Pali / English side-by-side
Namo tassa bhagavato arahato sammāsambuddhassa
3.10.6 Abhidhamma - Survey of Some Essential Terms
Term | Translation1 | Definition |
---|---|---|
abyākata: |
not + explained, decided, determined - |
A term that describes neutral phenomena, that are neither wholesome nor unwholesome in themselves. They do not manifest by way of an effect. It is used as a collective expression for kiriya and vipāka.2 |
akusala |
unwholesome, unprofitable, unmeritorious, unskilful, bad, faulty |
Not productive of a good result. It entails negative effects. |
āyatana |
sense organs and sense objects, region, sphere, place, occasion, base and base objects
|
Āyatana is the sphere of perception (i.e., of sense in general), sense organ and the object of impingement on the mind. They comprise six inner (ajjhattikani) organs and the respective six outer (bāhirani) objects. They get translated here as ‘base’ when referring to the sense-organ (ajjhattika) and as object or object-base, and when referring to an outside object (bāhira) cognized by any sense organ.3 |
cattāro khandhā arūpino |
four + aggregates + immaterial |
Four immaterial, mental aggregates – these refer to the mental aggregates of nāma:4 sensation, perception, mentally conditioned reactions or formations, and consciousness. |
cetasikā |
mental concomitants, |
These depend on and cannot arise without a citta. They occur in direct conjunction with it and they perform specific tasks within the related states of consciousness. |
citta |
mind, consciousness |
In the context of Abhidhamma, citta is analyzed as the principal cognitive element, often translated as consciousness, different from mano. Citta is the apparatus by which the associated states are being recognized. It signifies that which cognizes and properly discerns an object.5 There are overall 89 different cittas, extended by closer analyses to 121. Of these 12 are kusala, 21 akusala, 36 vipāka and 20 kiriya.6 |
dhamma/ā |
|
Dhamma, in general, remains untranslated when it is applied to the teaching of the Buddha. Dhamma denotes the essential nature and reality of existence and experience. It includes all laws of nature, an interdependent and interlocking assembly of concepts, phenomena and states. It is the way things are. |
kiriya (also kriya) |
functional, indefinite, of no result |
Used here as an adjective, it involves activity but it is neither kamma nor kamma resultant. It is casually ineffective and inoperative.7 |
kusala |
wholesome, good, meritorious, moral, profitable, righteous, proper, faultless |
Productive of a happy, good result. |
mahābhūtā: |
primary elements, great primaries, great elements |
Refers to pathavī, āpo, tejo, vāyo but in this context especially to their characteristics of solidity & extension; liquidity & cohesion; maturity & temperature and motion & vibration. |
manāyatana: |
mind + base |
manāyatana is described in one-fold up to twelve-fold classification. Mind-base is a collective term that describes consciousness in its entirety.8 |
manodhātu: |
mind + element, |
manodhātu is described as the first reaction to all the preceding arising and passing phenomena;9 mind-element refers to the dhatu of the mind in the sense as expressed with the other senses, like cakkhudhātu, sotadhātu. …10 |
manoviññāṇadhātu: |
mind + consciousness + element, |
Arises immediately after the arising and passing away of manodhātu.11 |
paccaya |
lit. ‘resting on’: condition, determining condition, foundation, support, cause, by means of, caused by |
Necessary or invariable condition for the existence of something. The condition that precedes the operation of a cause, something on which something depends. |
paccayadhamma/ā |
conditioning state/s |
State on which the effect depends. It functions as a condition for other phenomena to arise, supporting and/or maintaining these. |
paccayānuloma: |
condition + forward, |
Positive method of analysing the conditions. Analysis based on existence. |
paccayapaccanīya: |
condition + reverse, |
Negative method of analysing the conditions. Analysis based on negation. |
paccayasatti |
condition + ability |
‘That which has the power to accomplish the conditioning’. It is the respective force enabling the conditioning states to function as condition, inherent in those states that bring about the conditioning; they cannot exist apart. |
paccayene |
inst. by means of, |
The instrumental points to the way, the means, by which something occurs, is conditioned, supports as a condition. paccayene paccayo literally means: ‘… is a condition, as xxxx-condition’, ‘functions as a condition for’. |
paccayuppannadhamma/ā: |
condition + arisen + phenomenon |
The conditioned phenomena that result from a cause and arises and/or persists, through the effect originated through the conditioning state. |
paṭicca |
dependent on, relying on, grounded in, on account of, by means of, because of, produced from, with a cause |
|
paṭṭhāna |
setting forth, putting forward, relation yielding unavoidable effects |
‘Book of origins’, ‘book of causes’, according to Ledi Sayadaw, ‘paṭṭhāna sets out the chief cause’, being a cause in many ways.
|
sampayuttaka: |
associated with, |
|
samuṭṭhānāna: |
rising, origination, cause |
|
saṅkhāra |
mentally conditioned reaction, |
Saṅkhāra is derived from saṅkharoti, which means put together, restore, form, prepare. |
saṅkhatā, saṅkhārika: |
to condition, produce from a cause, prepare, prompt, put together |
Next to the more commonly known saṅkhāra these adjectives are used in Abhidhamma terminology to describe phenomena or states like citta or duka or tika to point to their different conditioning. Thus (sa + saṅkhārika) saṅkhatā means something that is conditioned, prompted, caused; a + saṅkhārika and a + saṅkhatā point to the fact that there is no cause behind it. The prompting can be done inwardly, premeditated by oneself or from outside by argument, convention or force.13 |
‘siyā atthi’ |
would there + be, exist, come into existence, ‘may there be?’ |
A grammatical term of raising seven core questions in regards to the possibility of the existence/arising of conditions/states/phenomena. |
viññāṇadhātu |
consciousness + element |
The collective term for the six respective consciousness.14 |
vipāka
|
resultant, |
Vipāka describes the result of wholesome and unwholesome kamma. It is based on volitional activity associated with wholesome or unwholesome citta and results in citta of the same kammic character but has no further kammic effect. Vipāka designates the ‘ripened’ effect. |
1. When there are alternative English translations, all are mentioned, but those chosen for ETP will be in bold.
2. For more details of these essential terms, refer to the next lesson 3.10.7 Paṭṭhānapāli – Mātikā – Classification of the Universe.
3. Dvādasāyatanāni – cakkhāyatanaṃ, sotāyatanaṃ, ghānāyatanaṃ, jivhāyatanaṃ, kāyāyatanaṃ, manāyatanaṃ, rūpāyatanaṃ, saddāyatanaṃ, gandhāyatanaṃ, rasāyatanaṃ, phoṭṭhabbāyatanaṃ, dhammāyatanaṃ. Āyatanavibhaṅgo.
The Vibhaṅgapāḷi dissolves the sense organs into their nature and function: Yaṃ cakkhu catunnaṃ mahābhūtānaṃ upādāya pasādo attabhāvapariyāpanno anidassano sappaṭigho … - The eye, derived from the four great primary elements, consisting in sensitive surface, (visibility) related to individual existence, invisible, producing reaction (perception) …
4. Pañcakkhandhā – rūpakkhandho, vedanākkhandho, saññākkhandho, saṅkhārakkhandho, viññāṇakkhandho.
5. For more details of these essential terms, one may refer to the next lesson 3.10.7 Paṭṭhānapāli – Citta – States of Consciousness.
6. One may also refer to 3.8.12 Cittānupassanā – The Observation of Mind: Comprehending Its Quality and Character.
7. Refer to 3.10.7 Paṭṭhānapāli – Citta - States of Consciousness.
8. Sevenfold classification: Sattavidhena manāyatanaṃ – cakkhuviññāṇaṃ, sotaviññāṇaṃ, ghānaviññāṇaṃ, jivhāviññāṇaṃ, kāyaviññāṇaṃ, manodhātu, manoviññāṇadhātu. Evaṃ sattavidhena manāyatanaṃ. Āyatanavibhaṅgo, Abhidhammabhājanīyaṃ, Vibhaṅgapāḷi.
9. tajjāmanodhātu: tajjā + manodhātu — arising from that, depending on the aforesaid + mind element.
The ‘aforesaid’ concerns the process of arising and passing, starting with the eye-consciousness: cakkhuviññāṇadhātuyā uppajjitvā niruddhasamanantarā uppajjati cittaṃ mano mānasaṃ hadayaṃ paṇḍaraṃ mano manāyatanaṃ manindriyaṃ viññāṇaṃ viññāṇakkhandho tajjāmanodhātu ….
10. Dhātuvibhaṅgo, Abhidhammabhājanīyaṃ, Vibhaṅgapāḷi.
11. … pe … tajjāmanoviññāṇadhātu manañca paṭicca dhamme ca uppajjati cittaṃ mano mānasaṃ hadayaṃ paṇḍaraṃ mano manāyatanaṃ manindriyaṃ viññāṇaṃ viññāṇakkhandho tajjāmanoviññāṇadhātu – ayaṃ vuccati “manoviññāṇadhātu”. – … arising from that, depending on the aforesaid there arises mind-consciousness-element. Depending on mind and objects of mind there arises consciousness, mind, ideation, heart, that which is clear, mind-base, mind-faculty, consciousness, aggregate of consciousness, and depending on all this mind-consciousness-element.
12. A detailed description has been provided in 3.2.7 Bījavaggo – Neem and Sugarcane.
13. Likewise refer to 3.10.7 Paṭṭhānapāli – Citta – States of Consciousness.
14. Tattha katamā viññāṇadhātu? Cakkhuviññāṇadhātu, sotaviññāṇadhātu, ghānaviññāṇadhātu, jivhāviññāṇadhātu, kāyaviññāṇadhātu, manoviññāṇadhātu – ayaṃ vuccati “viññāṇadhātu”.