His Holiness the Dalai Lama Concludes Visit with a Dharma Talk
September 19th 2012
Mussoorie, India, 18 September 2012 - Days of heavy rain gave
way at last to clear blue skies, the early morning sun catching the surrounding
hill-tops, as His Holiness the Dalai Lama stepped out of the temple where he had
been staying to walk down to the Tibetan Homes Foundation School ground. He
admired the hibiscus bushes with their white and pink blooms on the way, greeted
a 90 year old Tibetan as he reached the school, then took his seat in an
armchair before the assembled children. In the front row sat the youngest
children, neat and clean in their school uniforms, solemnly trying to pay
attention, as, without further ado, His Holiness began his talk.
He told the children that Buddhists from many countries come these days to hear him teach, and he
He told the children that Buddhists from many countries come these days to hear him teach, and he
explains that there are many religions in the world of which
Buddhism is only one. The Sanskrit word for religious or spiritual practice is
Dharma, which has the sense of protecting us from suffering because it involves
restraining how we think and behave. He divided religions into two categories,
ancient traditions of spirit worship and animal sacrifice and traditions with a
philosophical background. In India, the Samkhyas may have preceded Buddhism by
3000 years and are a source from which Hindu traditions have grown. Buddhism
appeared about 2500 years ago at the same time as Jainism and much later came
Sikhism. The Middle East was the location of the origins of Judaism,
Christianity and Islam, while Persia gave rise to Zoroastrianism. All these
traditions have a philosophical background.
A Sufi teacher His Holiness met at an inter-faith gathering
in Amritsar once told him that all religions address three questions: What is
the self? Does the self have a beginning? And, does the self have an end? In
answer to the first question, all religions except Buddhism speak of a self or
soul separate from body and mind that goes on after death. Buddhism, however,
says that the person or self is only a designation on the basis of the body and
mind. His Holiness pointed out that just as a chariot is only designated on the
basis of its parts, the self is designated on the basis of our physical and
mental aggregates. Designation is relative. If you hold up one finger and ask if
it is long or short, you can’t say without relating it to another finger.
“Can you call someone with no child a mother or father? We
only designate or refer to people as parents in relation to their having
children.”
This relates to our thought processes. We can distinguish between conceptual and sensory
experience. There is a difference between our perception of a
flower we look at and the way we think about it. These days scientists too are
examining which parts of the brain are involved in this, just as they are
beginning to map which parts of the brain are active when someone is angry or
filled with compassion.
His Holiness mentioned how he categorizes Buddhist literature
into Buddhist science and philosophy, which may be of interest to scientists,
and Buddhist religion which is the preserve of Buddhist practitioners. Buddhist
philosophy, for example, discusses impermanence and momentary change. At a
subtle level, everything is undergoing constant change, nothing remains the same
and this can be seen through a microscope. Buddhists understand this subtle
change through logical inference, whereas scientists observe it through
instruments. Such change is brought about by causes and conditions. As soon as
something comes into being, it is bound to disintegrate. Nothing is independent;
everything is dependent on other factors. This is why Buddhists talk about
causality and interdependence and do not accept a creator god.
“Those who do believe in a creator god also speak of a self
or soul that is permanent and unchanging, Buddhists deny this. However, this is
not to say there is no self, we talk about the practice of ‘exchanging self with
others’, but what we say is that there is no permanent, unchanging
self.”
As to the second question, whether the self has a beginning,
those who believe in a creator god say he created the self or soul, so that’s
its beginning. Buddhists say the self is not separate from the physical body,
feelings, recognitions etc., and consciousness. When we die, the body is left
behind and feelings, recognitions etc., cease; but a subtle consciousness
remains. There is evidence of this when accomplished practitioners sometimes
remain in a meditative state after clinical death has taken place. On such
occasions their bodies remain fresh, even after their circulation has stopped.
Scientists are taking an interest in this phenomenon and instruments for
monitoring what is happening have been left in Dharamsala. In a recent case,
measurements showed there was some sort of activity going on during meditation
after death, but scientists don’t draw conclusions from only one instance. More
data will have to be gathered, which will take an unpredictable amount of time,
because as His Holiness said,
“We can’t ask people to die and go into meditation just so we can measure the result!”
The subtlest mind is said to have no beginning and no end.
The logic texts say that something that is not mind cannot be the cause of mind,
which is how Buddhists explain the existence of past lives. His Holiness
remarked that one of his scientist friends told him that the Buddhist
explanation of consciousness seems to accord with the facts. We have to examine
these facts further, but because we say that there is no beginning to
consciousness, which is one of the main factors in the designation of a person,
there is no beginning to self.
Regarding the third question, whether self has an end, while
theistic religions talk about a judgement day and an after-life, Buddhism says
we continue up to enlightenment and liberation, so there is no end to the self.
His Holiness commented,
“I asked a Christian friend where God came from and he
replied that Christians don’t ask such questions, they don’t do such analysis.
However, we Buddhists do and we ask what are the causes and conditions of
suffering and happiness. We ask whether the self has a beginning or an end, and
most Buddhist schools say there is no end to consciousness.”
His Holiness discussed some of the differences found among
Buddhist traditions. He said that the explanation of the Four Noble Truths that
all Buddhists accept is included in the Pali collection of scriptures, but that
there are also Mahayana teachings that the Buddha did not give in public. For
example, the Heart Sutra, which presents a conversation between Shariputra and
Avalokiteshvara, who is a bodhisattva in the form of a deity. Some people deny
that the Buddha gave the Mahayana or tantra teachings, but great masters like
Nagarjuna examined them and say that he did. In the Four Noble Truths the Buddha
taught about suffering and its causes, liberation and the path to it, but His
Holiness stated that without the Mahayana explanation it’s difficult to
understand what liberation is. Switching his attention to actual practice, His
Holiness said,
“I thought we might hold a brief ceremony to generate the
awakening mind of bodhichitta. We’ll use the verse you all know that begins, ‘To
the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha I go for refuge, ...’ In Ladakh I asked how many
knew this verse and everyone raised their hands, but when I asked how many
understood what it meant, far fewer hands went up.
“The first line is about taking refuge in a Mahayana way, ‘I
take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha until I am enlightened’. The Buddha
appeared in the world, gave his teaching and his followers practised it. When
someone has a true experience of the Dharma, the teaching, we say he or she has
become a member of the Sangha. We take refuge in these three, which is a causal
refuge. There are also the resultant refuges, Buddha, Dharma and Sangha, that we
attain through reliance on them. Buddha Shakyamuni is referred to as an
Emanation Body, which came from a Complete Enjoyment Body, which came from the
Truth Body. These can be achieved because the mind is empty of intrinsic
existence and the defilements that obscure it can be cleared away. This factor
that enables us to attain enlightenment is called Buddha nature.
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