Regarding the Buddha's explanation of kamma:
mikenz66 wrote:And in Wings to Awakening:
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth ... index.htmlI have made similar use of modern science — chaos theory in particular. There are many parallels between Buddhist theories of causation and modern deterministic chaos theory. Examples and terminology drawn from the latter — such as feedback, scale invariance, resonance, and fluid turbulence — are very useful in explaining the former. Again, in using these parallels I am not trying to equate Buddhist teachings with chaos theory or to engage in pseudo-science. Fashions in science change so rapidly that we do the Buddha's teachings no favor in trying to "prove" them in light of current scientific paradigms. Here I am simply pointing out similarities as a way of helping to make those teachings intelligible in modern terms. Deterministic chaos theory is the only modern body of knowledge that has worked out a vocabulary for the patterns of behavior described in Buddhist explanations of causality, and so it seems a natural source to draw on, both to describe those patterns and to point out some of their less obvious implications.
It seems that the Buddha was deliberately applying the principle of non-linear chaotic systems in some of his similes describing the uncertainty of rebirth and of kamma-vipaka in general, because there are so many variables (the initial conditions = input of actions).
Samsara means 'aimless wandering' of one’s life. From lifetime to lifetime we wander in this form or another, or even from day to day, moment to moment. In many Buddhist texts, the Buddha describes this aimless wandering. In the Danda Sutta (SN 15.9), the Buddha says:
From an inconstruable beginning comes transmigration. A beginning point is not evident, though beings hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving are transmigrating and wandering on. Just as a stick thrown up in the air lands sometimes on its base, sometimes on its side, sometimes on its tip; in the same way, beings hindered by ignorance and fettered by craving, transmigrating and wandering on, sometimes go from this world to another world, sometimes come from another world to this.
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka ... .than.htmlThe simile of the stick is important. We assume that good kamma = good vipaka (results), or even a better rebirth, but the issue of kamma is insanely complicated. In another, much longer sutra, the Mahakammavibhanga Sutta (MN 136) or “The Greater Exposition on Kamma”, the Buddha explains that even if you do good deeds now, you can still have a bad rebirth because you also have to take into account all the kamma you’ve committed in past lives. The good kamma you commit will come to fruition someday, but not necessarily when you think it will. For something like rebirth, many actions, thoughts and such all take into account and come to fruition as one dies and is reborn again.
“It is kamma which makes the world go round; Kamma keeps moving on the lives of men. All beings to kamma are bound, as a linchpin to the chariot wheel.” (Sutta Nipata)
It could also be compared to double pendulum which is a wonderful example of chaos theory, how something that seems so simple can be so unpredictable. A double pendulum is pretty much what it sounds like: you attach one pendulum to the end of another, making it a double-jointed pendulum. But unlike a normal pendulum, the double pendulum is sensitive to initial conditions and never does the same thing twice:
http://pippagoldenberg.wordpress.com/20 ... -pendulum/Another example involves the turbulences in a flow of water which is non-linear chaotic process in nature:
"Imagine that the whole earth was covered with water, and that a man were to throw a yoke with a hole in it into the water. Blown by the wind, that yoke would drift north, south, east and west. Now suppose that once in a hundred years a blind turtle were to rise to the surface. What would be the chances of that turtle putting his head through the hole in the yoke as he rose to the surface once in a hundred years?"
"It would be very unlikely, Lord."
"Well, it is just as unlikely that one will be born as a human being. It is just as unlikely that a Tathagata, a Noble One, a fully enlightened Buddha should appear in the world. And it is just as unlikely that the Dhamma and discipline of the Tathagata should be proclaimed. But now you have been born as a human being, a Tathagata has appeared and the Dhamma has been proclaimed. Therefore, strive to realize the Four Noble Truths." (S.V,456)
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka ... .than.htmlThis interesting passage uses the metaphor of a dice game -- with its incalculable probability -- to illustrate the workings of kamma. What the simile seems to imply is that, despite the unpredictability, the results of good and bad actions will always in the end bring corresponding fruition.
"As to that tainted failure (in living), which is threefold in bodily acts, fourfold in verbal acts and threefold in mental acts, and which, having been caused by unwholesome volition, produces suffering, results in suffering, it is due to those very failures (in living) that beings, after death, when the body breaks up, are reborn in a world of woe, in an unhappy destiny, a state of misery, in the hells.
"Just as a perfect throw of dice, when thrown upwards, will come to rest firmly wherever it falls, similarly beings will be reborn in states of woe, in an unhappy destiny, a state of misery, in the hells, due to those tainted failures (in living) caused by unwholesome volition.
"I declare, monks, that actions (kamma) willed, performed and accumulated, will not become extinct as long as their results have not been experienced, be it in this life, in the next life or in future lives. And as long as these results of actions willed, performed and accumulated, have not been experienced, there will be no end to suffering, I declare. ...
"As to that success (in living), which is threefold in bodily acts, fourfold in verbal acts and threefold in mental acts, and having been caused by wholesome volition, produces happiness, results in happiness, it is due to that very success (in living) that beings after death, on the break-up of the body, are reborn to a happy destiny, in a heavenly world.
"Just as a perfect throw of dice, when thrown upwards, will come to rest firmly wherever it falls, similarly beings will be reborn to a happy destiny, in a heavenly world, due to success (in living), caused by wholesome volition.
"I declare, monks, that actions (kamma) willed, performed and accumulated, will not become extinct as long as their results have not been experienced, be it in this life, in the next life or in future lives. And as long as these results of actions willed, performed and accumulated, have not been experienced, there will be no end to suffering, I declare." (AN 10.206)
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/auth ... el238.html