Son of Buddha wrote:you are Saying that what IS D.O. IS preceiveing D.O. and that once this D.O. preceives D.O it will be the end of Samsara.even though what is preceiving D.O is actually D.O itself.
what you are saying is the cause of Samsara is the personality self("I" ego) that is itself dependently originated is failing to preceive the rest of dependent origination.
futerko wrote:Son of Buddha wrote:you are Saying that what IS D.O. IS preceiveing D.O. and that once this D.O. preceives D.O it will be the end of Samsara.even though what is preceiving D.O is actually D.O itself.
what you are saying is the cause of Samsara is the personality self("I" ego) that is itself dependently originated is failing to preceive the rest of dependent origination.
Yes, that is exactly whay I am saying, that when dependent origination perceives itself as such, then this is what is called Tathatā.
songhill wrote:futerko wrote:Son of Buddha wrote:you are Saying that what IS D.O. IS preceiveing D.O. and that once this D.O. preceives D.O it will be the end of Samsara.even though what is preceiving D.O is actually D.O itself.
what you are saying is the cause of Samsara is the personality self("I" ego) that is itself dependently originated is failing to preceive the rest of dependent origination.
Yes, that is exactly whay I am saying, that when dependent origination perceives itself as such, then this is what is called Tathatā.
Please be so kind as to post the canonical source of your view that "dependent origination perceives itself." I can hardly wait for your response.
futerko wrote:
edit: if you want a reference, I suggest reading Mipham's Beacon of Certainty - he makes it clear how the two truths are not seperate.
songhill wrote:futerko wrote:
edit: if you want a reference, I suggest reading Mipham's Beacon of Certainty - he makes it clear how the two truths are not seperate.
I would prefer the older, more traditional canon. It should be easy to find something in the Nikayas or the Agamas that mentions d.o. perceives itself.
Son of Buddha wrote: Yes a True Self that exists beyond the aggreagates.
clinging to aggregates is listed as apart of dependent orgination which is rooted in ignorance.
the aggreagates themselves are apart of dependent origination the 5 aggreagates have as their souce ingorance,ignorance as their origin,they are born and produced from ignorance.
so if the 5 aggreagates are actually sourced,originate,anbd are born and produced from ignorance how does that fit into your views?
Son of Buddha wrote:So WHO is the one that is realising dependent orgination?
YOU STATED:(down below) "Again, I don't speak of any self that clings to the aggregates, it is something you do"
you rely more on this tainted self than i do my friend,"i" cannot realise Dependent origination,"i" cannot realise enlightenement for the "i" itself IS the property of Samsara.your view is of a self that is realising something as if the "I" truely is real.
futerko wrote:
It would seem a pretty basic consequence of the doctrine of no-self - what is it that perceives causality? - is if isn't consciousness then where does it state that it is something other than consciousness?
edit: If we approach it from the opposite angle - how is it possible for anything outside the causal chain to have any perception of causality? If something "eternal" was to come into contact with causality - then it would be changed by it, and therefore no longer eternal/unchanging.
Astus wrote:You believe in a true self beyond the aggregates, that is fine for a Hindu or some other religion, but in Buddhism there is no such thing.
songhill wrote:futerko wrote:
It would seem a pretty basic consequence of the doctrine of no-self - what is it that perceives causality? - is if isn't consciousness then where does it state that it is something other than consciousness?
edit: If we approach it from the opposite angle - how is it possible for anything outside the causal chain to have any perception of causality? If something "eternal" was to come into contact with causality - then it would be changed by it, and therefore no longer eternal/unchanging.
Please don't assume that I can follow you. Right now your thoughts about Buddhism are unclear to me. At least for me, they lack conceptual clarity. First, it would be helpful to tell me what you base your confidence upon with regard to the no-self doctrine outside of your beliefs and assumptions. You might provide me with a few credible references from the Nikayas as to what no-self really means, hopefully, from reputable translators like Bhikkhu Bodhi or I.B. Horner. Then we can go from there and have a conversation about your unusual theory.
songhill wrote:This comes across to me as somewhat of put down. For those of us who have read reputable Buddhist scholars such as Pande and Hajime Nakamura, to name just a few, the doctrine of no-self was not in the original canon. It is part of postmortem Buddhism. Of the discourses I have read in the Samyutta-Nikaya, for example, the Buddha makes a clearcut distinction between the aggregates and his self. Self has nothing to do with the aggregates. In this sense the Buddha's self is beyond the reach and range of the aggregates. This also comports with the general English definition of "transcendent" of going beyond or exceeding usual limits. In this case, the limit would be the five aggregates which the Buddha says are "not my self."
futerko wrote:I'm not going to go over the whole of the Pali canon, neither is there a simple one-liner which describes the whole canon, and moreover, were I to provide a reference it would still be open to interpretation. The only thing I can really do is explain my understanding to you...
The aggregates of self, including consciousness are dependently originated. All form is dependently originated. So there are two possibilites here - either consciousness realises that it is part of the greater stream of dependent origination, or it doesn't realise this and believes itself to be a seperate, independent "self".
This is a complete theory of transcendence, it doesn't require an additional "true self" to be outside of the process, and the idea that there is some other, outer, true self, is exactly what is called "God" by other religions. If you want to add that then that is fine, but it makes the theory dualistic, theistic, and eternalistic, which is exactly what is refuted in the canon.

Astus wrote:
I don't know what original canon you mean. Mahayana has a few large collections of canonical works and a number of generally accepted masters like Nagarjuna, Aryadeva, Asanga and Vasubandhu. A self beyond the aggregates is accepted by none of them, nor even by Theravada.
songhill wrote:futerko wrote:I'm not going to go over the whole of the Pali canon, neither is there a simple one-liner which describes the whole canon, and moreover, were I to provide a reference it would still be open to interpretation. The only thing I can really do is explain my understanding to you...
The aggregates of self, including consciousness are dependently originated. All form is dependently originated. So there are two possibilites here - either consciousness realises that it is part of the greater stream of dependent origination, or it doesn't realise this and believes itself to be a seperate, independent "self".
This is a complete theory of transcendence, it doesn't require an additional "true self" to be outside of the process, and the idea that there is some other, outer, true self, is exactly what is called "God" by other religions. If you want to add that then that is fine, but it makes the theory dualistic, theistic, and eternalistic, which is exactly what is refuted in the canon.
I have problems with your terms such as "aggregates of self" The aggregates don't belong to the self. There is no such concept in the Pali canon. The term "attâ" when it is used in conjunction with the five aggregates by the Buddha is meant by him to be distinguished from them. The aggregates are said, by the Buddha, to be anattâ; not attâ. Scholars have noted this sharp distinction, the use of which by the Buddha is not outside of the bounds of the via negativa. In addition, the five aggregates are treated always in a pejorative way throughout the canon whereas self is not. They are even identified with Mara if you've read The Connected Discourses of the Buddha: A New Translation of the Samyutta Nikaya by Bhikkhu Bodhi.
futerko wrote:I do wonder, if Buddha told people he took his tea with no sugar - did they ask how many no-sugar he wanted in his tea!!!
futerko wrote:
Firstly, a minor point, but Bhikkhu Bodhi practices Theravada, so it may not facilitate a simple equivalence of terms.
More importantly, I agree that the aggregates are anattâ, but as consciousness is one of these aggregates what do you mean by the word "self"? I have no concept of the word self that exists in the sense in which you seem to be using it. The aggregates include everything that constitutes the concept of a person/individual/subject/identity/being - so if we are talking about a via negativa, then the designation "true self" would seem to misrepresent that completely.
It becomes no-self not itself. There is no self outside of the five aggregates, the Buddha teaches this quite clearly.songhill wrote:It is the worldling who produceds the five aggregates according to the Buddha. By the same token the Buddha and his disciples spiritually disassociate themselves from them. Following this out, when a worldling asks, "What is self?" the metric for cognizing the self is never other than the aggregates (e.g., shape, feeling, or perception, etc.). Right away we can see a major problem. The aggregates can neither judge nor perceive—even know—the self. So enters the necessity of the via negativa. I will abandon desire for whatever is no-self/anâtta which are the five aggregates. Is Futerko, rupa on down to vijñâna? No, he is not. The authentic first-person, when stripped of the aggregates by the via negative, becomes itself and not other.
songhill wrote: Is Futerko, rupa on down to vijñâna? No, he is not. The authentic first-person, when stripped of the aggregates by the via negative, becomes itself and not other.
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