サイトマップ本館について諮問委員会お問い合わせ資料提供著作権について当サイトの内容を引用するホームページへ        

書目仏学著者データベース当サイト内
検索システム全文コレクションデジタル仏経言語レッスンリンク
 


加えサービス
書誌管理
書き出し
The structure and dynamics of attainment of cessation in Theravada meditation [abst, article available from Scholar's Pr, Missoula, MT]
著者 King, Winston L.
掲載誌 Journal of the American Academy of Religion
巻号v.45 n.2
出版年月日1977.06
ページ226 - 226
出版者Oxford University Press
出版サイト http://ukcatalogue.oup.com/
出版地Oxford, UK [牛津, 英國]
資料の種類期刊論文=Journal Article
言語英文=English
ノート300
キーワードMeditation (Buddhism); Theravada Buddhism
抄録The attainment of cessation (nirodha-samāpatti) is the highest meditational state possible in Theravada Buddhism. Those in this state are to all appearances dead, for it is the extinction of all feeling and perception, continuing for as long as seven days. It is seen as the actual realization of Nibbana in this life.

The basic technique of this achievement is yogic. The meditator proceeds through four jhānic states, each one of deeper concentration than the previous one, and then on through four “formless meditations” by an increasing subtilization of the object of meditation and a correlate weakening of the sense of individuality. The eighth level has “neither perception nor non-perception” as its object and is “semi-conscious.” All these states are transic in nature, i.e., locked into speechless, conceptionless, irresponsive concentration on one object. Cessation is the consummation of this process.

Yet there is another absolutely necessary component: vipassanā, or insight meditation. Only those who have pursued this route to its perfection, and are at the same time jhānic adepts, can attain to cessation. Now vipassanā is the sine qua non of enlightenment; it is the fully existentialized comprehension that all existent entities, including the self, are impermanent, empty of true reality and instinct with suffering (and rebirth). It can form a separate, non-jhānic, Buddhist style of meditation in its own right. But it may also be used in conjunction with the jhānic mode to produce cessation.

How then can and do these two disparate, seemingly antagonistic disciplines together produce the attainment of cessation? The methodology is as follows: Fully intending cessation the meditator enters the first jhāna and then successively goes up the transic ladder to neither perception nor non-perception, whence he vaults on into cessation. But after each emergence from jhānic trance, he “reviews” it in vipassanic terms, “This too is impermanent, empty, instinct with pain.”

What are the implications? (1) Obviously the two techniques are interacting at every stage but with vispassanā dominating the consciousness. (2) Both seek states which are transcendent of ordinary subject-object consciousness: The jhānic “peaceful abidings” overcome all “materiality”; vipassanā brings Path-awareness in which Nibbana itself is directly apprehended. (3) Both inevitably tend toward a climactic experience; the jhānic-yogic progresses toward a non-dual awareness; the vipassanic toward a “going-out” into the “Unconditioned.” Hence a fully “unconscious” state of transic nature and achieved by yogic means if seen as nibbanic realization constitutes a joint climax.

To this the jhānic-yogic strand contributes techniques and gives depth, stability and transic quality, vipassanā contributes the all-pervasive conviction (pre- and postcessation) of cessation's identity with Nibbana.

ISSN00027189 (P); 14774585 (E)
ヒット数289
作成日1998.04.28
更新日期2019.12.25



Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac)での検索をお勧めします。IEではこの検索システムを表示できません。

注意:

この先は にアクセスすることになります。このデータベースが提供する全文が有料の場合は、表示することができませんのでご了承ください。

修正のご指摘

下のフォームで修正していただきます。正しい情報を入れた後、下の送信ボタンを押してください。
(管理人がご意見にすぐ対応させていただきます。)

シリアル番号
278363

検索履歴
フィールドコードに関するご説明
検索条件ブラウズ