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Comments
Soh Wei Yu
Trained the AI a bit. Now it knows dependent existence is not right view
Tan Jui Horng
Soh Wei Yu How to train ChatGPT?
Soh Wei Yu
Tan Jui Horng feed with better information and challenge it and ask it questions to see whether it understood lol
Anurag Jain
Good that you corrected dependent existence as the final view on emptiness.
But you still did not explain what is the emptiness. For that you have to explain the tetralemma.
Soh Wei Yu
Yes dependent existence is quite clearly refuted by Nagarjuna.
John tan said before:
This comment by Malcolm is really good.

Session Start: Wednesday, August 09, 2006
(11:32 PM) AEN: namdrol:
While
it is true that many non-Buddhist paths a reunciate and so on, the
unique feature of the Buddha's path is understanding that phenomena are
dependently originated. Dependent origination is critical in developing a
correct view.
Is the mere knowledge that phenomena dependently originated sufficient? No.
It
is possible to hold a view of dependent origination which is
nevertheless realist or substantialist in nature-- a perfect example of
this would the way Thich Nhat Hahn's "interbeing" is generally
understood. Here, it is never questioned that the mutually depedendent
phenomena exist in dependence because they all exist together. In
general, this is also the naive understanding of dependent origination.
(11:32 PM) AEN: Even
so, this view of dependent orgination already marks the beginning of
turning from a wrong or incorrect view, to a right or correct view.
How do we move from a substantialist interpretation of dependent origination to a non-substantialist understanding?
We
need to first be open to having our existential assumptions undermined.
Any clinging to existence and non-existence must be eradicated before
we can properly appreciate the meaning of DO. Some people think this
simply means clinging to inherent or ultimate existence. But this is not
so. Whatever arises in dependence also must be devoid of mere existence
as well.
To
understand this fully we must understand the perfection of wisdom
sutras in their entirety and the thinking of Nagarjuna and his
followers.
(11:32 PM) AEN:
When
we have truly understood that phenomena are devoid existence and
non-existence because they are dependently originated; we can understand
that phenomena do not arise, since existence and dependence are
mutually exclusive. Any existence that can be pointed to is merely
putative and nominal, and does not bear any reasoned investigation.
Since
phenomena are dependently originated, and the consquence of dependent
origination is that there are no existing existents, we can understand
that existents are non-arising by nature. As Buddhapalita states "We do
not claim non-existence, we merely remove claims for existing
existents."
Whatever
does not arise by nature is free from existence and non-existence, and
that is the meaning of "freedom from proliferation." In this way,
dependent origination = emptiness, and this is the correct view that
Buddhas elucidate. There is no other correct view than this.
N
Soh Wei Yu
Kyle Dixon:
Existence
[bhāva] and dependent origination [pratītyasamutpāda] are mutually
exclusive. For something to actually "exist" it must do so independently
of causes and conditions, but as luminaries such as Nāgārjuna point
out, that is impossible.
Many
people conflate dependent existence [parabhāva], which is something
existing with assistance from another, with dependent origination
[pratītyasamutpāda]. The two are radically different principles.
Regarding Nāgārjuna's classification of "existence" [bhāva], he asserts
rather damningly:
“Whoever
has a view of inherent existence [svabhāva], dependent existence
[parabhāva], existence [bhāva] and non-existence [abhāva] do not see the
truth of the Buddha's teaching.”
Yet
Nāgārjuna was one of the most major proponents of clarifying the inner
workings of dependent origination [pratītyasamutpāda], and states that
there can be no existence established independently of inherent
existence or dependent existence in the following inquiry:
“Where
is there an existent not included in inherent existence and dependent
existence? If inherent existence and dependent existence are
established, existence will be established.”
This
means that dependent existence [parabhāva] is actually a guise for
inherent existence [svabhāva], and therefore is in direct contradiction
to dependent origination [pratītyasamutpāda]. Further, since we cannot
extract any form of existence [bhāva] as separate from dependent
existence [parabhāva] or inherent existence [svabhāva], existence in any
form is contradictory to dependent origination [pratītyasamutpāda].
Buddhapālita comments on Nāgārjuna's damning assertion above:
“Someone
like that, who [has a] view of inherent existence, dependent existence,
existence or non-existence does not see the truth in the profound and
supreme teaching of the Buddha. Because we, in the correct way, see the
nonexistence of the inherent existence of things which appear because of
the sun of dependent origination arose, because of that, because we see
the truth, liberation can be accepted only for us.”
Nāgārjuna is stating that all views of existence contradict dependent origination.
In
order for something to exist, it must be independently originated, and
conversely, for something to be independently originated it would have
to be unconditioned, independent and uncaused, but as mentioned above,
this is considered an impossibility in the eyes of the buddhadharma. The
correct conventional view for emptiness is dependent origination, and
so we see that in order to have objects, persons, places, things and so
on, they must be possessed of causes and conditions. Meaning they cannot
be found apart from those causes and conditions. If the conditions are
removed, the object cannot remain.
Regarding this, Nāgārjuna states the following:
“That
which comes into being from a cause, and does not endure without
conditions, it disappears as well when conditions are absent - how can
this be understood to exist?”
Going on to say:
“Since it comes to and end when ignorance ceases; why does it not become clear then that it was conjured by ignorance?”
And
so here we get to the actual meaning, and the heart of dependent
origination, which is nonarising [anutpāda]. For an object to inherently
exist it must exist outright, independent of causes and conditions,
independent of attributes, characteristics and constituent parts.
However, we cannot find an inherent object independent of these factors,
and the implications of this fact is that we likewise cannot find an
inherent object within those factors either.
The
object itself, as the core entity which possesses characteristics, is
ultimately unfindable. We instead only find a designated collection of
pieces, which do not in fact create any discrete object. In the absence
of an object the pieces are likewise rendered as incapable of being
"pieces" or "parts" and therefore they are also nothing more than
arbitrary designations that amount to nothing more than inferences.
This
means that all entities, selves, and so on are merely useful
conventional designations, their provisional validity is only measured
by their efficacy, and apart from that conventional imputation, there is
no underlying object that can be ascertained or found.
Dependent
origination is the apparent origination of entities that seem to
manifest in dependence on causes and conditions. But as Nāgārjuna states
above, those causes and conditions are actually the ignorance which
afflicts the mindstream, and the conditions of grasping, mine-making and
I-making which are the drivers of karmic activity that serve to reify
the delusion of a self, or a self in objects, and so on.
This
is why many adepts are explicitly clear that dependent origination is
synonymous with a lack of origination [anutpāda], because phenomena that
originate in dependence on ignorance as a cause, never actually
originate at all, for example, Candrakīrti states:
“The perfectly awakened buddhas proclaimed, "What is dependently originated is non-arisen.”
Or Mañjuśrī:
“Whatever is dependently originated does not truly arise.”
Nāgārjuna once again:
“What originates dependently is non-arisen!”
Thus
dependent origination is incapable of producing existence of any sort,
because dependent origination is incapable of producing entities.
Entities and existence only appear because of the ignorance which
afflicts your mind. When that ignorance is removed, all perceptions of
existence are removed, all perceptions of selves are removed and all
perceptions of origination are removed.
Anurag Jain
Soh Wei Yu lol. Lot of words. Still does not explain what is emptiness...
Soh Wei Yu
Anurag Jain it is explained above
Anurag Jain
Soh Wei Yu ok. But not as clear as the tetralemma.
Stian Gudmundsen Høiland
>
In the Lankavatara Sutra, the Buddha teaches: "All things are empty of
self-nature. They are not produced from themselves, nor are they
produced from other things, nor are they produced by both. They have no
producer." (Lankavatara Sutra, Chapter 3)
Nice!
>
The Lankavatara Sutra states: "By knowing that all things are empty,
one can remove all clinging and attain final Nirvana." (Lankavatara
Sutra, Chapter 4)
Nice!