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Re: Cessation's permanence

ground
Posts: 2592
Joined: Wed Nov 25,
2009 6:01 am

by ground Sun Apr 24, 2011 6:31 am


P
o that evidences what?
And
s
t

Kind regards

o
p
Kenshou
Posts: 1030
Joined: Sun Nov 15,
2009 12:03 am
Location: Minneapolis,
MN

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Kenshou Sun Apr 24, 2011 6:33 am
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

the examples given by chownah, accinteyo and Nibbida all are based on the idea that the state
of the arya is based on his remembrance of past experiences.

Maybe I missed something, but as far as I can see, no they are not based on that. It seems that
you brought up the subject on your own a few posts back.
Is your line of thinking here that in order for a reborn sotapanna etc. to maintain their
realization, they must be able to recall their practice in past lives? I would submit that the
termination of whatever fetters is not something so shallow, that merely not remembering
that it happened would be enough for a person to retrogress.
But unless we have some reborn ariyas around here, this is all pretty speculative... not that we
can't discuss it.
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


Akuma
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010
4:56 pm
Location: NRW, Germany

by Akuma Sun Apr 24, 2011 6:58 am


P
o
s
Kenshou wrote:
t

Maybe I missed something, but as far as I can see, no they are not based on that. It seems that
you brought up the subject on your own a few posts back. Is your line of thinking here that in
order for a reborn sotapanna etc. to maintain their realization, they must be able to recall their
practice in past lives?

No I read this in their answers. Nibbida wrote that you cannot compare the belief in Nirvana
with the belief in Jesus because there is gradual training that you can witness and so forth.
While it is true that gradual training can produce visible outcomes (more relaxed and so forth)
it is of course not indicating the existence of a Nirvana. But more important to the OP is that
since everything in Buddhism is transient everything that is gradually aquired can also be
gradually lost again. So reacting to this chownah tried to get rid of the idea of gradual training
and brought up the idea of chocolate ice-cream which is based on the same principle tho having had an experience and then remembering it. Just like training in piano-playing or
whatever the experience of ice-cream is based on the remembering of past objects of
consciousness. Unlike accinteyos first explanation that is able to logically show that the
absence of avijja will lead to the absence of rebirth and so on the explanations based on
remembrance can not do that until you base it on the skill of remembering your experience.

I would submit that the termination of whatever fetters is not something so shallow, that merely
not remembering that it happened would be enough for a person to retrogress.

Which brings us back to the original question, what exactly happens to the citta-stream in the
moments of enlightenment that changes it in such a way. This becomes especially hard to
explain for Tehravadins because they accept the present-only-exists viewpoint and which made
this question interesting for me in the first place.
o
p
Akuma
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010
4:56 pm
Location: NRW, Germany

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Akuma Sun Apr 24, 2011 7:03 am
P
o
s
TMingyur wrote:
t

And that evidences what?


Kind regards

That even if you argue with the relativity of concepts the question is still valid in the context of
the school its asking about.
o
p
chownah
Posts: 3666
Joined: Wed Aug 12,
2009 2:19 pm

Re: Cessation's permanence


by chownah Sun Apr 24, 2011 7:10 am
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


I tried to find your Jesus-example but couldn't find it....can you post it soon? I'll ignore the
fact that I don't know what your example is and proceed to start firing wildly in the dark
to answer your post.

Nibbida referred to my answer to Ben I assume.

I think that skills acquired for training is not a good metaphor for the changes of reaching
Sotapanna and higher......possibly a more apt metaphor is the smell and taste of chocolate
ice cream......once you experience them you do not retrogress and forget them even if
you don't practice.

So a Sotapanna from Theravada pov can always remember his past existences?

OK, I see your jesus example....sorry that i missed it before.


First let me say that the portion of my last post you reproduce here is a direct comment on
your metaphor of skills acquired for training and why I think it is not appropriate....so please
take it to be that and try to understand why I think your metaphor is not appropriate.
Second let me say that I think that Sotapanna's know the difference between their condition
and the condition of those not having reached Sotapanna....whether this is from remembrace
of their own experiences or if it is from observing the world around them is not an issue for
me......even if they can not remember their own experiences it should be easy enough to see
the folly of indulgence in self (for instance) for them to know that their understandings about
doctrine of self is absolutely the way to go...and so they continue....without regress.....I
guess......I don't really know for sure because in life there are no proofs and there are no
guarantees.....in life you pays your money and you takes your chances.......
chownah
o
p
Kenshou
Posts: 1030
Joined: Sun Nov 15,
2009 12:03 am
Location: Minneapolis,
MN

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Kenshou Sun Apr 24, 2011 7:15 am
P
It ois my suspicion that when it comes to something as radical
s
gaining
that understanding of how the cessation of suffering
t

as seeing through self-view and


is possible (which is a big deal),
even if it is not conceptually remembered, the individual could still intuit, so to say, that
knowledge. Those realizations are pretty novel for one who has been going around and around
in samsara for so long, and I would not be surprised that they would condition the mindstream
significantly.

If you pushed me to say one way or another whether retrogression is possible I would have to
say that I simply don't know, so I'd better not worry about it right now since thinking about
that isn't going to help me not retrogress.
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence

ground
Posts: 2592

by ground Sun Apr 24, 2011 7:34 am


P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


TMingyur wrote:

Joined: Wed Nov 25,


2009 6:01 am

And that evidences what?


Kind regards

That even if you argue with the relativity of concepts the question is still valid in the context of
the school its asking about.

Only if one erroneously assumes that "the relativity of concepts" can be logically grasped which
actually is impossible because whereas "relativity as such" can be logically grasped "the
relativity of a meaning qua meaning" is not accessible to logical thought which is necessarily of
binary nature.

Kind regards
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


by tiltbillings Sun Apr 24, 2011 8:02 am
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

...

tiltbillings
Posts: 21230
Joined: Wed Dec 31,
2008 9:25 am

You appear to be widely read in Theravadin and other Buddhist stuff, but I wonder what your
actual quesation is here?
.

++++++++++++++++

This being is bound to samsara, kamma is his means for going beyond. -- SN
I, 38.

Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should
that mean that it is not real? HPatDH p.723
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence

ground
Posts: 2592
Joined: Wed Nov 25,
2009 6:01 am

by ground Sun Apr 24, 2011 8:42 am


P
Asoa matter of fact the Buddha's way is
s
t

one of experience which entails knowledge:

... don't go by logical conjecture, by inference, ...


When you know for yourselves that,
'These qualities are unskillful; these qualities are blameworthy; these qualities are criticized by
the wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to harm & to suffering' then you
should abandon them.
...
When you know for yourselves that,
'These qualities are skillful; these qualities are blameless; these qualities are praised by the

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


wise; these qualities, when adopted & carried out, lead to welfare & to happiness' then you
should enter & remain in them.
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka ... .than.html

Kind regards
o
p
nobody12345
Posts: 196
Joined: Mon Nov 22,
2010 4:05 am

Re: Cessation's permanence


by nobody12345 Sun Apr 24, 2011 11:41 am
P
o
s
Ben wrote:
t

Practice.
The proof of the pudding, Akuma, is in its eating.

Ben's answer is wise one.


To OP, suppose if you want to know about the taste of apple and you are asking me about it.
I could write thousands pages of researches and descriptions regarding the taste of apple and
its chemical and molecule level dynamics that creates such a taste and flavor.
But in the end, even after read all the pages of researches, you would have no idea what is the
taste after all.
You need to eat it in order to know what is like the taste of apple.
(This simile of the apple's taste is from Ajahn Chah.)
But in the end, you do not need to believe it.
If it doesn't ring a bell to you, then forget about Theravada and move on to some other
'religions'.
Dhamma only rings a bell if a listener is ready (faculty wise).
If Dhamma doesn't do that, it is simply not for you.
Metta.
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


by acinteyyo Sun Apr 24, 2011 6:09 pm
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

the examples given by chownah, accinteyo and Nibbida all are based on the idea that the state
of the arya is based on his remembrance of past experiences.

Hi Akuma,
acinteyyo
Posts: 1344
Joined: Mon Jun 01,
2009 9:48 am
Location: Bavaria /
Germany

with respect to my given example it is not based on remembrance of past experiences at all.
This is in fact the important point to understand. It is about knowing in the here and now, by
directly seeing things as they are here and now. Not by remembering any experience in the
past. That's why it is irreversible. The ability to remember past experiences could get lost but
when a point has reached once, where one penetrated delusion to some degree, the
knowledge by directly seeing things clearer here and now is irreversible. No need to remember
this particular experience of the past again, because it is always known directly here and now
by seeing it clearly here and now.
best wishes, acinteyyo
Pubbe cha bhikkhave, etarahi ca dukkhaceva papemi, dukkhassa ca nirodha. (M 22)

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


o
p
Akuma
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010
4:56 pm
Location: NRW, Germany

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Akuma Mon Apr 25, 2011 7:28 am
P
o
s
TMingyur wrote:
t

Only if one erroneously assumes that "the relativity of concepts" can be logically grasped which
actually is impossible because whereas "relativity as such" can be logically grasped "the
relativity of a meaning qua meaning" is not accessible to logical thought which is necessarily of
binary nature.

Without judging this as true or untrue it is in any case using concepts inaccesible to Theravada
since they were developed later.

tilt wrote:

You appear to be widely read in Theravadin and other Buddhist stuff, but I wonder what your
actual quesation is here?

Im wondering that about yours, too now, since my question is in the OP and clear enough. But if
you want me to elaborate a bit more then I could split it into a purely buddhological /
philosophical and a personal thing. The first would be that since it seems that Buddhisms coredoctrines were really questioned only to much over a thousand years after the Buddha and afaik - the doctrine of Nirvana was weirdly ignored completely. As stated before you can find
proof for rebirth f.e. but not for Nirvana. So I was wondering if Theravada was ever confronted
with critical inquiry and could answer at all from the their viewpoint.
The second thing is purely personal since I would of course just like everyone else here be free
from suffering. But so far Buddhist practice looks pretty much like a bunch of people who can
neither explain what theyre aiming at exactly, nor technically define why it should work, how
it should work nor give a functioning step-by-step guide how to reach it, altho they sure like to
talk much about everything peripheral to it .
So as long as the core of all this is just imagination and belief - its all just wishful thinking. So
the first step to check if this perception is correct is to question the mechanics of nibbana.
And this starts with asking why the attainments are unshakeable naturally.

imaginos wrote:

If it doesn't ring a bell to you, then forget about Theravada and move on to some other
'religions'.
Dhamma only rings a bell if a listener is ready (faculty wise).

So your reaction to my critical questions is an inapplicable example where you presuppose


exactly what I'm questioning and then youre in addition indirectly insulting me? Youre doing a
great job providing practical proof that not even gradual training has any visible positive
effects here.

accinteyo wrote:

Hi Akuma,

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


with respect to my given example it is not based on remembrance of past experiences at all.
This is in fact the important point to understand. It is about knowing in the here and now, by
directly seeing things as they are here and now. Not by remembering any experience in the
past. That's why it is irreversible. The ability to remember past experiences could get lost but
when a point has reached once, where one penetrated delusion to some degree, the knowledge
by directly seeing things clearer here and now is irreversible. No need to remember this
particular experience of the past again, because it is always known directly here and now by
seeing it clearly here and now.

Good. What is different then in the setup of the mindstream of the arya as compared the the
putthujana? The Sarvastivadins f.e. hold that the arya-santana actually appropriates certain
dharmas that make him an arya. Do you know how Theravada explains if it does?
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


by tiltbillings Mon Apr 25, 2011 7:50 am
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

or untrue it is in any case using concepts inaccesible to Theravada since they were developed
later.

tiltbillings
Posts: 21230
Joined: Wed Dec 31,
2008 9:25 am

tilt wrote:

You appear to be widely read in Theravadin and other Buddhist stuff, but I wonder what
your actual question is here?

Im wondering that about yours, too now, since my question is in the OP and clear enough.

No, it is not.

But if you want me to elaborate a bit more then I could split it into a purely buddhological /
philosophical and a personal thing. The first would be that since it seems that Buddhisms coredoctrines were really questioned only to much over a thousand years after the Buddha and afaik - the doctrine of Nirvana was weirdly ignored completely. As stated before you can find
proof for rebirth f.e. but not for Nirvana. So I was wondering if Theravada was ever confronted
with critical inquiry and could answer at all from the their viewpoint.

Why would it matter?

The second thing is purely personal since I would of course just like everyone else here be free
from suffering. But so far Buddhist practice looks pretty much like a bunch of people who can
neither explain what theyre aiming at exactly, nor technically define why it should work, how it
should work nor give a functioning step-by-step guide how to reach it, altho they sure like to
talk much about everything peripheral to it.

And having some sort of pat intellectual explanation is going to matter?

So as long as the core of all this is just imagination and belief - its all just wishful thinking. So

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


the first step to check if this perception is correct is to question the mechanics of nibbana. And
this starts with asking why the attainments are unshakeable naturally.

So, one needs to construct an intellectual edifice before putting the teachings into practice.
Why?
.

++++++++++++++++

This being is bound to samsara, kamma is his means for going beyond. -- SN
I, 38.

Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should
that mean that it is not real? HPatDH p.723
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence

ground
Posts: 2592
Joined: Wed Nov 25,
2009 6:01 am

by ground Mon Apr 25, 2011 8:34 am


P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

TMingyur wrote:

Only if one erroneously assumes that "the relativity of concepts" can be logically grasped
which actually is impossible because whereas "relativity as such" can be logically grasped
"the relativity of a meaning qua meaning" is not accessible to logical thought which is
necessarily of binary nature.

Without judging this as true or untrue it is in any case using concepts inaccesible to Theravada
since they were developed later.

Well yes, but your approach isn't accessible from within the sphere of Theravada either.
kind regards
o
p
Akuma
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010
4:56 pm
Location: NRW, Germany

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Akuma Mon Apr 25, 2011 8:38 am
P
o
s
tilt wrote:
t

Why would it matter?

Searching for truth means lookin in all sorts of places. In addition I just find buddhist
philosophy to be quite intruiging.

And having some sort of pat intellectual explanation is going to matter?


(...)
So, one needs to construct an intellectual edifice before putting the teachings into practice.
Why?

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel

Example. You want a specific object that you can only get in a specific city that is hidden
somewhere. I am asking you as to your explanation why you think you can get this object in
this city since I have my doubts that the city and the object exist at all. And your answer is "go
to the city and get the object then you will see".
Concretely you are asking me to do what you have been unable to do yourself to prove to
myself that which you cannot explain. So if you want to call reason an intellectual edifice then
suit yourself.
o
p
Akuma
Posts: 147
Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010
4:56 pm
Location: NRW, Germany

Re: Cessation's permanence


by Akuma Mon Apr 25, 2011 8:44 am
P
o
s
TMingyur wrote:
t

Well yes, but your approach isn't accessible from within the sphere of Theravada either.
kind regards

Yea this is what I thought at first too but I was unsure. And ehm - so far I am still unsure
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


by tiltbillings Mon Apr 25, 2011 8:45 am
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

tilt wrote:
tiltbillings
Posts: 21230
Joined: Wed Dec 31,
2008 9:25 am

Why would it matter?

Searching for truth means lookin in all sorts of places. In addition I just find buddhist philosophy
to be quite intruiging.

And for others Buddhist philosophy is a distraction. A mastery of such is not necessary for doing
the practice.

And having some sort of pat intellectual explanation is going to matter?


(...)
So, one needs to construct an intellectual edifice before putting the teachings into
practice. Why?

Example. You want a specific object that you can only get in a specific city that is hidden
somewhere. I am asking you as to your explanation why you think you can get this object in this
city since I have my doubts that the city and the object exist at all.

The teachings provide a map that can be followed, but trying to analysis the map to see if it
leads to were it says, is at best of limited value.

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel

And your answer is "go to the city and get the object then you will see".
Concretely you are asking me to do what you have been unable to do yourself to prove to myself
that which you cannot explain. So if you want to call reason an intellectual edifice then suit
yourself.

I am not asking you to do anything, and if you want to pursue an analysis of the map, that is
your choice.
.

++++++++++++++++

This being is bound to samsara, kamma is his means for going beyond. -- SN
I, 38.

Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should
that mean that it is not real? HPatDH p.723
o
p
rowyourboat
Posts: 1949
Joined: Sat Jan 03, 2009
5:29 pm
Location: London, UK

Re: Cessation's permanence


by rowyourboat Mon Apr 25, 2011 10:26 am
P
HIoAkuma,
s
t

So you want the ending of suffering? ..and the way to do that is to get to this place called
nibbana? ..and you have doubts about its permanency?
Seems reasonable, but it also seems to be wound up with an idea of having to get to someplace
where the ending of suffering is seen. Theravada buddhism doesnt work like that.
In Theravada Buddhism we see the ending of suffering in this life, by understanding the full
extent of suffering, by seeing the causes of that full spread of suffering, and by removing the
cause(s) of that suffering .. in this very life. Nibbana expressed in a mundane way, is
experienced in this very life. Your assumption that people here haven't experienced nibbana,
the truth of that process to nibbana, and the logical consistency of the goal, the experiential
relief of cessation, and at least the release that faith in this goal brings, is mistaken. Even
their lack of ignorance about the dhamma, their lack of doubt will take them to a good place
at the very least. You seem to sit ever outside, wondering, pondering but never really
belonging.. to anything. What use has been your erudition to you?
with metta
Matheesha
With Metta
Karuna
Mudita
& Upekkha
o
p
chownah
Posts: 3666
Joined: Wed Aug 12,
2009 2:19 pm

Re: Cessation's permanence


by chownah Mon Apr 25, 2011 12:20 pm
P
o

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


Akuma wrote:

"................
But so far Buddhist practice looks pretty much like a bunch of people who can neither explain
what theyre aiming at exactly, nor technically define why it should work, how it should work
nor give a functioning step-by-step guide how to reach it, altho they sure like to talk much
about everything peripheral to it?
.................."

Akuma,
Buddhist practice is not a bunch of people....it is what individuals do.
As far as I know most of the "Buddhists" who post on this forum are aiming at the end of
suffering (Dukkha).
The Buddha taught that it does work and how this can be seen in the world....isn't this in the 4
Noble Truths?
The Buddha taught how it does work....Isn't this in the 4 Noble Truths?
There is not step by step guide....if it was that easy we would probably just need a pamphlet
issued to us......
Alot of the things people do to help in achieving the end of Dukkha are things to train the mind
so that it is more aware of its own functioning and so to the casual observer (no insult
intended) they seem peripheral...and I suppose it could be called that...I guess it takes most
people alot of peripheral work to get ready for the "big event".....this is just the nature of
following the path...a path where there is not step by step guide......
There are no guarantees....there are no proofs....there is no easy answer....there is no step by
step guide.....whether an arahant is stuck in nibbana or not is of no importance whatsoever as
far as I can tell....what difference does it make anyway?....is it just that you can have no faith
unless this can be proven?....proven in some way that is not even clear what would constitute
proof?....then I guess you probably won't pursue Theravada Buddhism....that's ok with me....I
suggest trying Taoism....it teaches about the same thing as Theravada but eveything is treated
as mysteriously obscure and unproven.....I rather like Taoism and think that while it teaches
about the same thing it does so in a way that is more attractive to many people and you just
might find it more enticing.
chownah
o
p

Re: Cessation's permanence


by acinteyyo Mon Apr 25, 2011 12:21 pm
P
o
s
Akuma wrote:
t

accinteyo wrote:

Hi Akuma,

acinteyyo
Posts: 1344
Joined: Mon Jun 01,
2009 9:48 am
Location: Bavaria /
Germany

with respect to my given example it is not based on remembrance of past experiences at


all. This is in fact the important point to understand. It is about knowing in the here and
now, by directly seeing things as they are here and now. Not by remembering any
experience in the past. That's why it is irreversible. The ability to remember past
experiences could get lost but when a point has reached once, where one penetrated
delusion to some degree, the knowledge by directly seeing things clearer here and now is
irreversible. No need to remember this particular experience of the past again, because it
is always known directly here and now by seeing it clearly here and now.
Good. What is different then in the setup of the mindstream of the arya as compared the the

http://dhammawheel.com/viewtopic.php?f=13&t=8168&start=20[14/8/2558 12:17:29]

Cessation's permanence - Page 2 - Dhamma Wheel


putthujana? The Sarvastivadins f.e. hold that the arya-santana actually appropriates certain
dharmas that make him an arya. Do you know how Theravada explains if it does?

I'm not familiar with views of the earlier Sarvstivda. To answer your question, the relevance
of what one appropriates is less important. What one gets rid of is much more important. For
example one way to describe the difference between an ariya and a puthujjana are the
fetters. A puthujjana is anyone who is still possessed of all the 10 fetters. An arya is free from
some or all fetters. Another way to look at it are the five clinging aggregates
(pac'updnakkhandh) vs. the aggregates (pacakhandh). In case of the puthujjana the
pac'updnakkhandh apply, whereas only the pacakhandh apply to an arahant, who got rid
of clinging. A third way to differentiate is the way puthujjana, sekha and arahant
recognize/comprehend the world. See Notes on Dhamma :: Shorter Notes :: MAMA of Ven.
anavira Thera and Mulapariyaya Sutta MN1.
best wishes, acinteyyo
Pubbe cha bhikkhave, etarahi ca dukkhaceva papemi, dukkhassa ca nirodha. (M 22)

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