At length, we have a tradition that clearly, unambiguously is akin to a kind of atomism, which they call kalapas, or paramattha dhammas, which disappear and reappear rapidly, dependent on each other. It teaches that these atoms, though, are mind independent. The earth, land, rocks and so on arise and cease on their own, composed of these atoms, the earth appears before people are reborn on it, and it isn't even caused to appear by kamma in the first place. People leave behind corpses after consciousness ceases, the corpse is made of dhammas generated by the fire element, tejo, which can generate matter all on its own, and so on, and, thus, it is quite independent of perception. Even if we forget the word "atom" and "atomism" if anyone finds issue with that word, the point remains that scholars generally present it as something like realism, if not outright call it realism, and, regardless, the system affirms the mind independent dhammas.
Then, it inexplicably says that the element of earth is something completely incompatible with all of this: that it is just "hardness."'
A few quotes to substantiate these points, then I'll get back to the question at hand.
It is the dhammas alone that possess ultimate reality: determinate existence “from their own side” (sarupato) independent of the minds conceptual processing of the data. Such a conception of the nature of the real seems to be already implicit in the Sutta Pitaka, particularly in the Buddha’s disquisitions on the aggregates, sense bases, elements, dependent arising, etc.,…
…
Thus by examining the conventional realities with wisdom, we eventually arrive at the objective actualities that lie behind our conceptual constructs. It is these objective actualities – the dhammas, which maintain their intrinsic natures independent of the mind’s constructive functions…
…
…the commentaries consummate the dhamma theory by supplying the formal definition of dhammas as “things which bear their own intrinsic nature” (attano sabhavam dharenti ti dhamma).
…
…concretely produced matter…possess intrinsic natures and are thus suitable for contemplation and comprehension by insight.
…
Great seers who are free from craving declare that Nibbana is an
objective state which is deathless, absolutely endless, unconditioned,
and unsurpassed.
Thus as fourfold the Tathagatas reveal the ultimate realities—
consciousness, mental factors, matter, and Nibbana.
-Bhikkhu Bodhi, Acariya Anuruddha, A Comprehensive Manual of Abhidhamma, pages 3, 15, 26, 235, 260
It should be noted that the atomic theory prevailed in
India in the time of the Buddha. Paramàõu was the ancient
term for the modern atom. According to the ancient belief
one rathareõu consists of 16 tajjàris, one tajjàri, 16 aõus;
one aõu, 16 paramàõus. The minute particles of dust seen
dancing in the sunbeam are called rathareõus. One paramàõu is, therefore, 4096th part of a rathareõu. This paramàõu was considered indivisible.
With His supernormal knowledge the Buddha analysed this so-called paramàõu and declared that it consists
of paramatthas—ultimate entities which cannot further be
subdivided.
The paramatthas are pañhavi, àpo, tejo, and vàyo.
-Narada Thera, A Manual of Abhidhamma, page 318
dhamma theory is best described as dhamma realism
-The Theravada Abhidhamma: Inquiry into the Nature of Conditioned Reality
By Y. Karunadasa, chapter 2
What emerges from this Abhidhammic doctrine of dhammas
is a critical realism, one which (unlike idealism) recognises
the distinctness of the world from the experiencing subject
yet also distinguishes between those types of entities that
truly exist independently of the cognitive act and those that
owe their being to the act of cognition itself.
-Y. Karunadasa, The Dhamma Theory, page 38
Controverted point: That land is a result of action.
...your proposition is wrong.
...the earth is established and afterwards beings are reborn on it.
-Kv 7.7
But at the time of death, kamma-born material phenomena no
longer arise starting with the stage of presence of the seventeenth
consciousness preceding the death consciousness. Kamma-born
material phenomena that arose earlier occur till the death-moment
and then cease. Following that, the consciousness-born and nutriment-born material phenomena come to cessation. Thereafter,
a continuity of material qualities produced by temperature persists
as long as it can be called a corpse.
-Bodhi, ibid, p 257
Tejo is the element of heat. Cold is also a form of tejo.
Both heat and cold are included in tejo because they possess the power of maturing bodies. Tejo, in other words, is
the vitalizing energy. Preservation and decay are also due
to this element. Unlike the other three essentials of matter,
this element has the power to regenerate matter by itself.
-Narada Thera, A Manual of Abhidhamma p 319
Now what? It has been said it is phenomenalism. I'd be obliged to agree, if all there was to it was the hardness thing. However, the rest of it completely rules out the phenomenalism reading. So, we have a distinctly phenomenalism thing in a system that otherwise is quite incompatible with phenomenalism.The earth element (paṭhavī-dhātu), in the ultimate sense, is the mere property of hardness. By earth is not meant any substance— not even a hundred-thousandth part of an atom. It lacks shape, mass, form, core, or solidity. Therefore, this element exists in very clear spring water or river water; in all forms of light, including sunlight, moonlight, and even the lustre of gems; in all sounds, including the vibrant sounds of gongs or pagoda bells; in moving air, from the softest breeze to a gale ; and in smells, good or bad, that spread near and far…In the case of light and smell, however, although the element of extension is definitely there, this element is too subtle to notice. No empirical data can be drawn from them. We simply have to rely on the authority of the scriptures…
When hundreds of thousands of crores of the earth element— by themselves the mere property of hardness—happen to be held together by the element of cohesion or the water element (āpodhātu), a form appears, which is given the name “atom.” When thousands of crores of such atoms come together, certain forms of life come into being, beginning with tiny insects.
Then, when we call it realism, we are confronted with this.
Worse, still, mind independent dhammas that exist from their own side, cannot be just "hardness," that is linguistically, and logically, nonsense.
So, either we come up with a solution, or we must say the system is self contradictory, and cannot be called anything, because it doesn't make any sense.
My thinking is we have to take it for granted that their idea of what "hardness" is and means must be different than what it means from the phenomenalist perspective.
I haven't come up with anything to substantiate this position, though, except that it may be some kind of force or field, and that is based on the fact that it is called the element of extension in the commentaries.
Does anyone have any solution? I respectfully reject the brushing off of the issue by calling it phenomenalism, for no other reason than that other parts of it are incompatible with phenomenalism, which rules out that reading. That said, I would concede that it possibly may be a self contradictory system, and thus insoluble, but not that it is a phenomenalist system.
The pious in me, however, and the part of me that is confident in the brilliance of the arahants of old who composed the Theravada system, is entirely confident that there is a solution.