The Buddhist Path
moss and leaves, ruffled by the wind, muddied and in a dark place.
If someone should look down into a bowl of water contaminated
in any one of these five ways, then he would not be able to see
a clear and true reflection of himself. On the other hand, if one
were to look down into a bowl of water that is free of such con-
taminations, one would see a clear and true reflection. Likewise;
the mind that is disturbed by the hindrances will never succeed
in coming to know its true nature.
This then is the basic theory of Buddhist meditation stated in
the terms of the oldest texts. While later schools and traditions
may change and adapt the terminology used, while they may elab-
orate the stages and techniques in a number of different ways,
while they may give distinctive technical accounts of the content
of the knowledge gained in insight meditation, the basic prin-
ciple for the most part holds good: one stills and clears the mind
and then turns it towards investigation and insight.
Stilling the mind
The techniques of calm meditation involve counteracting the.
tendency of the mind to restlessly seek out new and different
objects of the senses. This is accomplished by developing a basic
capacity of the mind to rest undisturbed on an object of per-
ception. This capacity, termed 'concentration' (samiidhi), is in
fact understood as a prerequisite of all thought, .but in normal
consciousness it functions only minimally. When this capacity is
developed in meditation practice, however, it brings the mind to
a condition of stillness in which it finds complete contentment
with just one object of contemplation. In this condition the
mind enters into quite different states of consciousness from its
habitual, ordinary states. These states of consciousness may
themselves be.termed samiidhi, or alternatively they are known
as the dhyiinas (Palijhiina), a term which means something like
'deep thought' or 'meditation'. In Buddhist technical terms, the
mind has temporarily escaped from 'the sphere of the senses~
(kiimiivacara)-its normal preoccupation with thoughts that are
in some way bound up with the objects o£ the five senses-to the
subtle 'sphere of pure form' (rupiivacara )-a refined world of