Encyclopedia of Buddhism

(Elle) #1

  1. Worlds (loka)

  2. Action (karma)

  3. Contaminants (anus ́aya)

  4. Path of Religious Praxis and Religious Persons
    (margapudgala)

  5. Knowledge (jñana)

  6. Meditative States (samapatti)

  7. Person (pudgala)


The ninth chapter contains a refutation of the theory
of the existence of the person and may represent a sep-
arate treatise by Vasubandhu, appended to the re-
mainder of the Abhidharmakos ́a.The Abhidharmakos ́a
became the most influential early Indian Buddhist Ab-
hidharmatext within the later scholastic traditions of
Tibet and East Asia, where it served as a textbook
within monastic curricula and generated numerous
commentaries.


See also:Abhidharma; Dharma and Dharmas; Sar-
vastivada and Mulasarvastivada


Bibliography


La Vallée Poussin, Louis de, trans. L’Abhidharmakos ́a de Va-
subandhu,6 vols. Paris: Paul Geuthner, 1923–1931. English
trans. Leo M. Pruden, Abhidharmakos ́abhasyam,Vols. 1–4.
Berkeley, CA: Asian Humanities Press, 1988–1990.


COLLETTCOX

ABHI JÑA (HIGHER KNOWLEDGES)


Abhijña(Pali, abhiñña; higher knowledge) refers to a
stereotyped set of typically six spiritual powers ascribed
to buddhas and their chief disciples. The first five are
mundane and attainable through the perfection of
concentration (samadhi) in meditative trance (dhyana;
Pali, jhana). As earthly attainments, they are deemed
available to non-Buddhist sages. In contrast, the sixth
higher knowledge is supramundane and exclusively
Buddhist, and attainable only through insight
(vipas ́yana;Pali, vipassana) into the Buddhist truths.


The five mundane abhijñasinclude:


  • The divine eye (divyacaksus; Pali, dibbacakkhu), or
    the ability to see the demise and rebirth of beings
    according to their good and evil deeds;

    • The divine ear (divyas ́rota; Pali, dibbasota), the
      ability to hear heavenly and earthly sounds far and
      near;

    • Knowledge of other minds (cetahparyayajñana;
      Pali, cetopariyañana), the ability to know the
      thoughts and mental states of others;

    • Recollection of previous habitations (purvani-
      vasanusmrti; Pali pubbenivasanusati), the ability to
      remember one’s former existences from one to
      thousands of rebirths, through the evolution and
      destruction of many world systems;

    • Various supernatural powers (rddhi; Pali, iddhi),
      such as the ability to create mind-made bodies,
      project replicas of oneself, become invisible, pass
      through solid objects, move through the earth,
      walk on water, fly through the air, touch the sun
      and moon, and ascend to the highest heaven.




In the MAHAPARINIRVANA-SUTRA(Pali, Mahaparinib-
bana-sutta; Great Discourse on the Parinirvana), the
Buddha tells his disciple ANANDAthat one who per-
fects the four bases of supernatural power (rddhipada;
Pali, iddhipada) can live for an entire eon, or for the
remaining portion of an eon should he so desire.
The sixth and only supramundane abhijña is the
most important. Called “knowledge of the extinction
of the passions” (as ́ravaksaya; Pali, asavakkhaya), it is
equivalent to arhatship. The passions extinguished
through this knowledge are sensuality (kama), be-
coming (bhava), ignorance (avidya; Pali, avijja), and
views (drsti; Pali, ditthi).
Historically, the six abhijñascan be seen as an elab-
oration of an earlier Buddhist paradigm of human per-
fection called the “three knowledges” (traividya; Pali,
tevijja). Comprised of the recollection of former habi-
tations, the divine eye, and knowledge of the extinc-
tion of the passions, the three knowledges form the
content of the Buddha’s awakening in early canonical
depictions of his enlightenment experience.
Although mastery of the six abhijñasis an attribute
of all perfect buddhas, the early Buddhist tradition was
ambivalent toward the display of supernatural powers
by members of the monastic order. In the Kevaddha-
sutta(Discourse to Kevaddha), the Buddha disparages
as vulgar those monks who would reveal such powers
to the laity, and in the VINAYAor monastic code, he
makes it an offense for them to do so. Despite these
strictures, wonder-working saints were lionized in the
literatures of all Buddhist schools, and they became

ABHI JNA(HIGHERKNOWLEDGES)

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