In the Pāli Nikayas, the Buddha teaches through a method in which experience is explained using various conceptual groupings of physical and mental processes, which are called "
dhammā". Examples of lists of dhammas taught by the Buddha in the Nikayas include the twelve sense 'spheres' (
ayatana)
, the
five aggregates (
khandha) and the eighteen elements of cognition
(dhatu). Expanding these various models, the Pāli Abhidhamma concerned itself with providing a finer and more exhaustive understanding of all phenomenal experience by explaining, analyzing and classifying all dhammas and their relationships. According to
Y. Karunadasa, for the Abhidhamma, dhammas are "the basic factors into which all things can be resolved" and "elementary constituents, the ultimate realities behind manifest phenomena." This "
Dhamma theory" is the central theory or cornerstone of the Pāli
Abhidhamma. According to various scholars of Abhidhamma, the main point of this theory is to provide a useful schema for meditative contemplation and insight into the nature of phenomena. Noa Ronkin defines dhammas as "the constituents of sentient experience; the irreducible ‘building blocks’ that make up one's world, albeit they are not static mental contents and certainly not substances." According to Karunadasa, a dhamma, which can be translated as "a 'principle' or 'element' (
dhamma)", is "those items that result when the process of analysis is taken to its ultimate limits". They are also said to be not-self (
anatta) and thus empty (
suññā). After all, dhammas are interconnected and interdependent in various relationships. Thus, the Pali Abhidhamma is not a type of pluralism, since it relies on both analysis (
bheda) and synthesis (
sangaha). According to Karunadasa, this "has enabled it to transcend the binary opposition between pluralism (
sabbam puthuttam) and monism (
sabbam ekattam), or as one Pāli commentary says, the binary opposition between the principle of plurality (
nānatta-naya) and the principle of unity (
ekatta-naya)." That the Pali Abhidhamma sought to avoid both absolute pluralism and monism can be seen in various commentarial statements that warn against a one-sided focus or grasping on the principle of plurality (
nānattta-naya). For example, the sub-commentary to the Dīgha Nikāya says that "the erroneous grasping of the principle of plurality is due to the undue emphasis on the radical separateness (
accanta-bheda) of the dhammas." Likewise, dhammas "are not fractions of a whole indicating an absolute unity" or manifestations of a single metaphysical substratum, since this would be the opposite error, a one-sided focus on the principle of unity. Instead, they are simply a "multiplicity of inter-connected but distinguishable co-ordinate factors." This is said to correspond to the idea that the Buddha's teaching is an ontological middle way between various extremes, such as absolute existence and non-existence, or radical plurality and absolute monism. While dhammas are said to be distinguishable (vibhāgavanta) from each other, they are said to arise together in clusters due to their inseparability (samsatthatā, avinibhogatā). This principle can also be seen in the suttas (see:
Mahāvedalla Sutta,) which state that some dhammas are said to be blended (samsattha) in such a way that they cannot be separated out. The fact that dhammas always arise together is also connected to their conditional dependence on each other. In the Abhidhamma, nothing arises without a cause, from a single cause or as a single effect. Therefore, in Abhidhamma "it is always the case that a plurality of conditions gives rise to a plurality of effects. Applied to the dhamma theory this means that a multiplicity of dhammas brings about a multiplicity of other dhammas."
Their nature and characteristics According to the
Atthasalini: "Dhammas bear their own particular natures (
sabhāva). Alternatively, dhammas are borne by conditions, or according to particular natures." The use of the term
sabhāva (own nature, own being) in the description of dhammas is not found in the books of the
Abhidhamma Pitaka, but does appear in other texts such as the
Nettippakarana and in the commentaries. Theravāda commentaries sometimes equate the two terms, such as the
Visuddhimagga which states that ‘dhamma means
sabhāva ’. According to Karunadasa, this usage of
sabhāva is only of provisional validity, "an attribution made for the convenience of definition." It merely refers to the fact that "any dhamma represents a distinct fact of empirical existence which is not shared by other dhammas." According to
Peter Harvey, the Theravāda view of a dhamma's
sabhāva is that it refers to an individualizing characteristic (
salakkhaṇa) that "is not something inherent in a dhamma as a separate ultimate reality, but arise due to the supporting conditions both of other dhammas and previous occurrences of that dhamma". This is shown by other definitions given in the commentaries, which state that a dhamma is "that which is borne by its own conditions," and "the mere fact of occurrence due to appropriate conditions." Similarly, Noa Ronkin argues that in Theravāda Abhidhamma, "
sabhāva is predominantly used for the sake of determining the dhammas’ individuality, not their existential status".
Sabhāva is therefore synonymous with
salakkhaṇa (own characteristic), which is what differentiates one type of dhamma from another for the convenience of definition.
Salakkhaṇa (own characteristic) is also called as "individual characteristic" (
paccatta-lakkhaṇa), "special characteristic" (
visesa-lakkhaṇa), "the characteristic which separates it from other characteristics" (
asādhāraṇa-lakkhaṇa), and "intrinsic characteristic" (
āveṇika-lakkhaṇa). This is contrast to "universal characteristics" of all dhammas (
sāmanna-lakkhaņa), which are those features all dhammas share. Thus, while in Theravāda Abhidhamma, dhammas are the ultimate constituents of experience, they are not seen as
substances (
attena),
essences or independent particulars, since they are empty (
suñña) of a self (
attā) and conditioned. This is spelled out in the
Patisambhidhamagga, which states that dhammas are empty of
sabhāva (
sabhavena suññam). According to Ronkin, the canonical Pāli Abhidhamma remains pragmatic and psychological, and "does not take much interest in
ontology" in contrast with the
Sarvastivada tradition. Paul Williams also notes that the Abhidhamma remains focused on the practicalities of insight meditation and leaves ontology "relatively unexplored". Ronkin does note however that later Theravāda sub-commentaries (
ṭīkā) do show a doctrinal shift towards ontological
realism from the earlier epistemic and practical concerns.
Classification of dhammas The Theravāda Abhidhamma holds that there is a total of 82 possible types of dhammas, 81 of these are conditioned (
sankhata), while one is unconditioned. These dhammas are divided into four main categories: •
Citta (
Mind, Consciousness, awareness) •
Cetasika (
mental factors, mental events, associated mentality), there are 52 types. •
Rūpa (
physical occurrences, material form), 28 types. •
Nibbāna — (
Extinction, cessation). The only unconditioned dhamma, it neither arises nor ceases due to causal interaction. Since no dhamma exists independently, every single dhamma of consciousness, known as a citta, arises associated (
sampayutta) with at least seven mental factors (
cetasikas). In Abhidhamma, all awareness events are thus seen as being characterized by
intentionality (aboutness, direction) and never exist in isolation. The Buddha made use of this term in the suttas, as can be seen in the
Potthapāda Sutta, where he explains that even though he uses the word "myself" (
atta), he is not referring to an ultimate essence, only speaking conventionally and that such terms "are names (
samaññā), expressions (
nirutti), turns of speech (
vohāra), and designations (
paññatti) in common use in the world. And of these the Tathāgata makes use indeed, but is not led astray by them". Also, the Niruttipatha Sutta states that the division of time into past, present and future are "three pathways of expression (
nirutti), designation (
adhivacana), and concept-making (
paññatti)." Together, the conceptual and the ultimate reality constitute the whole of the knowable (
ñeyya-dhamma). In Abhidhamma,
paññattis are a "merely conceptualized" (
parikappa-siddha) "product of the mind's synthesizing function", and "exists only by virtue of conceptual thought." There are two kinds of mutually interdependent conceptualizations: It is only in deep meditation that one is said to transcend conceptuality and gain direct insight into the dhammas themselves, seeing them as empty (
suñña) and impersonal (
nissatta, nijjīva). It is not only everyday objects that are conceptual, but also persons (
pudgala), time (
kala), and the characteristics of dhammas when considered as separate abstractions, including universal characteristics (
sāmanna-lakkhaņa) such as impermanence (
aniccatā) as well as the principle of dependent origination and the four noble truths.
Two truths According to
Y. Karunadasa, for the Theravāda, the
two truths theory which divides reality into
sammuti (worldly conventions) and
paramattha (ultimate, absolute truths) is a doctrinal innovation of the Abhidhamma, but it has its origins in some statements from the early
Pāli Nikayas. This can mainly be seen in the distinction made in the
Aṅguttara-nikāya between statements (not truths) that are
nītattha (explicit, definitive) and
neyyattha (requiring further explanation). Karunadasa notes that in the Nikayas, "no preferential value judgment is made between
nītattha and
neyyattha. All that is emphasized is that the two kinds of statement should not be confused."Therefore, in Abhidhamma, when a situation is explained in terms of what cannot be empirically analyzed further into smaller components with different characteristics (
lakkhana) that explanation is
paramattha-sacca (ultimate truth), and when it is explained in terms of
what is analyzable further due to being dependent on the mind's synthesizing function (i.e.
paññatti), that explanation is
sammuti-sacca (truth by convention), which exists in a relative or conventional sense due to mental conception (
attha-paññatti) and linguistic construction (
nama-paññatti). As Karunadasa writes:the distinction between
sammuti-sacca and
paramattha-sacca does not refer to two kinds of truth as such, but to two ways of presenting what is true. Although they are formally introduced as two truths, they are explained as two modes of expressing what is true. They do not represent two degrees of truth, of which one is superior or inferior to the other. Nor do they represent two parallel truths.
Nibbāna, the unconditioned dhamma pays homage to the Buddha's remains after the final
nibbāna (at the death of the body), Burma, mid 19th century. The suttas do not define the nature of
nibbāna in a technical and philosophical sense, but focus on explaining it psychologically and through metaphor as the 'blowing out' of greed, hatred and delusion and remain ambiguous about its metaphysical status. The various Abhidharma systems attempted to provide a fuller ontological account of
nibbāna. The Theravada position is first found in the
Dhammasaṅgaṇī, which describes
nibbāna as the unconditioned element (
asankhata-dhatu), completely outside of the five aggregates. It is a dhamma which "is neither skilful nor unskilful, associated neither with feeling nor with cognition, neither resultant nor giving result, does not require any object, is not classified as past, present or future." Though it is not accessible by discursive or conceptual thought, it is a dhamma that can be cognized or attained by the mind. The Theravāda commentarial literature also further developed their view of
nibbāna, where it is seen as a real dhamma with a specific own nature or characteristic as well as being completely devoid of any conditioned characteristic. According to Buddhaghosa: "it is because it is uncreated (
appabhava) that it is free from ageing and death. It is because of the absence of its creation and of its ageing and death that it is permanent. He argues against the view that nibbana is unreal or non-existent and quotes a famous verse found in the
Itivuttaka and the
Udana which states "There is an unborn, an unbecome, an unmade, an unconditioned..." Thus, the commentary to the
Visuddhimagga states that
nibbāna is the opposite to all conditioned states. In Theravāda Abhidhamma,
nibbāna is seen as totally other than the conditioned existents and as the only unique unconditioned dhamma. Therefore, Theravāda Abhidhamma holds that there is only one singular
nibbāna, unlike in Vaibhasika or Mahayana Abhidharma, where there are different types of unconditioned elements and different forms of
nibbāna (such as the
apratistha or non-abiding nirvana of
Mahayana and the unconditioned space element in Vaibhasika). == Analysis of Mind ==