reflection wrote:Asking where ignorance comes from is like asking where the big bang comes from.
But ignorance basically is our not understanding the nature of things. Why don't we by nature see it? Good question, but the point is that ignorance is here now. We need to know how to deal with it, not to know where it comes from.
With metta.
steve19800 wrote:...there were many beings from higher realm whose bodies are made of light...
steve19800 wrote:It is said the cause of sufferings is ignorance, our mind/nature intrinsically is pure and luminous.
Buckwheat wrote:steve19800 wrote:It is said the cause of sufferings is ignorance, our mind/nature intrinsically is pure and luminous.
This is a Mahayana concept. In Theravada, the mind is not inherently this or that, it is just mind, often falling into greed, anger, and delusion. The Buddha didn't focus on origins. He focused on the way things are, causes and effects that are obervable and have an effect right here and now.
If you are worried about this idea: that nirvana might be impermanent, that once you finish the path there would still be some danger of falling back into dukkha, all I can say is the Buddha assured us not to worry about this. If you want to prove him wrong you'll have to find nibbana first (not that it's a thing to find - sorry for my poor choice of words).
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/ptf/dham ... bbana.html
""Luminous, monks, is the mind.[1] And it is defiled by incoming defilements." {I,v,9}
"Luminous, monks, is the mind. And it is freed from incoming defilements." {I,v,10}
"Luminous, monks, is the mind. And it is defiled by incoming defilements. The uninstructed run-of-the-mill person doesn't discern that as it actually is present, which is why I tell you that — for the uninstructed run-of-the-mill person — there is no development of the mind." {I,vi,1}
"Luminous, monks, is the mind. And it is freed from incoming defilements. The well-instructed disciple of the noble ones discerns that as it actually is present, which is why I tell you that — for the well-instructed disciple of the noble ones — there is development of the mind." {I,vi,2} http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka ... .than.html
seeker242 wrote:Are you sure that is specifically Mahayana, what about this "luminous mind"?
""Luminous, monks, is the mind.[1] And it is defiled by incoming defilements." {I,v,9}
"Luminous, monks, is the mind. And it is freed from incoming defilements." {I,v,10}
seeker242 wrote:AAs for the OP, I do not think the Buddha ever declared, if I remember correctly, the origin of the first instance of ignorance because doing so would not help put an end to it.
SN 22.100 wrote:"Monks, from an inconstruable beginning comes transmigration. A beginning point is not evident, although beings hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving are transmigrating & wandering on.
steve19800 wrote:reflection wrote:Asking where ignorance comes from is like asking where the big bang comes from.
But ignorance basically is our not understanding the nature of things. Why don't we by nature see it? Good question, but the point is that ignorance is here now. We need to know how to deal with it, not to know where it comes from.
With metta.
Let me re-phrase it, How come ignorance, defilements can arise from something that is Pure ?
I am a Buddhist, but I don't even know the answer to this question. It sounds to me like we are born in this realm because of transgression.
steve19800 wrote:Hi guys,
It is said the cause of sufferings is ignorance, our mind/nature intrinsically is pure and luminous. But why is ignorance even occur in the first place? From where does this ignorance come from?
A brahman once asked the Buddha, "Will all the world reach release [Awakening], or half the world, or a third?" But the Buddha didn't answer. Ven. Ananda, concerned that the brahman might misconstrue the Buddha's silence, took the man aside and gave him an analogy: Imagine a fortress with a single gate. A wise gatekeeper would walk around the fortress and not see an opening in the wall big enough for even a cat to slip through. Because he's wise, he would realize that his knowledge didn't tell him how many people would come into the fortress, but it did tell him that whoever came into the fortress would have to come in through the gate. In the same way, the Buddha didn't focus on how many people would reach Awakening but he did know that anyone who reached Awakening would have to follow the path he had found: abandoning the five hindrances, establishing the four frames of reference, and developing the seven factors for Awakening.
What's striking about the Buddha's knowledge is the implied "if": If people want to gain Awakening they will have to follow this path, but the choice as to whether they want Awakening is theirs. The Buddha's knowledge of the future didn't mean that the future was preordained, for people are free to choose. They can take up a particular course of action and stick with it, or not, as they see fit.
The Buddha thus based all his teaching on freedom of choice. As he said, if everything were predetermined by the past, there would be no point in teaching a path to Awakening. The number of people who would reach Awakening would already have been set a long time ago, and they would have no need for a path or a teacher. Those preordained to awaken would get there inevitably as a result of a long-past action or an essential nature already built into the mind. Those preordained not to awaken wouldn't stand a chance.
But these things are not preordained. No one is doomed never to awaken, but — until you've had your first sight of the deathless at stream-entry — neither is Awakening assured. It's contingent on intentional actions chosen in each present moment. And even after stream-entry, you're constantly faced with choices that will speed up final Awakening or slow it down. Nibbana, of course, is independent and unconditioned; but the act of awakening to nibbana depends on a path of practice that has to be willed. It happens only if you choose to give rise to its causes. This, as the Buddha noted, involves determining to do four things: not to neglect discernment, to preserve truth, to develop relinquishment, and to train for peace.
....
hanzze_ wrote:steve19800 wrote:Hi guys,
It is said the cause of sufferings is ignorance, our mind/nature intrinsically is pure and luminous. But why is ignorance even occur in the first place? From where does this ignorance come from?
Steve, I guess Bhikkhu Thanissaro gave some good explaining in "Freedom from Buddha Nature" regarding your question.A brahman once asked the Buddha, "Will all the world reach release [Awakening], or half the world, or a third?" But the Buddha didn't answer. Ven. Ananda, concerned that the brahman might misconstrue the Buddha's silence, took the man aside and gave him an analogy: Imagine a fortress with a single gate. A wise gatekeeper would walk around the fortress and not see an opening in the wall big enough for even a cat to slip through. Because he's wise, he would realize that his knowledge didn't tell him how many people would come into the fortress, but it did tell him that whoever came into the fortress would have to come in through the gate. In the same way, the Buddha didn't focus on how many people would reach Awakening but he did know that anyone who reached Awakening would have to follow the path he had found: abandoning the five hindrances, establishing the four frames of reference, and developing the seven factors for Awakening.
What's striking about the Buddha's knowledge is the implied "if": If people want to gain Awakening they will have to follow this path, but the choice as to whether they want Awakening is theirs. The Buddha's knowledge of the future didn't mean that the future was preordained, for people are free to choose. They can take up a particular course of action and stick with it, or not, as they see fit.
The Buddha thus based all his teaching on freedom of choice. As he said, if everything were predetermined by the past, there would be no point in teaching a path to Awakening. The number of people who would reach Awakening would already have been set a long time ago, and they would have no need for a path or a teacher. Those preordained to awaken would get there inevitably as a result of a long-past action or an essential nature already built into the mind. Those preordained not to awaken wouldn't stand a chance.
But these things are not preordained. No one is doomed never to awaken, but — until you've had your first sight of the deathless at stream-entry — neither is Awakening assured. It's contingent on intentional actions chosen in each present moment. And even after stream-entry, you're constantly faced with choices that will speed up final Awakening or slow it down. Nibbana, of course, is independent and unconditioned; but the act of awakening to nibbana depends on a path of practice that has to be willed. It happens only if you choose to give rise to its causes. This, as the Buddha noted, involves determining to do four things: not to neglect discernment, to preserve truth, to develop relinquishment, and to train for peace.
....
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