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Are nihilism & the sphere of nothingness different or the same?

edited March 2012 in Philosophy
dear friends of the dharma

i have promoted my inquiry into 'nihilism' to the Advanced Ideas subforum

the doctrine of nihilism in the original teachings is described & regarded as unwholesome:
There is nothing given, nothing offered, nothing sacrificed. There is no fruit or result of good or bad actions. There is no this world, no other world, no mother, no father, no spontaneously reborn beings; no brahmans or contemplatives who, faring rightly and practicing rightly, proclaim this world and the other after having directly known and realized it for themselves.

Of those those contemplatives who hold this doctrine, hold this view, it can be expected that, shunning these three skillful activities — good bodily conduct, good verbal conduct, good mental conduct — they will adopt & practice these three unskillful activities: bad bodily conduct, bad verbal conduct, bad mental conduct.

http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.060.than.html
yet the original teachings also describe the sphere of nothingness as a state of liberation:
And what is the nothingness awareness-release [liberation of mind]? There is the case where a monk, with the complete transcending of the dimension of the infinitude of consciousness, [perceiving,] 'There is nothing,' enters & remains in the dimension of nothingness. This is called the nothingnessawareness-release.

The limitless awareness-release, the nothingness awareness-release, the emptiness awareness-release, the theme-less-awareness-release: There is a way of explanation by which these qualities are different in meaning & different in name and there is a way of explanation by which these qualities are one in meaning and different only in name.

http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
are nihillism & the sphere of nothingness the same? are they different? how do they differ? how are they similar? or are the original teachings in contradiction?

metta



Comments

  • cazcaz Veteran United Kingdom Veteran
    Nothingness is a inappropriate word to use really as it is akin to Nihilism. Emptiness is more appropriate. as it says "...there is a way of explanation by which these qualities are one in meaning and different only in name."
  • Hi WB,

    I confess I'm a little puzzled by it all.

    Is knowing about this very important for my practice, do you think ?

    with metta,

    D

  • edited March 2012
    I confess I'm a little puzzled by it all. Is knowing about this very important for my practice, do you think ?
    of course it is. in MN 121, Buddha taught nothingness (whilst mere samadhi) is genuine progress towards emptiness. how will you know it is important or not if you do not investigate mentally entering such a state? keep in mind this forum is advance ideas. it is not for the faint of heart :)

  • edited March 2012
    Nothingness is a inappropriate word to use really as it is akin to Nihilism. Emptiness is more appropriate. as it says "...there is a way of explanation by which these qualities are one in meaning and different only in name."
    but the sutta later differentiates between nothingness & emptiness, as follows:
    Now, to the extent that there is nothingness awareness-release, the unprovoked awareness-release is declared the foremost. And this unprovoked [unshakeable] awareness-release is empty of passion, empty of aversion, empty of delusion.

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
    nothingness & emptiness are only the same in that they are states of liberation. but nothingness is temporary liberation where as emptiness is permanent & unshakeable

    'emptiness' in this particular teaching shares the same description as Nibbana :)

  • cazcaz Veteran United Kingdom Veteran
    Nothingness is a inappropriate word to use really as it is akin to Nihilism. Emptiness is more appropriate. as it says "...there is a way of explanation by which these qualities are one in meaning and different only in name."
    but the sutta later differentiates between nothingness & emptiness, as follows:
    Now, to the extent that there is nothingness awareness-release, the unprovoked awareness-release is declared the foremost. And this unprovoked [unshakeable] awareness-release is empty of passion, empty of aversion, empty of delusion.

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html
    nothingness & emptiness are only the same in that they are states of liberation. but nothingness is temporary liberation where as emptiness is permanent & unshakeable

    'emptiness' in this particular teaching shares the same description as Nibbana :)

    That would be a misreading on my part then, Sutta language can be fairly obscure sometimes :)
  • but nothingness is temporary
    Doesn't that kind of answer your question? Nihilists hold "nothingness" as an absolute, rather than temporary.
  • seeker242seeker242 Zen Florida, USA Veteran
    edited March 2012
    doctrine of nihilism:There is no fruit or result of good or bad actions
    This is the difference that stand out to me. No teaching on nothingness or emptiness denies karma.

  • "The limitless awareness-release, the nothingness awareness-release, the emptiness awareness-release, the theme-less-awareness-release: There is a way of explanation by which these qualities are different in meaning & different in name and there is a way of explanation by which these qualities are one in meaning and different only in name."

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.043.than.html


    This is from the same sutta and appears to show that "nothingness" here refers to the ending of 3 "somethings", ie passion, aversion and delusion:

    "Passion is a something. Aversion is a something. Delusion is a something. In a monk whose fermentations are ended, these have been abandoned, their root destroyed, made like a palmyra stump, deprived of the conditions of development, not destined for future arising. Now, to the extent that there is nothingness awareness-release, the unprovoked awareness-release is declared the foremost"
  • Maybe it comes down to the split between experiential reality verses theory.
    One can cling to Nihilism or Eternalism.
    But direct experience communicates nothing about nihilism and eternalism.

    These are just concepts that we cling to.

    Even the sphere of nothingness is an image or an experience that is clung to. How does the sphere of nothingness relate to the seeming appearance of something.

    So this is where the absolute and relative truth is the same and both are met with the correct understanding of emptiness which negates eternalism and the correct understanding of dependent origination which negates nihilism.

    Form is emptiness and emptiness is form. Form is form. Emptiness is emptiness.

    The suchness of form implies that it is ungraspable, unlocatable. Yet it dependently originates into the appearances.

    So I think it comes down to where there is clinging. One can cling to the sphere of nothingness and abide in Nihilism. Or one can move beyond that and see that yes everything is nothing, but that doesn't deny the relative world of appearances. There was no true split to begin with.

    This is the seeming problem with duality. The mind clings to one extreme or another.

    But I don't feel like debating about duality. This is just my philosophical view.
  • edited March 2012
    But I don't feel like debating about duality.
    generally, when i start a thread, i do not debate on it. thank you for your answer, Koala :)

  • edited March 2012
    Nihilists hold "nothingness" as an absolute, rather than temporary.
    This is the difference that stand out to me. No teaching on nothingness...denies karma.
    Thanks. Sounds reasonable :)

  • edited March 2012
    This is from the same sutta and appears to show that "nothingness" here refers to the ending of 3 "somethings", ie passion, aversion and delusion:
    I am not sure the sutta states this. It states:
    And this unprovoked awareness-release [that is, the emptiness awareness-release] is empty of passion, empty of aversion, empty of delusion.
    It does not say the nothingness awareness-release is the same, given it states the unprovoked awareness-release is declared the foremost.

    I sounds like the sutta is infering the nothingness awareness-release is inadequate for ending or even perceiving these 'somethings'. In other words, although the mind may sense: "There is nothing", these three "somethings" may still remain dormant & not uprooted.

    I think it is important for the thread to not equate nothingness with emptiness (sunnata).

    Metta :)
  • Maybe it comes down to the split between experiential reality verses theory.
    This sounds interesting. The nothingness meditation is a very calm abiding therefore there is not obvious inclination to do any harmful karma. Where as nihilism is denying karmic consequences, thus promoting harmful behaviour. :)

  • Regarding this, the Dalai Lama also spoke about it before:

    http://www.lamayeshe.com/otherteachers/hhdl/happinesskarma.shtml

    ...Through the gates of the five sense organs a being sees, hears, smells, tastes and comes into contact with a host of external forms, objects and impressions. Let the form, sound, smell, taste, touch and mental events which are the relations of the six senses be shut off. When this is done the recollection of past events on which the mind tends to dwell will be completely discontinued and the flow of memory cut off. Similarly, plans for the future and contemplation of future action must not be allowed to arise. It is necessary to create a space in place of all such processes of thought if one is to empty the mind of all such processes of thought. Freed from all these processes there will remain a pure, clean, distinct and quiescent mind. Now let us examine what sort of characteristics constitute the mind when it has attained this stage. We surely do possess some thing called mind, but how are we to recognize its existence? The real and essential mind is what is to be found when the entire load of gross obstructions and aberrations (i.e. sense impressions, memories, etc.) has been cleared away. Discerning this aspect of real mind, we shall discover that, unlike external objects, its true nature is devoid of form or color; nor can we find any basis of truth for such false and deceptive notions as that mind originated from this or that, or that it will move from here to there, or that it is located in such-and-such a place. When it comes into contact with no object mind is like a vast, boundless void, or like a serene, illimitable ocean. When it encounters an object it at once has cognizance of it, like a mirror instantly reflecting a person who stands in front of it. The true nature of mind consists not only in taking clear cognizance of the object but also in communicating a concrete experience of that object to the one experiencing it.* Normally, our forms of sense cognition, such as eye-consciousness, ear-consciousness, etc., perform their functions on external phenomena in a manner involving gross distortion. Knowledge resulting from sense cognition, being based on gross external phenomena, is also of a gross nature. When this type of gross stimulation is shut out, and when concrete experiences and clear cognizance arise from within, mind assumes the characteristics of infinite void similar to the infinitude of space. But this void is not to be taken as the true nature of mind. We have become so habituated to consciousness of the form and color of gross objects that, when we make concentrated introspection into the nature of mind, it is, as I have said, found to be a vast, limitless void free from any gross obscurity or other hindrances. Nevertheless, this does not mean that we have discerned the subtle, true nature of the mind. What has been explained above concerns the state of mind in relation to the concrete experience and clear cognizance by the mind which are its function, but it describes only the relative nature of mind.

    There are in addition several other aspects and states of mind. In other words, taking mind as the supreme basis, there are many attributes related to it. Just as an onion consists of layer upon layer that can be peeled away, so does every sort of object have a number of layers; and this is no less true of the nature of mind as explained here; it, too, has layer within layer, slate within state.

    All compounded things are subject to disintegration. Since experience and knowledge are impermanent and subject to disintegration, the mind, of which they are functions (nature), is not something that remains constant and eternal. From moment to moment it undergoes change and disintegration. This transience of mind is one aspect of its nature. However, as we have observed, its true nature has many aspects, including consciousness of concrete experience and cognizance of objects. Now let us make a further examination in order to grasp the meaning of the subtle essence of such a mind. Mind came into existence because of its own cause. To deny that the origination of mind is dependent on a cause, or to say that it is a designation given as a means of recognizing the nature of mind aggregates, is not correct. With our superficial observance, mind, which has concrete experience and clear cognizance as its nature, appears to be a powerful, independent, subjective, completely ruling entity. However, deeper analysis will reveal that this mind, possessing as it does the function of experience and cognizance, is not a self-created entity but Is dependent on other factors for its existence. Hence it depends on something other than itself. This non-independent quality of the mind substance is its true nature which in turn is the ultimate reality of the self.

    Of these two aspects, viz. the ultimate true nature of mind and a knowledge of that ultimate true nature, the former is the base, the latter an attribute. Mind (self) is the basis and all its different states are attributes. However, the basis and its attributes have from the first pertained to the same single essence. The non-self-created (depending on a cause other than itself) mind entity (basis) and its essence, sunyata, have unceasingly existed as the one, same, inseparable essence from beginningless beginning. The nature of sunyata pervades all elements. As we are now and since we cannot grasp or comprehend the indestructible, natural, ultimate reality (sunyata) of our own minds, we continue to commit errors and our defects persist....
  • ""Furthermore, with the complete transcending of the dimension of the infinitude of consciousness, [perceiving,] 'There is nothing,' Sariputta entered & remained in the dimension of nothingness. Whatever qualities there are in the dimension of nothingness — the perception of the dimension of nothingness, singleness of mind, contact, feeling, perception, intention, consciousness, desire, decision, persistence, mindfulness, equanimity, & attention — he ferreted them out one after another. Known to him they arose, known to him they remained, known to him they subsided. He discerned, 'So this is how these qualities, not having been, come into play. Having been, they vanish.' He remained unattracted & unrepelled with regard to those qualities, independent, detached, released, dissociated, with an awareness rid of barriers. He discerned that 'There is a further escape,' and pursuing it there really was for him.""

    -MN 111
    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.111.than.html

    Read the whole thing ... your mind will be blown

    Anyways, to the op, the sphere of "nothingness" is not the same as a doctrine of belief in "nothing." Nihilists do not believe that there is such thing as a sphere of nothingness. They believe in nothing. they are without belief. They see the world as pointless and random and that there is no such thing as action or consequence.

    The sphere of nothingness is a state of deep formless meditation whereby there is a cessation of the perception of the sphere of infinite consciousness and once there is met the cessation of the perception of the sphere of nothingness the meditator enters upon the sphere of neither perception nor non-perception.

    It's just a stepping stone toward deeper meditation absorption giving rise eventually to the emergence from the attainment of the cessation of feeling and perception (it is impossible to perceive the cessation of feeling and perception becasue it implies the cessation of perception so it can only be perceived through mindful reflection) which grants a powerful, albiet impermanent, ending of the mental fermentation and completely clear and lucid awareness of the world. This lucidity is used in vippisanna to grants clear comprehension and direct realization of the 3 marks of existence and thus liberation and release from suffering.
  • xabirxabir Veteran
    edited March 2012
    The former is the false view that there is no rebirth and karma.

    The latter is the temporary absorption in the sphere of nothingness. It is not a view, but a meditative state/sphere that can be entered and left.

    I.e. a person who enters/have experienced the sphere of nothingness can still believe in karma and rebirth.
  • edited March 2012
    I.e. a person who enters/have experienced the sphere of nothingness can still believe in karma and rebirth.
    do we really think a mind that enters into the sphere of nothingness would believe in 'rebirth'? rebirth of what? myself, i cannot see this occuring, as the sphere of nothingness is very close to an 'unconditioned state'. when thoughts & self-thinking vanish in a very clear way, rebirth beliefs would appear like a pure folly & manufacturing of thought construct :)

    karma, yes. results of karma, yes. but post-mortem rebirth, very hard to imagine when 'perceptualized reality' has broken down & the only perception left is 'there is nothing'

  • edited March 2012
    I.e. a person who enters/have experienced the sphere of nothingness can still believe in karma and rebirth.
    hi Xabir

    putting forth such views is the purpose of this inquiry but, I, myself, view a contraction here. buddha taught the sphere of nothingness is a [temporary] state of liberation where as rebirth belief is a state of bondage & attachment (upadi). these seems to be a difference between the sphere of nothingness & the non-nihilistic asavic morality based right view

    :)
    And what is the right view that has effluents [asava], sides with merit & results in acquisitions [upadi]? There is what is given, what is offered, what is sacrificed. There are fruits & results of good & bad actions. There is this world & the other world. There is mother & father. There are spontaneously reborn beings....

    This is the right view that has effluents, sides with merit, & results in acquisitions.

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.117.than.html
  • image

    Ten Ox-herding Pictures - Stage 8
    PERSON AND OX BOTH FORGOTTEN

    It is the same fact manifested in Dôgen Zenji's statement, "My body and mind have fallen away," which he presented to his own master, TENDÔ Nyojô Zenji [1162-1227], after he had come to great realization upon hearing the words of his master, "Practicing Zen is the falling away of body and mind." You have forgotten yourself, you have forgotten all others, you have forgotten everything; there is only one round circle without any substance whatsoever. This is what is meant by "person and ox both forgotten."

    If you have passed beyond both the world of buddhas and that of no buddhas, you are in a world which even Shakyamuni or Manjusri with their clairvoyance cannot perceive. It's because there is not even a thing there. The basis of Zen is to grasp this world of nothingness through experience. Zen without this experience is merely a conceptual Zen and amounts to nothing more than playing around with plastic models of Zen.

    image

    http://www.tarrdaniel.com/documents/ZenBuddhizmus/oxherding.html
  • xabirxabir Veteran
    edited March 2012

    hi Xabir

    putting forth such views is the purpose of this inquiry but, I, myself, view a contraction here. buddha taught the sphere of nothingness is a [temporary] state of liberation where as rebirth belief is a state of bondage & attachment (upadi). these seems to be a difference between the sphere of nothingness & the non-nihilistic asavic morality based right view

    :)
    And what is the right view that has effluents [asava], sides with merit & results in acquisitions [upadi]? There is what is given, what is offered, what is sacrificed. There are fruits & results of good & bad actions. There is this world & the other world. There is mother & father. There are spontaneously reborn beings....

    This is the right view that has effluents, sides with merit, & results in acquisitions.

    http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/mn/mn.117.than.html
    Hi WallyB, the sutta you quoted is talking about a view that "sides with merits, results in acquisitions".

    The view being spoken here is not merely the belief in rebirth, but the view that "I want to acquire merits for a favourable rebirth". You are thus siding with merits, resulting in wholesome karma which results in a virtuous rebirth. This leads to further becoming than the cessation of becoming, and therefore is not the path to liberation.

    However there is obviously those arhants who as the suttas state, know (not just believe) for themselves the fact of karma and rebirth. ("arahants who know the next world") Plus afterall, karma and rebirth are the first two of Buddha's three knowledges. It just so happens that while they know for a fact that there is such things as karma and rebirth, nonetheless there is no effluents tied to them, there is no craving for further becoming, there is no identification to becoming as 'I, me, mine', or as something desirable. They have seen and actualized the path that leads to knowledge, disenchantment, dispassion, and the cessation of becoming.

    Plus, the view that there is no afterlife, no next world, etc etc... are taught to be nihilistic wrong view rejected by Buddha. These nihilist views are even more detrimental than eternalist views.
  • edited March 2012
    However there is obviously those arhants who as the suttas state, know (not just believe) for themselves the fact of karma and rebirth. ("arahants who know the next world") Plus afterall, karma and rebirth are the first two of Buddha's three knowledges. It just so happens that while they know for a fact that there is such things as karma and rebirth, nonetheless there is no effluents tied to them, there is no craving for further becoming, there is no identification to becoming as 'I, me, mine', or as something desirable. They have seen and actualized the path that leads to knowledge, disenchantment, dispassion, and the cessation of becoming.

    Plus, the view that there is no afterlife, no next world, etc etc... are taught to be nihilistic wrong view rejected by Buddha. These nihilist views are even more detrimental than eternalist views.
    Xabir

    your post above is just your opinion interpreted on the side of materialism

    firstly, the words in the Pali 'paraloka' mean 'other world' rather than 'next world'. The other worlds are the hungry ghost, hell, animal & godly worlds, which are mental states & the results of karma. Thus, naturally, arahants know for themselves the 'other worlds'.

    about the Buddha's first knowledge, i agree with Achariya Buddhaghosa, who, in his Vissudhimagga, explained the word 'birth' here to mean 'becoming'. 'becoming' is a mental state or asava. further, the word 'past lives' does not exist in this verse. the word in Pali is literally 'past homes' or 'dwellings'. this is acknowledge by every learned Buddhist scholar

    about the Buddha's second knowledge, this was certainly about karma & its results. but your interpretation of the language Buddha used is just your own

    but, for me, for example, when a human being has sex, they have a mind-body conditioned by sexual craving & excitement. then when that 'mind-body' ends, they reap the results of the death of that kaya (group, both nama kaya and rupa kaya) in the form of loneliness, sexual longing, frustration, even despair & heartbreak

    so my interpretation is valid & based in real insight of Dependent Origination. where as your interpretation is also valid but based in blind faith about things not verified. my interpretation is proven to be absolutely true & cannot ever be refuted. where as your interpretation is unproven & speculative

    as for your opinion that: "nihilist views are even more detrimental than eternalist views" this true for ordinary people but untrue for enlightened people

    MN 60, a sutta specifically spoken for householders, agrees with you. but there are lokuttara suttas which state of all of the views the nihilistic view comes closest to the lokuttara dhamma

    Buddha taught two levels of dhamma: lokiya & lokuttara and it seems you are attracted to lokiya. Buddha taught human beings have attraction due to their dispositional elements

    all the best with your Dhamma practise

    :)


  • xabirxabir Veteran
    However there is obviously those arhants who as the suttas state, know (not just believe) for themselves the fact of karma and rebirth. ("arahants who know the next world") Plus afterall, karma and rebirth are the first two of Buddha's three knowledges. It just so happens that while they know for a fact that there is such things as karma and rebirth, nonetheless there is no effluents tied to them, there is no craving for further becoming, there is no identification to becoming as 'I, me, mine', or as something desirable. They have seen and actualized the path that leads to knowledge, disenchantment, dispassion, and the cessation of becoming.

    Plus, the view that there is no afterlife, no next world, etc etc... are taught to be nihilistic wrong view rejected by Buddha. These nihilist views are even more detrimental than eternalist views.
    Xabir

    your post above is just your opinion interpreted on the side of materialism

    firstly, the words in the Pali 'paraloka' mean 'other world' rather than 'next world'. The other worlds are the hungry ghost, hell, animal & godly worlds, which are mental states & the results of karma. Thus, naturally, arahants know for themselves the 'other worlds'.

    about the Buddha's first knowledge, i agree with Achariya Buddhaghosa, who, in his Vissudhimagga, explained the word 'birth' here to mean 'becoming'. 'becoming' is a mental state or asava. further, the word 'past lives' does not exist in this verse. the word in Pali is literally 'past homes' or 'dwellings'. this is acknowledge by every learned Buddhist scholar

    about the Buddha's second knowledge, this was certainly about karma & its results. but your interpretation of the language Buddha used is just your own

    but, for me, for example, when a human being has sex, they have a mind-body conditioned by sexual craving & excitement. then when that 'mind-body' ends, they reap the results of the death of that kaya (group, both nama kaya and rupa kaya) in the form of loneliness, sexual longing, frustration, even despair & heartbreak

    so my interpretation is valid & based in real insight of Dependent Origination

    where as your interpretation is also valid but based in blind faith about things not verified

    my interpretation is proven to be absolutely true & cannot ever be refuted

    where as your interpretation is unproven & speculative

    all the best with your Dhamma practise

    :)


    I think there are a number of ways to interprete D.O. which are equally valid, though the Buddha did indeed have 3 lifetimes in mind as one if not the main (more important) ways which 12 d.o. manifests in.

    Unproven and speculative is only for the untrained, and does not apply to someone like Buddha who has the three knowledges including knowledge of past lives and karma.
  • edited March 2012
    I think there are a number of ways to interprete D.O. which are equally valid, though the Buddha did indeed have 3 lifetimes in mind as one if not the main (more important) ways which 12 d.o. manifests in.
    yes. you think this but obviously i do not. you also think the Buddha did indeed have 3 lifetimes in mind but there is no evidence for this. Dependent Origination in the suttas is exclusively about the origination of sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief & despair
    Unproven and speculative is only for the untrained.
    yes, absolutely. this fact cannot be questioned
    and does not apply to someone like Buddha who has the three knowledges including knowledge of past lives and karma.
    i already suggested a lokuttara explanation. the words "past lives" do not exist in the Pali. and karma does not necessarily require to include post-mortem rebirth. the view of post-mortem rebirth is simply an interpretation arising from mental disposition

    i can only suggest to diligently apply your mind to the following Buddhist verse:
    duve saccāni akkhāsi
    sambuddho vadataṃ varo
    sammutiṃ paramatthañca
    tatiyaṃ nupalabbhati

    The Awakened One, best of speakers,
    Spoke two kinds of truths:
    The conventional and the ultimate.
    A third truth does not obtain.

    tattha:
    saṅketavacanaṃ saccaṃ lokasammutikāraṇaṃ
    paramatthavacanaṃ saccaṃ
    dhammānaṃ tathalakkhaṇan ti

    Therein:
    The speech wherewith the world converses is true
    On account of its being agreed upon by the world.
    The speech which describes what is ultimate is also true,
    Through characterizing dhammas as they really are.

    tasmā vohārakusalassa
    lokanāthassa satthuno
    sammutiṃ voharantassa
    musāvādo na jāyatī ti

    Therefore, being skilled in common usage,
    False speech does not arise in the Teacher,
    Who is Lord of the World,
    When he speaks according to conventions.
    (Mn. i. 95)


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