I was researching 'materialism' and also found the word 'immaterial' used as immaterial absorptions, which are from the eight stages of meditation. What exactly does "immaterial" mean? In what ways, situations or contexts did Buddha use this word "immaterial"? For example, are sexual desires that obviously have a relationship to biology, hormones & chemical "immaterial"?
Thanks
How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
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Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
This might be of interest:Roz wrote:I was researching 'materialism' and also found the word 'immaterial' used as immaterial absorptions, which are from the eight stages of meditation. What exactly does "immaterial" mean? In what ways, situations or contexts did Buddha use this word "immaterial"? For example, are sexual desires that obviously have a relationship to biology, hormones & chemical "immaterial"?
Thanks
"Beyond the four jhanas lie four higher attainments in the scale of concentration, referred to in the suttas as the "peaceful immaterial liberations transcending material form" (santa vimokkha atikammarupe aruppa, M.i,33).
...They receive the designation "immaterial" or " formless" (arupa) because they are achieved by surmounting all perceptions of material form, including the subtle form of the counterpart sign which served as the object of the previous jhanas, and because they are the subjective correlates of the immaterial planes of existence."
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth ... html#ch4.2
Buddha save me from new-agers!
Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
I have read "arupa jhana" is not a sutta word, but a commentary word. Arupa is. But instead of jhana we would find eg "ayatana" in suttas.Spiny Norman wrote:
"Beyond the four jhanas lie four higher attainments in the scale of concentration, referred to in the suttas as the "peaceful immaterial liberations transcending material form" (santa vimokkha atikammarupe aruppa, M.i,33).
...They receive the designation "immaterial" or " formless" (arupa) because they are achieved by surmounting all perceptions of material form, including the subtle form of the counterpart sign which served as the object of the previous jhanas, and because they are the subjective correlates of the immaterial planes of existence."
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth ... html#ch4.2
Do you have information, point of view, link regarding this statement?
Thanks much Spiny Norman
Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
ah sorry i have disturbed for nothing. I found Ajhan Brahm, in his book about Dhyana, writes exactly thispyluyten wrote:
I have read "arupa jhana" is not a sutta word, but a commentary word. Arupa is. But instead of jhana we would find eg "ayatana" in suttas.
Do you have information, point of view, link regarding this statement?
"It is noteworthy that the Buddha never called these attainments jhana in they suttas."
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Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
The ajahn continues...pyluyten wrote:ah sorry i have disturbed for nothing. I found Ajhan Brahm, in his book about Dhyana, writes exactly this
"It is noteworthy that the Buddha never called these attainments jhana in they suttas."
https://www.dhammatalks.net/Books/Ajahn ... Jhanas.htmAjahn Brahmavamso wrote:Only the commentaries, compiled a thousand years later, call them Jhana.
But this isn't correct. The term 'arūpajjhāna' dates back to the Dhammasaṅgaṇī of the Abhidhamma Piṭaka.
Yena yena hi maññanti,
tato taṃ hoti aññathā.
In whatever way they conceive it,
It turns out otherwise.
(Sn. 588)
tato taṃ hoti aññathā.
In whatever way they conceive it,
It turns out otherwise.
(Sn. 588)
Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
ah thanks for clarificationDhammanando wrote: But this isn't correct. The term 'arūpajjhāna' dates back to the Dhammasaṅgaṇī of the Abhidhamma Piṭaka.
Re: How is the word "immaterial" used in Buddha's teaching?
Apart from two dubious Suttas in AN 3, that have no parallels, and that speak about the arūpadhathu - there seems to be only one occurrence of "arūpa" in the EBTs.Roz wrote:What exactly does "immaterial" mean?
Speaking of the citta in Thag 19.1, this is what Mahāmoggallāna said:
You, incorporeal (citta,) far-traveller, lone-wanderer ...
Arūpa dūraṅgama ekacāri ...
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AN 11.9 speaks about losing the perception of forms (earth, water, etc.).
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This is Jhana 5.
Note that saññā (perception) has the underlying meaning of "experience with acknowledgment" in pre-Buddhist Vedic texts.With the complete overstepping of perceptions of form (matter) - with the vanishing of perceptions (based) upon the organs of senses (viz. ajjhattikāni āyatanāni [including mano]) - not striving with the mind (manasa/mano) to perceptions of manifoldness (lit. (what is) differently than one), aware that ‘space is boundless,’ he attains and seizes distinctively, the field of experience of boundless space.
sabbaso rūpasaññānaṃ samatikkamā - paṭighasaññānaṃ atthaṅgamā nānattasaññānaṃ - amanasikārā ananto ākāsoti ākāsānañcāyatanaṃ upasampajja viharāti.
Note also that the loss of "perception" of materiality (The four great elements (mahābhūtāna rūpa) and the forms out of (derived from) them (upādāya) - SN 12.2), is not the same as dwelling in "nothingness" in Jhāna 7:
Ākiñcaññā, which has the meaning of "nothing" here, means literally, that there is "not even from the cause" - "not even 'whence'" (na kiṃ cana).By completely surmounting the base of infinite consciousness, aware that ‘there is nothing,’ a bhikkhu enters upon and dwells (distinctively,) in the base of nothingness.
sabbaso viññāṇañcāyatanaṃ samatikkamma ‘natthi kiñcī’ti ākiñcaññāyatanaṃ upasampajja viharāti.
Metta.
In this world, there are many people acting and yearning for the Mara's world; some for the Brahma's world; and very few for the Unborn.