The Foundations of Buddhism

(Sean Pound) #1

I2 The Buddha


century BCE, the Aryas had been in India perhaps a thousand
years and their cultural influence extended down the Ganges

valley as far as Pataliputra (modern Patna). The coming of the


Aryas into India did not bring political unity to northern India,
but it did bring a certain ideology that constitutes one of the prin-
cipal components of Indian culture. This Aryan vision of society
was principally developed and articulated by a hereditary group

within Aryan society known as briihmafJas or, in the Anglo-Indian


spelling, brahmins. The original literature of the brahrnins is known

as the Vedas, the oldest portions of which, found in the l_?.g Veda,


date from about rsoo BCE. By the time of the Buddha, Vedic
literature probably already comprised several different classes:

the four collections (saf!lhitii) of verses attributed to the ancient


seers (r#), the ritual manuals (also known as briihmaiJas) giving


instruction in the carrying out of the elaborate Vedic sacrificial

ritual, and 'the forest books' (iiraiJyaka) explaining the esoteric


meaning of this sacrificial ritual. The final class of Vedic liter-


ature, the Upani~ads, containing further esoteric explanations
of the sacrificial ritual, was still in the process of formation.

Two aspects of the brahmanical vision are of particular im-


portance, namely an understanding of society as reflecting a
hierarchy of ritual 'purity', and a complex system of ritual and
sacrifice. From the brahmanical perspective society comprises two

groups: the Aryas and the non-Aryas. The former consists of the


three hereditary classes (variJa) in descending order of purity:


briihmaiJaS (whose prerogative and duty it is to teach and main-

tain the Vedic tradition), k~atriyas or rulers (whose prerogat-


ive and duty is to maintain order and where necessary inflict

appropriate punishment), and the vaisyas (whose prerogative and


duty is to generate wealth through farming and trade). These three

classes are termed 'twice born' (dvija) by virtue of the fact that


traditionally male members undergo an initiation ( upanayana)


into a period of study of the Vedic tradition under the super-


vision of a brahmin teacher; at the end of this period of study it


is their duty to maintain the household sacrificial fires and, with
the help ofbrahmins, carry out various sacrificial rituals in accord-
ance with the prescriptions of Vedic tradition. The non-Aryas

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