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Cosmology Theravada Buddhism Somaratena
Cosmology Theravada Buddhism Somaratena
Learning Outcomes:
At the completion of the lesson, students will be able to
Student Activities:
Read each of the Readings carefully and underline/ highlight the key words and
concepts in each reading.
Also go through the slides of the PowerPoint presentation.
Draw a mind-map around the main topic linking the key words and concepts that you
underlined or highlighted in the readings showing their relationship to the main topic
and also to each other
Read the given original sources to be familiar with the texts
Prepare a chart on Theravda Cosmology highlighting the threefold realm
For your journal entries, write detailed notes on the following: samsra, world-systems, planes
of existence
Unanswered Questions
There are four questions pertaining to the duration and the extent of the world that the
Buddha either kept silent about or rejected or brushed aside. Is the world eternal? Is the
world not eternal? Is the world finite? Is the world infinite? Why does the Buddha refrain
from answering these questions? As a discourse points out, they are not useful, not related
to the basic discipline of the holy life, not conducive to detachment, dispassion, cessation,
pacification, higher knowledge, enlightenment and Nibbna (MN I, 431).
1.
World Systems
There are three large world-systems recognized, the first with 1000 suns, the second with
1,000,000 suns and the third with 1,000,000,000 suns (AN I, 227; AN V, 59-60) .
The Thousand-fold Minor World-System is the one that consists of 1000 suns. As far as the
suns and moons revolve, shining and shedding their light in space, so far extends the
Thousand-fold Minor World-System (sahass claik loka-dhtu). In it there are a thousand
moons, a thousand suns, thousands of earths and thousands of heavenly worlds. The text
continues with the wording: a thousand Sinerus, the kings of mountains, a thousand RoseApple Lands, a thousand Western Ox-Wains, a thousand Northern Kurus, a thousand Eastern
Videhas; a thousand of the fourfold oceans, a thousand of the fourfold great rulers, a
thousand Ctummahrjikas, a thousand Tvatimsas, a thousand Ymas, a thousand
Tusitas, a thousand Nimmaratis, a thousand Paranimmitavasavattis, a thousand Brahmaworlds. This, nanda, is called the Thousandfold Minor World-System.
The Two Thousand-fold Middling World-System (dvi-sahass majjhimik loka-dhtu) consists of
thousand times the Thousand-fold Minor World-System. The Three Thousand-fold Major WorldSystem (ti-sahass mah-sahass loka-dhtu) contains thousand times the Two Thousand-fold
Middling World-System.
2.
firm-bowed archer trained, skilful, practiced, experienced could easily shoot past the
shadow of a Palmyra tree with a light arrow. My stride was such that it seemed to reach
from the eastern ocean to the western ocean.
Then the wish arose in me: `I will reach the end of the world by travelling. Possessing such
speed and such a stride, and having a life span of a hundred years, living for a hundred
years, I traveled for a hundred years, without posing except to eat, drink, take meals and
snacks, to defecate and urinate, to sleep and dispel fatigue; yet I died along the way
without having reached the end of the world SN I, 61-62).
Aeon
An aeon (kappa), an incalculable time period, is taken for the completion of a contraction
process of a planetary system. Aeon is the largest scale of measurement in the cosmic
context. There are four periods for an aeon: period of rolling up, the period of being rolled
up standing still, the period of rolling out, and the period of being rolled out standing still.
Each of the four periods is incalculable (AN II, 142).
The duration of an aeon is so vast that it could only be presented through similes. The
Buddha has given two similes. Suppose there were a city of iron walls, one yojana (about
seven miles) in length, one yojana in width and one yojana high, filled up with mustard
seeds, wherefrom a man were to take out at the end of every hundred years one mustard
seed. That pile of mustard seeds would in this way be sooner done away with and ended
than an aeon (SN II, 182). The second simile reads: suppose there were a great mountain,
one yojana in length, one yojana in breadth and one yojana in height without chasms or
clefts a solid mass. And a man at the end of every hundred years were to rub it once each
time with a Ksi-cloth. Well, the mountain in this way would be sooner rubbed out and
destroyed than an aeon (SN II, 182).
Innumerable such aeons have already elapsed and it is difficult to reckon them. Suppose
there were four disciples of a life-span of a hundred years, living here for a hundred years.
They were to recollect everyday a hundred thousand aeons. Thus recollecting aeons, the four
disciples of a hundred years life-span, living for a hundred years may die without finishing
the counting. Thus, many aeons have passed and gone by. It is not easy to count up as so
many aeons, so many hundred aeons, so many thousand aeons and so many hundred
thousand aeons have passed and gone by (SN II, 184).
Population
In this vastness of cosmic space and time, infinite numbers of beings are caught up in the
cycle of birth and death (sasra). The round of rebirths has its origin in eternity: It is
3.
impossible to find any beginning from which beings steeped in ignorance and bound up by
the thirst for existence wander aimlessly from rebirth to rebirth (SN II, 179).
The rebirth takes place in the five destinies (paca-gati) and the threefold world (tayo bhava).
The Five Destinies, the life forms that concerned with humans, are: the hellish beings, the
animals, the departed spirits, the humans, and the gods. The Three-fold World where earthly
humans may be reborn consists of: Kma-dhtu, Rpa-dhtu, and Arpa-dhtu. The
Kmadhtu or the world of desire, or of the five senses, includes the destinies of the hells,
animals, departed spirits, humans, and some of the gods known as the six classes of gods of
the world of desire.
Rpa-dhtu or the world of subtle matter includes heavenly beings who have been reborn
into the world of Brahm and who are distributed throughout the spheres of the four
jhnas (trance states). Arpa-dhtu or the world of formless includes heavenly beings who
have been reborn, in the shape of a mental series, in the spheres of the four attainments
(sampatti). These spheres consists of the sphere of unlimited space, the sphere of unlimited
consciousness, the sphere of nothingness, and the sphere of neither-perception-nor-nonperception which is the summit of worldly existence.
In this vastness of population, beings could be classified in various ways. According to a
classification, there are four kinds of generation: the egg-born generation or the beings
born by breaking out of the shell of an egg; the womb-born generation or the beings born
by breaking out from the caul; the moisture-born generation or the beings born in a rotten
fish, in a rotten corpse, in rotten dough, in a cesspit, or in a sewer; and the spontaneous
generation or the gods and denizens of hell and certain human beings and some beings in
the lower world.
There are beings different and distinguishable from each other in mind and body. Humans
belong to this category. There are beings different in body but one in mind, beings alike in
body but different in mind and beings alike both in body and mind. Another classification
reads that there are beings who could be classified as the no footed, the two-footed, the
four-footed, the many-footed, those having or lacking material form, the conscious, the
unconscious, and the super conscious.
To point out the first beginnings for these beings is impossible.
Real Minority
In this vastness, the human population forms a minority that could be compared to a little
soil taken by ones fingers and the non-humans to the rest of the soil on the earth. Buddha
asked his monks: Which is greater the little bit of sand on my fingernail, or the great
earth? Lord, great by far is the great earth. Tiny is the sand on your fingernail. The two
cannot be compared. So too, beings who are born as humans are few in number. Far
greater are those who are reborn in non-human realms. Therefore, you should train yourself,
thinking: `we will live earnestly (SN II, 262).
Ones Place
When compared oneself with the vastness of space, time, and the population, one could
easily understand ones petit and insignificant place in the universe. Yet in this cosmic
context, as the Buddha points out, humans have a unique position for they alone enjoy the
rarest privilege of easy accessibility to nirva. Human life is a good, balanced, mixture of
both pleasure and pain.
4.
Time
Further, in non-human worlds, the time scales are fairly high. Time is not the same
everywhere. For example, one hundred earth years are equivalent to one day and night in
one of the heavenly worlds, while in another a day and night is equivalent to no less than
1,600 earthly years. Life-span of these divine beings could be 1000 years according to their
own measurement. When born in them, one is bound to spend ones quota of time.
Life-Span
In comparison with the cosmic time, the life span of humans could be compared to a line
drawn in water. This shortness of human life: to die soon is an advantage and a privilege
because the fear of death propels humans towards the escape from suffering. The
unpredictability of the time of death makes humans think about a next world and in turn,
compels them to lead a moral life.
After pointing out the vastness of various aspects of the universe, Buddhas advice to his
disciples was: You should train yourself, thinking: `we will live earnestly.
5.
As the Buddha says: Kamma is the field, consciousness is the seed, and craving is the moisture,
for the consciousness of beings obstructed by ignorance and fettered by craving to be
established in a new realm of existence either low, middling, or superior (A I, 223).
As determined by past kamma, the seed of consciousness falls into an appropriate realm, sends
down roots, and nurtured by its store of kammic accumulations, unfolds according to its hidden
potentials.
2.
c. Hell (Niraya)
d. The animal kingdom (Tiracchnayoni)
e. The sphere of petas (Pettivisaya)
f. The host of asuras (Asurakya)
The Sensuous Blissful Plane (Kmasugatibhmi)
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
c.
iv.
The Realm of Minor Lustre (Parittbha)
v.
The Realm of Infinite Lustre (Appambha)
vi.
The Realm of Radiant Lustre (bhassara)
Tatiyajjhnabhmi
vii.
The Realm of Minor Aura (Parittasubha)
viii.
The Realm of Infinite Aura (Appamasubha)
ix.
The Realm of Steady Aura (Subhakiha)
d. Catutthajjhnabhmi
x.
The Realm of Great Reward (Vehapphala)
xi.
The realm of non-percipient beings (Asaasatta)
xii.
The Pure Abodes (Suddhvsa)
e. Pacamajjhnabhmi (= suddhvsabhmi - Pure Abodes)
Prof. G A Somaratena, 2011, International Buddhist College E-Learning Center
6.
Reading 3: Cosmology
In Buddhist scriptures we find a scheme of post-mortem worlds which, while having much in
common with general Indian ideas, is in may of its details unique. Here, there are no eternal
heavens or hells, though some of both are said to be tremendously long-lasting; but all is in an
eternal flux in which worlds and world-systems are born and perish, and living beings are
continually born, die and are reborn according to their karmic deserts. It is a grandiose, but
ultimately frightening and horrifying vision. Deliverance from it is only possible through the
insight engendered by following the path taught by one of the Buddhas who occasionally arise
on the scene. For those who fail to gain this insight there can be a happy rebirth for a long time
in one of the temporary heaven-worlds, but no permanent deliverance from the perils of birthand-death. This is sasra or cycle of existence, the on-faring.
All existence in the previous realms of sasra is one of the three worlds: the World of SenseDesires (kama-loka), the World of Form (or fine-material world: rpa-loka) and the Form-less (or
immaterial) World (arpa-loka), the latter two of which are inhabited by those who have
attained, in this life, the corresponding mental absorptions (jhnas) frequently described in the
texts. Beyond all this lies the realm of the Supramundane (lokuttara) or Nibbna the other
shore, the only secure heaven. And this, though it can be experienced, cannot be described.
There are thirty-one states in which, it is said, one can be reborn, distributed over the three
worlds. The lowest of the three, the World of Sense-Desires, consists of the first eleven states, of
which human rebirth is the fifth. Below this are the fourfold states of woe: hells, the world of
asuras (titans), of hungry ghosts (petas), and of animals, while above it are the six lowest
heavens. Above these are the sixteen heavens of World of Form, and above these again the four
heavens of the Formless World.
Special importance attaches to the human condition, since it is next to impossible to gain
enlightenment from any other sphere than this: the realms below the human are too miserable,
and those above it too happy and carefree for the necessary effort to be easily made.
7.
8.
exhausted. For what reason? Because, monks, this samsra is without discoverable beginning. A
first point is not discerned of beings roaming and wandering on hindered by ignorance and
fettered by craving. For such a long time, monks, you have experienced suffering, anguish, and
disaster, and swelled the cemetery. It is enough to become disenchanted with all formations,
enough to become dispassionate toward them, enough to be liberated from them. (SN II, 179)
A certain monk approached the Blessed One, paid homage to him, sat down to one side, and
said to him: Venerable sir, how long is an eon?
An eon is long, monk. It is not easy to count it and say it is so many years, or so many hundreds
of years, or so many thousands of years, or so many hundreds of thousands of years.
Then is it possible to give a simile, venerable sir?
It is possible, monk, the Blessed One said. Suppose, monk, there was a great stone mountain a
yojana long, a yojana wide, and a yojana high, without holes or crevices, one solid mass of rock.
At the end of every hundred years a man would stroke it once with a piece of fine cloth. That
great stone mountain might by this effort be worn away and eliminated but the eon would still
not have come to an end. So long is an eon, monk. And of eons of such length, we have
wandered through so many eons, so many hundreds of eons, so many thousands of eons, so
many hundreds of thousands of eons. For what reason? Because, monk, this samsra is without
discoverable beginning . It is enough to be liberated from them. (SN II, 181-2)
At Rajagaha, in the Bamboo Grove, the Squirrel Sanctuary, a certain Brahmin approached the
Blessed One and exchanged greetings with him. When they had concluded their greetings and
cordial talk, he sat down to one side and asked him: Master Gotama, how many eons have
elapsed and gone by?
Brahmin, many eons have elapsed and gone by. It is not easy to count them and say they are so
many eons, or so many hundreds of eons, or so many thousands of eons, or so many hundreds of
thousands of eons.
But is it possible to give a simile, Master Gotama?
It is possible, Brahmin, the Blessed One said. Imagine, Brahmin, the grains of sand between
the point where the river Ganges originates and the point where it enters the great ocean: it is
not easy to count these and say there are so many grains of sand, or so many hundreds of
grains, or so many thousands of grains, or so many hundreds of thousands of grains. Brahmin,
eons have elapsed and gone by are even more numerous than that. It is not easy to count them
and say that they are so many eons, or so many hundreds of eons, or so many thousands of
eons, or so many hundreds of thousands of eons. For what reason? Because, Brahmin, this
samsra is without discoverable beginning . It is enough to be liberated from them. (SN II,
183-4)
Monks, this samsra is without discoverable beginning. A first point is not discerned of beings
roaming and wandering on hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving.
There comes a time, monks, when the great ocean dries up and evaporates and no longer
exists, but still, I say, there is no making an end of suffering for those beings roaming and
wandering on hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving.
There comes a time, monks, when Sineru, the king of mountains, burns up and perishes and no
longer exists, but still, I say, there is no making an end of suffering for those beings roaming and
wandering on hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving.
9.
There comes a time, monks, when the great earth burns up and perishes and no longer exists,
but still, I say, there is no making an end of suffering for those beings roaming and wandering
on hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving.
Suppose, monks, a dog tied up on a leash was bound to a strong post or pillar: it would just
keep on running and revolving around that same post or pillar. So too, the uninstructed
worldling regards form as self feeling as self perception as self volitional formations as
self consciousness as self He just keeps running and revolving around form, around feeling,
around perception, around volitional formations, around consciousness. As he keeps on running
and revolving around them, he is not freed from form, not freed from feeling, not freed from
perception, not freed from volitional formations, not freed from consciousness. He is not freed
from birth, aging, and death; not freed from sorrow, lamentation, pain, dejection, and despair;
not freed from suffering, I say. (SN II, 149-50)
10.