starter wrote:I'm wondering if the following open, non-absorptive concentration can lead to jhana with piti/sukha or not?
"With meditation we have the opportunity to contemplate the mind. The silence of the mind is like the space in the room; it is always there, but it is subtle. It doesn't stand out, it doesn't grab your attention. It has no extreme quality which would stimulate and grasp your attention, so you have to pay attention, you have to be attentive. Now one can use the sound of silence (or the primordial sound, sound of the mind, or whatever you want to call it) very skilfully, by bringing it up, paying attention to it. By concentrating your attention on that for a while, it becomes something that you can really begin to know. It is the mode of knowing in which one can reflect. It's not a concentrated state you absorb into, it's not a suppressive kind of concentration. The mind is concentrated in a state of balance and openness, rather than absorbed into an object, so that one can actually think and use that as a way of seeing things in perspective -- letting things go [[let our attachment to things go]]."
"If you are still concentrated on the curtains, or the window or the people, you don't notice the space. But actually you don't have to get rid of all those things to notice the space; instead you begin just to open to the space, to notice it. Rather than focusing your attention on one thing, you are opening the mind completely; you are not choosing an object -- a conditioned object -- but the space where the conditioned objects are."
-- "Noticing Space" by Ajahn Sumedho [http://www.buddhanet.net/budsas/ebud/ebmed040.htm]
Claiming some degree of equivalence to LP Sumedho, wow. Other experienced practitioners may view things differently, which does not make them ignorant. It simply points to the fact that what jhana is undertstood as being can vary significantly and these differences can equally claim to be based upon direct experience.IanAnd wrote:I expect some difference of opinion from others here regarding that last point, but unless their practice has advanced to the stage that Ajhan Sumedho's (and obviously my own) has, then they would be speaking from a position of inexperience and hence ignorance.
This is only my (experienced) opinion. Which happens to reflect the opinion of other experienced practitioners.
IanAnd wrote: unless their practice has advanced to the stage that Ajhan Sumedho's (and obviously my own) has, then they would be speaking from a position of inexperience and hence ignorance.

I have heard that on one occasion the Blessed One was staying near Savatthi in Jeta's Grove, Anathapindika's monastery. Now at that time Ven. Subhuti was sitting not far from the Blessed One, his legs crossed, his body held erect, centered in a concentration free from directed thought. The Blessed One saw Ven. Subhuti sitting not far away, his legs crossed, his body held erect, centered in a concentration free from directed thought.
Then, on realizing the significance of that, the Blessed One on that occasion exclaimed:
Whose thoughts are
vaporized,
well-dealt-with
within,
without trace —
going beyond that tie,
one who perceives the formless,
overcoming
four yokes, [1]
does not go
to rebirth.
tiltbillings wrote:Other experienced practitioners may view things differently, which does not make them ignorant. It simply points to the fact that what jhana is undertstood as being can vary significantly and these differences can equally claim to be based upon direct experience.
The problem is that you claim yours is a mature practice, but based upon what objective criteria? I am sure there are those who you have dismissed as ignorant could as easily make the same claim based upon this criteria: when one's practice has matured and one is mindful of that fact and begins to accept what one is able to observe from one's own experience as being true and receives corroboration from others whose practices have also matured, one can fairly be very certain of what one speaks.IanAnd wrote:tiltbillings wrote:Other experienced practitioners may view things differently, which does not make them ignorant. It simply points to the fact that what jhana is undertstood as being can vary significantly and these differences can equally claim to be based upon direct experience.
I agree. However, I did qualify my statement with "unless their practice has advanced to the stage [of a mature practice]..."
Meaning that (and I've been there so I know whereof I speak),
starter wrote:The Buddha at first attained two formless samadhi but didn't find them useful for liberation. He then attained four jhanas which led him to the three noble knowledges and liberation. I wonder if the right concentration he defined in the N8P only includes the 4 jhanas or not.
Thanks and metta,
Starter
starter wrote:"... all concentration that manifests the jhana factors of the fourth jhana are the fourth jhana, regardless of the object of absorption."
-- As I understand, one has neither mental/emotional feelings nor physical sensations in the 4th jhana, which is very deep absorption.
The "open, non-absorptive concentration" doesn't seem to be any type of absorption/jhana. But probably such "open, non-absorptive concentration" can provide sufficient level of samatha for vipassana and liberation?
Metta to all,
Starter
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