Dependent
Arising (Paticca Samuppada)
Paticca
means because of, or dependent upon; Samuppada "arising
or origination." Paticca Samuppada, therefore, literally
means "Dependent Arising" or "Dependent
Origination."
It
must be borne in mind that paticca samuppada is only a
discourse on the process of birth and death and not a theory of
the ultimate origin of life. It deals with the cause of rebirth
and suffering, but it does not, in the least, attempt to show
the evolution of the world from primordial matter.
Ignorance
(avijja) is the first link or cause of the wheel of life.
It clouds all right understanding.
Dependent
on ignorance of the Four Noble Truths arise activities (sankhara)
both moral and immoral. The activities whether good
or bad rooted in ignorance which must necessarily have their due
effects, only tend to prolong life's wandering. Nevertheless,
good actions are essential to get rid of the ills of life.
Dependent
on activities arise rebirth-consciousness (viññana).
This links the past with the present.
Simultaneous
with the arising of rebirth-consciousness there come into being
mind and body (nama-rupa).
The
six senses (salayatana) are the inevitable consequences
of mind and body.
Because
of the six senses contact (phassa) sets in. Contact leads
to feeling (vedana).
These
five viz., consciousness, mind and matter, six senses,
contact and feeling are the effects of past actions and
are called the passive side of life.
Dependent
on feeling arises craving (tanha). Craving results in grasping
(upadana). Grasping is the cause of kamma (bhava) which
in its turn, conditions future birth (jati). Birth is the
inevitable cause of old age and death (jara-marana).
If
on account of cause effect comes to be, then if the cause ceases,
the effect also must cease.
The
reverse order of the paticca samuppada will make the matter
clear.
Old
age and death are possible in and with a psychophysical organism.
Such an organism must be born; therefore it pre-supposes birth.
But birth is the inevitable result of past deeds or kamma. Kamma
is conditioned by grasping which is due to craving. Such craving
can appear only where feeling exists. Feeling is the outcome of
contact between the senses and objects. Therefore it presupposes
organs of senses which cannot exist without mind and body. Where
there is a mind there is consciousness. It is the result of past
good and evil. The acquisition of good and evil is due to ignorance
of things as they truly are.
The
whole formula may be summed up thus:
Dependent
on ignorance arise activities (moral and Immoral)
.......
"....... ".. activities arises consciousness (rebirth
consciousness)
....... "....... ".. consciousness arise mind and
matter
....... "....... ".. mind and matter arise the six
spheres of sense
....... "....... ".. the six spheres of sense arises
contact
....... "....... ".. contact arises feeling
....... "....... ".. feeling arises craving
....... "....... ".. craving arises grasping
....... "....... ".. grasping arise actions (kamma)
....... "....... ".. actions arises rebirth
....... "....... ".. birth arise decay, death, sorrow,
lamentation, pain, grief, and despair.
Thus
does the entire aggregate of suffering arise.
The first two of these twelve links pertain to the past, the middle
eight to the present, and the last two to the future.
The
complete cessation of ignorance leads to the cessation of activities.
The
cessation of activities leads to the cessation of consciousness.
..."...... "........ " consciousness leads to
the cessation of mind and matter.
..."...... "........ " mind and matter leads
to the cessation of the six spheres of sense.
..."......
"........ " the six spheres of sense leads to the
cessation of contact,
..."...... "........ " contact leads to the cessation
of feeling.
..."...... "........ " feeling leads to the cessation
of craving.
..."...... "........ " craving leads to the cessation
of grasping.
..."...... "........ " Grasping leads to the
cessation of actions.
..."...... "........ " actions leads to the cessation
of rebirth.
..."...... "........ " rebirth leads to the cessation
of decay, death, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair.
Thus
does the cessation of this entire aggregate of suffering result.
This
process of cause and effect continues ad infinitum. The beginning
of this process cannot be determined as it is impossible to say
whence this life-flux was encompassed by nescience. But when this
nescience is turned into knowledge, and the life-flux is diverted
into nibbanadhatu, then the end of the life process of
samsara comes about.