Showing posts with label aggregtes desire ( 情慾). Show all posts
Showing posts with label aggregtes desire ( 情慾). Show all posts

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

How do We experience ???


THE FIVE AGGREGATES
This is the last in the series of twelve sessions that we have spent together, and in this last session we are going to look at the teaching of the five aggregates (Skandhas): Rupa, Vedana, Samjna, Samskara and Vijnana. In other words, we are going to look at the Buddhist analysis of personal experience or the Buddhist analysis of the personality.
Throughout the last lectures, I have had occasions a number of times to make the point that Buddhist teachings have been found relevant to modern life and thought in the fields of science, psychology and so forth. Here, in regard to the analysis of personal experience into the five aggregates, this is also the case. Modern psychologists and psychiatrists have been particularly interested in this analysis. It has even been suggested that in the Abhidharma and in the analysis of personal experience into the five aggregates, we have a psychological equivalent to the table of elements worked out in modern science. What we have in the Buddhist analysis of personal experience is a very careful inventory and evaluation of the elements of our experience.
What we are going to do today is basically an extension and a refinement of what we were doing at the end of last week’s lecture. There, we spent some time on the teachings of impermanence, suffering and notself. In the course of looking at the teaching on not-self, we have explored briefly how the analysis of personal experience can be carried out along two lines, and that is with regard to the body, and with regard to the mind. You will recall that we have examined the body and mind to see whether in either of them we can locate the self, and we have found that the self is not to be found in either of them. We have concluded that the name ‘self’ is just a convenient term for a collection of physical and mental factors, in the same way that the name ‘forest’ is just a convenient term for a collection of trees. This week, we are going to take our analysis still further, and rather than looking at personal experience simply in terms of body and mind, we are going to analyze personal experience in terms of the five aggregates.
Let us first look at the aggregate of matter or form (Rupa). The aggregate of form corresponds to what we would call material or physical factors. It includes not only our own bodies, but also the material objects that surround us - the earth, the oceans, the trees, the buildings, and so forth. Specifically, the aggregate of form includes the five physical sense organs and the corresponding physical objects of the sense organs. These are the eyes and visible objects, the ears and sound, the nose and smell, the tongue and taste, and the skin and tangible objects.
But physical elements by themselves are not enough to produce experience. The simple contact between the eyes and visible objects, or between the ears and sound cannot result in experience without consciousness (Vijnana). The eyes can be in conjunction with the visible object indefinitely without producing experience. The ears too can be exposed to sound indefinitely without producing experience. Only the co-presence of consciousness together with the sense organ and the object of the sense organ produces experience. In other words, it is when the eyes, the visible object and consciousness come together that the experience of a visible object is produced. Consciousness is therefore an indispensable element in the production of experience.
Before we go on to our consideration of the mental factors of personal experience, I would like to mention briefly the existence of one more set of an organ and its object, and here I speak of the sixth-sense -the mind. This is in addition to the five physical sense organs - eyes, ears, nose, tongue and skin. Just as the five physical sense organs have their corresponding physical objects, the mind has for its object ideas or properties (dharmas). And as in the case of the five physical sense organs, consciousness is present to unite the mind and its object so as to produce experience.
Let us now look at the mental factors of experience and let us see if we can understand how consciousness turns the physical factors of experience into personal conscious experience. First of all, we must remember that consciousness is mere awareness, or mere sensitivity to an object. When the physical factors of experience, as for example the eyes and a visible object, come into contact, and when consciousness too becomes associated with the physical factors of experience, visual consciousness arises. This is mere awareness of a visible object, not anything like what we could call personal experience. The way that our personal experience is produced is through the functioning of the other three major mental factors of experience and they are the aggregate of feeling, the aggregate of perception and the aggregate of mental formation or volition. These three aggregates function to turn this mere awareness of the object into personal experience.
The aggregate of feeling or sensation (Vedana) is of three kinds - pleasant, unpleasant and indifferent. When an object is experienced, that experience takes on one of these emotional tones, either the tone of pleasure, or the tone of displeasure, or the tone of indifference.
Let us next look at the aggregate of perception (Samjna). This is an aggregate which many people find difficult to understand. When we speak of perception, we have in mind the activity of recognition, or identification. In a sense, we are talking about the attaching of a name to an object of experience. The function of perception is to turn an indefinite experience into an identified and recognized experience. Here, we are speaking of the formulation of a conception of an idea about a particular object. Just as with feeling where we have a emotional element in terms of pleasure, displeasure or indifference; with perception, we have a conceptual element in the sense of introducing a definite, determinate idea about the object of experience.
Finally, there is the aggregate of mental formation or volition (Samskara). This aggregate may be described as a conditioned response to the object of experience. In this sense, it partakes of the meaning of habit as well. We have spent some time discussing the component of mental formation when we considered the twelve components of dependent origination. You will remember that on that occasion, we described mental formation as the impression created by previous actions, the habit energy stored up from countless former lives. Here, as one of the five aggregates also, the aggregate of mental formation plays a similar role. But it has not only a static value, it also has a dynamic value because just as our reactions are conditioned by former deeds, so are our responses here and now motivated and directed in a particular way by our mental formation or volition. Mental formation or volition therefore has a moral dimension just as perception has a conceptual dimension, and feeling has a emotional dimension. You will notice I use the terms mental formation and volition together. This is because each of these terms represents one half of the meaning of Samskara - mental formation represents the half that comes from the past, and volition represents the half that functions here and now. So mental formation and volition function to determine our responses to the objects of experience and these responses have moral consequences in the sense of wholesome, unwholesome or neutral.
We can now see how the physical and mental factors of experience worked together to produce personal experience. To make this a little clearer, let us take the help of a couple of concrete examples. Let us say after today’s lecture you decide to take a walk in the garden. As you walk in the garden, your eyes come into contact with a visible object. As your attention focuses on that visible object, your consciousness becomes aware of visible object as yet indeterminate. Your aggregate of perception will identify that visible object as, let us say, a snake. Once that happens, you will respond to that visible object with the aggregate of feeling - the feeling of displeasure, or more specifically that of fear. Finally, you will react to that visible object with the aggregate of mental formation or volition, with the intentional action of perhaps running away or perhaps picking up a stone.
In all our daily activities, we can see how all the five aggregates work together to produce personal experience. At this very moment, for instance, there is contact between two elements of the aggregate of form - the sound of my voice and your ears. Your consciousness becomes aware of the sound of my voice. Your aggregate of perception identifies the words that I am speaking. Your aggregate of feeling responds with an emotional response - pleasure, displeasure or indifference. Your aggregate of mental formation or volition responds with a conditioned reaction - sitting in attention, daydreaming or perhaps yawning. We can analyze all our personal experience in terms of the five aggregates.
There is one point that has to be remembered regarding the nature of the five aggregates, and that is that each and all of them are in constant change. The elements that constitute the aggregate of form are impermanent and are in a state of constant change. We discussed this last week - the body grows old, weak, sick and so forth. The things around us are also impermanent and change constantly. Our feelings too are constantly changing. We may respond today to a particular situation with a feeling of pleasure. To-morrow, we may respond to that same situation with the feeling of displeasure. Today we may perceive an object in a particular way. At a later time, under different circumstances, our perception will change. In semi-darkness we perceive a rope to be a snake. The moment the light of the torch falls upon that object, we perceive it to be a rope. So our perceptions like our feelings and like the material objects of our experience are ever changing and impermanent. So too, our mental formations are impermanent and ever-changing. We alter our habits. We can learn to be kind and compassionate. We can acquire the attitudes of renunciation and equanimity and so forth. Consciousness too is impermanent and constantly changing. Consciousness arises dependent upon an object and a sense organ. It cannot exist independently. As we have seen, all the physical and mental factors of our experience like our bodies, the physical objects around us, our minds and our ideas are impermanent and constantly changing. All these aggregates are constantly changing and impermanent. They are processes, not things. They are dynamic, not static.
What is the use of this analysis of personal experience in terms of the five aggregates? What is the use of this reduction of the apparent unity of personal experience into the various elements of form, feeling, perception, mental formation or volition, and consciousness? The purpose of this analysis is to create the wisdom of not-self. What we wish to achieve is to arrive at a way of experiencing the world which is not constructed upon and around the idea of a self. We want to see personal experience in terms of processes, in terms of impersonal functions rather than in terms of a self and what affects a self because this will create an attitude of equanimity, an attitude which will help us overcome the emotional disturbances of hope and fear. We hope for happiness, we fear pain. We hope for praise, we fear blame. We hope for gain, we fear loss. We hope for fame, we fear infamy. We live in a state of alternating between hope and fear. We experience these hopes and fears because we understand happiness and pain and so forth in terms of the self. We understand them as personal happiness and pain, as personal praise and blame, and so forth. But once we understand them in terms of impersonal processes, and once through this understanding we get rid of the idea of the self, we can overcome hope and fear. We can regard happiness and pain, praise and blame and all the rest with equanimity, with even-mindedness, and we will then no longer be subject to the imbalance of alternating between hope and fear.

How to cut the tie of Samsara?


How to cut the tie of Samsara?


There are two ways to purify one's obscurations; conventional and ultimate.  The conventional way is to engage in the practices of visualizing, chanting, engendering remorse, and making resolutions. The ultimate practice is to purify the deluded state of mind by means of the three fold purity, by simply rest in  rigpa, in non dual awareness.

 The connects one's mind with all the negative karma or imprints from the past is conceptual thinking !!!
The moment conceptual thinking is absent there is nothing to tie samsara together; it is cut, just like a rope that has been cut cannot bind. Look into what samasara is based on, and see it is the moment to moment delusion. This string of deluded moments is known as the continuous instant of delusion, and is the basis of samsara.  Among the five aggregates, it is called formation. The only thing that can really cut samsara is the moment of rigpa.  Rigpa totally makes samsara fall apart. ( p.103) 

 ---Repeating the Words of the Buddha by Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche


書獻給佛、法,和一切有情眾生。
據說當佛陀的教法昌盛時,所有眾生將得到安樂,
包括此生、中陰,以及諸多來世。

~祖古.烏金仁波切
英文預覽網頁  http://books.google.com.tw/books?id=c59FlWINO7gC&pg=PA15&hl=zh-TW&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=4#v=onepage&q&f=false





Saturday, May 19, 2012

宗薩欽哲仁波切開示--佛說老女人經)

昨天宗薩欽哲仁波切於台北兩個小時的開示的精華是.....
我們一切的痛苦是來自於---
把一個根本不存在,不是在那邊的東西把它當作在那邊。
不但在那邊,並且當作是真實存在的。
因為我們這樣想,一個不存在的東西被我們當作是存在,然後我們就產生了各式各樣的執著。
我們的痛苦是這樣來的。 ----by Kero Wang

(宗薩欽哲仁波切開示--佛說老女人經)



L: 知道這個道理
痛苦還是不能解除是因為
人必須一直區分 什麼是真實存在、什麼又只是我當作它存在
但是人自己的力量根本辦不到
除非有一天你相信根本沒有什麼是真實存在的吧...



A: 真的是學認知心理的高材生!可是,這是真的,佛家理論是,我們必須時時刻刻分分秒秒處在一種狀態:清楚明白的, 沒有被感官情緒偏見紛擾的狀態,也就是禪定的止的狀態下,就能夠分辨什麼是我們的妄想,什麼是暫時的存在,什麼又是執著。


另外,人自己的力量根本辦不到,基本上,也是對的。因為凡人,都是處在被七情六慾所操控著,被我之前post 的世間八法牽制著自己心,所以,沒有超脫的凡人,辦不到的,更是永遠處在痛苦中。借助一種依靠,借助外界的力量,是一個初學者最入門的方法。在基督教裡,是把自己交付給上帝,在密宗裡,在依法外,更是完完全全的皈依上師,上師本尊給予力量,在淨土宗裡,對阿彌陀佛的依止,,,, 比較宗教一點。在禪宗裡,應說最高的佛家境界,自己的本性,佛性,或是本覺,才是真正的力量!


P: Dear Angel, you know the secret of happiness. To live with it is the foundation of happiness.this is the path most people usually go along: suffer the pain; figure out the reasons of the pain; find out the way of ceasing the pain; and finally cease the pain by using the right ways.


A:dear Brother, Yes, he is amazing as always. However, I do usually mistakenly cling on something that seem to be either unnecessary or immaginary ! 痛苦的產生,都是自己幻想來的,令我們痛苦的幻想因子實是不存在的,或是我們執著在一個點上,而這個點通常是因為有我執的產生,別人說了或做了不合我期待的事,所以引起我的執著,而產生痛苦。。。。。


Dear L: 事實上,還有一點很重要,仁玻切說:"我們之所以會有痛苦是因為把不存在的東西當做是存在.
而師父亦同時開示: 如果我們不承認一個東西的存在,就等同於先承認某個東西存在.因為我們必須先承認一個東西的實際存在,才可以去否定那個東西的存在." 我的朋友說,他看的某個新聞馬上嫉妒心生起。。。。。" 我覺得,當你察覺到你的嫉妒心時,你是處在止的狀態,你的本覺必定升起,你不必要去想,去想去分析 ,這個嫉妒心是ˋ存在的或是不存在的,便落入了仁玻切所說的二元的分辨。他所說的不存在,並不是說他真的不存在,而是你的慾望與自我執著所ˊ產生的嫉妒心,並不是一個實質的可以觸摸的永恆的東西,他是一個由你的感官與過去的偏見之下的暫時的產物。因為,嫉妒心是幻想所生。一切的一切,在當下,不必要用想的 ,不必要受六識七識,與阿賴耶識的影響,如同堪布說的,用本覺去觀察,那麼一切的你的真實力量便會升起,更不會有所痛苦。Angel 個人的看法....."



痛苦是一種感官接收了外界訊息後,在大腦裡的反應。是用來自我防衛用的,生理上的。仁玻切所說的痛苦是,在這大腦反應後,我們之後的心理的作用。我認為這個心理作用如果執著於大腦反應痛的知覺,你不僅承認他的存在更加強了他的存在。你的痛苦程度就會增加!我們倘若依止在一個狀態下:可以讓這個外界接收的訊息視為只是路過的訊息,你的痛苦便不會存在了。--人若不熱愛痛苦,更是無法承擔一切~---- 我認為人若是為了長遠的恆久的快樂而承擔一切,這樣的承擔是真實而絕對的,不像承擔痛苦,是不得已的。畢竟人生是苦的,輪迴是苦的,只要我們的觀念與態度是不變得,人生必苦。只要我們肯進入令一種境界,痛苦可以超脫。


p:Everything will be all right in the end. If it is not all right, it is not  the end.












Saturday, October 22, 2011

Renunciation !

http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/prince/bl036.html

Renounciate from any concept and material that is solid, subjective, non changing, perfect, and self clining.
There is no such thing as true love in the worldly samsara.
Your parents will betray you, and so does your lover ... And your best friends....
First step into tantra practice is renounciation.
Second step is compassion.

Tuesday, June 9, 2009

亞當與夏娃為何被逐出伊甸園?

卡夫卡言:亞當與夏娃之所以被逐出伊甸園是因為太急燥,然而他們無法回去的原因是太懶惰.他只說對一半..... 太急躁, 太急於嘗試禁果, 太急於探索情慾的誘惑; 然而他們的情慾被啟動之後, 身上的感官便開始分辨與情慾有關的一切, 聲音, 氣味,觸覺, 形狀, 結構; 他們開始分辨, 什麼對自己是有利的, 什麼是對自己不利的, 因此出現了判別好與壞的差異. 綠色的樹葉是好看的, 枯黃的樹葉是醜陋的; 裸露身體是被別人見著自己的私密處, 是羞恥的, 掩蓋自己的私處是高尚的表徵; 園裡的天使長著翅膀都是美好的可愛的, 但是們嚐完禁果之後, 竟然發現天使也有不可愛, 沒有翅膀的.....

是上帝把亞當與夏娃逐出伊甸園嘛? 不盡然吧. 而是說, 他們兩人所身處的伊甸園, 在他們的眼中, 源於禁果慾望的點燃, 他們的世界, 不再是天堂, 而是充斥著善惡分別, 人我分別的世界. 簡單的說, 是他們自己把天堂轉變為人間. 卡夫卡說對了一半, 在於"急躁", 而另大半應在於"無知" , 在於不知道為何"禁果"此物, 是不能夠品嚐的. 卻急於探試. 只是, 上帝為何不告知? 因為住在伊甸園,智慧未開發的亞當與夏娃, 太過愚蠢嗎?也許吧!! 他們必須到人間走這麼一遭, 歷經千錘百鍊, 看盡善惡輪迴, 才會有所暸悟吧!難道"情慾"本身是罪惡嗎? 在基督教裡, 乾脆把"情慾"兩字簡單化, 只要是合乎上帝的旨意, 繁衍下一代時, 才合基督上帝之法. 不遵守上帝旨意確定為原罪. 基督教義太簡單, 敷衍, 易懂了.... !

但所謂"禁果", 所謂"誘惑" 廣泛而言, Mindancer 認為, 是慾念, 貪念, 瞠念. 像是一個潘朵拉的寶盒, 裡邊蘊藏所有人類的行為動機. 一切的分別之心,一切分辨你我,主觀課體的分別心,名為"禁果! 在佛法裡, "情慾"本身確定是罪惡, 這是個大大的誤解. 情慾本身本是無善無惡.....! 這便是天堂所在呀!