People who find life worth living are
usually confining their attention to
this particular life;
they forget (or do not know) that there has been no beginning to this
business of living.
This particular life may perhaps be not too bad, but how about when
they were a dog, or a hen, or a frog, or a tapeworm?
Alam—Enough!
*
It is always advisable, when taking up
a new author, to find out whether he accepts or rejects survival of
death. If one knows this, one can make the necessary allowances, and
one may perhaps make sense of what would otherwise seem to be
rubbish. Camus is a case in point—to find him sympathetic it is
necessary to know that he passionately loathes the idea of survival.
*
I see what you mean about the Balfour/Willett book,
and in fact I did not want to press it on you because I rather
thought you might feel that way about it. Our temperaments are too
different—which, of course, you very well understand when you
disapprove my preference for ideas over images. It is not easy for me
to think mythically—in terms, that is to say, of myths (in the good
sense)—and I always tend to ask myself 'Is it true as a matter of
fact? Is such a thing actually possible?' whereas for you, as I
understand you, the question is 'Is it a valid myth?' And so by a
commodious vicus of recirculation, we come back to Balfour and
Willett.[
2]
For me the question that this book raises (whether or not it provides
the answer) is obviously 'Are these communications actually what they
purport to be? Is rebirth (or personal survival of death) true
as
a matter of fact?' And, of course, this question is perfectly
intelligible to me.
But to you, I rather imagine,
this question is
not intelligible: it is not the sort of
question that can be raised at all—or at least, it
ought
not to be raised. Re-birth, survival, yes, by all means, but as a
metaphor for something else, perhaps for everything else (the
continuation of the human race, of one's seed in one's progeny, of
one's fame in the successive editions of one's books, of the
traditions and culture of a people; the re-birth of the year at the
winter solstice, of the foliage of a tree each spring, and of the
tree itself in the germinating of its seeds—your list will be far
better than mine can ever hope to be).
Perhaps you
will say (or am I misrepresenting you?) that the truths of religion
are mythical truths, that they are
not matters of
fact; and if you do say this, I shall not contradict you. But then I
shall have to say, with infinite regret, that if it is a religion you
are after (in the sense of a 'valid myth'), then I have nothing to
offer you, because the Dhamma is not a religion.[
a]
In other words, before we can
even begin to discuss the Dhamma we have to agree whether or not the
question 'Is there re-birth?' can be raised at all, and if so in what
sense. It is simply a matter of first securing our lines of
communication. But I am not suggesting that you will want to do this.
(What makes the situation all the more difficult is the popular and
mistaken idea that the Buddha's Teaching 'explains re-birth'.)
Footnotes:
[a]
I don't mean to say that the truths of Buddhism are necessarily
matter-of-fact truths in an objective scientific sense: the Four Noble
Truths are not even, properly speaking, propositions at all. (Cf.
Heidegger's idea of 'truth' as the self-disclosure of a thing for what
it really is.)
*
You told me that you had read Francis Story's 'The
Case for Rebirth' (BPS
Wheel 12/13
)
and found that it helped you to accept rebirth as a fact. I have now
just read this booklet myself, and perhaps a few observations might
not be out of place.
To begin with, the examples of
(what appear to be) rebirth are good, and there is no reason at all
not to take them at their face value. Such cases, while not amounting
to
logical demonstration of the necessity of rebirth (which
is not possible anyway, since, let alone
re-birth, logic
cannot even demonstrate the necessity of
birth—is there
any
logical reason why you, Dr. de Silva, should have been
born?), cannot easily be dismissed on some other hypothesis.[a]
The remainder of Mr. Story's
booklet, however, sets out to
explain rebirth, either in
terms taken from the Suttas ('Dependent Origination,'
paticcasamuppāda) or the exegetical literature ('Cognitive
Series,'
cittavīthi), or else in scientific or
pseudo-scientific terms. This part of the booklet is worthless (or
worse), and any acceptance of rebirth based on it is built on
quicksand; for not only are the explanations bogus,[b]
but they should never have been attempted in the first place. The
Buddha does not explain
how rebirth takes place; he states
simply that, unless craving has ceased, rebirth
does take
place. It may be that a more detailed description of the phenomenon
of rebirth than is found in the Suttas could be made, but (a) it
would be irrelevant and unnecessary (because it is quite enough just
to accept rebirth), and (b) it would not be in terms of 'cause and
effect' (i.e. it would be strictly a description and not an
explanation).
This distinction between
description and explanation is of vital importance, and is really
what I was talking about when I said that the Buddha's Teaching
cannot be understood by one who (however unwittingly) adopts the
scientific attitude (which is also the scholar's attitude). I
suggested that a more fruitful approach to the Dhamma, at least for
one accustomed to Western ideas, might be made by way of the
existential or phenomenological philosophers, who have developed a
more direct and fundamental approach to things than that of empirical
science with its inductive and statistical methods. These methods
give, at best, only
probable results; whereas the
phenomenologist, not going beyond description of
present
phenomena, enjoys
certainty.
Footnotes:
[9.a] I would
strongly recommend G. N. M. Tyrrell's
The Personality of Man
(Pelican Books A165, published by Penguin Books). It gives an
intelligent summary of various supernormal phenomena, and includes
some solid evidence for rebirth.
[9.b] (i) 'Dependent
Origination' has—in spite of a venerable tradition—nothing
whatsoever to do with 'Kamma and Re-birth', (ii) the 'Cognitive
Series' is rubbish anyway, and (iii) Science, since it excludes
the scientist, has nothing to say about the scientist's—or anyone
else's—rebirth
*