Buddha Dharma
Dharma Practitioner
At one time in Savatthi, the venerable Radha seated himself and asked of the Blessed Lord Buddha: “Anatta, Anatta I hear being said, Venerable. What, pray tell, does Anatta mean?”
“Just this, Radha, form is not the self (Anatta), sensations are not the self (Anatta), perceptions are not the self (Anatta), assemblages are not the self (Anatta), consciousness is not the self (Anatta). Seeing thusly, this is the end of birth, the Brahman life has been fulfilled, what must be done has been done." - Samyutta Nikaya
Among Buddhists I find my approach to Anatta somewhat controversial. I do not affirm that Anatta means not having an Atman. I affirm that Anatta means 'not-Atman'. Put another way: the Buddha only indicated what essential being is not
I find that the Samyutta Nikaya makes little sense taken otherwise. If the Buddha were really teaching that nothing has fundamental essence or being- he could have easily said so. It would be easy to have said to Radha: there is no Atman.
That is not how the Buddha answered. He answered with minimal negation. He stated what he knows (knows through the awakened eye of enlightenment) Atman/self is not.
There is more evidence for this though than the Samyutta Nikaya by itself. There is Buddhism as we see it approached and practiced through history.
Buddhism does not practice as though nothing exists, or nothing is being born from birth to birth. Buddhism historically has practices trying to liberate the deceased from the cycle of Samsara, or ease along the process.
It should be apparent that Buddhism is not teaching voidness. What exactly is it teaching then?
First I'll return to the Samyutta Nikaya. You will note that the Buddha says that seeing thus- that forms, etc are not-self> one has reached the end of birth.
This is similar to the Buddha's statement in the Dhammapada:
Through many births
I have wandered on and on,
Searching for, but never finding,
The builder of this house.
To be born again and again is suffering.
House-builder, you are seen!
You will not build a house again!
All the rafters are broken,
The ridgepole destroyed;
The mind, gone to the Unconstructed,
Has reached the end of craving!
-Dhammapada 11
In Buddhism this mind that goes to the Unconstructed is Citta.
Citta is better understood as the heart mind. It is the mind at the center of perception that says to itself: I am this. This I am.
This is in contrast with manas and vinnana, which are not the heart of consciousness, but refer to other aspects of the mind like the generating of the Skandhas.
Citta means exclusively that part of perception that sees itself. The heart of being.
This is no different for the Buddha as it happens. The center of the Buddha's being is called Bodhicitta. The heart of the Buddha.
The Buddha is saying that the fundamental mind moves to the Unconstructed when Nirvana has been realized. The heart mind that says: I am because I perceive that I am
This is not an illusory feeling in Mahayana Buddhism. In the Yogachara (also Cittamatra: mind-only) school, this mind is the only thing not generated by the Skandhas. Because the basic feeling of existing is not necessarily bound up in anything.
To be bound in the Skandhas (aggregates or collections) means only that one takes them to be indicative of the real self.
The Skandhas are those collective states produced by two or more sensations. Such as having a preference for chocolate cake, and the enjoyment sensation that accompanies sating the craving.
To be bound by the Skandhas means one takes these mind collectives generated by the world of forms as the real self. This is where fundamental ignorance about the mind first begins. When one looks at this mesmerizing shadow world and says: this I am
By contrast, to go to the Unconstructed is to perfectly attain understanding of Sunyata (emptiness). How is it that Citta ties in with this understanding though? Since as stated: Citta is not false or illusory.
I think this can only mean that Citta is not fundamentally separate from Sunyata. That is to say: the real mind is not different than emptiness.
One might very well ask: then why not simply say there is no mind and everything is void?
That is exactly the point! Buddhism is not saying that everything is void. Buddhism is saying that illusion is void. There is nothing real about illusion, or the false understandings we have about Ultimate Reality.
Sunyata is another form of minimalism to get the practitioner unstuck from speculation, just as Anatta is. I can easily prove this, given what the Heart Sutra says about emptiness and Dharma.
Real emptiness- the emptiness that Dharma has root in, is not voidness. That emptiness is a nature unknown to we humans. We have no reference to it in our concepts or sensations. That may even be why we use emptiness to refer to it. We have no other word that approaches this unconstructed.
Let's look at the Heart Sutra briefly, the first few lines, to help make this point:
Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva when coursing the deep Prajnaparamita clearly saw emptiness of all the Skandhas. After this he overcame all suffering.
Sariputra listen: Form is no other than void. Void is no other than form. Form is exactly void. Void is exactly form. Sensation, perception, discrimination, and awareness are likewise like this.
Sariputra, all Dharmas are marked with emptiness in that they are not born, and not destroyed. Not stained, and not pure. Without loss, and without gain.
There is a something to emptiness that transcends the illusion. This something has never been born, and never dies. It is not holy, or unclean. It gains or loses nothing, as the Heart Sutra describes it.
The heart mind is not separate from it in truth, so seeing that the mind is unconstructed is to awaken to this real reality within our being. That is when the Buddha's mind moved to the Unconstructed. He perceived no difference between his real being and this emptiness.
I can only suppose from this that there is a something encompassing this Cosmos. It is real and exists, but cannot be known through any concept. Because it doesn't need concepts. It is complete. It is whole.
To know it, is to know the true nature of existence. Because they are one and the same. Since this real nature is bound up in the illusions of the constructed- the constructed can perceive that it has a real nature, but Buddhists are warned about stopping here.
After all, we'd be clinging to shadows if we accepted what illusory grip can tell about it.
I conclude from everything said, and have concluded for some time: that Anatta does not mean everything is void, or that Atman is a false concept.
Anatta seems like the Buddha's way of denying a specific Atman concept. The Samyutta Nikaya gives us the negation of the Atman the Buddha did deny, so we can infer what the concept might have been.
The Buddha says forms, perceptions, and so on are not-self (not-Atman).
This means the Buddha is refuting dualism. He's refuting seeing an otherness in the base ego sense. The ego substantiates it's real separateness by clinging to it's abilities to perceive, think, grasp, and the like.
The Buddha is saying this base self sense, and any Atman view that might enshrine the ego as eternal is no Atman.
The thing that Buddhists chant mantras and perform funerary rites for, so that a deceased person might escape Samsara is not the person. It is the real Unconstructed bound up in this phantom world because of ignorance and misunderstanding.
This is what is being touched by the merits of chants and rites. This Unconstructed. This real.
Buddhism holds we are the Unconstructed bound in an illusion. This is why the Buddha says if there was not an Unconstructed- there would be no escape from the constructed and so on (Samsara).
The Unconstructed that goes to the Unconstructed, is not separate from it in reality. It is a seeming separation only.
This is why there are scriptures like the Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti that say though we die- in truth nothing has died. Nothing has ever been born that it might die.
This nothing that is not born and does not die is the elusive realness of Sunyata. Unlike Hinduism, the Buddha does not call it Brahman. He doesn't want us to get caught up in a trap, or the potential of falling into one with any concept.
However, Brahman is clearly what Buddhism seems to be getting at. We mean the Ultimate Reality that Hindus mean when they say Brahman. That is probably the most controversial thing I will say in this essay, and certainly my opinion.
Seems like a good place to end this work. Hope it clarifies my view of Anatta that I've eluded to in other threads. That was the purpose- to clarify my view of Anatta.
On an additional and final note: I very much affirm Anatta. It is a useful concept that keeps us from the speculation that goes with a defined Atman.
The Buddha has taught Anatta through his skillful means. For a Buddhist, that is enough.
Thanks for reading.
“Just this, Radha, form is not the self (Anatta), sensations are not the self (Anatta), perceptions are not the self (Anatta), assemblages are not the self (Anatta), consciousness is not the self (Anatta). Seeing thusly, this is the end of birth, the Brahman life has been fulfilled, what must be done has been done." - Samyutta Nikaya
Among Buddhists I find my approach to Anatta somewhat controversial. I do not affirm that Anatta means not having an Atman. I affirm that Anatta means 'not-Atman'. Put another way: the Buddha only indicated what essential being is not
I find that the Samyutta Nikaya makes little sense taken otherwise. If the Buddha were really teaching that nothing has fundamental essence or being- he could have easily said so. It would be easy to have said to Radha: there is no Atman.
That is not how the Buddha answered. He answered with minimal negation. He stated what he knows (knows through the awakened eye of enlightenment) Atman/self is not.
There is more evidence for this though than the Samyutta Nikaya by itself. There is Buddhism as we see it approached and practiced through history.
Buddhism does not practice as though nothing exists, or nothing is being born from birth to birth. Buddhism historically has practices trying to liberate the deceased from the cycle of Samsara, or ease along the process.
It should be apparent that Buddhism is not teaching voidness. What exactly is it teaching then?
First I'll return to the Samyutta Nikaya. You will note that the Buddha says that seeing thus- that forms, etc are not-self> one has reached the end of birth.
This is similar to the Buddha's statement in the Dhammapada:
Through many births
I have wandered on and on,
Searching for, but never finding,
The builder of this house.
To be born again and again is suffering.
House-builder, you are seen!
You will not build a house again!
All the rafters are broken,
The ridgepole destroyed;
The mind, gone to the Unconstructed,
Has reached the end of craving!
-Dhammapada 11
In Buddhism this mind that goes to the Unconstructed is Citta.
Citta is better understood as the heart mind. It is the mind at the center of perception that says to itself: I am this. This I am.
This is in contrast with manas and vinnana, which are not the heart of consciousness, but refer to other aspects of the mind like the generating of the Skandhas.
Citta means exclusively that part of perception that sees itself. The heart of being.
This is no different for the Buddha as it happens. The center of the Buddha's being is called Bodhicitta. The heart of the Buddha.
The Buddha is saying that the fundamental mind moves to the Unconstructed when Nirvana has been realized. The heart mind that says: I am because I perceive that I am
This is not an illusory feeling in Mahayana Buddhism. In the Yogachara (also Cittamatra: mind-only) school, this mind is the only thing not generated by the Skandhas. Because the basic feeling of existing is not necessarily bound up in anything.
To be bound in the Skandhas (aggregates or collections) means only that one takes them to be indicative of the real self.
The Skandhas are those collective states produced by two or more sensations. Such as having a preference for chocolate cake, and the enjoyment sensation that accompanies sating the craving.
To be bound by the Skandhas means one takes these mind collectives generated by the world of forms as the real self. This is where fundamental ignorance about the mind first begins. When one looks at this mesmerizing shadow world and says: this I am
By contrast, to go to the Unconstructed is to perfectly attain understanding of Sunyata (emptiness). How is it that Citta ties in with this understanding though? Since as stated: Citta is not false or illusory.
I think this can only mean that Citta is not fundamentally separate from Sunyata. That is to say: the real mind is not different than emptiness.
One might very well ask: then why not simply say there is no mind and everything is void?
That is exactly the point! Buddhism is not saying that everything is void. Buddhism is saying that illusion is void. There is nothing real about illusion, or the false understandings we have about Ultimate Reality.
Sunyata is another form of minimalism to get the practitioner unstuck from speculation, just as Anatta is. I can easily prove this, given what the Heart Sutra says about emptiness and Dharma.
Real emptiness- the emptiness that Dharma has root in, is not voidness. That emptiness is a nature unknown to we humans. We have no reference to it in our concepts or sensations. That may even be why we use emptiness to refer to it. We have no other word that approaches this unconstructed.
Let's look at the Heart Sutra briefly, the first few lines, to help make this point:
Avalokitesvara Bodhisattva when coursing the deep Prajnaparamita clearly saw emptiness of all the Skandhas. After this he overcame all suffering.
Sariputra listen: Form is no other than void. Void is no other than form. Form is exactly void. Void is exactly form. Sensation, perception, discrimination, and awareness are likewise like this.
Sariputra, all Dharmas are marked with emptiness in that they are not born, and not destroyed. Not stained, and not pure. Without loss, and without gain.
There is a something to emptiness that transcends the illusion. This something has never been born, and never dies. It is not holy, or unclean. It gains or loses nothing, as the Heart Sutra describes it.
The heart mind is not separate from it in truth, so seeing that the mind is unconstructed is to awaken to this real reality within our being. That is when the Buddha's mind moved to the Unconstructed. He perceived no difference between his real being and this emptiness.
I can only suppose from this that there is a something encompassing this Cosmos. It is real and exists, but cannot be known through any concept. Because it doesn't need concepts. It is complete. It is whole.
To know it, is to know the true nature of existence. Because they are one and the same. Since this real nature is bound up in the illusions of the constructed- the constructed can perceive that it has a real nature, but Buddhists are warned about stopping here.
After all, we'd be clinging to shadows if we accepted what illusory grip can tell about it.
I conclude from everything said, and have concluded for some time: that Anatta does not mean everything is void, or that Atman is a false concept.
Anatta seems like the Buddha's way of denying a specific Atman concept. The Samyutta Nikaya gives us the negation of the Atman the Buddha did deny, so we can infer what the concept might have been.
The Buddha says forms, perceptions, and so on are not-self (not-Atman).
This means the Buddha is refuting dualism. He's refuting seeing an otherness in the base ego sense. The ego substantiates it's real separateness by clinging to it's abilities to perceive, think, grasp, and the like.
The Buddha is saying this base self sense, and any Atman view that might enshrine the ego as eternal is no Atman.
The thing that Buddhists chant mantras and perform funerary rites for, so that a deceased person might escape Samsara is not the person. It is the real Unconstructed bound up in this phantom world because of ignorance and misunderstanding.
This is what is being touched by the merits of chants and rites. This Unconstructed. This real.
Buddhism holds we are the Unconstructed bound in an illusion. This is why the Buddha says if there was not an Unconstructed- there would be no escape from the constructed and so on (Samsara).
The Unconstructed that goes to the Unconstructed, is not separate from it in reality. It is a seeming separation only.
This is why there are scriptures like the Holy Teaching of Vimalakirti that say though we die- in truth nothing has died. Nothing has ever been born that it might die.
This nothing that is not born and does not die is the elusive realness of Sunyata. Unlike Hinduism, the Buddha does not call it Brahman. He doesn't want us to get caught up in a trap, or the potential of falling into one with any concept.
However, Brahman is clearly what Buddhism seems to be getting at. We mean the Ultimate Reality that Hindus mean when they say Brahman. That is probably the most controversial thing I will say in this essay, and certainly my opinion.
Seems like a good place to end this work. Hope it clarifies my view of Anatta that I've eluded to in other threads. That was the purpose- to clarify my view of Anatta.
On an additional and final note: I very much affirm Anatta. It is a useful concept that keeps us from the speculation that goes with a defined Atman.
The Buddha has taught Anatta through his skillful means. For a Buddhist, that is enough.
Thanks for reading.