Sherab wrote:If your nature is changeable, buddhahood is not attainable since if your nature is changeable, the buddhahood attained could also change.
If your nature is unchangeable, no amount of practice will enable you to attain buddhahood, since your nature is unchangeable.
Yet Buddha taught that there is path to buddhahood.
And Buddha also taught that buddhahood is not attained.
retrofuturist wrote:If it removes all traces of conditioning/forming/fabricating, then I see no inherent conflict.
So if there is no nature, does it mean that there is completely nothing?Astus wrote:The fault lies in the original idea itself that there is such thing as nature (svabhava/dhatu). It is no different from the view of self.
TMingyur wrote:... what is attainable is the cessation of obscurations and with this comes the cessation of papanca.
Sherab wrote:So if there is no nature, does it mean that there is completely nothing?
Astus wrote:Sherab wrote:So if there is no nature, does it mean that there is completely nothing?
I think the most detailed and logical explanation of the attainment of buddhahood is what you find in yogacara's transformation of mind from the eight consciousnesses to the four wisdoms, or an upgraded vajrayana version with 5 wisdoms and four bodies. In brief, the mind-stream contains defilements and if those are eliminated, thus have no more effect, the mind-stream becomes pure, so from a sentient being we get a buddha. Also, it can't be polluted again because defilement was sustained by the mind itself therefore once the corrupting factors are removed they're forever gone.
Sherab wrote:So are you saying that something that is previously conditioned by various factors can become something that can no longer become conditioned again, ie., something previously conditionable can become something unconditionable?
Astus wrote:Sherab wrote:So are you saying that something that is previously conditioned by various factors can become something that can no longer become conditioned again, ie., something previously conditionable can become something unconditionable?
No. A mind-stream is not a single thing but the causal continuum of mental factors. Among those factors we find the three roots of samsara. If they're removed the functioning of the mind-stream changes from defiled to pure, from ignorance to wisdom. It doesn't mean it becomes unchanging per se since there is wisdom. But it doesn't become defiled again because there is no cause for defilements any more.
Sherab wrote:"the three roots of samsara" - do these have a changeable nature or unchangeable nature?
"It doesn't mean it becomes unchanging per se since there is wisdom" - so the mind-stream is changeable because there is wisdom?
"But it doesn't become defiled again because there is no cause for defilements any more." - So no ignorance implies wisdom just as no apple implies orange?
Astus wrote:All composite things (samskara) are impermanent and dependently arisen. Because they're dependently arisen they're empty of nature (nih-svabhava). Also, if by changeable you mean disappearing and by unchangeable you mean eternal, these are the extremes of annihilation and permanence.
Astus wrote:No, the mind-stream is a stream of causal continua similarly to a river where you find no permanent component.
Astus wrote:Lack of inhibiting factors means freedom, from the freedom of perception comes insight into dependent origination and that is wisdom.
Sherab wrote:[What is it that previously has no such insight but now has this insight?
muni wrote:Sherab wrote:[What is it that previously has no such insight but now has this insight?
Wave can recognize being empty vast ocean and wave just its play. changing experienced play, life is dependent of nature 'before' mind, cannot exist independently.
Sherab wrote:So composite things have no nature and are therefore unreal/untrue but there are real/true connections between them?
Sherab wrote:So there is a permanent continua even though the components are impermanent? If so, is it not possible for all components to cease and therefore a cessation of the permanent continua?
Sherab wrote:What is it that previously has no such insight but now has this insight?
Sherab wrote:[
What are you referring to as wave?
What are you referring to as ocean?
Don't you have some practice to do?Sherab wrote:If your nature is changeable, buddhahood is not attainable since if your nature is changeable, the buddhahood attained could also change.
If your nature is unchangeable, no amount of practice will enable you to attain buddhahood, since your nature is unchangeable.
Yet Buddha taught that there is path to buddhahood.
And Buddha also taught that buddhahood is not attained.

Sherab wrote:If your nature is changeable, buddhahood is not attainable since if your nature is changeable, the buddhahood attained could also change.
If your nature is unchangeable, no amount of practice will enable you to attain buddhahood, since your nature is unchangeable.
Yet Buddha taught that there is path to buddhahood.
And Buddha also taught that buddhahood is not attained.
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