Encyclopedia of Buddhism

(Elle) #1

There is an old tradition (continued now especially
in Tibetan Buddhism) of representing the six realms
graphically as forming six segments of a wheel of exis-
tence: at the top, the heavenly realms of the gods, and
moving clockwise, the jealous gods (separated by the
wishing tree), animals, hells, hungry ghosts, and hu-
mans. The outer rim of the wheel is formed of the
twelve links of PRATITYASAMUTPADA(DEPENDENT ORIG-
INATION). At the hub, driving the whole process, are a
cock (greed), a snake (hatred), and a pig (ignorance).


See also:Cosmology; Divinities; Ghosts and Spirits;
Heavens


Bibliography


Reynolds, Frank E., and Reynolds, Mani B., trans. Three Worlds
According to King Ruang: A Thai Buddhist Cosmology.Berke-
ley: University of California Press, 1982.


Sadakata, Akira. Buddhist Cosmology: Philosophy and Origin.
Tokyo: Kosei, 1997.


RUPERTGETHIN

REBIRTH


Rebirth (Sanskrit, punaravrtti, punarutpatti, punarjan-
man,or punarjlvatu), also called transmigration and
reincarnation, is the belief common to all Buddhist tra-
ditions that birth and death occur in successive cy-
cles driven by ignorance (avidya), DESIRE(trsna), and
hatred (dvesa). The cycle of rebirth, termed SAMSARA,
is beginningless and ongoing, and it is determined by
the moral quality of a person’s thoughts and KARMA
(ACTION). The effects of good moral actions lead to
wholesome rebirths, and the effects of bad moral ac-
tions lead to unwholesome rebirths.


Origins of the doctrine


Scholars have long debated the origins of the theory of
rebirth among the religions of India. Some trace the
belief to the ritual models inscribed in the ancient
literature of the Vedas and Brahmanas, which rested
firmly on belief in the efficacy of ritual sacrifice as a
means to secure a place in heaven. To guarantee pos-
itive future results these sacrificial acts were required
to be perpetually reenacted. The conceptual parallels
in this ancient model of a continuous cycle of ritual
action have led some scholars to suggest that the me-
chanics of Vedic ritual should be seen as the precur-


sor to later Indian theories of karma, samsara, and re-
birth. Other more controversial suggestions have been
that rebirth doctrine originated among the ancient
non-Aryan tribal groups of India. Still others theo-
rize that the doctrine was formulated by followers of
the samnyasin(renouncer) traditions affiliated with
the broad-based s ́ramana(mendicant) movement that
began to emerge in India around the sixth century
B.C.E., a movement that included the early Buddhists
and Jains.

Rebirth and the problem of no-self
The Buddhist doctrine of rebirth differs fundamentally
from the idea generally upheld in Hinduism and Jain-
ism, both of which accept the existence of an eternal
and substantial self or soul (atman in Hinduism, jlva
in Jainism) that transmigrates from life to life. Bud-
dhism, by contrast, rejects the notion of an absolute
self. Fundamental to its understanding of rebirth is
the doctrine of no-self (anatman)—the idea that in
samsara, which is forever in flux, impermanent, and
constantly changing, there can be no permanent, un-
changing, independent self or soul.

But if there is no absolute self, how does Buddhism
resolve the problem of transmigration and of the con-
tinuity of karma between one life and the next? The
early Buddhist schools in India offered a variety of re-
sponses to this conundrum. One school, the Vatspu-
trya (also known as the PUDGALAVADA), went so far
as to propose the concept of an inexpressible personal
entity (pudgala) that traveled from life to life, a con-
cept that seemed to contradict the fundamental tenet
of anatman. Other schools, such as the Sarvastivada,
posited the existence of an ethereal entity (called a
gandharva) composed of subtle forms of the five
SKANDHA(AGGREGATES) that passed through an IN-
TERMEDIATE STATE(antarabhava) between death and
the next birth. In the early period of Buddhism in In-
dia, concepts like pudgalaand antarabhavawere sub-
jects of much controversy.

Not all of the schools accepted such ideas. The
THERAVADA, for example, denied the existence of an
intermediate state and argued instead for the existence
of an inactive mode of deep consciousness (bhavan ̇ga)
that forms a causal link (Sanskrit, pratisandhi; Pali,
patisandhi) between one life and the next. In this view,
the first moment of consciousness in a new birth is
simply the direct conditioned effect of the final mo-
ment of consciousness of the immediately previous
existence.

REBIRTH

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