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Peter wrote:I recall the Theravada argument against an intermediate state rests largely on said state being "other than any of the birth realms". I have never understood why an "intermediate state" couldn't simply be a short lifespan in one of these realms, such as a minor deva realm for example.
In other words: a human dies, is reborn in a particular deva state - one in which his form resembles his previous human form and in which he floats around the human realm insubstantial - eventually finds and is attracted to his future parents, dies from that realm and is born to his new parents. Thus the anecdotal accounts of intermediate states could find expression within the traditional realms of Buddhist cosmology.
In other words, it seems to me if we stop calling it an "intermediate state" and instead call it a "brief birth and death in a deva realm" then the controversy disappears.
Peter wrote:MN 36 wrote:"I recollected my manifold past lives... I saw beings passing away & re-appearing..."
The Buddha had no qualms about speaking of I or you being reborn. It seems to only be folks on internet forums who have such qualms. Personally, zac, I found your original question clear and easy to understand. And I am glad you received relevant answers. In short, the Buddha didn't say much about what happens between death and birth. He said so little, in fact, that I personally have found it unhelpful to dwell on the topic.
The Blessed One said: "There is the case, student, where a woman or man is a killer of living beings, brutal, bloody-handed, given to killing & slaying, showing no mercy to living beings. Through having adopted & carried out such actions, on the break-up of the body, after death, he/she reappears in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell. If, on the break-up of the body, after death — instead of reappearing in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell — he/she comes to the human state, then he/she is short-lived wherever reborn.
beeblebrox wrote:What happens after death? Ignorance (volitional formations, consciousness, clinging, existence, another birth, death again, still ignorant...) Is there an escape?
jcsuperstar wrote:...the problem here, if it is a problem(i don't think so),...
cooran wrote:Ben wrote:Actually, it could have been those footnotes Retro. I'll dig it out later tonight.
I just have to rush off in a little while to group-sit!
metta
Ben
Hello Ben,
Maybe this?
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From Venerable Bodhi
There definitely seem to be suggestions in the suttas that there is a temporal gap, an intermediate state, between lives, at least with respect to rebirth in the human realm and in the case of non-returners. I have a long note to the Connected Discourses of the Buddha (Samyutta Nikaya), chapter 46, which explores this question in regard to the fivefold distinction among non-returners. I will paste it in below.
The position that rebirth is instantaneous is strongly maintained by the Theravada commentaries, but other schools of Indian Buddhism based on the early collections (pre-Mahayana) supported an intermediate state. This became a ground of contention among the Buddhist schools, sometimes generating a lot of emotional friction, but the issue seems to be given very little importance in the early discourses. Nevertheless, there are passages that suggest (quite clearly, in my opinion) that there is an intermediate state. For example, the famous Metta Sutta speaks of extending loving-kindness to 'bhuutaa vaa sambhavesii vaa' -- "to beings who have come to be and those about to come to be" -- and the suttas on nutriment say that the four kinds of nutriment are "for the maintence of those that have come to be and to assist those about to come to be." Those beings that are sambhavesii, "about to come to be" (or "seeking existence") must be an allusion to those in the intermediate state seeking a new rebirth.
See too SN 44:9, in which Vacchagotta asks the Buddha: "When a being has laid down this body but has not yet been reborn in another body, what does Master Gotama declare to be its fuel on that occasion?" The Buddha does not reject V's question by asserting that such a situation is impossible. He says, rather, that in such a situation "I declare that it is fueled by craving.382 For on that occasion craving is its fuel."
Note 382 reads:
382. Tam aha˙ ta˚hÒp›d›na˙ vad›mi. The Buddha’s statement seems to imply that a temporal gap can intervene between the death moment and reconception. Since this contradicts Therav›da orthodoxy, Spk contends that at the death moment itself the being is said to be “not yet reborn” because the rebirth-consciousness has not yet arisen.
I have also found evidence for beings in this state from the reported rebirth memories of people who (without meditative experience) can recollect their previous life and death. Several cases I have read of this type report that the being, after passing away, spends some time moving about in a subtle body (identical in form with their previous body, hence with a sense of the same personal identity) until they find themselves drawn towards a particular couple, who then become their new parents. Some cases like this are included in Francis Story's book, Rebirth as Doctrine and Experience (published by the Buddhist Publcation Society, Kandy, Sri Lanka).
See too Peter Harvey's book, The Selfless Mind (Curzon) which I refer to in the note below.
65 This fivefold typology of nonreturners recurs at 48:15, 24, 66; 51:26; 54:5; and 55:25. Spk explains the antar›parinibb›yı (“attainer of Nibb›na in the interval”) as one reborn in the Pure Abodes who attains arahantship during the first half of the life span. This type is subdivided into three, depending on whether arahantship is reached: (i) on the very day of rebirth; (ii) after one or two hundred aeons have elapsed; or (iii) after four hundred aeons have elapsed. The upahaccaparinibb›yı (“attainer of Nibb›na upon landing”) is explained as one who attains arahantship after passing the first half of the life span. For Spk, the asaºkh›raparinibb›yı (“attainer without exertion”) and the sasaºkh›raparinibb›yı (“attainer with exertion”) then become two modes in which the first two types of nonreturners attain the goal. This explanation originates from Pp 16–17 (commented on at Pp-a 198–201). However, not only does this account of the first two types disregard the literal meaning of their names, but it also overrides the sequential and mutually exclusive nature of the five types as delineated elsewhere in the suttas (see below).
If we understand the term antar›parinibb›yı literally, as it seems we should, it then means one who attains Nibb›na in the interval between two lives, perhaps while existing in a subtle body in the intermediate state. The upahaccaparinibb›yı then becomes one who attains Nibb›na “upon landing” or “striking ground” in the new existence, i.e., almost immediately after taking rebirth. The next two terms designate two types who attain arahantship in the course of the next life, distinguished by the amount of effort they must make to win the goal. The last, the uddha˙sota akani˛˛hag›mı, is one who takes rebirth in successive Pure Abodes, completes the full life span in each, and finally attains arahantship in the Akani˛˛ha realm, the highest Pure Abode.
This interpretation, adopted by several non-Therav›da schools of early Buddhism, seems to be confirmed by the Purisagati Sutta (AN IV 70–74), in which the simile of the flaming chip suggests that the seven types (including the three kinds of antar›parinibb›yı) are mutually exclusive and have been graded according to the sharpness of their faculties. Additional support comes from AN II 134,25–29, which explains the antar›parinibb›yı as one who has abandoned the fetter of rebirth (upapattisa˙yojana) without yet having abandoned the fetter of existence (bhavasa˙yojana). Though the Therav›din proponents argue against this interpretation of antar›parinibb›yı (e.g., at Kv 366), the evidence from the suttas leans strongly in its favour. For a detailed discussion, see Harvey, The Selfless Mind, pp. 98–108.
AN II 155–56 draws an alternative distinction between the sasaºkh›raparinibb›yı and the asaºkh›raparinibb›yı: the former reaches arahantship through meditation on the “austere” meditation subjects such as the foulness of the body, the perception of the repulsiveness of food, discontent with the whole world, the perception of impermanence in all formations, and mindfulness of death; the latter, through the four jh›nas."
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with metta
Chris
I have also found evidence for beings in this state from the reported rebirth memories of people who (without meditative experience) can recollect their previous life and death.
Annapurna wrote:Peter wrote:MN 36 wrote:"I recollected my manifold past lives... I saw beings passing away & re-appearing..."
The Buddha had no qualms about speaking of I or you being reborn. It seems to only be folks on internet forums who have such qualms. Personally, zac, I found your original question clear and easy to understand. And I am glad you received relevant answers. In short, the Buddha didn't say much about what happens between death and birth. He said so little, in fact, that I personally have found it unhelpful to dwell on the topic.
Zac, I agree with the above.
Also look at MN 135:The Blessed One said: "There is the case, student, where a woman or man is a killer of living beings, brutal, bloody-handed, given to killing & slaying, showing no mercy to living beings. Through having adopted & carried out such actions, on the break-up of the body, after death, he/she reappears in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell. If, on the break-up of the body, after death — instead of reappearing in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell — he/she comes to the human state, then he/she is short-lived wherever reborn.
jcsuperstar wrote:geeez
why are you trying to goad people into an argument?

The Blessed One said: "There is the case, student, where a woman or man is a killer of living beings, brutal, bloody-handed, given to killing & slaying, showing no mercy to living beings. Through having adopted & carried out such actions, on the break-up of the body, after death, he/she reappears in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell. If, on the break-up of the body, after death — instead of reappearing in the plane of deprivation, the bad destination, the lower realms, hell — he/she comes to the human state, then he/she is short-lived wherever reborn.
awesome!!!!!!!! check that out everyone!!!!!!! the buddha himself says "REBORN". so who is right? you guys or the buddha?
although i'm sure you're thinking the translator is at fault, but again this is a bhikkhu bodhi translation so who knows their stuff better, him or...?
None of what the people said in here was about you, or what you said... just the way the question was phrased. Yes, I understood the question the first time, don't worry.Peter wrote:I have never understood why an "intermediate state" couldn't simply be a short lifespan in one of these realms, such as a minor deva realm for example.
beeblebrox wrote:You should take it easy, Zac.None of what the people said in here was about you, or what you said... just the way the question was phrased. Yes, I understood the question the first time, don't worry.
The problem was that the "you" part of the question was taken as a "self" by some people on here (why wouldn't they?), so this means that they think the question was coming from a wrong view, making it irrelevant to the Dhamma. This isn't being anal, or splitting hairs... it's very relevant to the Dhamma.
Having the right view (and therefore, asking the right questions) is crucial to understanding what the Buddha actually taught. This has nothing to do with you. The way that I understand it at the moment - there is no "self" that is being reborn, only formations.
As for what Peter said:Peter wrote:I have never understood why an "intermediate state" couldn't simply be a short lifespan in one of these realms, such as a minor deva realm for example.
The deva's lifespan is very long from what I recall... something like tens of thousand of human years. That can't be called an intermediate state, unless my own understanding of time is wrong.
. it seems to be a huge problem so how is it handled when you can't simply look for fault in someones text and then post on it instantly?

beeblebrox wrote:The deva's lifespan is very long from what I recall... something like tens of thousand of human years. That can't be called an intermediate state, unless my own understanding of time is wrong.Peter wrote:I have never understood why an "intermediate state" couldn't simply be a short lifespan in one of these realms, such as a minor deva realm for example.

trying to make an attempt to use either of those to answer that specific question, the way it is phrased, would be a misuse of each system.Peter wrote:beeblebrox wrote:The deva's lifespan is very long from what I recall... something like tens of thousand of human years. That can't be called an intermediate state, unless my own understanding of time is wrong.Peter wrote:I have never understood why an "intermediate state" couldn't simply be a short lifespan in one of these realms, such as a minor deva realm for example.
From what I recall, there are many different deva realms and lifespans vary from realm to realm. But if it makes you feel better then pretend I said "ghost realm" instead of "deva realm". The meaning is preserved.![]()
Zac, the simple and obvious truth is that on an internet forum there will be posts we find helpful and posts we don't find helpful and there's nothing we can do about it. I find it best to simply ignore the unhelpful ones. I have rarely seen telling someone "your post was not helpful" result in anything constructive.

MN 57 wrote:Punna: "Venerable sir, this naked dog-duty ascetic Seniya does what is hard to do: he eats his food when it is thrown on the ground. That dog duty has long been taken up and practiced by him. What will be his destination? What will be his future course?"
Buddha: "On the dissolution of the body, after death, if his dog duty is perfected, it will lead him to the company of dogs; if it is not, it will lead him to hell."
beeblebrox wrote:I think these are good points, Zac. I'm just wondering... what would you say if someone asked this question - "According to Mathematics, what happens after you die?"
Where I'm at right now (doesn't necessarily mean that I have the right view, yet), I get the same impression when someone asks me - "According to Buddha, what happens after you die?"
Both of those questions seem like they come from wrong ideas, about what Math or the Dhamma are supposed to be about. The former is just about numbers, and the latter is just about the cessation of suffering.
I think that (not saying that you're wrong, Zac)trying to make an attempt to use either of those to answer that specific question, the way it is phrased, would be a misuse of each system.
Peter wrote:MN 57 wrote:Punna: "Venerable sir, this naked dog-duty ascetic Seniya does what is hard to do: he eats his food when it is thrown on the ground. That dog duty has long been taken up and practiced by him. What will be his destination? What will be his future course?"
Buddha: "On the dissolution of the body, after death, if his dog duty is perfected, it will lead him to the company of dogs; if it is not, it will lead him to hell."
I have often come across people who feel that talking about rebirth is a "misuse of the system" and yet when I read passages like the one above I feel it is otherwise.
zac wrote:honestly i don't understand what everyone's game is here, it's actually kind of strange. i've literally read the same combinations of words i used in books by buddhist authors and in the pali canon itself! the funny thing is that if i looked up some and posted them then you or someone else would just change your argument and pretend you were never proven wrong. instead of the word "you" being the problem it would be the word "after".
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