The Four Noble Truths: Difference between revisions

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This can be brought about by removing the cause.
This can be brought about by removing the cause.


==Fourth Truth==
==Fourth Truth: the path leading to the cessation of suffering==
 
According to Keown this is the Eightfold Path:
 
#Right View
#Right Resolve
#Right Speech
#Right Action
#Right Livelihood
#Right Effort
#Right Mindfulness
#Right Meditation
 
According to Cathy Cantwell,<ref>''Buddhism'', Routledge</ref> this is a Theravada formulation and Mahayana prefers others.


==Notes==
==Notes==


{{Reflist}}
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The Four Noble Truths are an important concept in Buddhism. Scholars have published a variety of different statements about what they are and their place in Buddhism.

Translation

Some scholars present them as statements, propositions, about suffering and so on (see below). Others, however, say that they are actually not statements but the things themselves, suffering etc. Some of these suggest "Realities" as a translation. Some scholars seem to mix the two interpretations, suggesting they may regard both as valid aspects.

In addition, a variety of possible analyses of the compounds in ancient Indian languages have been put forward:

  1. noble truths
  2. truths of the noble one, i.e. the Buddha
  3. truths of the noble ones, i.e. those who have attained some level of enlightenment
  4. ennobling truths

K.R. Norman (then President of the Pali Text Society) suggested all meanings were valid, saying multiple meanings were common in the Indian tradition.

Role

The received wisdom among American and European scholars, though contested, is that they are the central teachings of all or most traditions of Buddhism.[1]

Professor Peter Harvey (of Sunderland University) says they are the Buddha's advanced teachings for those ready for them.[2] L.S.Cousins (sometime President of the Pali Text Society) says this is the traditional Theravada position,[3] and quotes a stock passage from the Pali Canon in support.

Harvey also says the Mahayana position is that the Truths are an elementary teaching for those not ready for its own.[4]

The Chinese Mahayana writer Zhiyi presents the Truths as the essence of the teachings, but says there are different levels of Four Noble Truths, including Mahayana ones.

A former British ambassador to Japan reported in the first half of the 20th century that the Truths were little known in the Far East (which might seem strange for the "central teachings").[5]

In a 1999 book,[6] Carol S. Anderson argued that the Pali Canon presents the Truths as one teaching among many, and asserted that their centrality is part of the hegemonic structure of colonialism. More recently, she seems to have revised this position, saying the Truths and the Eightfold Path (see below) represent the most fundamental teachings of Buddhism.[7]

First Truth: suffering

"Suffering" is the usual translation, though others are found, such as "pain", "ill", "anguish", "dis-ease" etc.

According to Professor Damien Keown, this says that life is suffering.[8]

According to Dr Michael Jerryson,[9] it concerns the nature of suffering (not the nature of life), but he gives no details.

Second Truth: the cause of suffering

Keown says this holds that craving causes rebirth and hence suffering.

Third Truth: the cessation of suffering

This can be brought about by removing the cause.

Fourth Truth: the path leading to the cessation of suffering

According to Keown this is the Eightfold Path:

  1. Right View
  2. Right Resolve
  3. Right Speech
  4. Right Action
  5. Right Livelihood
  6. Right Effort
  7. Right Mindfulness
  8. Right Meditation

According to Cathy Cantwell,[10] this is a Theravada formulation and Mahayana prefers others.

Notes

  1. History of Religions, volume 42, page 389
  2. Introduction to Buddhism, Cambridge University Press, 1990, p. 47
  3. in Hinnells, ed, New Handbook of Living Religions [2nd edition], 1997, pages 393f/Handbook of the World's Living Religions [3rd edition], Viking-Penguin, pages 395f
  4. Routledge Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2007, page 319
  5. Sir Charles Eliot, Japanese Buddhism, Edward Arnold, London, 1935, pages 59f
  6. Pain and Its Ending
  7. Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism, 2004 (Volume One), page 297
  8. Buddhism, Oxford University Press, 1996, chapter 4
  9. Buddhist Warfare, Oxford University Press, 2010, page 15, note 5
  10. Buddhism, Routledge