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The setup ...

Mendicants, conditioned phenomena have these three characteristics. What three? Arising is evident, vanishing is evident, and change while persisting is evident. These are the three characteristics of conditioned phenomena.

AN 3.47

Together with ...

Why is that? Transmigration has no known beginning. No first point is found of sentient beings roaming and transmigrating, shrouded by ignorance and fettered by craving. For such a long time you have undergone suffering, agony, and disaster, swelling the cemeteries. This is quite enough for you to become disillusioned, dispassionate, and freed regarding all conditions.

SN 15.1

Along with the assumption that "transmigration" or "samsara" is a conditioned phenomena ...

Would seem to give rise to a contradiction. On the one hand, the Buddha said quite unambiguously that conditioned phenomena have a beginning, middle and an end, but on the other hand the Buddha said that "transmigration" or "samsara" has no known beginning.

Questions:

  1. Do you agree this is an apparent contradiction?
  2. Do you think this is a real contradiction?
  3. If it is apparent but not real, then how would you resolve it?

I would say, "yes, no, and it is complicated" but I'm curious to know how others resolve it.

Related but distinct questions.

UPDATE:

This was too close to a seeded question. Although it was asked sincerely in that I was curious to know others responses (particular users on this site who I respect and admire) I do have my own idea of how I would answer this question so I should not have opened it out of mere curiosity. I was going to delete it given it goes against the site moderation guidelines, but then there are good answers and we are discouraged to delete questions where people have attempted to give good and thoughtful answers so I will leave it, but I do regret opening it in the first place.

8 Answers8

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A circle has no beginning, but we can by convention start at 0 degrees as a beginning and end at 360 degrees, ready for a new cycle. Transmigration is cyclic. But we can let go of chasing the cycles. We can stop treating the circle as a line and just let it be a circle.

SNp3.12:28.1: “Craving is a person’s partner
SNp3.12:28.2: as they transmigrate on this long journey.
SNp3.12:28.3: They go from this state to another,
SNp3.12:28.4: but don’t escape transmigration.

OyaMist
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  • Is a circle not a conditioned phenomena? Was the Buddha wrong that with a circle - being a conditioned phenomena - arising is evident, vanishing is evident, and change while persisting is evident? –  Nov 07 '23 at 18:25
  • Also, by that same token if a 'circle has no beginning' then in the same way it 'has no end' and if you are comparing transmigration to this circle are you then saying transmigration has no end?? –  Nov 07 '23 at 18:27
  • Thank you for your kind answer. I will think on these. – OyaMist Nov 08 '23 at 13:34
  • @YesheTenley: I think it can reasonably be argued circles are not conditioned. π is literally a transcendental number, that seems to represent a fundamental quality of our reality. Similarly logical inferences are not conditioned. – CriglCragl Nov 09 '23 at 22:24
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    There are many many dependent conditions for transcendental numbers, diameters, circumferences, logical inferences etc and all of these are conditioned phenomena. They are all conventions. No matter how useful a convention, conventions are still just conventions –  Nov 10 '23 at 01:32
  • @CriglCragl, as an engineer I agree with you. However, it doesn't help me read the suttas. So for the suttas, I now prefer YesheTenley's explanation (which also works for me as an engineer) – OyaMist Nov 10 '23 at 16:25
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This is an apparent contradiction. All conditioned phenomena are impermanent. All conditions are also conditioned phenomena. Therefore as conditions themselves are conditioned phenomena , we say a conditioned phenomena is built upon another conditioned phenomena. There seems to be no beginning of a conditioned phenomena which can be called father or mother of all phenomena.

However , every phenomena along with its conditionals ,in this infinite cycle,has a beginning as the conditioned phenomena arises ,changes and vanishes.

I was asked :

If arising itself has the characteristic of arising, then it leads to an unacceptable infinite regress.

I will explain it using an example as follows:

Take an example of eating, we ask , is there a beginning of phenomena of eating ? Answer is Yes. There is an arising of phenomena of eating.Is there any change in Sankhara of eating ? No. Is there is an end of eating? Yes.

Next we ask , what are the conditions for eating ? Answer is craving(hunger). Is hunger a phenomena? Yes. Does it have arising , change and end ? Yes. What are the conditions for craving ? Answer is feelings.Does it have beginning and end ? Yes. What are the conditions for feelings ? Answer is contact. Does it have beginning, change and end? Yes. What are the conditions for contact ? Six senses. Is six senses a phenomena with beginning, change and end ? Yes. What are the conditions for six senses? Name and form. Is name and form a phenomena with arising , change and end ? Yes. What are the conditions for name and form ? Consciousness. Is consciousness a phenomena with beginning, change and end ? Yes. What are the conditions for consciousness? Volitional formations or mental fabrications. Is volitional formations or mental fabrication a phenomena with beginning, change and end? Yes. What are the conditions for volitional formations? Ignorance. Is ignorance a phenomena with beginning, change and end? Yes. What are the conditions for ignorance? Answer is craving.

You see we have again reached to craving. Therefore each phenomena with conditions have beginning, change and end. And also note every phenomena is based on manifestation of other phenomena. We do not regress infinitely because we end up with circle.

SacrificialEquation
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  • Is arising itself a compounded phenomena? –  Nov 07 '23 at 17:04
  • @YesheTenley Yes. – SacrificialEquation Nov 07 '23 at 17:13
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    So arising itself has the three characteristics of arising, enduring, and ceasing? –  Nov 07 '23 at 17:16
  • Also, what school(s) of Buddhism do you follow @SacrificialEquation ? –  Nov 07 '23 at 17:18
  • If arising itself has the characteristic of arising, then it leads to an unacceptable infinite regress. –  Nov 07 '23 at 19:37
  • You didn't understand the infinite regress. If arising has the characteristic of arising, then the arising of arising has the characteristic of arising, then the arising of arising of arising has the characteristic of arising, then the arising of arising of arising of arising has the characteristic of arising... infinite regress. This is unacceptable. –  Nov 08 '23 at 13:09
  • @YesheTenley Arising is a combination of Sankharas. There is no arising of the arising. For example -Eating. It arises. Eating is conditional. Those conditions also have condition and so on. But arising of eating is a finite process. – SacrificialEquation Nov 08 '23 at 17:37
  • You take back saying that arising itself has the three characteristics? –  Nov 08 '23 at 17:38
  • @YesheTenley No. Arising is conditional… dependently originates. But it is finitely realised. There are infinite points between any two distinct points but we cover the distance finitely… – SacrificialEquation Nov 08 '23 at 17:45
  • So you still maintain that arising has the characteristic of arising? If so, you can't avoid the infinite regress –  Nov 08 '23 at 18:29
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Do you agree this is a contradiction?

  • First, when I read a sutta I look for meaning -- perhaps I assume it has a meaning -- and a context and a purpose. IMO each of these suttas is saying something meaningful, and is 'sensible' by which I mean 'inline with experience/observation'. Give that they're both/each useful statements in context, and saying different things, their being "contradictory" doesn't come to mind.

  • I'm not sure whether samsara is a sankhara as described in AN 3.47:

    • You might think it is i.e. that, "Samsara is the set/sum/totality of all sankharas and is therefore an aggregate/sankhara itself", but I'm not sure that's true. In general there can be paradoxes if you assume that's true (see "universal set") which in Maths is considered "proof by contradiction" that it isn't true. Knowing a little of that, I avoid making confident statements on that subject (like I beware, or find unsatisfactory, lay-people's making 'logical' arguments using the word 'infinite').
    • If a sankhara is a "conditioned thing" with a start and end, I'm not sure that samsara is a thing in the same way, perhaps you're reifying it. It's true that 'samsara' is a noun: but!
  • By analogy, maybe samsara is like an ocean and sankharas are like the waves. Float a duck on the surface of the ocean, graph its position over time, it goes up and down thus each wave has a top and bottom, like a beginning and an end -- but statements about the properties of "waves" aren't necessarily applicable to the whole ocean.

    Similarly a statement about human beings (e.g. "each has a date of birth and date of death") isn't applicable to the human race (the beginning of which is not only 'lost in the mists of time' but also perhaps indefinite i.e. too gradual to identify).

  • Samsara is like the evolution of an object into another, isn't it. SN 15.9 is about the migration and AN 3.47 is about the objects, they're not mutually-contradictory because they're taking about different subjects/objects.

  • This answer hasn't mentioned 'emptiness' yet but to an extent sankharas are 'mind-made', based on sense-contact, "Oh hello, there's my friend again!", and to that extent short-lived. AN 3.47 is about any specific, identified thing-cluster-perception. Samsara is more or less saying, "It's in the nature of any things to be short/finite-lived", it's not a contradiction to say that samsara or samsaric nature itself is so, and has been so since who even knows when.

  • It may be worth mentioning the 'unanswered questions' too, i.e. Buddhism has a purpose/message. Maybe "the origin of samsara" isn't a useful topic, a tractable problem. Logically it seems that it might be a useful thing to know, so it's tempting. But I think SN 15.9 short-circuits that, "No it's not evident".

ChrisW
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  • Yes, the suttas have profound meaning
  • You seem to be saying that there is not even an apparent contradiction (it doesn't come to mind)
  • You then try to explain the apparent contradiction you won't even acknowledge
  • The whole question rests on whether samsara is indeed a conditioned phenomena as I said in my question but you don't even seem to want to grab either horn (yes it is conditioned phenomena or no it isn't)
  • All conditioned phenomena are put together or compound not just samsara. A chariot is made up of parts, the parts are made up of parts, the parts of the parts are made
  • –  Nov 08 '23 at 13:16
  • of parts. Can the beginning of 'chariot' similarly not be known? * I'm talking about conditioned phenomena... the two suttas in question are talking about conditioned phenomena if you grab the horn and agree that samsara is saṅkhata * talking about how samsara is made up of parts does not refute that it is saṅkhata and thus subject to AN 3.47 * You again and again go back to the 'unanswered questions' as an escape from the agitation that the apparent contradiction brings to your mind * It is fine to temporarily escape this agitation if you can't resolve the apparent contradiction * But this –  Nov 08 '23 at 13:20
  • does not actually resolve the agitation or dukkha you have to deal with it at some point if the contradiction is in fact apparent to you. * It really does seem that the contradiction is apparent to you, you refuse to believe it is a real contradiction (which is good), but you are unsure how to actually resolve it –  Nov 08 '23 at 13:22
  • It is fine to say - commendable even - that "It is an apparent contradiction, I don't believe it is a real contradiction, but I'm unsure right now how to resolve it." –  Nov 08 '23 at 13:23
  • It wasn't apparent to me, it didn't occur to me, but you posted the question and said you wanted me to answer. I don't think samsara is a thing like a chariot. Consider a fire: it happens under the right conditions (e.g. fuel and air and heat); a fire is a conditioned thing with a start and end, more or less. But when did the "law of flammability" begin, the tendency of things to combust under certain conditions, when was the first fire? That's not knowable, and not answerable. – ChrisW Nov 08 '23 at 15:47
  • If there is no apparent contradiction, then nothing needs to be explained. It seems there is no apparent contradiction for you because you reject the part that I clearly marked as an assumption: that samsara is a conditioned phenomena. –  Nov 08 '23 at 15:53
  • The problem with grasping that horn is you are left with samsara is either an unconditioned phenomena (like nirvana) OR samsara is simply not a phenomena at all which is also problematic –  Nov 08 '23 at 15:54
  • Comparing samsara to the 'law of flammability' is problematic: are you saying samsara has no end? you are saying samsara doesn't begin, but it endures and then ends? –  Nov 08 '23 at 15:56
  • "you reject the part that I clearly marked as an assumption" I don't buy it as a given, anyway; it's not how I read the sutta. Another answer could be, I guess, that perhaps another way to escape the dilemma you posit might be to ask "evident to whom?" e.g. perhaps its beginning is not evident to beings caught in samsara in SN 15.1 and yet evident to the author of AN 3.57. It (whether it's evident) varying with the person could be inline with the suttas being spoken in different "contexts". As for flammability, SN 35.28 for example says it can be ended, even if we can't identify when it began. – ChrisW Nov 08 '23 at 16:07
  • Anyway you wrote, "I would say, "yes, no, and it is complicated"" -- perhaps you'll post an answer. – ChrisW Nov 08 '23 at 16:16
  • I've now linked my answer. I can elaborate if someone thinks it would be helpful, but my answer is basically Nagarjuna's answer. –  Nov 09 '23 at 14:15