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Rebirth (Buddhism)

Rebirth in Buddhism refers to the teaching that the actions of a sentient being lead to a new existence after death, in an endless cycle called saṃsāra.[1][2] This cycle is considered to be dukkha, unsatisfactory and painful. The cycle stops only if moksha (liberation) is achieved by insight and the extinguishing of craving.[3][4] Rebirth is one of the foundational doctrines of Buddhism, along with karma, Nirvana and liberation.[1][3][5] Rebirth was however less relevant among early Buddhist teachings, which also mentioned the beliefs in an afterlife, ancestor worship, and related rites. The concept varies among different Buddhist traditions.[6][page needed][7][8]

The rebirth doctrine, sometimes referred to as reincarnation or transmigration, asserts that rebirth takes place in one of the six realms of samsara, the realms of gods, demi-gods, humans, the animal realm, the ghost realm and hell realms.[4][9][note 1] Rebirth, as stated by various Buddhist traditions, is determined by karma, with good realms favored by kushala karma (good or skillful karma), while a rebirth in evil realms is a consequence of akushala karma (bad karma).[4] While nirvana is the ultimate goal of Buddhist teaching, much of traditional Buddhist practice has been centered on gaining merit and merit transfer, whereby one gains rebirth in the good realms and avoids rebirth in the evil realms.[4][11][12][note 2]

The rebirth doctrine has been a subject of scholarly studies within Buddhism since ancient times, particularly in reconciling the rebirth doctrine with its anti-essentialist anatman (not-self) doctrine.[4][3][13] The various Buddhist traditions throughout history have disagreed on what it is in a person that is reborn, as well as how quickly the rebirth occurs after each death.[4][12]

Some Buddhist traditions assert that vijñana (consciousness), though constantly changing, exists as a continuum or stream (santana) and is what undergoes rebirth.[4][14][15] Some traditions like Theravada assert that rebirth occurs immediately and that no "thing" (not even consciousness) moves across lives to be reborn (though there is a causal link, like when a seal is imprinted on wax). Other Buddhist traditions such as Tibetan Buddhism posit an interim existence (bardo) between death and rebirth, which may last as many as 49 days. This belief drives Tibetan funerary rituals.[4][16] A now defunct Buddhist tradition called Pudgalavada asserted there was an inexpressible personal entity (pudgala) which migrates from one life to another.[4]

Buddhist terminology and doctrine

There is no word corresponding exactly to the English terms "rebirth", "metempsychosis", "transmigration" or "reincarnation" in the traditional Buddhist languages of Pāli and Sanskrit. Rebirth is referred to by various terms, representing an essential step in the endless cycle of samsara, terms such as "re-becoming" or "becoming again" (Sanskrit: punarbhava, Pali: punabbhava), re-born (punarjanman), re-death (punarmrityu), or sometimes just "becoming" (Pali/Sanskrit: bhava), while the state one is born into, the individual process of being born or coming into the world in any way, is referred to simply as "birth" (Pali/Sanskrit: jāti).[4][17] The entire universal process of beings being reborn again and again is called "wandering about" (Pali/Sanskrit: saṃsāra).

Some English-speaking Buddhists prefer the term "rebirth" or "re-becoming" (Sanskrit: punarbhava; Pali: punabbhava) to "reincarnation" as they take the latter to imply an entity (soul) that is reborn.[3] Buddhism denies there is any such soul or self in a living being, but does assert that there is a cycle of transmigration consisting of rebirth and redeath as the fundamental nature of existence.[3][4][18]

Historical context

Before the time of the Buddha, many ideas on the nature of existence, birth and death were in vogue. The early layers of the Vedas do not mention the doctrine of Karma and rebirth but mention the belief in an afterlife.[19][20] According to Sayers, these earliest layers of the Vedic literature show ancestor worship and rites such as sraddha (offering food to the ancestors). The later Vedic texts such as the Aranyakas and the Upanisads show a different soteriology based on reincarnation, they show little concern with ancestor rites, and they begin to philosophically interpret the earlier rituals.[21][22][23] The idea of reincarnation and karma have roots in the Upanishads of the late Vedic period, predating the Buddha and the Mahavira.[24][6] The Sramana schools affirmed the idea of soul, karma and cycle of rebirth. The competing Indian materialist schools denied the idea of soul, karma and rebirth, asserting instead that there is just one life, there is no rebirth, and death marks complete annihilation.[25] From these diverse views, Buddha accepted the premises and concepts related to rebirth,[26] but introduced innovations.[1] According to various Buddhist scriptures, Buddha believed in other worlds,

Since there actually is another world (any world other than the present human one, i.e. different rebirth realms), one who holds the view 'there is no other world' has wrong view...

— Buddha, Majjhima Nikaya i.402, Apannaka Sutta, translated by Peter Harvey[1]

Buddha also asserted that there is karma, which influences the future suffering through the cycle of rebirth, but added that there is a way to end the cycle of karmic rebirths through nirvana.[1][12] The Buddha introduced the concept that there is no soul (self) tying the cycle of rebirths, in contrast to themes asserted by various Hindu and Jaina traditions, and this central concept in Buddhism is called anattā; Buddha also affirmed the idea that all compounded things are subject to dissolution at death or anicca.[27] The Buddha's detailed conception of the connections between action (karma), rebirth and causality is set out in the twelve links of dependent origination.[13]

In Early Buddhism

There are several references to rebirth in the Early Buddhist texts (henceforth EBTs), however also to ancestor worship and a spirit world associated with the afterlife. Some key suttas which discuss rebirth include Mahakammavibhanga Sutta (Majjhima Nikaya "MN" 136); Upali Sutta (MN 56); Kukkuravatika Sutta (MN 57); Moliyasivaka Sutta (Samyutta Nikaya "SN" 36.21); and Sankha Sutta (SN 42.8).

There are various terms which refer to the rebirth process, such as Āgati-gati, Punarbhava and others. The term Āgati literally means 'coming back, return', while Gati means 'going away' and Punarbhava means 're-becoming'.[28][29][note 3] Numerous other terms for rebirths are found in the Buddhist scriptures, such as Punagamana, Punavasa, Punanivattati, Abhinibbatti, and words with roots of *jati and *rupa.[28]

According to Damien Keown, the EBTs state that on the night of his awakening, the Buddha attained the ability to recall a vast number of past lives along with numerous details about them. These early scriptures also state that he could remember "as far as ninety one eons" (Majjhima Nikaya i.483).[30][note 4] An interpretation of these memories is a link to deceased ancestors and their individual lives and memories, with later views interpreting these as personal memories of past lives.[6][page needed][7][8]

Bhikkhu Sujato notes that there are three main principles of rebirth in early Buddhism:[34]

  1. Rebirth is regarded as an ongoing process to be escaped from in the search for liberation.
  2. Rebirth is determined by one's own mind, particularly one's ethical choices.
  3. The practice of Buddhism aims at ending rebirth.

According to Bhikkhu Anālayo, the Buddhist teaching of Dependent Origination is closely connected with the doctrine of rebirth. One of the 12 elements of Dependent Origination is "birth" (jati), which according to Anālayo refers to the rebirth of living beings. He cites SN 12.2 and its parallel in Samyukta Agama "SA" 298 as evidence.[35]: 28  SN 12.2 defines "birth" in the context of Dependent Origination as "the birth of the various beings into the various orders of beings, their being born, descent into the womb, production, the manifestation of the aggregates, the obtaining of the sense bases."[36]

The early Buddhist conception of rebirth is one in which consciousness is always dependent on other factors, mainly name and form (nama-rupa) which refers to the physical body and various cognitive elements (such as feeling, perception and volition). Because of this, consciousness (viññana) is seen as supported by the body and its cognitive apparatus and cannot exist without it (and vice versa). However, consciousness can jump from one body to another (this is compared to how a spark from a hot iron can travel through the air in AN 7.52).[34] This process applies to the very moment of conception, which requires a consciousness to enter the womb. This is indicated by Dirgha Agama "DA" 13 and its parallels (DN 15, Madhyama Agama "MA" 97). DA 13 states:[35]: 13 

[The Buddha said]: Ananda, in dependence on consciousness there is name and form. What is the meaning of this? If consciousness did not enter the mother's womb, would there be name and form? [Ananda] replied: No.

The same sutra states that if consciousness were to depart from the womb, the fetus could not continue to grow. Drawing on these sutras and others (such as SN 22.8 and SA 1265) Anālayo concludes that "consciousness appears to be what provides the transition from one body to another".[35]: 13–14  However, according to Sujato, the EBTs indicate that it is not just consciousness which undergoes rebirth, but some form of all the five aggregates.[34]

The EBTs also seem to indicate that there is an in-between state (antarābhava) between death and rebirth. According to Bhikkhu Sujato, the most explicit passage supporting this can be found in the Kutuhalasāla Sutta, which states that "when a being has laid down this body, but has not yet been reborn in another body, it is fuelled by craving."[34]

Another term which is used to describe what gets reborn in the EBTs is gandhabba ("spirit"). According to the Assalayana Sutta (and its parallel at MA 151), for conception to be successful, a gandhabba must be present (as well as other physiological factors).[35]: 15 

According to the EBTs, this rebirth consciousness is not a tabula rasa (blank slate), but contains certain underlying tendencies (anusaya) which in turn "form an object for the establishment of consciousness" (SA 359, SN 13.39). These subliminal inclinations are thus a condition for continued rebirth and also carry imprints from past lives.[35]: 16–17 

According to the EBTs, past life memories can be retrieved through the cultivation of deep meditative states (samadhi). The Buddha himself is depicted as having developed the ability to recollect his past lives as well as to access the past life memories of other conscious beings in texts like the Bhayabherava Sutta (MN 4, the parallel Agama text is at Ekottara Agama 31.1) and the Mahapadana Sutta (DN 14, parallel at DA 1).[35]: 18–19  Another key point affirmed by the EBTs is that the series of past lives stretches so far back into the past that a beginning point cannot be found (see e.g. SN 15.3 and SA 938).[35]: 25 

Cosmology and liberation

 
A Bhavachakra ("Wheel of Existence") depicting the six realms of existence in which a sentient being can be reborn into, according to the rebirth doctrine of Buddhism.

In traditional Buddhist cosmology the rebirth, also called reincarnation or metempsychosis, can be in any of the six realms of existence. These are called the Gati in cycles of re-becoming, Bhavachakra.[4] The six realms of rebirth include three good realms: Deva (heavenly, god), Asura (demigod), and Manusya (human); and three evil realms: Tiryak (animals), Preta (ghosts), and Naraka (hellish).[4] The realm of rebirth is conditioned by the karma (deeds, intent) of current and previous lives;[37] good karma will yield a happier rebirth into good realms while bad karma is believed to produce rebirth which is more unhappy and evil.[4]

The release from this endless cycle of rebirth is called nirvana (Sanskrit: निर्वाण, nirvāṇa; Pali: nibbāna) in Buddhism. The achievement of nirvana is the ultimate goal of Buddhist teaching.[note 5][note 6] However, much of traditional Buddhist practice has been centered on gaining merit and merit transfer, whereby an individual gains rebirth for oneself or one's family members in the good realms, and avoids rebirth in the evil realms.[4][11][12]

An important part of the early Buddhist soteriology is the four stages of awakening. With each stage, it was believed that one abandons certain mental defilements or "fetters". Furthermore, each stage of awakening was believed to be associated with being closer to the ending of rebirth in the following manner:[49]

  • The Sotāpanna (Stream-enterer) - Still has up to seven rebirths left
  • Sakadāgāmi (Once Returner) - Will only return for one more human rebirth
  • Anāgāmi - Will only return once more to a heavenly realm
  • Arahant - Has cut off rebirth completely, will not be reborn

Right View and Rebirth

According to the early Buddhist texts, accepting the truth of rebirth (glossed as the view that "there is this world & the next world" in suttas like MN 117) is part of right view, the first element of the noble eight-fold path.[50] While some scholars like Tilmann Vetter and Akira Hirakawa have questioned whether the Buddha saw rebirth as important, Johannes Bronkhorst argues that these views are based on scant evidence from the EBTs. He further writes that "in so far as the texts allow us to reach an answer...the Buddha did believe in rebirth."[51]

As noted by Anālayo, a standard definition of wrong view in the EBTs "explicitly covers the denial of rebirth and the fruition of karma".[35]: 27  The denial of rebirth is rejected as an "annihilationist" view in the Brahmajala Sutta (DN 1, Chinese parallel at DA 21, a Tibetan parallel also exists).[35]: 28  The Samaññaphala Sutta (parallel at DA 27) also critiques the view of a school of ancient Indian materialism called Carvaka (which rejected rebirth and held that "all are destroyed at death"). According to this Sutta, to hold this view while living in a time when the Buddha's teachings are available is equivalent to being born dumb and dull.[35]: 28–29 

However, Anālayo argues that since there are different definitions of right view in the early texts, this "leaves open the possibility that someone may engage in practices related to the Buddhist path to liberation without necessarily pledging faith in rebirth. It does not leave open the possibility of denying rebirth outright, however, since that would amount to holding wrong view". Because of this, Anālayo writes that the question of rebirth may simply be set aside without going as far as to deny rebirth and affirm annihilation.[35]: 30–31 

An advice given in various EBTs is not to waste time speculating about what one might have been in the past and what they will be in the future. Such advice can be found in the Sabbasava Sutta (MN 2, with a parallel at MA 10). In contrast to this, various early texts regularly recommend the direct recollection of one's own past lives as one of the three higher knowledges which correspond to the realizations attained by the Buddha on the night of his awakening. According to Anālayo, there is a major difference between direct access to our past lives through mental training (which is encouraged) and theoretical speculation (which is not).[35]: 32–33 

Some early discourses also depict various Buddhist monks who seriously misunderstood the nature of rebirth. In one discourse, the Mahatanhasankhaya sutta (MN 38, MA 201), a monk comes to the conclusion that it is this very same consciousness that will be reborn (as opposed to a dependently originated process). In another discourse, the Mahapunnama sutta (MN 109, SA 58), a monk misapplies the doctrine of not-self to argue that there is nobody who will be affected by the fruition of karma.[35]: 44 

Later Developments and Theories

 
A traditional Tibetan illustration of conception and the growth of the fetus, from the "Blue Beryl" medical treatise by Sangye Gyatso (c. 1720). Note the rebirth consciousness entering the womb during conception (first illustration, top left).

While the vast majority of Buddhists accept some notion of rebirth, they differ in their theories about the rebirth mechanism and precisely how events unfold after the moment of death. Already at the time of the Buddha there was much speculation about how to explain how rebirth occurs and how it relates to the doctrines of not-self and impermanence.[52][53]

After the death of the Buddha, the various Buddhist schools which arose debated numerous aspects of rebirth, seeking to provide a more systematic explanation of the rebirth process. Important topics included the existence of the intermediate state, the exact nature of what undergoes rebirth, the relationship between rebirth and not-self, and how karma affects rebirth.[53]

Both the Sarvāstivāda-Vaibhāṣika and the Theravāda tradition interpreted the teaching of the 12 factors (nidana) of dependent origination by using a three life model (the previous life, the present life and the future life). However, their Abhidharma works also state that the 12 factors of dependent origination can be understood as active in the present moment.[35]: 8–9 

Karma and what gets reborn

An important question which was debated by Indian Buddhist thinkers was the question of what exactly gets reborn, and how this is different from the Indian concept of an attā (ātman, unchanging self), which Buddhism rejects. The early Buddhist texts sometimes speak of an "evolving consciousness" (Pali: samvattanika viññana, M.1.256)[54] or a "stream of consciousness" (Pali: viññana sotam, D.3.105) as that which transmigrates. However, according to Bruce Matthews, "there is no single major systematic exposition on this subject" in the Pali Canon.[55][56]

Some Buddhist scholars such as Buddhaghosa, held that the lack of an unchanging self (atman) does not mean that there is a lack of continuity in rebirth, since there is still a causal link between lives. The process of rebirth across different realms of existence was compared to how a flame is transferred from one candle to another.[57][58]

Various Indian Buddhist schools like the Sautrantika, Mahasamghika and the Mahasisaka held that the karmic link between lives could be explained by how karmic effects arose out of "seeds" which were deposited in a mental substratum.[59] The Sautrantika Elder Srilata defended the theory of a "subsidiary element" (anudhatu or *purvanudhatu) which corresponds to the seed theory.[60] The Sautrantika school held this was a "transmigrating substratum of consciousness".[61] It argued that each personal action "perfumes" the individual stream of consciousness and leads to the planting of a seed that would later germinate as a good or bad karmic result. This allowed them to explain what underwent the process of rebirth.[62]

The Sarvāstivāda-Vaibhāṣika school on the other hand did not make use of the seed theory, since they held an eternalist theory of time, which held that phenomena (dharmas) in the past, present and future exist. Because of this, they argued that after an action was done by a person, it still continued to exist, and to be in a state of "possession" (prāpti) vis a vis the mindstream (santana) of the person who performed the action. According to Vaibhāṣikas, it was this which guaranteed the capacity of past karma to produce an effect long after it had been performed.[63]

The seed theory was defended by the influential Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu in his Abhidharmakosha.[60] It is also present in the Viniscayasamgrahani of the Yogacarabhumi.[64] The Sarvastivada Abhidharma master Saṃghabhadra states that the seed theory was referred to by different names including: subsidiary elements (anudhatu), impressions (vasana); capability (samarthya), non-disappearance (avipranasa), or accumulation (upacaya).[60]

The seed theory was adopted and further developed by the Yogacara school into their doctrine of the "container consciousness" (alaya-vijñana), which is a subliminal and constantly changing stream of consciousness that stores the seeds and undergoes rebirth.[62][53] Asanga's Mahāyānasaṃgraha equated the alaya-vijñana with similar teachings found in other Buddhist schools which indicates that the idea of a rebirth consciousness was widespread. He states that this is the same idea which is called "root-consciousness" (mula-vijñana) by the Mahasamghika schools and what the Sthavira schools call the bhavaṅga.[65]

According to Lobsang Dargyay, the Prāsaṇgika branch of the Madhyamaka school (which is exemplified by the philosopher Chandrakirti), attempted to refute every concept for a support or a storehouse of karmic information (including the alaya-vijñana). Instead, some Prāsaṇgika philosophers argue that a karmic action results in a potential which will ripen later. This potential is not a thing and does not need a support. However, other Madhyamaka thinkers (which are classified as "Svatantrikas" by Tibetans scholars), generally adopted the Sautrantika concept of tendencies stored in the stream of consciousness.[62]

The Theravāda school's doctrine of the bhavaṅga (Pali, "ground of becoming", "condition for existence") is another theory that was used to explain rebirth. It is seen as a mental process which conditions the next mental process at the moment of death and rebirth (though it does not actually travel in between lives, see below).[66]

The Pudgalavada school of early Buddhism accepted the core premise of Buddhism that there is no ātman, but asserted that there is a "personal entity" (pudgala, puggala) that retains karmic merit and undergoes rebirth. This personal entity was held to be neither different nor identical to the five aggregates (skandhas).[67] This concept was attacked by Theravada Buddhists in the early 1st millennium CE.[67] The personal entity concept was rejected by the mid-1st millennium CE Pali scholar Buddhaghosa, who attempted to explain rebirth mechanism with "rebirth-linking consciousness" (patisandhi-citta).[67][68] It was also criticized by northern Buddhist philosophers like Vasubandhu.

Intermediate existence

Another topic which gave rise to much debate in among Indian Buddhists was the idea of the intermediate existence (antarabhāva). According to Andre Bareau, the Indian Buddhists schools were split on this issue. While the Sarvāstivāda, Sautrantika, Pudgalavada, Pūrvaśaila and late Mahīśāsaka accepted this doctrine, the Mahāsāṃghika, early Mahīśāsaka, Theravāda, Vibhajyavāda and the Śāriputrābhidharma (possibly Dharmaguptaka) rejected it in favor of an immediate leap of the consciousness from one body to the next.[69]

In the Abhidharmakosha, Vasubandhu defends the theory of the intermediate existence. He argues that each intermediate being is made up of the five aggregates, that it arises in the place of death and carries the "configuration of the future being." Furthermore, according to Vasubandhu, this conscious intermediate being becomes aroused on seeing their future parents joined in intercourse and it becomes envious of one of the parents. Because of this desire and hatred, it becomes attached to the womb where it conditions the first moment of "birth existence" (pratisamdhi).[53]

In Tibetan Buddhism, the intermediate existence (Tibetan: bardo) concept developed elaborate descriptions of numerous visions experienced during the process of dying, including visions of peaceful and wrathful deities.[70] These ideas led to various maps for navigating the intermediate existence which are discussed in texts like the Bardo Thodol.[71][72]

In contrast to this, the Theravāda scholar Buddhaghosa argued that rebirth occurs in one instant as part of a process called "rebirth-linking" (patisandhi). According to Buddhaghosa, at death, the sense faculties dissolve one by one until only consciousness is left. The very last moment of consciousness at death (cuti viññana) conditions the very first instant of consciousness of the next life, the patisandhi viññana, which occurs at the time of conception. The relationship is compared to that between a seal and wax. While they are not the same entity, the wax impression is conditioned by the seal. Therefore, in the classic Theravāda view, nothing actually transmigrates.[53]

In spite of the rejection of the intermediate state by such an influential figure, some modern Theravāda scholars (such as Balangoda Ananda Maitreya) have defended the idea of an intermediate state. It is also a very common belief among monks and laypersons in the Theravāda world (where it is commonly referred to as the gandhabba or antarabhāva).[73]

Buddhist arguments for rebirth

Empirical arguments

Ancient Buddhists as well as some moderns cite the reports of the Buddha and his disciples of having gained direct knowledge into their own past lives as well as those of other beings through a kind of parapsychological ability or extrasensory perception (termed abhiñña).[35]: 40 [74][75] Traditional Buddhist philosophers like Dharmakīrti have defended the concept of special yogic perception (yogi-pratyakṣa) which is able to empirically verify the truth of rebirth.[76] Some modern Buddhists authors like K.N. Jayatilleke also argue that the Buddha's main argument in favor of rebirth was based on empirical grounds, and that this included the idea that extra-sensory perception (Pali: atikkanta-manusaka) can provide a validation for rebirth.[77]

Modern Buddhists such as Bhikkhu Anālayo and Jayatilleke have also argued that rebirth may be empirically verifiable and have pointed to certain parapsychological phenomena as possible evidence, mainly near-death experiences (NDEs), past-life regression, reincarnation research and xenoglossy.[35]: (SIII) [78][79] Both Anālayo and B. Alan Wallace point to the work of the American Psychiatrist Ian Stevenson as providing possible evidence of rebirth.[35]: (SIII) [80] This is not just a recent phenomenon. According to Anālayo, ancient Chinese Buddhists also pointed to anomalous phenomena such as NDEs to argue for the truth of rebirth.[35]: 55–56  Furthermore, according to Roger R. Jackson, the Indian Buddhist philosopher Śāntarakṣita (725–788) argues in his Tattvasaṅgraha that newborn children exhibit a wide range of complex desires, emotions and mental states that could not exist without the force of past habit, and thus they must be based on the habits acquired in a past life.[81]

Wallace also notes that several modern Buddhist figures, such as Pa Auk Sayadaw and Geshe Gedun Lodro have also written about how to train the mind to access past life memories.[82] The Burmese monk Pa Auk Sayadaw is known for teaching such methods and some of his western students like Shaila Catherine have written about this and their experiences in practicing it.[83]

B. Alan Wallace argues that first person introspection is a valid means of knowledge about the mind (when that introspection is well trained by meditation) and has been used by numerous contemplatives throughout history.[84] He writes that a well trained mind, "which may be likened to an inwardly focused telescope," should be able to access "a subtle, individual mind stream that carries on from one lifetime to another."[85] Wallace proposes that a research project using well trained meditators could access information from past lives in an accurate manner and these could then be checked by independent third person observers.[82]

Metaphysical arguments

 
The Indian Buddhist philosopher Dharmakīrti (fl. c. 6th or 7th century) outlined one of the most influential arguments for rebirth.

Besides defending the status of the Buddha as an epistemically authoritative or reliable person (pramāṇa puruṣa), Indian Buddhist philosophers like Dignaga (c. 480–540 CE) and Dharmakīrti (fl. c. 6th or 7th century), as well as later commentators on their works, also put forth philosophical arguments in favor of rebirth and especially directed against the reductionist materialist philosophy of the Carvaka school.[86]

In his Pramanavarttika, Dharmakīrti defends rebirth by initially focusing on refuting the materialist doctrine of the Carvaka school, which held that the support (asraya) for cognition is the body and that when the body is destroyed, cognition is destroyed.[87] Modern Buddhists who argue in favor of rebirth like B. Alan Wallace often begin by mounting similar arguments against materialism and physicalism, pointing to the current philosophical debate on the "hard problem of consciousness" and arguing that conscious properties cannot be reduced to physical properties.[88] Indeed, according to Wallace "the metaphysical views of materialism are in fundamental conflict with the Buddhist worldview regarding the nature of the mind"[89]

According to Richard P. Hayes, Dharmakīrti denied that mental events were a mere byproduct of the body, instead holding that "both mental events and physical events can be seen as effects of the same set of causal conditions."[62] For Dharmakīrti, all events are dependent on multiple causes, and they must be preceded by an "antecendent causal condition" of the same class. This means that all mental events must have a previous mental event as part of its causal nexus (presumably stretching back before one's birth). According to Hayes, Dharmakīrti holds therefore that "both physical factors and nonphysical factors play a role in the formation of mental events", if not there would be no difference between sentient beings and inanimate matter.[62]

Philosopher Evan Thompson outlines Dharmakīrti's main point as follows: "matter and consciousness have totally different natures; an effect must be of the same nature as its cause; hence consciousness cannot arise from or be produced by matter (though material things can condition or influence consciousness)." Thompson further notes that for Dharmakīrti, the nature of matter it is that it is obstructive, it resists other instances of matter, while the nature of consciousness is altogether different since it is capable of including diverse objects within itself at the same time without any of them obstructing the other. Furthermore, phenomenal consciousness is able to illuminate or cognize objects (as well as itself, i.e. it is self-reflexive) and has intentionality, while matter does not.[90][91]

Eli Franco mentions that for Dharmakīrti, the position that cognition "can arise from the body alone, independent of their similar causes" at the moment of birth is irrational. That is, if the mind is not being conditioned by a previous cognitive event, then it cannot arise from inert matter.[92] Dharmakīrti also argues that mental events can causally condition physical events, and thus there is no reason to privilege matter as being primary.[62] According to Martin Willson, this kind of argument is the most commonly used in the Tibetan philosophical tradition to establish the truth of rebirth and in its most simple form can be put as follows:[93]

With respect to the knowing (consciousness or mind) of an ordinary being just born:

it is preceded by earlier knowing; because it is knowing.

Willson notes that this relies on two further assumptions, the first is that any mental continuum must have previous causes, the second is that materialism is false and that mind cannot emerge solely from matter (emergentism).[93]

According to Jacob Andrew Lucas, the strength of Dharmakīrti's argument lies on its two key premises:[94]

  1. Consciousness, or the mental continuum, has characteristics that are distinct from physical characteristics.
  2. The substantial cause for any event is a prior event with the same character (i.e. it is a homogeneous cause).

However, as Lucas notes, we should not take Dharmakīrti to be arguing in favor of a strict mind-body dualism, since in all systems of Buddhist thought, the mind and body are deeply interconnected and dependent on each other. Dharmakīrti 's point is merely that consciousness cannot arise from physical factors alone, which does not entail that consciousness is totally separate from physical factors.[95]

Jacob Andrew Lucas provides a modern formulation of an argument for rebirth which draws on the work of Galen Strawson. Strawson argues against emergence as well as against proto-experiential qualities and argues for a form of constitutive panpsychism.[96] Lucas rejects constitutive panpsychism as a live option for a Buddhist due to various issues including the "combination problem" and because it supports the idea that the conscious subject collapses into micro-experiences when the body dies.[97] Lucas then proceeds to argue for an unbroken stream of consciousness or an indivisible cluster of conscious experience "that can neither arise from nor collapse into rudimentary factors that are devoid of the distinctive characteristics of consciousness."[98]

Theravada Abhidhamma makes a similar argument to Dharmakīrti's. According to the Abhidhamma teacher Nina van Gorkom, physical and mental events (dhammas) both depend on each other and on previous events of the same category (i.e. mental events must also be conditioned by previous mental events, and so on). In Abhidhamma, the mental event (citta) which arises at the first moment of life is called the rebirth consciousness or patisandhi-citta. According to van Gorkom, "there isn't any citta which arises without conditions, the patisandhi-citta must also have conditions. The patisandhi-citta is the first citta of a new life and thus its cause can only be in the past."[99]

Pragmatic arguments and wager theories

Various Buddhists and interpreters of the Buddhist texts such as David Kalupahana and Etienne Lamotte, have argued that the Buddha is a kind of pragmatist regarding truth, and that he saw truths as important only when they were soteriologically useful.[100][101][102] Thus, the Buddhist position on rebirth could be defended on pragmatic grounds instead of empirical or logical grounds. Some modern Buddhists have taken this position.

The American monk Thanissaro Bhikkhu has argued for the acceptance of the Buddhist idea of rebirth as a type of pragmatic wager argument (Pali: apaṇṇaka, "safe bet" or "guarantee"). Thanissaro argues that "the Buddha stated that it's a safe wager to assume that actions bear results that can affect not only this lifetime for also lifetimes after this than it is to assume the opposite."[103] Thanissaro cites Majjhima Nikaya 60 (Apaṇṇaka sutta) where the Buddha says that if there is an afterlife, those who perform bad actions have "made a bad throw twice" (because they are harmed in this world and in the next) while those who perform good actions will not, and thus he calls his teaching a "safe-bet teaching".[103] This ancient wager argument is similar in structure to modern wager arguments like Pascal's Wager and the Atheist's Wager.

According to Thanissaro Bhikkhu:[104]

The Buddha's main pragmatic argument is that if one accepted his teachings, one would be likely to pay careful attention to one's actions, so as to do no harm. This in and of itself is a worthy activity regardless of whether the rest of the path was true. When applying this argument to the issue of rebirth and karmic results, the Buddha sometimes coupled it with a second pragmatic argument that resembles Pascal's wager: If one practices the Dhamma, one leads a blameless life in the here-and-now. Even if the afterlife and karmic results do not exist, one has not lost the wager, for the blamelessness of one's life is a reward in and of itself. If there is an afterlife with karmic results, then one has won a double reward: the blamelessness of one's life here and now, and the good rewards of one's actions in the afterlife. These two pragmatic arguments form the central message of this sutta.

Sri Lankan Buddhist philosopher K.N. Jayatilleke writes that the Buddha's "wager argument" in MN 60 is that a rational person (viññu puriso) would reason as follows:[105]

If p is true If p is not true
We wager p [atthikavada, rebirth based on moral actions is true] We are happy in the next life We are praised by the wise in this life
We wager not-p [natthikavada, it is false] We are unhappy in the next life We are condemned by the wise in this life

The Kālāma Sutta also contains a similar wager argument towards rebirth, called the "four assurances" or "four consolations".[106] These four assurances are as follows:[107]

  1. "If there is another world, and if there is the fruit and result of good and bad deeds, it is possible that with the breakup of the body, after death, I will be reborn in a good destination, in a heavenly world."
  2. "If there is no other world, and there is no fruit and result of good and bad deeds, still right here, in this very life, I maintain myself in happiness, without enmity and ill will, free of trouble."
  3. "Suppose evil comes to one who does evil. Then, when I have no evil intentions toward anyone, how can suffering afflict me, since I do no evil deed?"
  4. "Suppose evil does not come to one who does evil. Then right here I see myself purified in both respects."

Moral arguments

According to Thanissaro Bhikkhu, part of the reason the Buddha recommended having conviction in the truth of rebirth was that his teaching on the nature of human action would be incomplete without reference to rebirth. Thanissaro argues that the distinction that the Buddha draws between skillful and unskillful actions is based on the consequences of these actions, and that this provides a strong motivation to do good as long as rebirth holds. This is because actions can sometimes take many lifetimes to yield their results (and thus bad persons do not always experience bad consequences in one lifetime as can be seen in SN 42.13 and MN 136) and therefore only a multi-life perspective can lead to "a complete and convincing case that unskillful actions should always be avoided, and skillful ones always developed."[50]

Thanissaro further writes that:[50]

If you assume that your actions have results, and those results will reverberate through many lifetimes, it's easier to stick to your principles not to lie, kill, or steal even under severe duress. And even though you may not know whether these assumptions are true, you cannot plan an action without implicitly wagering on the issue. This is why simply stating, "I don't know," is not an adequate response to the questions of rebirth and the efficacy of karma. The attitude behind it may be honest on one level, but it's dishonest in thinking that this is all that needs to be said, for it ignores the fact that you have to make assumptions about the possible results of your actions every time you act.

B. Alan Wallace writes that nihilistic and materialistic views which reject rebirth "undermine any sense of moral responsibility, and this is bound to have a profoundly detrimental effect on societies that adopt such beliefs."[108] He further argues:[109]

If we embrace a materialistic worldview, we will naturally seek satisfaction and fulfillment by turning our attention to the outside world, looking for novel sensory and intellectual experiences as well as new material acquisitions. Likewise, when we focus on decreasing our level of suffering and pain, once again our orientation will be outward, looking for scientific and technological breakthroughs to relieve our suffering. Human desire for ever-greater happiness seems to be insatiable, and a materialistic worldview strongly supports materialistic values and a way of life centered on the never-ending quest of consumerism... A materialistic outlook that focuses our attention on the bounties of the external physical world simultaneously blinds us to the inner resources of the human heart and mind. If all our efforts go toward the alleviation of suffering and realization of happiness by external means, the inner ways that we might pursue the good life will be unexplored. A materialistic worldview provides no rationale for making a commitment to ethics or spiritual practice of any kind. Material values and consumerism are naturally aligned with materialism, which reduces meditation to a means for making a materialistic way of life more bearable.

According to Alexander Berzin, acceptance of rebirth also has positive moral consequences, particularly in our practice of the Buddhist path. Berzin writes that an understanding of rebirth allows one to better cultivate compassion and loving-kindness towards all beings, since it allows us to see how in past lives, we have been related to all beings and how they have been our mothers (and vice versa). Likewise, we have also been many different types of beings in the past (male, female, animals, numerous nationalities etc). According to Berzin, this reflection allows us to better relate to other sentient beings.[110]

Modern naturalistic interpretations

In the 1940s, J. G. Jennings interpreted the teaching of rebirth in a less than literal sense. Believing that the doctrine of anatta (not-self) is incompatible with the view that the actions of one individual can have repercussions for the same individual in a future life, Jennings argued that the doctrine of actual transmigration was an "Indian dogma" that was not part of the original teachings of the Buddha. However, rebirth could instead be understood as the recurrence of our selfish desires which could repeat themselves "in endless succeeding generations". In this interpretation, our actions do have consequences beyond our present lives, but these are "collective not individual."[111]

The British Buddhist thinker Stephen Batchelor has recently posited a similar view on the topic:[111]

Regardless of what we believe, our actions will reverberate beyond our deaths. Irrespective of our personal survival, the legacy of our thoughts, words, and deeds will continue through the impressions we leave behind in the lives of those we have influenced or touched in any way.

The Thai modernist Buddhist monk Buddhadāsa (1906–1993) also had a rationalistic or psychological interpretation of rebirth.[112] He argued that since there is no substantial entity or soul (atman),  "there is no one born, there is no one who dies and is reborn. Therefore, the whole question of rebirth is quite foolish and has nothing to do with Buddhism…in the sphere of the Buddhist teachings there is no question of rebirth or reincarnation."[113] However, Buddhadāsa did not completely reject the rebirth doctrine, he only saw the idea that there is something that gets reborn into a future womb as "trivial". Instead of this 'literal' view, he interpreted the true meaning of rebirth as the re-arising of the sense of self or "I" or "me", a kind of "self-centredness" which is "a mental event arising out of ignorance, craving, and clinging." According to Buddhadāsa, this is what "rebirth" truly means on the ultimate level (paramattha) of discourse.[111]

Comparison with rebirth doctrines in Hinduism and Jainism

The rebirth theories in different traditions within Hinduism rely on their foundational assumption that soul exists (Atman, attā), in contrast to Buddhist assumption that there is no soul.[114][18][115] Hindu traditions consider soul to be the unchanging eternal essence of a living being, and in many of its theistic and non-theistic traditions the soul asserted to be identical with Brahman, the ultimate reality.[116][117][118] Thus while both Buddhism and Hinduism accept the karma and rebirth doctrine, and both focus on ethics in this life as well as liberation from rebirth and suffering as the ultimate spiritual pursuit, they have a very different view on whether a self or soul exists, which impacts the details of their respective rebirth theories.[119][120][121]

Rebirth and karma doctrine in Jainism differ from those in Buddhism, even though both are non-theistic Sramana traditions.[122][123] Jainism, in contrast to Buddhism, accepts the foundational assumption that soul exists (Jiva) and is involved in the rebirth mechanism.[124] Further, Jainism considers that the rebirth has a start, that rebirth and redeath cycle is a part of a progression of a soul, karmic dust particles emanate from ethical or unethical intent and actions, these karmic particles stick to the soul which determines the next birth. Jainism, further asserts that some souls can never achieve liberation, that ethical living such as Ahimsa (non-violence) and asceticism are means to liberation for those who can attain liberation, and that liberated souls reach the eternal siddha (enlightened state) that ends their rebirth cycles.[122][125][126] Jainism, like Buddhism, also believes in realms of birth[note 7] and is symbolized by its emblematic Swastika sign,[128] with ethical and moral theories of its lay practices focussing on obtaining good rebirth.[129]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This is discussed in many Suttas of different Nikayas. See, for example, Devaduta Sutta in Majjhima Nikaya (iii.178).[10]
  2. ^ This merit gaining may be on the behalf of one's family members.[4][11][12]
  3. ^ Āgati-gati in the sense of rebirth and re-death appears in many places in early Buddhist texts, such as in Samyutta Nikaya III.53, Jataka II.172, Digha Nikaya I. 162, Anguttara III.54-74 and Petavatthu II.9.[28] Punarbhava in the sense of rebirth, similarly appears in many places, such as in Digha II.15, Samyutta I.133 and 4.201, Itivuttaka 62, Sutta-nipata 162, 273, 502, 514 and 733.[28]
  4. ^ It is unclear when Majjhima Nikaya was written down. For the historicity of rebirth, samsara in early texts, see Carol Anderson;[31]
    Ronald Davidson: "While most scholars agree that there was a rough body of sacred literature (disputed)(sic) that a relatively early community (disputed)(sic) maintained and transmitted, we have little confidence that much, if any, of surviving Buddhist scripture is actually the word of the historic Buddha."[32]
    Richard Gombrich: "I have the greatest difficulty in accepting that the main edifice is not the work of a single genius. By "the main edifice" I mean the collections of the main body of sermons, the four Nikāyas, and of the main body of monastic rules."[33]
  5. ^ On samsara, rebirth and redeath:
    * Paul Williams: "All rebirth is due to karma and is impermanent. Short of attaining enlightenment, in each rebirth one is born and dies, to be reborn elsewhere in accordance with the completely impersonal causal nature of one's own karma. The endless cycle of birth, rebirth, and redeath, is samsara."[14]
    * Buswell and Lopez on "rebirth": "An English term that does not have an exact correlate in Buddhist languages, rendered instead by a range of technical terms, such as the Sanskrit PUNARJANMAN (lit. "birth again") and PUNABHAVAN (lit. "re-becoming"), and, less commonly, the related PUNARMRTYU (lit. "redeath")."[26]
    See also Perry Schmidt-Leukel (2006) pages 32-34,[38] John J. Makransky (1997) p.27.[39]
  6. ^ * Graham Harvey: "Siddhartha Gautama found an end to rebirth in this world of suffering. His teachings, known as the dharma in Buddhism, can be summarized in the Four Noble truths."[40] Geoffrey Samuel (2008): "The Four Noble Truths [...] describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth."[41] See also [42][43][14][44][40][45][web 1][web 2]
    * The Theravada tradition holds that insight into these four truths is liberating in itself.[46] This is reflected in the Pali canon.[47] According to Donald Lopez, "The Buddha stated in his first sermon that when he gained absolute and intuitive knowledge of the four truths, he achieved complete enlightenment and freedom from future rebirth."[web 1]
    * The Maha-parinibbana Sutta also refers to this liberation.[web 3] Carol Anderson: "The second passage where the four truths appear in the Vinaya-pitaka is also found in the Mahaparinibbana-sutta (D II 90-91). Here, the Buddha explains that it is by not understanding the four truths that rebirth continues."[48]
    * On the meaning of moksha as liberation from rebirth, see Patrick Olivelle in the Encyclopædia Britannica.[web 4]
  7. ^ Jainism posits that there are four realms, in contrast to six of Buddhism; the Jaina realms are heavenly deities, human, non-human living beings (animal, plants), and hellish beings. Within the human realms, Jainism asserts that rebirth lineage and gender depends on karma in the past lives.[127][128]

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Bibliography

  • Bhikkhu Anālayo (2018). Rebirth in early Buddhism & current research: With forewords by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Bhante Gunaratna. Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 978-1-61429446-7.
  • Anderson, Carol (1999). Pain and Its Ending: The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-136-81332-0.
  • Ñāamoli, Bhikkhu (trans.) and Bodhi, Bhikkhu (ed.) (2001). The Middle-Length Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Majjhima Nikāya. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-072-X.
  • Anderson, Carol (2013), Pain and Its Ending: The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon, Routledge
  • Buswell, Robert E. Jr.; Lopez, Donald Jr. (2003), The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, Princeton University Press
  • Carter, John Ross (1987), "Four Noble Truths", in Jones, Lindsay (ed.), MacMillan Encyclopedia of Religions, MacMillan
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  • Gombrich, Richard F (1997). How Buddhism Began: The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-19639-5.
  • Harvey, Graham (2016), Religions in Focus: New Approaches to Tradition and Contemporary Practices, Routledge
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Web bibliography

  1. ^ a b Donald Lopez, Four Noble Truths, Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. ^ Thanissaro Bhikkhu, The Truth of Rebirth And Why it Matters for Buddhist Practice
  3. ^ "Maha-parinibbana Sutta: Last Days of the Buddha". www.accesstoinsight.org.
  4. ^ Patrick Olivelle (2012), Encyclopædia Britannica, Moksha (Indian religions)

Commentaries

  • Bhikkhu Anālayo, Rebirth in Early Buddhism and Current Research, Somerville, MA, USA: Wisdom Publications, 2018. ISBN 978-1-614-29446-7
  • Steven Collins, Selfless Persons: Imagery and Thought in Theravada Buddhism, Cambridge, 1982. ISBN 0-521-39726-X
  • Peter Harvey, The Selfless Mind: Personality, Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism, Curzon, 1995. ISBN 0-7007-0338-1
  • Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, Living Meaningfully, Dying Joyfully: The Profound Practice of Transference of Consciousness, Tharpa, 1999. ISBN 81-7822-058-X
  • Glenn H. Mullin, Death and Dying: The Tibetan Tradition, Arkana, 1986. ISBN 0-14-019013-9.
  • Mullin, Glenn, H. (1998). Living in the Face of Death: The Tibetan Tradition. 2008 reprint: Snow Lion Publications, Ithaca, New York. ISBN 978-1-55939-310-2.
  • Vicki MacKenzie, Reborn in the West, HarperCollins, 1997. ISBN 0-7225-3443-4
  • Tom Shroder, Old Souls: Scientific Search for Proof of Past Lives, Simon and Schuster, 2001. ISBN 0-684-85193-8
  • Francis Story, Rebirth as Doctrine and Experience: Essays and Case Studies, Buddhist Publication Society, 1975. ISBN 955-24-0176-3
  • Robert A.F. Thurman (trans.), The Tibetan Book of the Dead: Liberation Through Understanding in the Between, HarperCollins, 1998. ISBN 1-85538-412-4
  • Martin Willson, Rebirth and the Western Buddhist, Wisdom Publications, 1987. ISBN 0-86171-215-3
  • Nagapriya, Exploring Karma and Rebirth, Windhorse Publications, Birmingham 2004. ISBN 1-899579-61-3

External links

  • "A Buddhist Ethic Without Karmic Rebirth?" – article by Winston L. King
  • "Dhamma Without Rebirth?" – essay by Bhikkhu Bodhi
  • "Does Rebirth Make Sense?" – essay by Bhikkhu Bodhi
  • "Causal Relationship" – an analysis of Paṭiccasamuppāda in the Nikāyas

rebirth, buddhism, rebirth, buddhism, refers, teaching, that, actions, sentient, being, lead, existence, after, death, endless, cycle, called, saṃsāra, this, cycle, considered, dukkha, unsatisfactory, painful, cycle, stops, only, moksha, liberation, achieved, . Rebirth in Buddhism refers to the teaching that the actions of a sentient being lead to a new existence after death in an endless cycle called saṃsara 1 2 This cycle is considered to be dukkha unsatisfactory and painful The cycle stops only if moksha liberation is achieved by insight and the extinguishing of craving 3 4 Rebirth is one of the foundational doctrines of Buddhism along with karma Nirvana and liberation 1 3 5 Rebirth was however less relevant among early Buddhist teachings which also mentioned the beliefs in an afterlife ancestor worship and related rites The concept varies among different Buddhist traditions 6 page needed 7 8 The rebirth doctrine sometimes referred to as reincarnation or transmigration asserts that rebirth takes place in one of the six realms of samsara the realms of gods demi gods humans the animal realm the ghost realm and hell realms 4 9 note 1 Rebirth as stated by various Buddhist traditions is determined by karma with good realms favored by kushala karma good or skillful karma while a rebirth in evil realms is a consequence of akushala karma bad karma 4 While nirvana is the ultimate goal of Buddhist teaching much of traditional Buddhist practice has been centered on gaining merit and merit transfer whereby one gains rebirth in the good realms and avoids rebirth in the evil realms 4 11 12 note 2 The rebirth doctrine has been a subject of scholarly studies within Buddhism since ancient times particularly in reconciling the rebirth doctrine with its anti essentialist anatman not self doctrine 4 3 13 The various Buddhist traditions throughout history have disagreed on what it is in a person that is reborn as well as how quickly the rebirth occurs after each death 4 12 Some Buddhist traditions assert that vijnana consciousness though constantly changing exists as a continuum or stream santana and is what undergoes rebirth 4 14 15 Some traditions like Theravada assert that rebirth occurs immediately and that no thing not even consciousness moves across lives to be reborn though there is a causal link like when a seal is imprinted on wax Other Buddhist traditions such as Tibetan Buddhism posit an interim existence bardo between death and rebirth which may last as many as 49 days This belief drives Tibetan funerary rituals 4 16 A now defunct Buddhist tradition called Pudgalavada asserted there was an inexpressible personal entity pudgala which migrates from one life to another 4 Contents 1 Buddhist terminology and doctrine 2 Historical context 3 In Early Buddhism 3 1 Cosmology and liberation 3 2 Right View and Rebirth 4 Later Developments and Theories 4 1 Karma and what gets reborn 4 2 Intermediate existence 5 Buddhist arguments for rebirth 5 1 Empirical arguments 5 2 Metaphysical arguments 5 3 Pragmatic arguments and wager theories 5 4 Moral arguments 6 Modern naturalistic interpretations 7 Comparison with rebirth doctrines in Hinduism and Jainism 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Bibliography 10 2 Web bibliography 11 Commentaries 12 External linksBuddhist terminology and doctrine EditThere is no word corresponding exactly to the English terms rebirth metempsychosis transmigration or reincarnation in the traditional Buddhist languages of Pali and Sanskrit Rebirth is referred to by various terms representing an essential step in the endless cycle of samsara terms such as re becoming or becoming again Sanskrit punarbhava Pali punabbhava re born punarjanman re death punarmrityu or sometimes just becoming Pali Sanskrit bhava while the state one is born into the individual process of being born or coming into the world in any way is referred to simply as birth Pali Sanskrit jati 4 17 The entire universal process of beings being reborn again and again is called wandering about Pali Sanskrit saṃsara Some English speaking Buddhists prefer the term rebirth or re becoming Sanskrit punarbhava Pali punabbhava to reincarnation as they take the latter to imply an entity soul that is reborn 3 Buddhism denies there is any such soul or self in a living being but does assert that there is a cycle of transmigration consisting of rebirth and redeath as the fundamental nature of existence 3 4 18 Historical context EditBefore the time of the Buddha many ideas on the nature of existence birth and death were in vogue The early layers of the Vedas do not mention the doctrine of Karma and rebirth but mention the belief in an afterlife 19 20 According to Sayers these earliest layers of the Vedic literature show ancestor worship and rites such as sraddha offering food to the ancestors The later Vedic texts such as the Aranyakas and the Upanisads show a different soteriology based on reincarnation they show little concern with ancestor rites and they begin to philosophically interpret the earlier rituals 21 22 23 The idea of reincarnation and karma have roots in the Upanishads of the late Vedic period predating the Buddha and the Mahavira 24 6 The Sramana schools affirmed the idea of soul karma and cycle of rebirth The competing Indian materialist schools denied the idea of soul karma and rebirth asserting instead that there is just one life there is no rebirth and death marks complete annihilation 25 From these diverse views Buddha accepted the premises and concepts related to rebirth 26 but introduced innovations 1 According to various Buddhist scriptures Buddha believed in other worlds Since there actually is another world any world other than the present human one i e different rebirth realms one who holds the view there is no other world has wrong view Buddha Majjhima Nikaya i 402 Apannaka Sutta translated by Peter Harvey 1 Buddha also asserted that there is karma which influences the future suffering through the cycle of rebirth but added that there is a way to end the cycle of karmic rebirths through nirvana 1 12 The Buddha introduced the concept that there is no soul self tying the cycle of rebirths in contrast to themes asserted by various Hindu and Jaina traditions and this central concept in Buddhism is called anatta Buddha also affirmed the idea that all compounded things are subject to dissolution at death or anicca 27 The Buddha s detailed conception of the connections between action karma rebirth and causality is set out in the twelve links of dependent origination 13 In Early Buddhism EditThere are several references to rebirth in the Early Buddhist texts henceforth EBTs however also to ancestor worship and a spirit world associated with the afterlife Some key suttas which discuss rebirth include Mahakammavibhanga Sutta Majjhima Nikaya MN 136 Upali Sutta MN 56 Kukkuravatika Sutta MN 57 Moliyasivaka Sutta Samyutta Nikaya SN 36 21 and Sankha Sutta SN 42 8 There are various terms which refer to the rebirth process such as Agati gati Punarbhava and others The term Agati literally means coming back return while Gati means going away and Punarbhava means re becoming 28 29 note 3 Numerous other terms for rebirths are found in the Buddhist scriptures such as Punagamana Punavasa Punanivattati Abhinibbatti and words with roots of jati and rupa 28 According to Damien Keown the EBTs state that on the night of his awakening the Buddha attained the ability to recall a vast number of past lives along with numerous details about them These early scriptures also state that he could remember as far as ninety one eons Majjhima Nikaya i 483 30 note 4 An interpretation of these memories is a link to deceased ancestors and their individual lives and memories with later views interpreting these as personal memories of past lives 6 page needed 7 8 Bhikkhu Sujato notes that there are three main principles of rebirth in early Buddhism 34 Rebirth is regarded as an ongoing process to be escaped from in the search for liberation Rebirth is determined by one s own mind particularly one s ethical choices The practice of Buddhism aims at ending rebirth According to Bhikkhu Analayo the Buddhist teaching of Dependent Origination is closely connected with the doctrine of rebirth One of the 12 elements of Dependent Origination is birth jati which according to Analayo refers to the rebirth of living beings He cites SN 12 2 and its parallel in Samyukta Agama SA 298 as evidence 35 28 SN 12 2 defines birth in the context of Dependent Origination as the birth of the various beings into the various orders of beings their being born descent into the womb production the manifestation of the aggregates the obtaining of the sense bases 36 The early Buddhist conception of rebirth is one in which consciousness is always dependent on other factors mainly name and form nama rupa which refers to the physical body and various cognitive elements such as feeling perception and volition Because of this consciousness vinnana is seen as supported by the body and its cognitive apparatus and cannot exist without it and vice versa However consciousness can jump from one body to another this is compared to how a spark from a hot iron can travel through the air in AN 7 52 34 This process applies to the very moment of conception which requires a consciousness to enter the womb This is indicated by Dirgha Agama DA 13 and its parallels DN 15 Madhyama Agama MA 97 DA 13 states 35 13 The Buddha said Ananda in dependence on consciousness there is name and form What is the meaning of this If consciousness did not enter the mother s womb would there be name and form Ananda replied No The same sutra states that if consciousness were to depart from the womb the fetus could not continue to grow Drawing on these sutras and others such as SN 22 8 and SA 1265 Analayo concludes that consciousness appears to be what provides the transition from one body to another 35 13 14 However according to Sujato the EBTs indicate that it is not just consciousness which undergoes rebirth but some form of all the five aggregates 34 The EBTs also seem to indicate that there is an in between state antarabhava between death and rebirth According to Bhikkhu Sujato the most explicit passage supporting this can be found in the Kutuhalasala Sutta which states that when a being has laid down this body but has not yet been reborn in another body it is fuelled by craving 34 Another term which is used to describe what gets reborn in the EBTs is gandhabba spirit According to the Assalayana Sutta and its parallel at MA 151 for conception to be successful a gandhabba must be present as well as other physiological factors 35 15 According to the EBTs this rebirth consciousness is not a tabula rasa blank slate but contains certain underlying tendencies anusaya which in turn form an object for the establishment of consciousness SA 359 SN 13 39 These subliminal inclinations are thus a condition for continued rebirth and also carry imprints from past lives 35 16 17 According to the EBTs past life memories can be retrieved through the cultivation of deep meditative states samadhi The Buddha himself is depicted as having developed the ability to recollect his past lives as well as to access the past life memories of other conscious beings in texts like the Bhayabherava Sutta MN 4 the parallel Agama text is at Ekottara Agama 31 1 and the Mahapadana Sutta DN 14 parallel at DA 1 35 18 19 Another key point affirmed by the EBTs is that the series of past lives stretches so far back into the past that a beginning point cannot be found see e g SN 15 3 and SA 938 35 25 Cosmology and liberation Edit A Bhavachakra Wheel of Existence depicting the six realms of existence in which a sentient being can be reborn into according to the rebirth doctrine of Buddhism In traditional Buddhist cosmology the rebirth also called reincarnation or metempsychosis can be in any of the six realms of existence These are called the Gati in cycles of re becoming Bhavachakra 4 The six realms of rebirth include three good realms Deva heavenly god Asura demigod and Manusya human and three evil realms Tiryak animals Preta ghosts and Naraka hellish 4 The realm of rebirth is conditioned by the karma deeds intent of current and previous lives 37 good karma will yield a happier rebirth into good realms while bad karma is believed to produce rebirth which is more unhappy and evil 4 The release from this endless cycle of rebirth is called nirvana Sanskrit न र व ण nirvaṇa Pali nibbana in Buddhism The achievement of nirvana is the ultimate goal of Buddhist teaching note 5 note 6 However much of traditional Buddhist practice has been centered on gaining merit and merit transfer whereby an individual gains rebirth for oneself or one s family members in the good realms and avoids rebirth in the evil realms 4 11 12 An important part of the early Buddhist soteriology is the four stages of awakening With each stage it was believed that one abandons certain mental defilements or fetters Furthermore each stage of awakening was believed to be associated with being closer to the ending of rebirth in the following manner 49 The Sotapanna Stream enterer Still has up to seven rebirths left Sakadagami Once Returner Will only return for one more human rebirth Anagami Will only return once more to a heavenly realm Arahant Has cut off rebirth completely will not be rebornRight View and Rebirth Edit According to the early Buddhist texts accepting the truth of rebirth glossed as the view that there is this world amp the next world in suttas like MN 117 is part of right view the first element of the noble eight fold path 50 While some scholars like Tilmann Vetter and Akira Hirakawa have questioned whether the Buddha saw rebirth as important Johannes Bronkhorst argues that these views are based on scant evidence from the EBTs He further writes that in so far as the texts allow us to reach an answer the Buddha did believe in rebirth 51 As noted by Analayo a standard definition of wrong view in the EBTs explicitly covers the denial of rebirth and the fruition of karma 35 27 The denial of rebirth is rejected as an annihilationist view in the Brahmajala Sutta DN 1 Chinese parallel at DA 21 a Tibetan parallel also exists 35 28 The Samannaphala Sutta parallel at DA 27 also critiques the view of a school of ancient Indian materialism called Carvaka which rejected rebirth and held that all are destroyed at death According to this Sutta to hold this view while living in a time when the Buddha s teachings are available is equivalent to being born dumb and dull 35 28 29 However Analayo argues that since there are different definitions of right view in the early texts this leaves open the possibility that someone may engage in practices related to the Buddhist path to liberation without necessarily pledging faith in rebirth It does not leave open the possibility of denying rebirth outright however since that would amount to holding wrong view Because of this Analayo writes that the question of rebirth may simply be set aside without going as far as to deny rebirth and affirm annihilation 35 30 31 An advice given in various EBTs is not to waste time speculating about what one might have been in the past and what they will be in the future Such advice can be found in the Sabbasava Sutta MN 2 with a parallel at MA 10 In contrast to this various early texts regularly recommend the direct recollection of one s own past lives as one of the three higher knowledges which correspond to the realizations attained by the Buddha on the night of his awakening According to Analayo there is a major difference between direct access to our past lives through mental training which is encouraged and theoretical speculation which is not 35 32 33 Some early discourses also depict various Buddhist monks who seriously misunderstood the nature of rebirth In one discourse the Mahatanhasankhaya sutta MN 38 MA 201 a monk comes to the conclusion that it is this very same consciousness that will be reborn as opposed to a dependently originated process In another discourse the Mahapunnama sutta MN 109 SA 58 a monk misapplies the doctrine of not self to argue that there is nobody who will be affected by the fruition of karma 35 44 Later Developments and Theories Edit A traditional Tibetan illustration of conception and the growth of the fetus from the Blue Beryl medical treatise by Sangye Gyatso c 1720 Note the rebirth consciousness entering the womb during conception first illustration top left While the vast majority of Buddhists accept some notion of rebirth they differ in their theories about the rebirth mechanism and precisely how events unfold after the moment of death Already at the time of the Buddha there was much speculation about how to explain how rebirth occurs and how it relates to the doctrines of not self and impermanence 52 53 After the death of the Buddha the various Buddhist schools which arose debated numerous aspects of rebirth seeking to provide a more systematic explanation of the rebirth process Important topics included the existence of the intermediate state the exact nature of what undergoes rebirth the relationship between rebirth and not self and how karma affects rebirth 53 Both the Sarvastivada Vaibhaṣika and the Theravada tradition interpreted the teaching of the 12 factors nidana of dependent origination by using a three life model the previous life the present life and the future life However their Abhidharma works also state that the 12 factors of dependent origination can be understood as active in the present moment 35 8 9 Karma and what gets reborn Edit An important question which was debated by Indian Buddhist thinkers was the question of what exactly gets reborn and how this is different from the Indian concept of an atta atman unchanging self which Buddhism rejects The early Buddhist texts sometimes speak of an evolving consciousness Pali samvattanika vinnana M 1 256 54 or a stream of consciousness Pali vinnana sotam D 3 105 as that which transmigrates However according to Bruce Matthews there is no single major systematic exposition on this subject in the Pali Canon 55 56 Some Buddhist scholars such as Buddhaghosa held that the lack of an unchanging self atman does not mean that there is a lack of continuity in rebirth since there is still a causal link between lives The process of rebirth across different realms of existence was compared to how a flame is transferred from one candle to another 57 58 Various Indian Buddhist schools like the Sautrantika Mahasamghika and the Mahasisaka held that the karmic link between lives could be explained by how karmic effects arose out of seeds which were deposited in a mental substratum 59 The Sautrantika Elder Srilata defended the theory of a subsidiary element anudhatu or purvanudhatu which corresponds to the seed theory 60 The Sautrantika school held this was a transmigrating substratum of consciousness 61 It argued that each personal action perfumes the individual stream of consciousness and leads to the planting of a seed that would later germinate as a good or bad karmic result This allowed them to explain what underwent the process of rebirth 62 The Sarvastivada Vaibhaṣika school on the other hand did not make use of the seed theory since they held an eternalist theory of time which held that phenomena dharmas in the past present and future exist Because of this they argued that after an action was done by a person it still continued to exist and to be in a state of possession prapti vis a vis the mindstream santana of the person who performed the action According to Vaibhaṣikas it was this which guaranteed the capacity of past karma to produce an effect long after it had been performed 63 The seed theory was defended by the influential Buddhist philosopher Vasubandhu in his Abhidharmakosha 60 It is also present in the Viniscayasamgrahani of the Yogacarabhumi 64 The Sarvastivada Abhidharma master Saṃghabhadra states that the seed theory was referred to by different names including subsidiary elements anudhatu impressions vasana capability samarthya non disappearance avipranasa or accumulation upacaya 60 The seed theory was adopted and further developed by the Yogacara school into their doctrine of the container consciousness alaya vijnana which is a subliminal and constantly changing stream of consciousness that stores the seeds and undergoes rebirth 62 53 Asanga s Mahayanasaṃgraha equated the alaya vijnana with similar teachings found in other Buddhist schools which indicates that the idea of a rebirth consciousness was widespread He states that this is the same idea which is called root consciousness mula vijnana by the Mahasamghika schools and what the Sthavira schools call the bhavaṅga 65 According to Lobsang Dargyay the Prasaṇgika branch of the Madhyamaka school which is exemplified by the philosopher Chandrakirti attempted to refute every concept for a support or a storehouse of karmic information including the alaya vijnana Instead some Prasaṇgika philosophers argue that a karmic action results in a potential which will ripen later This potential is not a thing and does not need a support However other Madhyamaka thinkers which are classified as Svatantrikas by Tibetans scholars generally adopted the Sautrantika concept of tendencies stored in the stream of consciousness 62 The Theravada school s doctrine of the bhavaṅga Pali ground of becoming condition for existence is another theory that was used to explain rebirth It is seen as a mental process which conditions the next mental process at the moment of death and rebirth though it does not actually travel in between lives see below 66 The Pudgalavada school of early Buddhism accepted the core premise of Buddhism that there is no atman but asserted that there is a personal entity pudgala puggala that retains karmic merit and undergoes rebirth This personal entity was held to be neither different nor identical to the five aggregates skandhas 67 This concept was attacked by Theravada Buddhists in the early 1st millennium CE 67 The personal entity concept was rejected by the mid 1st millennium CE Pali scholar Buddhaghosa who attempted to explain rebirth mechanism with rebirth linking consciousness patisandhi citta 67 68 It was also criticized by northern Buddhist philosophers like Vasubandhu Intermediate existence Edit Another topic which gave rise to much debate in among Indian Buddhists was the idea of the intermediate existence antarabhava According to Andre Bareau the Indian Buddhists schools were split on this issue While the Sarvastivada Sautrantika Pudgalavada Purvasaila and late Mahisasaka accepted this doctrine the Mahasaṃghika early Mahisasaka Theravada Vibhajyavada and the Sariputrabhidharma possibly Dharmaguptaka rejected it in favor of an immediate leap of the consciousness from one body to the next 69 In the Abhidharmakosha Vasubandhu defends the theory of the intermediate existence He argues that each intermediate being is made up of the five aggregates that it arises in the place of death and carries the configuration of the future being Furthermore according to Vasubandhu this conscious intermediate being becomes aroused on seeing their future parents joined in intercourse and it becomes envious of one of the parents Because of this desire and hatred it becomes attached to the womb where it conditions the first moment of birth existence pratisamdhi 53 In Tibetan Buddhism the intermediate existence Tibetan bardo concept developed elaborate descriptions of numerous visions experienced during the process of dying including visions of peaceful and wrathful deities 70 These ideas led to various maps for navigating the intermediate existence which are discussed in texts like the Bardo Thodol 71 72 In contrast to this the Theravada scholar Buddhaghosa argued that rebirth occurs in one instant as part of a process called rebirth linking patisandhi According to Buddhaghosa at death the sense faculties dissolve one by one until only consciousness is left The very last moment of consciousness at death cuti vinnana conditions the very first instant of consciousness of the next life the patisandhi vinnana which occurs at the time of conception The relationship is compared to that between a seal and wax While they are not the same entity the wax impression is conditioned by the seal Therefore in the classic Theravada view nothing actually transmigrates 53 In spite of the rejection of the intermediate state by such an influential figure some modern Theravada scholars such as Balangoda Ananda Maitreya have defended the idea of an intermediate state It is also a very common belief among monks and laypersons in the Theravada world where it is commonly referred to as the gandhabba or antarabhava 73 Buddhist arguments for rebirth EditEmpirical arguments Edit Ancient Buddhists as well as some moderns cite the reports of the Buddha and his disciples of having gained direct knowledge into their own past lives as well as those of other beings through a kind of parapsychological ability or extrasensory perception termed abhinna 35 40 74 75 Traditional Buddhist philosophers like Dharmakirti have defended the concept of special yogic perception yogi pratyakṣa which is able to empirically verify the truth of rebirth 76 Some modern Buddhists authors like K N Jayatilleke also argue that the Buddha s main argument in favor of rebirth was based on empirical grounds and that this included the idea that extra sensory perception Pali atikkanta manusaka can provide a validation for rebirth 77 Modern Buddhists such as Bhikkhu Analayo and Jayatilleke have also argued that rebirth may be empirically verifiable and have pointed to certain parapsychological phenomena as possible evidence mainly near death experiences NDEs past life regression reincarnation research and xenoglossy 35 SIII 78 79 Both Analayo and B Alan Wallace point to the work of the American Psychiatrist Ian Stevenson as providing possible evidence of rebirth 35 SIII 80 This is not just a recent phenomenon According to Analayo ancient Chinese Buddhists also pointed to anomalous phenomena such as NDEs to argue for the truth of rebirth 35 55 56 Furthermore according to Roger R Jackson the Indian Buddhist philosopher Santarakṣita 725 788 argues in his Tattvasaṅgraha that newborn children exhibit a wide range of complex desires emotions and mental states that could not exist without the force of past habit and thus they must be based on the habits acquired in a past life 81 Wallace also notes that several modern Buddhist figures such as Pa Auk Sayadaw and Geshe Gedun Lodro have also written about how to train the mind to access past life memories 82 The Burmese monk Pa Auk Sayadaw is known for teaching such methods and some of his western students like Shaila Catherine have written about this and their experiences in practicing it 83 B Alan Wallace argues that first person introspection is a valid means of knowledge about the mind when that introspection is well trained by meditation and has been used by numerous contemplatives throughout history 84 He writes that a well trained mind which may be likened to an inwardly focused telescope should be able to access a subtle individual mind stream that carries on from one lifetime to another 85 Wallace proposes that a research project using well trained meditators could access information from past lives in an accurate manner and these could then be checked by independent third person observers 82 Metaphysical arguments Edit The Indian Buddhist philosopher Dharmakirti fl c 6th or 7th century outlined one of the most influential arguments for rebirth Besides defending the status of the Buddha as an epistemically authoritative or reliable person pramaṇa puruṣa Indian Buddhist philosophers like Dignaga c 480 540 CE and Dharmakirti fl c 6th or 7th century as well as later commentators on their works also put forth philosophical arguments in favor of rebirth and especially directed against the reductionist materialist philosophy of the Carvaka school 86 In his Pramanavarttika Dharmakirti defends rebirth by initially focusing on refuting the materialist doctrine of the Carvaka school which held that the support asraya for cognition is the body and that when the body is destroyed cognition is destroyed 87 Modern Buddhists who argue in favor of rebirth like B Alan Wallace often begin by mounting similar arguments against materialism and physicalism pointing to the current philosophical debate on the hard problem of consciousness and arguing that conscious properties cannot be reduced to physical properties 88 Indeed according to Wallace the metaphysical views of materialism are in fundamental conflict with the Buddhist worldview regarding the nature of the mind 89 According to Richard P Hayes Dharmakirti denied that mental events were a mere byproduct of the body instead holding that both mental events and physical events can be seen as effects of the same set of causal conditions 62 For Dharmakirti all events are dependent on multiple causes and they must be preceded by an antecendent causal condition of the same class This means that all mental events must have a previous mental event as part of its causal nexus presumably stretching back before one s birth According to Hayes Dharmakirti holds therefore that both physical factors and nonphysical factors play a role in the formation of mental events if not there would be no difference between sentient beings and inanimate matter 62 Philosopher Evan Thompson outlines Dharmakirti s main point as follows matter and consciousness have totally different natures an effect must be of the same nature as its cause hence consciousness cannot arise from or be produced by matter though material things can condition or influence consciousness Thompson further notes that for Dharmakirti the nature of matter it is that it is obstructive it resists other instances of matter while the nature of consciousness is altogether different since it is capable of including diverse objects within itself at the same time without any of them obstructing the other Furthermore phenomenal consciousness is able to illuminate or cognize objects as well as itself i e it is self reflexive and has intentionality while matter does not 90 91 Eli Franco mentions that for Dharmakirti the position that cognition can arise from the body alone independent of their similar causes at the moment of birth is irrational That is if the mind is not being conditioned by a previous cognitive event then it cannot arise from inert matter 92 Dharmakirti also argues that mental events can causally condition physical events and thus there is no reason to privilege matter as being primary 62 According to Martin Willson this kind of argument is the most commonly used in the Tibetan philosophical tradition to establish the truth of rebirth and in its most simple form can be put as follows 93 With respect to the knowing consciousness or mind of an ordinary being just born it is preceded by earlier knowing because it is knowing Willson notes that this relies on two further assumptions the first is that any mental continuum must have previous causes the second is that materialism is false and that mind cannot emerge solely from matter emergentism 93 According to Jacob Andrew Lucas the strength of Dharmakirti s argument lies on its two key premises 94 Consciousness or the mental continuum has characteristics that are distinct from physical characteristics The substantial cause for any event is a prior event with the same character i e it is a homogeneous cause However as Lucas notes we should not take Dharmakirti to be arguing in favor of a strict mind body dualism since in all systems of Buddhist thought the mind and body are deeply interconnected and dependent on each other Dharmakirti s point is merely that consciousness cannot arise from physical factors alone which does not entail that consciousness is totally separate from physical factors 95 Jacob Andrew Lucas provides a modern formulation of an argument for rebirth which draws on the work of Galen Strawson Strawson argues against emergence as well as against proto experiential qualities and argues for a form of constitutive panpsychism 96 Lucas rejects constitutive panpsychism as a live option for a Buddhist due to various issues including the combination problem and because it supports the idea that the conscious subject collapses into micro experiences when the body dies 97 Lucas then proceeds to argue for an unbroken stream of consciousness or an indivisible cluster of conscious experience that can neither arise from nor collapse into rudimentary factors that are devoid of the distinctive characteristics of consciousness 98 Theravada Abhidhamma makes a similar argument to Dharmakirti s According to the Abhidhamma teacher Nina van Gorkom physical and mental events dhammas both depend on each other and on previous events of the same category i e mental events must also be conditioned by previous mental events and so on In Abhidhamma the mental event citta which arises at the first moment of life is called the rebirth consciousness or patisandhi citta According to van Gorkom there isn t any citta which arises without conditions the patisandhi citta must also have conditions The patisandhi citta is the first citta of a new life and thus its cause can only be in the past 99 Pragmatic arguments and wager theories Edit Various Buddhists and interpreters of the Buddhist texts such as David Kalupahana and Etienne Lamotte have argued that the Buddha is a kind of pragmatist regarding truth and that he saw truths as important only when they were soteriologically useful 100 101 102 Thus the Buddhist position on rebirth could be defended on pragmatic grounds instead of empirical or logical grounds Some modern Buddhists have taken this position The American monk Thanissaro Bhikkhu has argued for the acceptance of the Buddhist idea of rebirth as a type of pragmatic wager argument Pali apaṇṇaka safe bet or guarantee Thanissaro argues that the Buddha stated that it s a safe wager to assume that actions bear results that can affect not only this lifetime for also lifetimes after this than it is to assume the opposite 103 Thanissaro cites Majjhima Nikaya 60 Apaṇṇaka sutta where the Buddha says that if there is an afterlife those who perform bad actions have made a bad throw twice because they are harmed in this world and in the next while those who perform good actions will not and thus he calls his teaching a safe bet teaching 103 This ancient wager argument is similar in structure to modern wager arguments like Pascal s Wager and the Atheist s Wager According to Thanissaro Bhikkhu 104 The Buddha s main pragmatic argument is that if one accepted his teachings one would be likely to pay careful attention to one s actions so as to do no harm This in and of itself is a worthy activity regardless of whether the rest of the path was true When applying this argument to the issue of rebirth and karmic results the Buddha sometimes coupled it with a second pragmatic argument that resembles Pascal s wager If one practices the Dhamma one leads a blameless life in the here and now Even if the afterlife and karmic results do not exist one has not lost the wager for the blamelessness of one s life is a reward in and of itself If there is an afterlife with karmic results then one has won a double reward the blamelessness of one s life here and now and the good rewards of one s actions in the afterlife These two pragmatic arguments form the central message of this sutta Sri Lankan Buddhist philosopher K N Jayatilleke writes that the Buddha s wager argument in MN 60 is that a rational person vinnu puriso would reason as follows 105 If p is true If p is not trueWe wager p atthikavada rebirth based on moral actions is true We are happy in the next life We are praised by the wise in this lifeWe wager not p natthikavada it is false We are unhappy in the next life We are condemned by the wise in this lifeThe Kalama Sutta also contains a similar wager argument towards rebirth called the four assurances or four consolations 106 These four assurances are as follows 107 If there is another world and if there is the fruit and result of good and bad deeds it is possible that with the breakup of the body after death I will be reborn in a good destination in a heavenly world If there is no other world and there is no fruit and result of good and bad deeds still right here in this very life I maintain myself in happiness without enmity and ill will free of trouble Suppose evil comes to one who does evil Then when I have no evil intentions toward anyone how can suffering afflict me since I do no evil deed Suppose evil does not come to one who does evil Then right here I see myself purified in both respects Moral arguments Edit According to Thanissaro Bhikkhu part of the reason the Buddha recommended having conviction in the truth of rebirth was that his teaching on the nature of human action would be incomplete without reference to rebirth Thanissaro argues that the distinction that the Buddha draws between skillful and unskillful actions is based on the consequences of these actions and that this provides a strong motivation to do good as long as rebirth holds This is because actions can sometimes take many lifetimes to yield their results and thus bad persons do not always experience bad consequences in one lifetime as can be seen in SN 42 13 and MN 136 and therefore only a multi life perspective can lead to a complete and convincing case that unskillful actions should always be avoided and skillful ones always developed 50 Thanissaro further writes that 50 If you assume that your actions have results and those results will reverberate through many lifetimes it s easier to stick to your principles not to lie kill or steal even under severe duress And even though you may not know whether these assumptions are true you cannot plan an action without implicitly wagering on the issue This is why simply stating I don t know is not an adequate response to the questions of rebirth and the efficacy of karma The attitude behind it may be honest on one level but it s dishonest in thinking that this is all that needs to be said for it ignores the fact that you have to make assumptions about the possible results of your actions every time you act B Alan Wallace writes that nihilistic and materialistic views which reject rebirth undermine any sense of moral responsibility and this is bound to have a profoundly detrimental effect on societies that adopt such beliefs 108 He further argues 109 If we embrace a materialistic worldview we will naturally seek satisfaction and fulfillment by turning our attention to the outside world looking for novel sensory and intellectual experiences as well as new material acquisitions Likewise when we focus on decreasing our level of suffering and pain once again our orientation will be outward looking for scientific and technological breakthroughs to relieve our suffering Human desire for ever greater happiness seems to be insatiable and a materialistic worldview strongly supports materialistic values and a way of life centered on the never ending quest of consumerism A materialistic outlook that focuses our attention on the bounties of the external physical world simultaneously blinds us to the inner resources of the human heart and mind If all our efforts go toward the alleviation of suffering and realization of happiness by external means the inner ways that we might pursue the good life will be unexplored A materialistic worldview provides no rationale for making a commitment to ethics or spiritual practice of any kind Material values and consumerism are naturally aligned with materialism which reduces meditation to a means for making a materialistic way of life more bearable According to Alexander Berzin acceptance of rebirth also has positive moral consequences particularly in our practice of the Buddhist path Berzin writes that an understanding of rebirth allows one to better cultivate compassion and loving kindness towards all beings since it allows us to see how in past lives we have been related to all beings and how they have been our mothers and vice versa Likewise we have also been many different types of beings in the past male female animals numerous nationalities etc According to Berzin this reflection allows us to better relate to other sentient beings 110 Modern naturalistic interpretations EditIn the 1940s J G Jennings interpreted the teaching of rebirth in a less than literal sense Believing that the doctrine of anatta not self is incompatible with the view that the actions of one individual can have repercussions for the same individual in a future life Jennings argued that the doctrine of actual transmigration was an Indian dogma that was not part of the original teachings of the Buddha However rebirth could instead be understood as the recurrence of our selfish desires which could repeat themselves in endless succeeding generations In this interpretation our actions do have consequences beyond our present lives but these are collective not individual 111 The British Buddhist thinker Stephen Batchelor has recently posited a similar view on the topic 111 Regardless of what we believe our actions will reverberate beyond our deaths Irrespective of our personal survival the legacy of our thoughts words and deeds will continue through the impressions we leave behind in the lives of those we have influenced or touched in any way The Thai modernist Buddhist monk Buddhadasa 1906 1993 also had a rationalistic or psychological interpretation of rebirth 112 He argued that since there is no substantial entity or soul atman there is no one born there is no one who dies and is reborn Therefore the whole question of rebirth is quite foolish and has nothing to do with Buddhism in the sphere of the Buddhist teachings there is no question of rebirth or reincarnation 113 However Buddhadasa did not completely reject the rebirth doctrine he only saw the idea that there is something that gets reborn into a future womb as trivial Instead of this literal view he interpreted the true meaning of rebirth as the re arising of the sense of self or I or me a kind of self centredness which is a mental event arising out of ignorance craving and clinging According to Buddhadasa this is what rebirth truly means on the ultimate level paramattha of discourse 111 Comparison with rebirth doctrines in Hinduism and Jainism EditThe rebirth theories in different traditions within Hinduism rely on their foundational assumption that soul exists Atman atta in contrast to Buddhist assumption that there is no soul 114 18 115 Hindu traditions consider soul to be the unchanging eternal essence of a living being and in many of its theistic and non theistic traditions the soul asserted to be identical with Brahman the ultimate reality 116 117 118 Thus while both Buddhism and Hinduism accept the karma and rebirth doctrine and both focus on ethics in this life as well as liberation from rebirth and suffering as the ultimate spiritual pursuit they have a very different view on whether a self or soul exists which impacts the details of their respective rebirth theories 119 120 121 Rebirth and karma doctrine in Jainism differ from those in Buddhism even though both are non theistic Sramana traditions 122 123 Jainism in contrast to Buddhism accepts the foundational assumption that soul exists Jiva and is involved in the rebirth mechanism 124 Further Jainism considers that the rebirth has a start that rebirth and redeath cycle is a part of a progression of a soul karmic dust particles emanate from ethical or unethical intent and actions these karmic particles stick to the soul which determines the next birth Jainism further asserts that some souls can never achieve liberation that ethical living such as Ahimsa non violence and asceticism are means to liberation for those who can attain liberation and that liberated souls reach the eternal siddha enlightened state that ends their rebirth cycles 122 125 126 Jainism like Buddhism also believes in realms of birth note 7 and is symbolized by its emblematic Swastika sign 128 with ethical and moral theories of its lay practices focussing on obtaining good rebirth 129 See also EditAlter ego Reincarnation Saṃsara Jainism Dissociative identity Disorder Metempsychosis Four Noble Truths Index of Buddhism related articles Secular Buddhism Six realms The unanswered questions TulpaNotes Edit This is discussed in many Suttas of different Nikayas See for example Devaduta Sutta in Majjhima Nikaya iii 178 10 This merit gaining may be on the behalf of one s family members 4 11 12 Agati gati in the sense of rebirth and re death appears in many places in early Buddhist texts such as in Samyutta Nikaya III 53 Jataka II 172 Digha Nikaya I 162 Anguttara III 54 74 and Petavatthu II 9 28 Punarbhava in the sense of rebirth similarly appears in many places such as in Digha II 15 Samyutta I 133 and 4 201 Itivuttaka 62 Sutta nipata 162 273 502 514 and 733 28 It is unclear when Majjhima Nikaya was written down For the historicity of rebirth samsara in early texts see Carol Anderson 31 Ronald Davidson While most scholars agree that there was a rough body of sacred literature disputed sic that a relatively early community disputed sic maintained and transmitted we have little confidence that much if any of surviving Buddhist scripture is actually the word of the historic Buddha 32 Richard Gombrich I have the greatest difficulty in accepting that the main edifice is not the work of a single genius By the main edifice I mean the collections of the main body of sermons the four Nikayas and of the main body of monastic rules 33 On samsara rebirth and redeath Paul Williams All rebirth is due to karma and is impermanent Short of attaining enlightenment in each rebirth one is born and dies to be reborn elsewhere in accordance with the completely impersonal causal nature of one s own karma The endless cycle of birth rebirth and redeath is samsara 14 Buswell and Lopez on rebirth An English term that does not have an exact correlate in Buddhist languages rendered instead by a range of technical terms such as the Sanskrit PUNARJANMAN lit birth again and PUNABHAVAN lit re becoming and less commonly the related PUNARMRTYU lit redeath 26 See also Perry Schmidt Leukel 2006 pages 32 34 38 John J Makransky 1997 p 27 39 Graham Harvey Siddhartha Gautama found an end to rebirth in this world of suffering His teachings known as the dharma in Buddhism can be summarized in the Four Noble truths 40 Geoffrey Samuel 2008 The Four Noble Truths describe the knowledge needed to set out on the path to liberation from rebirth 41 See also 42 43 14 44 40 45 web 1 web 2 The Theravada tradition holds that insight into these four truths is liberating in itself 46 This is reflected in the Pali canon 47 According to Donald Lopez The Buddha stated in his first sermon that when he gained absolute and intuitive knowledge of the four truths he achieved complete enlightenment and freedom from future rebirth web 1 The Maha parinibbana Sutta also refers to this liberation web 3 Carol Anderson The second passage where the four truths appear in the Vinaya pitaka is also found in the Mahaparinibbana sutta D II 90 91 Here the Buddha explains that it is by not understanding the four truths that rebirth continues 48 On the meaning of moksha as liberation from rebirth see Patrick Olivelle in the Encyclopaedia Britannica web 4 Jainism posits that there are four realms in contrast to six of Buddhism the Jaina realms are heavenly deities human non human living beings animal plants and hellish beings Within the human realms Jainism asserts that rebirth lineage and gender depends on karma in the past lives 127 128 References Edit a b c d e Peter Harvey 2012 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices Cambridge University Press pp 32 33 38 39 46 49 ISBN 978 0 521 85942 4 Trainor 2004 p 58 Quote Buddhism shares with Hinduism the doctrine of Samsara whereby all beings pass through an unceasing cycle of birth death and rebirth until they find a means of liberation from the cycle However Buddhism differs from Hinduism in rejecting the assertion that every human being possesses a changeless soul which constitutes his or her ultimate identity and which transmigrates from one incarnation to the next a b c d e Norman C McClelland 2010 Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma McFarland pp 226 228 ISBN 978 0 7864 5675 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Robert E Buswell Jr Donald S Lopez Jr 2013 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton University Press pp 708 709 ISBN 978 1 4008 4805 8 Edward Craig 1998 Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy Routledge p 402 ISBN 978 0 415 18715 2 a b c Laumakis 2008 a b Sayers Matthew R 2013 09 12 Feeding the Dead Ancestor Worship in Ancient India OUP USA ISBN 978 0 19 989643 1 a b Sayers Matthew R May 2008 Feeding the ancestors ancestor worship in ancient Hinduism and Buddhism Thesis thesis Obeyesekere Gananath 2005 Karma and Rebirth A Cross Cultural Study Motilal Banarsidass p 127 ISBN 978 8120826090 Nanamoli Bhikkhu Bhikkhu Bodhi 2005 The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Majjhima Nikaya Simon Schuster pp 1029 1038 ISBN 978 0 86171 982 2 a b c William H Swatos Peter Kivisto 1998 Encyclopedia of Religion and Society Rowman Altamira p 66 ISBN 978 0 7619 8956 1 a b c d e Ronald Wesley Neufeldt 1986 Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments State University of New York Press pp 123 131 ISBN 978 0 87395 990 2 a b Wendy Doniger 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster p 148 ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 a b c Williams 2002 pp 74 75 Post Classical Developments in the Concepts of Karma and Rebirth in Theravada Buddhism by Bruce Matthews in Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments State Univ of New York Press 1986 ISBN 0 87395 990 6 pg 125 Collins Steven Selfless persons imagery and thought in Theravada Buddhism Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 39726 X pg 215 1 Buswell amp Lopez 2003 pp 49 50 Harvey 2013 pp 71 73 a b a Anatta Encyclopaedia Britannica 2013 Quote Anatta in Buddhism the doctrine that there is in humans no permanent underlying soul The concept of anatta or anatman is a departure from the Hindu belief in atman the self b Steven Collins 1994 Religion and Practical Reason Editors Frank Reynolds David Tracy State Univ of New York Press ISBN 978 0791422175 page 64 Central to Buddhist soteriology is the doctrine of not self Pali anatta Sanskrit anatman the opposed doctrine of atman is central to Brahmanical thought Put very briefly this is the Buddhist doctrine that human beings have no soul no self no unchanging essence c Edward Roer Translator Shankara s Introduction p 2 at Google Books to Brihad Aranyaka Upanishad pages 2 4 d Katie Javanaud 2013 Is The Buddhist No Self Doctrine Compatible With Pursuing Nirvana Philosophy Now e David Loy 1982 Enlightenment in Buddhism and Advaita Vedanta Are Nirvana and Moksha the Same International Philosophical Quarterly Volume 23 Issue 1 pages 65 74 f KN Jayatilleke 2010 Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge ISBN 978 8120806191 pages 246 249 from note 385 onwards Laumakis 2008 p 90 Atsushi Hayakawa 2014 Circulation of Fire in the Veda LIT Verlag Munster pp 66 67 101 103 ISBN 978 3 643 90472 0 Sayers Matthew R 2013 Feeding the Dead Ancestor worship in ancient India Oxford University Press pp 1 9 ISBN 978 0 19 989643 1 Sayers Matthew Rae Feeding the ancestors ancestor worship in ancient Hinduism and Buddhism PhD thesis University of Texas p 12 Sayers Matthew R 1 November 2015 McGovern Nathan ed Feeding the Dead Ancestor worship in ancient India The Journal of Hindu Studies 8 3 336 338 doi 10 1093 jhs hiv034 ISSN 1756 4255 Keown Damien 2013 Buddhism A very short introduction Oxford University Press pp 28 32 38 ISBN 978 0 19 966383 5 Kalupahana 1992 pp 38 43 138 140 a b Buswell amp Lopez 2003 p 708 Arvind Sharma s review of Hajime Nakamura s A History of Early Vedanta Philosophy Philosophy East and West Vol 37 No 3 Jul 1987 page 330 a b c d Thomas William Rhys Davids William Stede 1921 Pali English Dictionary Motilal Banarsidass pp 94 95 281 282 294 295 467 499 ISBN 978 81 208 1144 7 Peter Harvey 2013 The Selfless Mind Personality Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism Routledge pp 95 97 ISBN 978 1 136 78329 6 Keown 2000 p 32 Anderson 1999 pp 1 48 Davidson 2003 p 147 Gombrich 1997 a b c d Sujato 2008 Rebirth and the In between State in Early Buddhism a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Bhikkhu Analayo 2018 Rebirth in early Buddhism amp current research Somerville MA USA Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 1 61429446 7 Saṁyutta Nikaya Connected Discourses on Causation 12 2 Analysis of Dependent Origination translated by Bhikkhu Bodhi suttacentral net Obeyesekere Gananath 2005 Karma and Rebirth A Cross Cultural Study Motilal Banarsidass p 127 ISBN 978 8120826090 Schmidt Leukel 2006 p 32 34 Makransky 1997 p 27 a b Harvey 2016 Samuel 2008 p 136 Spiro 1982 p 42 Makransky 1997 p 27 28 Lopez 2009 p 147 Kingsland 2016 p 286 Carter 1987 p 3179 Anderson 2013 Anderson 2013 p 162 with note 38 for context see pages 1 3 Naṇamoli amp Bodhi 2001 Middle Length Discourses pp 41 43 a b c Thanissaro Bhikkhu 2012 The Truth of Rebirth and Why it Matters for Buddhist Practice Bronkhorst Johannes Did The Buddha Believe in Karma and Rebirth published in Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 21 1 1998 pp 1 19 David J Kalupahana 1975 Causality The Central Philosophy of Buddhism University Press of Hawaii pp 115 119 ISBN 978 0 8248 0298 1 a b c d e Severns Tiffany L Buddhist Rebirth A Survey of Pre Modern Asian Thought 1991 Honors Theses Paper 301 OpenSIUC Collins Steven Selfless persons imagery and thought in Theravada Buddhism Cambridge University Press 1990 ISBN 0 521 39726 X pg 215 2 Matthews Bruce 1986 Post Classical Developments in the Concepts of Karma and Rebirth in Theravada Buddhism in Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments edited by Ronald W Neufeldt State University of New York Press 1986 ISBN 0 87395 990 6 p 125 3 Peter Harvey 2012 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices Cambridge University Press pp 71 75 ISBN 978 0 521 85942 4 David J Kalupahana 1975 Causality The Central Philosophy of Buddhism University Press of Hawaii p 83 ISBN 978 0 8248 0298 1 William H Swatos Peter Kivisto 1998 Encyclopedia of Religion and Society Rowman Altamira p 66 ISBN 978 0 7619 8956 1 Lamotte Pruden Karmasiddhiprakarana 1987 page 28 a b c Fukuda Takumi Bhadanta Rama A Sautrantika before Vasubandhu Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Volume 26 Number 2 2003 Sautrantika Encyclopaedia Britannica a b c d e f Lobsang Dargyay Tsong Kha Pa s Concept of Karma in Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments edited by Ronald W Neufeldt p 169 State University of New York Press 1986 ISBN 0 87395 990 6 Schmithausen Lambert Critical Response in Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments edited by Ronald W Neufeldt p 219 State University of New York Press 1986 Kritzer Robert Sautrantika in the Abhidharmakosabhaṣya JIABS Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies Volume 26 Number 2 2003 Waldron William S The Buddhist Unconscious The Alaya vijnana in the context of Indian Buddhist Thought Routledge Critical Studies in Buddhism 2003 page 131 Gethin Bhavaṅga and Rebirth According to the Abhidhamma PDF a b c James McDermott 1980 Wendy Doniger ed Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions University of California Press pp 168 170 ISBN 978 0 520 03923 0 Bruce Mathews 1986 Ronald Wesley Neufeldt ed Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments State University of New York Press pp 123 126 ISBN 978 0 87395 990 2 Bareau Andre 1955 Les sectes bouddhiques du Petit Vehicule pp 291 449 Saigon Ecole francaise d Extreme Orient Karma gliṅ pa Chogyam Trungpa Francesca Fremantle 2000 The Tibetan Book of the Dead The Great Liberation Through Hearing in the Bardo Shambhala Publications pp xi xvii xxiii ISBN 978 1 57062 747 7 Karma gliṅ pa Chogyam Trungpa Francesca Fremantle 2000 The Tibetan Book of the Dead The Great Liberation Through Hearing in the Bardo Shambhala Publications pp 4 23 ISBN 978 1 57062 747 7 Kevin Trainor 2004 Buddhism The Illustrated Guide Oxford University Press pp 210 211 ISBN 978 0 19 517398 7 Langer Rita 2007 Buddhist Rituals of Death and Rebirth Contemporary Sri Lankan Practice and Its Origins pp 83 84 Routledge Narada Thera 1982 Buddhism in a Nutshell p 17 Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 128 New York Columbia University Press Tom Tillemans 2011 Dharmakirti Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Matthews Bruce 1986 Post Classical Developments in the Concepts of Karma and Rebirth in Theravada Buddhism in Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments edited by Ronald W Neufeldt State University of New York Press 1986 ISBN 0 87395 990 6 pp 131 132 Willson Martin Rebirth and the Western Buddhist Wisdom Publications London 1987 p 28 Jayatilleke K N 2010 Facets of Buddhist Thought p 5 Buddhist Publication Society Kandy Sri Lanka Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 82 New York Columbia University Press Jackson Roger R 2022 Rebirth A Guide to Mind Karma and Cosmos in the Buddhist World pp 167 168 Shambhala Publications a b Wallace B Alan 2009 Mind in the Balance Meditation in Science Buddhism and Christianity pp 112 116 Columbia University Press Braun Erik The Many Lives of Insight The Abhidhamma and transformations in Theravada meditation Harvard Divinity School Bulletin Winter Spring 2016 Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice pp 64 65 New York Columbia University Press Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 24 New York Columbia University Press Hayes Richard P Dharmakirti on punarbhava 1993 Franco Eli Dharmakirti on compassion and rebirth Arbeitskreis fur Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien Universitat Wien 1997 p 95 Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 12 New York Columbia University Press Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 18 New York Columbia University Press Thompson Evan 2015 Waking Dreaming Being Self and Consciousness in Neuroscience Meditation and Philosophy Columbia University Press p 82 Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners pp 95 105 121 University of Exeter Franco Eli Dharmakirti on compassion and rebirth Arbeitskreis fur Tibetische und Buddhistische Studien Universitat Wien 1997 p 105 a b Willson Martin Rebirth and the Western Buddhist Wisdom Publications London 1987 p 42 Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners pp 108 153 University of Exeter Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners pp 110 113 135 University of Exeter Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners p 162 University of Exeter Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners p 200 University of Exeter Lucas Jacob Andrew 2018 Mindful Life or Mindful Lives Exploring why the Buddhist belief in rebirth should betaken seriously by mindfulness practitioners Abstract pp 224 225 University of Exeter van Gorkom Nina 2009 Abhidhamma in Daily Life p 97 Jayatilleke K N Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge p 356 Poussin Bouddhisme Third Edition Paris 1925 p 129 Kalupahana David J Ethics in Early Buddhism 1995 p 35 a b Thanissaro Bhikkhu 2012 The Truth of Rebirth and Why it Matters for Buddhist Practice Thanissaro Bhikkhu Apannaka Sutta A Safe Bet 2008 www accesstoinsight org Retrieved 2018 10 19 Jayatilleke K N Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge p 375 406 407 Kalama Sutta web ics purdue edu Retrieved 2018 10 19 Aṅguttara Nikaya The Book of the Threes 3 65 Kesaputtiya translated by Bhikkhu Bodhi suttacentral net Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 26 New York Columbia University Press Wallace Alan B 2011 Meditations of a Buddhist Skeptic A Manifesto for the Mind Sciences and Contemplative Practice p 39 New York Columbia University Press Berzin Alexander The Place of Rebirth in Buddhism c 2003 2021 Berzin Archives a b c Burley Mikel Karma and Rebirth in the Stream of Thought and Life Philosophy East and West Volume 64 Number 4 October 2014 pp 965 982 Bucknell Roderick S and Martin Stuart Fox 1983 The Three Knowledges of Buddhism Implications of Buddhadasa s Interpretation of Rebirth Religion 13 99 112 Steven M Emmanuel Buddhist Philosophy A Comparative Approach John Wiley amp Sons 2017 p 225 a Christmas Humphreys 2012 Exploring Buddhism Routledge pp 42 43 ISBN 978 1 136 22877 3 b Brian Morris 2006 Religion and Anthropology A Critical Introduction Cambridge University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 521 85241 8 Quote anatta is the doctrine of non self and is an extreme empiricist doctrine that holds that the notion of an unchanging permanent self is a fiction and has no reality According to Buddhist doctrine the individual person consists of five skandhas or heaps the body feelings perceptions impulses and consciousness The belief in a self or soul over these five skandhas is illusory and the cause of suffering c Richard Gombrich 2006 Theravada Buddhism Routledge p 47 ISBN 978 1 134 90352 8 Quote Buddha s teaching that beings have no soul no abiding essence This no soul doctrine anatta vada he expounded in his second sermon John C Plott et al 2000 Global History of Philosophy The Axial Age Volume 1 Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120801585 page 63 Quote The Buddhist schools reject any Atman concept As we have already observed this is the basic and ineradicable distinction between Hinduism and Buddhism Bruce M Sullivan 1997 Historical Dictionary of Hinduism Scarecrow pp 235 236 See Upanishads ISBN 978 0 8108 3327 2 Klaus K Klostermaier 2007 A Survey of Hinduism Third Edition State University of New York Press pp 119 122 162 180 194 195 ISBN 978 0 7914 7082 4 Kalupahana 1992 pp 38 39 G Obeyesekere 1980 Wendy Doniger ed Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions University of California Press pp 137 141 ISBN 978 0 520 03923 0 Libby Ahluwalia 2008 Understanding Philosophy of Religion Folens pp 243 249 ISBN 978 1 85008 274 3 Harold Coward Julius Lipner Katherine K Young 1989 Hindu Ethics State University of New York Press pp 85 94 ISBN 978 0 88706 764 8 a b Naomi Appleton 2014 Narrating Karma and Rebirth Buddhist and Jain Multi Life Stories Cambridge University Press pp 76 89 ISBN 978 1 139 91640 0 Kristi L Wiley 2004 Historical Dictionary of Jainism Scarecrow p 91 ISBN 978 0 8108 5051 4 Kristi L Wiley 2004 Historical Dictionary of Jainism Scarecrow pp 10 12 111 112 119 ISBN 978 0 8108 5051 4 Gananath Obeyesekere 2006 Karma and Rebirth A Cross Cultural Study Motilal Banarsidass pp 107 108 ISBN 978 81 208 2609 0 Kristi L Wiley 2004 Historical Dictionary of Jainism Scarecrow pp 118 119 ISBN 978 0 8108 5051 4 Naomi Appleton 2014 Narrating Karma and Rebirth Buddhist and Jain Multi Life Stories Cambridge University Press pp 20 59 ISBN 978 1 107 03393 1 a b John E Cort 2001 Jains in the World Religious Values and Ideology in India Oxford University Press pp 16 21 ISBN 978 0 19 803037 9 Kristi L Wiley 2004 Historical Dictionary of Jainism Scarecrow pp 10 12 21 23 24 74 208 ISBN 978 0 8108 5051 4 Bibliography Edit Bhikkhu Analayo 2018 Rebirth in early Buddhism amp current research With forewords by His Holiness the Dalai Lama and Bhante Gunaratna Somerville MA USA Wisdom Publications ISBN 978 1 61429446 7 Anderson Carol 1999 Pain and Its Ending The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 81332 0 Naṇ amoli Bhikkhu trans and Bodhi Bhikkhu ed 2001 The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Majjhima Nikaya Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 072 X Anderson Carol 2013 Pain and Its Ending The Four Noble Truths in the Theravada Buddhist Canon Routledge Buswell Robert E Jr Lopez Donald Jr 2003 The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism Princeton University Press Carter John Ross 1987 Four Noble Truths in Jones Lindsay ed MacMillan Encyclopedia of Religions MacMillan Davidson Ronald M 2003 Indian Esoteric Buddhism Columbia University Press ISBN 0 231 12618 2 Gombrich Richard F 1997 How Buddhism Began The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 19639 5 Harvey Graham 2016 Religions in Focus New Approaches to Tradition and Contemporary Practices Routledge Harvey Peter 2013 An Introduction to Buddhism 2nd Edition Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521676748 Kalupahana David J 1992 A history of Buddhist philosophy Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Publishers Private Limited Keown Damien 2000 Buddhism A Very Short Introduction Kindle ed Oxford University Press Kingsland James 2016 Siddhartha s Brain Unlocking the Ancient Science of Enlightenment HarperCollins Laumakis Stephen J 2008 02 21 An Introduction to Buddhist Philosophy Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 139 46966 1 Lopez Donald jr 2009 Buddhism and Science A Guide for the Perplexed University of Chicago Press Makransky John J 1997 Buddhahood Embodied Sources of Controversy in India and Tibet SUNY Samuel Geoffrey 2008 The Origins of Yoga and Tantra Indic Religions to the Thirteenth Century Cambridge University Press Schmidt Leukel Perry 2006 Understanding Buddhism Dunedin Academic Press ISBN 978 1 903765 18 0 Snelling John 1987 The Buddhist handbook A Complete Guide to Buddhist Teaching and Practice London Century Paperbacks Spiro Melford E 1982 Buddhism and Society A Great Tradition and Its Burmese Vicissitudes University of California Press Trainor Kevin 2004 Buddhism The Illustrated Guide Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 517398 7 Williams Paul 2002 Buddhist Thought Kindle ed Taylor amp FrancisWeb bibliography Edit a b Donald Lopez Four Noble Truths Encyclopaedia Britannica Thanissaro Bhikkhu The Truth of Rebirth And Why it Matters for Buddhist Practice Maha parinibbana Sutta Last Days of the Buddha www accesstoinsight org Patrick Olivelle 2012 Encyclopaedia Britannica Moksha Indian religions Commentaries EditBhikkhu Analayo Rebirth in Early Buddhism and Current Research Somerville MA USA Wisdom Publications 2018 ISBN 978 1 614 29446 7 Steven Collins Selfless Persons Imagery and Thought in Theravada Buddhism Cambridge 1982 ISBN 0 521 39726 X Peter Harvey The Selfless Mind Personality Consciousness and Nirvana in Early Buddhism Curzon 1995 ISBN 0 7007 0338 1 Geshe Kelsang Gyatso Living Meaningfully Dying Joyfully The Profound Practice of Transference of Consciousness Tharpa 1999 ISBN 81 7822 058 X Glenn H Mullin Death and Dying The Tibetan Tradition Arkana 1986 ISBN 0 14 019013 9 Mullin Glenn H 1998 Living in the Face of Death The Tibetan Tradition 2008 reprint Snow Lion Publications Ithaca New York ISBN 978 1 55939 310 2 Vicki MacKenzie Reborn in the West HarperCollins 1997 ISBN 0 7225 3443 4 Tom Shroder Old Souls Scientific Search for Proof of Past Lives Simon and Schuster 2001 ISBN 0 684 85193 8 Francis Story Rebirth as Doctrine and Experience Essays and Case Studies Buddhist Publication Society 1975 ISBN 955 24 0176 3 Robert A F Thurman trans The Tibetan Book of the Dead Liberation Through Understanding in the Between HarperCollins 1998 ISBN 1 85538 412 4 Martin Willson Rebirth and the Western Buddhist Wisdom Publications 1987 ISBN 0 86171 215 3 Nagapriya Exploring Karma and Rebirth Windhorse Publications Birmingham 2004 ISBN 1 899579 61 3External links Edit A Buddhist Ethic Without Karmic Rebirth article by Winston L King Dhamma Without Rebirth essay by Bhikkhu Bodhi Does Rebirth Make Sense essay by Bhikkhu Bodhi Causal Relationship an analysis of Paṭiccasamuppada in the Nikayas Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rebirth Buddhism amp oldid 1131213242, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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