
Venerable Ajahn Brahmavamso Mahathera
was born Peter Betts in London, United Kingdom on August 7, 1951. He
is the chief prelate of Bodhinyana Monastery in Western Australia,
the Spiritual Director of the Buddhist Society of Western Australia,
Spiritual Adviser to the Buddhist Society of Victoria, Spiritual
Adviser to the Buddhist Society of South Australia, Spiritual Patron
of the Buddhist Fellowship in Singapore, and Spiritual Patron of the
Bodhikusuma Centre in Sydney. |
Buddhism, the only real science
Venerable Ajahn Brahmavamso Mahathera
I used to be a scientist. I did Theoretical Physics at Cambridge
University, hanging out in the same building as the later-to-be-famous
Professor Stephen Hawking. I became disillusioned with such science
when, as an insider, I saw how dogmatic some scientists could be.
A
dogma, according to the dictionary, is an arrogant declaration of an
opinion. This was a fitting description of the science that I saw in the
labs of Cambridge. Science had lost its sense of humility. Egotistical
opinion prevailed over the impartial search for Truth. My favourite
aphorism from that time was: "The eminence of a great scientist, is
measured by the length of time that they OBSTRUCT PROGRESS in their
field"!
To understand real science, one can go back to one of its founding
fathers, the English philosopher Francis Bacon (1561 - 1628). He
established the framework on which science was to progress, namely "the
greater force of the negative instance". This meant that, having
proposed a theory to explain some natural phenomenon, then one should
try one's best to disprove it! One should test the theory with
challenging experiments.
One must put it on trial with rigorous
argument. When a flaw appears in the theory, only then does science
advance. A new discovery has been made enabling the theory to be
adjusted and refined. This fundamental and original methodology of
science understood that it is impossible to prove anything with absolute
certainty.
One can only disprove with absolute certainty. For example, how can one
prove the basic law of gravity that "what goes up comes down,
eventually"? One may throw objects up one million times and see them
fall one million times. But that still does not prove "what goes up
comes down".
For NASA might then 'throw' a Saturn rocket up into space
to explore Mars, and that never comes down to earth again. One negative
instance is enough to disprove the theory with absolute certainty. Some
misguided scientists maintain the theory that there is no rebirth, that
this stream of consciousness is incapable of returning to a successive
human existence.
All one needs to disprove this theory, according to
science, is to find one instance of rebirth, just one! Professor Ian
Stevenson, as some of you would know, has already demonstrated many
instances of rebirth.
The theory of no rebirth has been disproved. Rebirth is now a scientific
fact! Modern science gives a low priority to any efforts to disprove its
pet theories. There is too much vested interest in power, prestige and
research grants.
A courageous commitment to truth takes too many
scientists out of their comfort zone. Scientists are, for the most part,
brainwashed by their education and their in-group conferences to see the
world in a very narrow, microscopic, way.
The very worst scientists are
those who behave like eccentric evangelists, claiming that they alone
have the whole truth, and then demanding the right to impose their views
on everyone else. Ordinary people know so little about science that they
can hardly even understand the jargon.
Yet, if they read in a newspaper or magazine "a scientist says that?",
then they automatically take it to be true. Compare this to our reaction
when we read in the same journal "a politician says that?"! Why do
scientists have such unchallenged credibility? Perhaps it is because the
language and ritual of science has become so far removed from the common
people, that scientists have become today's revered and mystical
priesthood.
Dressed in their ceremonial white lab coats, chanting
incomprehensible mumbo jumbo about multi-dimensional fractal parallel
universes, and performing magical rituals that transubstantiate metal
and plastic into TVs and computers, these modern day alchemists are so
awesome we'll believe anything they say. Elitist science, as once was
the Pope, is now infallible. Some know better.
Much of what I learnt 30 years ago has now been proved wrong. There are,
fortunately, many scientists with integrity and humility who affirm that
science is, at best, a work still in progress. They know that science
can only suggest a truth, but can never claim a truth.
I was once told
by a Buddhist G.P. that, on his first day at a medical school in Sydney,
the famous Professor, head of the Medical School, began his welcoming
address by stating "Half of what we are going to teach you in the next
few years is wrong. Our problem is that we do not know which half it
is!"
Those were the words of a real scientist. Some evangelical scientists
would do well to reflect on the (amended) old saying "Scientists rush in
where angels fear to tread" and stop pontificating about the nature of
the mind, happiness and even Nirvana. Neurologists are especially prone
to such neuroses (Neurosis: an undue adherence to unrealistic ideas of
things). They are claiming that the mind, awareness and will, is now
adequately explained by activity in the brain.
This theory was disproved over 20 years ago by Prof. Lorber's discovery
of the student at Sheffield University with an IQ of 126, a First Class
degree in mathematics, but with virtually no brain (Science, Vol. 210,
12 Dec 1980)! More recently, it was disproved by Prof. Pim Van Lommel,
who demonstrated the existence of consciousness activity after clinical
death, i.e. when all brain activity has ceased (Lancet, Vol. 358, 15
December 2001, p 2039).
Although there may be correlation between a
measurable activity in part of the brain and a mental impression, such
co-occurrence doesn't always imply that one is the cause of the other.
For instance, some years ago, research showed a clear correlation
between cigarette smoking and the non-occurrence of Alzheimer's disease.
It was not that smoking cigarettes somehow caused immunity from
Alzheimer's, as much as the tobacco companies might have wished, it was
only that many smokers did not live long enough to get Alzheimer's
disease! Thus a co-incidence of two phenomena, even when repeated, does
not mean that one phenomenon is the cause of the other. To claim that
activity in the brain causes awareness, or mind, is plainly
unscientific. Buddhism is more scientific than modern science.
Like science, Buddhism is based on verifiable cause-and-effect
relationships. But unlike science, Buddhism challenges with thoroughness
every belief. The famous Kalama Sutta of Buddhism states that one cannot
believe fully in "what one is taught, tradition, hearsay, scripture,
logic, inference, appearance, agreement with established opinion, the
seeming competence of a teacher, or even in one's own teacher".
How many
scientists are as rigorous in their thinking as this? Buddhism
challenges everything, including logic. It is worth noting that Quantum
Theory appeared quite illogical, even to such great scientists as
Einstein, when it was first proposed. It is yet to be disproved. Logic
is only as reliable as the assumptions on which it is based. Buddhism
trusts only clear and objective experience.
Clear experience occurs when one's measuring instruments, one's senses,
are bright and undisturbed. In Buddhism, this happens when the
hindrances of sloth-and-torpor and restlessness-and-remorse are both
overcome. Objective experience is that which is free from all bias. In
Buddhism, the three types of bias are desire, ill will and sceptical
doubt. Desire makes one see only what one wants to see, it bends the
truth to fit one's preferences.
Ill will makes one blind to whatever is
disturbing or disconcerting to one's views and it distorts the truth by
denial. Sceptical doubt stubbornly refuses to accept those truths, like
rebirth, that are plainly valid but which fall outside of one's
comforting worldview.
In summary, clear and objective experience only
happens when the Buddhist 'Five Hindrances' have been overcome. Only
then can one trust the data arriving through one's senses. Because
scientists are not free of these five hindrances, they are rarely clear
and objective.
It is common, for example, for scientists to ignore annoying data, which
do not fit their cherished theories, or else confine such evidence to
oblivion by filing it away as an 'anomaly'. Even most Buddhists aren't
clear and objective. One has to have recent experience of Jhana to
effectively put aside these five hindrances (according to the Nalakapana
Sutta , Majjhima No. 68).
So only accomplished meditators can claim to
be real scientists, that is, clear and objective. Science claims to rely
not only on clear and objective observation, but also on measurement.
But what is measurement in science? To measure something, according to
the pure science of Quantum Theory, is to collapse the Schroedinger Wave
Equation through an act of observation.
Moreover, the "un-collapsed"
form of the Schroedinger Wave Equation, that is before any measurement
is made, is, perhaps, science's most perfect description of the world.
That description is weird! Reality, according to pure science, does not
consist of well-ordered matter with precise massed, energies and
positions in space, all just waiting to be measured. Reality is the
broadest of smudges of all possibilities, only some being more probable
than others.
Even basic 'measurable' qualities as 'alive' or 'dead' have been
demonstrated by science to be invalid sometimes. In the notorious 'Schroedinger's
Cat' thought experiment, Prof. Schroedinger's cat was ingeniously placed
in a real situation where it was neither dead nor alive, where such
measurements became meaningless. Reality, according to Quantum Theory,
is beyond measurements.
Measuring disturbs reality, it never describes
it perfectly. It was Heisenberg's famous 'Uncertainty Principle' that
showed the inevitable error between the real Quantum world and the
measured world of pseudo-science.
Anyway, how can anyone measure the measurer, the mind? At a recent
seminar on Science and Religion, at which I was a speaker, a Catholic in
the audience bravely announced that whenever she looks through a
telescope at the stars, she feels uncomfortable because her religion is
threatened.
I commented that whenever a scientist looks the other way
round through a telescope, to observe the one who is watching, then they
feel uncomfortable because their science is threatened by what is doing
the seeing! So what is doing the seeing, what is this mind that eludes
modern science? A Grade-One teacher once asked her class "What is the
biggest thing in the world?" One little girl answered "My daddy".
A little boy said "An elephant", since he'd recently been to the zoo.
Another girl suggested "A mountain". The six-year-old daughter of a
close friend of mine replied, "My eye is the biggest thing in the
world"! The class stopped. Even the teacher didn't understand her
answer.
So the little philosopher explained "Well, my eye can see her
daddy, an elephant, and a mountain too. It can also see so much else. If
all of that can fit into my eye, then my eye must be the biggest thing
in the world." Brilliant! However, she was not quite right.
The mind can see everything that one's eye can see, and it can also
imagine so much more. It can also hear, smell, taste and touch, as well
as think. In fact, everything that can be known can fit into the mind.
Therefore, the mind must be the biggest thing in the world. Science's
mistake is obvious now. The mind is not in the brain, nor in the body.
The brain, the body and the rest of the world, are in the mind! Mind is
the sixth sense in Buddhism, it is that which encompasses the five
senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste and touch, and transcends them
with its own domain. It corresponds loosely to Aristotle's "common
sense" that is distinct from the five senses. Indeed, ancient Greek
philosophy, from where science is said to have its origins, taught six
senses just like Buddhism.
Somewhere along the historical journey of
European thinking, they lost their mind! Or, as Aristotle would put it,
they somehow discarded their "common sense"! And thus we got science. We
got materialism without any heart. One can accurately say that Buddhism
is science that has kept its heart, and which hasn't lost its mind! Thus
Buddhism is not a belief system.
It is a science founded on objective
observation, i.e. meditation, ever careful not to disturb the reality
through imposing artificial measurements, and it is evidently
repeatable. People have been re-creating the experimental conditions,
known as establishing the factors of the Noble Eightfold Path, for over
twenty-six centuries now, much longer than science.
And those renowned
Professors of Meditation, the male and female Arahants, have all arrived
at the same conclusion as the Buddha. They verified the timeless Law of
Dhamma, otherwise known as Buddhism. So Buddhism is the only real
science, and I'm happy to say that I'm still a scientist at heart, only
a much better scientist than I ever could have been at Cambridge.
Courtesy: Buddhist Society of Western Australia.
Understanding nutriment
Kingsley Heendeniya
Contributing to a discussion on 'meat eating', I referred briefly to the
subject of 'nutriment' (ahara). In the Teaching of the Buddha,
'nutriment' has a wider comprehensive meaning than when discussing food
and diet as 'nutrition'. In fact, it is little known that the concept of
nutriment summarises the entire Dhamma thus: sabbe satta aharatthitika -
all beings are maintained by nutriment.
I propose to discuss this
statement. There are three discourses that include reference to
nutriment: Sammaditthisutta, Mahahattipadopamasutta, in the
Majjhimanikaya, and Sangitisutta of the Dighanikaya. All three are
delivered by venerable Sariputta, the chief disciple of the Buddha.
Sammaditthisutta - On Right View 'Friends, with the arising of craving (tanha),
there is arising of nutriment (ahara) for the maintenance of beings that
have come to be (gestating), and for the maintenance of beings already
come to be (born). There are four kinds of nutriment: physical food,
coarse or fine (kabalinkarahara), contact (phassa), intention (cetana),
and consciousness (vinnana). With ceasing of craving, there is ceasing
of nutriment. The way leading to ceasing of nutriment is this noble
eightfold path.' There are two kinds of craving: desire for more of what
one already has (tanha), and coveting what others have (abhijja).
Craving is the primordial inclination or instinct of all beings (plants
and animal) for survival and propagation of species. (Let us omit plants
in this discussion.) That is to say, craving is built-in to our very
being (bhava). There can be no dispute about it. In the Teaching, the
objective is to put a stop to being, and thereby, to birth, ageing and
death; use the opportunity of hearing the Dhamma, and from penetrating
its true meaning, bring this unjustified existence to an end.
'Whilst I
(the Bodhisatta) had such power and good fortune (to be born the only
son of a king), yet, when I saw that an ordinary man subject to ageing
is shocked and humiliated to see another ageing, I lost the vanity of
youth. Yet, when I saw that an ordinary man subject to sickness is
shocked and humiliated to see another falling sick, the vanity of health
left me.
Yet, when I saw that an ordinary man subject to death is
shocked and humiliated to see another dead, the vanity of life left me.'
(Condensed and paraphrased, Anguttara 3:38).
This was the first insight of the robust fun-loving Prince and heir,
Siddhatta Gotama. Mahahattipadopamasutta - Greater Discourse on the
Footprint of the Elephant. 'Friends, when internally, the eye... mind is
intact and external visible matter... images/ideas (percepts) come into
its range, and there is corresponding eye... mind consciousness, there
is contact (with me).
There now arise feeling (vedana), perception (sanna),
and intention (cetana) pertaining to such visible matter...
images/ideas; and one clings, grasps, holds to them and delight in them
(or is averse).
The matter... images/ideas goes into the matter, feeling, perception,
determination and consciousness aggregates (five things that make up the
body and mind), and cumulate. That is how there comes to be inclusion,
amassing and growth of the five aggregates affected by holding (upadana).'
What these words mean can put in secular terms thus.
The fetus,
new-born, child, boy or girl, man or woman is not merely the sum total
of physical food. From conception to death, feelings... consciousness
are included in what is ordinarily spoken of 'person' or 'personality.'
Starved of feeling etc, no one, not even animals can survive merely on
physical food.
Food, whether, plant or animal is just external matter -
the same as the internal matter of body and mind: carbon, sodium,
potassium, magnesium etc. Or, ultimately, electrons; and all electrons
in the world are the same. This is the true and intelligent way to
understand and use physical food, and purchase its diverse presentation
- barely as it actually is (yatha bhuta).
Sangitisutta - Reciting Together
'Friends, this Dhamma (unlike of Nigantha Nataputta - Mahavira - that is
unedifying, arousing passion and ineffectual in calming) is well
proclaimed by the Blessed One. Let us therefore recite it together
without disagreement so that this holy life may long endure, and for the
welfare of humans and gods.
'What is this one thing (eko dhammo)? All beings are maintained by
nutriment...' (Beginning with this pr‚cis, a total of more than 100
teachings is recited in this discourse). Summary It is clear from the
above apparently mundane topic, that what the Buddha taught, as in every
subject relevant to his purpose, is complete, profound, reasonable,
logical, scientific, and leading onwards to insight of things as they
actually are.
He did not teach us to believe in this and that, have
speculative views of what is and what is not, what may be or may be not,
what should be or not be. We too can exactly see, if we make effort,
what he saw in impermanence, vanity and emptiness of things.
But true understanding for attaining insight of the meaning of things (dhamma)
he describes is difficult and hardly obvious. Discussing the dependent
arising (samudaya) and ceasing (nirodha) of connected dhamma such as
aggregates (khanda), bases (ayatana), contact (phassa), intention (cetana),
determinations (sankhara), consciousness (vinnana) is outside the scope
of this essay.
For full understanding of nutriment (ahara), and its
relevance, it is essential to know the true meaning of these connected
teachings. That is, it is impossible to have insight of any aspect of
the Teaching, of dependent arising and ceasing, piece-meal. My purpose
shall be served if the reader at least disabuses his mind that what the
Buddha taught is accessible to everybody; and find this essay
stimulating. The Buddha says: This Dhamma will not give delight to
fools.
Lecture by Ven. Dr. Kusalƒnanda of Sabbalokavihara, Radolfzell,
Germany
The Ven. Dr. Kusalƒnanda (Ayukusala Thera) will deliver a lecture on
"Buddhist Meditation and Buddhist Psychology" at the Dharmavijaya
Foundation Hall, 380/7 Sarana Road, Bauddhaloka Mawatha, Colombo 7 on
Friday March 30 at 5.00 pm.
The lecture is open to the public. The Ven
Thera is a Theravada Buddhist monk who resides in Weltkloster (Sabbalokavihƒra)
in Radolfzell, Germany. He leads the Ayukusala Sangha in Austria,
Czechia, Germany, Slovakia and Switzerland. He also regularly visits the
Zurich Buddhist Vihƒra and International Buddhist Foundation, Vihƒra
Geneva in Switzerland to spread the Dhamma. He visits Sri Lanka to
co-ordinate the training of European monks and nuns in Sri Lanka.
When in Sri Lanka, he resides at the Ancient Forest Cave Monastery,
Walagamba Arannya in Kotapola, Galigamuwa in the Kegalle District. He
has studied meditation under Acariya Anagƒrika Munindra in Buddhagaya,
India and has become a teacher of Vipassanƒ Meditation in 1967. During
the 1970s he had worked in Switzerland as a psychotherapist and later as
a professor of psychology at the Berne University.
In 1980 as a lay Buddhist, Dr. Mirko Fryba, was the Founder President of
the Swiss Buddhist Union. In 1983 he moved to Sri Lanka and studied
under his teacher Venerable Nyƒnaponika Mahathera who lived in the
forest hermitage, Udawattakele, Kandy.
At that time he had also served
as a Visiting Lecturer, University of Peradeniya. From 1990 he had
taught Dhamma in Czechoslovakia, while teaching at the Universities of
Prague, Olomouc, and Brno. He has founded several Buddhist Groups in the
main cities of Czechoslovakia.
In 1997 Dr. Fryba had returned to Sri Lanka and received ordination as
Bhikkhu Kusalƒnanda. He is now internationally known as Ayukusala Thera.
Venerable Ayukusala Thera has explained the Dhamma in his book The Art
of Happiness Teachings of Buddhist Psychology (Boston & London, 1989)
which was published in several languages under his lay name Mirko Fryba
as a practical method of life mastering. He has also written in English
the popular publication THE PRACTICE OF HAPPINESS EXERCISES AND
TECHNIQUES FOR DEVELOPING MINDFULNESS, WISDOM, AND JOY (Shambhala
Publications, Boston & London, 1995).
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