Embodied Transcendence: The Buddha’s Body in the Pāli Nikāyas
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Buddha’s Perfect Body
When he walks, the honorable Gotama steps with his right foot first; he does not raise his foot too far and does not place it too near; he does not walk too fast or too slowly; he walks without knocking his knees against each other or knocking his ankles against each other. When he walks, he does not turn his thighs up or down, or twist them this way or that. When he walks, he instigates movement only with the lower part of his body. He walks without exerting any bodily force.18
“the common association of good posture with poise—that is, mental and emotional tranquility—is in fact an excellent criterion of good posture. Neither excessive muscular tension nor emotional intensity is compatible with good posture. Good posture means acting fast without a hurry; hurry means generally heightened activity that results not in faster action, but only in increased muscular contraction. Good posture means using all the power one possesses without enacting any parasitic movements.”
When the honorable Gotama looks,20 he does so with his whole body; he does not look up or down; he does not walk looking about, and keeps his gaze a plow-length ahead. Beyond that he has unveiled knowledge and vision.When he enters a house, he does not bend his body up or down, or twist it this way or that; he does not turn too near or too far from his seat; he does not sit while leaning his hands on his seat, and he does not throw his body down on the seat.Sitting indoors, the recluse does not toy with his hands or feet; he does not sit placing one knee upon the other, nor does he place one ankle on the other. He does not sit leaning his jaw on his hand. When seated indoors, the recluse is not afraid; he does not shake, tremble or worry. He has no fear, no shake or tremble, no worry, because he has lost all anxiety. The honorable Gotama sits indoors composed in seclusion.When he takes water for his bowl, he does not raise or lower the bowl, nor does he bend or twist it. He does not take too much or too little water for the bowl. He does not splash when he rinses the bowl; he does not turn it over and over; he does not place it on the floor to wash his hands, but as he washes his hands he washes the bowl, and as he washes the bowl he washes his hands; he throws out the water neither to far or to near from his seat, and he does not scatter it about.”21
3. The Body in Advanced Meditation
For him who abides diligent, ardent and resolute, the thoughts and memories that are based on the household life fade away. After their fading away, his mind settles inwardly, calms down, unifies and concentrates. In this way too, monks, a monk develops mindfulness directed to the body.34
He drenches, suffuses, fills, and pervades this very body (imam eva kāyaṃ) with joy and bliss born of seclusion, so that there is nothing in his whole body (sabbāvato kāyassa) that is untouched (apphutaṃ) by joy and bliss born of seclusion.38
Monks, just as a skilled washer or a washer’s apprentice would spread soap-powder on a bronze dish, and sprinkling it more and more with water, mixes it so that [he shapes] a ball of soap filled with moisture (sneha40, suffused with moisture, pervaded by moisture inside and outside, without trickling, so [he drenches… the body…].41
4. Body and Mind
5. Metaphysics of Embodiment—What Is a Body?
The robe of the reverend Gotama is not too long or too short; it does not stick to his body and is not too loose; the wind does not blow the reverend Gotama’s rope away from his body; and dust and dirt do not stick to the reverend Gotama’s body.82
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
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1 | That this approach continues to be influential, beyond many of the classic studies referred to below, can be seen is such studies as Anālayo (2012, p. 307), who emphasizes “liberation of mind and liberation by wisdom”; see also in the recent, in-depth study of jhāna by Arbel (2017). |
2 | As in SN IV.15 (Discourse #24): “I will teach you a truth for the abandoning of everything… The eye should be abandoned… The ear… the body should be abandoned, bodily sensations should be abandoned, body-consciousness should be abandoned, body contact [the meeting of the body, the sensation and the consciousness] should be abandoned, feelings that arise dependent on body contact, whether pleasant, painful or neither pleasant nor painful, should be abandoned. sabbapahānāya vo bhikkhave dhammaṃ dessissāmi…cakkhuṃ, bhikkhave, pahātabbaṃ… sotaṃ pahātabbaṃ… kayo pahātabbo phoṭṭabbā pahātabbā kāyaviññāṇaṃ pahātabbaṃ kāyasamphassho pahātabbo yampidaṃ kāyasamphassapaccayā upajjati vedyitaṃ sukhaṃ vā dukkhaṃ vā adukkhamasukkhaṃ vā tampi pahātabbaṃ. All translations from Pāli are my own. Pāli sources are adapted from the editions of the Pāli Text Society and the Vipassanā Research Institute, and quoted according to the former’s page numbers. |
3 | As for example in the Aggivacchagotta-sutta of the Majjhima Nikāya (MN), in which the Buddha describes his liberation as being completely freed of the five aggregates, so that it cannot be said whether after his death he will be reborn, not-reborn, both or neither. He then offers the simile of the fire, which after being extinguished cannot be said to have gone in any of the four cardinal directions. This presentation also relates to the classic formulation that distinguishes between nibbāna with or without remainder (sa-upādi-sesa/nir-upādi-sesa), that is with or without the presence of the aggregates, as discussed by Harvey (1995, chp. 11). |
4 | As in the deep meditative state of saññā-vedayita-nirodha (“cessation of perception and feeling”), or in one of the four “formless attainments”, arūpya-samāpatti, that lead to it. See the description of these states in, e.g., the MN’s Anupada-sutta (no. 111), at MN III.27–28, and the discussion of nirodha in Harvey (1995, chp. 11). For an interpretation that emphasizes luminosity, see the concluding verses of the Kevaddha-sutta (DN 11, I.223), or the verses in Udāna 8.1 or 8.3., as well as the Discussion in Harvey (1995, chp. 12). |
5 | An apt example for the present case comes from Rita Gross’s classic Buddhism after Patriarchy (Gross 1993, pp. 159–60): “Egolessness is not a nihilistic condition nor the attainment of non-existence, as opposed to existence. It is not a vacuous state of non-perception and non-thinking… An egoless person is quite the opposite of a zombie. Rather, she is cheerful, calm, humorous, compassionate, empowered, and energized because she has dropped the burden of ego. She has found a sane, healthy, and mature way of being free within the world” (emphasis in the original). While I find much to commend in Gross’s study, including in her historical approach to early Buddhism (chp. 4), this perception of liberation overly simplifies the picture. |
6 | See notes 1–3 above. |
7 | As discussed in the Mahāvedalla-sutta (MN I.296–298). |
8 | As at DN II.70–71 and II.111–112. |
9 | E.g., MN III.77.20. |
10 | The paradigmatic formulation here is de La Vallée Poussin (1937); see further Schmithausen (1981); Gombrich (1996, chp. 4). For plurality of liberations, see further Ben-David (2017); Shulman (2017a). |
11 | Such an a approach characterizes classic studies such as Bronkhorst (1993); Vetter (1988), and most distinctively Schmithausen (1981). |
12 | I refer mainly to Collet’s own introduction and chapter 3, yet most of the other articles in the volume contribute to this discourse. |
13 | Radich (2007, pp. 17–18). In the present context I offer only a short summary of Radich’s expansive, complex, and quite fascinating discussion, focusing only on his arguments about early Buddhism… I also make no claim regarding the argument that is central to his thesis that there is no real evidence for origins of the concept of the dharmakāya in early Buddhism, and suspect that he is correct. |
14 | Issues of comparison with other extant versions of the early discourses may reveal interesting insights, but should not be thought to bring us closer to the historical realities of early Buddhism. Each textual tradition offers its own version(s) of discourses, which conform to local tastes and standards. Thus, we could read Chinese versions of Suttas in order to understand ideals of masculinity in early Chinese Buddhism, not in order to return to the days in which the texts were composed, supposedly before the schisms. See further Shulman (forthcoming, chp. 1). |
15 | See for example the manner in which the Buddha enters paribbājaka-assemblies is texts such as the Udumbarika-sutta (DN 25), or the Cūḷasakuludāyi-sutta (MN 79), or the manner in which he impresses Saccaka the Jain philosopher (see below) in the Cūḷasaccaka-sutta (MN 35, at MN I.233.35–36) with golden body. |
16 | |
17 | For an interesting demonstration, see the Migajāla-sutta (SN IV, no. 63), in which the Buddha defines one who “abides alone” (ekavihārī), and compares him to one who abides with another (sadutiya-vihārī), that is who has a wife (dutiyā). The first does not delight in the senses, so that even if his sits near a village surrounded by a many people, he is considered to be alone. The second delights in the senses so that “for him, desire is a wife; and for it, she has not been abandoned” (SN IV.36.29–30: taṇhā hissa dutiyā, sāssa apahīnā). |
18 | MN II. 137: gacchanto kho pana so bhavaṃ gotamo dakkhiṇeneva pādena paṭhamaṃ pakkamati. so nātidūre pādaṃ uddharati, nāccāsanne pādaṃ nikkhipati; so nātisīghaṃ gacchati, nātisaṇikaṃ gacchati; na ca adduvena adduvaṃ saṅghaṭṭento gacchati, na ca gopphakena gopphakaṃ saṅghaṭṭento gacchati. so gacchanto na satthiṃ unnāmeti, na satthiṃ onāmeti; na satthiṃ sannāmeti, na satthiṃ vināmeti. gaccha[n]to kho pana tassa bhoto gotamassa adharakāyova iñjati, na ca kāyabalena gacchati. |
19 | See especially Chapters 8 and 12. |
20 | Apaloketi. This refers to a special look that the Buddha uses, as he did when he gave Vesāli its last glance in the Mahāparinnibbāna-sutta (DN II.122). The commentary there refers to this as a ”Nāga glance”, which is a turning of the whole body that is afforded by the Buddha’s unique physiognomy, in which the bones (of the spine) seem not to touch each other. |
21 | MN II.137–138: gacchanto kho pana so bhavaṃ gotamo dakkhiṇeneva pādena paṭhamaṃ pakkamati. so nātidūre pādaṃ uddharati, nāccāsanne pādaṃ nikkhipati; so nātisīghaṃ gacchati, nātisaṇikaṃ gacchati; na ca adduvena adduvaṃ saṅghaṭṭento gacchati, na ca gopphakena gopphakaṃ saṅghaṭṭento gacchati. so gacchanto na satthiṃ unnāmeti, na satthiṃ onāmeti; na satthiṃ sannāmeti, na satthiṃ vināmeti. gacchato kho pana tassa bhoto gotamassa adharakāyova iñjati, na ca kāyabalena gacchati. apalokento kho pana so bhavaṃ gotamo sabbakāyeneva apaloketi; so na uddhaṃ ulloketi, na adho oloketi; na ca vipekkhamāno gacchati, yugamattañca pekkhati; tato cassa uttari anāvaṭaṃ ñāṇadassanaṃ bhavati. so antaragharaṃ pavisanto na kāyaṃ unnāmeti, na kāyaṃ onāmeti; na kāyaṃ sannāmeti, na kāyaṃ vināmeti. so nātidūre nāccāsanne āsanassa parivattati, na ca pāṇinā ālambitvā āsane nisīdati, na ca āsanasmiṃ kāyaṃ pakkhipati. so antaraghare nisinno samāno na hatthakukkuccaṃ āpajjati, na pādakukkuccaṃ āpajjati; na adduvena adduvaṃ āropetvā nisīdati; na ca gopphakena gopphakaṃ āropetvā nisīdati; na ca pāṇinā hanukaṃ upādiyitvā nisīdati. so antaraghare nisinno samāno na chambhati na kampati na vedhati na paritassati. so achambhī akampī avedhī aparitassī vigatalomahaṃso. vivekavatto ca so bhavaṃ gotamo antaraghare nisinno hoti.. so pattodakaṃ paṭiggaṇhanto na pattaṃ unnāmeti, na pattaṃ onāmeti; na pattaṃ sannāmeti, na pattaṃ vināmeti. so pattodakaṃ paṭiggaṇhāti nātithokaṃ nātibahuṃ. So na khulukhulukārakaṃ pattaṃ dhovati, na samparivattakaṃ pattaṃ dhovati, na pattaṃ bhūmiyaṃ nikkhipitvā hatthe dhovati; hatthesu dhotesu patto dhoto hoti, patte dhote hatthā dhotā honti. so pattodakaṃ chaḍḍeti nātidūre nāccāsanne, na ca vicchaḍḍayamāno. |
22 | Powers (2009) discusses the Brahmāyu shortly, referring mainly to Brahmāyu’s conversion experience following his encounter with the Buddha, which relies on the search for the marks of a great man (p. 15). Power does not discuss at length the more subtle passage we read above (see the short reference on p. 16). Notice the mistake he makes in note 87 on page 256, in which he confuses between the figures of the Brahmin teacher Brahmāyu and his student Uttara. The more elusive suggestions in relation to the underlying sexual allusions in the Brahmāyu, raised by Gummer (2020) are more compelling. |
23 | For an enlightening discussion of the relation between the body and morality in Buddhism, see Mrozik (2007, esp. chp. 4). |
24 | I speak here generically about a male practitioner, in accord with the emphasis of the literature, even though this is a normative position that probably does not reflect the state of things on the ground, in which there women who were adepts in meditation as well; See Sponberg (1992) and Gross (1993). |
25 | |
26 | |
27 | This is the third chapter of the fifth book of the SN, “The Great Book” (Mahā-vagga). Supposedly, this collection and others of its sort collect relatively short statements on mindfulness, which purport to have been uttered by the Buddha. More realistically, these are legitimate elaborations on the theme of mindfulness according relevant formulas. I intend to discuss this theme in future publications. |
28 | A prominent example would be the practice of jhāna, or the analysis according to the perspectives of non-self in relation to the aggregates, both prevalent themes in the literature; the first forms a central part of the KGSS, while analysis of the aggregates is alluded to in the Sati-paṭṭhāna-sutta (but not in its Chinese parallels). |
29 | Nikāya discourses have their subtle literary strategies to mark texts and themes as valuable; here, the Buddha interrupts a group of monks in their discussion after knowing of it through his supernatural hearing powers, as happens in such seminal texts as the Ariyapariyesanā-sutta (MN 26) or the Mahāpadāna-sutta (DN 14). See also the, Mahāyāna-like opening of the Ānāpāna-sati-sutta (MN 118), placed immediately before the KGSS and impacting its reading, in which the Buddha teaches a large, magnificent assembly on the night of the full moon. More generally, the last section of recitation in the MN, which includes its final 52 discourses, contains many discourses that can be seen as relatively late and mature formulations on meditation; see also MN 121 and 122. |
30 | MN III.89.8: kathaṃ bhāvitā can bhikkhave kāyagatā sati kathaṃ bahulīkatā mahapphalā hoti mahānisaṃsā? |
31 | MN III.89.10–12. |
32 | In assessing the early Buddhist textual tradition, I follow the approach developed in Shulman (forthcoming), which is sensitive to the literary, and more broadly to the creative, nature of the early discourses, so that these texts are no longer understood mainly as attempts to preserve the Buddha’s teachings. Authors and editors were continually composing and reshaping texts, as a legitimate practice within Buddha-vacana. In this sense I speak of a “mindfulness cycle” of texts, that is an array of texts that develop resonant themes, but which need not necessarily reduce to a systematic theoretical structure that has backing in the historical teachings of one individual. |
33 | |
34 | MN III.89.20–24: tassa evaṃ appamattassa ātāpino pahitatassa viharato ye te gehasitā sarasaṃkappā te pahīyanti, tesaṃ pahānā ajjhatam eva cittam santiṭṭhati sannisīdati ekodihoti samādhiyati. evaṃ pi bhikkhave bhikkhu kāyagataṃ satiṃ bhāveti. |
35 | For sake of clarity, I do not necessarily assume that the events described in the texts took place in the hearts and minds of real meditators; yet I do believe that they reflect practice to some degree, and at least express an idealised vision of it. |
36 | On the question of the relation between sati and jhāna see Kuan (2008, chp. 3), Shulman (2010, 2014, chp. 3.2). |
37 | MN III.92.23–25: puna ca paraṃ bhikkhave bhikkhu vivicc’eva kāmehi vivicca akusalehi dhammehi savitakkaṃ savicāraṃ vivekajaṃ pītisukhaṃ paṭḥamajhānaṃ upasampajja viharati. |
38 | MN III.92.25–28: so imam eva kāyaṃ vivekajena pītisukhena abhisandeti parisandeti paripūreti parippharati nāssa kiñci sabbāvato kāyassa vivekajena pītisukhena apphutaṃ hoti. |
39 | See further the corresponding emphases on this passage in Langenberg (2018, p. 7). |
40 | Sneha implies here both moisture and grease. |
41 | MN III.92.28–32: seyyathāpi, bhikkhave, dakkho napāpako vā nahāpakantevasī vā kaṅtathāle nahāniyacuṇṇāni ākiritvā udakena paripphosakaṃ paripphosakaṃ sanneyya, sā ‘ssa nahāniyapiṇḍī snehānugatā snehapperatā santarabāhirā phutā snehena, na ca paggharini, evam eva… |
42 | It is interesting to note in this respect the focus made by Cabezón (2017, pp. 223–26) on the jhānas being beyond sexual desire. |
43 | |
44 | MN III.92.12–15: so imam eva kāyaṃ parisuddhena cetasā pariyodātena pharitvā nisinno hoti, nāssa kiñci sabbāvato kāyassa parisuddhenacetasā pariyodatena apphutaṃ hoti. |
45 | Here is a place where issues of terminology and translation become particularly vexing. It is far from certain that there is a good correspondence between the modern mind and the Pāli manas, or between consciousness and citta, while the Indic traditions have a much broader set of concepts to describe these terms, including most prominently (in Pāli) viññāṇa, together with a set of terms form attention and awareness, such as sati and sampajāna, and yet more for knowledge and understanding, including ñāṇa, vijjā, abhiññā, pariññā, aññā. I use these terms with no theoretical precision here, and look forward to a study that will offer a sober consideration of their meanings, which seem to shift between contexts. Notice that mind, manas, is commonly counted as one of the six senses. |
46 | See classically in Bronkhorst (1993). |
47 | See above, p. 8. See further Shulman (2017c). This formula is reproduced in a slightly shortened version in a number of MN discourses, which perhaps due to the effort to shorten the text, do not include the similes and the reference to the body. These parts of the formulas do appear in two more MN texts aside from the KGSS, the Mahāssapūra-sutta (MN 39) and the Mahāsakuludāyi-sutta (MN 77), as well as in the Aṅguttara-nikāya’s Pañcaṅgika-sutta (V.28). Notice that classical presentations of the Buddha’s awakening in the MN as the Bhayabherava-sutta (MN 4) and the Mahāsaccaka-sutta (MN 36, discussed in the next section), do not include the reference to the body and keep the shorter version. This could be seen as a different interpretation of jhāna, but could also relate to textual considerations such as length of texts and issues of orality. |
48 | See also Arbel (2017, chp. 4). |
49 | See for instance in the Kāya-sutta, the second discourse of the Bojjhaṅga-saṃyutta (SN V.64), which states. “And what, monks, is the nutriment for the arising of the un-arisen tranquility limb of enlightenment, or for the development and fulfillment of the tranquility limb of enlightenment? There is, monks, tranquility of body and the tranquility of mind…” (SN V.66.22–24: ko ca, bhikkhave, āhāro anuppannassa vā passaddhisambojjhaṅgassa uppādāya, uppannassa vā passaddhisambojjhaṅgassa bhāvanāya pāripūriyā? atthi, bhikkhave, kāyapassaddhi, cittapassaddhi); for the discussion of the significance of the notion of “nutriment (ahāra) in the scheme of the bojjhaṅgas, see Gethin ([1992] 2001, pp. 175–77). The following Sīla-sutta says a little bit more. “The body of one who is filled with bliss (pīti) tranquilizes, and his mind tranquilizes as well” (SN V.27–28: pītimanassa kāyopi passambhati, cittampi passambhati). After explaining that this relates to the arising of the limb of enlightenment of tranquility, the text concludes that “for the joyful one whose body is tranquil, the mind enters concentration” (SN V.69.1–2: passaddhakāyassa sukhino cittaṃ samādhiyati). Notice that the PTS edition opts here for a variant reading—passaddhakāyassa sukhaṃ hoti. sukhino cittaṃ samādhiyati—that suggests that there were different understandings of this process within the tradition. |
50 | E.g., MN I.21.33. |
51 | E.g., MN I.33.34-35, or 479.5–6: ye te santā vimokkhā atikamma rūpe āruppā ten a kāyena phasitvā viharati. |
52 | See also the interesting passage from the Indriya-saṃyutta of the SN (V.230.18–19), which defines the practitioner who has gone beyond training (asekha) as one who in relation to the full capacity of the five faculties (indriya) “abides having touched them with the body and see having penetrated them with wisdom (kāyena ca phusitvā viharati paññāya ca ativijjha passati). |
53 | The best reading for this term is the parallel one, induced also by the commentaries, of antogatā. |
54 | MN III.92.22–23: yassa kassaci bhikkhave kāyagatā sati bhāvitā bahulīkatā antogadhā tassa kusalā dhamma ye keci vijjābhāgiyā. |
55 | The full quote of this enigmatic passage reads—MN III.96.16–19: yassa kassaci bhikkhave kāyagatā sati bhāvitā bahulīkatā so yassa yassa abhiññā-sacchakarayassa dhammasa cittaṃ abhininnāmeti abhiññāsacchikiriyāya tatra tatra eva sakkhibavyatam pāpuṇāti sati sati-āyatane. |
56 | khīnā jāti vusitaṃ brahmacariyaṃ kataṃ karanīyaṃ nāparam itthatayā’ti. |
57 | akuppā me vimutti, ayaṃ antimā jāti, natthi dāni punabbhāvoti. |
58 | See above, p. 2. |
59 | Mrozik (2007, p. 84): “The presence of seemingly contradictory body discourses in a single text is not uncommon in Buddhist literature.” |
60 | Another important related formulation is the interdependence between consciousness and “name and form” (nāma-rūpa) articulated by the Mahānidāna-sutta at DN II.62–63. |
61 | |
62 | See Gallagher and Zahavi (2008, chp. 2). |
63 | See Thompson (2017, esp. chp. 10), as well as Gallagher (2005). Thompson’s approach draws much from the neurophenomenological approach developed by Fransisco Varela (1996). |
64 | |
65 | This counterintuitive element is also apparent in Saccaka’s initial formulation, which has the practitioner who is undeveloped in body and mind only to have trouble dealing with painful feelings. Yet for him, suffering that results from bodily (sārīrika) pain results from a lack of development of mind, while suffering from mental (cetasika) anguish ensues from lack of bodily development. In Saccaka’s formulation, the problems are caused by the undeveloped side following the other and falling under its power. Thus, for example, “the body follows upon the mind and falls under its power (cittanvayo kāyo hoti cittassa vasena vattati), which results from the body being undeveloped (abhāvitattā kāyassa). |
66 | See MN.I.239–240. |
67 | Powers (2009, p. 43) mentions also the radical presentation of asceticism in Mahāsīhanāda-sutta (MN 12); this wild presentation is a good example of the confusion that arises when literary dimensions of texts remain unrecognized. The extreme practices it describes include having the Buddha walking on four and eating cow-dung or urinated upon while lying in a cemetery. None of this relates to any particular power or perfection, but is a literary elaboration on ascetic trials. |
68 | On the relation to other texts in the MN and the remarkable literary technique of the authors of the Sutta, best perceived at this point, see Shulman (forthcoming, chp. 6). |
69 | See the discussion of this text in relation to parallel versions, mainly in different Sanskritic works, in Anālayo (2011, pp. 232–46). These texts should, however, be treated as different versions of the story, so that the attempt for the one true original text pursued by scholars like Anālayo seems misguided. The attempt here is not merely at faithful transmission. |
70 | Perhaps the simplest solution to the perplexity is that the authors of the Mahāsaccaka misplaced the correct titles for the definition of development body and mind in the Buddha’s first formulation. Yet the text does seem to rely on a different understanding that he holds throughout, even if it is less convincing. |
71 | The emphasis on the parallel development of both body and mind fits with the similes the Buddha gives when he begins his final stage of practice. While Bodhi and Ñāṇamoli (1995, 1229n387) and Anālayo (2011, pp. 235–36) feel the simile is misplaced since they understand its message to be that austerities are unnecessary, this reading is an attempt to force the conventionalized themes of the Buddha’s life story on the Mahāsaccaka, which has a different focus of polemics with Jainism, thus aiming to show that the Buddha is master of both body and mind. The simile is of the ability to light a fire with wood that must be both dry and sapless, just as a practitioner must be secluded in both bodily and mental respects. See MN I.240–42, reading with VRI and Anālayo (2011, 235n152) kāyena ceva cittena ca. |
72 | For a valuable historical survey of an array of practices that relate to relics in Buddhism, see Skilling (2005); for remarkable examples of relic veneration in Buddhist traditions, see Seneviratne (1978), as well as Kieschnick (2005, chp. 1). |
73 | I emphasize that in this statement, or in ones that follow in this section, I do not intend there to be an essential dichotomy between body and mind; rather, I take these categories as phenomenologically and pre-theoretically clear enough to the tradition, while the overall patter is that mental attainment has an important physical manifestation, or that the two are interdependent. |
74 | |
75 | This idea fits well with Strong’s (2004) interpretation of relics as an extension of the Buddha’s biography. See also the ambiguous attempt by the authors of the Mahāparinibbāna-sutta, who wanted, at the very same time, to retain their Buddha as alive forever and as an impermanent being who dies like the rest of men; see further in Shulman (forthcoming, chp. 3). |
76 | We may question whether rūpīṃ must necessarily mean ‘material’, as it could also mean more generally ‘possessing form’; nevertheless, the overall description seems to take this as a regular body, as is confirmed by the commentary’s lack of elaboration and acceptance that this body possesses all limbs and faculties. |
77 | As Maneé (1990) argues in relation to the DN; and compare Grinshpon’s (2002, esp. chp. 3) attention to magical powers in the Yoga tradition. |
78 | DN I.77.6–10: so… manomayaṃ kāyaṃ abhinimmānāya cittaṃ abhinīharati abhininnāmeti. so imamhā kāyā aññaṃ kāyaṃ abhinimmināti rūpiṃ manomayaṃ sabbaṅgapaccaṅgiṃ ahīnindriyaṃ. |
79 | |
80 | |
81 | By using this term in this way I intend a theorization that relies on elements beyond the empirical, which are taken to be no less, and perhaps more, real than empirical knowledge. I prefer the term metaphysical to spiritual. |
82 | MN II.139.20–25: na ca tassa bhoto gotamassa kāye cīvaraṃ accukkaṭṭhaṃ hoti na ca accokkaṭṭhaṃ, na ca kāyasmiṃ allīnaṃ na ca kāyasmā apakaṭṭhaṃ; na ca tassa bhoto gotamassa kāyamhā vāto cīvaraṃ apavahati; na ca tassa bhoto gotamassa kāye rajojallaṃ upalimpati. |
83 | MN II.129.19–20: sukhumacchavi kho pana so bhavaṃ gotamo. sukhumattā chaviyā rajojallaṃ kāye na upalimpati. |
84 | I thank Amy Langenberg for illuminating remarks on an earlier version of this article, as well of the careful and insightful reading of the two anonymous reviewers assigned by the Journal. |
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Shulman, E. Embodied Transcendence: The Buddha’s Body in the Pāli Nikāyas. Religions 2021, 12, 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12030179
Shulman E. Embodied Transcendence: The Buddha’s Body in the Pāli Nikāyas. Religions. 2021; 12(3):179. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12030179
Chicago/Turabian StyleShulman, Eviatar. 2021. "Embodied Transcendence: The Buddha’s Body in the Pāli Nikāyas" Religions 12, no. 3: 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12030179
APA StyleShulman, E. (2021). Embodied Transcendence: The Buddha’s Body in the Pāli Nikāyas. Religions, 12(3), 179. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12030179