,
Korea. The various Buddhist schools hold some varying interpretations on the nature of Buddha. All Buddhist traditions hold that a Buddha is fully awakened and has completely purified his mind of the
three poisons of
craving,
aversion and
ignorance. A Buddha is no longer bound by
saṃsāra, and has ended the
suffering which unawakened people experience in life. Most schools of Buddhism have also held that the Buddha was
omniscient. However, the early texts contain explicit repudiations of making this claim of the Buddha. Mahāyāna buddhology expands the powers of a Buddha exponentially, seeing them as having unlimited lifespan and all-pervasive omniscient wisdom, as omnipotent, and as able to produce an infinite number of magical manifestations (nirmanakayas) as well as being able to produce pure lands (heaven-like realms for bodhisattvas).
The classic superknowledges The
Early Buddhist texts (and other later sources as well) contain a classic list of "
supernormal knowledges" (Skt.
abhijñā,
Pali:
abhiññā) that a Buddha has attained through spiritual practice. There is an ancient list of "six classes of superknowledge" (Pali: chalabhiññā, Skt. ṣaḍabhijña) that Buddhas have which are found in various Buddhist sources. These are: • "
Higher powers" (P:
iddhi, S:
ṛddhi), such as walking on water and through walls; flight, becoming invisible and creating mind made bodies. • "Divine ear" (Pali:
dibbasota), that is,
clairaudience which extends in the human realm as well as into the other realms, like the realms of the gods (devas). • "Mind-penetrating knowledge" (
cetopariyañāa), that is,
telepathy; • "Remember one's former abodes" (
pubbenivāsanussati), recalling one's own
past lives stretching back eons into the past. • "Divine eye" (
dibbacakkhu), that is, knowing others'
karmic destinations (where they will be reborn); and, • "Knowledge of the destruction of
the mental pollutants" (
āsavakkhaya), which is the eradication of all negative mental states and the ending of suffering. This knowledge is the "liberation of the mind" (Pali:
cetovimutti, Skt.
cittavimukti).
Miraculous displays , 3rd century CE. Buddhist texts include numerous stories of the Buddha's
miracles, which include displays of the
abhiññās, healings, elemental magic (such as manipulating fire and water), and various other supernatural phenomena, traveling to higher realms of
Buddhist cosmology, and others. One of the most famous of these miracles was the
Twin Miracle at Sāvatthī, in which the Buddha emitted fire from the top of his body and water from his lower body simultaneously, before alternating them and then expanding them to illuminate the cosmos.
Mahayana sūtras contain even more extensive miracles. In the
Vimalakirti Sūtra, the Buddha display the true pure nature of his "
buddha field" to everyone on earth, who suddenly beholds the world as a perfect world filled with jewels and other majestic features. Likewise, in the
Lotus Sūtra, the Buddha shakes the earth and shines a beam of light which illuminates thousands of "buddha-fields".
Ten epithets of a Buddha Some Buddhists meditate on (or contemplate) the Buddha as having ten characteristics (Ch./Jp. 十號). These characteristics are frequently mentioned in the Pāli Canon as well as in other early Buddhist sources as well as in
Mahayana texts, and are chanted daily in many Buddhist monasteries. The ten epithets are: • Thus gone, thus come (Skt: '''') • Worthy one (Skt:
arhat) • Perfectly self-enlightened (Skt: '''') • Perfected in knowledge and conduct (Skt: '''' ) • Well gone (Skt:
sugato) • Knower of the world (Skt:
lokavidu) • Unsurpassed leader of persons to be tamed (Skt: '''') • Teacher of the gods and humans (Skt: '''') • The Enlightened One (Skt: buddha) • The Blessed One or fortunate one (Skt:
bhagavat) The tenth epithet is sometimes listed as "The World Honored Enlightened One" (Skt.
Buddha-Lokanatha) or "The Blessed Enlightened One" (Skt.
Buddha-Bhagavan).
Acts of a Buddha According to various Buddhist texts, upon reaching Buddhahood each Buddha performs various acts (
buddhacarita) during his life to complete his duty as a Buddha. The Mahayana tradition generally follows the list of "Twelve Great Buddha Acts" (Skt.
dvadaśabuddhakārya). These are: • A Buddha must descend from
Tushita heaven and transfer his throne to the next future Buddha. • A Buddha must enter his mothers womb. • A Buddha must be born (generally accompanied by miracles). • A Buddha must master numerous arts and skills in his youth. • A Buddha must live in the palace and enjoy his life with his wife. • A Buddha must make a
great departure from his palace and become a renunciant (
sramana). • A Buddha must practice
asceticism. • A Buddha must sit under a buddha tree (like the
bodhi tree) on a
bodhimanda (place of awakening) • A Buddha must defeat the demonic forces of
Mara. • A Buddha must attain and manifest full awakening. • A Buddha must give his
first sermon, and thus turn the wheel of the Dharma. • A Buddha must die and pass into Nirvana, demonstrating liberation and impermanence. The Pali suttas do not have such a list, but the Theravada
commentarial tradition lists 30 obligatory acts of a Buddha.
Attributes of a Buddha in Mahāyāna Manifesting in the Dharma-body of
Expedient Means", Japanese painting, at the
Met. Various
Mahayana sūtras and treatises contain explanations of the nature of a Buddha and the various attributes which Buddhas are said to have. These attributes are significantly different and more exalted than the way a Buddha is understood in non-Mahayana Buddhism. Some of the key attributes of Buddhahood in Mahayana buddhology include: •
Triple body (Trikāya): This is the central Mahayana buddhological theory which states that a Buddha has three aspects, or functions (Sanskrit: vṛṭṭis): the
Dharmakāya (
Sanskrit;
Dharma body, the
ultimate reality, the true nature of all things), the
Sambhogakāya (the body of self-enjoyment, a blissful divine body with infinite forms and powers) and the
Nirmāṇakāya (manifestation body, the body which appears in the everyday world and presents the semblance of a
human body). •
Eternity and
Immutability: In its ultimate aspect (i.e.
Dharmakāya), Buddhahood is said to be unchanging,
non-arising, un-created, eternal, permanent (nitya) and unceasing. Various sources like the
Lotus Sūtra also indicate the Buddha's lifespan (ayus) is also immeasurable or eternal ("ever enduring, never perishing"). Furthermore, in Mahayana, Buddhahood is also understood as timeless, beyond any concept of past, present or future, since any concept of time is a mental construction. •
Beyond thought: A Buddha has no
thoughts or ordinary
cognition (
samjña), he does not plan,
conceptualize,
think (amanasikāra). His mind is beyond all mental proliferation (nis
prapañca). Instead, Buddhahood naturally and spontaneously manifests myriad
skillful means to benefit all beings in an automatic manner without any thought or planning. Thus he is said to have a mind which is
no-mind (Sanskrit: acitta) or without discrimination (nirvikalpa). •
Wordless Teaching: Various sūtras, like the
Tathāgataguhya Sūtra, state that the Buddha "has never once uttered a single word" since Buddha is always in a state of meditative
samadhi. In spite of this, the Buddha manifests innumerable skillful means that magically appears to all sentient beings as various teachings appropriate specifically for them, in whatever language or sound they can understand. •
All-knowing wisdom: Buddha's knowledge and wisdom is said to be all-knowing (Sanskrit: sarvajña), i.e. omniscient. This is because a Buddha knows the true nature of all reality as well as all phenomena (dharmas). •
All-pervasive: Sūtras like the
Avatamsaka Sūtra state that Buddha's light and wisdom is all pervasive and
omnipresent throughout out the cosmos. As such, Buddhahood is present everywhere, including in the minds of all beings as
buddha-nature. However, most beings do not detect Buddha's presence, because their minds are deluded and clouded over by
defilements. •
Measureless Power: Buddha's power (anubhāva, adhiṣṭhāna) is said to be immeasurably vast, though not claimed to be
omnipotent per se. This power is able to influence and help liberate sentient beings in different ways. Furthermore, the "power of the [Buddha's] past vows" (pūrva-praṇidhāna-vaśa) can help living beings who call on the Buddha's aid by helping them be reborn in a
Pure Land. This idea, also called "other-power", is central to
Pure Land Buddhism. •
Great Compassion: Buddha's great compassion (
mahākaruṇā) and kindness (
maitrī) is universal and embraces all beings in the universe. It is due to this great compassion that the Buddha works to liberate all beings, and will unceasingly continue to manifest immeasurable numbers of emanation bodies (
nirmāṇakāyas) and
skillful means in order to save all beings. •
Skillful Means (Upaya): Buddha's compassion and love manifests as Buddha's skillful means which take immeasurably many forms. For example, Buddha may appear as a human, any deva, animal, etc. In order to liberate all different types of beings, the Buddha also teaches many paths to awakening (such as the
three vehicles), many teachings (such as the
three turnings) and many methods of spiritual cultivation. •
Inconceivability: In numerous sources, the Buddha is seen as being inconceivable (acintya), beyond all concepts, indescribable by language, unable to grasped by thought or intellectual understanding. One of the names of the Buddha
Amitabha is Acintyaprabha, "Inconceivable Light". •
Purity: Buddhahood is totally beyond the
defilements (kleśa) and thus perfectly pure (viśuddhi), unstained (
anāśrava), and undefiled (akleśa). •
Non-dual: While Buddhahood is said to transcend the suffering of
samsara (the conditioned world), it is also not separate from samsara either, and thus is
non-dual (advaya) with the world of suffering. This due to the Mahayana doctrine of "
non-abiding nirvana" (apratiṣṭhita-nirvana, also "not-fixed" or "non-localized"), which holds that nirvana is not a state of total transcendence separated from the world, but is also able to freely operate in the world of suffering, ecompassing the entire cosmos and being
immanent within it. == Lists of Buddhas ==