The Four Noble Truths
The Four Noble TruthsThe truths discovered by the Buddha during his enlightenment. are teachings essential to the Buddhist way of life. For Buddhists, they describe the truth of the universe and the nature of reality and sufferingPain and/or upset endured by humans..
The DhammapadaThe most famous of the Buddhist scriptures in the West, with 423 verses in the Pali canon. states that: Mind precedes all mental states. Mind is their chief; they are all mind-wrought. If with an impure mind a person speaks or acts, suffering follows him like the wheel that follows the foot of the ox (Dhammapada 1). This verse shows that understanding is a key belief in Buddhism.
The Four Noble Truths in more detail
- dukkhaSuffering, illness, dissatisfaction or imperfection. An unavoidable fact of existence according to the first Noble Truth of Buddhism. 鈥 life is unsatisfactory and full of suffering. While desires might be temporarily fulfilled, physical, emotional or mental suffering cannot be avoided.
- SamudayaThe Second Noble Truth: that there are causes of suffering. 鈥 suffering is caused by desire or craving. Craving, or tanhaCraving or desire, which is a cause of dukkha (suffering) in Buddhism., keeps humans attached to existence. It means that humans are reincarnatedThe belief that the soul comes back to life in another body after death. again and again, or 鈥榓rise鈥 again and again. Samudaya means 鈥榓rising鈥.
- NirodhaThe third of the Four Noble Truths in Buddhism, meaning the stopping (or cessation) of suffering, through breaking the cycle of craving and desire.聽 鈥 an end to craving is an end to suffering. Nirodha means 鈥榗essation鈥 or stopping. It is possible for Buddhists to break the cycle of craving and arising. When they break this cycle, they become free from rebirth and will no longer be born into another life of suffering.
- MaggaIn Buddhism this refers to the fourth of the Four Noble Truths 鈥 the pathway to ending suffering. It is also known as the Noble Eightfold Path. The word magga means 鈥榩ath鈥. 鈥 to end their craving, Buddhists must follow the The Noble Eightfold PathBuddhist practises that can lead to the end of suffering and the cycle of rebirth: right views, right thinking, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness and right meditation.. Once they have accepted the first three truths, a Buddhist might choose to follow the Buddha鈥檚 teaching in order to stop craving. This path is called 鈥榤agga鈥, or the Noble Eightfold Path.
The Three Poisons
Siddhartha left behind his life of luxury to understand suffering (dukkha). His teachings help Buddhists to understand and ultimately overcome suffering. The basic causes of suffering are known as the The Three Poisons These are the ultimate causes of suffering in Buddhism: greed, ignorance and hatred.:
- greed 鈥 often represented as a rooster
- ignorance 鈥 often represented as a pig
- hatred 鈥 often represented as a snake
Buddhists believe that all suffering is ultimately caused by these human urges. People might suffer because they cannot accept change (viparinama dukkhaIn Buddhism, suffering caused because a person cannot accept that everything in life is in a constant state of change.聽) or because they have become attached to possessions or sensation (samkhara dukkha聽In Buddhism, suffering caused through attachment, eg to worldly possessions or people.). However, the root of all suffering is greed, ignorance or hatred.
Samsara, nirvana and enlightenment
samsaraIn Hinduism, Buddhism and Sikhism, this is the cycle of life, death and rebirth. is the continuous cycle of birth, death and rebirth. Buddhists aim to escape from this cycle. They believe that samsara is where suffering happens, and therefore freedom from samsara means an end to suffering.
Nirvana (also spelt Nibbana)An indescribable state, held by Buddhists to be the ultimate goal of religious practice, involving breaking free from the cycle of samsara. means 鈥榖lowing out鈥, as a candle is blown out. Nirvana can be understood as finally being free from the cycle of samsara, which means that the soul is no longer reborn. The soul is finally blown out and is free from suffering.
A Buddha is an enlightenmentThe realisation of the truth about life. In Buddhism it releases a person from the cycle of rebirth. being, or 鈥榦ne who is awake鈥. Enlightenment is necessary to attain nirvana. Enlightenment is a state of complete understanding and complete compassion.
The Dhammapada teaches that:
This is an example of what a Buddhist needs to understand in order to become an enlightened being (ie achieve nirvana). Hatred is one of the Three Poisons, which are the roots of suffering. Hatred must be overcome in order to achieve enlightenment.
Mahayana and Theravada understandings of enlightenment
Mahayana BuddhismOne of the major schools of Buddhism, it includes Tibetan and Zen Buddhism. and TheravadaMeaning 鈥榯eachings of the elders'. It is primarily focused on the Arhat path to enlightenment. This branch of Buddhism can be found in Sri Lanka and South East Asia. Buddhists have different understandings of enlightenment. Mahayana Buddhists follow the path of the Bodhisattva (also spelt Bodhisatta)In Mahayana Buddhism the bodhisattva is one who has vowed to obtain enlightenment for the benefit of all beings. and Theravada Buddhists follow the path of the arhatA person who has achieved enlightenment following the Buddha鈥檚 teaching..
A Bodhisattva (in the Mahayana tradition) is a being who has attained enlightenment but choses to remain in samsara until all other beings have been freed from suffering. Siddhartha, who later became the Buddha, attained enlightenment and remained to pass on his insights. This is called nirvana with remainder, as his body remained on Earth. When the Buddha died, he achieved nirvana without remainder, or final nirvana.
An Arhat (in the Theravada tradition) is a person who has attained enlightenment through perfect understanding and perfect compassion. At death, they will not be reborn into samsara, but will have achieved nirvana.
Question
What are the Three Poisons?
These are the three basic causes of all suffering: greed, ignorance and hatred.