idleness through concentration which favours idleness Vism Ch IV 49 13 Relation to the Five Powers Edit In SN 48 43 the Buddha declares that the five spiritual faculties are the Five Powers and vice versa He uses the metaphor of a stream passing by a mid stream island the island creates two streams but the streams can also be seen as one and the same 14 The Pali commentaries remark that these five qualities are faculties when used to control their spheres of influence and are powers when unshakeable by opposing forces 15 5 material or 6 sensory faculties EditIn the Sutta Pitaka six sensory faculties are referenced in a manner similar to the six sense bases These faculties consist of the five senses with the addition of mind or thought manas vision cakkh indriya hearing sot indriya smell ghan indriya taste jivh indriya touch kay indriya thought man indriya The first five of these faculties are sometimes referenced as the five material faculties e g pancannaṃ indriyanaṃ avakanti 16 22 phenomenological faculties EditIn the Abhidhamma Pitaka the notion of indriya is expanded to the twenty two phenomenological faculties or controlling powers Pali bavisati indriyani 17 which are six sensory facultieseye vision faculty cakkh indriya ear hearing faculty sot indriya nose smell faculty ghan indriya tongue taste faculty jivh indriya body sensibility faculty kay indriya mind faculty man indriya three physical facultiesfemininity itth indriya masculinity puris indriya life or vitality jivit indriya five feeling faculties 18 physical pleasure sukh indriya physical pain dukkh indriya mental joy somanassa indriya mental grief domanass indriya equanimity upekhha indriya five spiritual facultiesfaith saddh indriya energy viriy indriya mindfulness sat indriya concentration samadhi indriya wisdom pann indriya three final knowledge facultiesthinking I shall know the unknown anannata nassamit indriya gnosis ann indriya one who knows annata vindriya According to the post canonical Visuddhimagga the 22 faculties along with such constructs as the aggregates sense bases Four Noble Truths and Dependent Origination are the soil of wisdom panna 19 Other faculty groupings EditAt times in the Pali Canon different discourses or Abhidhammic passages will refer to different subsets of the 22 phenomenological faculties Thus for instance in the Abhidhamma there are references to the eightfold form faculty aṭṭhavidhaṃ indriya rupaṃ which includes the first five sensory faculties eye ear nose tongue and body faculties plus the three physical faculties femininity masculinity and vitality 20 See also EditAyatana sense base Bodhi awakening enlightenment Bodhipakkhiyadhamma 37 enlightenment qualities Five Powers Four Right Efforts Prajna wisdom Salayatana six sense bases Panchendriya Indian philosophy Notes Edit Bodhi 2000 p 1509 Conze 1993 n 1 Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 p 122 entry indriya Thanissaro 1998 Part II sec E The Five Faculties Bodhi 2000 translates indriya as spiritual faculty and at times particularly when referring to Abhidhammic sources faculty Buddhaghosa amp Naṇamoli 1999 consistently translate indriya simply as faculty both in the context of the five spiritual faculties e g pp 128 9 and the 22 phenomenological faculties Ch XVI Conze 1993 mentions and uses translations of faculty controlling faculty and spiritual faculty and refers to the five indriya as cardinal virtues Thanissaro 1998 uses faculty Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 p 122 123 entry for Indriya retrieved 2007 05 27 defines it as Indriya is one of the most comprehensive amp important categories of Buddhist psychological philosophy amp ethics meaning controlling principle directive force elan dynamis a with reference to sense perceptibility faculty function While the Pali commentaries consistently use the term bodhipakkhiya dhamma states conducive to enlightenment to refer to seven sets of enlightenment qualities i e the four frames of reference four right exertions four bases of power five faculties five powers seven bojjhanga and Noble Eightfold Path see e g Bodhi 2000 p 1937 n 235 a search of the Sinhala SLTP tipitaka using La Trobe University s search engine at La Trobe University Pali Canon Online Database Archived from the original on 2007 09 27 Retrieved 2007 11 21 finds the Pali phrase bodhipakkhiya dhamma occurring only once in the early suttas in the Sala Sutta SN 48 51 where the term references solely these five spiritual faculties of faith energy mindfulness concentration and wisdom Bodhi 2000 p 1695 Alternatively SN 48 8 and AN V 15 identify faith as referring to the four fold faith of the stream enterer which Conze 1993 n 28 and Nyanaponika amp Bodhi 1999 p 297 n 9 identify as faith in the Triple Gem and perfect morality Bodhi 2000 pp 1671 73 and Thanissaro 1997a Bodhi 2000 p 1695 Thanissaro 1997b See also Nyanaponika amp Bodhi 1999 pp 168 70 Following Nyanaponika amp Bodhi the Pali word viṇa which Thanissaro leaves untranslated is translated here as lute other square bracketed phrases are from Thanissaro 1997b In Nyanaponika amp Bodhi 1999 they translate this excerpt s last line as Therefore Soṇ a keep your energy in balance penetrate to a balance of the spiritual faculties and there seize your object In the associated end note pp 301 2 n 31 they provide the commentary s interpretation of object nimitta as When such balance exists the object can arise clearly just like the reflection of the face in a mirror and you should seize this object be it of tranquillity insight path or fruition See also the Aggi Sutta Fire Discourse SN 46 53 in which within the context of the seven enlightenment factors the Buddha counsels that one should develop energy and other factors when experiencing a sluggish mind and develop concentration and other factors when experiencing an excited mind Bodhi 2000 pp 1605 7 For instance in an end note associated with AN 6 55 Nyanaponika amp Bodhi 1999 pp 301 2 n 31 reference the Aṅguttara Aṭṭhakatha AN commentary Direct quotes from the Visuddhimagga are from Buddhaghosa amp Naṇamoli 1999 pp 128 9 Also mentioned in Bodhi 2000 p 1511 and Conze 1993 Part II sec 5 The Balance of the Faculties Bodhi 2000 pp 1688 89 Bodhi 2000 p 1511 Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 pp 122 23 Bodhi 2000 pp 1508 1509 refers to these 22 faculties as phenomenological faculties while Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 p 122 3 entry on indriya refers to these 22 faculties as controlling powers The five feeling faculties are essentially an expanded scale of the three vedana where pleasant and unpleasant feelings sensations are divided between physical and mental experiences see e g Bodhi 2000 p 1510 Buddhaghosa amp Naṇamoli 1999 pp 442 443 See for instance Dhs 709 717 971 973 Rhys Davids 2003 pp 215 217 247 and Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 pp 122 123 Sources EditBodhi Bhikkhu trans 2000 The Connected Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 331 1 Buddhaghosa Bhadantacariya amp Bhikkhu Naṇamoli trans 1999 The Path of Purification Visuddhimagga Seattle WA BPS Pariyatti Editions ISBN 1 928706 00 2 Conze Edward 1980 1993 The Way of Wisdom The Five Spiritual Faculties The Wheel Publication No 65 66 Kandy Buddhist Publication Society Retrieved on 2007 05 27 from Access to Insight at http www accesstoinsight org lib authors conze wheel065 html Nyanaponika Thera amp Bhikkhu Bodhi trans 1999 Numerical Discourses of the Buddha An Anthology of Suttas from the Anguttara Nikaya Kandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 0 7425 0405 0 Rhys Davids Caroline A F 1900 2003 Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics of the Fourth Century B C Being a Translation now made for the First Time from the Original Pali of the First Book of the Abhidhamma Piṭaka entitled Dhamma Sangaṇi Compendium of States or Phenomena Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0 7661 4702 9 Rhys Davids T W amp William Stede eds 1921 5 The Pali Text Society s Pali English Dictionary Chipstead Pali Text Society A general on line search engine for the PED is available at http dsal uchicago edu dictionaries pali Thanissaro Bhikkhu 1996 1998 Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Retrieved 2007 05 27 from Access to Insight at http www accesstoinsight org lib authors thanissaro wings index html Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997a Indriya vibhanga Sutta Analysis of the Mental Faculties SN 48 10 Retrieved 2007 05 27 from Access to Insight at http www accesstoinsight org tipitaka sn sn48 sn48 010 than html Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997b Sona Sutta About Sona AN 6 55 Retrieved 2008 04 15 from Access to Insight at http www accesstoinsight org tipitaka an an06 an06 055 than html Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Indriya amp oldid 1116019053, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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