Four Truths
items of the eightfold path is not so transparent. Effort (6),
mindfulness ( 7 ), and concentration (8) are in effect technicalterms
of Buddhist meditation practice whose expression in everyday
language is less obvious. In practice they relate to one's under-
lying state of mind or, perhaps better, emotional state. In other
words, the list of eight items suggests that there is a basic rela-
tionship between one's understanding, one's actions, and one's
underlying emotional state.
The eight items of the path are not, however, to be understood
simply as stages, each one being completed before moving on to
the next. In fact, when we look at the extensive treatment of the
eightfold path in Buddhist literature, it becomes apparent that
view, intention, speech, conduct, livelihood, effort, mindfulness,
and concentration are presented here as eight significant dimen-
sions of one's behaviour-mental, spoken, and bodily-that are
regarded as operating in dependence on one another and as
defining a complete way (miirga/magga) of living.^35 The eight
items are significant in that they focus on the manner in which
what one thinks, says, does, and feels can effect-and affect-
the unfolding of the path to the cessation of suffering. Ordinarily
these eight aspects of one's way of life may, at different times,
be either 'right' and 'appropriate' (samyak/sammii) or 'wrong'
and 'inappropriate' (mithyii/micchii); that is, they may either
be out of keeping with the nature of things, leading .one further
away from the cessation of suffering, or they may be in keeping
with the nature of things, bringing one closer to the cessation of
suffering. By means of Buddhist practice the eight dimensions
are gradually and collectively transformed and developed, until
they are established as 'right', such that-they constitute the 'noble'
(iiryalariya) eightfold path. Strictly, then, the noble eightfold
path represents the end of Buddhist practice; it is the way of
living achieved by Buddhist saints-the stream-attainers, once-
returners, non-returners, arhats, and bodhisattvas who have worked
on and gradually perfected view, intention, speech, conduct,
livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and concentration. For such as
these, having perfect view, intention, speech, action, livelihood,
endeavour, mindfulness, and concentration is not a matter of