retrofuturist wrote:You've clearly got a different take on some key terminology to me, so it makes sense for you to define this yourself, I think. For what it's worth, your saññā seems more similar to my nama-rupa (i.e. name and form, or as Sylvester called it elsewhere, naming and form).
But which vortex do you refer to? The point at
paṭighasamphassa (bare/initial sensory contact, which afflicts even Arahants) or
adhivacanasamphassa (designation contact, which Arahants continue to use as as part of naming) or the sequel
paññapeti (which Arahants continue to do as part of the sphere of wisdom/
paññāvacara so necessary to communicate the reality of suffering)?
I think modern scholarship has demonstrated that MN 1 cannot be given a traditional Theravada interpretation, eg footnote 6 of Ven T's translation. The sutta, although looking rather prajnaparamita-ish, is not a stab at ontology and epistemic limits in sectarian Buddhism, but rather a denial of Upanisadic cosmogony. The fact that Pajāpati (the Upanisadic "creator") makes it to the list should be clear, together with the All (Sabbaṃ/Sarvam - the Upanisadic ground of Existence, rather than the Buddha's alternative "All") point clearly to the pre-Buddhist search for beginnings/sources of identity and the "self".
I'm currently checking if the term "perceives" (
sañjānāti) versus "directly knows" (
abhijānāti) carries any pre-Buddhist significance, or whether this is a purely Buddhist issue, principally in the context of AN 4.49 namely perversion of perception (
saññāvipallāsa). There, another stab at the Upanisads can be detected, where the perversion of perception is directed against the perception of
nicca (permanent), self and
sukha, all hallmarks of the Upanisad conception of Atman.