1. What hinders one from realising the nature of mind?
2. What stops one who has seen the nature from completing buddhahood?
Huseng wrote:
3. Realization of tathata.
Astus wrote:1. What hinders one from realising the nature of mind?
m0rl0ck wrote:Huseng wrote:
3. Realization of tathata.
What is that? How is it different than self and phenomena? From what does it arise?
The Heart sutra and various other chan/zen sources seem pretty clear to me in equating form and emptiness, it the tathata isnt form or emptiness, what is it?
Huseng wrote:
Tathata is usually equated to emptiness, but then emptiness has different meanings according to different perspectives.
m0rl0ck wrote:Huseng wrote:
Tathata is usually equated to emptiness, but then emptiness has different meanings according to different perspectives.
If its emptiness too, how can it be different than the emptiness of self and the world?
If you have two kinds of emptiness you have to distinguish them from each other and then they arent empty anymore, are they?
The Master said to me: All the Buddhas and all sentient beings are nothing but the One Mind, beside which nothing exists. This Mind, which is without beginning, is unborn and indestructible. It is not green nor yellow, and has neither form nor appearance. It does not belong to the categories of things which exist or do not exist, nor can it be thought of in terms of new or old. It is neither long nor short, big nor small, for it transcends all limits, measure, names, traces and comparisons. It is that which you see before you – begin to reason about it and you at once fall into error. It is like the boundless void which cannot be fathomed or measured. The One Mind alone is the Buddha, and there is no distinction between the Buddha and sentient things, but that sentient beings are attached to forms and so seek externally for Buddhahood.
Astus wrote:m0rl0ck,
What you describe as hindrances are what defilements are. And if that obstructs one from seeing nature, isn't it that different methods should be applied? Huangbo also says that while there are a few who can go the sudden way, many has to walk the gradual path.
"Some students attain the state of liberated Mind quickly, some slowly. After listening to a Dharma talk, some reach "no mind" directly. In contrast, some must first pass gradually through the ten grades of Bodhisattva faith, the Dasabhumi of Bodhisattva development, and the ten stages before attaining the Perfectly Awakened Mind."
"Out of thousands and thousands of Dharma students in the Dhyana School, only three or five attain the fruit."
It follows that if one is not enlightened immediately, they must apply the usual Mahayana path of sila, samadhi and prajna.
Astus wrote:m0rl0ck,
Indeed, there have always been Chan students working with different meditation practices before gaining insight. Huatou is a method devised to expedite seeing nature. As tradition says, it was invented by teachers because the capacity of students became worse than those of the ancients. I don't think this is the case, but that's a historical issue.
However, it tells a lot about Chan if there is hardly anyone who can do it.
Astus wrote:Talking about sudden enlightenment and 30 years of mountain retreat at the same time is a bit contradictory. One could as well use other methods, like samatha-vipasyana of Tiantai, or Huayan instructions, since they're more step by step and applicable to different circumstances.
Astus wrote:Seeing nature is supposed to be the pure Chan path which is not even a path but enlightenment. Or that is just rhetoric.
Astus wrote:If sudden enlightenment were purely rhetorical in Chan the whole thing could as well be put aside as a badly set up system and we should get involved in something real. I mean, the whole idea of Chan is about sudden enlightenment, without that it has no raison d'être.

m0rl0ck wrote:I guess one has to do something while waiting for the lightning to strike tho
See Nature, Become Buddha - Can You?
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