Hi Gerard (and Ven.Kumara)

thanks for your comment. Please allow me first a few general remarks before I answer in detail.
I just come back from a visit to a friend living abroad and have now more time to study respective sutta sources as well the necessary quiteude
for contemplation /concentration.

You may recall , that the contemplation of jhana is included within samma sati /maha satipatthana (i.e. in dhammānupassanā) .
I suppose there is not much difference in respect to the first jhana of samma samadhi. However the distinction becomes clear with the 2nd Jhana (' After the subsiding of thought-conception and discursive thinking' which is connected with contemplation ) .
The Pali orginal may give us hints whether the translation 'susididing' of this standard text doesn't allow absorbtion as a synonym.

I still think that the All (as defined by the 5 senses media and the 6xt ) is gradually absorbed in the jhana progress ,in particular when it comes to the definitions of arupa jhanas.

to be continued

with Metta Dieter

----- Original Message -----
From: Gerard
To: Pali
Sent: Saturday, January 19, 2013 10:28 AM
Subject: Re: [Pali] All of that is considered JhÄ ?na ?



Hi Dieter,

I am not a specialist in these matters, but still I venture to make some
observations:

I think it is not true that "absorption" and "burning up" refer to the same
thing. Absorption is a highly concentrated state in which the senses don't
function anymore, or, at least, don't function in a normal way. Somebody is
said to be in absorption means, as I understand it, that he or she is one
with the object, without any thinking or awareness of the body. Sujiva
describes it as follows: "When one enters fixed concentration, the mind
undergoes a specific form of mental process,...,which leaves behind any
conscious subject-object experiences. This fixation can be cleary
experienced as a merging of the mind with its object."
I think this is the way "jhana" is normally interpreted. The
Buddhaghosa 'etymology is indeed a popular one: according to Nyanatiloka's
"Pali-Anthologie und Wörterbuch", the word "jhana" is from the Sanskrit root
"dhyaa", or "dhi", which means to perceive, to think. Nyanatiloka writes:
"erscheinen, bemerken, denken". There is also the word "jhana" that has the
meaning "burn, to set on fire", but that is from the Sanskrit root "ksha".

The meaning of jhana as absorption is the way Sujiva uses - and, if I am
right, that is the normal conception of 'jhana" - is not in keeping with the
sutta's.
Let's take an example: in sutta 111 of the Majjhima Nikaya, the Anuppada
Sutta, Sariputta's path to deliverance is described.

"And the states in the first jhana - the applied thought, the sustained
thought, the rapture, the pleasure, and the unification of mind; the
contact, feeling, perception, volition, and mind" (that is: the 5 khanda's,
GB); the zeal, decision, energy, mindfulness, equanimity, and attention -
these states were defined by him one by one as they occurred; known to him
these states arose, known they were present, known they disappeared. He
understood thus: "So indeed, these states, not having been, come into being;
having been, they vanish." Regarding those states, he abided unattracted,
unrepelled, independent, detached, free, dissociated, with a mind rid of
barriers. He understood: "There is an escape beyond", and with the
cultivation of that attainment, he confirmed that there is." (Bikkhu Bodhi:
the next attainment, the second jhana)
Sariputta goes through all jhana's. At the end of the cycle, after reaching
the base of neither-perception-nor-non-perception, he abides in the
"cessation of perception and feeling'. Then follow the words: " And the
taints were destroyed by his seeing with wisdom."

So, it seems clear to me that jhana can coincide with awareness of the body
and all other khanda's, that during the jhana's insight (vipassana...) into
the arising and falling away of phenomena, i.e. awareness of impermanence,
is present, and that the jhana-way can lead to complete liberation.
This implies, I think, that the usual interpretation of 'jhana' as
absorption, as one pointed concentration, is not in accordance with the
sutta's.

Metta,

Gerard

Gerard,

sorry for late reply .. but I received your messages only today ..not sure
why (?)

You wrote:

(G: Interesting in this connection are the ideas about meditation and jhana
of > > the American monk Vimalaramsi (dhammasukha.org).> > According to him
the idea of jhana as absorption, or even, concentration > > meditation,
which is, in vipassana-circles, the common vue, is utterly > > false. It is
based on the commentaries, he says, in particular on the > > Visuddhimagga,
but not on the Sutta’s.)

(D: I wonder whether he put it this way, as it is obvious according to the >
suttas , that within the first Jhana the 5 senses media is absorbed , and >
in the second , the 6xt sense .)

G: could you be a bit more explicit: what is the Pali word for “absorbed” ,
and can you mention a sutta, an > exact place if possible, where is told
what you say

Ven. K: I'm interested to know where you find the Suttas say that.

D: absorbtion ( I understand is the common translation) and burning up can
be synonymously used (e.g. nourishment of fire) in respect to first Jhana:
sensual objects =5senses media ,second Jhana: thinking/ mental activity
(subsiding of thought-conception and discursive thinking).
I would prefe German "ausblenden" English blank out, fade out/down, blind
out

PTS:Jhāna1 (nt.) [from jhāyati,1 BSk. dhyāna. The (popular etym -- ) expln
of jhāna is given by Bdhgh at Vism 150 as follows: "ārammaṇ' ûpanijjhānato
paccanīka -- jhāpanato vā jhānaŋ," i.e. called jh. from meditation on
objects & from burning up anything adverse] literally meditation

Nyanatiloka Buddhist Dictionary :
„The stereotype text, often met with in the Suttas, runs as follows:

(1) "Detached from sensual objects, o monks, detached from unwholesome
consciousness, attached with thought-conception (vitakka) and discursive
thinking (vicāra), born of detachment (vivekaja) and filled with rapture
(pīti) and joy (sukha) he enters the first absorption.

(2) "After the subsiding of thought-conception and discursive thinking, and
by gaining inner tranquility and oneness of mind, he enters into a state
free from thought-conception and discursive thinking, the second absorption,
which is born of concentration (samādhi), and filled with rapture (pīti) and
joy (sukha)."

PTS provides following sources :
The jhānas are discussed in extenso & in various combinations as regards
theory & practice at: D i.34 sq.; 73 sq.; S ii. 210 sq.; iv.217 sq., 263
sq.; v.213 sq.; M i.276 sq., 350 sq., 454 sq.; A i.53, 163; ii.126; iii.394
sq.; iv.409 sq.; v.157 sq.; Vin iii.4; Nd2 on Sn 1119 & s.v.; Ps i.97 sq.;
ii.169 sq.; Vbh 257 sq.; 263 sq.; 279 sq.; Vism 88, 415. -- They are
frequently mentioned either as a set, or singly, when often the set is
implied (as in the case of the 4th jh.). Mentioned as jh. 1 -- 4 e. g. at
Vin i.104; ii.161 (foll. by sotāpanna, etc.); D ii.156, 186; iii.78, 131,
222; S ii.278 (nikāmalābhin); A ii.36 (id.); iii.354; S iv.299; v.307 sq.; M
i.21, 41, 159, 203, 247, 398, 521; ii.15, 37; Sn 69, 156, 985; Dh 372; J
i.139; VvA 38; PvA 163. -- Separately: the 1st: A iv.422; v.135; M i.246,
294; Miln 289; 1st -- 3rd: A iii.323; M i.181; 1st & 2nd: M ii.28; 4th: A
ii.41; iii.325; v.31; D iii.270; VvA 4. -- See also Mrs. Rh. D. Buddh.
Psych. (Quest Series) p. 107 sq.; Dhs. trsl. p. 52 sq.; Index to Saŋyutta N.
for more refs.; also Kasiṇa.

I suppose that misunderstandings occur when theory ( contemplation of samma
samadhi as an object of contemplation within the framework of Maha
SatiPatthana) and practise --see standard texts- is not distinguished.

Further investigation of this issue may be benefitial.

With Metta Dieter

P.S. I wrote to the list owner concerning the delay of postings, no answer
so far





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