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Āyatana

Āyatana (Pāli; Sanskrit: आयतन) is a Buddhist term that has been translated as "sense base", "sense-media" or "sense sphere".[1] In Buddhism, there are six internal sense bases (Pali: ajjhattikāni āyatanāni; also known as, "organs", "gates", "doors", "powers" or "roots"[2]) and six external sense bases (bāhirāni āyatanāni or "sense objects"; also known as vishaya or "domains"[3]).

Translations of
ṣaḍāyatana
Englishsix sense bases,
six sense spheres
Sanskritṣaḍāyatana
Palisaḷāyatana
Chinese六入, 六処
(Pinyin: liùrù)
Japanese六入, 六処
(Rōmaji: rokunyū, rokusho)
Korean육입, 육처
(RR: yuk-yip, yuk-tcher)
Tibetanskye.mched
Tagalogayatana
Thaiอายตนะ (RTGSayatana)
Vietnameselục nhập
Glossary of Buddhism
  The 12 Nidānas:  
Ignorance
Formations
Consciousness
Name & Form
Six Sense Bases
Contact
Feeling
Craving
Clinging
Becoming
Birth
Old Age & Death
 

There are six internal-external (organ-object) saḷāyatana (Pāli; Skt. ṣaḍāyatana), pairs of sense bases:[note 1][note 2]

Buddhism and other Indian epistemologies[8][9] identify six "senses" as opposed to the Western identification of five. In Buddhism, "mind" denotes an internal sense organ which interacts with sense objects that include sense impressions, feelings, perceptions and volition.[6][10]

In the Pali Canon edit

In the Four Noble Truths, the Buddha identifies that the origin of suffering (Pali, Skt.: dukkha) is craving (Pali: taṇhā; Skt.: tṛṣṇā). In the chain of Dependent Origination, the Buddha identifies that craving arises from sensations that result from contact at the six sense bases (see Figure 2 below). Therefore, to overcome craving and its resultant suffering, one should develop restraint of and insight into the sense bases.[11]

Sense-base contexts edit

Figure 1: The Pali Canon's Six Sextets:
 
  sense bases  
 
  f
e
e
l
i
n
g
   
 
  c
r
a
v
i
n
g
   
  "internal"
sense
organs
<–> "external"
sense
objects
 
 
contact
   
consciousness
 
 
 
  1. The six internal sense bases are the eye, ear,
    nose, tongue, body & mind.
  2. The six external sense bases are visible forms,
    sound, odor, flavors, touch & mental objects.
  3. Sense-specific consciousness arises dependent
    on an internal & an external sense base.
  4. Contact is the meeting of an internal sense
    base, external sense base & consciousness.
  5. Feeling is dependent on contact.
  6. Craving is dependent on feeling.
 Source: MN 148 (Thanissaro, 1998)    diagram details
 

12
Causes

Ignorance  
 
Formations
 
Consciousness
 
Name & Form
 
Six Sense Bases
Contact
Sensations
  Suffering Craving   Cessation   the Path  
 ← 4 Noble Truths
  Clinging  
 
Becoming
 
Birth
 
Old Age & Death
 
Figure 2: The intersection of the
Twelve Causes and the Four Noble Truths:
How the sense bases lead to suffering.
[12]

Throughout the Pali Canon, the sense bases are referenced in hundreds of discourses.[13] In these diverse discourses, the sense bases are contextualized in different ways including:

  • Sextets (Pali: chakka):
    The sense bases include two sets of six: six sense organs (or internal sense bases) and six sense objects (or external sense bases). Based on these six pairs of sense bases, a number of mental factors arise. Thus, for instance, when an ear and sound are present, the associated consciousness (Pali: viññāṇa) arises. The arising of these three elements (dhātu) – ear, sound and ear-related consciousness – lead to what is known as "contact" (phassa) which in turn causes a pleasant or unpleasant or neutral "feeling" or "sensation" (vedanā) to arise. It is from such a feeling that "craving" (taṇhā) arises. (See Figure 1.) Such an enumeration can be found, for instance, in the "Six Sextets" discourse (Chachakka Sutta, MN 148), where the "six sextets" (six sense organs, six sense objects, six sense-specific types of consciousness, six sense-specific types of contact, six sense-specific types of sensation and six sense-specific types of craving) are examined and found to be empty of self.[14]
  • "The All" (Pali: sabba):
    In a discourse entitled, "The All" (SN 35.23), the Buddha states that there is no "all" outside of the six pairs of sense bases.[15] In the next codified discourse (SN 35.24), the Buddha elaborates that the All includes the first five aforementioned sextets (sense organs, objects, consciousness, contact and sensations).[16] References to the All can be found in a number of subsequent discourses.[17] In addition, the Abhidhamma and post-canonical Pali literature further conceptualize the sense bases as a means for classifying all factors of existence.[18]
  • The Twelve Dependencies (Pali, Skt.: nidāna):
    As described in the "Related Buddhist concepts" section below and illustrated in Figure 2, the sense bases are a critical link in the endless round of rebirth known as the Twelve Causes and as depicted in the Wheel of Becoming (Skt.: bhavacakra).[19]

"Aflame with lust, hate and delusion" edit

In "The Vipers" discourse (Asivisa Sutta, SN 35.197), the Buddha likens the internal sense bases to an "empty village" and the external sense bases to "village-plundering bandits." Using this metaphor, the Buddha characterizes the "empty"[20] sense organs as being "attacked by agreeable & disagreeable" sense objects.[21]

Elsewhere in the same collection of discourses (SN 35.191), the Buddha's Great Disciple Sariputta clarifies that the actual suffering associated with sense organs and sense objects is not inherent to these sense bases but is due to the "fetters" (here identified as "desire and lust") that arise when there is contact between a sense organ and sense object.[22]

In the "Fire Sermon" (Adittapariyaya Sutta, SN 35.28), delivered several months after the Buddha's awakening, the Buddha describes all sense bases and related mental processes in the following manner:

"Monks, the All is aflame. What All is aflame? The eye is aflame. Forms are aflame. Consciousness at the eye is aflame. Contact at the eye is aflame. And whatever there is that arises in dependence on contact at the eye – experienced as pleasure, pain or neither-pleasure-nor-pain – that too is aflame. Aflame with what? Aflame with the fire of passion, the fire of aversion, the fire of delusion. Aflame, I tell you, with birth, aging & death, with sorrows, lamentations, pains, distresses, & despairs."[23]

Extinguishing suffering's flame edit

The Buddha taught that, in order to escape the dangers of the sense bases, one must be able to apprehend the sense bases without defilement. In "Abandoning the Fetters" (SN 35.54), the Buddha states that one abandons the fetters "when one knows and sees ... as impermanent" (Pali: anicca) the six sense organs, objects, sense-consciousness, contact and sensations.[24] Similarly, in "Uprooting the Fetters" (SN 35.55), the Buddha states that one uproots the fetters "when one knows and sees ... as nonself" (anatta) the aforementioned five sextets.[25]

To foster this type of penetrative knowing and seeing and the resultant release from suffering, in the Satipatthana Sutta (MN 10) the Buddha instructs monks to meditate on the sense bases and the dependently arising fetters as follows:

"How, O bhikkhus, does a bhikkhu live contemplating mental object in the mental objects of the six internal and the six external sense-bases?
"Here, O bhikkhus, a bhikkhu understands the eye and material forms and the fetter that arises dependent on both (eye and forms); he understands how the arising of the non-arisen fetter comes to be; he understands how the abandoning of the arisen fetter comes to be; and he understands how the non-arising in the future of the abandoned fetter comes to be. [In a similar manner:] He understands the ear and sounds ... the organ of smell and odors ... the organ of taste and flavors ... the organ of touch and tactual objects ... the consciousness and mental objects....
"Thus he lives contemplating mental object in mental objects ... and clings to naught in the world."[26]

In post-canonical Pali texts edit

The Vimuttimagga, the Visuddhimagga, and associated Pali commentaries[27] and subcommentaries all contribute to traditional knowledge about the sense bases.

Understanding sense organs edit

When the Buddha speaks of "understanding" the eye, ear, nose, tongue and body, what is meant?

According to the first-century CE Sinhalese meditation manual, Vimuttimagga, the sense organs can be understood in terms of the object sensed, the consciousness aroused, the underlying "sensory matter," and an associated primary or derived element that is present "in excess."[28] These characteristics are summarized in the table below.

sense
organ
sense
object
sense
consciousness
sensory
matter
element
in excess
eye visual objects visual consciousness "...the three small fleshy discs round the pupil, and the white and black of the eye-ball that is in five layers of flesh, blood, wind, phlegm and serum, is half a poppy-seed in size, is like the head of a louseling...." Earth
ear sound waves auditory consciousness "...in the interior of the two ear-holes, is fringed by tawny hair, is dependent on the membrane, is like the stem of a blue-green bean...." Sounds
nose odors olfactory consciousness "...in the interior of the nose, where the three meet, is dependent on one small opening, is like a Koviḷāra (flower in shape)...." air
tongue tastes gustatory consciousness "...two-finger breadths in size, is in shape like a blue lotus, is located in the flesh of the tongue...." water
body tangibles tactual consciousness "...in the entire body, excepting the hair of the body and the head, nails teeth and other insensitive parts...." Heat (or lack thereof)
Table 1. The Vimuttimagga's characterization of sense organs.[29]

The compendious fifth-century CE Visuddhimagga provides similar descriptors, such as "the size of a mere louse's head" for the location of the eye's "sensitivity" (Pali: pasāda; also known as, "sentient organ, sense agency, sensitive surface"),[30] and "in the place shaped like a goat's hoof" regarding the nose sensitivity (Vsm. XIV, 47–52).[31] In addition, the Visuddhimagga describes the sense organs in terms of the following four factors:

  • characteristic or sign (lakkhaa)
  • function or "taste" (rasa)
  • manifestation (paccupaṭṭhāna)
  • proximate cause (padaṭṭhāna)

Thus, for instance, it describes the eye as follows:

Herein, the eye's characteristic is sensitivity of primary elements that is ready for the impact of visible data; or its characteristic is sensitivity of primary elements originated by kamma sourcing from desire to see. Its function is to pick up [an object] among visible data. It is manifested as the footing of eye-consciousness. Its proximate cause is primary elements born of kamma sourcing from desire to see.[32]

In regards to the sixth internal sense base of mind (mano), Pali subcommentaries (attributed to Dhammapāla Thera) distinguish between consciousness arising from the five physical sense bases and that arising from the primarily post-canonical notion of a "life-continuum" or "unconscious mind" (bhavaga-mana):[33]

"Of the consciousness or mind aggregate included in a course of cognition of eye-consciousness, just the eye-base [not the mind-base] is the 'door' of origin, and the [external sense] base of the material form is the visible object. So it is in the case of the others [that is, the ear, nose, tongue and body sense bases]. But of the sixth sense-base the part of the mind base called the life-continuum, the unconscious mind, is the 'door' of origin...."[34]

The roots of wisdom edit

In the fifth-century CE exegetical Visuddhimagga, Buddhaghosa identifies knowing about the sense bases as part of the "soil" of liberating wisdom. Other components of this "soil" include the aggregates, the faculties, the Four Noble Truths and Dependent Origination.[35]

Related Buddhist concepts edit

  • Aggregates (Pali, khandha; Skt., skandha):
    In a variety of suttas, the aggregates, elements (see below) and sense bases are identified as the "soil" in which craving and clinging grow.[36] In general, in the Pali Canon, the aggregate of material form includes the five material sense organs (eye, ear, nose, tongue and body) and associated sense objects (visible forms, sounds, odors, tastes and tactile objects); the aggregate of consciousness is associated with the sense organ of mind; and, the mental aggregates (sensation, perception, mental formations) are mental sense objects.[37]
    Both the aggregates and the sense bases are identified as objects of mindfulness meditation in the Satipatthana Sutta. In terms of pursuing liberation, meditating on the aggregates eradicates self-doctrine and wrong-view clinging while meditating on the sense bases eradicates sense-pleasure clinging.[38]
  • Dependent Origination (Pali: paṭicca-samuppāda; Skt.: pratitya-samutpada):
    As indicated in Figure 2 above, the six sense bases (Pali: saḷāyatana; Skt.: ṣaḍāyatana) are the fifth link in the Twelve Causes (nidāna) of the chain of Dependent Origination and thus likewise are the fifth position on the Wheel of Becoming (bhavacakra). The arising of the six sense bases is dependent on the arising of material and mental objects (Pali, Skt.: nāmarūpa); and, the arising of the six sense bases leads to the arising of "contact" (Pali: phassa; Skt.: sparśa) between the sense bases and consciousness (Pali: viññāṇa; Skt.: visjñāna) which results in pleasant, unpleasant and neutral feelings (Pali, Skt.: vedanā).
  • Elements (Pali, Skt.: dhātu):[39]
    The eighteen elements include the twelve sense bases. The eighteen elements are six triads of elements where each triad is composed of a sense object (the external sense bases), a sense organ (the internal sense bases) and the associated sense-organ-consciousness (viññāṇa).[40] In other words, the eighteen elements are made up of the twelve sense bases and the six related sense-consciousnesses.
  • Karma (Skt.; Pali: kamma):
    In a Samyutta Nikaya discourse, the Buddha declares that the six internal senses bases (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind) are "old kamma, to be seen as generated and fashioned by volition, as something to be felt."[41] In this discourse, "new kamma" is described as "whatever action one does now by body, speech, or mind." In this way, the internal sense bases provide a link between our volitional actions and subsequent perceptions.

See also edit

  • Heart SutraMahayana text that shows the ayatanas in Mahayana discourse
  • Indriya—"faculties", which include a group of "six sensory faculties" similar to the six sense bases
  • Prajna (wisdom)
  • Satipatthana Sutta—includes a meditation using sense bases as the meditative object
  • Skandha—a similar Buddhist construct
  • Twelve Nidanas—the chain of endless suffering of which the sense bases are the fifth link

Notes edit

  1. ^ One may logically deduce from the existence of six internal sense bases and six external sense bases that there are a total of twelve individual sense bases; the Pali canon, however, never references "twelve" sense bases per se, e.g., see MN 137: "[S]aāyatanavibhaṅgaṃ vo, bhikkhave, desessāmi.... Cha ajjhattikāni āyatanāni veditabbāni, cha bāhirāni āyatanāni veditabbāni...." Also see MN 148, 149, etc.
  2. ^ Saḷāyatana is generally used in the context of the Twelve Causes (nidāna) of the chain of Dependent Origination.[4]Ṣaḍāyatana is the fifth link in the Twelve Nidānas of Pratitya-Samutpada (Dependent Origination) and thus likewise in the fifth position on the Bhavacakra (Wheel of Becoming). Ṣaḍāyatana (Sense Gates) is dependent on Nāmarūpa (Name and Form) as condition before it can exist: "With Name and Form as condition, Sense Gates arise." Ṣaḍāyatana is also the prevailing condition for the next condition in the chain, Contact (Sparśa): "With

References edit

  1. ^ "Sense base" is used for instance by Bodhi (2000b) and Soma (1999). "Sense-media" is used by Thanissaro (e.g., cf. Thanissaro, 1998c). "Sense sphere" is used for instance by VRI (1996) and suggested by Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–5), p. 105, whose third definition for Āyatana is:
    sphere of perception or sense in general, object of thought, sense-organ & object; relation, order. – [Aung & Rhys Davids (1910)], p. 183 says rightly: 'āyatana cannot be rendered by a single English word to cover both sense-organs (the mind being regarded as 6th sense) and sense objects'. – These āyatanāni (relations, functions, reciprocalities) are thus divided into two groups, inner (ajjhattikāni) and outer (bāhirāni)....
  2. ^ Pine 2004, p. 102
  3. ^ Pine 2004, p. 103
  4. ^ "Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–5), p. 699".
  5. ^ The Pāli word translated here as "visible objects" is rūpa. In terms of the Buddhist notion of the sense bases, rūpa refers to visual objects (or objects knowable by the eye through light). This should not be confused with the use of the word rūpa in terms of the Buddhist notion of aggregates where rūpa refers to all material objects, both of the world and the body. Thus, when comparing these two uses of rūpa, the rūpa aggregate (rūpakkhandha) includes the rūpa sense-object (rūpāyatana) as well as the four other material sense-objects (sound, odor, taste and touch).
  6. ^ a b The Pāli word translated here as "mind" is mano. Other common translations include "intellect" (e.g., Thanissaro, 2001a) and "consciousness" (e.g., Soma, 1999). In the Suttapitaka, mano does not necessarily refer to all mental processing. Other oft-mentioned complementary mental processes include "consciousness" (viññāṇa) and "mental states" (citta). Nonetheless, in the Abhidhamma Pitaka and later texts, these terms are at times used synonymously.
  7. ^ The Pāli word translated here as "mental objects" is dhammā. Other frequently seen translations include "mental phenomena" (e.g., Bodhi, 2000b, pp. 1135ff.), "thoughts," "ideas" (e.g., Thanissaro, 2001a) and "contents of the mind" (VRI, 1996, p. 39) while some translators simply leave this word untranslated due to its complex overtones in the Pali literature.
  8. ^ Hamilton (2001), p. 53, writes: "... six senses, including one relating to non-sensory mental activity, are recognized in Buddhism and other Indian schools of thought...."
  9. ^ See also Pine 2004, p. 101. Red Pine argues that this scheme probably predates Buddhism, because it has ten external members (ear, sound, nose, odor, tongue, taste, body, touch) corresponding to the single external skandha (form), and only two internal members (mind and thought) corresponding to the four internal skandhas.
  10. ^ See, for instance, Bodhi (2000a), p. 288.
  11. ^ Bodhi (2005b), starting at time 50:00. Bodhi (2005b) references, for instance, Majjhima Nikaya Sutta No. 149, where the Buddha instructs:
    "...[K]nowing & seeing the eye as it actually is present, knowing & seeing [visible] forms... consciousness at the eye... contact at the eye as they actually are present, knowing & seeing whatever arises conditioned through contact at the eye – experienced as pleasure, pain, or neither-pleasure-nor-pain – as it actually is present, one is not infatuated with the eye... forms... consciousness at the eye... contact at the eye... whatever arises.... The craving that makes for further becoming – accompanied by passion & delight, relishing now this & now that – is abandoned by him. His bodily disturbances & mental disturbances are abandoned. His bodily torments & mental torments are abandoned. His bodily distresses & mental distresses are abandoned. He is sensitive both to ease of body & ease of awareness..." (Thanissaro, 1998c).
  12. ^ This diagram is based on comments made by Bhikkhu Bodhi during a dharma talk (Bodhi, 2005, starting at time 50:00). Of course, reference to the Four Noble Truths in this context is redundant as the whole endless cycle of the Twelve Causes is a form of suffering and the last two causes, Birth and Old Age & Death, are explicitly identified as components of suffering by the Buddha in the Four Noble Truths (for instance, see the Dhammacakka Sutta). Nonetheless, Bodhi's formulation here provides a conciseness – both conceptually and, in this diagram, visually – that might otherwise not be as compelling and readily comprehended.
  13. ^ The greatest concentration of discourses related to the sense bases is in the Samyutta Nikaya, chapter 35, entitled "The Book of the Six Sense Bases" (Saḷāyatana-vagga). For instance, in Bodhi (2000b) edition of the Samyutta Nikaya, this chapter alone has 248 discourses. The Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–25) entry for "Āyatana" (p. 105) also mentions other discourses in each of the Pali nikayas.
  14. ^ Ñāṇamoli & Bodhi (2001), pp. 1129–36; and, Thanissaro (1998a).
  15. ^ Bodhi (2000b), p. 1140; and, Thanissaro (2001b). According to Bodhi (2000b), p. 1399, n. 7, the Pali commentary regarding the Sabba Sutta states: "...[I]f one passes over the twelve sense bases, one cannot point out any real phenomenon." Also see Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–25), p. 680, "Sabba" entry where sabbaŋ is defined as "the (whole) world of sense-experience."
  16. ^ Bodhi (2000b), p. 1140; and, Thanissaro (2001a).
  17. ^ For instance, SN 35.25 through 35.29, including the famed "Fire Sermon" (SN 35.28).
  18. ^ Bodhi (2000b), p. 1122.
  19. ^ Note that the Twelve Causes and Six Sextets describe the relationship between the sense bases and consciousness in different ways. Relatedly, there are canonical discouses that put forth hybrid models of these various psychophysical factors, such as described in "The World Discourse" (Loka Sutta, SN 12.44) (Thanissaro, 1998b; and, Bodhi, 2005a, pp. 358–59) where the aforementioned six "sextets" (from the eye and form to craving) condition the last four "causes" (clinging, becoming, birth, old age & death) and suffering. In reference to this and similar "variant" discourses, Bodhi (2005a) notes:
    "These variants make it plain that the sequence of factors should not be regarded as a linear causal process in which each preceding factor gives rise to its successor through the simple exercise of efficient causality. Far from being linear, the relationship among the factors is always complex, involving several interwoven strands of conditionality." (Bodhi, 2005a, p. 316.)
  20. ^ In the context of SN 35.197, the term "empty" might simply be meant to convey "passive." It could also be used in the Buddhist sense of self-less, as in anatta (see). In fact, in SN 35.85, the Buddha applies this latter notion of emptiness (suññata) to all internal and external sense bases (Bodhi, 2000b, pp. 1163–64; and Thanissaro, 1997c).
  21. ^ Bodhi (2000b), pp. 1237–1239 (where this discourse is identified as SN 35.238); Buddhaghosa (1999), p. 490 (where this discourse is identified as S.iv,175); and, Thanissaro (2004). Similarly, in the last sutta of the Samyutta Nikaya's Salayatana-samyutta, entitled "The Sheaf of Barley" (which Bodhi, 2000b, identifies as SN 35.248 and Thanissaro, 1998d, as SN 35.207), the Buddha describes the sense organs as "struck" or "thrashed" by "agreeable and disagreeable" sense objects (Bodhi, 2000b, pp. 1257–59; Thanissaro, 1998d).
  22. ^ Bodhi (2000b), pp. 1230–1231 (where this discourse is identified as SN 35.232); and, Thanissaro (1997b).
  23. ^ Thanissaro, 1993. For other references to the sense bases as "the All," see Thanissaro (2001b) and Thanissaro (2001a). The sense bases are "the All" insomuch that all we know of the world is known through the sense bases.
  24. ^ Bodhi (2000b), p. 1148.
  25. ^ Bodhi (2000b), p. 1148. For a correspondence between impermanence and nonself, see Three marks of existence.
  26. ^ Soma (1999), section entitled, "The Six Internal and the Six External Sense-bases."
  27. ^ In terms of the Pali commentaries, for instance, there is overlap between the Visuddhimagga and the commentary to the Dhammasangani, Atthasālinī (e.g., cf. Vsm. XIV,49 [Buddhaghosa, 1999, p. 446] and Asl. 310 [Rhys Davids, 1900, p. 178 n. 2]).
  28. ^ In regards to defining the sense bases in terms of excess primary elements, the Visuddhimagga (Vsm. XIV, 42) is critical:
    "... Others say that the eye is sensitivity of those [primary elements] that have fire in excess, and that the ear, nose, tongue, and body are [sensitivity] of those [primary elements] that have [respectively] aperture, air, water and earth in excess. They should be asked to quote a sutta. They will certainly not find one." (Buddhaghosa, 1999, p. 444, para. 42.)
  29. ^ This table is based on Upatissa et al. (1995), pp. 238–240.
  30. ^ Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–25), p. 446, entry for "Pasāda" (retrieved 2008-04-16 from "U. Chicago" at [1]).
  31. ^ Buddhaghosa (1999), pp. 445–6. While this Visuddhimagga chapter (XIV) actually pertains to the Five Aggregates, this characterization is referenced in the Visuddhimagga chapter (XV) on the Sense Bases (Buddhaghosa, 1999, p. 489, verse 8).
  32. ^ Vsm. XIV, 37 (trans. Buddhaghosa, 1999, p. 443; square-bracketed text in original). The Pali (from the Burmese CSCD, retrieved 2008-04-16 from "VRI" at http://www.tipitaka.org/romn/cscd/e0102n.mul2.xml) associated with this passage is:
    Tattha rūpābhighātārahatappasādalakkhaṇaṃ daṭṭhukāmatānidānakammasamuṭṭhānabhūtappasādalakkhaṇaṃ vā cakkhu, rūpesu āviñchanarasaṃ, cakkhuviññāṇassa ādhārabhāvapaccupaṭṭhānaṃ, daṭṭhukāmatānidānakammajabhūtapadaṭṭhānaṃ.
  33. ^ Regarding bhavaga being a primarily post-canonical concept, see Matthews (1995, p. 128) where he states for instance: "Bhavaga does not occur in the Sutta Pitaka, but its appearance in both the Dhammasagai and the Paṭṭhāna assured that it received much post-classical attention in the Theravāda." He further amplifies this in an endnote (p. 140, n. 34): "... [A]lthough bhavaga does appear in the Abhidhamma Piaka, it is not until the post-classical era that it receives much attention." Citing Ñāamoli and others, Matthews (1995, p. 123) defines the "classical age" as "ended about the 4th century A.D.," just prior to the "great age of commentaries."
  34. ^ Soma (2003), p. 133. This excerpt is from the subcommentary to the Majjhima Nikāya, the Līnatthapakāsanā Tīkā.
  35. ^ Buddhaghosa & Ñāamoli (1999), pp. 442–43.
  36. ^ See, for instance, SN 35.91 where the Buddha proclaims:
    "Whatever, bhikkhus, is the extent of the aggregates, the elements, and the sense bases, [a right-practicing monk] does not conceive that, does not conceive in that, does not conceive from that, does not conceive, 'This is mine.' Since he does not conceive anything thus, he does not cling to anything in the world. Not clinging, he is not agitated. Being unagitated, he personally attains Nibbāna..." (Bodhi, 2000b, p. 1171).
  37. ^ See, for instance, Bodhi (2000b), pp. 1122–24. Beyond the five aggregates, Nibbana is also identified as a "mental object" perceivable by "mind" (mano) (see, for instance, Bodhi, 2000a, p. 288).
  38. ^ See, for instance, Bodhi (2000b), pp. 1124–26; and, Bodhi (2005b), starting at time 48:47. Also see the article on upadana for the canonical explanation of the four types of clinging: sense-pleasure, wrong-view, rites-and-rituals and self-doctrine.
  39. ^ The Pāli word referenced here as "element," dhātu, is used in multiple contexts in the Pāli canon. For instance, Bodhi (2000b), pp. 527–8, identifies four different ways that dhātu is used including in terms of the "eighteen elements" and in terms of "the four primary elements" (catudhātu).
  40. ^ In Buddhist literature, when a sense object and sense organ make contact (Pali, phassa), sense-consciousness arises. (See for instance MN 148.)
  41. ^ Bodhi (2005b), pp. 1211–12. See also Thanissaro (1997a).

Sources edit

  • Aung, S.Z. & C.A.F. Rhys Davids (trans.) (1910). Compendium of Philosophy (Translation of the Abhidhamm'attha-sangaha). Chipstead: Pali Text Society. Cited in Rhys Davids & Stede (1921–5).
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (ed.) (2000a). A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma: The Abhidhammattha Sangaha of Ācariya Anuruddha. Seattle, WA: BPS Pariyatti Editions. ISBN 1-928706-02-9.
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (trans.) (2000b). The Connected Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya. (Part IV is "The Book of the Six Sense Bases (Salayatanavagga)".) Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-331-1.
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (2005a). In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon. Boston: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-491-1.
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (18 Jan 2005b). MN 10: Satipatthana Sutta (continued) (MP3 audio file) [In this series of talks on the Majjhima Nikaya, this is Bodhi's ninth talk on the Satipatthana Sutta. In this talk, the discussion regarding the sense bases starts at time 45:36]. Available on-line at http://www.bodhimonastery.net/MP3/M0060_MN-010.mp3[permanent dead link].
  • Buddhaghosa, Bhadantācariya (trans. from Pāli by Bhikkhu Ñāṇamoli) (1999). The Path of Purification: Visuddhimagga. (Chapter XV is "The Bases and Elements (Ayatana-dhatu-niddesa)".) Seattle, WA: BPS Pariyatti Editions. ISBN 1-928706-00-2.
  • Hamilton, Sue (2001). Indian Philosophy: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-285374-5.
  • Matthews, Bruce (1995). "Post-Classical Developments in the Concepts of Karma and Rebirth in Theravāda Buddhism," in Ronald W. Neufeldt (ed.), Karma and Rebirth: Post-Classical Developments. Delhi, Sri Satguru Publications. (Originally published by the State University of New York, 1986). ISBN 81-7030-430-X.
  • Ñāṇamoli, Bhikkhu (trans.) & 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.
  • Rhys Davids, Caroline A.F. ([1900], 2003). Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics, of the Fourth Century B.C., Being a Translation, now made for the First Time, from the Original Pāli, of the First Book of the Abhidhamma-Piaka, entitled Dhamma-Saṅgaṇi (Compendium of States or Phenomena). Whitefish, MT: Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0-7661-4702-9.
  • Red Pine. The Heart Sutra: The Womb of the Buddhas (2004) Shoemaker & Hoard. ISBN 1-59376-009-4
  • Rhys Davids, T.W. & William Stede (eds.) (1921–5). The Pali Text Society’s Pali–English Dictionary. Chipstead: Pali Text Society. A general on-line search engine for the PED is available at http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/pali/.
  • Soma Thera (trans.) (1999). The Discourse on the Arousing of Mindfulness (MN 10). Available on-line at Satipatthana Sutta: The Discourse on the Arousing of Mindfulness.
  • Soma Thera (2003). The Way of Mindfulness: English translation of the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta Commentary. Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN 955-24-0256-5.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1993). Adittapariyaya Sutta: The Fire Sermon (SN 35.28). Available on-line at Adittapariyaya Sutta: The Fire Sermon.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997a). Kamma Sutta: Action (SN 35.145). Available on-line at Kamma Sutta: Action.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997b). Kotthita Sutta: To Kotthita (SN 35.191). Available on-line at Kotthita Sutta: To Kotthita.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1997c). Suñña Sutta: Empty (SN 35.85). Available on-line at Suñña Sutta: Empty.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1998a). Chachakka Sutta: The Six Sextets (MN 148). Available on-line at Chachakka Sutta: The Six Sextets.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1998b). Loka Sutta: The World (SN 12.44). Available on-line at Loka Sutta: The World.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1998c). Maha-salayatanika Sutta: The Great Six Sense-media Discourse (MN 149). Available on-line at Maha-salayatanika Sutta: The Great Six Sense-media Discourse.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (1998d). Yavakalapi Sutta: The Sheaf of Barley (SN 35.207). Available on-line at Yavakalapi Sutta: The Sheaf of Barley.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (2001a). Pahanaya Sutta: To Be Abandoned (SN 35.24). Available on-line at Pahanaya Sutta: To Be Abandoned.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (2001b). Sabba Sutta: The All (SN 35.23). Available on-line at Sabba Sutta: The All.
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (trans.) (2004). Asivisa Sutta: Vipers (SN 35.197). Available on-line at Asivisa Sutta: Vipers.
  • Upatissa, Arahant, N.R.M. Ehara (trans.), Soma Thera (trans.) and Kheminda Thera (trans.) (1995). The Path of Freedom (Vimuttimagga). Kandy, Sri Lanka: Buddhist Publication Society. ISBN 955-24-0054-6.
  • Vipassana Research Institute (VRI) (trans.) (1996). Mahāsatipaṭṭhāna Sutta: The Great Discourse on Establishing Mindfulness (Pali-English edition). Seattle, WA: Vipassana Research Publications of America. ISBN 0-9649484-0-0.

External links edit

  • "Salayatana Vagga – The Section on the Six Sense Bases" of the Samyutta Nikaya, on www.accesstoinsight.org

Āyatana, pāli, sanskrit, आयतन, buddhist, term, that, been, translated, sense, base, sense, media, sense, sphere, buddhism, there, internal, sense, bases, pali, ajjhattikāni, āyatanāni, also, known, organs, gates, doors, powers, roots, external, sense, bases, b. Ayatana Pali Sanskrit आयतन is a Buddhist term that has been translated as sense base sense media or sense sphere 1 In Buddhism there are six internal sense bases Pali ajjhattikani ayatanani also known as organs gates doors powers or roots 2 and six external sense bases bahirani ayatanani or sense objects also known as vishaya or domains 3 Translations ofṣaḍayatanaEnglishsix sense bases six sense spheresSanskritṣaḍayatanaPalisaḷayatanaChinese六入 六処 Pinyin liuru Japanese六入 六処 Rōmaji rokunyu rokusho Korean육입 육처 RR yuk yip yuk tcher Tibetanskye mchedTagalogayatanaThaixaytna RTGS ayatana Vietnameselục nhậpGlossary of Buddhism The 12 Nidanas Ignorance Formations Consciousness Name amp Form Six Sense Bases Contact Feeling Craving Clinging Becoming Birth Old Age amp Death There are six internal external organ object saḷayatana Pali Skt ṣaḍayatana pairs of sense bases note 1 note 2 eye and visible objects 5 ear and sound nose and odor tongue and taste body and touch mind 6 and mental objects 7 Buddhism and other Indian epistemologies 8 9 identify six senses as opposed to the Western identification of five In Buddhism mind denotes an internal sense organ which interacts with sense objects that include sense impressions feelings perceptions and volition 6 10 Contents 1 In the Pali Canon 1 1 Sense base contexts 1 2 Aflame with lust hate and delusion 1 3 Extinguishing suffering s flame 2 In post canonical Pali texts 2 1 Understanding sense organs 2 2 The roots of wisdom 3 Related Buddhist concepts 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksIn the Pali Canon editIn the Four Noble Truths the Buddha identifies that the origin of suffering Pali Skt dukkha is craving Pali taṇha Skt tṛṣṇa In the chain of Dependent Origination the Buddha identifies that craving arises from sensations that result from contact at the six sense bases see Figure 2 below Therefore to overcome craving and its resultant suffering one should develop restraint of and insight into the sense bases 11 Sense base contexts edit Figure 1 The Pali Canon s Six Sextets sense bases feeling craving internal senseorgans lt gt external senseobjects contact consciousness The six internal sense bases are the eye ear nose tongue body amp mind The six external sense bases are visible forms sound odor flavors touch amp mental objects Sense specific consciousness arises dependenton an internal amp an external sense base Contact is the meeting of an internal sensebase external sense base amp consciousness Feeling is dependent on contact Craving is dependent on feeling Source MN 148 Thanissaro 1998 diagram details 12Causes Ignorance Formations Consciousness Name amp Form Six Sense Bases Contact Sensations Suffering Craving Cessation the Path 4 Noble Truths Clinging Becoming Birth Old Age amp Death Figure 2 The intersection of the Twelve Causes and the Four Noble Truths How the sense bases lead to suffering 12 Throughout the Pali Canon the sense bases are referenced in hundreds of discourses 13 In these diverse discourses the sense bases are contextualized in different ways including Sextets Pali chakka The sense bases include two sets of six six sense organs or internal sense bases and six sense objects or external sense bases Based on these six pairs of sense bases a number of mental factors arise Thus for instance when an ear and sound are present the associated consciousness Pali vinnaṇa arises The arising of these three elements dhatu ear sound and ear related consciousness lead to what is known as contact phassa which in turn causes a pleasant or unpleasant or neutral feeling or sensation vedana to arise It is from such a feeling that craving taṇha arises See Figure 1 Such an enumeration can be found for instance in the Six Sextets discourse Chachakka Sutta MN 148 where the six sextets six sense organs six sense objects six sense specific types of consciousness six sense specific types of contact six sense specific types of sensation and six sense specific types of craving are examined and found to be empty of self 14 The All Pali sabba In a discourse entitled The All SN 35 23 the Buddha states that there is no all outside of the six pairs of sense bases 15 In the next codified discourse SN 35 24 the Buddha elaborates that the All includes the first five aforementioned sextets sense organs objects consciousness contact and sensations 16 References to the All can be found in a number of subsequent discourses 17 In addition the Abhidhamma and post canonical Pali literature further conceptualize the sense bases as a means for classifying all factors of existence 18 The Twelve Dependencies Pali Skt nidana As described in the Related Buddhist concepts section below and illustrated in Figure 2 the sense bases are a critical link in the endless round of rebirth known as the Twelve Causes and as depicted in the Wheel of Becoming Skt bhavacakra 19 Aflame with lust hate and delusion edit In The Vipers discourse Asivisa Sutta SN 35 197 the Buddha likens the internal sense bases to an empty village and the external sense bases to village plundering bandits Using this metaphor the Buddha characterizes the empty 20 sense organs as being attacked by agreeable amp disagreeable sense objects 21 Elsewhere in the same collection of discourses SN 35 191 the Buddha s Great Disciple Sariputta clarifies that the actual suffering associated with sense organs and sense objects is not inherent to these sense bases but is due to the fetters here identified as desire and lust that arise when there is contact between a sense organ and sense object 22 In the Fire Sermon Adittapariyaya Sutta SN 35 28 delivered several months after the Buddha s awakening the Buddha describes all sense bases and related mental processes in the following manner Monks the All is aflame What All is aflame The eye is aflame Forms are aflame Consciousness at the eye is aflame Contact at the eye is aflame And whatever there is that arises in dependence on contact at the eye experienced as pleasure pain or neither pleasure nor pain that too is aflame Aflame with what Aflame with the fire of passion the fire of aversion the fire of delusion Aflame I tell you with birth aging amp death with sorrows lamentations pains distresses amp despairs 23 Extinguishing suffering s flame edit The Buddha taught that in order to escape the dangers of the sense bases one must be able to apprehend the sense bases without defilement In Abandoning the Fetters SN 35 54 the Buddha states that one abandons the fetters when one knows and sees as impermanent Pali anicca the six sense organs objects sense consciousness contact and sensations 24 Similarly in Uprooting the Fetters SN 35 55 the Buddha states that one uproots the fetters when one knows and sees as nonself anatta the aforementioned five sextets 25 To foster this type of penetrative knowing and seeing and the resultant release from suffering in the Satipatthana Sutta MN 10 the Buddha instructs monks to meditate on the sense bases and the dependently arising fetters as follows How O bhikkhus does a bhikkhu live contemplating mental object in the mental objects of the six internal and the six external sense bases Here O bhikkhus a bhikkhu understands the eye and material forms and the fetter that arises dependent on both eye and forms he understands how the arising of the non arisen fetter comes to be he understands how the abandoning of the arisen fetter comes to be and he understands how the non arising in the future of the abandoned fetter comes to be In a similar manner He understands the ear and sounds the organ of smell and odors the organ of taste and flavors the organ of touch and tactual objects the consciousness and mental objects Thus he lives contemplating mental object in mental objects and clings to naught in the world 26 In post canonical Pali texts editThe Vimuttimagga the Visuddhimagga and associated Pali commentaries 27 and subcommentaries all contribute to traditional knowledge about the sense bases Understanding sense organs edit When the Buddha speaks of understanding the eye ear nose tongue and body what is meant According to the first century CE Sinhalese meditation manual Vimuttimagga the sense organs can be understood in terms of the object sensed the consciousness aroused the underlying sensory matter and an associated primary or derived element that is present in excess 28 These characteristics are summarized in the table below senseorgan senseobject senseconsciousness sensorymatter elementin excess eye visual objects visual consciousness the three small fleshy discs round the pupil and the white and black of the eye ball that is in five layers of flesh blood wind phlegm and serum is half a poppy seed in size is like the head of a louseling Earth ear sound waves auditory consciousness in the interior of the two ear holes is fringed by tawny hair is dependent on the membrane is like the stem of a blue green bean Sounds nose odors olfactory consciousness in the interior of the nose where the three meet is dependent on one small opening is like a Koviḷara flower in shape air tongue tastes gustatory consciousness two finger breadths in size is in shape like a blue lotus is located in the flesh of the tongue water body tangibles tactual consciousness in the entire body excepting the hair of the body and the head nails teeth and other insensitive parts Heat or lack thereof Table 1 The Vimuttimagga s characterization of sense organs 29 The compendious fifth century CE Visuddhimagga provides similar descriptors such as the size of a mere louse s head for the location of the eye s sensitivity Pali pasada also known as sentient organ sense agency sensitive surface 30 and in the place shaped like a goat s hoof regarding the nose sensitivity Vsm XIV 47 52 31 In addition the Visuddhimagga describes the sense organs in terms of the following four factors characteristic or sign lakkhaṇ a function or taste rasa manifestation paccupaṭṭ hana proximate cause padaṭṭ hana Thus for instance it describes the eye as follows Herein the eye s characteristic is sensitivity of primary elements that is ready for the impact of visible data or its characteristic is sensitivity of primary elements originated by kamma sourcing from desire to see Its function is to pick up an object among visible data It is manifested as the footing of eye consciousness Its proximate cause is primary elements born of kamma sourcing from desire to see 32 In regards to the sixth internal sense base of mind mano Pali subcommentaries attributed to Dhammapala Thera distinguish between consciousness arising from the five physical sense bases and that arising from the primarily post canonical notion of a life continuum or unconscious mind bhavaṅ ga mana 33 Of the consciousness or mind aggregate included in a course of cognition of eye consciousness just the eye base not the mind base is the door of origin and the external sense base of the material form is the visible object So it is in the case of the others that is the ear nose tongue and body sense bases But of the sixth sense base the part of the mind base called the life continuum the unconscious mind is the door of origin 34 The roots of wisdom edit In the fifth century CE exegetical Visuddhimagga Buddhaghosa identifies knowing about the sense bases as part of the soil of liberating wisdom Other components of this soil include the aggregates the faculties the Four Noble Truths and Dependent Origination 35 Related Buddhist concepts editAggregates Pali khandha Skt skandha In a variety of suttas the aggregates elements see below and sense bases are identified as the soil in which craving and clinging grow 36 In general in the Pali Canon the aggregate of material form includes the five material sense organs eye ear nose tongue and body and associated sense objects visible forms sounds odors tastes and tactile objects the aggregate of consciousness is associated with the sense organ of mind and the mental aggregates sensation perception mental formations are mental sense objects 37 Both the aggregates and the sense bases are identified as objects of mindfulness meditation in the Satipatthana Sutta In terms of pursuing liberation meditating on the aggregates eradicates self doctrine and wrong view clinging while meditating on the sense bases eradicates sense pleasure clinging 38 Dependent Origination Pali paṭicca samuppada Skt pratitya samutpada As indicated in Figure 2 above the six sense bases Pali saḷayatana Skt ṣaḍayatana are the fifth link in the Twelve Causes nidana of the chain of Dependent Origination and thus likewise are the fifth position on the Wheel of Becoming bhavacakra The arising of the six sense bases is dependent on the arising of material and mental objects Pali Skt namarupa and the arising of the six sense bases leads to the arising of contact Pali phassa Skt sparsa between the sense bases and consciousness Pali vinnaṇa Skt visjnana which results in pleasant unpleasant and neutral feelings Pali Skt vedana Elements Pali Skt dhatu 39 The eighteen elements include the twelve sense bases The eighteen elements are six triads of elements where each triad is composed of a sense object the external sense bases a sense organ the internal sense bases and the associated sense organ consciousness vinnaṇa 40 In other words the eighteen elements are made up of the twelve sense bases and the six related sense consciousnesses Karma Skt Pali kamma In a Samyutta Nikaya discourse the Buddha declares that the six internal senses bases eye ear nose tongue body and mind are old kamma to be seen as generated and fashioned by volition as something to be felt 41 In this discourse new kamma is described as whatever action one does now by body speech or mind In this way the internal sense bases provide a link between our volitional actions and subsequent perceptions See also editHeart Sutra Mahayana text that shows the ayatanas in Mahayana discourse Indriya faculties which include a group of six sensory faculties similar to the six sense bases Prajna wisdom Satipatthana Sutta includes a meditation using sense bases as the meditative object Skandha a similar Buddhist construct Twelve Nidanas the chain of endless suffering of which the sense bases are the fifth linkNotes edit One may logically deduce from the existence of six internal sense bases and six external sense bases that there are a total of twelve individual sense bases the Pali canon however never references twelve sense bases per se e g see MN 137 S aḷ ayatanavibhaṅgaṃ vo bhikkhave desessami Cha ajjhattikani ayatanani veditabbani cha bahirani ayatanani veditabbani Also see MN 148 149 etc Saḷayatana is generally used in the context of the Twelve Causes nidana of the chain of Dependent Origination 4 Ṣaḍayatana is the fifth link in the Twelve Nidanas of Pratitya Samutpada Dependent Origination and thus likewise in the fifth position on the Bhavacakra Wheel of Becoming Ṣaḍayatana Sense Gates is dependent on Namarupa Name and Form as condition before it can exist With Name and Form as condition Sense Gates arise Ṣaḍayatana is also the prevailing condition for the next condition in the chain Contact Sparsa WithReferences edit Sense base is used for instance by Bodhi 2000b and Soma 1999 Sense media is used by Thanissaro e g cf Thanissaro 1998c Sense sphere is used for instance by VRI 1996 and suggested by Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 5 p 105 whose third definition for Ayatana is sphere of perception or sense in general object of thought sense organ amp object relation order Aung amp Rhys Davids 1910 p 183 says rightly ayatana cannot be rendered by a single English word to cover both sense organs the mind being regarded as 6th sense and sense objects These ayatanani relations functions reciprocalities are thus divided into two groups inner ajjhattikani and outer bahirani Pine 2004 p 102 Pine 2004 p 103 Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 5 p 699 The Pali word translated here as visible objects is rupa In terms of the Buddhist notion of the sense bases rupa refers to visual objects or objects knowable by the eye through light This should not be confused with the use of the word rupa in terms of the Buddhist notion of aggregates where rupa refers to all material objects both of the world and the body Thus when comparing these two uses of rupa the rupa aggregate rupakkhandha includes the rupa sense object rupayatana as well as the four other material sense objects sound odor taste and touch a b The Pali word translated here as mind is mano Other common translations include intellect e g Thanissaro 2001a and consciousness e g Soma 1999 In the Suttapitaka mano does not necessarily refer to all mental processing Other oft mentioned complementary mental processes include consciousness vinnaṇa and mental states citta Nonetheless in the Abhidhamma Pitaka and later texts these terms are at times used synonymously The Pali word translated here as mental objects is dhamma Other frequently seen translations include mental phenomena e g Bodhi 2000b pp 1135ff thoughts ideas e g Thanissaro 2001a and contents of the mind VRI 1996 p 39 while some translators simply leave this word untranslated due to its complex overtones in the Pali literature Hamilton 2001 p 53 writes six senses including one relating to non sensory mental activity are recognized in Buddhism and other Indian schools of thought See also Pine 2004 p 101 Red Pine argues that this scheme probably predates Buddhism because it has ten external members ear sound nose odor tongue taste body touch corresponding to the single external skandha form and only two internal members mind and thought corresponding to the four internal skandhas See for instance Bodhi 2000a p 288 Bodhi 2005b starting at time 50 00 Bodhi 2005b references for instance Majjhima Nikaya Sutta No 149 where the Buddha instructs K nowing amp seeing the eye as it actually is present knowing amp seeing visible forms consciousness at the eye contact at the eye as they actually are present knowing amp seeing whatever arises conditioned through contact at the eye experienced as pleasure pain or neither pleasure nor pain as it actually is present one is not infatuated with the eye forms consciousness at the eye contact at the eye whatever arises The craving that makes for further becoming accompanied by passion amp delight relishing now this amp now that is abandoned by him His bodily disturbances amp mental disturbances are abandoned His bodily torments amp mental torments are abandoned His bodily distresses amp mental distresses are abandoned He is sensitive both to ease of body amp ease of awareness Thanissaro 1998c This diagram is based on comments made by Bhikkhu Bodhi during a dharma talk Bodhi 2005 starting at time 50 00 Of course reference to the Four Noble Truths in this context is redundant as the whole endless cycle of the Twelve Causes is a form of suffering and the last two causes Birth and Old Age amp Death are explicitly identified as components of suffering by the Buddha in the Four Noble Truths for instance see the Dhammacakka Sutta Nonetheless Bodhi s formulation here provides a conciseness both conceptually and in this diagram visually that might otherwise not be as compelling and readily comprehended The greatest concentration of discourses related to the sense bases is in the Samyutta Nikaya chapter 35 entitled The Book of the Six Sense Bases Saḷayatana vagga For instance in Bodhi 2000b edition of the Samyutta Nikaya this chapter alone has 248 discourses The Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 entry for Ayatana p 105 also mentions other discourses in each of the Pali nikayas Naṇamoli amp Bodhi 2001 pp 1129 36 and Thanissaro 1998a Bodhi 2000b p 1140 and Thanissaro 2001b According to Bodhi 2000b p 1399 n 7 the Pali commentary regarding the Sabba Sutta states I f one passes over the twelve sense bases one cannot point out any real phenomenon Also see Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 p 680 Sabba entry where sabbaŋ is defined as the whole world of sense experience Bodhi 2000b p 1140 and Thanissaro 2001a For instance SN 35 25 through 35 29 including the famed Fire Sermon SN 35 28 Bodhi 2000b p 1122 Note that the Twelve Causes and Six Sextets describe the relationship between the sense bases and consciousness in different ways Relatedly there are canonical discouses that put forth hybrid models of these various psychophysical factors such as described in The World Discourse Loka Sutta SN 12 44 Thanissaro 1998b and Bodhi 2005a pp 358 59 where the aforementioned six sextets from the eye and form to craving condition the last four causes clinging becoming birth old age amp death and suffering In reference to this and similar variant discourses Bodhi 2005a notes These variants make it plain that the sequence of factors should not be regarded as a linear causal process in which each preceding factor gives rise to its successor through the simple exercise of efficient causality Far from being linear the relationship among the factors is always complex involving several interwoven strands of conditionality Bodhi 2005a p 316 In the context of SN 35 197 the term empty might simply be meant to convey passive It could also be used in the Buddhist sense of self less as in anatta see In fact in SN 35 85 the Buddha applies this latter notion of emptiness sunnata to all internal and external sense bases Bodhi 2000b pp 1163 64 and Thanissaro 1997c Bodhi 2000b pp 1237 1239 where this discourse is identified as SN 35 238 Buddhaghosa 1999 p 490 where this discourse is identified as S iv 175 and Thanissaro 2004 Similarly in the last sutta of the Samyutta Nikaya s Salayatana samyutta entitled The Sheaf of Barley which Bodhi 2000b identifies as SN 35 248 and Thanissaro 1998d as SN 35 207 the Buddha describes the sense organs as struck or thrashed by agreeable and disagreeable sense objects Bodhi 2000b pp 1257 59 Thanissaro 1998d Bodhi 2000b pp 1230 1231 where this discourse is identified as SN 35 232 and Thanissaro 1997b Thanissaro 1993 For other references to the sense bases as the All see Thanissaro 2001b and Thanissaro 2001a The sense bases are the All insomuch that all we know of the world is known through the sense bases Bodhi 2000b p 1148 Bodhi 2000b p 1148 For a correspondence between impermanence and nonself see Three marks of existence Soma 1999 section entitled The Six Internal and the Six External Sense bases In terms of the Pali commentaries for instance there is overlap between the Visuddhimagga and the commentary to the Dhammasangani Atthasalini e g cf Vsm XIV 49 Buddhaghosa 1999 p 446 and Asl 310 Rhys Davids 1900 p 178 n 2 In regards to defining the sense bases in terms of excess primary elements the Visuddhimagga Vsm XIV 42 is critical Others say that the eye is sensitivity of those primary elements that have fire in excess and that the ear nose tongue and body are sensitivity of those primary elements that have respectively aperture air water and earth in excess They should be asked to quote a sutta They will certainly not find one Buddhaghosa 1999 p 444 para 42 This table is based on Upatissa et al 1995 pp 238 240 Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 25 p 446 entry for Pasada retrieved 2008 04 16 from U Chicago at 1 Buddhaghosa 1999 pp 445 6 While this Visuddhimagga chapter XIV actually pertains to the Five Aggregates this characterization is referenced in the Visuddhimagga chapter XV on the Sense Bases Buddhaghosa 1999 p 489 verse 8 Vsm XIV 37 trans Buddhaghosa 1999 p 443 square bracketed text in original The Pali from the Burmese CSCD retrieved 2008 04 16 from VRI at http www tipitaka org romn cscd e0102n mul2 xml associated with this passage is Tattha rupabhighatarahatappasadalakkhaṇaṃ daṭṭhukamatanidanakammasamuṭṭhanabhutappasadalakkhaṇaṃ va cakkhu rupesu avinchanarasaṃ cakkhuvinnaṇassa adharabhavapaccupaṭṭhanaṃ daṭṭhukamatanidanakammajabhutapadaṭṭhanaṃ Regarding bhavaṅ ga being a primarily post canonical concept see Matthews 1995 p 128 where he states for instance Bhavaṅ ga does not occur in the Sutta Pitaka but its appearance in both the Dhammasaṅ gaṇ i and the Paṭṭ hana assured that it received much post classical attention in the Theravada He further amplifies this in an endnote p 140 n 34 A lthough bhavaṅ ga does appear in the Abhidhamma Piṭ aka it is not until the post classical era that it receives much attention Citing Naṇ amoli and others Matthews 1995 p 123 defines the classical age as ended about the 4th century A D just prior to the great age of commentaries Soma 2003 p 133 This excerpt is from the subcommentary to the Majjhima Nikaya the Linatthapakasana Tika Buddhaghosa amp Naṇ amoli 1999 pp 442 43 See for instance SN 35 91 where the Buddha proclaims Whatever bhikkhus is the extent of the aggregates the elements and the sense bases a right practicing monk does not conceive that does not conceive in that does not conceive from that does not conceive This is mine Since he does not conceive anything thus he does not cling to anything in the world Not clinging he is not agitated Being unagitated he personally attains Nibbana Bodhi 2000b p 1171 See for instance Bodhi 2000b pp 1122 24 Beyond the five aggregates Nibbana is also identified as a mental object perceivable by mind mano see for instance Bodhi 2000a p 288 See for instance Bodhi 2000b pp 1124 26 and Bodhi 2005b starting at time 48 47 Also see the article on upadana for the canonical explanation of the four types of clinging sense pleasure wrong view rites and rituals and self doctrine The Pali word referenced here as element dhatu is used in multiple contexts in the Pali canon For instance Bodhi 2000b pp 527 8 identifies four different ways that dhatu is used including in terms of the eighteen elements and in terms of the four primary elements catudhatu In Buddhist literature when a sense object and sense organ make contact Pali phassa sense consciousness arises See for instance MN 148 Bodhi 2005b pp 1211 12 See also Thanissaro 1997a Sources editAung S Z amp C A F Rhys Davids trans 1910 Compendium of Philosophy Translation of the Abhidhamm attha sangaha Chipstead Pali Text Society Cited in Rhys Davids amp Stede 1921 5 Bodhi Bhikkhu ed 2000a A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma The Abhidhammattha Sangaha of Acariya Anuruddha Seattle WA BPS Pariyatti Editions ISBN 1 928706 02 9 Bodhi Bhikkhu trans 2000b The Connected Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya Part IV is The Book of the Six Sense Bases Salayatanavagga Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 331 1 Bodhi Bhikkhu 2005a In the Buddha s Words An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon Boston Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 491 1 Bodhi Bhikkhu 18 Jan 2005b MN 10 Satipatthana Sutta continued MP3 audio file In this series of talks on the Majjhima Nikaya this is Bodhi s ninth talk on the Satipatthana Sutta In this talk the discussion regarding the sense bases starts at time 45 36 Available on line at http www bodhimonastery net MP3 M0060 MN 010 mp3 permanent dead link Buddhaghosa Bhadantacariya trans from Pali by Bhikkhu Naṇamoli 1999 The Path of Purification Visuddhimagga Chapter XV is The Bases and Elements Ayatana dhatu niddesa Seattle WA BPS Pariyatti Editions ISBN 1 928706 00 2 Hamilton Sue 2001 Indian Philosophy A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 285374 5 Matthews Bruce 1995 Post Classical Developments in the Concepts of Karma and Rebirth in Theravada Buddhism in Ronald W Neufeldt ed Karma and Rebirth Post Classical Developments Delhi Sri Satguru Publications Originally published by the State University of New York 1986 ISBN 81 7030 430 X Naṇamoli Bhikkhu trans amp 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 Rhys Davids Caroline A F 1900 2003 Buddhist Manual of Psychological Ethics of the Fourth Century B C Being a Translation now made for the First Time from the Original Pali of the First Book of the Abhidhamma Piṭ aka entitled Dhamma Saṅgaṇi Compendium of States or Phenomena Whitefish MT Kessinger Publishing ISBN 0 7661 4702 9 Red Pine The Heart Sutra The Womb of the Buddhas 2004 Shoemaker amp Hoard ISBN 1 59376 009 4 Rhys Davids T W amp William Stede eds 1921 5 The Pali Text Society s Pali English Dictionary Chipstead Pali Text Society A general on line search engine for the PED is available at http dsal uchicago edu dictionaries pali Soma Thera trans 1999 The Discourse on the Arousing of Mindfulness MN 10 Available on line at Satipatthana Sutta The Discourse on the Arousing of Mindfulness Soma Thera 2003 The Way of Mindfulness English translation of the Satipaṭṭ hana Sutta Commentary Kandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 955 24 0256 5 Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1993 Adittapariyaya Sutta The Fire Sermon SN 35 28 Available on line at Adittapariyaya Sutta The Fire Sermon Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997a Kamma Sutta Action SN 35 145 Available on line at Kamma Sutta Action Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997b Kotthita Sutta To Kotthita SN 35 191 Available on line at Kotthita Sutta To Kotthita Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1997c Sunna Sutta Empty SN 35 85 Available on line at Sunna Sutta Empty Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1998a Chachakka Sutta The Six Sextets MN 148 Available on line at Chachakka Sutta The Six Sextets Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1998b Loka Sutta The World SN 12 44 Available on line at Loka Sutta The World Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1998c Maha salayatanika Sutta The Great Six Sense media Discourse MN 149 Available on line at Maha salayatanika Sutta The Great Six Sense media Discourse Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 1998d Yavakalapi Sutta The Sheaf of Barley SN 35 207 Available on line at Yavakalapi Sutta The Sheaf of Barley Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 2001a Pahanaya Sutta To Be Abandoned SN 35 24 Available on line at Pahanaya Sutta To Be Abandoned Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 2001b Sabba Sutta The All SN 35 23 Available on line at Sabba Sutta The All Thanissaro Bhikkhu trans 2004 Asivisa Sutta Vipers SN 35 197 Available on line at Asivisa Sutta Vipers Upatissa Arahant N R M Ehara trans Soma Thera trans and Kheminda Thera trans 1995 The Path of Freedom Vimuttimagga Kandy Sri Lanka Buddhist Publication Society ISBN 955 24 0054 6 Vipassana Research Institute VRI trans 1996 Mahasatipaṭṭhana Sutta The Great Discourse on Establishing Mindfulness Pali English edition Seattle WA Vipassana Research Publications of America ISBN 0 9649484 0 0 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Ayatana Salayatana Vagga The Section on the Six Sense Bases of the Samyutta Nikaya on www accesstoinsight org Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ayatana amp oldid 1145334303, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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