Transcript nirvana 2
NIRVANA / NIBBANA
Nibbana / Nirvana is the cessation from
dukkha as outlined in the third Noble Truth
The existence of Nirvana is not the result of
logical argument but the experience of an
enlightened mind
As Nirvana is utterly different from
dependent origination, it is by definition
ineffable
Descriptions of Nirvana tend to be either
apophatic or poetic
Apophatic descriptions
(This means a description stating what
something is not)
In the Fire Sermon The Buddha describes
Nibbana as that which quenches dukkha
and tanha. It is therefore the state of not
being reborn and being free from karma. It is
beyond death, not physical, beyond mystical
experience, beyond mind and body. It is a
lack of attachment, hatred and delusion. It is
also unconditional (apatittica)
Poetic descriptions
It is variously described as the ‘further
shore’ and ‘an island amidst the flood’ (i.e. a
refuge from danger), a ‘cave of shelter’ (a
refuge from the heat of the sun) and the
highest bliss.
The problem
Each of the two states in which Nirvana is
experienced poses us a problem
Nirvana before death?
Is the Arahat who has experienced Nibbana
free from all desires? The Buddhist answer
is that a person affected by past kamma is
still able to be detached from it. For
example, they may experience the pain of
anger but still be mentally free from its
effects, which would otherwise cause them
to act (and cause further kamma).
Nirvana beyond death?
Disciples frequently asked the Buddha, ‘What
experiences Nibbana?’ If Nibbana means
extinguishing of all desire, in what way does the
person having the experience exist? The Buddha
considered the four possibilities (‘He is’, ‘He is not’,
‘He is and he is not’, ‘He neither is nor is not’) to be
speculative questions to which there is no answer!
Speculations such as these fail to tackle the
question that really matters, dukkha. In addition, the
question is being asked by people who still think of
themselves as having a self. Finally, if the state of
Nibbana is ineffable, so too is the new conscious
state
How is Nirvana to be achieved?
There is much discussion as to whether it is a
process achieved over a period of time or a sudden
flash of enlightenment. The story of the Buddha’s
life can be interpreted to advocate both. His
experience of Nibbana was achieved through
meditation. There are many ways in which
meditation can be performed, from reciting a
mantra to focusing on an object, contemplation of
the Three Jewels or the Four Measureless States, or
control of breathing. In this way the mind is able to
pass thought he eight levels of trance or Jhanas.
How is Nirvana to be achieved?
Regarding the Jhanas – the first four concentrate on
‘The sphere of pure form’ whereas the last four
concentrate on ‘The sphere of formlessness’.
Although there must be a willingness to achieve
Nibbana, this is different from other forms of desire,
which generate kamma. At the stage of the eighth
Jhana even willingness has to give way to what is
termed as ‘Touching Nibbana with the Body’.
Conclusions
Like all religious experience it is extremely difficult
to know whether enlightenment is an actual
phenomenon. The Buddha himself often
encountered scepticism. Some modern western
psychologists believe that meditative states can be
explained simply in terms of altered brain states,
wish fulfilment or neurosis. In the end, the only real
test of the validity of the Buddhist path is whether it
actually makes a difference to daily life. Matters of
rebirth and Nibbana cannot be analysed
scientifically or philosophically because they are
first and foremost items of faith.