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Satipatthana

Satipatthana (Pali: Satipaṭṭhāna; Sanskrit: smṛtyupasthāna) is a central practice in the Buddha's teachings, meaning "the establishment of mindfulness" or "presence of mindfulness", or alternatively "foundations of mindfulness", aiding the development of a wholesome state of mind. In Theravada Buddhism, applying mindful attention to four domains, the body, feelings, the mind, and key principles or categories of the Buddha's teaching (dhammās),[1] is thought to aid the elimination of the five hindrances and the development of the seven aspects of wakefulness.

Translations of
Satipaṭṭhāna
Sanskritस्मृत्युपस्थान (smṛtyupasthāna)
Palisatipaṭṭhāna
Chinese念處
Japanese念処 (nenjo)
Khmerសតិបដ្ឋាន
(Satepadthan)
Thaiสติปัฏฐาน
Glossary of Buddhism

The Satipatthana Sutta is probably the most influential meditation text in modern Theravada Buddhism,[2] on which the teachings of the Vipassana movement are based. While these teachings are found in all Buddhist traditions, modern Theravada Buddhism and the Vipassana Movement are known especially for promoting the practice of satipaṭṭhāna as developing mindfulness to gain insight into impermanence, thereby reaching a first state of liberation. In the popular understanding, mindfulness has developed into a practice of bare awareness to calm the mind.

Etymology edit

Satipaṭṭhāna edit

Satipaṭṭhāna is a compound term that has been parsed (and thus translated) in two ways, namely Sati-paṭṭhāna and Sati-upaṭṭhāna. The separate terms can be translated as follows:

  • Sati – Pali; Sanskrit smṛti. Smṛti originally meant "to remember", "to recollect", "to bear in mind", as in the Vedic tradition of remembering the sacred text; the term sati also means "to remember". According to Sharf, in the Satipațțhāna-sutta the term sati means to remember the wholesome dhammās, whereby the true nature of phenomena can be seen,[3] such as the five faculties, the five powers, the seven awakening-factors, the Noble Eightfold Path, and the attainment of insight.[4] Usually, sati is interpreted as observing and watching various phenomena or domains of experience, being aware and attentive of them in the present moment.[5][6]
  • Upaṭṭhāna (Sanskrit: upasthāna) – "attendance, waiting on, looking after, service, care, ministering"[web 1]
  • Paṭṭhāna – "setting forth, putting forward"; in later Buddhist literature also "origin", "starting point", "cause".[web 2]

The compound terms have been translated as follows:

  • Sati-upaṭṭhāna – "presence of mindfulness" or "establishment of mindfulness" or "arousing of mindfulness", underscoring the mental qualities co-existent with or antecedent to mindfulness.
  • Sati-paṭṭhāna – "foundation of mindfulness", underscoring the object used to gain mindfulness.

While the latter parsing and translation is more traditional, the former has been given etymological and contextual authority by contemporary Buddhist scholars such as Bhikkhu Analayo and Bhikkhu Bodhi.[note 1]

Anālayo argues from an etymological standpoint that, while "foundation [paṭṭhāna] of mindfulness" is supported by the Pāli commentary, the term paṭṭhāna (foundation) was otherwise unused in the Pāli nikayas and is only first used in the Abhidhamma. In contrast, the term upaṭṭhāna (presence or establishment) can in fact be found throughout the nikayas and is readily visible in the Sanskrit equivalents of the compound Pāli phrase satipaṭṭhāna (Skt., smṛtyupasthāna or smṛti-upasthāna). Thus Anālayo states that "presence of mindfulness" (as opposed to "foundation of mindfulness") is more likely to be etymologically correct.[7]

Like Anālayo, Bodhi assesses that "establishment [upaṭṭhāna] of mindfulness" is the preferred translation. However, Bodhi's analysis is more contextual than Anālayo's. According to Bodhi, while "establishment of mindfulness" is normally supported by the textual context, there are exceptions to this rule, such as with SN 47.42[note 2] where a translation of "foundation of mindfulness" is best supported.[8] Soma uses both "foundations of mindfulness" and "arousing of mindfulness."[9]

Sati edit

The term sati (Sanskrit: smṛti), which is often translated as mindfulness, also means memory and recollection, and it is often used in that sense in the early discourses, which sometimes define sati as "the ability of calling to mind what has been done or said long ago."[10] According to Sharf, in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, the term sati means to remember the dharmas, which allows one to see the true nature of phenomena.[3]

According to Anālayo, sati does not literally mean memory, but "that which facilitates and enables memory." This is particularly applicable in the context of satipaṭṭhāna, in which sati does not refer to remembering past events, but an "awareness of the present moment", and to remember to stay in that awareness (especially if one's attention wanders away).[6] Anālayo states that it is this clear and awake state of presence that allows one to easily remember whatever is experienced.[11] He also states that sati is a detached, uninvolved and non-reactive observation which does not interfere with what it is observing (such an active function is instead associated with right effort, not mindfulness). This allows one to clearly attend to things in a more sober, objective and impartial manner.[12] Regarding upaṭṭhāna, Anālayo writes that it means "being present" and "attending" in this context. He further states: "Understood in this way, "satipaṭṭhāna" means that sati "stands by", in the sense of being present; sati is "ready at hand", in the sense of attending to the current situation. Satipaṭṭhāna can then be translated as "presence of mindfulness" or as "attending with mindfulness."[13]

Paul Williams (referring to Frauwallner) states that satipaṭṭhāna practice refers to "constantly watching sensory experience in order to prevent the arising of cravings which would power future experience into rebirths."[14][note 3]

Rupert Gethin, who argues that satipaṭṭhāna is derived from sati+upaṭṭhāna, sees satipaṭṭhāna as "the activity of observing or watching the body, feelings, mind and dhammas," as well as "a quality of mind that 'stands near'" (the literal meaning of upaṭṭhāna) or "serves' the mind," and even "presence of mind".[5] Gethin further notes that sati ('mindfulness') refers to "remembering" or "having in mind" something. It is keeping something in mind without wavering or losing it.[15]

Bhikkhu Bodhi writes that sati is "a presence of mind, attentiveness or awareness" as well as "bare attention, a detached observation of what is happening within us and around us in the present moment [...] the mind is trained to remain in the present, open, quiet, alert, contemplating the present event."[16] He also states that sati is "what brings the field of experience into focus and makes it accessible to insight."[16] According to Bodhi, to be mindful, "all judgements and interpretations have to be suspended, or if they occur, just registered and dropped."[16]

Bhante Gunaratana explains satipaṭṭhāna practice as bringing full awareness to our present moment bodily and mental activities.[17]

According to Sujato, mindfulness is "the quality of mind which recollects and focuses awareness within an appropriate frame of reference, bearing in mind the what, why, and how of the task at hand."[18]

Textual accounts edit

Early Buddhist texts edit

In the Pāli Tipitaka, the four satipaṭṭhānas are found throughout the Satipaṭṭhāna-samyutta (SN, Chapter 47) which contains 104 of the Buddha's discourses on the satipaṭṭhānas.[19][20] Other saṁyuttas in SN also deal with satipaṭṭhāna extensively, such as the Anuruddha-saṁyutta.[21] They can also be found in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta (MN 10), as well as in DN 22 which is mostly the same with the addition of the four noble truths.[20]

The Sarvāstivāda Saṃyukta Āgama (SĀ, Taisho Tripitaka #99) contains an entire section devoted to smṛtyupasthāna, which parallels the Pali Satipaṭṭhāna-samyutta.[22] According to Sujato, the Sarvāstivāda Smṛtyupasthāna Sūtra seems to emphasize samatha or calm abiding, while the Theravadin version emphasizes vipassana or insight.[23]

The Chinese Tripitaka also contains two parallels to the Satipaṭṭhāna sutta; Madhyama Āgama (MĀ) No. 98 (belonging to the Sarvāstivāda) and the Ekottara Āgama 12.1, Ekāyana Sūtra (possibly from the Mahāsaṅghika school).[24] Their presentation of the satipaṭṭhāna formula has some significant differences with the Theravada version. For example, MĀ 98 lists the four jhanas and the 'perception of light' under mindfulness of the body as well as listing six elements instead of four. However they generally share the same structure and several basic practices.[25]

Scholastic and Abhidhamma texts edit

The four satipaṭṭhāna are analyzed and systematized in the scholastic and Abhidharma works of the various Buddhist schools. In these later texts, various doctrinal developments can be seen.[26] The satipaṭṭhānas can be found in the Vibhaṅga (a book of the Theravada Abhidhamma Pitaka) in a form which differs from that in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta. According to Johannes Bronkhorst and Bhikkhu Sujato, the satipaṭṭhāna formulation in the Vibhaṅga is actually an earlier version of the formula (it includes less elements than the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta).[27] The Sarvāstivāda Abhidharma text called the Dharmaskandha also contains a passage with the smṛtyupasthāna schema. According to Sujato, this is very similar to the passage from the Vibhaṅga.[28] The Śāriputrābhidharma, an Abhidharma text of the Dharmaguptaka school, also contains a passage with the smṛtyupasthānas.

In his history of satipaṭṭhāna, Bhikkhu Sujato writes that:

In the early teachings satipaṭṭhāna was primarily associated not with vipassanā but with samatha. Since for the Suttas, samatha and vipassanā cannot be divided, a few passages show how this samatha practice evolves into vipassanā. In later literature the vipassanā element grew to predominate, almost entirely usurping the place of samatha in satipaṭṭhāna.[26]

Tse-fu Kuan agrees, noting that "the tendency to dissociate satipaṭṭhāna from samatha is apparently a rather late development."[29] According to Sujato, various canonical texts which show sectarian Theravada elements consistently depict satipaṭṭhāna as more closely aligned with vipassanā practice. However, in the canonical Abhidhamma, satipaṭṭhāna is still said to be associated with jhana as well.[30] For example, according to Kuan, the Vibhanga "says that when a monk attains the first jhāna and contemplates the body (feelings, etc.) as a body (feelings, etc.), at that time sati, anussati, etc. are called 'satipaṭṭhāna.'"[29] Meanwhile, the canonical Abhidharma texts of the Sarvāstivāda tradition consistently interpreted the smṛtyupasthānas as being a practice that was associated with samadhi and dhyana.[31] This can be seen in the Mahāvibhāṣa Śāstra, which contains a section on how to practice the smṛtyupasthānas in the context of the four dhyanas and the formless attainments.[29]

In the later texts of the Theravada tradition, like the Visuddhimagga, the focus on vipassanā is taken even further. Some of these works claim that one may reach awakening by practicing dry insight meditation (vipassanā without jhana) based on satipaṭṭhāna. Through this practice, one is said to be able to reach a "transcendental jhana" which lasts for one mind moment prior to realization. According to Sujato this is a "grave distortion of the suttas".[32]

The same kind of trend can be seen in some later, post-canonical Sarvāstivāda Abhidharma works, such as the Abhidharmasāra of Dharmaśrī. This text, unlike the canonical Sarvāstivāda Abhidharma, treats the four smṛtyupasthānas as mainly vipassanā practices. This presentation influenced later works like the Abhidharmakośa (4th century CE), which "defines satipaṭṭhāna not as ‘mindfulness’, but as ‘understanding’ (paññā)." However, this practice is only undertaken after having practiced samādhi based on ānāpānasati or contemplation of the body and so is not equivalent to the dry insight approach of the later Theravada.[33]

Mahayana texts edit

Mahayana Buddhist texts also contain teachings on the four smṛtyupasthānas. These include the Pratyutpanna Samādhi Sūtra, Asanga's Abhidharmasamuccaya, the Yogācārabhūmi, Vasubandhu's Madhyāntavibhāgabhāṣya, the Avataṁsaka Sūtra, and Santideva's Śikṣāsamuccaya.[34] Furthermore, Nagarjuna's Letter to a Friend contains a passage which affirms the early Buddhist understanding of the four smṛtyupasthānas as closely connected with samādhi: "he persevering practice (of smṛtyupasthāna) is called ‘samādhi’."[35] Another parallel passage of the satipaṭṭhāna schema can be found in the Pañcavimsatisāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā sutra.[36][37] Another passage is found in the Śrāvakabhūmi.[37]

Elements in the early texts edit

The various early sources for satipaṭṭhāna provide an array of practices for each domain of mindfulness. Some of these sources are more elaborate and contain more practices than others. The table below contains the main elements found in the various early Buddhist sources on the satipaṭṭhānas.[38]

Various scholars have attempted to use the numerous early sources to trace an "ur-text" i.e. the original satipaṭṭhāna formula or the earliest sutta. Bronkhorst (1985) argues that the earliest form of the satipaṭṭhāna sutta only contained the observation of the impure body parts under mindfulness of the body, and that mindfulness of dhammas was originally just the observation of the seven awakening factors.[39][note 4] Sujato's reconstruction similarly only retains the contemplation of the impure under mindfulness of the body, while including only the five hindrances and the seven awakening factors under mindfulness of dhammas.[40][note 5] According to Analayo, mindfulness of breathing was probably absent from the original scheme, noting that one can easily contemplate the body's decay taking an external object, that is, someone else's body, but not be externally mindfull of the breath, that is, someone else's breath. [41]

Reconstruction Theravāda Vibhanga Sarvāstivāda Dharma-skandha Śāriputr-ābhidharma Theravāda Mahā-satipatṭhāna Sutta Sarvāstivāda Smṛtyupasthāna Sūtra Ekāyana Sūtra Long Prajñā-pāramitā Sūtra
Body (kaya) Impure body parts Parts of the body Parts of the body, 6 elements 4 postures, Clear Comprehending, Ānāpānasati, Parts of the body |4 elements, Food, Space (5th element), Oozing orifices, Death contemplation Ānāpānasati, 4 postures, Clear Comprehending, Parts of the body, 4 elements, Death contemplation 4 postures, Clear Comprehending, Cutting off thought, Suppressing thought, Ānāpānasati, 4 jhāna similes, Perception of light, Basis of reviewing, Parts of the body, 6 elements, Death contemplation Parts of the body, 4 elements, Oozing orifices, Death contemplation 4 Postures, Comprehension, Ānāpānasati, 4 elements, Body parts, Death contemplation
Feelings (vedana) Happy/pain/neutral, Carnal/spiritual Happy/pain/neutral, Bodily/Mental, Carnal/spiritual, Sensual/Non–sensual Happy/pain/neutral, Carnal/spiritual Happy/pain/neutral, Carnal/spiritual Happy/pain/neutral, Bodily/Mental, Carnal/spiritual, Sensual/Non–sensual Happy/pain/neutral, Carnal/spiritual, No mixed feelings N/A (the source only mentions that one practices mindfulness of feelings without elaborating)
Mind (Cittā) Greedy (or not), Angry, Deluded, Contracted, Exalted, Surpassed, Samādhi, Released Greedy, Angry, Deluded, Contracted, Slothful, Small, Distracted, Quiet, Samādhi, Developed, Released Greedy, Angry, Deluded, Contracted, Exalted, Surpassed, Samādhi, Released Greedy, Angry, Deluded, Contracted, Exalted, Surpassed, Samādhi, Released Greedy, Angry, Deluded, Defiled, Contracted, Small, Lower, Developed, Samādhi, Released Greedy, Angry, Deluded, Affection, Attained, Confused, Contracted, Universal, Exalted, Surpassed, Samādhi, Released N/A
Dhammā Hindrances, Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances, Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances, 6 Sense-Bases, Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances, 6 Sense-Bases, Factors of Enlightenment, Four Noble Truths Hindrances, Aggregates, 6 Sense-Bases, Factors of Enlightenment, Four Noble Truths Hindrances, 6 Sense-Bases, Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances, Factors of Enlightenment, 4 jhānas N/A

Connection with other Buddhist teachings edit

Gradual training edit

The satipaṭṭhānas are one of the seven sets of "states conducive to awakening" (Pāli bodhipakkhiyādhammā) identified in many schools of Buddhism as means for progressing toward bodhi (awakening). The early sources also contain passages in which the Buddha is said to refer to satipaṭṭhāna as a path which is "ekā-yano" for purification and the realisation of nirvana. The term ekāyano has been interpreted and translated in different ways including "the only path" (Soma), "direct path," (Analayo, B. Bodhi), "path to convergence" i.e. to samādhi (Sujato) and the "comprehensive" or "all-inclusive" path where all practices converge (Kuan).[42][43][note 6][note 7] According to Sujato, in the context of the graduated path to awakening found in numerous early texts, the practice of the satipaṭṭhānas is closely connected with various elements, including sense restraint, moderate eating, wakefulness, clear comprehension, seclusion, establishing mindfulness and abandoning the hindrances.[45]

The place of satipaṭṭhāna in the gradual training is thus outlined by Sujato as follows:

One's understanding of the Dhamma impels one to renounce in search of peace; one undertakes the rules of conduct and livelihood; applies oneself to restraint and mindfulness in all activities and postures; resorts to a secluded dwelling; establishes mindfulness in satipaṭṭhāna meditation; and develops the four jhānas leading to liberating insight.[46]

Johannes Bronkhorst has argued that in the early texts there are two kinds of mindfulness, the preliminary stage of "mindfulness in daily life" (often called clear comprehension) and the practice of mindfulness meditation proper (the actual practice of satipaṭṭhāna as a formal meditation). According to Sujato, these two forms of mindfulness are so closely connected that they gradually came to be subsumed under the heading of satipaṭṭhāna.[47]

Jhana edit

In the schema of the Noble Eightfold Path, they are included in sammā-sati (right mindfulness), which culminates in the final factor of the path, sammā-samādhi (a state of luminous awareness, but also interpreted as deep meditative absorption). This is confirmed by texts like MN 44.12 which state "the four satipaṭṭhānas are the basis for samādhi."[48] The close connection between satipaṭṭhāna and samādhi can also be seen in texts which discuss the three trainings (such as MN 44.11/MA 210) which list satipaṭṭhāna under samādhi.[49] Thus, according to Bhikkhu Sujato, "all of the basic statements on the function of satipaṭṭhāna in the path confirm that its prime role is to support samādhi, that is, jhāna."[50] Rupert Gethin also affirms the close connection between satipaṭṭhāna and the jhanas, citing various discourses from the Pali Nikayas (such as SN 47.10 and SN 47.8).[51]

In the oldest texts of Buddhism, dhyāna (Sanskrit) or jhāna (Pāḷi) is the training of the mind, commonly translated as meditation, to withdraw the mind from the automatic responses to sense-impressions, and leading to a "state of perfect equanimity and awareness (upekkhā-sati-parisuddhi)."[52] Dhyāna may have been the core practice of pre-sectarian Buddhism, in combination with several related practices which together lead to perfected mindfulness and detachment, and are fully realized with the practice of dhyana.[53][54][55] In the later commentarial tradition, which has survived in present-day Theravāda, dhyāna is equated with "concentration," a state of one-pointed absorption in which there is a diminished awareness of the surroundings. Since the 1980s, scholars and practitioners have started to question this equation, arguing for a more comprehensive and integrated understanding and approach, based on the oldest descriptions of dhyāna in the suttas.[56][57][58][59]

According to Anālayo, writing from a more traditional perspective, "several discourses testify to the important role of satipaṭṭhāna as a basis for the development of absorption" (jhana). This includes suttas like the Dantabhūmi Sutta and the Cūḷavedalla Sutta (which speaks of satipaṭṭhāna as the “cause” of samādhi, samādhinimitta).[60] Anālayo also writes that satipaṭṭhāna is not purely a concentration (samādhi) exercise, noting that sati "represents an enhancement of the recollective function," in which the breadth of attention is expanded. During absorption, "sati becomes mainly presence of the mind," but in a more focused way.[61][note 8]

Anālayo cites SN 47.10 in which the Buddha states that if one is distracted and sluggish while practicing satipaṭṭhāna, one should switch one's meditation towards a calm (samatha) meditation, in order to cultivate joy and serenity. Once the mind has been calmed, one can then return to satipaṭṭhāna. Anālayo argues that the distinction that is made in this sutta between “directed” and “undirected” forms of meditation suggest that satipaṭṭhāna is not the same as samatha meditation. However, the sutta also shows that they are closely interrelated and mutually supporting.[62]

Thanissaro Bhikkhu, citing various early sources (SN 47:40, MN 118, AN 4:94, AN 4:170, Dhp 372 etc.), similarly states that "developing the frames of reference [satipaṭṭhāna] is a precondition for jhana" and that "the proper development of the frames of reference necessarily incorporates, in and of itself, the practice of jhana."[63]

As four domains of mindfulness edit

The four domains edit

In the early Buddhist texts, mindfulness is explained as being established in four main ways:

  1. mindfulness of the body (Pāli: kāyagatā-sati; Skt. kāya-smṛti),
  2. mindfulness of feelings (Pāli vedanā-sati; Skt. vedanā-smṛti),
  3. mindfulness of the mind (Pāli citta-sati; Skt. citta-smṛti)
  4. mindfulness of principles or phenomena (Pāli dhammā-sati; Skt. dharma-smṛti).[1]

Rupert Gethin translates (from the Pali) the basic exposition of these four practices (which he calls the "basic formula") that is shared by numerous early Buddhist sources as follows:

Here, bhikkhus, a bhikkhu [i] with regard to the body dwells watching body; he is ardent, he comprehends clearly, is possessed of mindfulness and overcomes both desire for and discontent with the world. [ii] With regard to feelings he dwells watching feeling [vedana] ... [iii] With regard to the mind he dwells watching mind [citta] ... [iv] With regard to dhammas he dwells watching dhamma; he is ardent, he comprehends clearly, is possessed of mindfulness and overcomes both desire for and discontent with the world.[64]

According to Grzegorz Polak, the four upassanā have been misunderstood by the developing Buddhist tradition, including Theravada, to refer to four different foundations. According to Polak, the four upassanā do not refer to four different foundations of which one should be aware, but are an alternate description of the jhanas, describing how the samskharas are tranquilized:[65]

  • the six sense-bases which one needs to be aware of (kāyānupassanā);
  • contemplation on vedanās, which arise with the contact between the senses and their objects (vedanānupassanā);
  • the altered states of mind to which this practice leads (cittānupassanā);
  • the development from the five hindrances to the seven factors of enlightenment (dhammānupassanā).

Mindfulness of the body edit

The various early sources show considerable variation in the practices included under mindfulness of the body. The most widely shared set of meditations are the contemplation of the body's anatomical parts, the contemplation of the elements, and the contemplation of a corpse in decay.[66] Anālayo notes that the parallel versions of the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta "agree not only in listing these three exercises, but also in the sequence in which they are presented."[67] According to Sujato's comparative study of satipaṭṭhāna, the original mindfulness of the body practice focused on contemplating various parts of the body, while the other practices later came to be added under mindfulness of the body.[68]

Body parts edit

The practice of mindfulness of anatomical parts is described in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta as follows: "one examines this same body up from the soles of the feet and down from the top of the hair, enclosed by skin and full of many kinds of impurity." Following this instruction is a list of various body parts, including hair, skin, teeth, numerous organs as well as different kinds of bodily liquids.[69] According to Anālayo, this meditation, which is often called the meditation on "asubha" (the unattractive), is supposed to deconstruct notions of bodily beauty and to allow us to see that bodies are "not worth being attached to" (as the Ekottarika-āgama version states).[70] Ultimately, according to Anālayo, "the principal aim of contemplating the anatomical constitution of the body is the removal of sensual desire."[71] Sujato similarly states that the basic purpose of these three meditations "is to rise above sensuality," and to deprive "the addiction to sensual gratification" of its fuel.[72]

According to U Sīlānanda, first one should memorize the 32 parts of the body by reciting them, then one learns the color, shape and location of each part. After achieving mastery in this, one is ready to contemplate the unattractiveness of each part in meditation.[73] Bhikkhu Bodhi notes that this practice is done "using visualization as an aid."[74] This practice is described with a common simile in the early discourses: one is mindful of each body part in the same way one is mindful when looking through various kinds of beans (or grains) in a bag (i.e. in a detached way). This indicates that the goal is not to become disgusted with the body but to see it in a detached manner.[70] Bhante Gunaratana similarly notes that this practice "opens the mind to accepting our body as it is right now, without our usual emotional reactions. It helps us overcome pride and self-hatred and regard our body with the balanced mind of equanimity."[75] Similarly, Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that this practice, far from creating a negative self-image, allows us to develop a healthy understanding of the reality that all bodies are equal (and thus none is superior or inferior in terms of beauty, since such a concept is ultimate relative to one's frame of reference).[76]

Elements edit

The practice of mindfulness of the elements or properties mainly focuses on four physical attributes (mahābhūta): earth (solids), water (liquids), air (gases moving in and outside the body, as well as breathing) and fire (warmth/temperature). The early texts compare this to how a butcher views and cuts up a slaughtered cow into various parts. According to Anālayo this second exercise focuses on diminishing the sense of identification with the body and thus, on seeing anatta (not-self) and undoing the sense of ownership to the body.[77] Buddhaghosa states that through this practice a monk "immerses himself in voidness and eliminates the perception of living beings."[78] The practice of contemplating these four properties is also described in more detail in the Mahāhaṭṭthipadopama Sutta, the Rāhulovāda Sutta, and the Dhātuvibhaṅga Sutta.[78]

Corpse edit

 
Illustration of mindfulness of death using corpses in a charnel ground, a part of the first satipatthana. From an early-20th-century manuscript found in Chaiya District, Surat Thani Province, Thailand.[79]

The practice of mindfulness of death is explained as contemplating a corpse various progressive stages of decay (from a fresh corpse to bone dust).[80] According to Anālayo, the sources indicate that the practice could have been done in a charnel ground with real corpses but also indicate that one may visualize this as well.[81] Bodhi writes that this practice can be done in the imagination, through using pictures or by viewing an actual formerly living human corpse.[82]

The various early sources all indicate that one should contemplate how one's own body is of the same nature as the corpse. The Ekottarika-āgama version states that one is to contemplate how "my body will not escape from this calamity", "I will not escape from this condition. My body will also be destroyed," and "this body is impermanent, of a nature to fall apart."[81] This practice allows one to gain insight into our own impermanence, and therefore also leads to letting go. In numerous early sources, contemplating the inevitability of death is also said to lead to increased motivation to practice the path.[83]

Overall direction edit

Anālayo sums up the overall direction of mindfulness of the body as "detachment from the body through understanding its true nature."[84] The early discourses compare mindfulness of the body to a strong pillar which can be used to tie up numerous wild animals (which are compared to the six senses). This simile shows that mindfulness of the body was seen as a powerful centering practice and as a strong anchor for maintaining the guarding of the senses.[85] The Kāyagatāsati-sutta and its Madhyama-āgama parallel also list various others benefits from practicing mindfulness of the body, including how it helps to give rise to mental balance and detachment and allows one to endure many physical discomforts.[86]

Mindfulness of feelings edit

This satipaṭṭhāna focuses on the contemplation of "feelings" (vedanā, affect, valence or hedonic tones), which mainly refers to how one perceives feelings as pleasant, unpleasant or neutral.[87] According to Anālayo, mindfulness of feelings "requires recognizing the affective tone of present-moment experience, before the arisen feeling leads to mental reactions and elaborations." It also requires that "one does not get carried away by the individual content of felt experience and instead directs awareness to the general character of experience."[88] The early discourses contain similes which compare feelings to various types of "fierce winds that can suddenly arise in the sky" as well as to "various types of people who stay in a guest house." These similes illustrate the need to remain calm and non-reactive in respect to feelings.[89]

In most early sources, feelings are also distinguished between those which are sensual or worldly (lit. "carnal") and those that are not sensual or spiritual in nature.[90] This introduces an ethical distinction between feelings that can lead to the arising of defilements and those that lead in the opposite direction."[91] Thus, while pleasant feelings associated with sense pleasures lead to unwholesome tendencies, pleasant feelings associated with mental concentration lead towards wholesome states. Meanwhile, a worldly painful feeling might lead to the arising of unwholesome mental states, but it need not do so if one is mindfully aware of it without reacting. Furthermore, certain painful feelings, like those caused by the sadness of knowing one has not yet reached liberation, are considered spiritual unpleasant feelings and can motivate one to practice more. As such, they are commendable.[92]

The Madhyama-āgama version of the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta also adds the additional categories of bodily and mental feelings, which refers to feelings that arise either from physical contact or from the mind (a distinction which does appear in other early discourses like the Salla-sutta SN 36.6 and its parallels).[93] Furthermore, according to Sujato, the Ānāpānasati Sutta section on vedanā also adds "rapture" and "mental activities" (cittasankhāra, feeling and perception), which "seems to broaden the scope of feelings here as far as ‘emotions’, ‘moods’."[87] Gunaratana similarly states that vedanā "includes both physical sensations and mental emotions."[94]

Furthermore, Anālayo argues that "the central role that feelings have in this respect is particularly evident in the context of the dependent arising (paṭiccasamuppāda) of dukkha, where feeling forms the crucial link that can trigger the arising of craving."[91] The fact that dependent origination can be contemplated through mindfulness of feelings is supported by SĀ 290.[95] The early discourses also state that practicing mindfulness of feeling can be a way of dealing with physical pain and disease.[96]

Bhikkhu Bodhi notes that feelings arise due to sense contact (phassa) and thus another way of analyzing feeling is into six types depending on the six sense bases: eye, nose, tongue, ear, body, and mind.[97]

Mindfulness of the mind edit

In all early sources, the contemplation of the mind or cognition (citta) begins with noticing the presence or absence of the three unwholesome roots (lust, anger, and delusion).[98] This practice is similar to that found in other early discourses in which the Buddha looks into his mind by applying a basic distinction between wholesome and unwholesome thoughts (and reflecting how unwholesome thoughts are harmful, which allows him to abandon them). This can be seen in the Dvedhāvitakka-sutta and its parallels such as MĀ 102.[99] Other suttas like the Vitakkasaṇṭhāna-sutta and its parallels, provide several ways of dealing with unwholesome thoughts, such as replacing an unwholesome thought with a wholesome one or contemplating the drawbacks of unwholesome thoughts.[100]

Reflecting on the absence of unwholesome states is also important, as it allows one to rejoice in this positive state and become inspired by it. It also encourages one to protect this mental state, as can be seen in the simile of the bronze dish found in the Anaṅgaṇa-sutta (MN 5) and its parallels such as EĀ 25.6.[101] In this simile, a person who buys a bronze dish but takes no care to clean it from time to time is compared to someone who is unaware of having a mind free of unwholesome states. In this case, the dish (mind) will eventually get dirty. In the other hand, someone who has reached some degree of purity and is mindful of this is more likely to protect and maintain this mental state.[101]

Anālayo writes that this way of contemplating the mind is a middle path that avoids two extremes:

one extreme is seeing only what is bad within oneself and consequently getting frustrated, succumbing to feelings of inadequacy. As a result of this, inspiration can get lost and one no longer engages fully in the practice. The other extreme is pretending to oneself (and in front of others) that one is better than one really is, at the cost of ignoring one's own dark sides, those areas of the mind that are in need of purification. Such ignoring allows those dark sides to gather strength until they are able to overwhelm the mind completely. Steering a balanced middle path between these two extremes becomes possible through the simple but effective element of honest recognition, introduced through mindfulness of the present condition of one's mind, which sees both one's shortcomings and one's virtues equally well.[102]

This mindfulness is also extended into being aware of the level of mindfulness (or distraction) and concentration present in the mind (from contraction or a lesser mind to higher states such as samadhi and liberation). Anālayo states that the basic task here is "recognizing the degree to which one's practice has developed and realizing if more can be done."[90][98]

Therefore, the terms such as a "small", "lower", "contracted" or "distracted" mind indicate a mind which lacks development in the qualities of mindfulness and samadhi. Other terms such as the "developed," "exalted" and "liberated" mind are referring to a mind that has achieved some level of samadhi and mindfulness (and in some cases, has been at least temporarily liberated from the hindrances through meditation).[103] Sujato states that the terms associated with higher states of mind refer to the jhanas (he cites MN 54.22–24, MN 53.20–22 as support).[104] Anālayo further notes that this element of contemplation of the mind shows that in early Buddhism "enquiring if one has reached some degree of attainment is considered an integral part of knowing the nature of one's own mental condition."[105]

In the early discourses (SĀ 1246 and AN 3.100), the gradual process of removing unwholesome thoughts and cultivating wholesome mental states is compared to the gradual refining of gold ore which is initially covered over with rock, sand and fine dust (which represent the various gross and subtle aspects of mental defilement).[106]

Mindfulness of dhammas edit

Five hindrances and seven aspects of wakefulness edit

This last set of exercises show considerable variation in the various early Buddhist sources. Only two sets of dhammas ("principles" or "mental categories") are shared by all early sources: the five hindrances and the seven factors of awakening, and Anālayo considers these two as integral elements of the fourth satipaṭṭhāna.[107] Sujato's comparative study concludes that these two groups of dhammas constituted the original subjects of meditation in this satipaṭṭhāna, while the other elements are later additions.[108] Thanissaro Bhikkhu states that it is not possible to decide the question of what the original version may have been, but he concludes that there is a good case for stating that "the early tradition regarded the abandoning of the hindrances and the development of the factors for Awakening as encompassing all the factors that might be included under this heading."[109]

Dhamma edit

"Dhammā" is often translated as "mental objects" but Anālayo argues that this translation is problematic for multiple reasons.[110] The three prior satipatthāna (body, sensations, mind) can become mental objects in themselves, and those objects, such as the hindrances, aggregates and sense bases, identified under the term dhamma are far from an exhaustive list of all possible mental objects. Anālayo translates dhammā as "mental factors and categories," "classificatory schemes," and "frameworks or points of reference to be applied during contemplation".[111] Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that the fourth satipaṭṭhāna "denotes the qualities of mind that are developed and abandoned as one masters the meditation."[112]

Sujato argues that dhammā here refers to a "distinctive and more profound aspect of meditation: the understanding of the causal principles underlying the development of samādhi."[113] According to Anālayo, this satipaṭṭhāna focuses on phenomena which lead to awakening when cultivated and therefore, it is soteriologically oriented.[114][115] Anālayo states that the "main thrust" of the fourth satipaṭṭhāna is the path to awakening and therefore, "contemplation of dharmas is somewhat like a shorthand description of the path." He further adds that "the task of mindfulness in the context of contemplation of dharmas would thus be to supervise the mind on the path to awakening, ensuring that the hindrances are overcome and the awakening factors are well established."[116]

Five hindrances edit

According to U Sīlānanda, a proponent of the New Burmese method, the five hindrances are those mental states that hinder or block the mind's progress to deeper concentration and liberation.[117][118] In the early discourses (see MN 43.20, MN 68.6), the attainment of jhana is associated with the abandonment of the five hindrances, which are said to "choke the mind, robbing understanding of its strength".[119] Through the simile of refining gold, the early discourses state that as long as the hindrances have not been removed "the mind is not soft, nor workable, nor radiant, but is brittle" (AN 5.13).[120]

The Satipaṭṭhāna sutta indicates that one is to be mindful of the presence or absence of each of the five hindrances (sense desire, ill will, sloth-and-torpor, restlessness-and-worry and doubt). The sutta and the MA parallel also state that one should know how a hindrance arises, how it can be removed and how it can be prevented from arising.[121] The fact that mindfulness of the hindrances is also connected to remembering the instructions on how to remove and prevent the hindrances (not just watch it mindfully) is supported by other early discourses like the Gopakamoggallāna-sutta and its parallels (like MĀ 145).[122] Anālayo thus sees this practice as twofold: the receptive mode of just being aware of the hindrances and the more active mode of understanding how the hindrance arises and how it can be abandoned through a skillful deployment of right effort.[123]

According to U Sīlānanda, various hindrances can arise from inappropriate attention/reflection (ayoniso manasikāra) and that proper or wise attention (yoniso manasikāra) can prevent their arising. Another way to prevent their arising is simply to be mindful of the hindrances.[124] Various early discourses like SĀ 715 provide specific instructions on how to weaken and counter the hindrances. Desire is said to be countered with the contemplation of unattractiveness, ill will is countered with loving-kindness, sloth-torpor is countered with energetic thoughts or perceiving light (or being in a well lit place), restlessness-worry is countered with thoughts that bring calmness and doubt can be countered by contemplating dependent origination or contemplating what is wholesome and what is unwholesome.[125] Suttas like the Saṅgārava-sutta mention that one benefit of removing the hindrances is an increased ability to learn and to remember what one has learned. The suttas also state that being mindful of the absence of the hindrances leads to joy, an important element of meditation.[126]

Seven factors of awakening edit

The other main contemplation shared by all versions of the satipaṭṭhāna formula is mindfulness of the seven factors of awakening (satta bojjhaṅgā). The contemplation is similar to that of the hindrances. First, one is aware of the presence or absence of each of these factors. Then one also contemplates how these factors arise, how they can be maintained and how they can be further developed, that is to say, one develops an "awareness to the conditions that are related to their presence or absence."[127]

Early sources such as SĀ 729 and SN 46.27 state that one cultivates these awakening factors "supported by seclusion, supported by dispassion, and supported by cessation, culminating in letting go." This indicates that a successful cultivation of these factors leads to awakening if they each one is cultivated while being supported by three elements: seclusion from unwholesome actions, dispassion as the fading away of craving, and the gradual cessation of dukkha.[128]

The awakening factors are positive qualities associated with wisdom that stand in opposition to the hindrances (associated with darkness and lack of wisdom, see SN 46.40 and SĀ 706).[129] The Aggi-sutta and its parallel at SĀ 714 indicate that particular awakening factors (investigation of dhammas, energy, joy) can be used as antidotes to sluggishness while other factors (tranquillity, concentration, equanimity) are antidotes for agitation. This does not work the other way around, that is to say, awakening factors that are useful against agitation are not useful to cultivate when one is sluggish and vice versa.[130] The awakening factor of mindfulness meanwhile is useful in all circumstances.[131] Indeed, according to Kaṭukurunde Ñāṇananda, "mindfulness stands in the middle and orders the other faculties, here too it comes to the forefront and marshals those factors that are behind it."[132]

Furthermore, the hindrance of doubt is also countered by the factor of investigation.[131] When all hindrances are absent, one is then able to cultivate all seven factors at once.[130] SĀ 718 and SN 46.4 indicate that mastering the awakening factors requires learning how to make use of each one of them in different circumstances. These suttas illustrate this with the simile of a king that dresses in various clothes throughout the day according to his needs.[133]

Various discourses including SĀ 715 and SN 46.51 discuss how the seven awakening factors are to be nourished and developed.[134] For example, mindfulness is nourished by the four satipaṭṭhānas, investigation is nourished by distinguish wholesome things from unwholesome things, and energy is nourished through the four right efforts.[134]

Furthermore, according to the Anāpānasati-sutta and its Saṃyukta-āgama parallel, the sequence in which the factors are listed seems to correspond to how they unfold through practice. According to Analayo, "this sequence reflects an underlying progression in which the factor mentioned earlier supports the arising of the factor that comes next."[135] However, this progression is not a strict one. Kaṭukurunde Ñāṇananda states that "it does not mean that one has to develop the first category first and then after a time the next category and so on. But still there is a certain order in the development – an ascending order, one may say."[136]

Practice edit

Process view edit

According to Sujato, Satipaṭṭhāna is "a prescription of how to practice," which "introduces certain specific objects of meditation."[137] Likewise, according to Thanissaro Bhikkhu, the "four frames of reference" (satipaṭṭhāna) are "a set of teachings that show where a meditator should focus attention and how."[63]

Anālayo and Sujato both note that these four meditation subjects provide a progressive refinement of contemplation from coarse elements (the body) to increasingly subtler and more refined subjects.[138][139] Likewise, Gethin writes that there is "a movement from clear awareness of the more immediately accessible realms of experience to an awareness of what the Nikayas see as subtler and deeper realms."[140]

However, Anālayo also argues that this pattern "does not prescribe the only possible way of practising satipaṭṭhāna," since this would "severely limit the range of one's practice." This is because, "a central characteristic of satipaṭṭhāna is awareness of phenomena as they are, and as they occur. Although such awareness will naturally proceed from the gross to the subtle, in actual practice it will quite probably vary from the sequence depicted in the discourse." Anālayo sees the four satipaṭṭhānas as flexible and mutually supportive practices. Therefore, according to Anālayo "the sequence in which they are practised may be altered in order to meet the needs of each individual meditator."[141] All four may even be combined into a single practice, as documented by the Ānāpānasati Sutta.[142]

Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that an element of mindfulness practice includes learning how to maximize skillful qualities and how to minimize unskillful qualities, which might require one to "manipulate and experiment" with different mental qualities and meditation methods. Therefore, Thanissaro argues that mindfulness meditation can also be an active process of learning various skillful ways of directing the mind by cultivating certain perceptions and ideas (such as asubha).[143] Thanissaro compares this process to how "one learns about eggs by trying to cook with them, gathering experience from one's successes and failures in attempting increasingly difficult dishes."[144] Eventually, as one gains mastery of the mind, one is able to transcend even the need for skillful manipulation of mental qualities.[145]

Practice instructions edit

The Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta states that one first goes to a secluded place, like a forest or an empty hut. U Sīlānanda states that a place away from human habitation and the noises of towns and cities is the most suitable place for satipaṭṭhāna meditation.[146]

The definition of how one practices satipaṭṭhāna in the early texts uses the term anupassanā which refers to "sustained observation" of each subject of meditation.[147] Anālayo defines this term which is derived from the verb “to see” (passati) as meaning “to repeatedly look at”, that is, “to contemplate” or “to closely observe.”[148] Furthermore, he interprets this as referring to "a particular way of meditation, an examination of the observed object from a particular viewpoint" which "emphasize how the object is to be perceived" (such as seeing the body as unattractive or impermanent for example).[148] Thanissaro translates anupassanā as "remaining focused" and “keeping track,” which "denotes the element of concentration in the practice, as one tries to stay with one particular theme in the midst of the welter of experience."[149]

All versions of the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta also indicate that each satipaṭṭhāna is to be contemplated first "internally" (ajjhatta), then "externally" (bahiddhā), and finally both internally and externally.[150][151] This is generally understood as observing oneself and observing other persons, an interpretation which is supported by Abhidharma works (including the Vibhaṅga and the Dharmaskandha) as well as by several suttas (MN 104, DĀ 4, DĀ 18 and DN 18).[152][153] Others interpret this passage as referring to mental (internal) phenomena and to phenomena associated with the senses (external), which according to Anālayo, does have some support from the suttas.[154]

According to Gethin, the passage refers to observing ourselves and other persons: "the bhikkhu, then, first watches his own body, feelings, mind and dhammas, next those of others, and finally his own and those of others together."[155] One example which indicates how this is to be understood is the practice of death meditation, which can be done in a charnel ground by looking at dead bodies (external contemplation) and also by contemplating the death of one's own body (internal).[156] According to Gethin, this practice leads to "the blurring of distinctions between self and other" which arises as one begins to understand the world as being made up of impermanent and insubstantial processes.[157] Anālayo concurs, stating that this contemplation can lead to the abandoning of the boundary between "I" and "other", "leading to a comprehensive vision of phenomena as such, independent of any sense of ownership."[158]

Regarding the question of how one is supposed to observe the feelings and mental states of other people, Anālayo argues that one can cultivate this by "carefully observing their outer manifestations" since feelings and mental states do influence the facial expression, tone of voice, and physical posture. He cites suttas such as DN 28 as evidence that the early discourses hold that one may infer the mental state of others by watching their external manifestations.[159] Anālayo also notes that balancing internal and external contemplation is important because it can prevent a one sided awareness focused on one domain (self-centredness or lack of introspection respectively). Balancing both fields of mindfulness can thus "achieve a skilful balance between introversion and extroversion."[160]

Thanissaro Bhikkhu outlines how all the different elements of mindfulness meditation come together as follows:

“Mindful” (satima) literally means being able to remember or recollect. Here it means keeping one's task in mind. The task here is a dual one—remaining focused on one's frame of reference [satipaṭṭhāna], and putting aside the distractions of greed and distress that would come from shifting one's frame of reference back to the world. In other words, one tries to stay with the phenomenology of immediate experience, without slipping back into the narratives and world views that make up one's sense of the world. In essence, this is a concentration practice, with the three qualities of ardency, alertness, and mindfulness devoted to attaining concentration. Mindfulness keeps the theme of the meditation in mind, alertness observes the theme as it is present to awareness, and also is aware of when the mind has slipped from its theme. Mindfulness then remembers where the mind should be focused, and ardency tries to return the mind to its proper theme—and to keep it there—as quickly and skillfully as possible. In this way, these three qualities help to seclude the mind from sensual preoccupations and unskillful mental qualities, thus bringing it to the first jhana.[149]

Auxiliary qualities edit

In the early texts, the satipaṭṭhānas are said to be practiced with specific mental qualities. This is listed in the Pali version in what Sujato calls the "auxiliary formula" which states that one contemplates (anupassī) each satipaṭṭhāna with the following four qualities: ardency or diligence (ātāpī), clear comprehension (sampajāna), mindfulness (sati), and "free from desires and discontent (vineyya abhijjhādomanassa)" (with some variation across the different sources).[161][162] In many of the alternative forms of the auxiliary formula, samādhi is mentioned as the result of the practice (e.g. in DN 18.26/DA 4 and in SN 47.8/SA 616).[163]

The term ātāpī is associated with the concept of tapas (ascetic power) and it is said to be related to heroic strength, effort or energy (viriya) in the Nettipakarana.[162] It is thus associated with skillful effort and wholesome desire or resolve. It is best understood as a "balanced but sustained application of energy" according to Anālayo.[164] Thanissaro Bhikkhu defines it as "the factor of effort or exertion...which contains an element of discernment in its ability to distinguish skillful from unskillful mental qualities."[149] U Sīlānanda glosses ātāpī as "you must be energetic, put forth effort to be mindful."[165]

The second quality, sampajāna, means to know something clearly or thoroughly so that one has "the ability to fully grasp or comprehend what is taking place".[166] This can refer to basic forms of knowing (such being aware of one's posture) as well as more discriminative forms of understanding (such as comprehending the five hindrances).[167] According to Thanissaro, this "means being clearly aware of what is happening in the present."[149]

According to Gethin, "having removed covetousness and aversion for the world" is associated with the abandoning of the five hindrances as well as with the attainment of the jhanas as can be seen in suttas like MN 125 which directly associate these elements of the path.[168] According to U Sīlānanda, this passage refers to a temporary removal of the five hindrances as a preliminary for meditation."[165] The Ekottarika-āgama version states that one practices satipaṭṭhāna while "removing evil thoughts and being free from worry and sorrow, one experiences joy in oneself."[169] Anālayo also associates this element with the development of samādhi. This is supported by the Nettippakarana (Nett 82) as well as by various suttas which contain a variation of the auxiliary formula which explicitly mentions samadhi such as SN 47.4).[170]

Anālayo also notes that the abandonment of covetousness and aversion is associated with the practice of restraint of the senses in the early discourses (such as in MN 39). This is a stage of practice prior to formal meditation, in which "the meditator guards the sense doors in order to prevent sense impressions from leading to desires and discontent."[171] The goal in the initial stages of practice is to develop a sense of "inner equipoise within which desires and discontent are held at bay." Anālayo further notes that "although sense-restraint precedes proper meditation practice in the gradual path scheme, this does not imply that sense-restraint is completed at an exact point in time, only after which one moves on to formal practice. In actual practice the two overlap to a considerable degree."[172] Likewise, Sujato associates this element with "the preliminary subduing" of the five hindrances through sense restraint to prepare the mind for mindfulness meditation.[173]

Contemplation of impermanence edit

The Theravada Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, as well as the Ekottarika-āgama version preserved in Chinese contain instructions to contemplate the arising and disappearance of the meditation subject (i.e. impermanence, anicca). The Madhyama-āgama version does not contain this instruction, but does mention that on practicing mindfulness "one is endowed with knowledge, vision, understanding, and penetration."[153] Sujato thinks that this instruction to practice contemplation of impermanence reflects a later sectarian development that began to associate satipaṭṭhāna more closely with vipassanā.[174] Analayo on the other hand thinks that contemplation of impermanence (aniccasaññā) "should be considered an integral aspect of satipaṭṭhāna practice." He cites the Śāriputrābhidharma and the Ānāpānasati-sutta (and its parallels) as other sources which indicate that contemplation of impermanence is a part of satipaṭṭhāna practice.[153]

Furthermore, Anālayo states that awareness of impermanence (which is an aspect of right view) also leads to insight into anatta and dukkha.[175] Gethin notes that the practice of observing the arising and falling of phenomena is "particularly associated with the gaining of the insight that leads directly to the destruction of the asavas, directly to awakening." He also notes how various other suttas state that the practice of the four satipaṭṭhānas are directly linked with the destruction of the asavas.[176]

Influence edit

Modern Theravāda edit

The four satipaṭṭhānas are regarded as fundamental in modern Theravāda Buddhism and the Vipassana or Insight Meditation Movement. In the Pali Canon, mindfulness meditation and satipaṭṭhāna are seen as ways to develop the mental factors of samatha ("calm", "serenity") and vipassana ("insight").[177]

According to Bhikkhu Sujato, there is a particularly popular interpretation of mindfulness meditation in modern Theravāda which he calls the vipassanāvāda (the vipassanā-doctrine). According to Sujato, this widespread modernist view can be summarized as follows:

The Buddha taught two systems of meditation, samatha and vipassanā. Samatha was taught before the Buddha (so is not really Buddhist), it is dangerous (because one can easily get attached to the bliss), and it is unnecessary (because vipassanā alone can develop the access samādhi necessary to suppress the hindrances). Vipassanā is the true key to liberation taught by the Buddha. This method was pre-eminently taught in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta, the most important discourse taught by the Buddha on meditation and on practice in everyday life. The essence of this practice is the moment-to-moment awareness of the rise and fall of all mind-body phenomena. Thus satipaṭṭhāna and vipassanā are virtually synonyms.[2]

Tse-fu Kuan also writes that it is a "widely held opinion in Theravada Buddhism that serenity meditation is not essential for the realization of Nirvana".[178] Kuan cites Theravada authors such as Ven. Rahula, Ven. Silananda and Nyanaponika as figures who support some version of this view.[179] In contrast to this, Kuan argues that "there is probably no explicit indication in the Canon that one can achieve liberation by the practice of sati alone without the attainment of the jhānas."[179]

According to Kuan, this "bare insight" view arose due to "the tendency in the tradition to redefine “liberation by wisdom” (paññāvimutti) as being liberated by insight alone without high meditative attainments, although “liberation by wisdom” originally did not mean so." That liberation by wisdom did not originally mean liberation without jhana has also been argued by Cousins and Gombrich.[180]

Anālayo writes that certain modern Theravada meditation teachers "emphasize the “dry insight” approach, dispensing with the formal development of mental calm."[181] He writes that some teachers of this dry insight approach describe the practice of mindfulness as “attacking” its object or "plunging into it". He cites U Pandita who writes that satipaṭṭhāna practice means to “attack the object without hesitation ... with violence, speed or great force ... with excessive haste or hurry.”[182] Analayo thinks this mistaken understanding of mindfulness "arose because of a misreading or misinterpretation of a particular term". This is related to the interpretation of the Abhidhamma term apilāpeti (plunging) in the Theravada commentaries. Analayo agrees with Gethin, who argues instead for a reading of apilapati (or abhilapati) which means "reminding".[182]

Furthermore, even though the early discourses support the idea that one can attain stream entry without having developed the jhanas (mainly by listening to a discourse by the Buddha), Anālayo argues that "for satipaṭṭhāna to unfold its full potential of leading to non-returning or full awakening [arahantship], the development of absorption is required."[183]

Sujato notes that not all modern Theravāda meditation traditions accept this dichotomy of samatha and vipassanā. According to Sujato, the teachers of the Thai forest tradition instead emphasize how samatha and vipassanā are complementary factors which must be practiced together. This is closer to how these two aspects of meditation are understood in the early Buddhist texts.[184]

Similarly, Thanissaro Bhikkhu notes that:

Although satipaṭṭhāna practice is often said to be separate from the practice of jhāna, a number of suttas—such as MN 125 and AN 8:63—equate the successful completion of this first stage [of satipaṭṭhāna practice] with the attainment of the first level of jhāna. This point is confirmed by the many suttas—MN 118 among them—describing how the practice of satipaṭṭhāna brings to completion the factors for awakening, which coincide with the factors of jhāna.[185]

According to Buddhadasa Bhikkhu, the aim of mindfulness is to stop the arising of disturbing thoughts and emotions, which arise from sense-contact.[186]

According to the theory of Theravada Buddhism, in the period of 5000 years after the parinirvana of Buddha, we can still attain Sotāpanna or even Arhat through practicing Satipatthana, and Satipatthana is the only way out. [187]

In Indo-Tibetan Buddhism edit

The four establishments of mindfulness also known as "the four close placements of mindfulness" (dran-pa nyer-bzhag) are also taught in Indo Tibetan Buddhism as they are part of the 37 factors leading to a purified state (byang-chub yan-lag so-bdun).[188] They are discussed in Tibetan commentaries on Śāntideva's Bodhicaryāvatāra, such as Pawo Tsugla Trengwa Rinpoche's 16th century commentary and Kunzang Pelden's (1862–1943) commentary The Nectar of Manjushri's Speech.[189]

The Tibetan canon also contains a True Dharma Application of Mindfulness Sutra (Tohoku Catalogue # 287, dam chos dran pa nyer bzhag, saddharmasmṛtyupasthānasutra).[190] This sutra is cited by various Tibetan Buddhist figures, such as Atisha (in his Open Basket of Jewels) and the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche (1759–1792).[191][192] It is also cited as a sutra of the first turning by Khedrup Je (1385–1438 CE).[193]

This sutra is a large text that dates from between the second and fourth centuries CE. It survives in Tibetan, Chinese and Sanskrit manuscripts.[194] It is a complex and heterogeneous Mulasarvastivada text with various topics, such as long descriptions of the various realms in Buddhist cosmology, discussions of karma theory, meditation and ethics.[195] The earliest layer of the text, which can be found in chapter two, contains the core meditation teachings of the text, which include an extensive exposition of six elements (dhatus) meditation, meditations on feeling (vedana), meditations on the skandhas and ayatanas, meditation on the mind and impermanence, and other meditation topics organized into a structure of ten levels (bhumi).[196]

According to Jigme Lingpa's (1730–1798) Treasury of Precious Qualities, the four applications of mindfulness are emphasized during the path of accumulation and in Mahayana are practiced with a focus on emptiness:

"If one practices according to the Hinayana, one meditates on the impurity of the body, on the feelings of sufferings, on the impermanence of consciousness and on the fact that mental objects are "ownerless" (there is no self to which they belong). If one practices according to the Mahayana, during the meditation session one meditates on the same things as being spacelike, beyond all conceptual constructs. In the post-meditation period one considers them as illusory and dreamlike."[197]

The general presentation of this practice in the Indo-Tibetan Buddhist tradition focuses on cultivating śamatha first, and then practicing vipaśyanā.[188] Examples of contemporary figures in Indo-Tibetan Buddhism that have taught this practice include Chogyam Trungpa who often taught these practices in the USA and Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche, a contemporary Tibetan lama.[198][199] They have also been taught by the 14th Dalai Lama and students of his like Alexander Berzin and Thubten Chodron.[188]

The four applications of mindfulness are also discussed by Nyingma scholars like as Rong-zom-pa (eleventh century), Longchenpa (1308–1364), and Ju Mipham (1846–1912).[200] These authors describe specifically Vajrayana modes of the four smṛtyupasthānas, which have been adapted to the Vajrayana philosophy.

These four "mantric" smṛtyupasthānas described by Mipham are summarized by Dorji Wangchuk as follows:[153]

(1) Contemplating (blo bzhag pa) the physical bodies of oneself and others as being characterized by primordial or intrinsic purity (dag pa), on the one hand, and by emptiness (stong pa nyid), freedom from manifoldness (spros bral), great homogeneity (mnyam pa chen po), and integrality (zung du ’jug pa), on the other, is called kāyasmṛtyupasthāna.

(2) Transforming “conceptual constructions whose occurrence one feels/senses (or is aware of)” (byung tshor gyi rtog pa) into gnosis characterized by great bliss (bde ba chen po’i ye shes) is called vedanāsmṛtyupasthāna.

(3) Channelling or containing/constraining (sdom pa) all kinds of manifoldness associated with mind and mental factors into/in/to the innate sphere of the luminous nature of the mind is called cittasmṛtyupasthāna.

(4) Conducting oneself in a way (or with an attitude) that all saṃsāric and nirvāṇic, universal and particular phenomena are pure and equal and hence beyond adoption or rejection, is dharmasmṛtyupasthāna.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ For the traditional use of the translation, "foundations [paṭṭhānā] of mindfulness," see, e.g., Gunaratana (2012) and U Silananda (2002). For appraisals supporting the parsing of the suffix as upaṭṭhāna, see, e.g., Anālayo (2006), pp. 29–30; and, Bodhi (2000), p. 1504.
  2. ^ pp. 1660, 1928 n. 180
  3. ^ Frauwallner, E. (1973), History of Indian Philosophy, trans. V.M. Bedekar, Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass. Two volumes., pp.150 ff
  4. ^ Kuan refers to Bronkhorst (1985), Dharma and Abhidharma, p.312-314.
  5. ^ Kuan refers to Sujato (2006), A history of mindfulness: how insight worsted tranquility in the Satipatthana Sutta, p.264-273
  6. ^ See the Satipatthana sutta (MN 10; DN 22); as well as SN 47.1, 47.18 and 47.43. These five discourses are the only canonical sources for the phrase, "ekāyano ... maggo" (with this specific declension).

    The Pāli phrase "ekāyano ... maggo'" has been translated as:
    • "direct path" (Bodhi & Gunaratana, 2012, p. 12; Nanamoli & Bodhi, 1995; Thanissaro, 2008)
    • "one-way path"(Bodhi, 2000, pp. 1627–8, 1647–8, 1661)
    • "the only way" (Nyanasatta, 2004; Soma, 1941/2003)
    • "the one and only way" (Vipassana Research Institute, 1996, pp. 2, 3)
  7. ^ "Bhikkhus, this is the one-way path for the purification of beings,
    for the overcoming of sorrow and lamentation,
    for the passing away of pain and displeasure,
    for the achievement of the method,[subnote 1]
    for the realization of Nibbāna,
    that is, the four establishments of mindfulness.[subnote 2] The wholesome establishments of mindfulness are contrasted with the unwholesome qualities of the five strands of sensuality, namely pleasant sensations from the eye, the ear, the tongue and the body.[44]
  8. ^ Anālayo (2006, p. 63): "...to consider satipaṭṭhāna purely as a concentration exercise goes too far and misses the important difference between what can become a basis for the development of concentration and what belongs to the realm of calmness meditation proper. While concentration corresponds to an enhancement of the selective function of the mind, by way of restricting the breadth of attention, sati on its own represents an enhancement of the recollective function, by way of expanding the breadth of attention. These two modes of mental functioning correspond to two different cortical control mechanisms in the brain. This difference, however, does not imply that the two are incompatible, since during absorption attainment both are present. But during absorption sati becomes mainly presence of the mind, when it to some extent loses its natural breadth owing to the strong focusing power of concentration."[61]
Subnotes
  1. ^ Bodhi (2000, SN 47 n. 123, Kindle Loc. 35147) notes: "Spk [the commentary to the Samyutta Nikaya] explains the 'method' (ñāya) as the Noble Eightfold Path...."
  2. ^ SN 47.1 (Bodhi, 2000, p. 1627). Also see DN 22, MN 10, SN 47.18 and SN 47.43.

References edit

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  3. ^ a b Sharf 2014, p. 942.
  4. ^ Sharf 2014, p. 942-943.
  5. ^ a b Gethin (2001), pp. 30–32.
  6. ^ a b Anālayo 2006, p. 47.
  7. ^ Anālayo (2006), pp. 29–30
  8. ^ Bodhi (2000), p. 1504
  9. ^ Soma (1941/2003)
  10. ^ Anālayo (2006), pp. 46–47.
  11. ^ Anālayo 2006, p. 48.
  12. ^ Anālayo 2006, p. 57-59.
  13. ^ Anālayo 2006, p. 29.
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Sources edit

Printed sources edit

  • Anālayo (2006), Satipatthāna: The Direct Path to Realization (PDF), Birmingham: Windhorse Publications, ISBN 1-899579-54-0
  • Anālayo (2013), Perspectives on Satipatthāna (PDF), Cambridge: Windhorse Publications, ISBN 978-1-909314-03-0
  • Arbel, Keren (2017), Early Buddhist Meditation: The Four Jhanas as the Actualization of Insight, Routledge
  • Bronkhorst, Johannes (1993), The Two Traditions Of Meditation In Ancient India, Motilal Banarsidass Publ.
  • Buddhadasa Bhikkhu (2014), Heartwood of the Bodhi Tree, Wisdom publications
  • Gethin, Rupert (1992), The Buddhist Path to Awakening, OneWorld Publications
  • Gethin, R. M. L. (2001), The Buddhist Path to Awakening: A Study of the Bodhi-Pakkhiyā Dhammā, Oneworld Publications, ISBN 1-85168-285-6
  • Gombrich, Richard F. (1996), How Buddhism Began: The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings
  • Gunaratana, Henepola (2012), The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English, Boston: Wisdom Pub., ISBN 978-1-61429-038-4
  • Gyori, Thomas I. (1996), The Foundations of Mindfulness (Satipatthāna) as a Microcosm of the Theravāda Buddhist World View (M.A. dissertatio, Washington: American University
  • Kuan, Tse-fu (2008), Mindfulness in Early Buddhism: New Approaches through Psychology and Textual Analysis of Pāli, Chinese and Sanskrit Sources, Routledge, ISBN 978-0-415-43737-0
  • Nyanaponika (2014) [1962], The Heart of Buddhist Meditation., Kandy, Sri Lanka: Weiser Books, ISBN 978-1578635580
  • Polak, Grzegorz (2011), Reexamining Jhana: Towards a Critical Reconstruction of Early Buddhist Soteriology, UMCS
  • Rose, Kenneth (2016), Yoga, Meditation, and Mysticism: Contemplative Universals and Meditative Landmarks, Bloomsbury
  • Shankman, Richard (2008), The Experience of Samadhi: An In-depth Exploration of Buddhist Meditation, Shambhala
  • Sharf, Robert (October 2014), "Mindfulness and Mindlessness in Early Chan" (PDF), Philosophy East and West, 64 (4): 933–964, doi:10.1353/pew.2014.0074, S2CID 144208166
  • Sujato (2012), A History of Mindfulness, How insight worsted tranquillity in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta (PDF), Santipada
  • Sīlānanda (2012), The Four Foundations of Mindfulness, Simon and Schuster
  • Vetter, Tilmann (1988), The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism, BRILL
  • Williams, Paul; Tribe, Anthony (2000), Buddhist Thought, Routledge

Web-sources edit

  1. ^ Chicago, The University of; Libraries (CRL), Center for Research. "Digital South Asia Library". dsal.uchicago.edu.
  2. ^ Chicago, The University of; Libraries (CRL), Center for Research. "Digital South Asia Library". dsal.uchicago.edu.

Further reading edit

Theravada
  • Bodhi, Bhikkhu (2000). The Connected Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya. Somerville, MA: Wisdom Publications. ISBN 0-86171-168-8.
  • Nanamoli, Bhikkhu and Bhikkhu Bodhi (trans.) (1995), The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha: A Translation of the Majjhima Nikaya. Somerville: Wisdom Pubs ISBN 0-86171-072-X.
  • Nyanasatta Thera (2004). Satipatthana Sutta: The Foundations of Mindfulness (MN 10).
  • Olendzki, Andrew (2005). Makkata Sutta: The Foolish Monkey (SN 47.7).
  • Patton, Charles S., III. The Abodes of Mindfulness 念處 (MN 98)
  • Soma Thera (1941; 6th ed. 2003). The Way of Mindfulness – The Satipatthana Sutta and Its Commentary. Kandy: BPS. ISBN 955-24-0256-5.
  • Sujato, Bhante. Linked Discourses on Mindfulness Meditation (Satipaṭṭhāna-samyutta, SN chapter 47).
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (1997). Sakunagghi Sutta (The Hawk) (SN 47.6).
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (1997a). Sedaka Sutta: At Sedaka (The Acrobat) (SN 47.19).
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (1997b). Sedaka Sutta: At Sedaka (The Beauty Queen) (SN 47.20).
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu (2008). Satipatthana Sutta: Frames of Reference (MN 10).
  • Vipassana Research Institute (trans.) (1996). Mahāsatipaṭṭhāna Sutta: The Great Discourse on Establishing Mindfulness. Seattle, WA: Vipassana Research Publications of America.ISBN 0-9649484-0-0.
Zen
  • Nhat Hanh, Thich (trans. Annabel Laity) (2005). Transformation and Healing : Sutra on the Four Establishments of Mindfulness . Berkeley, CA: Parallax Press. ISBN 0-938077-34-1.
  • Nhất Hạnh, Thích; Laity, Annabel. Ekottarikāgama 12.1 – The One Way In Sūtra.
Scholarly
  • Polak, Grzegorz (2011), Reexamining Jhana: Towards a Critical Reconstruction of Early Buddhist Soteriology, UMCS

External links edit

  • Satipaṭṭhāna-related discourses in the Pāli Canon:
  • Commentary on the Satipatthana sutta
  • "Agendas of Mindfulness," by Thanissaro Bhikkhu, a discourse on Satipaṭṭhāna
  • "Satipatthana Vipassana" or "Insight through Mindfulness," by Mahasi Sayadaw
  • Global Online Satipatthana Recitation
  • Saddhamma Foundation Information about practicing Satipatthana meditation.
  • The Four Foundations of Mindfulness – from the Satipatthana Sutta: D.22
  • Satipatthana — The Direct Path to Realization by Bhikkhu Analayo
  • Foundations Of Mindfulness: Satipatthana Sutta by Nyanasatta Thera

satipatthana, pali, satipaṭṭhāna, sanskrit, smṛtyupasthāna, central, practice, buddha, teachings, meaning, establishment, mindfulness, presence, mindfulness, alternatively, foundations, mindfulness, aiding, development, wholesome, state, mind, theravada, buddh. Satipatthana Pali Satipaṭṭhana Sanskrit smṛtyupasthana is a central practice in the Buddha s teachings meaning the establishment of mindfulness or presence of mindfulness or alternatively foundations of mindfulness aiding the development of a wholesome state of mind In Theravada Buddhism applying mindful attention to four domains the body feelings the mind and key principles or categories of the Buddha s teaching dhammas 1 is thought to aid the elimination of the five hindrances and the development of the seven aspects of wakefulness Translations ofSatipaṭṭhanaSanskritस म त य पस थ न smṛtyupasthana PalisatipaṭṭhanaChinese念處Japanese念処 nenjo Khmerសត បដ ឋ ន Satepadthan ThaistiptthanGlossary of Buddhism The Satipatthana Sutta is probably the most influential meditation text in modern Theravada Buddhism 2 on which the teachings of the Vipassana movement are based While these teachings are found in all Buddhist traditions modern Theravada Buddhism and the Vipassana Movement are known especially for promoting the practice of satipaṭṭhana as developing mindfulness to gain insight into impermanence thereby reaching a first state of liberation In the popular understanding mindfulness has developed into a practice of bare awareness to calm the mind Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Satipaṭṭhana 1 2 Sati 2 Textual accounts 2 1 Early Buddhist texts 2 2 Scholastic and Abhidhamma texts 2 3 Mahayana texts 2 4 Elements in the early texts 3 Connection with other Buddhist teachings 3 1 Gradual training 3 2 Jhana 4 As four domains of mindfulness 4 1 The four domains 4 2 Mindfulness of the body 4 2 1 Body parts 4 2 2 Elements 4 2 3 Corpse 4 2 4 Overall direction 4 3 Mindfulness of feelings 4 4 Mindfulness of the mind 4 5 Mindfulness of dhammas 4 5 1 Five hindrances and seven aspects of wakefulness 4 5 2 Dhamma 4 5 3 Five hindrances 4 5 4 Seven factors of awakening 5 Practice 5 1 Process view 5 2 Practice instructions 5 3 Auxiliary qualities 5 4 Contemplation of impermanence 6 Influence 6 1 Modern Theravada 6 2 In Indo Tibetan Buddhism 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 10 1 Printed sources 10 2 Web sources 11 Further reading 12 External linksEtymology editSatipaṭṭhana edit Satipaṭṭhana is a compound term that has been parsed and thus translated in two ways namely Sati paṭṭhana and Sati upaṭṭhana The separate terms can be translated as follows Sati Pali Sanskrit smṛti Smṛti originally meant to remember to recollect to bear in mind as in the Vedic tradition of remembering the sacred text the term sati also means to remember According to Sharf in the Satipațțhana sutta the term sati means to remember the wholesome dhammas whereby the true nature of phenomena can be seen 3 such as the five faculties the five powers the seven awakening factors the Noble Eightfold Path and the attainment of insight 4 Usually sati is interpreted as observing and watching various phenomena or domains of experience being aware and attentive of them in the present moment 5 6 Upaṭṭhana Sanskrit upasthana attendance waiting on looking after service care ministering web 1 Paṭṭhana setting forth putting forward in later Buddhist literature also origin starting point cause web 2 The compound terms have been translated as follows Sati upaṭṭhana presence of mindfulness or establishment of mindfulness or arousing of mindfulness underscoring the mental qualities co existent with or antecedent to mindfulness Sati paṭṭhana foundation of mindfulness underscoring the object used to gain mindfulness While the latter parsing and translation is more traditional the former has been given etymological and contextual authority by contemporary Buddhist scholars such as Bhikkhu Analayo and Bhikkhu Bodhi note 1 Analayo argues from an etymological standpoint that while foundation paṭṭhana of mindfulness is supported by the Pali commentary the term paṭṭhana foundation was otherwise unused in the Pali nikayas and is only first used in the Abhidhamma In contrast the term upaṭṭhana presence or establishment can in fact be found throughout the nikayas and is readily visible in the Sanskrit equivalents of the compound Pali phrase satipaṭṭhana Skt smṛtyupasthana or smṛti upasthana Thus Analayo states that presence of mindfulness as opposed to foundation of mindfulness is more likely to be etymologically correct 7 Like Analayo Bodhi assesses that establishment upaṭṭhana of mindfulness is the preferred translation However Bodhi s analysis is more contextual than Analayo s According to Bodhi while establishment of mindfulness is normally supported by the textual context there are exceptions to this rule such as with SN 47 42 note 2 where a translation of foundation of mindfulness is best supported 8 Soma uses both foundations of mindfulness and arousing of mindfulness 9 Sati edit The term sati Sanskrit smṛti which is often translated as mindfulness also means memory and recollection and it is often used in that sense in the early discourses which sometimes define sati as the ability of calling to mind what has been done or said long ago 10 According to Sharf in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta the term sati means to remember the dharmas which allows one to see the true nature of phenomena 3 According to Analayo sati does not literally mean memory but that which facilitates and enables memory This is particularly applicable in the context of satipaṭṭhana in which sati does not refer to remembering past events but an awareness of the present moment and to remember to stay in that awareness especially if one s attention wanders away 6 Analayo states that it is this clear and awake state of presence that allows one to easily remember whatever is experienced 11 He also states that sati is a detached uninvolved and non reactive observation which does not interfere with what it is observing such an active function is instead associated with right effort not mindfulness This allows one to clearly attend to things in a more sober objective and impartial manner 12 Regarding upaṭṭhana Analayo writes that it means being present and attending in this context He further states Understood in this way satipaṭṭhana means that sati stands by in the sense of being present sati is ready at hand in the sense of attending to the current situation Satipaṭṭhana can then be translated as presence of mindfulness or as attending with mindfulness 13 Paul Williams referring to Frauwallner states that satipaṭṭhana practice refers to constantly watching sensory experience in order to prevent the arising of cravings which would power future experience into rebirths 14 note 3 Rupert Gethin who argues that satipaṭṭhana is derived from sati upaṭṭhana sees satipaṭṭhana as the activity of observing or watching the body feelings mind and dhammas as well as a quality of mind that stands near the literal meaning of upaṭṭhana or serves the mind and even presence of mind 5 Gethin further notes that sati mindfulness refers to remembering or having in mind something It is keeping something in mind without wavering or losing it 15 Bhikkhu Bodhi writes that sati is a presence of mind attentiveness or awareness as well as bare attention a detached observation of what is happening within us and around us in the present moment the mind is trained to remain in the present open quiet alert contemplating the present event 16 He also states that sati is what brings the field of experience into focus and makes it accessible to insight 16 According to Bodhi to be mindful all judgements and interpretations have to be suspended or if they occur just registered and dropped 16 Bhante Gunaratana explains satipaṭṭhana practice as bringing full awareness to our present moment bodily and mental activities 17 According to Sujato mindfulness is the quality of mind which recollects and focuses awareness within an appropriate frame of reference bearing in mind the what why and how of the task at hand 18 Textual accounts editEarly Buddhist texts edit In the Pali Tipitaka the four satipaṭṭhanas are found throughout the Satipaṭṭhana samyutta SN Chapter 47 which contains 104 of the Buddha s discourses on the satipaṭṭhanas 19 20 Other saṁyuttas in SN also deal with satipaṭṭhana extensively such as the Anuruddha saṁyutta 21 They can also be found in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta MN 10 as well as in DN 22 which is mostly the same with the addition of the four noble truths 20 The Sarvastivada Saṃyukta Agama SA Taisho Tripitaka 99 contains an entire section devoted to smṛtyupasthana which parallels the Pali Satipaṭṭhana samyutta 22 According to Sujato the Sarvastivada Smṛtyupasthana Sutra seems to emphasize samatha or calm abiding while the Theravadin version emphasizes vipassana or insight 23 The Chinese Tripitaka also contains two parallels to the Satipaṭṭhana sutta Madhyama Agama MA No 98 belonging to the Sarvastivada and the Ekottara Agama 12 1 Ekayana Sutra possibly from the Mahasaṅghika school 24 Their presentation of the satipaṭṭhana formula has some significant differences with the Theravada version For example MA 98 lists the four jhanas and the perception of light under mindfulness of the body as well as listing six elements instead of four However they generally share the same structure and several basic practices 25 Scholastic and Abhidhamma texts edit The four satipaṭṭhana are analyzed and systematized in the scholastic and Abhidharma works of the various Buddhist schools In these later texts various doctrinal developments can be seen 26 The satipaṭṭhanas can be found in the Vibhaṅga a book of the Theravada Abhidhamma Pitaka in a form which differs from that in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta According to Johannes Bronkhorst and Bhikkhu Sujato the satipaṭṭhana formulation in the Vibhaṅga is actually an earlier version of the formula it includes less elements than the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta 27 The Sarvastivada Abhidharma text called the Dharmaskandha also contains a passage with the smṛtyupasthana schema According to Sujato this is very similar to the passage from the Vibhaṅga 28 The Sariputrabhidharma an Abhidharma text of the Dharmaguptaka school also contains a passage with the smṛtyupasthanas In his history of satipaṭṭhana Bhikkhu Sujato writes that In the early teachings satipaṭṭhana was primarily associated not with vipassana but with samatha Since for the Suttas samatha and vipassana cannot be divided a few passages show how this samatha practice evolves into vipassana In later literature the vipassana element grew to predominate almost entirely usurping the place of samatha in satipaṭṭhana 26 Tse fu Kuan agrees noting that the tendency to dissociate satipaṭṭhana from samatha is apparently a rather late development 29 According to Sujato various canonical texts which show sectarian Theravada elements consistently depict satipaṭṭhana as more closely aligned with vipassana practice However in the canonical Abhidhamma satipaṭṭhana is still said to be associated with jhana as well 30 For example according to Kuan the Vibhanga says that when a monk attains the first jhana and contemplates the body feelings etc as a body feelings etc at that time sati anussati etc are called satipaṭṭhana 29 Meanwhile the canonical Abhidharma texts of the Sarvastivada tradition consistently interpreted the smṛtyupasthanas as being a practice that was associated with samadhi and dhyana 31 This can be seen in the Mahavibhaṣa Sastra which contains a section on how to practice the smṛtyupasthanas in the context of the four dhyanas and the formless attainments 29 In the later texts of the Theravada tradition like the Visuddhimagga the focus on vipassana is taken even further Some of these works claim that one may reach awakening by practicing dry insight meditation vipassana without jhana based on satipaṭṭhana Through this practice one is said to be able to reach a transcendental jhana which lasts for one mind moment prior to realization According to Sujato this is a grave distortion of the suttas 32 The same kind of trend can be seen in some later post canonical Sarvastivada Abhidharma works such as the Abhidharmasara of Dharmasri This text unlike the canonical Sarvastivada Abhidharma treats the four smṛtyupasthanas as mainly vipassana practices This presentation influenced later works like the Abhidharmakosa 4th century CE which defines satipaṭṭhana not as mindfulness but as understanding panna However this practice is only undertaken after having practiced samadhi based on anapanasati or contemplation of the body and so is not equivalent to the dry insight approach of the later Theravada 33 Mahayana texts edit Mahayana Buddhist texts also contain teachings on the four smṛtyupasthanas These include the Pratyutpanna Samadhi Sutra Asanga s Abhidharmasamuccaya the Yogacarabhumi Vasubandhu s Madhyantavibhagabhaṣya the Avataṁsaka Sutra and Santideva s Sikṣasamuccaya 34 Furthermore Nagarjuna s Letter to a Friend contains a passage which affirms the early Buddhist understanding of the four smṛtyupasthanas as closely connected with samadhi he persevering practice of smṛtyupasthana is called samadhi 35 Another parallel passage of the satipaṭṭhana schema can be found in the Pancavimsatisahasrika Prajnaparamita sutra 36 37 Another passage is found in the Sravakabhumi 37 Elements in the early texts edit The various early sources for satipaṭṭhana provide an array of practices for each domain of mindfulness Some of these sources are more elaborate and contain more practices than others The table below contains the main elements found in the various early Buddhist sources on the satipaṭṭhanas 38 Various scholars have attempted to use the numerous early sources to trace an ur text i e the original satipaṭṭhana formula or the earliest sutta Bronkhorst 1985 argues that the earliest form of the satipaṭṭhana sutta only contained the observation of the impure body parts under mindfulness of the body and that mindfulness of dhammas was originally just the observation of the seven awakening factors 39 note 4 Sujato s reconstruction similarly only retains the contemplation of the impure under mindfulness of the body while including only the five hindrances and the seven awakening factors under mindfulness of dhammas 40 note 5 According to Analayo mindfulness of breathing was probably absent from the original scheme noting that one can easily contemplate the body s decay taking an external object that is someone else s body but not be externally mindfull of the breath that is someone else s breath 41 Reconstruction Theravada Vibhanga Sarvastivada Dharma skandha Sariputr abhidharma Theravada Maha satipatṭhana Sutta Sarvastivada Smṛtyupasthana Sutra Ekayana Sutra Long Prajna paramita Sutra Body kaya Impure body parts Parts of the body Parts of the body 6 elements 4 postures Clear Comprehending Anapanasati Parts of the body 4 elements Food Space 5th element Oozing orifices Death contemplation Anapanasati 4 postures Clear Comprehending Parts of the body 4 elements Death contemplation 4 postures Clear Comprehending Cutting off thought Suppressing thought Anapanasati 4 jhana similes Perception of light Basis of reviewing Parts of the body 6 elements Death contemplation Parts of the body 4 elements Oozing orifices Death contemplation 4 Postures Comprehension Anapanasati 4 elements Body parts Death contemplation Feelings vedana Happy pain neutral Carnal spiritual Happy pain neutral Bodily Mental Carnal spiritual Sensual Non sensual Happy pain neutral Carnal spiritual Happy pain neutral Carnal spiritual Happy pain neutral Bodily Mental Carnal spiritual Sensual Non sensual Happy pain neutral Carnal spiritual No mixed feelings N A the source only mentions that one practices mindfulness of feelings without elaborating Mind Citta Greedy or not Angry Deluded Contracted Exalted Surpassed Samadhi Released Greedy Angry Deluded Contracted Slothful Small Distracted Quiet Samadhi Developed Released Greedy Angry Deluded Contracted Exalted Surpassed Samadhi Released Greedy Angry Deluded Contracted Exalted Surpassed Samadhi Released Greedy Angry Deluded Defiled Contracted Small Lower Developed Samadhi Released Greedy Angry Deluded Affection Attained Confused Contracted Universal Exalted Surpassed Samadhi Released N A Dhamma Hindrances Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances 6 Sense Bases Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances 6 Sense Bases Factors of Enlightenment Four Noble Truths Hindrances Aggregates 6 Sense Bases Factors of Enlightenment Four Noble Truths Hindrances 6 Sense Bases Factors of Enlightenment Hindrances Factors of Enlightenment 4 jhanas N AConnection with other Buddhist teachings editGradual training edit The satipaṭṭhanas are one of the seven sets of states conducive to awakening Pali bodhipakkhiyadhamma identified in many schools of Buddhism as means for progressing toward bodhi awakening The early sources also contain passages in which the Buddha is said to refer to satipaṭṭhana as a path which is eka yano for purification and the realisation of nirvana The term ekayano has been interpreted and translated in different ways including the only path Soma direct path Analayo B Bodhi path to convergence i e to samadhi Sujato and the comprehensive or all inclusive path where all practices converge Kuan 42 43 note 6 note 7 According to Sujato in the context of the graduated path to awakening found in numerous early texts the practice of the satipaṭṭhanas is closely connected with various elements including sense restraint moderate eating wakefulness clear comprehension seclusion establishing mindfulness and abandoning the hindrances 45 The place of satipaṭṭhana in the gradual training is thus outlined by Sujato as follows One s understanding of the Dhamma impels one to renounce in search of peace one undertakes the rules of conduct and livelihood applies oneself to restraint and mindfulness in all activities and postures resorts to a secluded dwelling establishes mindfulness in satipaṭṭhana meditation and develops the four jhanas leading to liberating insight 46 Johannes Bronkhorst has argued that in the early texts there are two kinds of mindfulness the preliminary stage of mindfulness in daily life often called clear comprehension and the practice of mindfulness meditation proper the actual practice of satipaṭṭhana as a formal meditation According to Sujato these two forms of mindfulness are so closely connected that they gradually came to be subsumed under the heading of satipaṭṭhana 47 Jhana edit Main article Dhyana in Buddhism In the schema of the Noble Eightfold Path they are included in samma sati right mindfulness which culminates in the final factor of the path samma samadhi a state of luminous awareness but also interpreted as deep meditative absorption This is confirmed by texts like MN 44 12 which state the four satipaṭṭhanas are the basis for samadhi 48 The close connection between satipaṭṭhana and samadhi can also be seen in texts which discuss the three trainings such as MN 44 11 MA 210 which list satipaṭṭhana under samadhi 49 Thus according to Bhikkhu Sujato all of the basic statements on the function of satipaṭṭhana in the path confirm that its prime role is to support samadhi that is jhana 50 Rupert Gethin also affirms the close connection between satipaṭṭhana and the jhanas citing various discourses from the Pali Nikayas such as SN 47 10 and SN 47 8 51 In the oldest texts of Buddhism dhyana Sanskrit or jhana Paḷi is the training of the mind commonly translated as meditation to withdraw the mind from the automatic responses to sense impressions and leading to a state of perfect equanimity and awareness upekkha sati parisuddhi 52 Dhyana may have been the core practice of pre sectarian Buddhism in combination with several related practices which together lead to perfected mindfulness and detachment and are fully realized with the practice of dhyana 53 54 55 In the later commentarial tradition which has survived in present day Theravada dhyana is equated with concentration a state of one pointed absorption in which there is a diminished awareness of the surroundings Since the 1980s scholars and practitioners have started to question this equation arguing for a more comprehensive and integrated understanding and approach based on the oldest descriptions of dhyana in the suttas 56 57 58 59 According to Analayo writing from a more traditional perspective several discourses testify to the important role of satipaṭṭhana as a basis for the development of absorption jhana This includes suttas like the Dantabhumi Sutta and the Cuḷavedalla Sutta which speaks of satipaṭṭhana as the cause of samadhi samadhinimitta 60 Analayo also writes that satipaṭṭhana is not purely a concentration samadhi exercise noting that sati represents an enhancement of the recollective function in which the breadth of attention is expanded During absorption sati becomes mainly presence of the mind but in a more focused way 61 note 8 Analayo cites SN 47 10 in which the Buddha states that if one is distracted and sluggish while practicing satipaṭṭhana one should switch one s meditation towards a calm samatha meditation in order to cultivate joy and serenity Once the mind has been calmed one can then return to satipaṭṭhana Analayo argues that the distinction that is made in this sutta between directed and undirected forms of meditation suggest that satipaṭṭhana is not the same as samatha meditation However the sutta also shows that they are closely interrelated and mutually supporting 62 Thanissaro Bhikkhu citing various early sources SN 47 40 MN 118 AN 4 94 AN 4 170 Dhp 372 etc similarly states that developing the frames of reference satipaṭṭhana is a precondition for jhana and that the proper development of the frames of reference necessarily incorporates in and of itself the practice of jhana 63 As four domains of mindfulness editThe four domains edit In the early Buddhist texts mindfulness is explained as being established in four main ways mindfulness of the body Pali kayagata sati Skt kaya smṛti mindfulness of feelings Pali vedana sati Skt vedana smṛti mindfulness of the mind Pali citta sati Skt citta smṛti mindfulness of principles or phenomena Pali dhamma sati Skt dharma smṛti 1 Rupert Gethin translates from the Pali the basic exposition of these four practices which he calls the basic formula that is shared by numerous early Buddhist sources as follows Here bhikkhus a bhikkhu i with regard to the body dwells watching body he is ardent he comprehends clearly is possessed of mindfulness and overcomes both desire for and discontent with the world ii With regard to feelings he dwells watching feeling vedana iii With regard to the mind he dwells watching mind citta iv With regard to dhammas he dwells watching dhamma he is ardent he comprehends clearly is possessed of mindfulness and overcomes both desire for and discontent with the world 64 According to Grzegorz Polak the four upassana have been misunderstood by the developing Buddhist tradition including Theravada to refer to four different foundations According to Polak the four upassana do not refer to four different foundations of which one should be aware but are an alternate description of the jhanas describing how the samskharas are tranquilized 65 the six sense bases which one needs to be aware of kayanupassana contemplation on vedanas which arise with the contact between the senses and their objects vedananupassana the altered states of mind to which this practice leads cittanupassana the development from the five hindrances to the seven factors of enlightenment dhammanupassana Mindfulness of the body edit The various early sources show considerable variation in the practices included under mindfulness of the body The most widely shared set of meditations are the contemplation of the body s anatomical parts the contemplation of the elements and the contemplation of a corpse in decay 66 Analayo notes that the parallel versions of the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta agree not only in listing these three exercises but also in the sequence in which they are presented 67 According to Sujato s comparative study of satipaṭṭhana the original mindfulness of the body practice focused on contemplating various parts of the body while the other practices later came to be added under mindfulness of the body 68 Body parts edit The practice of mindfulness of anatomical parts is described in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta as follows one examines this same body up from the soles of the feet and down from the top of the hair enclosed by skin and full of many kinds of impurity Following this instruction is a list of various body parts including hair skin teeth numerous organs as well as different kinds of bodily liquids 69 According to Analayo this meditation which is often called the meditation on asubha the unattractive is supposed to deconstruct notions of bodily beauty and to allow us to see that bodies are not worth being attached to as the Ekottarika agama version states 70 Ultimately according to Analayo the principal aim of contemplating the anatomical constitution of the body is the removal of sensual desire 71 Sujato similarly states that the basic purpose of these three meditations is to rise above sensuality and to deprive the addiction to sensual gratification of its fuel 72 According to U Silananda first one should memorize the 32 parts of the body by reciting them then one learns the color shape and location of each part After achieving mastery in this one is ready to contemplate the unattractiveness of each part in meditation 73 Bhikkhu Bodhi notes that this practice is done using visualization as an aid 74 This practice is described with a common simile in the early discourses one is mindful of each body part in the same way one is mindful when looking through various kinds of beans or grains in a bag i e in a detached way This indicates that the goal is not to become disgusted with the body but to see it in a detached manner 70 Bhante Gunaratana similarly notes that this practice opens the mind to accepting our body as it is right now without our usual emotional reactions It helps us overcome pride and self hatred and regard our body with the balanced mind of equanimity 75 Similarly Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that this practice far from creating a negative self image allows us to develop a healthy understanding of the reality that all bodies are equal and thus none is superior or inferior in terms of beauty since such a concept is ultimate relative to one s frame of reference 76 Elements edit The practice of mindfulness of the elements or properties mainly focuses on four physical attributes mahabhuta earth solids water liquids air gases moving in and outside the body as well as breathing and fire warmth temperature The early texts compare this to how a butcher views and cuts up a slaughtered cow into various parts According to Analayo this second exercise focuses on diminishing the sense of identification with the body and thus on seeing anatta not self and undoing the sense of ownership to the body 77 Buddhaghosa states that through this practice a monk immerses himself in voidness and eliminates the perception of living beings 78 The practice of contemplating these four properties is also described in more detail in the Mahahaṭṭthipadopama Sutta the Rahulovada Sutta and the Dhatuvibhaṅga Sutta 78 Corpse edit nbsp Illustration of mindfulness of death using corpses in a charnel ground a part of the first satipatthana From an early 20th century manuscript found in Chaiya District Surat Thani Province Thailand 79 The practice of mindfulness of death is explained as contemplating a corpse various progressive stages of decay from a fresh corpse to bone dust 80 According to Analayo the sources indicate that the practice could have been done in a charnel ground with real corpses but also indicate that one may visualize this as well 81 Bodhi writes that this practice can be done in the imagination through using pictures or by viewing an actual formerly living human corpse 82 The various early sources all indicate that one should contemplate how one s own body is of the same nature as the corpse The Ekottarika agama version states that one is to contemplate how my body will not escape from this calamity I will not escape from this condition My body will also be destroyed and this body is impermanent of a nature to fall apart 81 This practice allows one to gain insight into our own impermanence and therefore also leads to letting go In numerous early sources contemplating the inevitability of death is also said to lead to increased motivation to practice the path 83 Overall direction edit Analayo sums up the overall direction of mindfulness of the body as detachment from the body through understanding its true nature 84 The early discourses compare mindfulness of the body to a strong pillar which can be used to tie up numerous wild animals which are compared to the six senses This simile shows that mindfulness of the body was seen as a powerful centering practice and as a strong anchor for maintaining the guarding of the senses 85 The Kayagatasati sutta and its Madhyama agama parallel also list various others benefits from practicing mindfulness of the body including how it helps to give rise to mental balance and detachment and allows one to endure many physical discomforts 86 Mindfulness of feelings edit This satipaṭṭhana focuses on the contemplation of feelings vedana affect valence or hedonic tones which mainly refers to how one perceives feelings as pleasant unpleasant or neutral 87 According to Analayo mindfulness of feelings requires recognizing the affective tone of present moment experience before the arisen feeling leads to mental reactions and elaborations It also requires that one does not get carried away by the individual content of felt experience and instead directs awareness to the general character of experience 88 The early discourses contain similes which compare feelings to various types of fierce winds that can suddenly arise in the sky as well as to various types of people who stay in a guest house These similes illustrate the need to remain calm and non reactive in respect to feelings 89 In most early sources feelings are also distinguished between those which are sensual or worldly lit carnal and those that are not sensual or spiritual in nature 90 This introduces an ethical distinction between feelings that can lead to the arising of defilements and those that lead in the opposite direction 91 Thus while pleasant feelings associated with sense pleasures lead to unwholesome tendencies pleasant feelings associated with mental concentration lead towards wholesome states Meanwhile a worldly painful feeling might lead to the arising of unwholesome mental states but it need not do so if one is mindfully aware of it without reacting Furthermore certain painful feelings like those caused by the sadness of knowing one has not yet reached liberation are considered spiritual unpleasant feelings and can motivate one to practice more As such they are commendable 92 The Madhyama agama version of the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta also adds the additional categories of bodily and mental feelings which refers to feelings that arise either from physical contact or from the mind a distinction which does appear in other early discourses like the Salla sutta SN 36 6 and its parallels 93 Furthermore according to Sujato the Anapanasati Sutta section on vedana also adds rapture and mental activities cittasankhara feeling and perception which seems to broaden the scope of feelings here as far as emotions moods 87 Gunaratana similarly states that vedana includes both physical sensations and mental emotions 94 Furthermore Analayo argues that the central role that feelings have in this respect is particularly evident in the context of the dependent arising paṭiccasamuppada of dukkha where feeling forms the crucial link that can trigger the arising of craving 91 The fact that dependent origination can be contemplated through mindfulness of feelings is supported by SA 290 95 The early discourses also state that practicing mindfulness of feeling can be a way of dealing with physical pain and disease 96 Bhikkhu Bodhi notes that feelings arise due to sense contact phassa and thus another way of analyzing feeling is into six types depending on the six sense bases eye nose tongue ear body and mind 97 Mindfulness of the mind edit In all early sources the contemplation of the mind or cognition citta begins with noticing the presence or absence of the three unwholesome roots lust anger and delusion 98 This practice is similar to that found in other early discourses in which the Buddha looks into his mind by applying a basic distinction between wholesome and unwholesome thoughts and reflecting how unwholesome thoughts are harmful which allows him to abandon them This can be seen in the Dvedhavitakka sutta and its parallels such as MA 102 99 Other suttas like the Vitakkasaṇṭhana sutta and its parallels provide several ways of dealing with unwholesome thoughts such as replacing an unwholesome thought with a wholesome one or contemplating the drawbacks of unwholesome thoughts 100 Reflecting on the absence of unwholesome states is also important as it allows one to rejoice in this positive state and become inspired by it It also encourages one to protect this mental state as can be seen in the simile of the bronze dish found in the Anaṅgaṇa sutta MN 5 and its parallels such as EA 25 6 101 In this simile a person who buys a bronze dish but takes no care to clean it from time to time is compared to someone who is unaware of having a mind free of unwholesome states In this case the dish mind will eventually get dirty In the other hand someone who has reached some degree of purity and is mindful of this is more likely to protect and maintain this mental state 101 Analayo writes that this way of contemplating the mind is a middle path that avoids two extremes one extreme is seeing only what is bad within oneself and consequently getting frustrated succumbing to feelings of inadequacy As a result of this inspiration can get lost and one no longer engages fully in the practice The other extreme is pretending to oneself and in front of others that one is better than one really is at the cost of ignoring one s own dark sides those areas of the mind that are in need of purification Such ignoring allows those dark sides to gather strength until they are able to overwhelm the mind completely Steering a balanced middle path between these two extremes becomes possible through the simple but effective element of honest recognition introduced through mindfulness of the present condition of one s mind which sees both one s shortcomings and one s virtues equally well 102 This mindfulness is also extended into being aware of the level of mindfulness or distraction and concentration present in the mind from contraction or a lesser mind to higher states such as samadhi and liberation Analayo states that the basic task here is recognizing the degree to which one s practice has developed and realizing if more can be done 90 98 Therefore the terms such as a small lower contracted or distracted mind indicate a mind which lacks development in the qualities of mindfulness and samadhi Other terms such as the developed exalted and liberated mind are referring to a mind that has achieved some level of samadhi and mindfulness and in some cases has been at least temporarily liberated from the hindrances through meditation 103 Sujato states that the terms associated with higher states of mind refer to the jhanas he cites MN 54 22 24 MN 53 20 22 as support 104 Analayo further notes that this element of contemplation of the mind shows that in early Buddhism enquiring if one has reached some degree of attainment is considered an integral part of knowing the nature of one s own mental condition 105 In the early discourses SA 1246 and AN 3 100 the gradual process of removing unwholesome thoughts and cultivating wholesome mental states is compared to the gradual refining of gold ore which is initially covered over with rock sand and fine dust which represent the various gross and subtle aspects of mental defilement 106 Mindfulness of dhammas edit Five hindrances and seven aspects of wakefulness edit This last set of exercises show considerable variation in the various early Buddhist sources Only two sets of dhammas principles or mental categories are shared by all early sources the five hindrances and the seven factors of awakening and Analayo considers these two as integral elements of the fourth satipaṭṭhana 107 Sujato s comparative study concludes that these two groups of dhammas constituted the original subjects of meditation in this satipaṭṭhana while the other elements are later additions 108 Thanissaro Bhikkhu states that it is not possible to decide the question of what the original version may have been but he concludes that there is a good case for stating that the early tradition regarded the abandoning of the hindrances and the development of the factors for Awakening as encompassing all the factors that might be included under this heading 109 Dhamma edit Dhamma is often translated as mental objects but Analayo argues that this translation is problematic for multiple reasons 110 The three prior satipatthana body sensations mind can become mental objects in themselves and those objects such as the hindrances aggregates and sense bases identified under the term dhamma are far from an exhaustive list of all possible mental objects Analayo translates dhamma as mental factors and categories classificatory schemes and frameworks or points of reference to be applied during contemplation 111 Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that the fourth satipaṭṭhana denotes the qualities of mind that are developed and abandoned as one masters the meditation 112 Sujato argues that dhamma here refers to a distinctive and more profound aspect of meditation the understanding of the causal principles underlying the development of samadhi 113 According to Analayo this satipaṭṭhana focuses on phenomena which lead to awakening when cultivated and therefore it is soteriologically oriented 114 115 Analayo states that the main thrust of the fourth satipaṭṭhana is the path to awakening and therefore contemplation of dharmas is somewhat like a shorthand description of the path He further adds that the task of mindfulness in the context of contemplation of dharmas would thus be to supervise the mind on the path to awakening ensuring that the hindrances are overcome and the awakening factors are well established 116 Five hindrances edit According to U Silananda a proponent of the New Burmese method the five hindrances are those mental states that hinder or block the mind s progress to deeper concentration and liberation 117 118 In the early discourses see MN 43 20 MN 68 6 the attainment of jhana is associated with the abandonment of the five hindrances which are said to choke the mind robbing understanding of its strength 119 Through the simile of refining gold the early discourses state that as long as the hindrances have not been removed the mind is not soft nor workable nor radiant but is brittle AN 5 13 120 The Satipaṭṭhana sutta indicates that one is to be mindful of the presence or absence of each of the five hindrances sense desire ill will sloth and torpor restlessness and worry and doubt The sutta and the MA parallel also state that one should know how a hindrance arises how it can be removed and how it can be prevented from arising 121 The fact that mindfulness of the hindrances is also connected to remembering the instructions on how to remove and prevent the hindrances not just watch it mindfully is supported by other early discourses like the Gopakamoggallana sutta and its parallels like MA 145 122 Analayo thus sees this practice as twofold the receptive mode of just being aware of the hindrances and the more active mode of understanding how the hindrance arises and how it can be abandoned through a skillful deployment of right effort 123 According to U Silananda various hindrances can arise from inappropriate attention reflection ayoniso manasikara and that proper or wise attention yoniso manasikara can prevent their arising Another way to prevent their arising is simply to be mindful of the hindrances 124 Various early discourses like SA 715 provide specific instructions on how to weaken and counter the hindrances Desire is said to be countered with the contemplation of unattractiveness ill will is countered with loving kindness sloth torpor is countered with energetic thoughts or perceiving light or being in a well lit place restlessness worry is countered with thoughts that bring calmness and doubt can be countered by contemplating dependent origination or contemplating what is wholesome and what is unwholesome 125 Suttas like the Saṅgarava sutta mention that one benefit of removing the hindrances is an increased ability to learn and to remember what one has learned The suttas also state that being mindful of the absence of the hindrances leads to joy an important element of meditation 126 Seven factors of awakening edit The other main contemplation shared by all versions of the satipaṭṭhana formula is mindfulness of the seven factors of awakening satta bojjhaṅga The contemplation is similar to that of the hindrances First one is aware of the presence or absence of each of these factors Then one also contemplates how these factors arise how they can be maintained and how they can be further developed that is to say one develops an awareness to the conditions that are related to their presence or absence 127 Early sources such as SA 729 and SN 46 27 state that one cultivates these awakening factors supported by seclusion supported by dispassion and supported by cessation culminating in letting go This indicates that a successful cultivation of these factors leads to awakening if they each one is cultivated while being supported by three elements seclusion from unwholesome actions dispassion as the fading away of craving and the gradual cessation of dukkha 128 The awakening factors are positive qualities associated with wisdom that stand in opposition to the hindrances associated with darkness and lack of wisdom see SN 46 40 and SA 706 129 The Aggi sutta and its parallel at SA 714 indicate that particular awakening factors investigation of dhammas energy joy can be used as antidotes to sluggishness while other factors tranquillity concentration equanimity are antidotes for agitation This does not work the other way around that is to say awakening factors that are useful against agitation are not useful to cultivate when one is sluggish and vice versa 130 The awakening factor of mindfulness meanwhile is useful in all circumstances 131 Indeed according to Kaṭukurunde Naṇananda mindfulness stands in the middle and orders the other faculties here too it comes to the forefront and marshals those factors that are behind it 132 Furthermore the hindrance of doubt is also countered by the factor of investigation 131 When all hindrances are absent one is then able to cultivate all seven factors at once 130 SA 718 and SN 46 4 indicate that mastering the awakening factors requires learning how to make use of each one of them in different circumstances These suttas illustrate this with the simile of a king that dresses in various clothes throughout the day according to his needs 133 Various discourses including SA 715 and SN 46 51 discuss how the seven awakening factors are to be nourished and developed 134 For example mindfulness is nourished by the four satipaṭṭhanas investigation is nourished by distinguish wholesome things from unwholesome things and energy is nourished through the four right efforts 134 Furthermore according to the Anapanasati sutta and its Saṃyukta agama parallel the sequence in which the factors are listed seems to correspond to how they unfold through practice According to Analayo this sequence reflects an underlying progression in which the factor mentioned earlier supports the arising of the factor that comes next 135 However this progression is not a strict one Kaṭukurunde Naṇananda states that it does not mean that one has to develop the first category first and then after a time the next category and so on But still there is a certain order in the development an ascending order one may say 136 Practice editProcess view edit See also Integrative approach According to Sujato Satipaṭṭhana is a prescription of how to practice which introduces certain specific objects of meditation 137 Likewise according to Thanissaro Bhikkhu the four frames of reference satipaṭṭhana are a set of teachings that show where a meditator should focus attention and how 63 Analayo and Sujato both note that these four meditation subjects provide a progressive refinement of contemplation from coarse elements the body to increasingly subtler and more refined subjects 138 139 Likewise Gethin writes that there is a movement from clear awareness of the more immediately accessible realms of experience to an awareness of what the Nikayas see as subtler and deeper realms 140 However Analayo also argues that this pattern does not prescribe the only possible way of practising satipaṭṭhana since this would severely limit the range of one s practice This is because a central characteristic of satipaṭṭhana is awareness of phenomena as they are and as they occur Although such awareness will naturally proceed from the gross to the subtle in actual practice it will quite probably vary from the sequence depicted in the discourse Analayo sees the four satipaṭṭhanas as flexible and mutually supportive practices Therefore according to Analayo the sequence in which they are practised may be altered in order to meet the needs of each individual meditator 141 All four may even be combined into a single practice as documented by the Anapanasati Sutta 142 Thanissaro Bhikkhu argues that an element of mindfulness practice includes learning how to maximize skillful qualities and how to minimize unskillful qualities which might require one to manipulate and experiment with different mental qualities and meditation methods Therefore Thanissaro argues that mindfulness meditation can also be an active process of learning various skillful ways of directing the mind by cultivating certain perceptions and ideas such as asubha 143 Thanissaro compares this process to how one learns about eggs by trying to cook with them gathering experience from one s successes and failures in attempting increasingly difficult dishes 144 Eventually as one gains mastery of the mind one is able to transcend even the need for skillful manipulation of mental qualities 145 Practice instructions edit The Satipaṭṭhana Sutta states that one first goes to a secluded place like a forest or an empty hut U Silananda states that a place away from human habitation and the noises of towns and cities is the most suitable place for satipaṭṭhana meditation 146 The definition of how one practices satipaṭṭhana in the early texts uses the term anupassana which refers to sustained observation of each subject of meditation 147 Analayo defines this term which is derived from the verb to see passati as meaning to repeatedly look at that is to contemplate or to closely observe 148 Furthermore he interprets this as referring to a particular way of meditation an examination of the observed object from a particular viewpoint which emphasize how the object is to be perceived such as seeing the body as unattractive or impermanent for example 148 Thanissaro translates anupassana as remaining focused and keeping track which denotes the element of concentration in the practice as one tries to stay with one particular theme in the midst of the welter of experience 149 All versions of the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta also indicate that each satipaṭṭhana is to be contemplated first internally ajjhatta then externally bahiddha and finally both internally and externally 150 151 This is generally understood as observing oneself and observing other persons an interpretation which is supported by Abhidharma works including the Vibhaṅga and the Dharmaskandha as well as by several suttas MN 104 DA 4 DA 18 and DN 18 152 153 Others interpret this passage as referring to mental internal phenomena and to phenomena associated with the senses external which according to Analayo does have some support from the suttas 154 According to Gethin the passage refers to observing ourselves and other persons the bhikkhu then first watches his own body feelings mind and dhammas next those of others and finally his own and those of others together 155 One example which indicates how this is to be understood is the practice of death meditation which can be done in a charnel ground by looking at dead bodies external contemplation and also by contemplating the death of one s own body internal 156 According to Gethin this practice leads to the blurring of distinctions between self and other which arises as one begins to understand the world as being made up of impermanent and insubstantial processes 157 Analayo concurs stating that this contemplation can lead to the abandoning of the boundary between I and other leading to a comprehensive vision of phenomena as such independent of any sense of ownership 158 Regarding the question of how one is supposed to observe the feelings and mental states of other people Analayo argues that one can cultivate this by carefully observing their outer manifestations since feelings and mental states do influence the facial expression tone of voice and physical posture He cites suttas such as DN 28 as evidence that the early discourses hold that one may infer the mental state of others by watching their external manifestations 159 Analayo also notes that balancing internal and external contemplation is important because it can prevent a one sided awareness focused on one domain self centredness or lack of introspection respectively Balancing both fields of mindfulness can thus achieve a skilful balance between introversion and extroversion 160 Thanissaro Bhikkhu outlines how all the different elements of mindfulness meditation come together as follows Mindful satima literally means being able to remember or recollect Here it means keeping one s task in mind The task here is a dual one remaining focused on one s frame of reference satipaṭṭhana and putting aside the distractions of greed and distress that would come from shifting one s frame of reference back to the world In other words one tries to stay with the phenomenology of immediate experience without slipping back into the narratives and world views that make up one s sense of the world In essence this is a concentration practice with the three qualities of ardency alertness and mindfulness devoted to attaining concentration Mindfulness keeps the theme of the meditation in mind alertness observes the theme as it is present to awareness and also is aware of when the mind has slipped from its theme Mindfulness then remembers where the mind should be focused and ardency tries to return the mind to its proper theme and to keep it there as quickly and skillfully as possible In this way these three qualities help to seclude the mind from sensual preoccupations and unskillful mental qualities thus bringing it to the first jhana 149 Auxiliary qualities edit In the early texts the satipaṭṭhanas are said to be practiced with specific mental qualities This is listed in the Pali version in what Sujato calls the auxiliary formula which states that one contemplates anupassi each satipaṭṭhana with the following four qualities ardency or diligence atapi clear comprehension sampajana mindfulness sati and free from desires and discontent vineyya abhijjhadomanassa with some variation across the different sources 161 162 In many of the alternative forms of the auxiliary formula samadhi is mentioned as the result of the practice e g in DN 18 26 DA 4 and in SN 47 8 SA 616 163 The term atapi is associated with the concept of tapas ascetic power and it is said to be related to heroic strength effort or energy viriya in the Nettipakarana 162 It is thus associated with skillful effort and wholesome desire or resolve It is best understood as a balanced but sustained application of energy according to Analayo 164 Thanissaro Bhikkhu defines it as the factor of effort or exertion which contains an element of discernment in its ability to distinguish skillful from unskillful mental qualities 149 U Silananda glosses atapi as you must be energetic put forth effort to be mindful 165 The second quality sampajana means to know something clearly or thoroughly so that one has the ability to fully grasp or comprehend what is taking place 166 This can refer to basic forms of knowing such being aware of one s posture as well as more discriminative forms of understanding such as comprehending the five hindrances 167 According to Thanissaro this means being clearly aware of what is happening in the present 149 According to Gethin having removed covetousness and aversion for the world is associated with the abandoning of the five hindrances as well as with the attainment of the jhanas as can be seen in suttas like MN 125 which directly associate these elements of the path 168 According to U Silananda this passage refers to a temporary removal of the five hindrances as a preliminary for meditation 165 The Ekottarika agama version states that one practices satipaṭṭhana while removing evil thoughts and being free from worry and sorrow one experiences joy in oneself 169 Analayo also associates this element with the development of samadhi This is supported by the Nettippakarana Nett 82 as well as by various suttas which contain a variation of the auxiliary formula which explicitly mentions samadhi such as SN 47 4 170 Analayo also notes that the abandonment of covetousness and aversion is associated with the practice of restraint of the senses in the early discourses such as in MN 39 This is a stage of practice prior to formal meditation in which the meditator guards the sense doors in order to prevent sense impressions from leading to desires and discontent 171 The goal in the initial stages of practice is to develop a sense of inner equipoise within which desires and discontent are held at bay Analayo further notes that although sense restraint precedes proper meditation practice in the gradual path scheme this does not imply that sense restraint is completed at an exact point in time only after which one moves on to formal practice In actual practice the two overlap to a considerable degree 172 Likewise Sujato associates this element with the preliminary subduing of the five hindrances through sense restraint to prepare the mind for mindfulness meditation 173 Contemplation of impermanence edit The Theravada Satipaṭṭhana Sutta as well as the Ekottarika agama version preserved in Chinese contain instructions to contemplate the arising and disappearance of the meditation subject i e impermanence anicca The Madhyama agama version does not contain this instruction but does mention that on practicing mindfulness one is endowed with knowledge vision understanding and penetration 153 Sujato thinks that this instruction to practice contemplation of impermanence reflects a later sectarian development that began to associate satipaṭṭhana more closely with vipassana 174 Analayo on the other hand thinks that contemplation of impermanence aniccasanna should be considered an integral aspect of satipaṭṭhana practice He cites the Sariputrabhidharma and the Anapanasati sutta and its parallels as other sources which indicate that contemplation of impermanence is a part of satipaṭṭhana practice 153 Furthermore Analayo states that awareness of impermanence which is an aspect of right view also leads to insight into anatta and dukkha 175 Gethin notes that the practice of observing the arising and falling of phenomena is particularly associated with the gaining of the insight that leads directly to the destruction of the asavas directly to awakening He also notes how various other suttas state that the practice of the four satipaṭṭhanas are directly linked with the destruction of the asavas 176 Influence editModern Theravada edit The four satipaṭṭhanas are regarded as fundamental in modern Theravada Buddhism and the Vipassana or Insight Meditation Movement In the Pali Canon mindfulness meditation and satipaṭṭhana are seen as ways to develop the mental factors of samatha calm serenity and vipassana insight 177 According to Bhikkhu Sujato there is a particularly popular interpretation of mindfulness meditation in modern Theravada which he calls the vipassanavada the vipassana doctrine According to Sujato this widespread modernist view can be summarized as follows The Buddha taught two systems of meditation samatha and vipassana Samatha was taught before the Buddha so is not really Buddhist it is dangerous because one can easily get attached to the bliss and it is unnecessary because vipassana alone can develop the access samadhi necessary to suppress the hindrances Vipassana is the true key to liberation taught by the Buddha This method was pre eminently taught in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta the most important discourse taught by the Buddha on meditation and on practice in everyday life The essence of this practice is the moment to moment awareness of the rise and fall of all mind body phenomena Thus satipaṭṭhana and vipassana are virtually synonyms 2 Tse fu Kuan also writes that it is a widely held opinion in Theravada Buddhism that serenity meditation is not essential for the realization of Nirvana 178 Kuan cites Theravada authors such as Ven Rahula Ven Silananda and Nyanaponika as figures who support some version of this view 179 In contrast to this Kuan argues that there is probably no explicit indication in the Canon that one can achieve liberation by the practice of sati alone without the attainment of the jhanas 179 According to Kuan this bare insight view arose due to the tendency in the tradition to redefine liberation by wisdom pannavimutti as being liberated by insight alone without high meditative attainments although liberation by wisdom originally did not mean so That liberation by wisdom did not originally mean liberation without jhana has also been argued by Cousins and Gombrich 180 Analayo writes that certain modern Theravada meditation teachers emphasize the dry insight approach dispensing with the formal development of mental calm 181 He writes that some teachers of this dry insight approach describe the practice of mindfulness as attacking its object or plunging into it He cites U Pandita who writes that satipaṭṭhana practice means to attack the object without hesitation with violence speed or great force with excessive haste or hurry 182 Analayo thinks this mistaken understanding of mindfulness arose because of a misreading or misinterpretation of a particular term This is related to the interpretation of the Abhidhamma term apilapeti plunging in the Theravada commentaries Analayo agrees with Gethin who argues instead for a reading of apilapati or abhilapati which means reminding 182 Furthermore even though the early discourses support the idea that one can attain stream entry without having developed the jhanas mainly by listening to a discourse by the Buddha Analayo argues that for satipaṭṭhana to unfold its full potential of leading to non returning or full awakening arahantship the development of absorption is required 183 Sujato notes that not all modern Theravada meditation traditions accept this dichotomy of samatha and vipassana According to Sujato the teachers of the Thai forest tradition instead emphasize how samatha and vipassana are complementary factors which must be practiced together This is closer to how these two aspects of meditation are understood in the early Buddhist texts 184 Similarly Thanissaro Bhikkhu notes that Although satipaṭṭhana practice is often said to be separate from the practice of jhana a number of suttas such as MN 125 and AN 8 63 equate the successful completion of this first stage of satipaṭṭhana practice with the attainment of the first level of jhana This point is confirmed by the many suttas MN 118 among them describing how the practice of satipaṭṭhana brings to completion the factors for awakening which coincide with the factors of jhana 185 According to Buddhadasa Bhikkhu the aim of mindfulness is to stop the arising of disturbing thoughts and emotions which arise from sense contact 186 According to the theory of Theravada Buddhism in the period of 5000 years after the parinirvana of Buddha we can still attain Sotapanna or even Arhat through practicing Satipatthana and Satipatthana is the only way out 187 In Indo Tibetan Buddhism edit The four establishments of mindfulness also known as the four close placements of mindfulness dran pa nyer bzhag are also taught in Indo Tibetan Buddhism as they are part of the 37 factors leading to a purified state byang chub yan lag so bdun 188 They are discussed in Tibetan commentaries on Santideva s Bodhicaryavatara such as Pawo Tsugla Trengwa Rinpoche s 16th century commentary and Kunzang Pelden s 1862 1943 commentary The Nectar of Manjushri s Speech 189 The Tibetan canon also contains a True Dharma Application of Mindfulness Sutra Tohoku Catalogue 287 dam chos dran pa nyer bzhag saddharmasmṛtyupasthanasutra 190 This sutra is cited by various Tibetan Buddhist figures such as Atisha in his Open Basket of Jewels and the Third Dzogchen Rinpoche 1759 1792 191 192 It is also cited as a sutra of the first turning by Khedrup Je 1385 1438 CE 193 This sutra is a large text that dates from between the second and fourth centuries CE It survives in Tibetan Chinese and Sanskrit manuscripts 194 It is a complex and heterogeneous Mulasarvastivada text with various topics such as long descriptions of the various realms in Buddhist cosmology discussions of karma theory meditation and ethics 195 The earliest layer of the text which can be found in chapter two contains the core meditation teachings of the text which include an extensive exposition of six elements dhatus meditation meditations on feeling vedana meditations on the skandhas and ayatanas meditation on the mind and impermanence and other meditation topics organized into a structure of ten levels bhumi 196 According to Jigme Lingpa s 1730 1798 Treasury of Precious Qualities the four applications of mindfulness are emphasized during the path of accumulation and in Mahayana are practiced with a focus on emptiness If one practices according to the Hinayana one meditates on the impurity of the body on the feelings of sufferings on the impermanence of consciousness and on the fact that mental objects are ownerless there is no self to which they belong If one practices according to the Mahayana during the meditation session one meditates on the same things as being spacelike beyond all conceptual constructs In the post meditation period one considers them as illusory and dreamlike 197 The general presentation of this practice in the Indo Tibetan Buddhist tradition focuses on cultivating samatha first and then practicing vipasyana 188 Examples of contemporary figures in Indo Tibetan Buddhism that have taught this practice include Chogyam Trungpa who often taught these practices in the USA and Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche a contemporary Tibetan lama 198 199 They have also been taught by the 14th Dalai Lama and students of his like Alexander Berzin and Thubten Chodron 188 The four applications of mindfulness are also discussed by Nyingma scholars like as Rong zom pa eleventh century Longchenpa 1308 1364 and Ju Mipham 1846 1912 200 These authors describe specifically Vajrayana modes of the four smṛtyupasthanas which have been adapted to the Vajrayana philosophy These four mantric smṛtyupasthanas described by Mipham are summarized by Dorji Wangchuk as follows 153 1 Contemplating blo bzhag pa the physical bodies of oneself and others as being characterized by primordial or intrinsic purity dag pa on the one hand and by emptiness stong pa nyid freedom from manifoldness spros bral great homogeneity mnyam pa chen po and integrality zung du jug pa on the other is called kayasmṛtyupasthana 2 Transforming conceptual constructions whose occurrence one feels senses or is aware of byung tshor gyi rtog pa into gnosis characterized by great bliss bde ba chen po i ye shes is called vedanasmṛtyupasthana 3 Channelling or containing constraining sdom pa all kinds of manifoldness associated with mind and mental factors into in to the innate sphere of the luminous nature of the mind is called cittasmṛtyupasthana 4 Conducting oneself in a way or with an attitude that all saṃsaric and nirvaṇic universal and particular phenomena are pure and equal and hence beyond adoption or rejection is dharmasmṛtyupasthana See also editSatipatthana Sutta also called the Four Satipatthanas Metta Sutta Kayagatasati Sutta Anapanasati Sutta Bodhipakkhiya dhamma Buddhist meditation Kammatthana Kōan Metta Mindfulness Samatha Buddhist paths to liberation VipassanaNotes edit For the traditional use of the translation foundations paṭṭhana of mindfulness see e g Gunaratana 2012 and U Silananda 2002 For appraisals supporting the parsing of the suffix as upaṭṭhana see e g Analayo 2006 pp 29 30 and Bodhi 2000 p 1504 pp 1660 1928 n 180 Frauwallner E 1973 History of Indian Philosophy trans V M Bedekar Delhi Motilal Banarsidass Two volumes pp 150 ff Kuan refers to Bronkhorst 1985 Dharma and Abhidharma p 312 314 Kuan refers to Sujato 2006 A history of mindfulness how insight worsted tranquility in the Satipatthana Sutta p 264 273 See the Satipatthana sutta MN 10 DN 22 as well as SN 47 1 47 18 and 47 43 These five discourses are the only canonical sources for the phrase ekayano maggo with this specific declension The Pali phrase ekayano maggo has been translated as direct path Bodhi amp Gunaratana 2012 p 12 Nanamoli amp Bodhi 1995 Thanissaro 2008 one way path Bodhi 2000 pp 1627 8 1647 8 1661 the only way Nyanasatta 2004 Soma 1941 2003 the one and only way Vipassana Research Institute 1996 pp 2 3 Bhikkhus this is the one way path for the purification of beings for the overcoming of sorrow and lamentation for the passing away of pain and displeasure for the achievement of the method subnote 1 for the realization of Nibbana that is the four establishments of mindfulness subnote 2 The wholesome establishments of mindfulness are contrasted with the unwholesome qualities of the five strands of sensuality namely pleasant sensations from the eye the ear the tongue and the body 44 Analayo 2006 p 63 to consider satipaṭṭhana purely as a concentration exercise goes too far and misses the important difference between what can become a basis for the development of concentration and what belongs to the realm of calmness meditation proper While concentration corresponds to an enhancement of the selective function of the mind by way of restricting the breadth of attention sati on its own represents an enhancement of the recollective function by way of expanding the breadth of attention These two modes of mental functioning correspond to two different cortical control mechanisms in the brain This difference however does not imply that the two are incompatible since during absorption attainment both are present But during absorption sati becomes mainly presence of the mind when it to some extent loses its natural breadth owing to the strong focusing power of concentration 61 Subnotes Bodhi 2000 SN 47 n 123 Kindle Loc 35147 notes Spk the commentary to the Samyutta Nikaya explains the method naya as the Noble Eightfold Path SN 47 1 Bodhi 2000 p 1627 Also see DN 22 MN 10 SN 47 18 and SN 47 43 References edit a b Kuan 2008 p i 9 81 a b Sujato 2012 pp 1 2 a b Sharf 2014 p 942 Sharf 2014 p 942 943 a b Gethin 2001 pp 30 32 a b Analayo 2006 p 47 Analayo 2006 pp 29 30 Bodhi 2000 p 1504 Soma 1941 2003 Analayo 2006 pp 46 47 Analayo 2006 p 48 Analayo 2006 p 57 59 Analayo 2006 p 29 Williams amp Tribe 2000 p 46 Gethin 2001 pp 36 40 a b c Bodhi Bhikkhu 2010 The Noble Eightfold Path The Way to the End of Suffering pp 79 80 Buddhist Publication Society Gunaratana Bhante Henepola 2012 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English pp 1 2 Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 35 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Samyutta Nikaya Ch 47 See Bodhi 2000 pp 1627ff a b Kuan 2008 p 104 Sujato 2012 p 244 Choong Mun keat 2010 Problems and Prospects of the Chinese Saṃyukta Agama Sujato A History of Mindfulness 2005 Sujato 2012 pp 278 288 289 Sujato 2012 p 280 a b Sujato 2012 p 133 Sujato 2012 p 148 Sujato 2012 p 260 a b c Kuan 2008 p 142 Sujato 2012 pp 320 321 Sujato 2012 pp 320 326 Sujato 2012 p 332 Sujato 2012 pp 341 345 Sujato 2012 pp 357 366 Sujato 2012 p 355 Sujato 2012 pp 273 274 a b Analayo 2006 p 16 Sujato 2012 p 305 308 Kuan 2008 p 107 Kuan 2008 p 108 Analayo 2013 p 48 49 Kuan 2008 p 143 Sujato 2012 pp 209 210 SN 47 6 Thanissaro 1997 and SN 47 7 Olendzki 2005 Sujato 2012 pp 186 188 Sujato 2012 pp 188 189 Sujato 2012 p 188 Sujato 2012 pp 181 182 Sujato 2012 p 182 Sujato 2012 pp 182 183 Gethin 2001 pp 50 52 Vetter 1988 p 5 Vetter 1988 Bronkhorst 1993 Gethin 1992 Rose 2016 p 60 Shankman 2008 Polak 2011 Arbel 2017 Analayo 2006 p 61 62 a b Analayo 2006 p 63 Analayo 2006 p 64 a b Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 pp 73 74 Gethin 2001 p 29 Polak 2011 p 153 156 196 197 Analayo 2013 p 40 Analayo 2013 p 45 Sujato 2012 pp 305 310 Analayo 2013 p 63 a b Analayo 2006 pp 46 47 63 68 Analayo 2013 p 73 Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 41 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia U Silananda 2012 pp 56 62 Bodhi Bhikkhu 2010 The Noble Eightfold Path The Way to the End of Suffering p 88 Buddhist Publication Society Gunaratana Bhante Henepola 2012 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English pp 57 58 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 p 80 Analayo 2013 pp 81 87 92 a b U Silananda 2012 pp 65 70 from Teaching Dhamma by pictures Explanation of a Siamese Traditional Buddhist Manuscript Analayo 2013 p 97 a b Analayo 2013 pp 97 101 Bodhi Bhikkhu 2010 The Noble Eightfold Path The Way to the End of Suffering p 89 Buddhist Publication Society Analayo 2013 pp 109 110 Analayo 2013 pp 46 47 Analayo 2013 p 55 Analayo 2013 pp 59 62 a b Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 43 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Analayo 2013 pp 117 118 Analayo 2013 pp 132 133 a b Analayo 2006 p 20 a b Analayo 2013 p 122 Analayo 2013 pp 127 129 Analayo 2013 pp 119 120 Gunaratana Bhante Henepola 2012 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English pp 81 82 Analayo 2013 pp 123 127 Analayo 2013 p 133 Bodhi Bhikkhu 2010 The Noble Eightfold Path The Way to the End of Suffering p 90 Buddhist Publication Society a b Analayo 2013 pp 142 145 Analayo 2013 pp 145 146 Analayo 2013 pp 149 150 a b Analayo 2013 pp 159 162 Analayo 2013 pp 161 162 Analayo 2013 p 162 Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 44 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Analayo 2013 p 145 Analayo 2013 pp 155 156 Analayo 2013 p 164 174 Sujato 2012 pp 312 314 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 p 75 Analayo 2006 pp 182 86 Analayo 2006 p 183 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 p 74 Sujato 2012 p 192 Gyori 1996 p 24 Analayo 2006 p 183 nn 2 3 Analayo 2013 p 176 Silananda 2012 p 90 Analayo 2013 p 177 Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 37 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers pp 38 40 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Analayo 2013 p 177 Analayo 2013 pp 181 182 Analayo 2013 pp 182 183 U Silananda 2012 pp 90 103 Analayo 2013 pp 183 184 Analayo 2013 pp 189 194 Analayo 2013 pp 195 196 Analayo 2013 pp 195 215 219 220 Analayo 2013 p 200 a b Analayo 2013 pp 200 205 a b Analayo 2013 pp 205 206 Naṇananda Bhikkhu K 2016 Seeing Through A Guide to Insight Meditation p 4 Kaṭukurunde Nanananda Sadaham Senasun Bharaya Sri Lanka Analayo 2013 p 205 a b Analayo 2013 pp 205 209 Analayo 2013 p 215 Naṇananda Bhikkhu K 2016 Seeing Through A Guide to Insight Meditation p 2 Kaṭukurunde Nanananda Sadaham Senasun Bharaya Sri Lanka Sujato 2012 p 190 Sujato 2012 p 191 Analayo 2006 p 19 Gethin 2001 p 47 Analayo 2006 pp 20 21 Analayo 2006 p 21 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 pp 77 79 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 p 77 Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 p 79 U Silananda 2012 p 17 Sujato 2012 pp 200 203 a b Analayo 2006 p 32 a b c d Thanissaro Bhikkhu Geoffrey DeGraff The Wings to Awakening An Anthology from the Pali Canon Seventh Edition 2013 pp 75 76 Analayo 2006 pp 94 97 98 Analayo 2013 pp 12 15 Analayo 2006 pp 94 98 a b c d Analayo 2013 pp 15 19 Analayo 2006 pp 100 101 Gethin 2001 p 53 Sujato 2012 pp 204 206 Gethin 2001 p 54 Analayo 2006 p 102 Analayo 2006 p 96 Analayo 2006 p 98 Sujato 2012 p 193 a b Analayo 2006 pp 34 35 Sujato 2012 p 197 Analayo 2006 pp 37 38 a b U Silananda 2012 pp 3 17 Analayo 2006 pp 39 40 Analayo 2006 pp 40 41 Gethin 2001 pp 48 51 Analayo 2013 p 23 Analayo 2006 p 67 Analayo 2006 p 71 Analayo 2006 p 72 Sujato 2012 A Swift Pair of Messengers p 36 INWARD PATH Penang Malaysia Sujato 2012 p 296 298 Analayo 2006 p 103 Gethin 2001 p 56 Kuan 2008 pp 38 40 57 60 Kuan 2008 p 9 a b Kuan 2008 pp 142 143 Kuan 2008 pp 140 141 Analayo 2006 p 64 a b Analayo 2006 p 65 Analayo 2006 pp 79 83 Sujato 2012 pp 2 137 Maha satipatthana Sutta The Great Frames of Reference DN 22 translated from the Pali by Thanissaro Bhikkhu Access to Insight Legacy Edition 30 November 2013 Buddhadasa Bhikkhu 2014 p 79 101 117 note 42 大念处经 白话文 网友文摘内容 佛教在线 www fjnet com Retrieved 2022 03 02 a b c Berzin Alexander The Four Close Placements of Mindfulness in Mahayana Study Buddhism Retrieved August 26 2020 Weiser Thomas A C 2011 Three Approaches to the Four Foundations An Investigation of Vipassana Meditation Analytical Meditation and Samatha Vipasyana Meditation on the Four Foundations of Mindfulness pp 33 36 Naropa University General Sutra Section 84000 co Retrieved August 26 2020 Apple James B 2019 Jewels of the Middle Way The Madhyamaka Legacy of Atisa and His Early Tibetan Followers pp 80 81 Simon and Schuster Dzogchen Rinpoche 2008 Great Perfection Outer and Inner Preliminaries Shambhala Publications Wayman Alex 1993 Introduction to Buddhist Tantric Systems Translated from Mkhas Grub Rje s Rgyud Sde Spyihi Rnam Par Gzag Pargyas Par Brjod with Original Text and Annotation p 45 Stuart Daniel Malinowski 2012 A Less Traveled Path Meditation and Textual Practice in the Saddharmasmrtyupasthana sutra pp 25 27 Stuart Daniel Malinowski 2012 A Less Traveled Path Meditation and Textual Practice in the Saddharmasmrtyupasthana sutra pp 29 31 Stuart Daniel Malinowski 2012 A Less Traveled Path Meditation and Textual Practice in the Saddharmasmrtyupasthana sutra pp 46 70 75 Longchen Yeshe Dorje Jigme Lingpa 2010 Treasury of Precious Qualities Book One p 391 Shambhala Publications See for example Chogyam Trungpa 1991 The Heart of the Buddha Entering the Tibetan Buddhist Path Shambhala Publications Dzogchen Ponlop The Four Foundations Of Mindfulness Excerpted from a teaching in Vermont 1996 Originally published in Bodhi Magazine Issue 3 Dorji Wangchuk The Diachronic and Synchronic Relationship between Philosophical Theory and Spiritual Praxis in Buddhism With Special Reference to the Case of the Four Applications of Mindfulness smṛtyupasthana dran pa nye bar gzhag pa in Vajrayana In Buddhist Meditative Praxis Traditional Teachings and Modern Applications edited by K L Dhammajoti Hong Kong Centre of Buddhist Studies University of Hong Kong 2015 pp 177 201 Sources editPrinted sources edit Analayo 2006 Satipatthana The Direct Path to Realization PDF Birmingham Windhorse Publications ISBN 1 899579 54 0 Analayo 2013 Perspectives on Satipatthana PDF Cambridge Windhorse Publications ISBN 978 1 909314 03 0 Arbel Keren 2017 Early Buddhist Meditation The Four Jhanas as the Actualization of Insight Routledge Bronkhorst Johannes 1993 The Two Traditions Of Meditation In Ancient India Motilal Banarsidass Publ Buddhadasa Bhikkhu 2014 Heartwood of the Bodhi Tree Wisdom publications Gethin Rupert 1992 The Buddhist Path to Awakening OneWorld Publications Gethin R M L 2001 The Buddhist Path to Awakening A Study of the Bodhi Pakkhiya Dhamma Oneworld Publications ISBN 1 85168 285 6 Gombrich Richard F 1996 How Buddhism Began The Conditioned Genesis of the Early Teachings Gunaratana Henepola 2012 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness in Plain English Boston Wisdom Pub ISBN 978 1 61429 038 4 Gyori Thomas I 1996 The Foundations of Mindfulness Satipatthana as a Microcosm of the Theravada Buddhist World View M A dissertatio Washington American University Kuan Tse fu 2008 Mindfulness in Early Buddhism New Approaches through Psychology and Textual Analysis of Pali Chinese and Sanskrit Sources Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 43737 0 Nyanaponika 2014 1962 The Heart of Buddhist Meditation Kandy Sri Lanka Weiser Books ISBN 978 1578635580 Polak Grzegorz 2011 Reexamining Jhana Towards a Critical Reconstruction of Early Buddhist Soteriology UMCS Rose Kenneth 2016 Yoga Meditation and Mysticism Contemplative Universals and Meditative Landmarks Bloomsbury Shankman Richard 2008 The Experience of Samadhi An In depth Exploration of Buddhist Meditation Shambhala Sharf Robert October 2014 Mindfulness and Mindlessness in Early Chan PDF Philosophy East and West 64 4 933 964 doi 10 1353 pew 2014 0074 S2CID 144208166 Sujato 2012 A History of Mindfulness How insight worsted tranquillity in the Satipaṭṭhana Sutta PDF Santipada Silananda 2012 The Four Foundations of Mindfulness Simon and Schuster Vetter Tilmann 1988 The Ideas and Meditative Practices of Early Buddhism BRILL Williams Paul Tribe Anthony 2000 Buddhist Thought Routledge Web sources edit Chicago The University of Libraries CRL Center for Research Digital South Asia Library dsal uchicago edu Chicago The University of Libraries CRL Center for Research Digital South Asia Library dsal uchicago edu Further reading editTheravada Bodhi Bhikkhu 2000 The Connected Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya Somerville MA Wisdom Publications ISBN 0 86171 168 8 Nanamoli Bhikkhu and Bhikkhu Bodhi trans 1995 The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha A Translation of the Majjhima Nikaya Somerville Wisdom Pubs ISBN 0 86171 072 X Nyanasatta Thera 2004 Satipatthana Sutta The Foundations of Mindfulness MN 10 Olendzki Andrew 2005 Makkata Sutta The Foolish Monkey SN 47 7 Patton Charles S III The Abodes of Mindfulness 念處 MN 98 Soma Thera 1941 6th ed 2003 The Way of Mindfulness The Satipatthana Sutta and Its Commentary Kandy BPS ISBN 955 24 0256 5 Sujato Bhante Linked Discourses on Mindfulness Meditation Satipaṭṭhana samyutta SN chapter 47 Thanissaro Bhikkhu 1997 Sakunagghi Sutta The Hawk SN 47 6 Thanissaro Bhikkhu 1997a Sedaka Sutta At Sedaka The Acrobat SN 47 19 Thanissaro Bhikkhu 1997b Sedaka Sutta At Sedaka The Beauty Queen SN 47 20 Thanissaro Bhikkhu 2008 Satipatthana Sutta Frames of Reference MN 10 Vipassana Research Institute trans 1996 Mahasatipaṭṭhana Sutta The Great Discourse on Establishing Mindfulness Seattle WA Vipassana Research Publications of America ISBN 0 9649484 0 0 Zen Nhat Hanh Thich trans Annabel Laity 2005 Transformation and Healing Sutra on the Four Establishments of Mindfulness Berkeley CA Parallax Press ISBN 0 938077 34 1 Nhất Hạnh Thich Laity Annabel Ekottarikagama 12 1 The One Way In Sutra Scholarly Polak Grzegorz 2011 Reexamining Jhana Towards a Critical Reconstruction of Early Buddhist Soteriology UMCSExternal links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Satipatthana Satipaṭṭhana related discourses in the Pali Canon Maha Satipaṭṭhana Sutta Digha Nikaya 22 in Pali Satipaṭṭhana Sutta Majjhima Nikaya 10 Satipaṭṭhana samyutta Samyutta Nikaya 47 selected discourses Commentary on the Satipatthana sutta Link to free online class on Satipaṭṭhana given by Sayadaw U Silananda Agendas of Mindfulness by Thanissaro Bhikkhu a discourse on Satipaṭṭhana Satipatthana Vipassana or Insight through Mindfulness by Mahasi Sayadaw Global Online Satipatthana Recitation Saddhamma Foundation Information about practicing Satipatthana meditation The Four Foundations of Mindfulness from the Satipatthana Sutta D 22 Satipatthana The Direct Path to Realization by Bhikkhu Analayo Foundations Of Mindfulness Satipatthana Sutta by Nyanasatta Thera Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Satipatthana amp oldid 1217126024, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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