Moderator: mikenz66
Thus, both this assumption & the understanding, 'I am,' occur to him.
Bhikkhu Bodhi wrote:"As 'I am' has not vanished, there takes place a descent of the five faculties --- of the eye faculty, the ear faculty, the nose faculty, the tongue faculty, the body faculty."
I take this terse sentence to be describing the rebirth process contingent on the persistence of the delusion of personal selfhood. Elsewhere "descent" (avakkanti) --- of conciousness, or of name-and-form indicates the commencement of a new existence (as at SN12:39, SN12:58, SN12:59).
Spk: When there is this group of defilements , there is the production of the five faculties conditioned by defilements and kamma.
Bhikkhu Bodhi wrote:"When the uninstructed worldling is contacted by a feeling born of ignorance-contact, 'I am' occurs to him; 'I am this' occurs to him; 'I will be' and 'I will not be', and 'I will consist of form' and 'I will be formless', and 'I will be percipient' and 'I will be nonpercipient' and 'I will be neither percipient nor nonpercipient' --- these occur to him."
I interpret this whole passage as a demonstration of ho the new kammically active phase of existence commences through the renewal of conceiving in terms of the notion "I am" and speculative views of selfhood. Spk idenfifies "mind" (mano) iwth the kamma-mind (kammamano) and "mental phenomena" (dhamma) with its objects, or the former as teh bhavanga and adverting conciousness. Ignorance-contact (avijjasamphassa) is the contact associated with ignorance (avijjasampayuttaphassa).
Ignorance is the most fundamental condition underlying this process, and when this is activated by feeling it gives rise to the notion "I am" (a manifestation of craving and conceit). The idea "I am this" arises subsequently, when the vacuous "I" is given content by being identified with one or other of the five aggregates. Finally, full eternalist and annihilationist views originate when the imagined self is held either to survive death, or to undergo destruction at death.
Bhikkhu Bodhi wrote:This passage thus presents us with an alternative version of dependent origination, where the "way of regarding things" and the notion "I am" belong to the causally active side of the past existence; the five faculties to the resultant side of the present existence; and the recurrence of the notion "I am" to the causal side of the present existence. This will in turn generate renewed existence in the future.
"Brahmin, these five faculties have different domains, different resorts, not experiencing each other's resort and domain --- they take recourse in the mind and the mind experiences their resort and domain."
Manopatisaranam mano ca nesam gocaravisayam paccanubhoti.
Spk explains mano here as the mind-door javana, which experiences the object by way of lust, hatred, or delusion. In my view, this introduces and unnecessary ethical slant on the passage, which I take to be primarily epistemic in import. I interpret the sentence simply to mean that mind-conciousness has access to the data provided by the five types of sense conciousness, which it collates, categorizes, and interprets with its own stock-in-trade, namely concepts.
mikenz66 wrote:In a momentary model I imagine that we can replace "previous existence"/"future existence" as "cause"/"effect".
mikenz66 wrote:1. The too famous "discovery" of Descartes, Cogito, ergo sum ("I think, therefore I am"), comes precisely under this heading. Descartes identified himself with, in Buddhist terms, vicaara "discursive thought," which belongs to the "mental formations" group (sankhaarakkhandha). When Goethe (whom many would consider a greater thinker than Descartes) said "Gefühl ist alles" ("Feeling is everything"), it might be thought that (at that moment) he was identifying himself with the "feeling" group (vedanaakhandha). But these are sensations, physical and mental, and what Goethe meant corresponds more probably to piiti (SN 12.23, n. 4 http://www.accesstoinsight.org/tipitaka/sn/sn12/sn12.023x.wlsh.html#fn-4), which also belongs to the mental formations.
The simple meaning of the phrase is that if someone wonders whether or not they exist, that is, in and of itself, proof that they do exist (because, at the very least, there is an "I" who does the thinking).[2] It forms the bedrock for all knowledge, because, while all things can be questioned as to whether they are from the realm of reality or from some figment of imagination (a dream, etc), the very act of doubting one's own existence serves as proof of the reality of one's own existence.
A common mistake is that people take the statement as proof that they, as a human person, exist. However, it is a severely limited conclusion that does nothing to prove that one's own body exists, let alone anything else that is perceived in the physical universe. It only proves that one's mind exists (that part of an individual that observes oneself doing the doubting). It does not rule out other possibilities, such as waking up to find oneself to be a butterfly who had dreamed of having lived a human life.
rowyourboat wrote:I think it is well worthwhile penetrating this thing called 'I' in terms of views.
Individual wrote::computerproblem:
Understanding through views isn't penetrating; it adds another layer of thought.
And thus, Theravadins have commentaries, commentaries on commentaries, commentaries on commentaries on commentaries, and Buddhist forums.

retrofuturist wrote:It's not thought that is to be shunned...

Individual wrote:Wikipedia wrote:The simple meaning of the phrase is that if someone wonders whether or not they exist, that is, in and of itself, proof that they do exist ...
Individual wrote:rowyourboat wrote:I think it is well worthwhile penetrating this thing called 'I' in terms of views.
Understanding through views isn't penetrating; it adds another layer of thought.
And thus, Theravadins have commentaries, commentaries on commentaries, commentaries on commentaries on commentaries, and Buddhist forums.
mikenz66 wrote:Hi Individual,Individual wrote:Wikipedia wrote:The simple meaning of the phrase is that if someone wonders whether or not they exist, that is, in and of itself, proof that they do exist ...
I believe Walshe's point is that both Descartes and the person who wrote the Wikipedia article are, from the point of view of the Buddha, mistaken...
Individual wrote:You're wrong, but you're not going to waste my time or ruin my good mood. Don't use the Buddha's point-of-view as a shield to defend your own interpretations.
The Buddha wrote:"Here, monks, the uninstructed worldling... regards body as the self, the self as having body, body as being in the self, or the self as being in the body. [Similarly with 'feelings,' 'perceptions,' 'mental formations,' 'consciousness.'] So this way of regarding arises: it occurs to him to think 'I am.'
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