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Has anyone read Nagarjuna as claiming only that an effect can never be conceived of as its cause?

I'm asking because it would neatly fit my own views on how to understand science, as well as I think rendering annihilation a conceptual impossibilty (for reasons other than that thesis assuming a person).

  • i want to delete the question –  Jul 26 '17 at 23:34
  • Why do you want to delete it? Might it be possible to improve the question or the answers, instead? – ChrisW Jul 28 '17 at 07:37
  • @ChrisW hm not sure. the question makes sense, as it is, it's just that it's not a very interesting / good one. i thought the reply may have same bearing on textual understanding, but my motivation was silly –  Jul 30 '17 at 21:51
  • rarely a good question with depth here, nice! i recall in Madhyamaka: 穀子中芽無所從來 (the sprout comes from nothingness of the grain) [slit the grain found no sprout in it]... 若果非有生 亦復非無生 亦非有無生 何得言有緣 (if the effect is not a production [生], neither non-production, nor production and non-production, how renders it there the cause)... rendering annihilation a conceptual impossibilty that is very insightful :) you may like to read about the Zeno's Paradoxes as well. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 03 '17 at 18:17
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    usually the one who doesn't understand Nagarjuna will refute him, or those who never read his works will; or read the bad translations. Anyone who caught a spark will be so captivated by an extra-ordinary mind. Nag's original texts (his very original was lost) exist only in Chinese translated by Kumarajiva. The later Sanskrit was back-translated from Chi. Seemed Kum (my personal reading of his works) was so fascinated by and admired Nag he particularly wrote a biography for him, only 2 pages very easy to read but very interesting storylines I wonder if anyone translated it. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 03 '17 at 18:40
  • if Nagarjuna is not a profuse meditator none of the monks today are doing meditation; if Nag is not an accomplished meditator none of the meditator today can expect to accomplish anything, neither the Buddha meditated at all! those claimed meditating and how superb their so-called "dhammas/ insights" are only but gabbling, do they really know what is meditation apart from their superficial yelling of calming the mind? while Nagarjuna sat on the Dharma Platform in silence only radiating lights. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 03 '17 at 19:02

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See "Mula-madhyamaka-karika" by Nagarjuna:

Neither from itself nor from another,

Nor from both,

Nor without a cause,

Does anything whatever, anywhere arise.

Later Chandrakirti wrote detailed explanations of these ideas.

The purpose was to demonstrate the middle way between extremes of eternalism and nihilism regarding causes.

Otherwise causes could be viewed as "substance of self" of phenomena.

For practical purposes, we can meditate thusly:


  1. Realize that all things depend on causes,

and therefore they lack independent existence.

For example, my feelings depend on causes. All my thoughts depend on causes. Also my wishes and my actions all depend on causes.

Therefore, is there anything in "me" this moment, not dependent on something else?

  1. Then realize also that causality itself is illusory.

For example, we can contemplate that causality is rather our assumption than reliably known truth.

We guess that this is the cause of that. But it's just our guess, conventional truth. In the absolute sense, we can not ultimately know it.

"Absolute truth" is understood here as something that appears directly (phenomena, dharmas). Any judgments - e.g. views about causality - are just guesses.

For practical purposes, we take such guesses to be "true", but we should realize that's just a convention in our mind.


This understanding helps to see the selflessness of phenomena, and thus to liberate from samsara.

chang zhao
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  • I just want to remark that this answer should not be regarded as a true understanding of Nagarjuna's 中論. Your understanding is far from Nag's. Suggest to read the orginal work 1st, only 68 pages incl. 青目(Chandrakriti?) in Kumarajiva's translation. Also recommend reading Sutra 摩訶般若波羅密多. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 08:55
  • Not sure who did good eng translation, very unfortunate the contemporary eng tranl. of almost all Mahayana Sutras (Chinese) were done by Theosophical scholars, they were twisted (erroneous), you shouldn't believe them don't read them as the 1st if you could read Classical Chinese. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 09:20
  • These scholars promote what they called early (authentic) Buddhism recorded in - ONLY - Pali, they promote "Mahayana Sutras were great - a later invention (not originally taught by the Buddha, or Buddha not a person, Sutras were group creation". This is a forum that adores Pali Canon, with most of the moderators trumpeting that one voice, you get what I meant ;) – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 09:20
  • @Mishu米殊, multilingual edition is here: https://www2.hf.uio.no/polyglotta/index.php?page=volume&vid=27 So what is incorrect in my understanding, and what is correct understanding? I respectfully beg you to explain. – chang zhao Aug 06 '17 at 12:12
  • Your quoted is only a close translation, from this verse: 1諸法不自生 2亦不從他生 3不共不無因 4是故知無生 transl.: '1All dharmas (rules, laws, ways... there not an equivalent word in eng to either the Sanskrit dharma or Chinese 法) are not coming from themselves, 2neither from others, 3nor from both (themselves and others) or without causes, 4Thus should know there no becoming [suchness].' your quote missed the 4, also misinterpreted the verse by reversively stating "something arises" which is grotesquely contradictory to Emptiness, the core meaning in fact is the missing 4, 「諸法無生」, no becoming. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 15:42
  • "Realize that all things depend on causes" this is very wrong. Nag doesn't state this, in contrast, nothing can be a cause of another thing, see my comment on the OP about the sprout and grain, things arise depends on conditions, not causes. 因緣 condition; 因果 causality or cause-effect (don't confuse it with Karma, Nag confirms Karma in his analogy too, not because it's morally necessary), Chinese is very distinct on these two terms. Your link was broken, also it will take too much time to explain point by point. I suggest you read the original Chinese work if you could. Hope that help :) – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 15:50
  • One more remark, 中論, your "middle way" and the scholars sayings are blind translation of this word: 中. In Chi 中 apart from meaning middle, it also means real, central. As the great ancient Chinese Buddhist scholar 僧叡 wrote in introduction: ...以為名者,照其實也。It only further confirmed that the Sanskrit was back-translated from Chinese. We don't know if Nagarjuna named this Sastra "Mula-madhy..." but Kumarajiva got his meaning giving it the Chi eqivalent 中, 僧叡 if I remembered correctly is Kum's student. – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 16:05
  • @Mishu米殊, the link works in my browser. It says: 諸法不自生 亦不從他生 不共不無因 是故知無生

    如諸法自性 不在於緣中 以無自性故 他性亦復無

    因緣次第緣 緣緣增上緣 四緣生諸法 更無第五緣

    The order of verses 2 & 3 might be changed because translations from other languages were used to join them all into one text. - Your criticism of my words is based on not understanding that causality is explained as conditional view (see Nag. comments), and any verbal expression is conditional. E.g. if you deny that "something arises" you fall into nihilism and don't understand emptiness of this expression. Anyway, thanks for your opinion. We may talk in chat.

    – chang zhao Aug 06 '17 at 16:08
  • One last revert to your comment, you didn't get my meaning, I said Nag means no becoming - suchness, definitely "something arises" is not Nag, and you don't need to have something arises to fill the world so that it is not nihilism, suchness is fully "filling" the world, read Surangama, also the Buddha said he is Tathagata, as come and well gone, means suchness. Logically thinking, if anything arises, over long enough time of accumulation, it will burst the world :D – Mishu 米殊 Aug 06 '17 at 16:28
  • @Mishu米殊, I disagree with this view. You need to see that terms are relative. "Suchness" is just a word. Is it correct or not depends on how we understand it. We can understand "suchness" as (1) what is: momentary appearances of phenomena. Or (2) in reified way, as what really exists. I could say that "suchness doesn't fill anything, and so your words are wrong". Likewise, "something arises" is wrong in a reified sense; but if that phrase points at momentary appearances then there's nothing wrong. Please study the concept of absolute and relative truths. – chang zhao Aug 06 '17 at 18:00
  • healthy debate is good to refine the understanding of Dharma, i appreciate, sure you do so too :). "absolute and relative truths" - you're strongly influenced by certain Tibetan concepts. But, isn't 色即是空, 空即是色 (Emptiness is form, form is emptiness)? i'm not sure using absolute/relative as a frequent stoppage how helpful it is. surely from the original Sutras that this is not often the manner of presenting Buddha his Dharma. did you read that Sastra the original text? – Mishu 米殊 Aug 07 '17 at 04:09
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    @Mishu米殊 it would be very good if you could post your own answer, much better for other readers than a thread of comments. – Andriy Volkov Nov 06 '17 at 15:27
  • @AndreiVolkov let me think... :) – Mishu 米殊 Nov 13 '17 at 05:44
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An effect is a cause because it is an effect that is the cause of a cause being defined as a 'cause'. In other words, since a cause is dependent upon an effect to be defined as a 'cause', an effect is the cause of a cause & an effect and is therefore a cause. A cause is similar. Since a cause is also an effect and since an effect is also a cause, there are not really any true causes & true effects.

This is merely intellectual gymnastics & not the experience of meditation.

In meditation, the mind sees causes creating effects, such as feelings causing craving or feeling & craving stimulating attachment or refined smooth long breathing causing calmness.

These ideas of Nagarjuna are from thinking rather than from observation.

In meditation, the mind does not really see 'causes' & 'effects'. Instead, the mind sees one 'phenomena' stimulating another 'phenomena'.

To think in the manner of Nagarjuna is alien to contemplation (observation) meditation.

If there was not the belief X causes the effect Y the path would never be practised because it would not be believed practising the path causes liberation.

In fact, the only reason Nagarjuna must have formulated his idiosyncratic philosophies was for those philosophies to cause a positive effect.

If Nagarjuna was actually not seeking to cause a positive effect from his idiosyncratic philosophies then that philosophizing was in vain & for no purpose.

Nagarjuna was often very illogical why Nagarjuna is so easy to refute.

The refutations of Nagarjuna could be as lengthy as his idiosyncratic philosophies.

Dhamma Dhatu
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  • hm well, he was quite an important monk. i've seen very many people try and refute him, and i guess it just seems that they read whatever they like into his terse arguments. –  Jul 30 '17 at 21:52
  • See my answer. "Manner of Nagarjuna is alien to contemplation" presents your experience of meditation: not distinguishing between original phenomena (sense perception) and their supposed relations (conceptualizing perception). Without such distinction we generalize our limited experience and come to incorrect conclusions. "If there was not the belief X causes the effect" is eternalism. See chapter 1 of "Mula madhyamaka karika": Nagarjuna doesn't refute dependent origination, but explains the correct view on it. – chang zhao Aug 06 '17 at 13:29
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You're right. An effect is never its cause. However, the action that one does due to the effect will create a new cause, and to an untrained mind, it always happens.

tutu
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If a plant were a seed, or the totality of a plant was in a seed, then where's the plant not, and hence cause what and effect what?

Annihalationism is not possible because 'nothing', 0, is more concrete than 'no thing', and the laws of nature follow the 'valley of the world', so to steal a Tao Te Ching expression. Action settles at the lowest energy level it can, 0 is as much effort as 1 in the end.

Ilya Grushevskiy
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I haven't read about Nagarjuna's claims nor I have read or heard anywhere about such claims, but I know Nagarjuna is speaking the truth.

What is the truth?

An effect always arises independently of the cause.

A cause always arises independently of the effect which produced the cause.

All causes and effects arise completely independently.

There are no causes, nor effects.

Everything arises and ceases independently.

Thus, everything being independent:

  • Nothing ever can be made to be annihilated.

  • Nothing ever can be made to last forever.

This is the truth. This is how it was said. This is how it was seen. This is what I know.

If a fire is burning due to fuel, it is not burning due to fuel, but it burns independent of the fuel. In other words: the fire does not burn due to fuel.

If a castle of cards is made, then a card is removed and that castle crashes to the ground, the crashing of that castle has not started due to the card being removed, but it started independent of the "removal of the card". In other words: the removal of the card did not cause the crashing of the castle.

If a red marble hits a blue marble and the blue marble moves due to being hit, the movement of the blue marble was not produced by the red marble hitting the blue marble, but the movement was produced independently. In other words: the hit of the red marble into the blue marble did not cause the movement of the blue marble.

If a truck crashes into a car and the car gets shattered to pieces, the car is not shattered to pieces by the forces the truck exerted on the car, but the forces were produced independently of the truck. In other words: the truck is not the cause of forces that shattered the car.

If you were to build a house, no matter what technology you would use, no matter what hi-tech materials you would use, no matter how you would built it, no matter what you would do, that house would be subject to decay.

If you were to knew and understood in its entirety why things are subject to decay, no technology nor any actions you would perform on things to eliminate their decay, would made things last forever. They would be subjected to decay no matter what you do.

If you destroy something, you destroy nothing. You can only dismantle an object to many pieces, but you destroy nothing. Everything rebuilds, no matter if you destroy it. If you were to destroy the universe, it would be rebuilt again. Everything in the universe is independent from everything. You can't destroy anything.

If you kill somebody, you kill nobody. You can only dismantle a being to many pieces, but you destroy nothing. All ignorant beings are reborn, no matter if you kill them. If you were to kill all the ignorant beings in the universe, they would be reborn again. All beings are independent from all beings. You can't destroy anything.

Etc.

I guess you're not bewildered by this nonsense. Good my friend, good. Does your understanding come from ignorance or from wisdom?

What is the cause of all this nonsense?

beginner
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