General
Arguments
and their Refutation 1342
B.
B.
AbhidharmakosabhasyamVol-4VasubandhuPoussinPruden1991
E5P78 1988 294.
3'824--dcl9
II. Title.
Copyright (C) 1991 by Asian Humanities Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the written permission of Asian Humanities Press except for brief passages quoted in a review.
2. Abhidharma.
I. La Vallee Poussin,
87-71231 AACR 2 MARC
? Translator's Introduction
A his volume is the fourth and the last volume of an English translation of Louis de La Valle'e Poussin's French translation of Vasubandhu's Abhidharmakosabhdsyam. This volume contains translations of Chapter VII ("The Knowledges \jndna~nirdesa), Chapter VIII ("The Absorptions", samdpatti-nirdefa), and Chapter IX ("Refutation of the Pudgala\ pudgala-pratisedha). This volume also contains a full Index to the text of the Kosabhdsyam, as well as to significant entries in the Footnotes to the various Chapters.
Chapter VII deals with the type and nature of the Knowledges, and how they differ from the Patiences and from Seeing; with the characteristics and aspects of the Ten Knowledges; how the knowledge of the mind of another takes place; the differences between a defiled mind and a good or concentrated mind; the role of emptiness and non-self in the Knowledges; the Path of Meditation; the qualities and powers that accompany the Knowledge of Destruction, and related to this, the powers and assurances of a Buddha; the difference between (ordinary) compassion and the great compassion of a Buddha; the nature of the Buddha's knowledge, his methods of conversion, and his supernormal powers (rddhi).
Chapter VIII is concerned with dhydna both as a state of absorption, and as states of existence in the realms of Rupadhatu and Arupyadhatu. This Chapter discusses dhydna versus samddhi; whether mpa or physical matter exists in Arupyadhatu; the origin of physical matter from the mind; the component parts of each dhydna; the role of happiness in the Third Dhyana; the role and nature of faith; which absorption can arise after which absorption; the mental object of the absorptions; the prefatory or threshhold absorptions (sdmantakas), and the prefatory absorptions as contrasted with dhydndntara. The nature of samddhi is discussed with reference to its containing vitarka and/or vicara; discussed also are the absorptions of emptiness, the absorption of the absence of characteristics, and the absorption of the absence of intention; the types of samddhi; the Four Immeasurables
? (called in other traditions the Four Brahmavihuras); and details how a beginner should cultivate the visualization of goodwill. This Chapter concludes with a short discussion on how long the Saddharma will last, and the definition of the Saddharma as consisting of agama (the teaching) and adhigama (its cultivation and realization). Three Karikas then conclude the basic text of the A bhidharmakoiabhdsyam.
Chapter IX has long been regarded as an appendix to the Abhidharmakosabhdsyam9 since the text of the Ninth Chapter contains no Karikas, and its presentation is devoted to a single theme, that of refuting the idea of a pudgala or soul. Since this Chapter is quoted or referred to twice (pages 650, 818) in th? text of the KoSabhdsyam, this work was evidently known to the author of the Kos'abhdsyam, and so was perhaps composed prior to Vasubandhu's composition of the Kosabhdsyam (as was perhaps his Karmasiddhi-prakarana) to answer objections to the non-soul teaching of the Buddhists.
This Chapter is concerned with refuting the soul (here pudgala) theories of one sect of Hinayana Buddhism, the Vatsiputriyas (also identified with Sammatiyas); later in the Chapter the author refutes the theories of the Vai? esikas, one of the orthodox schools of Hindu Philosophy. In this Chapter, Vasubandhu concerns himself with explaining memory and recognition: how does one account for memory and recognition in the absence of an unchanging substratum to human experience? The existence of such a substratum becomes the concern of the Yogacara school of Mahayana Buddhism.
I should like to thank Mr. Ken Johnson for his unstinting work on the Index of the Abhidharmako/abhdsyam; he has done a fine job of serving on numerous occasions as my editor and advisor.
Much remains to be done in Kosabhdsyam studies. At present the Bangladeshi Bhikkhu, Ven. Lokananda, and I are working on publishing a Romanized edition of the text of the Kosabhdsyam, and in the compilation of a dictionary to the Sanskrit text of the work. It would be a great source of joy to see an eventual translation of YaSomitra's commentary on the Kosabhdsyam, his Sphutdrtha-abhidharmakofa-vydkhyd, a work quoted liberally in de
? La Valine Poussin's Footnotes. It will also be necessary someday to investigate the filiation of Vasubandhu's thought into that of the Mahayuna, a task already carried out in many of Kyokuga Saeki's Footnotes to his edition of the Kusharon, his Kando-bon Kusharon.
Leo M. Pruden.
? I. ? .
Chapter Seven: The Knowledges
The Relationship Between the Patiences,
the Knowledges, and Seeing 1087
The Characteristics of the Ten Knowledges 1088
A. The Ten Knowledges 1088 1. Pure and Impure Knowledge 1089 2. Conventional Knowledge 1089 3. The Knowledge of the Mind of Another 1091
B. The Knowledge of Destruction and the
Knowledge of Non-Arising 1093
1. How Are They Obtained 1094
2. How Are They Views 1095
? How Are There Ten Knowledges? 1095 D. A Knowledge of the Dharmas and Inferential
Knowledge: Their Influence on Various Spheres. 1097
The Aspeas of Ten Knowledges 1098
A. The Different Aspeas of the Ten Knowledges 1098
B. Pure Knowledge and the Sixteen Aspeas 1099
1. Discussion: What is Saraga Mind? 1100
? The Sixteen Aspeas 1108
The Ten Knowledges: An Analysis 1117
A. Their Natures, Spheres; the Persons 1117
B. The Ten Knowledgfes and the Four
Foundations of Mindfulness 1119
? The Spheres of the Ten Knowledges 1120
1. The Ten Knowledges Are Conditioned
by Which Knowledge? 1120
2. The Spheres of the Ten Knowledges 1121
3. The Sphere of Conventional Knowledge 1121 D. The Ten Knowledges and the Ascetics
? .
IV.
CONTENTS
Cultivation 1122
? E. The Ten Knowledges as Innate or
Cultivated Knowledge 1124
1. The Ten Knowledges on the Path of Seeing 1124 2. The Ten Knowledges on the Path of
Meditation 1128 3. The Ten Knowledges in the Stage
oftheA&uksa 1133 4. The Ten Knowledges in Other Stages 1134 a. Qualities of the Ten Knowledges 1134
5. Innate and Cultivated Pure and Impure
Dharmas; the Meaning of Cultivation 1135 6. The Four Types of Cultivation 1135
a. Six Types of Cultivation:
the Vaibhasikas of the West 1136
b. Refutation: the Vaibhasikas of KaSmlr 1136 The Eighteen Qualities Unique to a Buddha 1136
A. B.
? D. E. F. G.
What are the Eighteen Qualities? 1136 The Ten Powers 1137 1. The Power of the Buddha s Mind 1137 2. The Power of the Buddhas Body 1139 a. Definition of Terms 1140 The Four Absence of Fear 1141 The Three Foundations of Mindfulness 1142 Great Compassion 1143 Do the Buddhas Resemble One Another 1145 The Threefold Perfection of the Tathagatas 1146
Qualities the Buddhas Have in Common with
Ordinary Persons and with Saints 1148
A. B.
General Remarks 1148 Qualities the Buddhas Have in Common
with Saints 1148
1. The Samadhi Absence of Contention 1150 2. The Knowledge Resulting from Resolution 1150
a. Does this Knowledge Exist in Ampyadhatu? : Opinion of the
Vaibhasikas 1151
? 3. The Four Unhindered Knowledges 1151 a. A Variant Order 1154 b. Various Opinions 1154
4. The Fourth Dhyana as Pruntakotika Dhyana 1155 Qualities the Buddhas, Saints, and
Ordinary Persons Have in Common 1157
1. The Six Supernormal Knowledges 1157 a. Discussion: Do These Six
Supernormal Knowledges Exist in
Nonmaterial Spheres 1159 b. How Are the Supernormal
Knowledges Obtained? 1161 ? Moral Quality of the
Supernormal Knowledges 1163 2. The Three Asaiksa Wisdom 1164 3. The Three Methods of Conversion 1166 4. The Meaning of Rddhi 1168 5. The Results of Rddhi 1168
a. Displacement 1168 b. Creation: The Mind Capable of
Creating Fictive Beings 1170 6. Empowerment 1173 7. A Variant List of Rddhi 1176 8. Divine Sight and Divine Hearing 1176 9. Is Rddhi Innate 1178
Footnotes 1181 Chapter Eight: The Absorptions
General Introduction 1215
A. The Four Dhyanas 1215 1. Application of the Mind on a Single Objea 1216 2. Definition of Dhyuna 1217
3. The Moral Value of Dhyana 1218
4. Characteristics of the Four Dhyanas 1218
B. The Four Arupyas 1219 Discussion: Is there mpa in Arupyadhatu? 1220
? 1. The Names of the Four Arupyas 1226
2. The Parts of the Pure Dhyanas 1227 a. Happiness 1231 b. Faith 1236 ? Joy 1237
3. The Parts of Defiled Dhyana 1238 a. Disturbed Dhyuna 1239 b. Vedana in the Dhyanas 1239
? Eye Consciousness in the Dhyanas 1240
4. Acquisition of the Absorptions 1241
5. What Absorption Arises After
What Absorption? 1244 a. Reciprocal Generation of the Absorptions 1248 b. What Beings Manifest How
Many Absorptions 1250
6. The Objects of the Absorptions 1251
7. Which Absorptions Destroy
the Defilements? 1252
8. The Prefatory Absorptions 1253
a. Differences Between the Prefatory
Absorptions and the Intermediate Dhyana 1254
i. The Categories of
Intermediate Dhyana 1255
9. The Three Samadhis 1256
a. Their Moral Value 1258
10. The Four Cultivations of Absorption 1262
11. The Immeasurables 1264 a. Definition 1265
b. Their Objects 1265
? The Spheres in Which They
Are Produced 1267
i. How the Beginner Cultivates
Goodwill 1269
12. The Deliverances 1271
a. In Arapyadhatu 1271
b. The Absorption of Extinction 1273
? Their Objects 1274
? d The Deliverances and the
Third Dhyana 1275
13. The Dominent Ayatanas 1276
14. The All-Encompassing Ayatanas 1277
15. How an Absorption Arises 1279
II. (including Remarks 1281
A. The Nature of the Good Law 1281 1, Its Duration 1281
B. This Present Treatise 1282
? Concluding Stanzas 1282
Footnotes
1283
Chapter EX: Refutation of the pudgala
I. General Statements 1313
II. Refutation of the Vatslputrlya Theories 1314
A. Refutations from Reasoning 1314 1. The Provisional Existence of the Pudgala 1315
a. Discussion: The Relationship of
Fire and Fuel 1315
2. The Pudgala as the Totality of the Skandhas 1318
3. The Support of the Pudgala 1318
4. The Pudgala as Cognized by the Vijnuna 1318
B. Refutations from Scripture 1321 1, Synonyms 1324 2. Scriptural Quotations 1324
a. Discussion: The Authority of Texts 1324 ? Refutation of Vatslputrlya Arguments 1326 1. "In the past, I was. . . " 1327
a. Discussion: The Omniscience of
the Buddha 1327
2. The Bearer of the Burden 1328
3. Apparitional Beings 1330
4. A Single Self or Soul 1330
5. Unanswerable Questions 1332
? 6. A False Opinion 1336
7. A Subject that Transmigrates 1337
8. "Then I was. . . " 1337
9. Three Wrong Beliefs 1338
10. Memory and Recognition 1339
a. Definition of Memory 1339
b. To Whom Does Memory Belong? 1341
? . Refutation of the Soul Theory of the Grammarians 1342
A.
General Arguments and their Refutation 1342
B. Specific Refutations 1342
1. What Does it Signify to Say "A Person
Walks"? 1342
2. How Consciousness Knows an Object 1343
3. The Non-determined Sequence of Consciousnesses 1344
4. Conclusion 1345
IV. Refutation of the Soul Theories of the Vaisesikas 1346 A. General Arguments and their Refutations 1346 B. Specific Refutations 1346
1. 2.
3. 4.
5. Preliminary Notes
Footnotes Index
A Substrate 1348 The Result of Action 1349 a. Cause of the Idea of "I" 1350 b. Definition of Pleasure and Pain 1350 ? Who Has Pain or Pleasure? 1350 d. The Agent of Action 1351 e. Past Causes and Future Results 1352
Cause and Result in Non-Human Life: A
Seed and Its Fruit 1352 A Retributive Result versus an
Out-flowing Result 1354
a. Discussion: Why a New
Retribution is not Generated
from the Retributive Result 1354
Concluding Statements 1355 1356
? ? 1381
? CHAPTER SEVEN
The Knowledges1
? m. Homage to the Buddha.
We have spoken of the ksantis or Patiences (vi. 25d) and of the
jndnas or Knowledges (vi. 26b), of samyagdrsti or Right Views (vi. 50c) and of samyagjndna or Right Knowledge (vi. 76c). Are the Patiences actually Knowledges, and isn't Right Knowledge identical to Right Views?
la. The pure Patiences are not a type of Knowledge. 2
The eight types of pure Patience which form part of the Path of Seeing (dbhisamaydntika, vi. 25d-26c) are not, by their nature, knowledge;3 for, at the moment of patience, the defilement of doubt, which each Patience abandons, is not already abandoned. But Knowledge is certain: it is produced when doubt is abandoned These eight types of Patience are Seeing, because, by their nature, they are examination. 4 In opposition to the pure Patiences which are Seeing and are not Knowledge,
lb. The prajnd of destruction and of non-arising is not seeing. 5
The knowledge of destruction (ksayajndna) and the knowledge of Non-Arising {anutpadajrlana, vi. 67a-b)--when they constitute Bodhi--are not Seeing, because they do not include examination, and because the intention of inquiry is not in them. 6
? 1088 Chapter Seven
lc. All other pure prajnd is both one and the other.
Besides the Patiences and the two Knowledges named above, pure prajnd is at one and the same time both seeing and knowledge, for it includes examination, and is therefore seeing; it is free from doubt, and is therefore knowledge. This refers to the eight abhtsamaya knowledges (duhkhe jridna, etc. , vi. 26) [and also to all prajnd of the pure Path of Meditation up to the Knowledge of Extinction].
Id. All other prajfid is knowledge.
All other prajnd which is not pure, but worldly or impure [i. e. , prajnd associated with the five sense consciousnesses,etc, and prajnd associated with the mental consciousness].
le. Six are also seeing.
Six impure prajnds are at one and the same time knowledge and seeing, namely the mental prajnd associated with the five defilements which are views by nature {satkayadrsti, etc. , v7) and, sixth, good prajnd, which is right worldly views (laukiki sam-
yagdrsti, i. 4l).
***
7
How many knowledges are there? There are ten; but, in short
there are only two:
2a. Knowledge is pure or impure.
All the Knowledges are subsumed into two types of knowledge,
? impure or worldly knowledge, and pure or supermundane knowledge. Of these two knowledges,
8 2b. The first is called conventional.
Impure Knowledge is called "knowledge conforming to worldly conventions. "
Why?
Because from usage it bears on (dlambate) things which exist 9
conventionally: a jug, clothing, male, female, etc. [We say "from usage," because it also bears on the real characteristics of things, unique characteristics and common characteristics, vii. 10b].
2c-d. Pure knowledge is of two types, a knowledge of 10
dharmas and inferential knowledge.
These two knowledges with the preceeding make three knowledges: worldly, conventional knowledge, a knowledge of dharmas, and inferential knowledge. Among these,
11 3a. Conventional knowledge bears on all.
All the conditioned and unconditioned dharmas are the object of conventional knowledge.
3b-c. The knowledge of dharmas has for its object the Suffering, etc. , of Kamadhatu.
The knowledge of dharmas has Suffering, the Arising of Suffering, the Extinction of Suffering, and the Path leading to the Extinction of Suffering of Kamadhatu for its object.
The Knowledges 1089
? 1090 Chapter Seven
? ? -d. Inferential knowledge bears on Suffering, etc. , of the higher spheres.
Inferential knowledge has the Suffering, the Origin of Suffering. . . of Rupadhatu and Arupyadhatu for its object.
4a-b. When one takes into consideration the distinction of the Truths, these two knowledges, make up four knowl- edges.
Namely: the knowledge of Suffering (which includes the knowledge of the dharmas of Suffering and the inferential knowledge of Suffering), the knowledge of Origin, the knowledge of Extinction, and the knowledge of the Path, because these two knowledges have Suffering, its Origin, etc. , for their object.
4b-c. These two knowledges, fourfold, are termed the knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Ari- sing. 12
The knowledge of dharmas and inferential knowledge, which are as we have just seen fourfold by reason of their objects, are, among the Arhats, when they are not of the nature of Seeing,13 called the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
4d-5a. At the moment when they arise, they are inferential knowledges of Suffering and Origin.
The Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Ar- ising, at the moment when they first arise are, by their nature, inferential knowledge of Suffering and of its Origin in the higher
? spheres, because they have for their object the skandhas of 14 15
Bhavagra under the aspects of Suffering and Origin. These two knowledges therefore have the same object.
The Knowledge of Destruction follows Vajropamasamadhi (vi. 44d); and the Knowledge of Non-Arising follows the Knowledge of Destruction.
Does Vajropamasamadhi have the same object as these two knowledges at the moment of their arising?
When it has Suffering and Origin for its object, yes; when it has Extinction and the Path for its object, no.
5b. The knowledge of the mind of another follows from four.
The knowledge of the mind of another follows four knowl-
edges, a knowledge of the dharmas, inferential knowledge, a 16
knowledge of the Path, and conventional knowledge.
5c-d. It does not know a mind in a higher sphere, faculties,
17 personalities, nor the past and future.
A mind is superior either from the point of view of its bhilmi, from the point of view of its indriyas, or from the point of view of its personality.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a lower sphere does not know a mind in a higher sphere.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a saint with weak faculties, namely a Sraddhadhimukta or a Samayavimukta (vi. 31c), does not know the mind of a saint of strong faculties, namely a Drstiprapta or a Asamayavimukta.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a lower saint does not know the mind of a higher saint: in order, Anagamin, Arhat,
The Knowledges 1091
? 1092 Chapter Seven
Pratyekabuddha, Samyaksambuddha.
When the mind of another is either past or future, the knowledge of a mind of another does not know it, for this knowledge has a present mind for its object.
Does the mind of another avoid being in the sphere of the knowledge of the mind of another in other cases as well?
6a-b. The knowledge of dharmas and inferential knowl- edges do not know one another.
The knowledge of the mind of another, when it is by its nature a knowledge of dharmas, is not capable of knowing the mind of another which is by nature inferential knowledge; when it is inferential by nature, it is not capable of knowing the mind of another which is by nature a series of dharmas.
Why?
Because these two knowledges have for their object the dharmas which are opposed to Kamadhatu and to the higher spheres respectfully.
#**
There is no knowledge of the mind of another in the Path of Seeing. That is to say, an ascetic, while he cultivates the Path of Seeing, is not endowed with the knowledge of the mind of another, because the duration of the Path of Seeing is much reduced, and because the Seeing of the Truths is rapid. But the mind of another which is found in the Path of Seeing can be the object of the knowledge of the mind of another.
When one desires to know, through the knowledge of the mind of another, the mind of another which is found in the Path of Seeing, one cultivates a preparatory exercise:
18
? 6b-d. The Sravaka knows two moment of Seeing; the Pratyekabuddha, three; the Buddha, without preparation, all.
When a Sravaka cultivates the knowledge of the mind of
another in the desire to see the mind of an ascetic in the Path of
Seeing, he obtains some knowing of the first two moments, the
Patience of the Knowledge of the dharmas of Suffering and the 19
knowledge of dharmas -- but not the following moments (the Patience of the Inferential Knowledge of Suffering. . . )--because the knowledge of the inferential part (Suffering in the higher spheres) of the Path of Seeing supposes a different preparatory exercise. Thus, if this Sravaka then begins a new exercise in order to obtain the knowledge of the inferential part, the ascetic whom he examines has already arrived at the fifteenth moment when this new preparatory exercise [which lasts thirteen moments] is finished. The whole interval between the twelfth and the sixteenth moment therefore is not in the sphere of the knowledge of the mind of another of the Sravaka (Vibhdsd, TD 27, p. 515c7).
In the same circumstances, the Pratyekabuddha knows three moments, namely the first two and the eighth; because the required preparatory exercise, after the consciousness of the first two moments, for the knowledge of the inferential part, is, among the Pratyekabuddhas, weak.
According to other masters, he knows the first two moments
20 and the fifteenth.
The Buddha, through simple desire, and without preparatory exercise, knows the mind of another in all the moments of the Path of Seeing.
***
What are the characteristics of the Knowledge of Destruction
The Knowledges 1093
? and of
the Knowledge of Non-Arising?
7. The knowledge of destruction is, with respect to the Truths, the certitude that they are known, abandoned, etc. ; the knowledge of non-arising is the certitude that they are
21 no longer to be known, to be abandoned, etc.
22
Chapter Seven
"What is the knowledge of extinction? When one knows within himself that 'Suffering is completely known by me, its Origin is abandoned by me, its Extinction has been actualized by me, the Path has been cultivated
According to the MulaSastra,
23
by me/ then the knowledge which results from this {tad updddya 24
yaj jndnam), the seeing, the knowing, the intuition, the 25
intelligence, the discernment, the clarity, the insight, is what is called the Knowledge of Destruction. " "What is the Knowledge of Non-Arising? When one knows within himself that 'Suffering is completely known by me and is no longer to be known. . . the Path is no longer to be cultivated', then this knowledge. . . is what is called the Knowledge of Non-Arising. " [See the definition vii. 12a-b. ]
###
But how can one, through a pure knowledge, have such a
26 knowledge?
The Masters of KaSmir explain: Two conventional knowledges
are consecutive to two pure knowledges: "Suffering is known by
me. . . ; Suffering is known by me and is no longer to be known. " It is
by reason of the characteristic of these two conventional knowl-
edges that the Sustra defines the two pure knowledges. [This is
27
why the Sastra says: tad updddya. . . ] 28
According to other masters, the ascetic knows, through a pure knowledge, that he knows Suffering, etc.
? But we have said that the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising are not seeing, or views. How can the Sustra define them as views?
29 The Sastra employs the term "view" through stylistic habit,
using again the formula employed in the definition of the other knowledges (the knowledge of Suffering,etc). Or rather, by reason of their characteristic of being directly perceived, these two knowledges are qualified as seeing. It is by reason of this
30 characteristic of being directly perceived that it says in the Sastra,
31 "Knowledge is seeing. "
***
There are ten knowledges: a knowledge of dharmas, inferential
knowledge, worldly, conventional knowledge, the knowledge of
the mind of another, the knowledge of Suffering, the knowledge of
Origin, the knowledge of Extinction, the knowledge of the Path,
the Knowledge of Destruction, and the Knowledge of Non-Ari-
32 sing.
33 How are they included in one another?
1. Conventional knowledge is made up of one knowledge,
namely the conventional knowledge, and one part of another
knowledge [namely the impure part of the knowledge of the mind
34 of another].
2. A knowledge of dharrnas is made up of one full knowledge and one part of seven other knowledges, namely the Kdmadhdtu part of the knowledge of suffering, of origin, of extinction, and of the Path, the knowledge of the mind of another, the Knowledge of Destruction, and the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
3. So too inferential knowledge, by replacing "the Kumadhatu
The Knowledges 1095
? 1096 Chapter Seven
part" with "the part relating to the two higher spheres (=Rupad- hatu and Arupyadhatu). "
4. The knowledge of suffering is made up of one knowledge and one part of four other knowledges--that part of the knowl- edge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising which have the Truth of Suffering for their objects.
5-6. The knowledge of origin and of extinction are explained according to the same principle.
7. A knowledge of the Path is made up of one knowledge and one part of five knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the Knowledge of Destruction, the knowledge of Non-Arising, and the knowledge of the mind of another.
8. The knowledge of the mind of another is made up of one knowledge and one part of four knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, a knowledge of the Path, and conventional knowledge.
9. The Knowledge of Destruction is made up of one knowledge and one part of six knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the knowledge of suffering, of origin, of
35 extinction, and of the Path.
10. So too the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
How are the knowledges, which are twofold (pure and impure) distributed into ten knowledges?
8. The knowledges are ten in number; the distinction is established by reason of their nature, their opposition, their aspect, their aspect and their object, their preparatory exercises, the achievement of their task, and the extension of their cause.
1. By reason of its nature, there is conventional knowledge,
36 because it is not absolute knowledge.
?
II. Title.
Copyright (C) 1991 by Asian Humanities Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the written permission of Asian Humanities Press except for brief passages quoted in a review.
2. Abhidharma.
I. La Vallee Poussin,
87-71231 AACR 2 MARC
? Translator's Introduction
A his volume is the fourth and the last volume of an English translation of Louis de La Valle'e Poussin's French translation of Vasubandhu's Abhidharmakosabhdsyam. This volume contains translations of Chapter VII ("The Knowledges \jndna~nirdesa), Chapter VIII ("The Absorptions", samdpatti-nirdefa), and Chapter IX ("Refutation of the Pudgala\ pudgala-pratisedha). This volume also contains a full Index to the text of the Kosabhdsyam, as well as to significant entries in the Footnotes to the various Chapters.
Chapter VII deals with the type and nature of the Knowledges, and how they differ from the Patiences and from Seeing; with the characteristics and aspects of the Ten Knowledges; how the knowledge of the mind of another takes place; the differences between a defiled mind and a good or concentrated mind; the role of emptiness and non-self in the Knowledges; the Path of Meditation; the qualities and powers that accompany the Knowledge of Destruction, and related to this, the powers and assurances of a Buddha; the difference between (ordinary) compassion and the great compassion of a Buddha; the nature of the Buddha's knowledge, his methods of conversion, and his supernormal powers (rddhi).
Chapter VIII is concerned with dhydna both as a state of absorption, and as states of existence in the realms of Rupadhatu and Arupyadhatu. This Chapter discusses dhydna versus samddhi; whether mpa or physical matter exists in Arupyadhatu; the origin of physical matter from the mind; the component parts of each dhydna; the role of happiness in the Third Dhyana; the role and nature of faith; which absorption can arise after which absorption; the mental object of the absorptions; the prefatory or threshhold absorptions (sdmantakas), and the prefatory absorptions as contrasted with dhydndntara. The nature of samddhi is discussed with reference to its containing vitarka and/or vicara; discussed also are the absorptions of emptiness, the absorption of the absence of characteristics, and the absorption of the absence of intention; the types of samddhi; the Four Immeasurables
? (called in other traditions the Four Brahmavihuras); and details how a beginner should cultivate the visualization of goodwill. This Chapter concludes with a short discussion on how long the Saddharma will last, and the definition of the Saddharma as consisting of agama (the teaching) and adhigama (its cultivation and realization). Three Karikas then conclude the basic text of the A bhidharmakoiabhdsyam.
Chapter IX has long been regarded as an appendix to the Abhidharmakosabhdsyam9 since the text of the Ninth Chapter contains no Karikas, and its presentation is devoted to a single theme, that of refuting the idea of a pudgala or soul. Since this Chapter is quoted or referred to twice (pages 650, 818) in th? text of the KoSabhdsyam, this work was evidently known to the author of the Kos'abhdsyam, and so was perhaps composed prior to Vasubandhu's composition of the Kosabhdsyam (as was perhaps his Karmasiddhi-prakarana) to answer objections to the non-soul teaching of the Buddhists.
This Chapter is concerned with refuting the soul (here pudgala) theories of one sect of Hinayana Buddhism, the Vatsiputriyas (also identified with Sammatiyas); later in the Chapter the author refutes the theories of the Vai? esikas, one of the orthodox schools of Hindu Philosophy. In this Chapter, Vasubandhu concerns himself with explaining memory and recognition: how does one account for memory and recognition in the absence of an unchanging substratum to human experience? The existence of such a substratum becomes the concern of the Yogacara school of Mahayana Buddhism.
I should like to thank Mr. Ken Johnson for his unstinting work on the Index of the Abhidharmako/abhdsyam; he has done a fine job of serving on numerous occasions as my editor and advisor.
Much remains to be done in Kosabhdsyam studies. At present the Bangladeshi Bhikkhu, Ven. Lokananda, and I are working on publishing a Romanized edition of the text of the Kosabhdsyam, and in the compilation of a dictionary to the Sanskrit text of the work. It would be a great source of joy to see an eventual translation of YaSomitra's commentary on the Kosabhdsyam, his Sphutdrtha-abhidharmakofa-vydkhyd, a work quoted liberally in de
? La Valine Poussin's Footnotes. It will also be necessary someday to investigate the filiation of Vasubandhu's thought into that of the Mahayuna, a task already carried out in many of Kyokuga Saeki's Footnotes to his edition of the Kusharon, his Kando-bon Kusharon.
Leo M. Pruden.
? I. ? .
Chapter Seven: The Knowledges
The Relationship Between the Patiences,
the Knowledges, and Seeing 1087
The Characteristics of the Ten Knowledges 1088
A. The Ten Knowledges 1088 1. Pure and Impure Knowledge 1089 2. Conventional Knowledge 1089 3. The Knowledge of the Mind of Another 1091
B. The Knowledge of Destruction and the
Knowledge of Non-Arising 1093
1. How Are They Obtained 1094
2. How Are They Views 1095
? How Are There Ten Knowledges? 1095 D. A Knowledge of the Dharmas and Inferential
Knowledge: Their Influence on Various Spheres. 1097
The Aspeas of Ten Knowledges 1098
A. The Different Aspeas of the Ten Knowledges 1098
B. Pure Knowledge and the Sixteen Aspeas 1099
1. Discussion: What is Saraga Mind? 1100
? The Sixteen Aspeas 1108
The Ten Knowledges: An Analysis 1117
A. Their Natures, Spheres; the Persons 1117
B. The Ten Knowledgfes and the Four
Foundations of Mindfulness 1119
? The Spheres of the Ten Knowledges 1120
1. The Ten Knowledges Are Conditioned
by Which Knowledge? 1120
2. The Spheres of the Ten Knowledges 1121
3. The Sphere of Conventional Knowledge 1121 D. The Ten Knowledges and the Ascetics
? .
IV.
CONTENTS
Cultivation 1122
? E. The Ten Knowledges as Innate or
Cultivated Knowledge 1124
1. The Ten Knowledges on the Path of Seeing 1124 2. The Ten Knowledges on the Path of
Meditation 1128 3. The Ten Knowledges in the Stage
oftheA&uksa 1133 4. The Ten Knowledges in Other Stages 1134 a. Qualities of the Ten Knowledges 1134
5. Innate and Cultivated Pure and Impure
Dharmas; the Meaning of Cultivation 1135 6. The Four Types of Cultivation 1135
a. Six Types of Cultivation:
the Vaibhasikas of the West 1136
b. Refutation: the Vaibhasikas of KaSmlr 1136 The Eighteen Qualities Unique to a Buddha 1136
A. B.
? D. E. F. G.
What are the Eighteen Qualities? 1136 The Ten Powers 1137 1. The Power of the Buddha s Mind 1137 2. The Power of the Buddhas Body 1139 a. Definition of Terms 1140 The Four Absence of Fear 1141 The Three Foundations of Mindfulness 1142 Great Compassion 1143 Do the Buddhas Resemble One Another 1145 The Threefold Perfection of the Tathagatas 1146
Qualities the Buddhas Have in Common with
Ordinary Persons and with Saints 1148
A. B.
General Remarks 1148 Qualities the Buddhas Have in Common
with Saints 1148
1. The Samadhi Absence of Contention 1150 2. The Knowledge Resulting from Resolution 1150
a. Does this Knowledge Exist in Ampyadhatu? : Opinion of the
Vaibhasikas 1151
? 3. The Four Unhindered Knowledges 1151 a. A Variant Order 1154 b. Various Opinions 1154
4. The Fourth Dhyana as Pruntakotika Dhyana 1155 Qualities the Buddhas, Saints, and
Ordinary Persons Have in Common 1157
1. The Six Supernormal Knowledges 1157 a. Discussion: Do These Six
Supernormal Knowledges Exist in
Nonmaterial Spheres 1159 b. How Are the Supernormal
Knowledges Obtained? 1161 ? Moral Quality of the
Supernormal Knowledges 1163 2. The Three Asaiksa Wisdom 1164 3. The Three Methods of Conversion 1166 4. The Meaning of Rddhi 1168 5. The Results of Rddhi 1168
a. Displacement 1168 b. Creation: The Mind Capable of
Creating Fictive Beings 1170 6. Empowerment 1173 7. A Variant List of Rddhi 1176 8. Divine Sight and Divine Hearing 1176 9. Is Rddhi Innate 1178
Footnotes 1181 Chapter Eight: The Absorptions
General Introduction 1215
A. The Four Dhyanas 1215 1. Application of the Mind on a Single Objea 1216 2. Definition of Dhyuna 1217
3. The Moral Value of Dhyana 1218
4. Characteristics of the Four Dhyanas 1218
B. The Four Arupyas 1219 Discussion: Is there mpa in Arupyadhatu? 1220
? 1. The Names of the Four Arupyas 1226
2. The Parts of the Pure Dhyanas 1227 a. Happiness 1231 b. Faith 1236 ? Joy 1237
3. The Parts of Defiled Dhyana 1238 a. Disturbed Dhyuna 1239 b. Vedana in the Dhyanas 1239
? Eye Consciousness in the Dhyanas 1240
4. Acquisition of the Absorptions 1241
5. What Absorption Arises After
What Absorption? 1244 a. Reciprocal Generation of the Absorptions 1248 b. What Beings Manifest How
Many Absorptions 1250
6. The Objects of the Absorptions 1251
7. Which Absorptions Destroy
the Defilements? 1252
8. The Prefatory Absorptions 1253
a. Differences Between the Prefatory
Absorptions and the Intermediate Dhyana 1254
i. The Categories of
Intermediate Dhyana 1255
9. The Three Samadhis 1256
a. Their Moral Value 1258
10. The Four Cultivations of Absorption 1262
11. The Immeasurables 1264 a. Definition 1265
b. Their Objects 1265
? The Spheres in Which They
Are Produced 1267
i. How the Beginner Cultivates
Goodwill 1269
12. The Deliverances 1271
a. In Arapyadhatu 1271
b. The Absorption of Extinction 1273
? Their Objects 1274
? d The Deliverances and the
Third Dhyana 1275
13. The Dominent Ayatanas 1276
14. The All-Encompassing Ayatanas 1277
15. How an Absorption Arises 1279
II. (including Remarks 1281
A. The Nature of the Good Law 1281 1, Its Duration 1281
B. This Present Treatise 1282
? Concluding Stanzas 1282
Footnotes
1283
Chapter EX: Refutation of the pudgala
I. General Statements 1313
II. Refutation of the Vatslputrlya Theories 1314
A. Refutations from Reasoning 1314 1. The Provisional Existence of the Pudgala 1315
a. Discussion: The Relationship of
Fire and Fuel 1315
2. The Pudgala as the Totality of the Skandhas 1318
3. The Support of the Pudgala 1318
4. The Pudgala as Cognized by the Vijnuna 1318
B. Refutations from Scripture 1321 1, Synonyms 1324 2. Scriptural Quotations 1324
a. Discussion: The Authority of Texts 1324 ? Refutation of Vatslputrlya Arguments 1326 1. "In the past, I was. . . " 1327
a. Discussion: The Omniscience of
the Buddha 1327
2. The Bearer of the Burden 1328
3. Apparitional Beings 1330
4. A Single Self or Soul 1330
5. Unanswerable Questions 1332
? 6. A False Opinion 1336
7. A Subject that Transmigrates 1337
8. "Then I was. . . " 1337
9. Three Wrong Beliefs 1338
10. Memory and Recognition 1339
a. Definition of Memory 1339
b. To Whom Does Memory Belong? 1341
? . Refutation of the Soul Theory of the Grammarians 1342
A.
General Arguments and their Refutation 1342
B. Specific Refutations 1342
1. What Does it Signify to Say "A Person
Walks"? 1342
2. How Consciousness Knows an Object 1343
3. The Non-determined Sequence of Consciousnesses 1344
4. Conclusion 1345
IV. Refutation of the Soul Theories of the Vaisesikas 1346 A. General Arguments and their Refutations 1346 B. Specific Refutations 1346
1. 2.
3. 4.
5. Preliminary Notes
Footnotes Index
A Substrate 1348 The Result of Action 1349 a. Cause of the Idea of "I" 1350 b. Definition of Pleasure and Pain 1350 ? Who Has Pain or Pleasure? 1350 d. The Agent of Action 1351 e. Past Causes and Future Results 1352
Cause and Result in Non-Human Life: A
Seed and Its Fruit 1352 A Retributive Result versus an
Out-flowing Result 1354
a. Discussion: Why a New
Retribution is not Generated
from the Retributive Result 1354
Concluding Statements 1355 1356
? ? 1381
? CHAPTER SEVEN
The Knowledges1
? m. Homage to the Buddha.
We have spoken of the ksantis or Patiences (vi. 25d) and of the
jndnas or Knowledges (vi. 26b), of samyagdrsti or Right Views (vi. 50c) and of samyagjndna or Right Knowledge (vi. 76c). Are the Patiences actually Knowledges, and isn't Right Knowledge identical to Right Views?
la. The pure Patiences are not a type of Knowledge. 2
The eight types of pure Patience which form part of the Path of Seeing (dbhisamaydntika, vi. 25d-26c) are not, by their nature, knowledge;3 for, at the moment of patience, the defilement of doubt, which each Patience abandons, is not already abandoned. But Knowledge is certain: it is produced when doubt is abandoned These eight types of Patience are Seeing, because, by their nature, they are examination. 4 In opposition to the pure Patiences which are Seeing and are not Knowledge,
lb. The prajnd of destruction and of non-arising is not seeing. 5
The knowledge of destruction (ksayajndna) and the knowledge of Non-Arising {anutpadajrlana, vi. 67a-b)--when they constitute Bodhi--are not Seeing, because they do not include examination, and because the intention of inquiry is not in them. 6
? 1088 Chapter Seven
lc. All other pure prajnd is both one and the other.
Besides the Patiences and the two Knowledges named above, pure prajnd is at one and the same time both seeing and knowledge, for it includes examination, and is therefore seeing; it is free from doubt, and is therefore knowledge. This refers to the eight abhtsamaya knowledges (duhkhe jridna, etc. , vi. 26) [and also to all prajnd of the pure Path of Meditation up to the Knowledge of Extinction].
Id. All other prajfid is knowledge.
All other prajnd which is not pure, but worldly or impure [i. e. , prajnd associated with the five sense consciousnesses,etc, and prajnd associated with the mental consciousness].
le. Six are also seeing.
Six impure prajnds are at one and the same time knowledge and seeing, namely the mental prajnd associated with the five defilements which are views by nature {satkayadrsti, etc. , v7) and, sixth, good prajnd, which is right worldly views (laukiki sam-
yagdrsti, i. 4l).
***
7
How many knowledges are there? There are ten; but, in short
there are only two:
2a. Knowledge is pure or impure.
All the Knowledges are subsumed into two types of knowledge,
? impure or worldly knowledge, and pure or supermundane knowledge. Of these two knowledges,
8 2b. The first is called conventional.
Impure Knowledge is called "knowledge conforming to worldly conventions. "
Why?
Because from usage it bears on (dlambate) things which exist 9
conventionally: a jug, clothing, male, female, etc. [We say "from usage," because it also bears on the real characteristics of things, unique characteristics and common characteristics, vii. 10b].
2c-d. Pure knowledge is of two types, a knowledge of 10
dharmas and inferential knowledge.
These two knowledges with the preceeding make three knowledges: worldly, conventional knowledge, a knowledge of dharmas, and inferential knowledge. Among these,
11 3a. Conventional knowledge bears on all.
All the conditioned and unconditioned dharmas are the object of conventional knowledge.
3b-c. The knowledge of dharmas has for its object the Suffering, etc. , of Kamadhatu.
The knowledge of dharmas has Suffering, the Arising of Suffering, the Extinction of Suffering, and the Path leading to the Extinction of Suffering of Kamadhatu for its object.
The Knowledges 1089
? 1090 Chapter Seven
? ? -d. Inferential knowledge bears on Suffering, etc. , of the higher spheres.
Inferential knowledge has the Suffering, the Origin of Suffering. . . of Rupadhatu and Arupyadhatu for its object.
4a-b. When one takes into consideration the distinction of the Truths, these two knowledges, make up four knowl- edges.
Namely: the knowledge of Suffering (which includes the knowledge of the dharmas of Suffering and the inferential knowledge of Suffering), the knowledge of Origin, the knowledge of Extinction, and the knowledge of the Path, because these two knowledges have Suffering, its Origin, etc. , for their object.
4b-c. These two knowledges, fourfold, are termed the knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Ari- sing. 12
The knowledge of dharmas and inferential knowledge, which are as we have just seen fourfold by reason of their objects, are, among the Arhats, when they are not of the nature of Seeing,13 called the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
4d-5a. At the moment when they arise, they are inferential knowledges of Suffering and Origin.
The Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Ar- ising, at the moment when they first arise are, by their nature, inferential knowledge of Suffering and of its Origin in the higher
? spheres, because they have for their object the skandhas of 14 15
Bhavagra under the aspects of Suffering and Origin. These two knowledges therefore have the same object.
The Knowledge of Destruction follows Vajropamasamadhi (vi. 44d); and the Knowledge of Non-Arising follows the Knowledge of Destruction.
Does Vajropamasamadhi have the same object as these two knowledges at the moment of their arising?
When it has Suffering and Origin for its object, yes; when it has Extinction and the Path for its object, no.
5b. The knowledge of the mind of another follows from four.
The knowledge of the mind of another follows four knowl-
edges, a knowledge of the dharmas, inferential knowledge, a 16
knowledge of the Path, and conventional knowledge.
5c-d. It does not know a mind in a higher sphere, faculties,
17 personalities, nor the past and future.
A mind is superior either from the point of view of its bhilmi, from the point of view of its indriyas, or from the point of view of its personality.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a lower sphere does not know a mind in a higher sphere.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a saint with weak faculties, namely a Sraddhadhimukta or a Samayavimukta (vi. 31c), does not know the mind of a saint of strong faculties, namely a Drstiprapta or a Asamayavimukta.
The knowledge of the mind of another of a lower saint does not know the mind of a higher saint: in order, Anagamin, Arhat,
The Knowledges 1091
? 1092 Chapter Seven
Pratyekabuddha, Samyaksambuddha.
When the mind of another is either past or future, the knowledge of a mind of another does not know it, for this knowledge has a present mind for its object.
Does the mind of another avoid being in the sphere of the knowledge of the mind of another in other cases as well?
6a-b. The knowledge of dharmas and inferential knowl- edges do not know one another.
The knowledge of the mind of another, when it is by its nature a knowledge of dharmas, is not capable of knowing the mind of another which is by nature inferential knowledge; when it is inferential by nature, it is not capable of knowing the mind of another which is by nature a series of dharmas.
Why?
Because these two knowledges have for their object the dharmas which are opposed to Kamadhatu and to the higher spheres respectfully.
#**
There is no knowledge of the mind of another in the Path of Seeing. That is to say, an ascetic, while he cultivates the Path of Seeing, is not endowed with the knowledge of the mind of another, because the duration of the Path of Seeing is much reduced, and because the Seeing of the Truths is rapid. But the mind of another which is found in the Path of Seeing can be the object of the knowledge of the mind of another.
When one desires to know, through the knowledge of the mind of another, the mind of another which is found in the Path of Seeing, one cultivates a preparatory exercise:
18
? 6b-d. The Sravaka knows two moment of Seeing; the Pratyekabuddha, three; the Buddha, without preparation, all.
When a Sravaka cultivates the knowledge of the mind of
another in the desire to see the mind of an ascetic in the Path of
Seeing, he obtains some knowing of the first two moments, the
Patience of the Knowledge of the dharmas of Suffering and the 19
knowledge of dharmas -- but not the following moments (the Patience of the Inferential Knowledge of Suffering. . . )--because the knowledge of the inferential part (Suffering in the higher spheres) of the Path of Seeing supposes a different preparatory exercise. Thus, if this Sravaka then begins a new exercise in order to obtain the knowledge of the inferential part, the ascetic whom he examines has already arrived at the fifteenth moment when this new preparatory exercise [which lasts thirteen moments] is finished. The whole interval between the twelfth and the sixteenth moment therefore is not in the sphere of the knowledge of the mind of another of the Sravaka (Vibhdsd, TD 27, p. 515c7).
In the same circumstances, the Pratyekabuddha knows three moments, namely the first two and the eighth; because the required preparatory exercise, after the consciousness of the first two moments, for the knowledge of the inferential part, is, among the Pratyekabuddhas, weak.
According to other masters, he knows the first two moments
20 and the fifteenth.
The Buddha, through simple desire, and without preparatory exercise, knows the mind of another in all the moments of the Path of Seeing.
***
What are the characteristics of the Knowledge of Destruction
The Knowledges 1093
? and of
the Knowledge of Non-Arising?
7. The knowledge of destruction is, with respect to the Truths, the certitude that they are known, abandoned, etc. ; the knowledge of non-arising is the certitude that they are
21 no longer to be known, to be abandoned, etc.
22
Chapter Seven
"What is the knowledge of extinction? When one knows within himself that 'Suffering is completely known by me, its Origin is abandoned by me, its Extinction has been actualized by me, the Path has been cultivated
According to the MulaSastra,
23
by me/ then the knowledge which results from this {tad updddya 24
yaj jndnam), the seeing, the knowing, the intuition, the 25
intelligence, the discernment, the clarity, the insight, is what is called the Knowledge of Destruction. " "What is the Knowledge of Non-Arising? When one knows within himself that 'Suffering is completely known by me and is no longer to be known. . . the Path is no longer to be cultivated', then this knowledge. . . is what is called the Knowledge of Non-Arising. " [See the definition vii. 12a-b. ]
###
But how can one, through a pure knowledge, have such a
26 knowledge?
The Masters of KaSmir explain: Two conventional knowledges
are consecutive to two pure knowledges: "Suffering is known by
me. . . ; Suffering is known by me and is no longer to be known. " It is
by reason of the characteristic of these two conventional knowl-
edges that the Sustra defines the two pure knowledges. [This is
27
why the Sastra says: tad updddya. . . ] 28
According to other masters, the ascetic knows, through a pure knowledge, that he knows Suffering, etc.
? But we have said that the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising are not seeing, or views. How can the Sustra define them as views?
29 The Sastra employs the term "view" through stylistic habit,
using again the formula employed in the definition of the other knowledges (the knowledge of Suffering,etc). Or rather, by reason of their characteristic of being directly perceived, these two knowledges are qualified as seeing. It is by reason of this
30 characteristic of being directly perceived that it says in the Sastra,
31 "Knowledge is seeing. "
***
There are ten knowledges: a knowledge of dharmas, inferential
knowledge, worldly, conventional knowledge, the knowledge of
the mind of another, the knowledge of Suffering, the knowledge of
Origin, the knowledge of Extinction, the knowledge of the Path,
the Knowledge of Destruction, and the Knowledge of Non-Ari-
32 sing.
33 How are they included in one another?
1. Conventional knowledge is made up of one knowledge,
namely the conventional knowledge, and one part of another
knowledge [namely the impure part of the knowledge of the mind
34 of another].
2. A knowledge of dharrnas is made up of one full knowledge and one part of seven other knowledges, namely the Kdmadhdtu part of the knowledge of suffering, of origin, of extinction, and of the Path, the knowledge of the mind of another, the Knowledge of Destruction, and the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
3. So too inferential knowledge, by replacing "the Kumadhatu
The Knowledges 1095
? 1096 Chapter Seven
part" with "the part relating to the two higher spheres (=Rupad- hatu and Arupyadhatu). "
4. The knowledge of suffering is made up of one knowledge and one part of four other knowledges--that part of the knowl- edge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the Knowledge of Destruction and the Knowledge of Non-Arising which have the Truth of Suffering for their objects.
5-6. The knowledge of origin and of extinction are explained according to the same principle.
7. A knowledge of the Path is made up of one knowledge and one part of five knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the Knowledge of Destruction, the knowledge of Non-Arising, and the knowledge of the mind of another.
8. The knowledge of the mind of another is made up of one knowledge and one part of four knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, a knowledge of the Path, and conventional knowledge.
9. The Knowledge of Destruction is made up of one knowledge and one part of six knowledges: the knowledge of dharmas, inferential knowledge, the knowledge of suffering, of origin, of
35 extinction, and of the Path.
10. So too the Knowledge of Non-Arising.
How are the knowledges, which are twofold (pure and impure) distributed into ten knowledges?
8. The knowledges are ten in number; the distinction is established by reason of their nature, their opposition, their aspect, their aspect and their object, their preparatory exercises, the achievement of their task, and the extension of their cause.
1. By reason of its nature, there is conventional knowledge,
36 because it is not absolute knowledge.
?
