Shunyavada

02.16.06 | 8 Comments | Filed Under Indian Philosophy

Preface

Whatever I’ve read on Shunyavada was several years ago and done in a semi-interested spirit. Add to it my phenomenal memory; all hazy, and muddled. Until recently when I felt compelled to turn the pages again, seriously this time.

I can’t exactly recall what compelled me but I think it’s mostly related to some blog (?) which had equated it with nihilism. I decided to find out for myself.

But before that, a somewhat lengthy introduction to Mahayana is in order because Shunyavada belongs to this Buddhist school.

Note: My main reference source is Chandradhar Sharma’s excellent A Critical Survey of Indian Philosophy.

Mahayana

According to the Mahayana school of thought, Nirvana (or Realization) is not a negative cessation of misery but a positive state of bliss. It revolves around the ideal of Bodhisattva who defers his own salvation in order to liberate others.

In one respect, Mahayana takes off on a tangent from what Buddha emphasized: atmadipo bhava (be a light unto thyself)–it assigns Divinity to Buddha. Buddha is worshipped as God; he is identified with transcendental reality and is believed to reincarnate–Buddha is the Absolute Self running through all individual selves.

However that be, Mahayana appeals to all because it aspires to seek Nirvana by accepting the world without rubbishing it away as unwanted. This is important because Mahayana considers the material world as unreal, a product of ignorance. And this speaks volumes about its accommodative spirit. Mahayana also commands our respect for its selfless zeal to serve humanity, more specifically to liberate people from misery and help every person attain Nirvana.

Ashvaghosha

To his everlasting credit, Ashvaghosha was the first to systemtically expound the Mahayana school of Buddhist thought. His seminal Mahayanashraddhotpada shastra (Awakening of Faith in the Mahayana) entitles him to this honour.

He says in the work that after Buddha’s Nirvana (death as we know it), few persons could actually fathom the Master’s teachings, that it had fallen into the hands of laymen, generally, half-knowledgeable people (pratyekabuddhas) who erred greatly in interpreting Buddha’s teaching.

Reality

The word for Reality is Tathataa. The Mahayana school views Reality from these chief perspectives and assigns definitions to each. The following table gives these definitions for Reality along with their Sanskrit equivalents.

Perspective Definition
Ultimate Existence Bhutatathataa
Pure Spirit Bodhi
Harmonious Whole Dharmakaaya or Dharmadhaatu
Bliss having infinite merits Tathaagatagarbha

Note: These definitions also help us understand why Buddha was also known variously as Tathaagata (He With Infinite Merits), and Bodhisattva (Pure [Calm] Bliss).

Reality in Mahayana is also looked at from the empirical standpoint, which signifies the cycle of birth and death or Samsara. However, the final goal of every Mahayani is to look at it from the ultimate standpoint which is Nirvana or the realization of positive bliss.

Reality is Indescribable

Because the Intellect cannot compass it.

A very common refrain that one across in most Indian philosophical schools is this: the world is unreal/illusory. Mahayana also maintains the same position meaning all worldly things are only phenomenally real because all phenomena are found to be relative. The intellect which discerns it is also therefore relational.

The Mahayana school uses the word Pratityasamutpada to denote Relativity. Crudely translated, Pratityasamutpada means “the world happens because it appears.” And this is the work of Ignorance. To quote Chandradhar Sharma,

Ignorance has no existence of its own, yet it is not entirely unreal as it produces the objective world [.] Relational intellect cannot give us Reality.

At the same time, Mahayana does not reject Intellect. In the words of Ashvaghosha, If we dispense with finite enlightenment, we cannot conceive of true enlightenment. Just as the calm water of the ocean on account of wind appears as waves, similarly consciousness on account of ignorance appears as finite intellects, and Just as clay is transformed into various kinds of pottery, similarly One Consciousness manifests itself as so many finite intellects.

The Way to Realization

Is to transcend the finite intellect. As Ashvaghosha says himself and as anyone familiar with Buddhist teaching methods /literature can testify, numerous tales, instances, and everyday symbols are used to instruct deep philosophical precepts. The purpose is to transcend the symbolism-paraphernalia and enter directly into Reality. Take the wildly popular tale of the mother who comes weeping to Buddha because her only child is dead. She wants Buddha to bring him back to life. The Master asks her to bring mustard seeds from a home which has not known death. The mother returns to Buddha empty-handed but spiritually ripe. If on the other hand Buddha had simply told her that death is inevitable, what’re the chances that she would simply nod, suddenly enlightened?

Transcendence at each step holds the key to unlock the door to Realization. Inside lies what Mahayana calls True Knowledge or the realization that the individual is no longer a finite being but Reality itself (technically, Absolute Suchness) which is self-existent and immortal.

The point that Reality is indescribable (see above) was expanded and later, systematised by its foremost proponent Nagarjuna. This falls in the realm of Shunyavada, which I’ll examine in the next part.

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