A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 756 pages of information about A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1.

A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 756 pages of information about A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1.

[Footnote 4:  Ibid. p. 185, Visuddhimagga, Ch.  XVII.]

[Footnote 5:  Ibid. pp. 185-186, Visuddhimagga, Ch.  XVII.]

89

the cross-roads beholding all that come from any direction [Footnote ref 1].  Buddhagho@sa in the Atthasalini also says that consciousness means that which thinks its object.  If we are to define its characteristics we must say that it knows (vijanana), goes in advance (pubba@ngama), connects (sandhana), and stands on namarupa (namarupapada@t@thanam).  When the consciousness gets a door, at a place the objects of sense are discerned (arammana-vibhavana@t@thane) and it goes first as the precursor.  When a visual object is seen by the eye it is known only by the consciousness, and when the dhammas are made the objects of (mind) mano, it is known only by the consciousness [Footnote ref 2].  Buddhagho@sa also refers here to the passage in the Milinda Panha we have just referred to.  He further goes on to say that when states of consciousness rise one after another, they leave no gap between the previous state and the later and consciousness therefore appears as connected.  When there are the aggregates of the five khandhas it is lost; but there are the four aggregates as namarupa, it stands on nama and therefore it is said that it stands on namarupa.  He further asks, Is this consciousness the same as the previous consciousness or different from it?  He answers that it is the same.  Just so, the sun shows itself with all its colours, etc., but he is not different from those in truth; and it is said that just when the sun rises, its collected heat and yellow colour also rise then, but it does not mean that the sun is different from these.  So the citta or consciousness takes the phenomena of contact, etc., and cognizes them.  So though it is the same as they are yet in a sense it is different from them [Footnote ref 3].

To go back to the chain of twelve causes, we find that jati (birth) is the cause of decay and death, jaramara@na, etc.  Jati is the appearance of the body or the totality of the five skandhas [Footnote ref 4].  Coming to bhava which determines jati, I cannot think of any better rational explanation of bhava, than that I have already

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[Footnote 1:  Warren’s Buddhism in Translations, p. 182, Milinda Panha (628).]

[Footnote 2:  Atthasalini, p. 112...]

[Footnote 3:  Ibid. p. 113, Yatha hi rupadini upadaya pannatta suriyadayo na atthato rupadihi anne honti ten’ eva yasmin samaye suriyo udeti tasmin samaye tassa teja-sa@nkhatam rupa@m piti eva@m vuccamane pi na rupadihi anno suriyo nama atthi.  Tatha cittam phassadayo dhamme upadaya pannapiyati.  Atthato pan’ ettha tehi annam eva.  Tena yasmin samaye cittam uppanna@m hoti eka@msen eva tasmin samaye phassadihi atthato annad eva hoti ti.]

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A History of Indian Philosophy, Volume 1 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.