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Emptiness (or śūnyatā in Sanskrit) is
one of the deepest, most important,
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and most life-changing concepts of Buddhist
philosophy. Many critics of Buddhism see
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emptiness as a form of nihilism, contradiction,
or plain absurdity. But these accusations are
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based on shallow understanding.
In fact, throughout its history,
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Buddhist philosophy has developed at least
5 distinct meanings of śūnyatā. Each of
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these is profound enough to change
one’s entire perception of reality.
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In any case, I have to warn you. The great
Buddhist philosopher Nāgārjuna wrote that
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‘when it is wrongly seen, emptiness destroys
the dull-witted, like a snake wrongly grasped’.
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So, if you don’t want to risk being
bitten and poisoned by this insight,
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you may want to click away from this video.
But… the reward of properly understanding
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emptiness is equally great. To grasp śūnyatā
in all its depth and to embody it in your
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life constitutes full spiritual awakening.
We can start with more humble ambitions.
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In this video, I have divided the complex
teaching of emptiness into five sub-teachings.
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This five-fold division is not part of the
Buddhist tradition, but it will help me
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present śūnyatā in a more organized fashion.
So let’s go through these five one by one and
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let’s see how much they will deepen our
understanding of reality. I hope after
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you’re done watching this some of your core
beliefs about the nature of the world and of
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yourself will be challenged… In a good way!
So, grab a seat, because we’re going deep
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with this one. I welcome you into the
great Buddhist teaching of śūnyatā.
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CHAPTER 1: NO SUBJECT
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The first Buddhist to use the word śūnyatā was
the historical Buddha himself. In the Suñña Sutta,
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he talks about emptiness like this:
‘It is … because it is empty of self
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and of what belongs to self that
it is said, ‘Empty is the world.’’
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The first meaning of emptiness is
that in the world of our experience
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a self (or anything belonging to
a self) is nowhere to be found.
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We’ve covered this before, so here
we will pause on it only briefly.
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For the Buddha, conscious experience is like
a musical performance. We can divide a musical
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performance in three parts: a musician, a
musical instrument, and the music itself.
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In the same way, conscious experience involves
sense objects, sense organs, and consciousness.
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Music arises is when the musician is
playing her instrument. In this same way,
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consciousness arises when sense objects
come in contact with sense organs.
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It is in these three components of experience –
sense objects, sense organs, and consciousness,
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that the Buddha says a self cannot be found.
Let’s examine the act of hearing as an example.
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When a pianist plays the piano, music is produced.
This music is a sense object. If you have healthy
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ears, these are your sense organs for sounds.
When the music from the piano reaches your ears,
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you ‘hear’ it. This experience of
‘hearing’ the music is consciousness.
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We instinctively say ‘I hear the music’, but
this phenomenon of hearing is the result of an
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automatic chain of causes and conditions.
A completely deterministic domino effect.
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Contact between the pianist and the piano
causes the music. Contact between the music
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and the ears cause hearing of the music. Without
a pianist or a piano, there is no music. Without
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music or ears, there is no hearing of music.
In this chain reaction there is nothing to
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which we can attribute a self. Nor is a
self required for all of this to occur.
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The Buddha says:
‘The ear is empty
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of a self or of anything pertaining to
a self. Sounds[,] ear-consciousness[,
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and] ear-contact [are] empty of a self
or of anything pertaining to a self.’
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He applies this same logic to all
six senses, including the mind,
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which he considers a sixth type of sense. Hearing,
smelling, tasting, touching, seeing, and thinking
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are all automatic processes that occur when the
right causes appear in the right conditions.
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The point here is that, if you investigate it
deeply, you would see your personal experience
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is actually entirely non-personal. There
is no you to whom experience is occurring.
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No experiencer of experience. Only an
endless cycle of causes and conditions
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stretching infinitely back and forward in time.
This cycle, as we saw in the video on the Four
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Noble Truths, brings us endless suffering
and disappointment. And what is the fuel
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that keeps it running? It is our clinging to what
we like and our avoidance of what we don’t like.
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It all has to do with what our ‘self’ wants.
To realize our feeling of being a self does not
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correspond to anything in reality is the
insight that brings suffering to an end.
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To live one’s life in accordance with this
insight is what the Buddha called nirvāṇa.
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This short summary should do for now. If you
want a deeper dive into the no-self teaching,
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I highly recommend you watch my earlier
video on it, where we discuss it at length.
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With this basic idea of what the Buddha meant by
śūnyatā, let’s see how the idea evolved through
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the work of his disciples. In fact, when we get
to the 4th meaning of emptiness, you will hear a
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teaching that seems to contradict all we’ve just
covered. But let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
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For now, we turn to the work of the greatest
figure of Buddhist philosophy, second only to
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the Buddha himself.
Nāgārjuna.
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CHAPTER 2: NO OBJECT
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As the Buddhist tradition spread across Asia,
it took under its wing many of the greatest
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minds of the time. These great scholars and
monks developed the Buddha’s teachings in new
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directions and in ever deeper sophistication.
Perhaps the greatest among these was the 2nd
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century philosopher Nāgārjuna. It is to
him we owe the second meaning of śūnyatā.
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If the Buddha said there is no ‘you’ experiencing
things, Nāgārjuna added there are also no ‘things’
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being experienced.
Let me explain.
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I’ll use this video you’re watching right
now to illustrate Nāgārjuna’s point.
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This video is a certain phenomenon, is it not?
It is an object in your awareness. Certainly,
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you are watching and listening to something,
right? This ‘something’ we call ‘this video’.
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So far so good. But let’s try to draw the
boundaries of this phenomenon. Any object
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must have boundaries defined, otherwise
we can’t say it is an object separate
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from its environment. So let’s see where this
video ends and the rest of the world begins.
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This video consists of my voice, the script
I’ve written, images, and music. That’s a
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good low-resolution definition.
But let’s investigate further.
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This video could not appear in your
experience without the pixels of the
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screen you’re viewing it on. Or without
the speakers that project my voice.
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These things are necessary parts of the
video, even if they don’t appear in it.
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This video, as an object of your experience,
would not exist without your internet connection
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either. Or without the people who installed
and maintain your internet connection.
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As a phenomenon you are experiencing, this video
couldn’t exist if you didn’t have the ears to hear
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it and the eyes to see it. And these eyes and ears
are the products of many causes and conditions,
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including your mom and dad, evolution, the
Big Bang... We must include all these too as
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causes and conditions for this video
being an object of your experience.
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Also, the ideas, images, and music in this
video have been produced by a countless
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number of people. Shouldn’t we credit these
people too as causes and conditions of this
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video? The historical Buddha himself is the
major factor for this video’s existence,
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so we must include him in the credits too.
This list of causes and conditions could go on
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forever, but I’ll stop here before you get bored.
You see, there is no point at which we can exhaust
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the causes and conditions that have
contributed to the existence of this
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video. What you are experiencing now looks
as an individual phenomenon, ‘a video’
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only to our everyday, unenlightened mind.
A mind with clear insight would see that the
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whole world and all of history have conspired for
this video to exist. What you call 'this video'
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is but the form in which the entire universe is
appearing to you in this moment of experience.
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Of course, this video is not a
unique example. Nāgārjuna tells
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us every seeming object or phenomenon, of
whatever kind, is a bundle of causes and
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conditions. There is nothing in experience
that can exist apart from everything else.
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An apple cannot exist apart from the
tree, the tree apart from the soil,
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the soil apart from the planet, the planet
apart from the solar system and so on…
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Things also cannot exist without their
opposite. There could be no front without back,
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no high without low, no good without evil.
You can watch my video on Heraclitus to see
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how this same idea appeared in Ancient Greece.
In fact, Heraclitus was alive at the exact same
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time when the Buddha was teaching his
Dharma in India. Are the similarities
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in their philosophies just a coincidence?
Or does this point to something more about
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the collective mind of our species, developing
similar ideas in different parts of the world?
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Anyway, Nāgārjuna’s point is that nothing
possesses a svabhāva, an individual essence.
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All things are a form of dependent origination
– their origin is dependent on other things.
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The great scholar-saint summarizes
this in the following stanza:
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There does not exist anything
That is not dependently arisen.
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Therefore there does not exist anything
That is not empty.
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Here you might ask ‘If every object and phenomenon
in the world is empty… wouldn’t that mean the
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world itself is empty? That nothing exists and
nothing is happening? But this is absurd because,
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after all, I am watching this video! Clearly,
something does exist and something is happening!’
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This is a good question and by the end of this
video you will have heard a few possible answers
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to it. For now, I’ll say Nāgārjuna explicitly
refused the wrong view that nothing exists. But he
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said the view that things exist is just as wrong.
To him, the existence and non-existence of things
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are two extreme views, neither of which captures
the complex and mysterious nature of reality.
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To Nāgārjuna, emptiness, understood properly,
is a middle way between these two wrong views.
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That’s why the school of Buddhism he founded
is called Madhyamaka, meaning ‘the Middle Way’.
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Nāgārjuna did not treat śūnyatā as some
intellectual diversion for philosophers
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and scholars. No, he maintained how crucial
this insight is for liberation. To see the
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interdependence of all things is to see
that all suffering in your life is also a
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dependent phenomenon. An effect originating
from causes and conditions. This means that
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if you understand the causes and conditions for
your suffering and remove them, so too would you
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remove the suffering that springs from them.
Nāgārjuna believed that to cultivate insight
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into śūnyatā is the essence of walking
the Buddhist path. The path leading
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out from suffering and ignorance.
But the Madhyamakas were not the
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only Buddhists with a new take on emptiness.
The next development of the idea came from a
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famous Buddhist school known for their mastery of
meditation. Since meditation is a form of ‘yoga’,
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this school became known as the Yogācāra.
It is from this great lineage of Buddhist
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philosophy that we get the
third meaning of śūnyatā.
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CHAPTER 3: NO SUBJECT & OBJECT
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Okay, let’s summarise what we’ve learned.
An unenlightened mind thinks he is a self,
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there are objects of the world, and
he is experiencing these objects.
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The Buddha showed us the sense of self
is empty of reality. Nāgārjuna showed
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us objects too are empty of individual essence.
So, after subject and object have been shown to
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have no ultimate reality, we are left only
with the mysterious fact of 3) experience.
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This is a funny position we find ourselves
in. How is experience possible if there is
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no one who can have an experience –
and nothing that can be experienced!?
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Yet experience is the one thing we can't deny.
You can question all aspects of your experience,
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you can even question whether it is
‘your’ experience… But the one thing
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you can’t deny is that something -
rather than nothing - is happening.
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What the Yogācārins did was inquire into the
nature of that 'something' we call 'experience'.
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Let me demonstrate what they discovered.
I will use a colour as an example. Orange will do.
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Now as you look at this orange, notice the
usual way in which we would describe this
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experience. There is you as the subject,
there is the orange colour as the object,
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and there is your experience of seeing the colour.
A Yogācārin's first question would be 'what is
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the difference between this orange and
your experience of seeing this orange?'
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Could you experience seeing this colour if the
colour was not here? Obviously not. Without the
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object, you cannot experience said object.
Now how about the reverse question…
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If you were not seeing this
colour right now, would it exist?
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Here the natural answer is 'Yes,
of course orange would still exist
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if I was not seeing it! Colours don't just
disappear every time I look away from them!'
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But wait a minute.
How would this orange
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exist if you were not seeing it right now?
What evidence do you have to support this?
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You may answer that there is orange all around
the world, in Van Gogh's paintings, in sand dunes,
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in the sunset, in... well, oranges. You know
that because you've seen these, and anyone
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who’s not convinced can immediately Google
countless images containing the colour orange.
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But that's the point.
You have seen orange in the
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past. Anyone can Google and see orange images.
If I look at the sunset while you look away,
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I will see orange hasn’t disappeared.
In all cases, seeing orange is the proof
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of its existence. Our experience is the
base upon which existence is confirmed.
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After all, can you imagine a colour
that you are not currently seeing?
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No, because the moment you imagine it, you see it!
It is tempting to dismiss this as sophistry,
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as simple slight-of-hand philosophy. But the
Yogācārins took it very seriously. Their deep
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meditative experience, combined with their
philosophical genius, discovered that what
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we call 'objects of experience' are really
inseparable from what we call 'experience'.
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Orange and seeing orange are like the full
and empty halves of a glass. One has no
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meaning without the other. One cannot
be said to exist without the other.
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The Yogācārins reached the same conclusion about
what we call ‘self’ or 'subject’ of experience.
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Think about it. Would you be seeing this orange
if you weren't seeing it? If you had your eyes
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closed and only I was looking at the orange,
would you be seeing it? Well, I think we can
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all agree your experience cannot occur if, well,
you aren’t experiencing it. To see something,
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you have to see it. This is natural enough.
But let's ask the reverse…
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Right now (look at the orange), do you
exist separately from seeing this orange?
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If you did, then your seeing this orange
would be in one place and you would be in
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another. But then you would be experiencing
something else and this orange would be seen
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by nobody. This is obviously absurd.
You see, there is simply no place where
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we can draw the line between you as an
experiencer and your experience. You
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as an experiencing subject and your experience
are completely co-dependent in your existence.
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This is like the case of the egg and the chicken.
A case of paired opposites which mutually create
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each other and cannot exist apart.
Now let’s see where these
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findings led the Yogācārins.
We have seen there is no boundary between
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this orange and your seeing it. There is also no
boundary between you and your seeing this orange.
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This would mean that you, this orange, and your
seeing this orange are different names for one and
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the same thing observed from different angles.
When the Yogācārins used the term śūnyatā,
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they meant that the division of experience
into subject and object is empty.
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Subject and object are like Heads and Tails
- two sides of a single coin. But Heads and
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Tails are only conventional terms. In reality,
we never find one without the other. Only the
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coin itself is real and contains in itself
all of itself. Any divisions we may impose
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on it are artificial labels produced
by the duality of conceptual thinking.
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This indivisible wholeness of Heads, Tails, and
coin is how the Yogācārins understood experience.
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In the Yogācāra view, all
that exists is experience.
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To the unenlightened mind, reality feels like a
subject at one end and an object at the other.
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But an awakened mind sees the unity of all
things in the flow of conscious experience.
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Reality is the experience of itself. Reality
is both that which experiences and that
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which is being experienced – by itself.
If you're finding it hard to wrap your
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head around this, don't worry. It’s not
something you can wrap your head around.
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Remember, Yogācāra philosophy is rooted in insight
gained through meditation. The Yogācārins said
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ultimate reality cannot be conceptualized. It
is not a thought you can have. It also cannot
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be spoken or written down, or represented
in any way. At best, it can be pointed at,
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like what this video is hopefully doing.
The only true way of understanding ultimate
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reality is through direct experience. But
even here language is misleading. Once you
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do experience ultimate reality, you are no
longer ‘you’ and it is no longer ‘it’. You
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experience ultimate reality not as something
you are a part of, but as that which you
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already are – which you always have been.
The coin wakes up from its dream of being
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Heads and Tails. It declares, like the
great Christian mystic, Meister Ekchart:
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‘The eye through which I see God is the same eye
through which God sees me; my eye and God's eye
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are one eye, one seeing, one knowing, one love.’
The Yogācārins went even further. What became
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their most famous claim is that the world we
experience is all produced by the mind. They
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saw all objects, phenomena, and experiences
like dreams – mental projections produced
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by the psyche. No wonder some call this
school the depth psychologists of Buddhism.
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We will leave this profound discussion for
another time. For now, you can have a look
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at my earlier video where I compare the Jungian
and the Yogācāra views on the unconscious – a
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fascinating subject. But let’s move on as we
have two more meanings of śūnyatā to cover!
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CHAPTER 4: BUDDHA NATURE
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We've learned a bunch of Sanskrit words
here already. We've learned śūnyatā,
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we've met the Madhyamaka school of the
middle way and also the Yogācārins.
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Now for the 4th meaning of emptiness I will
introduce one last Sanskrit term (I promise)
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and this is a bit of a mouthful.
I mean the tathāgatagarbha.
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Let me explain what this word
means and why it is so important.
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We can divide tathāgatagarbha into two parts
to make sense of it. Tathāgata and garbha.
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The first part, Tathāgata, is a fascinating
compound word itself. It can have three very
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different meanings, each of which have been
interpreted for centuries. Tathāgata can
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mean 'one who has thus come', 'one who has
thus gone', and 'one who has thus not gone'.
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You don't have to remember these. But know that
Tathāgata is how the Buddha most often referred to
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himself. Whatever the deep meaning of the word is,
it is what the Buddha understood himself to be.
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The second part of Tathāgata-garbha
is more straightforward. Garbha means
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‘womb’, ‘embryo’, and ‘core’.
So, tathāgatagarbha literally
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means 'Buddha-womb'. Most often,
it’s translated as 'Buddha nature'.
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Now why are we discussing this in
the middle of a video on emptiness?
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Well, because the tathāgatagarbha is one
of the most important and revolutionary
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ideas which evolved out of śūnyatā.
Remember, Nāgārjuna showed us how objects of
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experience are empty of an independent essence.
Coupled with the Buddha’s teaching of no-self,
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this leaves our picture of reality as both
lacking real objects and lacking real subjects.
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And yet Nāgārjuna maintained reality is
not empty of reality. In other words,
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there is something, even if it can’t be
defined in subjective or objective terms.
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The Yogācārins continued this line of
reasoning. For them, what our unenlightened
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minds understand by the term ‘experience’
is the closest we can get to a concept of
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reality. Deep insight reveals you are experience
experiencing and being experienced by experience.
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The tathāgatagarbha doctrine is the next step
in this line of reasoning. At the same time,
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it is also a radical break from everything
we’ve covered. Many even call it a heresy.
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Let me explain.
The tathāgatagarbha teaching tells us
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ultimate reality can be talked about as it
does possess qualities. What’s even more…
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get this… ultimate reality possesses the
qualities of a self. And not just any self,
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but the capital ‘S’ Self of the Tathāgata.
Ultimate reality is the Buddha.
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Okay, this sounds way too out there, so let’s
take a step back. Like most Buddhist teachings,
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the tathāgatagarbha is rooted in direct
experience. So, let’s test this teaching
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against our own concrete experience.
Let me ask you a question.
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What is the difference between you and me?
I mean this literally – what makes
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you one thing and me another?
Perhaps we can start with the fact
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I’ve made this video and you’re watching
it. That’s one difference. I’m speaking,
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and you’re listening. My name is Simeon and
your name, in all probability, is not Simeon.
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I am also located in Sofia, Bulgaria, whereas
you might be anywhere else in the world.
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We can have differences in age,
sex, height, weight, skin colour,
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eye colour, education, and so on.
We may have different opinions,
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beliefs, and temperaments.
These are some of the things
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that make us different. Because of these we
can’t say you and I are one and the same thing.
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But… here comes the tathāgatagarbha twist.
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Making this video is an experience in my
conscious awareness. Watching this video
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is an experience in your conscious awareness.
Being a twenty-five-year-old male Bulgarian is
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an experience in my conscious awareness. Your age,
sex, and nationality are experiences in yours.
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You see, all the differences we can list are
differences in the content of our awareness.
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Differences in what we experience,
not differences in who or what we are.
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Let me explain this with a metaphor I
learned from the great Rupert Spira.
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You’re probably watching this on some sort of
screen right now. Think of all the things you
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can watch on this screen. You can watch something
funny like Rick and Morty. You can watch something
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tragic like footage from the Turkey and
Siria earthquake. You can receive spiritual
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guidance by Rupert Spira. You can watch porn.
These are all different types of content that can
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appear on your screen. Each of these would provide
an entirely different experience, and yet through
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all of them, the screen will remain the same.
Watching a Dharma talk will not make this screen
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a good screen. Watching a Nazi rally will
not make it a bad screen. In other words,
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the screen can display any content, but it
is not itself affected by what appears on it.
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Maybe you can see where this is heading.
But there’s one more point.
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The screen on which this video is appearing is not
a part of the video. At the same time, this video
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could not appear without the screen. The whole
time you have been watching this video, you have
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been watching the screen, even though the screen
itself has never been the subject of the video.
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Until now.
Now this video is referring to the
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screen on which it is appearing because I want you
to refer to the screen on which you are appearing.
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I want you to investigate
your conscious awareness.
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Our age, sex, nationality, height, weight, skin
colour, eye colour, education… – these appear
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one way on the screen that is my awareness
and another way on the screen that is yours.
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But what is the difference
between your screen and mine?
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Let’s try to define some key
qualities of your conscious awareness.
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First, your conscious awareness is luminous. In
other words, it shines light on things. Whatever
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appears in it is instantaneously perceived.
Like how an object is immediately reflected
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when it appears in front of a mirror. Could my
conscious awareness lack this quality? No. Because
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then it wouldn’t be conscious awareness.
Second, your conscious awareness has no
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preferences. It lacks resistance and attachment.
When something pleasant appears, like the taste of
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Nutella, it is fully perceived and then released.
When something unpleasant appears, like the pain
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of a broken leg, it is fully perceived and then
released. Could my conscious awareness lack this
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detached quality? No, because then I would
be only experiencing the pleasant things in
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life. And let me tell you – that’s not the case…
Now, don’t mistake conscious awareness with the
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will or the intellect. Your will and intellect
may resist or become attached to experiences.
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But your conscious awareness is that which
experiences these resistances and attachments.
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It is the field in which they appear as objects.
Thirdly, your conscious awareness is empty. It can
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hold any thought, emotion, feeling, and experience
because it is itself empty of thoughts, emotions,
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feelings, and experiences. It is like the space of
an empty room which can be filled with furniture,
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because it is itself empty of furniture.
Could my conscious awareness lack this empty,
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spacious nature? No, because then it would be
an object of awareness and not awareness itself.
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Finally, your conscious awareness is outside time
and space. Time and space appear in it as objects,
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but it itself cannot be located anywhere
within time or space. Could my conscious
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awareness belong to time or space? No, because
then it would have form and duration. But at
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all times and all places, my conscious
awareness is always present here and now.
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Well, it appears what we call ‘your’ conscious
awareness possesses no quality different from
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what we call ‘my’ conscious awareness. When
we are comparing two entities and we discover
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not a single difference between them, we must
conclude they are one and the same entity. This
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‘entity’ we here call conscious awareness.
The Buddhists called it tathāgatagarbha.
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The Buddha Nature doctrine teaches that even
though we lack a personal self, at our core lies
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the fully awakened, detached, and liberated Self
of the Tathāgata. The reason why we ourselves lack
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these enlightened qualities is that our Buddha
nature is obscured by layers of defilements.
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When this video reminded you that you are
watching it on a screen, it did not produce
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the screen. The screen was already there the
whole time. Unchanging, fully detached from
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its content, outside the dimensions of
the video, the screen was always there.
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The same goes for the tathāgatagarbha.
Just like all the videos you can watch
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will appear on one and the same screen, so too
all selves are appearances in one and the same
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conscious awareness. Your self, my self, the self
of Thich Nhat Hanh, the self of Donald Trump,
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and yes, even the self of Barni, my dog…
these are all appearances in the luminous
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mind of the tathāgatagarbha.
As the Buddha says in the
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Mahāyāna Tathāgatagarbha Sūtra,
‘Hidden within the defilements of greed,
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desire, anger, and stupidity there is seated …
the Tathāgata’s wisdom, the Tathāgata’s vision,
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and the Tathāgata’s body… [A]ll beings,
though they find themselves with all sorts
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of defilements, have a tathāgatagarbha that
is eternally unsullied, and that is replete
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with virtues no different from my own.’
Now, the screen metaphor is just a metaphor
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and it can only go so far. This video can talk
all day long about your screen, but it cannot
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actually display your screen. In the same way,
the tathāgatagarbha can be talked about but,
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ultimately, it is outside the dimensions
of experience. So how can we talk about
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something we can never experience? Well,
because you and I already are that thing.
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This is an argument also used by the proponents
of the tathāgatagarbha. They say the only reason
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why you can understand the Buddha’s teaching and
reach enlightenment, is because the essence of
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the Buddha is already within you. Nirvāṇa is
not something we can produce or find outside
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of us. If it was, it would be just another
conditioned, empty object of experience.
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Nirvāṇa is rather an ever-present reality
we must uncover by removing our defilements.
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Like a mirror covered with dust, our
Buddha nature is always there within
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us. The goal of Buddhist practice then is
seen as wiping the dust off the mirror.
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There are many beautiful images of our Buddha
nature in the Tathāgatagarbha Sūtra. My favourite
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is the simile of the honey. It goes like this:
‘[The Tathāgatagarbha] is like pure honey in
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a cave or a tree, surrounded and protected
by a countless swarm of bees. It may happen
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that a person comes along who knows some
clever techniques. He first gets rid of the
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bees and takes the honey, and then does as he
will with it, eating it or giving it away...’
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Like the honey surrounded by bees, we all have the
Buddha nature inside us surrounded by defilements.
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But if we learn the right ‘techniques’,
we can get rid of those defilements and
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reach the tathāgatagarbha.
Now, again, what has all
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this got to do with emptiness?
Well, some Buddhists believe the
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tathāgatagarbha is the natural completion of
śūnyatā. Others believe it is a perversion
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of the Dharma and a heresy.
Both sides have strong arguments.
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Without getting too much into it, I should say
Nāgārjuna specifically warned against taking
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emptiness to be some sort of Ultimate reality.
To him, even the term ‘emptiness’ is ultimately
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empty; it only means something relative to
our unenlightened, everyday views on reality.
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Some criticise the tathāgatagarbha doctrine as a
mistaken interpretation of Nāgārjuna’s emptiness.
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Others point to the clear contradiction between
the tathāgatagarbha and the Buddha’s original
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no-self teaching. To them, the tathāgatagarbha
is an alien concept smuggled into Buddhism
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from other traditions like as Hinduism.
Also, the scriptures that talk about the
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tathāgatagarbha, like the one I quoted,
were written centuries after the death of
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the historical Buddha. This does not mean they
don’t contain authentic spiritual insight. But
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I wouldn’t bet on them being records of
what the historical Buddha actually said.
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In their defence, the proponents of the
tathāgatagarbha point out that the Self of the
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Tathāgata is an entirely different kind of self
from what the Buddha attacked. The tathāgatagarbha
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is impersonal and is in no way identical
with what we take to be our everyday self.
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To use the screen metaphor again, the Buddha
warned us against believing this video is the
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screen or that the screen can be found within
the video. The tathāgatagarbha doctrine simply
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tells us the screen exists and that
the video is only an appearance on it.
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The Jungians among you might detect here
the archetype of the Self in which the ego
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appears as a complex. We will return to this
fascinating comparison in an upcoming video.
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Another argument for the tathāgatagarbha is
that if reality is empty all the way down,
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then why would the Buddha waste 45 years of
his life teaching the Dharma to empty people
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living in an empty world? Yes, the Buddha said
the everyday world of saṃsāra is impermanent,
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full of suffering, and without a self.
But then it is logical that nirvāṇa, being the
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opposite of saṃsāra, should have the opposite
qualities. Namely, it should be permanent,
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lacking suffering, and possessing a self.
The self of the fully awakened,
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fully liberated Tathāgata.
So, which is it? Is there
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a capital ‘S’ Self or no-self?
This has remained an open debate for centuries.
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I invite you to approach it with curiosity and
not settle too quickly on any final opinion. I
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know all of us, at different stops on our path,
espouse different (sometimes conflicting) views.
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The Buddha himself, when asked if
the self exists, remained silent.
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Then he was asked if the self doesn’t exist.
He remained silent still.
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In the end, I return to what Niels Bohr
said: ‘The opposite of a great truth is
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another truth’. Such is the paradox of
life and no single view can capture it.
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CHAPTER 5: NO VIEWS
Okay, we’ve covered lots of ground here.
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We’ve seen how śūnyatā, the doctrine of
emptiness, challenges our understanding
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of 1) ourselves, 2) the objects of our
experience, of 3) experience itself,
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and 4) the ultimate nature of reality.
But there is another meaning of emptiness,
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which points in an entirely different direction.
This fifth aspect of emptiness is perhaps the most
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dangerous of them all. But like everything we’ve
covered so far, it also holds the potential to
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free our minds from ignorance and suffering.
I am talking about the emptiness of views.
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This teaching was first given by the historical
Buddha and it was developed at much greater length
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by the Mahāyāna philosophers, Nāgārjuna
key among them. Yet, strictly speaking,
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the emptiness of views is not a Buddhist
teaching. You might even say it is an
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anti-Buddhist teaching. In fact, it is not
even a teaching at all, but an anti-teaching.
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Let me explain.
From the outset, Buddhist philosophy recognizes
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two kinds of truth: 1) conventional truth and 2)
ultimate truth. Let me demonstrate the difference.
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It is 1) conventional truth that
my name is Simeon and that I’ve
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made this video. It is 1) conventional
truth that you are watching this video.
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Of course, we have seen that things are much more
complicated than that. Ultimately there is no me,
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no you, and no video. This is 2)
the ultimate truth of emptiness.
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Pay attention here, the Buddhists did not say
conventional truth is false, they still considered
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it a kind of truth. For example, if I say my name
is Kanye West and I’ve painted the Mona Lisa,
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this is both ultimately and conventionally untrue.
Buddhist philosophy recognizes and respects
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conventional truth. After all, we are
conventional beings. We can’t function on
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the level of the ultimate or we can’t do it most
of the time. Most of the time we have jobs to do,
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kids to feed, and taxes to pay. You
can’t do this as the tathāgatagarbha.
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So, conventional truth is important. It is
also a bridge to the ultimate. After all,
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what are parables, symbols, and myths if not ways
of using conventional truth in a way that points
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to something beyond it – something ultimate?
As Nāgārjuna writes:
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Without depending on the conventional truth
The meaning of the ultimate cannot be taught.
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Without understanding the meaning of the ultimate,
Nirvāṇa is not achieved.
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00:38:35,400 --> 00:38:40,980
Now, everything we’ve covered so far in this
video, the last four meanings of emptiness, it’s
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all ultimate truth. But the emptiness of views is
not ultimate truth. It is not conventional truth
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either. But it is also not untruth. We can either
call it hyper-ultimate truth… or anti-truth.
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You see, the emptiness of views
tells us that all teachings and
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all kinds of truth are ultimately untrue.
It tells us even the most perfect of teachings,
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like those delivered by the Buddha, are
a compromise. An imperfect translation
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of reality into ideas. Translations can
be good, they can be a piece of art in
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themselves… but they are never the original.
This idea is as profound as it is simple. All
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theory, all teachings, all opinions – in short,
all views depend on language. Whether they are
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expressed in Sanskrit, sign language,
C++, or equations, all statements about
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the world come in the form of language.
Language takes the infinite complexity
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of the world and compresses it
into semantic units. It thus
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ends up being a low-resolution map of reality.
The emptiness of views is simply a warning not to
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mistake the map with the terrain it is mapping.
It is a reminder that no matter how deep and
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complete, our theories are always a pale
reflection of the true complexity of
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reality. You could say this is a special case of
Nāgārjuna’s emptiness of objects. Like how objects
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lack a svabhāva, an independent essence, so too
concepts are artificial divisions of reality.
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The idea of wisdom is inseparable from the
idea of ignorance. The notion of purity is
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inseparable from the notion of defilement.
In other words, language is a conventional
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division of reality into ideas small enough
for the human mind to understand. Even the
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00:40:36,900 --> 00:40:42,360
very words of the Buddha, spoken during his
deepest sermons are ultimately conventions.
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Ultimately untrue.
Yes, this is controversial. But what’s even more
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surprising is that this is a mainstream Mahāyāna
doctrine. In the Mahāprajñāpāramitā Sūtra (or the
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Large Perfection of Wisdom Sutra), we read:
‘There is no ignorance and no cessation of
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00:41:02,760 --> 00:41:08,460
ignorance… no suffering and no knowledge
of suffering, no cause [of suffering],
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00:41:08,460 --> 00:41:14,760
and no abandoning of the cause, no cessation
[of suffering], and no realization of cessation,
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00:41:14,760 --> 00:41:22,080
and no path and no development of the path…’
If you are familiar with the Four Noble Truths,
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you will recognize this passage refers
to them and refutes them. And this is
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a passage from a major Mahāyāna text!
Is this an extreme form of nihilism? Is
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this telling us we shouldn’t bother learning the
Buddha’s Dharma since even it, like everything
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00:41:37,800 --> 00:41:44,220
else in life, is meaningless? Did the disciples
of the Buddha turn their backs on his teaching?
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00:41:44,940 --> 00:41:50,520
Well… I told you the emptiness of views
is dangerous. Like with a poisonous snake,
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00:41:50,520 --> 00:41:56,040
one should be very careful with how one
grasps it. But also like the snake’s poison,
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00:41:56,040 --> 00:42:02,700
this anti-truth can be used as medicine.
The emptiness of views, like all Buddhist
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doctrine, is aimed at freeing us from suffering.
This anti-teaching springs from the insight that
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much of our suffering in life comes from
our views, expectations, and prejudices.
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00:42:15,180 --> 00:42:21,540
In our ignorance, we jump to conclusions far
too quickly. Our ideas and opinions give us
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00:42:21,540 --> 00:42:27,060
unearned self-assurance and we build a sense of
self around them. This robs us of the humility
449
00:42:27,060 --> 00:42:34,020
we need to continue learning and growing. Rigid
views take away our spontaneity, our ability to
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00:42:34,020 --> 00:42:40,920
face life as it is rather than as we imagine it to
be. They close our eyes to the paradoxes of life,
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which are the wellsprings of true wisdom.
One look at the state of the world shows
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us another danger of growing attached to views.
Division, oppression, scapegoating, censorship,
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00:42:53,580 --> 00:43:00,420
war… All these can result from the simple fact
that I hold one strong view and you hold another.
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The emptiness of views is a safety measure. It is
a reminder left by the greatest Buddhist teachers,
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the Buddha first among them, to take the
Dharma seriously, really seriously… but not
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00:43:13,260 --> 00:43:21,000
too seriously. To take all teachings, theories,
models, philosophies, and concepts seriously – but
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00:43:21,000 --> 00:43:26,100
not as seriously as we take life.
It is a reminder that human thinking
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is simply too linear, too dualistic
and naïve to capture ultimate truth.
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00:43:32,160 --> 00:43:37,560
Perhaps this same idea drove the
philosopher Ludwig Wittgenstein to conclude:
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00:43:37,560 --> 00:43:42,780
‘[W]hereof one cannot speak,
thereof one must be silent.’
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00:43:43,620 --> 00:43:48,060
In later Buddhist tradition there is the
image of a finger pointing at the moon.
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A reasonable person will know the moon is
what the finger is pointing at. An ignorant
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00:43:53,700 --> 00:43:59,640
one will think the finger is the moon.
The emptiness of views is not nihilism.
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It does not tell us there is no truth in life.
It is simply a warning not to mistake the moon
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with the finger pointing at it. Not to
mistake life with our ideas about it.
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00:44:10,980 --> 00:44:16,680
Like the Yogācārin śūnyatā, the emptiness
of views tells us ultimate truth cannot be
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communicated. To reach ultimate truth, one has
to experience it for oneself. In this sense,
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00:44:22,860 --> 00:44:29,040
ultimate truth is the most private of things.
Shortly before dying, the Buddha encouraged
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his disciples with the following words:
‘Monks, be islands unto yourselves, be your
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own refuge, having no other; let the Dharma be
an island and a refuge to you, having no other.’
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I believe the Buddha was not telling his disciples
what they should be, but what they already are.
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What we all already are. The seeker of truth walks
a lonely path. He can have companions, enemies,
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teachers, disciples… but in the end, he encounters
truth alone in the wilderness of his heart.
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00:45:06,960 --> 00:45:13,920
But truth requires space. It fills you only to
the degree that you are empty of falsehood and
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00:45:13,920 --> 00:45:20,520
half-truths. Even the idea that there is
some great, final, ultimate truth must be
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surrendered if indeed you wish to be filled
by the great, final, and ultimate truth.
477
00:45:38,880 --> 00:45:43,500
CONCLUSION
Okay, this is our longest video and
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I hope you feel your patience was worth it. I hope
I’ve given you a taste of just how deep, complex,
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00:45:49,320 --> 00:45:55,680
and beautiful the Buddhist teaching of śūnyatā is.
Before I end, I want to mention a few ways
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in which śūnyatā is relevant today
outside the boundaries of Buddhism.
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First and foremost, by now you’ve seen
emptiness is really a teaching about
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the interconnectedness of things. It is not a
denial that anything exists, but a denial that
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00:46:10,740 --> 00:46:17,580
anything exists on its own. Nāgārjuna writes:
‘I praise that perfect Buddha, / The Supreme
484
00:46:17,580 --> 00:46:24,480
Philosopher, / Who taught us relativity…’
Śūnyatā shows us the world and we ourselves
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are a web of interdependence. Any division
between us and them, conservative and liberal,
486
00:46:30,840 --> 00:46:37,260
civilization and nature, self and world…
all these are only conventional partitions
487
00:46:37,260 --> 00:46:42,120
of reality. A deeper perspective on the
world sees the interconnectedness and
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00:46:42,120 --> 00:46:47,760
necessity of all objects and phenomena.
Emptiness, when grasped correctly,
489
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is the ultimate form of environmentalism.
It shows how our every thought, word,
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00:46:53,940 --> 00:47:00,420
and action echoes out into the world and bears
fruit. It also reminds us of the opposite,
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that we are part of the whole
and our every thought, word,
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and action is a fruit of the world we live in.
As Bulgaria’s national hero, Vasil Levski, wrote:
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‘Time is in us and we are in time.
It changes us and we change it.’
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In this sense, emptiness is the exact opposite
of nihilism. It gives us a perspective of just
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00:47:25,680 --> 00:47:31,440
how great our responsibility is and how our
thoughts, words, and actions are the living
496
00:47:31,440 --> 00:47:37,140
fabric out of which the world is woven.
This has a psychological significance too.
497
00:47:37,140 --> 00:47:43,020
To see the interconnectedness of things within
you is to reunite the fragments of your own
498
00:47:43,020 --> 00:47:48,600
soul. It is to reconnect with all you would
rather suppress and all you’ve exiled within
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00:47:48,600 --> 00:47:54,660
yourself. It is to see that what is high within
you is held up by what is low. And that your
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00:47:54,660 --> 00:48:00,960
light is born in the womb of your darkness.
It is to see yourself as an ecosystem which
501
00:48:00,960 --> 00:48:06,480
is nowhere divided, but everywhere whole.
Then you understand what Carl Jung meant
502
00:48:06,480 --> 00:48:09,900
when he wrote that:
‘No tree… can grow to
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00:48:09,900 --> 00:48:17,160
heaven unless its roots reach down to hell’.
I have to stress, interdependence is not the
504
00:48:17,160 --> 00:48:24,480
same thing as identity. To see the interdependence
of war and peace, man and woman, right and wrong,
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00:48:24,480 --> 00:48:30,480
ignorance and wisdom – is not to think they are
one and the same. In fact, it is the opposite.
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Ying and yang are interdependent because
one is black and the other white. It is in
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their difference that they are the same, and
you cannot stress the one without the other.
508
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It is in the conflict of opposites that
are the same, but also not the same that
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00:48:47,160 --> 00:48:51,660
the world is created. You can ask
Heraclitus, he will confirm this.
510
00:48:52,200 --> 00:48:58,380
Last, but not least, the Tathāgatagarbha,
that mystery of conscious awareness within us,
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is the one true base of love and compassion.
After all what, does love mean if not taking
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00:49:05,700 --> 00:49:11,880
another to be as real as you? In the Gospel
of Mathew, Christ sums up His teaching thus:
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‘[I]n everything, do to others what you
would have them do to you’. But further on,
514
00:49:18,660 --> 00:49:24,240
He adds to this. He says something that could
have come straight from the Tathāgatagarbha Sūtra:
515
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‘[W]hatever you did for one of the least of these
brothers and sisters of mine, you did for me…
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Truly I tell you, whatever you did not do for one
of the least of these, you did not do for me.’
517
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I believe Christ did not mean we have to imagine
ourselves in place of others. Nor that we have to
518
00:49:45,420 --> 00:49:51,660
imagine that how we treat others we treat also
Him. I think he was pointing to a profound fact
519
00:49:51,660 --> 00:49:58,800
of reality. The fact that you, me, Chirst,
the Tathāgata – that we are all one and the
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same timeless, unlimited, inconceivable
thing. Only the temporary appearances of
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00:50:05,520 --> 00:50:11,640
the world conceal this ‘thing’. Thus, it
appears as the impermanent, limited, and
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concrete individuals we believe ourselves to be.
But who knows… In the end, even this concealment
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00:50:18,360 --> 00:50:24,240
of ultimate truth, even this confusion of the
eternal with the temporary, the unlimited with
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the limited, wisdom with ignorance, the self with
the world… Perhaps even this is nothing other than
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the pure, direct experience of ultimate truth.
As the Heart Sutra says.
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all phenomena bear the mark of Emptiness;
their true nature is the nature of
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no Birth no Death,
no Being no Non-being,
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no Defilement no Purity,
no Increasing no Decreasing.
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00:51:03,060 --> 00:51:08,040
It goes without saying this video is only
an introduction into śūnyatā. Emptiness
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00:51:08,040 --> 00:51:14,400
has been developed in unbelievable depth for
centuries by many great minds. For this reason,
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00:51:14,400 --> 00:51:18,240
I have included some additional study
resources in the video description.
532
00:51:18,240 --> 00:51:23,820
Follow these if you wish to lean more.
This video took me weeks of work and I
533
00:51:23,820 --> 00:51:28,800
hope it brought you something of value. If it did,
I invite you to support my work through Patreon,
534
00:51:28,800 --> 00:51:34,920
PayPal, or becoming a member here on YouTube.
Or, if you prefer non-financial support,
535
00:51:34,920 --> 00:51:40,800
please do share this video with people who would
enjoy it. This would be a tremendous help too.
536
00:51:40,800 --> 00:51:45,360
I thank you for spending your time here
with me and I wish you all the best.
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00:51:45,360 --> 00:51:51,300
And remember – ‘what you seek is seeking you’.
See you next time!67252
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