142 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
142 lines
7.1 KiB
Plaintext
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DETACHMENT FROM THE SENSES
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The passions and cravings of the flesh often arise from the percep-
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tions of the senses. Therefore, subduing desire begins by cultivating an
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attitude of detachment towards sense perceptions, by regarding them as
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impermanent, transient, and of no account. This teaching is stressed in
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the Bhagavad Gita and in Buddhist scriptures. Related is the injunction
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by Jesus that "if your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and throw
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it away," which is illustrated by the story of the Buddhist nun Subha.
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Just as one does not touch a sensuous woman entering an empty house, so is
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he who does not touch the sense objects that have entered into him, a
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renouncer, an ascetic, a self-sacrificer.
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Hinduism. Maitri Upanishad 6.10
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All bodhisattvas, lesser and great, should develop a pure, lucid mind, not
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depending upon sound, flavor, touch, odor, or any quality. A bodhisattva
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should develop a mind which alights upon no thing whatsoever; and so
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should he establish it.
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Buddhism. Diamond Sutra 10
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When the senses contact sense objects, a person experiences cold or heat,
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pleasure or pain. These experiences are fleeting; they come and go. Bear
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them patiently, Arjuna. Those who are not affected by these changes, who
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are the same in pleasure and pain, are truly wise and fit for immortality.
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Assert your strength and realize this!...
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The disunited mind is far from wise; how can it meditate? How can it be
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at peace? When you know no peace, how can you know joy? When you let
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your mind follow the call of the senses, they carry away your better
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judgement as storms drive a boat off its charted course on the sea.
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Use all of your power to free the senses from attachment and aversion
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alike, and live in the full wisdom of the Self.
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Hinduism. Bhagavad Gita 2.14-15, 66-68
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Monks, there are these three feelings. What three? Pleasant feeling,
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painful feeling, and feeling that is neither painful nor pleasant. Pleas-
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ant feeling, monks, should be looked upon as pain, painful feeling should
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be looked upon as a barb, feeling that is neither painful nor pleasant
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should be looked upon as impermanent. When these three feelings are
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looked upon in these ways by a monk, that monk is called "rightly seeing."
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Buddhism. Itivuttaka 47
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The five colors make man's eyes blind;
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The five notes make his hears deaf;
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The five flavors injure his palate;
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Riding and hunting make his mind go mad.
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Goods hard to come by serve to hinder his progress.
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Hence the sage is for the belly and not the eye.
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Therefore he discards the one and takes the other.
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Taoism. Tao Te Ching 12
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If your right eye causes you to sin, pluck it out and throw it away; it is
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better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body be
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thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off
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and throw it away; it is better that you lose one of your members than
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that your whole body go into hell.
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Christianity. Matthew 5.29-30
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In Jivaka's pleasant wood walked Subh-a the bhikkuni. A gallant met her
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there and barred the way. Subh-a said this to him,
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"What have I done to offend you, that you stand obstructing me?
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For it is not fitting, sir, that a man should touch a sister in orders.
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This has my Master ordained in the precepts we honor and follow. So has
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the Welcome One taught in the training wherein they have trained me to be
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purified, disciplined, holy. Why do you stand blocking my pathway? I am
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pure; you impure of heart; I am passionless, you of vile passions; I am
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wholly freed in spirit and blameless. Why do you obnoxiously stand obs-
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tructing me?"
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"You are young, maiden, and faultless--what do you seek in the holy
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life? Cast off that yellow robe and come! In the blossoming woodland let
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us seek our pleasure. Filled with the incense of blossoms, the trees waft
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sweetness. See, the spring is at the prime, the season of happiness.
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Come with me then to the flowering woodland, and let us seek our plea-
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sure....
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"Dearer and sweeter to me than are you is no creature on earth, you
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with languid and slow-moving eyes of an elf in the forest. If you will do
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my bidding, come where the joys of the sheltered life await you; dwell in
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a house of verandas and terraces, with handmaidens serving you. Robe
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yourself with delicate garments, don garlands, use unguents. I will give
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you many and varied ornaments, fashioned with precious stones, gold work,
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and pearls. You will mount on a couch fair and sumptuous, carved in sand-
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alwood, fragrant with essences, spread with new pillows, coverlets fleecy
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and soft..."
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"What so infatuates you about this carcass, filled with carrion, to
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fill a grave, so fragile, that it seems to warrant such words?"
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"Eyes you have like a gazelle's, like an elf's in the heart of the
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mountains--'tis those eyes of yours, sight of which feeds the depth of my
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passion. Shrined in your dazzling, immaculate face as in the calyx of a
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lotus, 'tis those eye of yours, sight of which feeds the strength of my
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passion. Though you be far from me, how could I ever forget you, O
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maiden, you of long-drawn eyelashes, you of eyes so miraculous?..."
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"O you are blind! You chase a sham, deluded by puppet shows seen
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in the midst of the crowd; you deem of value and genuine conjurer's trick-
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work.... What is this eye but a little ball lodged in the fork of a
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hollow tree, bubble of film, anointed with tear-brine, exuding slime-
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drops, compost wrought in the shape of an eye of manifold aspects?"
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Forthwith the maiden so lovely tore out her eye and gave it to him.
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"Here, then! Take your eye!" Her heart unattached, she sinned not.
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Straightaway the lust in him ceased and he begged her pardon. "O
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pure and holy maid, would that you might recover your sight! Never again
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will I do such a thing. You have sore smitten my sin; blazing flames have
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I clasped to my bosom; a poisonous snake I have handled--but O, be healed
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and forgive me!"
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Freed from molesting, the bhikkuni went on her way to the Buddha,
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chief of the Awakened. There in his presence, seeing those features born
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of utmost merit, her eye was restored.
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Buddhism. Therigatha 366-99, Subha Jivakambavanika
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- - - - - - - - - - - -
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Diamond Sutra 10: Cf. Chuang Tzu 7, p. 728. Itivuttaka 47: Cf. Dhammapada
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212-14, p. 927. Tao Te Ching 12: Waley interprets this passage as a
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criticism of attachment to the senses; 'the belly' is man's inner power,
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or ch'i, which should be cultivated through meditation while ignoring dis-
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tractions of the senses. Others interpret the passage in a political
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sense: the extravagances of the court, pleasing to the eye, ear, and
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palate, should be rejected in favor of providing ample food for the
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people, 'the belly.' Matthew 5.29-30: Cf. Majjhima Nikaya i.142-45,
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p. 929. Therigatha 366-99: Cf. Akkamahadevi, Vachana 15 and 33, p. 931;
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Precious Garland 149-57, p. 930; Sutta Nipata 205-06, p. 914.
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