It is said that perception
is the cause for prapanca, translated as proliferation of
(erroneous) concepts and also defined as taking as me mine and my soul. It is
considered as an occurrence that fetters one to samsara. We need to study the
consequences that prapanca bring in to our lives, so that it won’t
be mistaken as an accepted norm.
The aggregates of perception or noting are categorised as
Perception of Form
Perception of Sound
Perception of Smell
Perception of Taste
Perception of touch and
Perception of mental
objects based on six sense bases.
When an object impinges on
the eye, eye consciousness arises and consequently the occurrence of eye
contact followed by sensation
and perception. At this point there are no defilements and the act of seeing is completed by
knowing, as perceived. We contemplate on what we see, hear and smell
etc. and express through thought, speech and action, committing kamma or formation.
Determination or formation (Sankara) of what is perceived is
said to be vital for the purpose of communication and use. We need to
distinguish the state of perception in the process of seeing, hearing etc. from
that of the state of determination.
One uses definitions for
the purpose of expression and communication, for e.g. a toddler sees colour
distinctions of a mobile hanging over his crib but doesn’t know descriptions of
it such as the commonly used terminology, Red, Blue and yellow etc., to
identify them. The state of seeing diversity of colour and shape, without
knowing details, is the state of noting or perceiving (sanna), it
is observation with no designation or description yet being aware of a visible form
similar to what a toddler sees. Perceptions through other sense basses are the
same. However, as the child matures in age and experience, he (or she)
learns to differentiate colour by names which helps him to identify objects distinctly and to
communicate.
In addition to aggregates
of perceptions or noting there are other forms of perceptions such as
perception of wholesomeness, permanence, happiness and self as well as perceptions
of sense-desires (kama), ill
will (vyapada) and cruelty (himsa) etc. These are
caused by ‘micca
ditti’
or wrong views and hence can be corrected.
It is said that the ability
to perceive, developed through knowledge and application, augment
contemplation. Madu Pindika Sutra
describes that contemplation occur corresponding to the perception (Yan
sanjati tan vitakketi). However, the sutra clearly states that this
occurrence does not take place vice versa, i.e. perception is not determined by
how we contemplate (Vitakka), for instance, though we consider
aggregates as persons and associate, say for instance as father, mother or child,
the state of aggregates will not change and thus need not necessarily be
perceived as father, mother etc. Perception is fundamental to how we
contemplate (on what we see or hear and so on) expressed through thought,
speech and action. Nevertheless, our habits have an influence on how we
perceive.
Perceiving as persons, say
father, mother, son and so on is due to our habits of associating with the world
developed through previous sense experiences known in the scripts as
cankers or fermentations (Asrava). We are unaware of being the
owners of our perception that we often believe that perception is determined by
external objects. We associate the world through perceptions we have developed
through our previous experiences. We note persons as men, women etc. due to our
defilements & cankers accumulated through previous experiences. If we are
to remove attachments that we develop as father, mother etc., we should first
recognise our errors in perceiving as persons.
The body formed of hair,
nails, teeth, skin and flesh etc. nourished with edible food is not a person as
we are used to perceive. The mind inhibits the body to make it conscious and to
manoeuvre and when we see a body our cankers take precedence in perceiving it as a
man or a woman. As we are ignorant of the reality of the body form we surrender
to our defilements and cankers in perceiving and hence what we experience is
distorted (Viparitha Sanna). Grasping as me, mine and myself (Prapanca) results
from how we contemplate which is determined by how we perceive and therefore we
form defilements in accordance with our sense of perception.
Madu Pindika Sutra
goes onto explain that prapanca that arise due to
contemplation hinder and delay our ability to see objects as it is at all
times, i.e.in the past, present and in future, thereby restraining us in
samsara grasping as me, mine and myself.
Objects themselves do not
constitute elements of perception but the way we behold influence our
perception. The Tathagata has explained this through the following
stanza,
Nete kāmā yāni citrāni loke;
Saṅkappa-rāgo purisassa kāmo,
Tiṭṭhanti citrāni tatheva loke;
Athettha dhīrā vinayanti chandan.
Tiṭṭhanti citrāni tatheva loke;
Athettha dhīrā vinayanti chandan.
Nibbedika Sutra
Objects of sensuality in
the world become pleasurable due to man’s lustful conceptions. Things of beauty
exist in this world as they are; they do not constitute any sensuality that man
associate with. The wise are not affected by them.
Here, The Enlightened one
stresses that objects do not constitute sensuality but man’s lustful
conceptions bring about sensuality on objects. In other words man’s perception
is influenced by corrupted conceptions that are tainted by his defilements and
cankers (or fermentations).
Venerable Sudassana explains “the dilemma is that the visual consciousness that arises due to conditions ceases when the conditions cease to exist, however, we tend to tie the corresponding thought that arises in the mind to that visual experience. This is to identify the object seen and to know with descriptions so that we can think, speak and act upon it. This, he says, is how we gather new Kamma and the difference between us and an enlightened person is that he or she does not combine the thought arising at the mind consciousness level (mental experience) to the visual experience. An arhat experiences both and could even respond with thought, speech or action, however, knows them apart as two different sense experiences and hence he or she does not collect kamma. The above distinction in responses to the same sense experience is said to be due to ignorance of the former and wisdom of the latter (being free of ignorance). We collect Kamma by combining the internal sense experience to the external sense experiences while an Arhat who knows them as independent occurrences discards Kamma.
Due to ignorance we form
defilements on aggregates and due to our habits in associating with defilements
(say as son, daughter etc.) our mind gets polluted (with cankers) distorting
our perceptions. As we interact with such cankers we perceive the corporeal as
man or woman and contemplate accordingly. In summary we are associating
aggregates and defilements which are described, in terms of Four Noble truths,
as suffering and cause for suffering. The teachings urge us to separate
defilements from aggregates in order to attain cessation of suffering. If we
cease perceiving as persons we will not contemplate on ‘persons’ and hence we
free ourselves from suffering from decay, sickness and death due to grasping as
father, mother, son or daughter. This implies that we need a shift in our
‘View’ in order to correct the way we perceive. If we can see aggregates as
they are with the Right View we will not form defilements and that in turn will
free us from grasping as me, mine and my-self (prapanca).
Scarecrow Example
Imagine a scarecrow in the
middle of a paddy field which may appear as a real person to someone looking
from far. Being deceived he may start contemplating about the ‘person’ say as a
youth or an old person, a man or woman etc. Due to his wrong perception a
stream of conceptions will flow in his mind (prapanca) with regard
to the ‘person’ he is ‘seeing’. Eventually if he walks towards the scarecrow,
at some point he will realise what it is and discard all conceptions he had
developed on it so far, instantly. At that particular point having gained a
clear view, his perception becomes clearer and hence, his contemplation
followed by how he respond through thought, speech and action.
Venerable Sudassana finds
no difference between seeing the scarecrow as a person and perceiving a body,
that is dependent on edible food, as a person or a soul. “Our habits of
perception or defilements come to the fore here distorting the view” he says.
The Venerable further
compares such perception to looking through a pair of coloured glasses, as our
contemplation is influenced by our perceptions similar to the way a pair of
coloured glasses influences our view. The challenge is to remove this pair of
coloured glasses, says the Venerable.
How can we associate the
world without perceiving erroneously so that we can free ourselves
from prapanca and liberate from this samsaric cycle? How can
we discard the habits of taking as me mine and myself?
The challenge as Buddha has
preached is that we must associate the world exactly like the others do but
perceive differently by not having greed, ill will or delusion that corrupt our
conceptions. By gaining the Right View one can change the way he or she
perceives things and persons and hence, how we associate the world. The
teachings refer to a cessation that can take place regardless of whether the
eye (or ear etc.) is present or not. It advocates a philosophy of wisdom that
the world cannot even imagine.
The Enlightened one has preached,
Na saññasaññi na visaññasaññi
Nopi asaññi na vibhūtasaññi,
Evaṃ sametassa vibhoti rūpaṃ
Saññānidānā hi papañcasaṅkhā.
Nopi asaññi na vibhūtasaññi,
Evaṃ sametassa vibhoti rūpaṃ
Saññānidānā hi papañcasaṅkhā.
-Kalaha Vivada Sutra
Let us examine this
profound teaching.
We all perceive visible
objects, sound, odour, taste, touch and mental objects, as worldly beings. The
six forms of perceptions are the world. Here, the Buddha shows us a goal to
reach through the Noble Path, to be free from all six sense perceptions, na
sanna sanni. If one is to cease the world (loka Nirodha) he
needs to be free from perceiving forms as the rest of the world do, through
sense bases. However, he can’t be unconscious, stresses the Buddha, as one may
suggest that being unconscious he can be free from all sense perceptions. One
can also argue that he can move to the state of nothingness (asanna),
No, the teaching does not accept that either. How about reaching a state beyond
perception, neither consciousness nor unconsciousness (neva
sanna na sanna), the Buddha wouldn't concur
with that either.
According to the Teachings,
one needs to associate the world while being detached from it. This is the
challenge in front of us, to clear our view and live in a state of being
‘free from worldly perceptions’ i.e. ‘nirodha sanna’. However, it’s
not associating nothingness or living without associating objects, the
cessation or nirvana is not that, it is stressed. It is the state of perceiving
cessation of the eye, ear etc., a state through which one can liberate from objects
of sight, sound, smell etc., while still living in the world.
It is the state of living with perception of cessation (nirodha sanna) where one does associate the world, however, differently to how the others do perceiving the opposite, i.e. arising (samudaya) only. He or she perceives things but in such a way that suffering is ceased by abandoning ignorance that causes kamma formation and therefore, he is not affected by decay, sickness or death.
The one who is free from worldly perceptions, experiences cessation of contact, but not by removing eye, ear etc. It is to be noted here that sanna nirodaya is different to nirodha sanna , the former is similar to the state of a dead body, no perceptions whatsoever, on the contrary, an enlightened one (Arhat) lives within the world, free from worldly perceptions, and is called the one who has ceased the world.
The
Buddha preached that the one who moves beyond form relinquishes himself from
contact as well as from cause for contact & experience cessation. Such
person is free from all forms of sense perceptions however; continue to
associates the world perceiving arising as well as cessation of aggregates. To
move beyond the form, one needs to see things as they really are with the Right
View and see that things do not exist before or after being sensed but arise to
the occasion due to conditions and cease when the conditions cease to exist.