Dhamma
Dhamma (Dharma)Dhamma is Buddhist doctrine about the nature of existence and includes the teachings of the Buddha., also called Dharma, refers to the BuddhaThe founder of Buddhism, Siddhartha Gautama, after his enlightenment. It is a title which means the enlightened or awakened one. teachings. The Buddha was a holy man and teacher who achieved enlightenmentThe realisation of the truth about life. In Buddhism it releases a person from the cycle of rebirth.. Before his enlightenment, he was a noble person called Siddhartha Gautama. The Buddha taught people how to follow the path to enlightenment through good living and understanding his insights. These teachings were later written down and are now known as the Dhamma (or Dharma).
Dependent origination/conditionality (pratityasamutpada)
Paticcasamupada (Pratityasamutpada)The concept of dependent arising. The belief that everything in existence is because other things are. The idea that everything is interconnected and that everyone affects everyone else. is the idea of 鈥榙ependent origination鈥 or 鈥榗onditionality鈥. This idea is crucial in Buddhist thought. It is one of the key principles of the 叠耻诲诲丑补鈥檚 teaching, or Dhamma. It can best be understood as the interconnectedness of everything in existence.
Dependent origination
Dependent origination means that nothing exists without something else causing it to exist. In other words, nothing has an independent origin and everything is dependent for its origin on something else. The Dhamma contains a list of states of mind that are themselves dependent on previous states of mind.
Conditionality
The principle of conditionality explains that because existence is dependent on previous or connecting factors, it is conditional. This means that one thing can only happen because of conditions that already exist. It also means that if conditions change or cease to exist, aspects of existence dependent on these conditions also change or cease to exist.
Dependent origination in Buddhist life
These two connected concepts 鈥 dependent origination and conditionality 鈥 are a way to understand and make sense of life. For example, they explain that:
- people experience sensation because they have senses
- people experience cravings because they are overloaded with sensation
- people experience desire because they want to satisfy their cravings
Looking for the dependent origin of craving helps Buddhists to overcome it. Buddhists should try to treat all beings with loving kindness because everything is interconnected and all actions affect others.
Lakshanas 鈥 the Three Marks of Existence
An essential part of the 叠耻诲诲丑补鈥檚 Dhamma is the Three lakshanas鈥楽igns鈥 or 鈥榤arks鈥. In Buddhist teaching, the three lakshanas are the Three Marks of Existence, which are three truths that describe the nature of reality., also called the Three Marks of ExistenceIn Buddhism these are impermanence (anicca), dissatisfaction or suffering (dukkha), and non-self (anatta). They are characteristics shared by all humans.. 鈥楲akshanas鈥 can be translated as 鈥榤arks鈥 or 鈥榮igns鈥. These are three fundamental marks (or signs) of reality, sometimes also called the Three Universal Truths.
- aniccaThe belief in impermanence; the first of the Three Marks of Existence in Buddhist teaching. is the belief that nothing in the universe is fixed. Nothing stays the same and everything will change. For example, a coastline will look vastly different in 100 years鈥 time from how it looks today. This is an example of something that is permanent yet changes over time. Anicca means 鈥impermanenceNot lasting forever.鈥. This fundamental mark of existence reminds Buddhists that nothing is fixed or stable.
- anattaThe belief that human beings have no permanent personal self or soul. is the belief that because everything in the universe changes, so too do human beings. Humans might feel that their personalities are fixed, but this is a mistake. Buddhism teaches that a persons feelings, beliefs and character, even their soul, changes. Sometimes change can happen quickly and sometimes slowly, but these aspects of a person are not fixed. Anatta means 鈥榥o self鈥.
- dukkhaSuffering, illness, dissatisfaction or imperfection. An unavoidable fact of existence according to the first Noble Truth of Buddhism. is the idea that people suffer. Life is unsatisfactory, bringing pain, fear and longing. The impermanence of existence (anicca) means that pleasant experiences do not last. Human desires and goals are always shifting (anatta), and life can seem meaningless. Dukkha refers to the 鈥榰nsatisfactoriness鈥 of existence.
The Story of Nagasena and the Chariot
The Story of Nagasena and the Chariot is recorded in a book called the Milinda PanhaThe Questions of Milinda, a Buddhist text in which a king, Milinda, has a lively discussion with a Buddhist wise man called Nagasena, and asks him hundreds of questions.聽, which translates as The Questions of Milinda. It recounts conversations between a Buddhist wise man called Nagasena and a king called Milinda.
In this story, Milinda asks Nagasena to explain the idea of anatta, or 鈥榥o self鈥. Nagasena points to the king鈥檚 chariot. The king agrees that the axel is not the chariot, and nor are the wheels, frame or harness. What the king thinks of as a 鈥榗hariot鈥 is made of several separate elements. There is no 鈥榗hariot鈥. Likewise, the 鈥榮elf鈥 is made up of several separate and changing elements, and there is no single entity called a 鈥榮elf鈥.
Question
What does dukkha mean?
The unsatisfactoriness of existence, or the suffering caused by existence, which nobody will escape.