|
The
subject today is the three universal characteristics of existence.
This is an important part of the teachings of the Buddha. The teaching
of three characteristics is part of what we might call the doctrinal
contents of wisdom. In other words, when we talk about the knowledge
and the understanding that id implied by wisdom, we have this in
mind.
The
three characteristics of existence that we have in mind are the
characteristics of :
(Anitya), Suffering (Duhkha), and not self
(Anatma). These three characteristics are always present in or are
connected with existence, and they tell us about the nature of existence.
They help us to know what to do with existence. What we learn to
develop as a result of understanding the three characteristics is
renunciation. Once we understand that existence is universally characterized
by impermanence suffering and not self, we eliminate our attachment
to existence, we gain the threshold of Nirvana. This is the purpose
that understanding the three characteristics serve. It removes attachment
by removing delusion, the misunderstanding to do with the self.
This is why understanding the three characteristics is part of the
content of wisdom.
Everything that has a caused has a beginning
and end: conditioned phenomena are transitory. But conditioned phenomena
are also what the self attaches to and when there attachment to
impermanent objects there will always be suffering.

There are all kinds of suffering in life:
birth, old age, sickness, death, association with unpleasant persons
and conditions, separation from beloved ones and pleasant condition,
not getting what one desire, grief, lamentation, distress-all forms
of physical and mental suffering.
Anatta
is the view that there is no enduring self. All phenomena are conditioned-have
a begging and end-so there is nothing to which they can attach.
Suffering arises from the illusion that impermanent conditioned
states are permanent and can be possessed by a self. Moreover, there
is no self or soul, which carries on after death. Instead we are
merely a collection of groups of grasping which are in a continual
state of flux. Rebirth is possible only because our desires and
volition drive us.
Background
from Fundamentals of Buddhism by Dr.Peter D. Santina for free distribution
|