Investigating the Buddha’s
World
Buddhist scholar and author John Peacocke talks with Tricycle
about what we can learn by taking a close look at the language and
philosophies of the Buddha’s time.
The teachings of the Buddha have been variously
understood by scholars, monks, and laypeople over the centuries.
But what was it that the Buddha actually taught? While this remains
an open and oft-debated question, scholar John Peacocke—in his work
as both an academic and a dharma teacher—asserts that by looking to
the history, language, and rich philosophical environment of the
Buddha’s day we can uncover what is most distinctive and
revolutionary about his teachings. Peacocke, who does not shy away
from controversy, argues that in some very important ways, later
Buddhist schools depart from early core teachings.
Peacocke has been practicing Buddhism since 1970. He
was first exposed to Buddhism at monasteries in South India, where
he ordained as a monk in the Tibetan tradition. He later studied in
Sri Lanka, where Theravada Buddhism has flourished for centuries.
Returning to lay life and his native England, Peacocke went on to
receive his Ph.D. in Buddhist studies at the University of Warwick.
He currently lectures on Buddhist and Hindu thought at the
University of Bristol and next year will begin teaching at the
Mindfulness-based Cognitive Therapy Master of Studies program at
Oxford University. A former director of the Sharpham Centre for
Buddhist Studies in Devon, England, Peacocke also serves on the
teaching council at nearby Gaia House, a retreat center offering
instruction in a variety of Buddhist traditions. He now teaches and
practices in the Vipassana tradition.
Tricycle editor James
Shaheen visited with Peacocke near Bristol University in April to
discuss what the language of the early Pali and Sanskrit texts
tells us about Buddhism today.
To what sort of world was the Buddha introducing his
teachings? Fifth-century BCE India witnessed a
philosophically rich period, and a time of social, political, and
cultural upheaval. It is during this period that we see the
transition from tribal republics (ganasanghas) to a
centralized power structure presided over by a monarch. The
Buddha’s teaching—for example, in the Mahaparanibbana
Sutta—is situated within just such a context. At the opening
of the sutta we see an emissary of King Ajatasattu, the king of
Magadha, attempting to obtain information from the Buddha in order
to vanquish the Vajjian federation. Even the Sakyas (the Buddha’s
tribe) were not immune from such territorial aggrandizement; they
were defeated by the son of King Pasenadi during the Buddha’s own
lifetime. There were also many competing religious traditions at
the time, and in the early Pali canon, in the Long Discourses of
the Buddha (Brahmajala Sutta), we find descriptions of
sixty-two types of philosophies. These are considered by the Buddha
to be sixty-two instances of wrong view. That’s the world of ideas
the Buddha is responding to.
What were the dominant beliefs of the time? The Buddha was
responding to two primary strands of thought. You have to bear in
mind, though, that there was no such thing as Hinduism as we know
it today. Rather, you had the dominant Brahmanical
culture—Brahmanism—which was primarily a sacrificial religion,
along with the breakaway Upanishadic culture that arose out of it
and was eventually reincorporated into the Brahmanical worldview,
and you had ascetic Jainism.
Can you say something first about Brahmanism? Brahmanism
dealt primarily with propitiating the gods, who were believed to
maintain the cosmic order. Everything was believed to be ordered
and regulated and it was through sacrifices to the gods that this
order was maintained. Through meticulously executed ritual, the
Brahmans induced the gods to do everything from ensuring
predictable planetary orbits and regular seasons to sustaining the
strictly hierarchical social order characteristic of the time. The
three classes of Veda (Rig, Sama, and Yajur),
which served as the Brahmanical culture’s literary base, are
essentially instructions for properly performing rituals that will
perpetuate what was thought to be the natural order of things. The
defining concept of the Vedas is the notion of cosmic order,
rita. So Buddhist thought is in part a reaction to a
purely sacrificial and highly ritualistic culture. In the early
canon you often find critical mention of ritual.
Can you give an example? A number of examples are
scattered throughout the Pali Canon. In the Kutadanta
Sutta, the Buddha subverts the notion of literal animal
sacrifice by claiming that true sacrifice is the performance of
generosity, taking refuge or adhering to the five precepts. In
another instance, in the Sigalaka Sutta, the Buddha comes
across a young Brahmin named Sigalaka ritualistically paying homage
to the six directions as a way of expressing honor, sacredness, and
reverence. During the discourse the Buddha, as in the previous
example, gets the Brahmin to see that the true way to express these
things is through adherence to the precepts and generally behaving
in an ethical manner. The Buddha in both cases reveals his
practical bias. He does not concern himself with what he considers
empty and pointless ritual. And he demonstrates his rhetorical
brilliance by using the very customs and language of the dominant
culture he critiques to subvert it.
Can you give an example of how he does that?
There’s hardly a term the Buddha uses that’s not actually derived
from a pre-Buddhist context. The Buddha literally takes the
religious language of the Brahmins and the Jains and deconstructs
and redefines it for his own purposes. Basically, he’s hijacking
the language and customs of the dominant religions—whether that of
the ascetic Jains, the ritualistic Brahmins, or the philosophers
and mystics of the Upanishads—to introduce an entirely new body of
ideas. Take, for instance, the three ritual household fires of the
Indian home. In Buddhism, they are no longer the sacred fires one
must keep continuously lit in order to maintain cosmic and social
order; rather, they become the fires of anger, greed, and
delusion—the “three poisons” we are enjoined to extinguish.
Upadana, or the “fuel” used to keep the fires burning,
becomes in Buddhism the stuff that fuels samsara, the
world of suffering, that is, “attachment” or “clinging.”
So his method was to critique the existing culture of the time by
turning the language of that culture on itself? That’s
exactly right. He very cleverly hijacks virtually all of their
language —and not just that of the Brahmanical culture but also
that of the Jains. For example, take a term like asava.
For the Jains the term means “influx” and refers to that which
weighs down the soul and keeps it bound to the cycle of rebirth.
However, for the Buddha the term has the connotation of something
that flows out of us, namely, ignorance, sensual desire, and
craving for continued existence. It is these things, from the
Buddha’s point of view, that keep the individual bound to
samsara.
According to the British scholar Richard Gombrich,
the Buddhist Middle Way is in fact the middle way between highly
materialistic Brahmanism and excessively ascetic Jainism. It’s not
just asceticism in general that the Buddha is reacting to, it’s the
extreme asceticism primarily associated with the Jains; and
likewise, the household life and the strict and materialistic
rituals of the Brahmins. Somewhere in between the two lies the
Middle Way of the Buddha’s teachings.
What Brahmanism and the Upanishads had in common with
Jainism was a belief in an eternal soul, while the Buddha’s
universal tenets of anatta and anicca—“not-self” and
“impermanence”—are a radical rejection of this belief. Can you say
something about this? All three of those Indian traditions
speak of an unchanging self or soul. The Buddha’s teaching is
highly radical in its break with essentialist thinking, which
usually conceives of the “real” as that which does not change. The
Buddha’s view was that absolutely everything was changing
and therefore the self was not exempt. As a result, Buddhist
thinking conceives of the self as process rather than as a fixed an
immutable essence.
How, then, would you look at the Brahmanical goal or the
Upanishadic goal of religious activity versus the Buddhist
goal? The goal of Buddhist practice can be seen as
radically different from that of Brahmanical or Upanishadic
thought. Brahmanical thought had an excessive emphasis on ritualism
and hierarchy focused on the maintenance of order both human and
divine. And the Upanishads concentrated on the realization of the
lack of differentiation between brahman and
atman—the essence of all things and the individual
self.
The Buddha is not looking outside of ourselves for
anything, for any supports. In the Mahaparinibbana Sutta
he instructs us to be lamps unto ourselves and insists that
everything we need to know can be found within “this fathom-long
carcass.” This latter suggestion is the Buddha once again alluding
to Brahmanical beliefs, one in which the entire cosmos, and
everything contained within it, is represented in the form of the
male body. In fact, this could be seen as a direct reference to the
Brihadaranyaka Upanishad, where it is claimed that in the
beginning the whole world was the self in the shape of a person.
However, the Buddha is really not looking to external elements,
whether metaphysical or sacrificial, as a way of life. His primary
focus is on our internal experience and ethical activity. This is a
real break from Brahmanical culture.
Brahmanical culture did not have an ethical focus? The
focus for Brahmanical culture was duty, and again, the proper
performance of ritual. The Buddha’s focus was volition, intentional
motivation. Everything hangs on motivation and understanding as
clearly as possible the individual’s own motivation underlying all
action. For the Brahmin, karma was created by how one performed
one’s duties and executed ritual; for the Buddha, intention drove
karma. The Brahmins never take the step into ethics that the Buddha
did.
While Brahmanical culture exhibited a literalist
bent—ritual had to be executed just to fuel nature’s processes both
above and below—in the thought of the Upanishads we find a
philosophy that is as sophisticated as any. What would be a
fundamental distinction between it and the Buddha’s method of
inquiry at the time? I distinguish the two traditions by
the way they ask a question. One way is metaphysical, which is
precisely what the Buddha rejects: It is to ask what something is.
Running throughout the Upanishads is the question, What is the
self? And what is the true nature of that self? And you
basically end up with an essentialist answer to that question:
Atman is the universally abiding and unchanging self that underlies
and sustains all things; atman is the real
self.
It’s like asking if there a God or not. It leads you into the
same essentialist trap. It does. By
asking what is the nature of anything, you’re going to end up an
essentialist if you answer the question. I make a comparison to
Socrates in ancient Greek society. Socrates asks, “What is the
good?” or “What is justice?” You might answer with an example, and
Socrates will reply, “You’ve just given me an example. You haven’t
told me what it is, what makes this example of the good or
of justice good or just.”
So Socrates, too, in the same way, is asking for essence.
Yes, and because he is ethically inclined, he asks, what is the
good? Plato then takes it further, to the metaphysical: The essence
of the good exists in the realm of the ideal, the realm of forms.
The rest, the world of phenomena, is simply an imitation of the
real thing, the essential thing that abides in an unchanging
metaphysical reality.
What is the Buddhist answer to metaphysical
inquiry, then? The Buddha’s method
is a phenomenological one. How does something appear, how does this
thing that we call the self operate? He’s not asking, Is there
a self or is there not a self? One possible answer is
deterministic and eternalistic, and the other, nihilistic. So the
Buddha is asking not so much what as
how.
I should add that I feel “not-self”—anatta—is
actually a much-misunderstood teaching. The Buddha is not saying
that there is no self, which is an idea that I think in a Western
context can be extremely dangerous.
Why? Because it’s nihilistic. The Buddha himself
says it’s better to teach self than to teach annihilationism; given
the choice, it’s better to teach that there is something because
this leads at least to some kind of ethical responsibility. I think
in our Western culture sometimes people have a very fragile notion
of what the self is anyway, so to come along and tell them there’s
no self could very destructive.
So from a phenomenological point of view, an early Buddhist
point of view, how would “not self”—the term you prefer—be
distinguished from “no-self”? It’s basically a question of
the phenomenon that we are labeling “self.” What we can ask is: How
does it operate? How does it work? The most primary analysis anyone
gives in Buddhism is to describe the self in terms of the five
khandhas—the “heaps,” or “aggregates,” in Pali—the
components of self. Each heap, or aggregate, is a process—that is,
it is not fixed but is changing. In order for self to arise, it
must include form, sensation, perception, mental formations, and
consciousness. It is upon these five processes that the label of
self is affixed. To take a couple of examples: Form, which includes
all of the physical processes of the individual, is not-self
because it is not under our control. Likewise, perception, which
includes all our faculties of discrimination, together with the
capacity of memory, is also not-self. This is because memory is
extremely partial, in that we may remember events from many years
ago but not recall what we did yesterday. With the onset of
degenerative brain disease, our capacity to remember becomes
severely impaired, with the result that we may even forget who we
are! Similar arguments apply to the other khandhas. The
self, therefore, according to this view, exists as a set of
interrelated processes rather than as an unchanging thing; so
rather than try to find an essence, the Buddha chooses to simply
describe a phenomenon, avoiding the essentialist trap.
The Buddha describes the self as a composite of the
khandhas; how does he describe the world of which that self is a
part? Our everyday world of suffering—samsara—is
described in terms of the mechanism that drives it: dependent
origination (paticcasamuppada, in Pali), which is depicted
most commonly as the Wheel of Life.
How was this different from prevailing ideas of the
Buddha’s day? Well, take the Upanishads. Basically, the
Buddha’s hijacking the language again. Ultimately, they all come
down to the idea that really everything is dependent on something
that’s outside of time and space: brahman. This direction
of thought later becomes Advaita Vedanta—the nondual school.
Advaita is basically an interpretation of the Upanishads offered by
the Hindu thinker Shankara. In his view, brahman and
atman are essentially the same thing—the term
advaita literally means “not-two.” The pluralistic world
offered up to perception, according to Shankara, is ultimately an
illusion (maya). Only one thing really exists, and that is
brahman; and brahman cannot depend on anything
else for existence and also cannot change. But for the Buddha,
there is nothing that arises ex nihilo, out of nothing.
Everything arises out of previous causes and conditions, and the
mechanism for this is dependent origination: out of this, that
arises. This ceasing, that ceases. You’ve got this complex sense
of, again, phenomenology, which is, the Buddha explained, our world
with its predominant feeling tone: dukkha, suffering.
However, dukkha also arises out of causes and conditions, and with
the discernment of the causes and their elimination,
dukkha will cease. And that is Buddhism’s fundamental
psychological element.
You’ve suggested in some of your lectures that there is a strong
resistance to Buddhist teachings of not-self even within the
Buddhist traditions themselves, that there is sometimes an
irresistible temptation to essentialize phenomena. Or, as you might
say, to “self.” Where do you see this impulse within
Buddhism? I see it in the formation of certain Mahayana
ideas, particularly later ideas, when, for example, Buddhism
arrives in China, and in Tibet. In some cases I see them almost
smuggling the atman in through the back door somehow. For example,
if you talk about Cittamatra philosophy, then you’re talking about
the alaya vijnana, or “store of consciousness.” In some
interpretations this sounds very much like a self. When you talk
about, say, rigpa, the notion of pristine
awareness—awareness without an object, the only true knower—it
sounds very much like Advaita, which defines brahman as
pure consciousness and the only knower.
Might this appear already in the Theravada tradition, this
tendency? I think there can be a tendency in the Theravada
to make things more orthodox, of making Buddhism much more
doctrinal. This takes the form of a certain literalism about the
teachings, the interpretation of metaphors in a literal manner, for
example. Certain ideas get solidified, as can happen with an idea
like rebirth.
What do you mean by “get solidified”? What is the danger of
taking the teachings literally? I’m inclined to wonder
how, in a Western context, we can make the best pragmatic use of
the Buddha’s ideas, understanding them as something more than a
doctrinal staple. According to many, for instance, you have to
believe in rebirth to be a Buddhist. But there’s a tension here:
Buddha exhorts us to investigate, yet rebirth is quite clearly
something we can’t investigate. So what might it mean outside of
its literal truth? How might we apply the ideas in a practical and
meaningful way that makes our lives better and helps us to see
things more clearly as they are? It is this practical dimension,
based on both a historical and a phenomenological approach to the
teachings, that I bring to my dharma teaching. This approach does
not mean ignoring what the traditions say; it means examining what
they have to say in the light of a close reading of the texts. We
have to remember that the historical forms of Buddhism have all
become “traditions,” and that these traditions, with their
viewpoints, have often gone unquestioned. Such unquestioning
acceptance seems to me diminish the challenging nature and dynamism
of the Buddha’s teaching.
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