What is Kamma?
The Pali term Kamma, literally, means action or doing. Any kind of
intentional action whether mental, verbal, or physical is regarded as
Kamma. It covers all that is included in the phrase: "Thought, word and
deed".
Generally speaking, all good and bad actions constitute Kamma. In its
ultimate sense Kamma means all moral and immoral volition (kusala,
akusala chetana). Involuntary, unintentional or unconscious actions,
though technically deeds, do not constitute Kamma, because volition, the
most important factor in determining Kamma, is absent.
The Buddha says, "I declare, O Bhikkhus, that volition (cetana) is
Kamma. Having willed one acts by body, speech and thought."
Every volitional action of persons, except those of Buddhas and
Arahants, is called Kamma. An exception is made in their case because
they are delivered from both good and evil.
They have eradicated both ignorance and craving, the roots of Kamma.
"Destroyed are their (germinal) seeds (khina-bija), selfish desires no
longer grow," states the Ratana Sutta. This does not mean that the
Buddhas and Arahants are passive.
They are tirelessly active in working for the real well-being and
happiness of all. Their deeds, ordinarily accepted as good or moral,
lack creative power as regards themselves. Understanding things as they
truly are, they have finally shattered their cosmic fetters - the chain
of cause and effect.
Some religions attributes this unevenness to Kamma, but they differ
from Buddhism when they state that even unintentional actions should be
regarded as Kamma.
According to them, "the unintentional murderer of his mother is a
hideous criminal. The man who kills or who harasses in any way a living
being without intent, is none the less guilty, just as a man who touches
fire is burnt." "This astounding theory undoubtedly leads to palpable
absurdities."
"The embryo and the mother would both be guilty of making each other
suffer. Further the analogy of the fire is logically fallacious. For
instance, a man would not be guilty if he got another person to commit
the murder, for one is not burnt if one gets another to put his hand
into the fire.
Moreover unintentional actions would be much worse than intentional
wrong actions, for according to the comparison, a man who touches fire
without knowing that it would burn is likely to be more deeply burnt
than the man who knows."
In the working of Kamma its most important feature is mind. All our
words and deeds are coloured by the mind or consciousness we experience
at such particular moments. "When the mind is unguarded, bodily action
is unguarded; speech also is unguarded: thought also is unguarded. When
the mind is guarded bodily action is guarded; speech also is guarded:
and thought also is guarded."
By mind the world is led, by mind is drawn: And all men own the
sovereignty of mind." "If one speaks or acts with a wicked mind, pain
follows one as the wheel, the hoof of draught-ox." "If one speaks or
acts with a pure mind, happiness follows one as the shadow that never
departs."
Immaterial mind conditions all Kammic activities.
Kamma does not necessarily mean past actions. It embraces both past
and present deeds. Hence, in one sense, we are the result of what we
were, we will be the result of what we are.
In another sense, it should be added, we are not totally the result
of what we were, we will not absolutely be the result of what we are.
The present is no doubt the offspring of the past and is the parent of
the future, but the present is not always a true index of either the
past or the future - so complex is the working of Kamma.
For instance, a criminal today may be a saint tomorrow a good person
yesterday may be a vicious one today.
It is this teaching of Kamma that the mother teaches her child when
she says: "Be good and you will be happy and we will love you. But if
you are bad, you will be unhappy and we will not love you".
Like attracts like. Good begets good. Evil begets evil. This is the
law of Kamma. In short Kamma is the law of cause and effect in the
ethical realm, or as some Westerners prefer to say, "action influence."
KAMMA AND VIPAKA
Kamma is action and Vipaka, fruit or result, is its reaction. Just as
every object is accompanied by a shadow, even so every volitional
activity is inevitably accompanied by its due effect. Like potential
seed Kamma.
Fruit, arsing from the tree is the Vipaka, effect or result. As Kamma
may be good or bad, so may Vipaka, fruit, be good or bad.
As Kamma is mental, so Vipaka too is mental; it is experienced as
happiness or bliss, unhappiness or misery, according to the nature of
the Kamma seed, Anisamsas are the concomitant prosperity, health and
longevity, advantageous material conditions such as When Vipaka's
concomitant material conditions are disadvantageous, they are known as
Adinava (evil consequences) and appear as poverty, ugliness, disease,
short life-span and the like.
By Kamma are meant the moral and immoral types of mundane
consciousness (kusala, akusala lokiya citta), and by Vipaka, the
resultant types of mundane consciousness (lokiya vipakacitta).
According to Abhidhamma, Kamma constitutes the twelve types of
immoral consciousness, eight types of moral consciousness pertaining to
the Sentient Realm (karnavacara), five types of moral consciousness
pertaining to the Realms of Forms (rupavacara), and four types of moral
consciousness pertaining to the Formless Realms (arupavacara).
The eight types of supramundane (lokuttara) consciousness are not
regarded as Kamma, because they tend to eradicate the roots of Kamma. In
them the predominant factor is wisdom (panna), while in the mundane it
is volition (cetana).
The nine types of moral consciousness pertaining to the Realms of
Forms and the formless realms are the five rupavacara and four
arupavacara jhanas (Ectasies) which are purely mental.
Words and deeds are caused by the first twenty types of mundane
consciousness. Verbal actions are done by the mind by means of speech.
Bodily actions are done by the mind through the instrument of the body.
Purely mental actions have no other instrument than the mind.
These twenty-nine types of consciousness are called Kamma because
they have the power to produce their due effects quite automatically,
independent of any external agency.
Those types of consciousness which one experience as inevitable
consequences of one's moral and immoral thoughts are called resultant
consciousness pertaining to the sentient realm.
The five types of resultant consciousness pertaining to the realms of
form and the four types of resultant consciousness pertaining to the
formless realms are called Vipaka or fruition of Kamma.
As we sow, so we reap somewhere and sometime, in this life or in a
future birth. What we reap today is what we have sown either in the
present or in the past. The Samyutta Nikaya states: "According to the
seed that's sown, so is the fruit ye reap therefrom Doer of good (will
gather) good, doer of evil, evil (reaps) Sown is the seed, and planted
well. Thou shalt enjoy the fruit thereof."
Kamma is a law in itself which operates in its own field without the
intervention of any external, independent ruling agency.
Inherent in Kamma is the potentiality of producing its due effect.
The cause produces the effect, the effect explains the cause. The seed
produces the fruit, the fruit explains the seed, such is their
relationship. Even so are Kamma and its effect.
"The effect already blooms in the cause." Happiness and misery, which
are the common lot of humanity, are the inevitable effects of causes.
From a Buddhist standpoint they are not rewards and punishments,
assigned by a supernatural omniscient ruling power to soul that has done
good or evil.
Theists who attempts to explain everything by this one temporal life
and an eternal future life, ignoring past, may believe in a post-mortem
justice, and may regard present happiness and misery blessings and
curses conferred on his creation by an omniscient and omnipotent divine
ruler, who sits in heaven above controlling the destinies of the human
race.
Buddhism that emphatically denies an arbitrarily created immortal
soul, believes in natural law and justice which cannot be suspended by
either an Almighty God, or an All-compassionate Buddha. According to
this natural law, acts being their own rewards and punishments to the
individual doer whether human justice finds him or not.
Some there are, who cavil thus: So you Buddhists too administer the
opium of Kammic doctrine to the poor, saying: "You are born poor in this
life on account of your past evil Kamma. He is born rich on account of
his past good Kamma. So be satisfied with your humble lot, but do good
to be rich in your next life.
"You are being oppressed now because of your past evil Kamma. That is
your destiny. Be humble and bear your suffering patiently. Do good now.
You can be certain of a better and happier life after death.
The Buddhist doctrine of Kamma does not expound such fatalistic
views. Nor does it vindicate a post-moterm justice. The All-Merciful
Buddha, who had no ulterior selfish motives, did not teach this law of
Kamma to protect the rich and comfort the poor by promising illusory
happiness in an after-life.
According to the Buddhist doctrine of Kamma, one is not always
compelled by an iron necessity, for Kamma is neither fate nor
predestination imposed upon us by some mysterious unknown power to which
we must helplessly submit ourselves. It is one's own doing reacting on
oneself, and so one has the power to divert the course of Kamma to some
extent. How far one diverts it, depends on oneself.
THE CAUSE OF KAMMA
Ignorance (avijja) or not knowing things as they truly are, is the
chief cause of Kamma. Dependent on ignorance arise Kammic activities (avijja
paccaya samkhara), states the Buddha in the Patica Samuppada (Dependent
Origination).
Associated with ignorance is its ally craving (tanha), the other root
of Kamma. Evil actions are considered by these two causes. All good
deeds of a working (puthujjana) though associated with the three
wholesome roots of generosity (alobha), goodwill (adosa) and knowledge (amoha),
are nevertheless regarded as Kamma because the two roots of ignorance
and craving are dormant in him.
The moral types of supramundane Path consciousness (magga citta) are
not regarded as Kamma because they tend to eradicate the two root
causes.
THE DOER OF KAMMA
Who is the doer of Kamma? Who reaps the fruit of Kamma? "Is it a sort
of accretion about a soul?"
In answer's to these subtle questions, Venerable Buddhaghosa writes
in the Visuddhi Magga: "No doer is there who does the deed, Nor is there
one who feels the fruit, Constituent parts alone roll on, This indeed is
right discernment.
According to Buddhism there are two realities-apparent and ultimate.
Apparent reality is ordinary conventional truth (sammuti sacca).
Ultimate reality is abstract truth (paramattha sacca).
For instance, the table we see is apparent reality. In an ultimate
sense the so-called table consists of forces and qualities.
For ordinary purposes a scientist would see the term water, but in
the laboratory he would say H20.
In the same way for conventional purposes such terms as man woman,
being, self and so forth are used. The so-called fleeting forms consist
of psycho-physical phenomena which are constantly changing, not
remaining for two consecutive moments the same.
Buddhists therefore do not believe in an unchanging entity, in an
actor apart from action, in a perceiver apart from perception, in a
conscious subject behind consciousness.
Who then is the doer of Kamma? Who experiences the effect? Volition
or will (cetana) is itself the Doer. Feeling (vedana) is itself the
reaper of the fruits of action. Apart from these pure mental states (suddha-dhamma)
there is none to sow and none to reap.
Just as, says the Venerable Buddhaghosa, in the case of those
elements of matter that go under the name of tree, as soon as at any
point the fruit springs up, it is then said "the tree bears fruit", or
'thus the tree has fruitified", so also in the case of 'aggregates (khandhas)
which go under the name of deva or man, when a fruition of happiness or
misery springs up at any point, then it is said "that deva or man is
happy or miserable".
In this respect Buddhists agree with Prof. William James when, unlike
descartes, he asserts: "Thoughts themselves are the thinkers".
WHERE IS KAMMA
"Where, Venerable Sir, is Kamma?" King Milinda questioned the
Venerable Nagasena. "O Maharaja," replied the Venerable Nagasena, "Kamma
is not said to be stored some where in this fleeting consciousness or in
another part of the body.
But dependent on mind and matter it rests manifesting itself at the
opportune moment, just as mangoes are not said to be stored somewhere in
the mango tree, but dependent on the mango tree they lie, springing up
in the due season."
Neither wind nor fire is stored in any particular place, nor is Kamma
stored anywhere, within or without the body.
Kamma is an individual force, and is transmitted from one existence
to another. It plays the principle part in the moulding character and
explains the marvellous phenomena of genius, infant prodigis, and so
forth.
The clear understanding of this teaching is essential for the welfare
of the world.
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