FOURFOLD KAMMA

Y2K

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FOURFOLD KAMMA

IN ORDER TO gain a clearer understanding of the role of kammain dying and rebirth, a holistic introduction to the nature ofkamma and some of its various aspects would be helpful. As thesubject of kamma is both profound and complex, a ratheracademic approach has been adopted here which, I hope, willnot deter or discourage the general reader. However, if the following discussion is too dry, technical or boring, this chaptercould be set aside and returned to subsequently.

THE NATURE OF KAMMA
The word kamma means literally action or deed, but in the Buddha’s teaching it refers exclusively to volitional action. From a technical standpoint, kamma denotes wholesome or unwholesome volition (cetanà), volition being the factor responsible for action. Thus the Buddha declares: “It is volition, monks, that I call kamma, for having willed, one performs an action through body, speech or mind.” All volitional action, except that of a Buddha or an arahant, constitutes kamma. As mentioned in the last chapter, although volition arises and passes away together with its citta, the kammic potential created by it does not dissipate until it has given its appropriate effect or becomes defunct. Buddhas and arahants are bound to experience the ripening of their past kamma as long as their psycho-physical personalities persist, that is, until they pass away. The law of kamma (kammaniyàma) is self-subsistent in its
operation, ensuring that willed deeds produce their effects in accordance with their ethical quality just as surely as seeds bear fruit in accordance with their species. The direct products of kamma are the resultant cittas that arise when kamma finds the right conditions to bear fruit. Kamma also produces a distinct type of matter in the organic bodies of living beings, called kammaborn matter, which was briefly explained in the preceding chapter.

SOME ASPECTS OF KAMMA
By applying four different methods of analysis, kamma can be classified into four fourfold divisions, making sixteen types of kamma in all. A summary of this is given in Diagram 3, and followed by a detailed explanation.

1 BY WAY OF FUNCTION
Kammas perform different functions (kicca), of which four arementioned here. Any kamma, under different circumstances,can perform any or several of these functions.

1.1 Productive (janaka) kamma is wholesome or unwholesomevolition which produces resultant cittas and kamma-born matter, both at the moment of rebirth-linking and during the course of existence. At the moment of conception, productive kamma generates the rebirth-linking citta and the kamma-born types of matter constituting the physical body of the new being. During the course of existence, it produces other resultant cittas and kammaborn matter, such as the sense faculties, gender, and the heart-base (the seat of consciousness, which is different from the anatomical heart). Only a kamma that has attained the status of a full course of action can perform the function of producing rebirth-linking, but all wholesome and unwholesome kammas without exception can produce results during the course of existence.

1.2 Supportive (upatthambhaka) kamma is kamma which does not gain an opportunity to produce its own result, but which, when some other kamma is exercising a productive function, supports it, either by enabling it to produce its pleasant or painful results over an extended time without obstruction, or by reinforcing the results produced by another kamma. For example, when through the productive function of wholesome kamma one is reborn as a human being, supportive kamma may contribute to the extension of one’s life-span and ensure that one is healthy and well provided with the necessities of life. When an unwholesome kamma has exercised its productive function by causing a painful disease, other unwholesome kammas may support it by preventing medicines from working effectively, thereby prolonging the disease. When a being has been reborn as an animal through the productive force of unwholesome kamma, supportive kamma may facilitate the ripening of more unwholesome kamma productive of painful results, and may also lead to an extension of the life-span so that the continuity of unwholesome resultants will long endure.


1.3 Obstructive (upapãëaka) kamma is kamma which cannot produce its own result but nevertheless obstructs and frustrates some other kamma, countering its efficacy or shortening the duration of its pleasant or painful results. Even though a productive kamma may be strong at the time it is accumulated, an obstructive kamma directly opposed to it may counteract it so that it becomes impaired when producing its results. For example, a wholesome kamma tending to produce rebirth in a superior plane of
existence may be impeded by an obstructive kamma so that it generates rebirth in a lower plane. A kamma tending to produce rebirth among high families may produce rebirth among low families; kamma tending to produce beauty may produce a plain appearance, etc. In the opposite way, an unwholesome kamma tending to


produce rebirth in the great hells may be counteracted by an obstructive wholesome kamma and produce rebirth in the minor hell or among the petas [departed ones]. During the course of existence, many instances may be found of the operation of obstructive kamma. In the human realm, such kamma will obstruct the good results produced by wholesome kamma, facilitating the maturation of unwholesome kamma that results in suffering and causing failures with regard to property and wealth, or family and friends. In the lower realms, obstructive kamma may counteract the unwholesome rebirthproducing kamma, contributing to occasions of ease and happiness.

1.4 Destructive (upaghàñaka) kamma is wholesome or unwholesome kamma which supplants another weaker kamma, prevents it from ripening, and produces instead its own result. For example, somebody born as a human being may, through his or her productive kamma, have been originally destined for a long life-span, but a destructive kamma may arise and bring about a premature death. At the time of death, at first a sign of a bad destination may appear by the power of an evil kamma, heralding a bad rebirth, but then a good kamma may emerge, expel the bad kamma and having caused the sign of a good destination to appear, produce rebirth in a heavenly world (see “Dying Perceptions,” , for an explanation of sign of destiny). On the other hand, a bad kamma may suddenly arise, cut off the productive potential of a good kamma, and generate rebirth in a woeful realm.

According to Ledi Sayadaw (a renowned Abhidhamma Master of Burma who lived from 1846 to 1923), destructive kamma can also be responsible for cutting off the efficacy of any of the sense faculties—the eye, ear, etc.—causing blindness or deafness, sexual mutation, etc.
The Vibhàvinã òãkà (the sub-commentary to Abhidhammatthasaïgaha, The Manual of Abhidhamma) distinguishes between productive kamma and destructive kamma on the ground that productive kamma produces its result without cutting off the result of some other kamma, while destructive kamma does so after first cutting off another kamma’s result. But other teachers cited by the Vibhàvinã hold that destructive kamma does not produce its own result at all; it completely cuts off the result of the other
kamma, giving still a third kamma the opportunity to ripen. Ledi Sayadaw gives the example of intentional killing to illustrate how one kamma may exercise all four functions. When a person takes another’s life, as long as the volition of killing does not have the opportunity to ripen, it exercises any of the other three functions: it may support the ripening of other unwholesome kamma; or obstruct the ripening of other wholesome kamma; or cut off entirely the efficacy of wholesome kamma. When the act of killing secures the opportunity to ripen, then each volition involved in the act has the power to produce one rebirth in the woeful planes; thereafter, such volition has no further power to produce rebirth-linking. However, such kamma can continue to exercise the other three functions, as well as the function of producing results during the course of existence, even for a hundred thousand aeons or more into the future (see pp. 9-10 for the kammic potential created by volition).
 

Y2K

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2. BY ORDER OF RIPENING
This section concerns the order of precedence among different kammas in taking on the role of generating rebirth-linking in the next existence. Being the major subject of this book, it will be explained in Chapter 4.

3 BY TIME OF RIPENING
3.1 Immediately effective (diññhadhammavedanãya) kamma;
3.2 Subsequently effective (upapajjavedanãya) kamma;
3.3 Indefinitely effective (aparàpariyavedanãya) kamma; The three types of kamma above have already been explained in the preceding chapter, pp. 27-28.
3.4 Defunct (ahosi) kamma: This term does not designate a special class of kamma, but applies to kamma that, although due to ripen in either the present existence or the next existence, did not meet conditions conducive to its maturation. In the case of arahants and Buddhas, all their accumulated kamma from the past which was due to ripen in future lives becomes defunct with their final passing away.
 

Y2K

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4 BY PLACE OF RIPENING
Here, place of ripening refers to the four planes of existence according to Theravada Buddhist scriptures:
the woeful plane;
the sensuous blissful plane;
the fine material-sphere plane;
the immaterial-sphere plane.
Though a distinction is made between the woeful plane and the sensuous blissful plane, both planes are actually subdivisions of the sense-sphere plane.
 

Y2K

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CAUSES OF DEATH

NOW LET US see what the Abhidhamma has to say about death and rebirth. Death comes about because of one of the following causes:
through the expiration of the life-span;
through the expiration of the productive kammic force;
through the expiration of both;
through the intervention of a destructive kamma.

To elaborate, certain realms of existence have definite life spans, e.g. the heavenly realms. When a deity’s (deva’s) life reaches the age limit of that particular plane of existence, he will have to die even though the productive kammic force sustaining his life may not have been exhausted. In the human realm, this should be understood as death in advanced old age due to natural causes. But when the kamma sustaining life expends its force, death will also take place even though the normal life-span has not yet expired.

Death can also occur through the simultaneous expiration of both the life-span and productive kamma. A powerful destructive kamma can also cause death by cutting off the force of the life-sustaining kamma prematurely even though the normal life-span may not be expired. Examples of this are violent deaths and deaths due to sicknesses.

DYING PERCEPTIONS
To those who are dying, the kamma about to determine rebirth manifests itself in one of four ways through any of the six-sense doors as

A kamma (a good or evil deed performed earlier during the same lifetime) that is to produce rebirth in the next existence. For example, a kind person with spiritual inclinations may remember the act of making a donation to an Old Folks’ Home, refraining from buying pirated computer software, or practising meditation in an intensive retreat; whereas an unscrupulous person may remember how he or she schemed to murder a relative in order to inherit some property, embezzled funds held in trust for the Saïgha [Community of Theravada Buddhist monks], or committed adultery with a neighbour’s spouse;

A sign of kamma, i.e. an object or image associated with the good or evil deed that is about to determine rebirth, or an instrument used to perform it. For example, a devout person may see the image of a monk or pagoda, a physician may see the image of a stethoscope, a butcher may hear the squeals of slaughtered pigs, a social worker may feel the touch of the poor child he or she had assisted, a contractor may see the image of the undersized iron bars that were used to cheat his or her employer;

A sign of destiny, i.e. a symbol of the realm into which the dying person is about to be reborn. For example, a person heading for a heavenly rebirth may hear celestial music, a person heading for the animal kingdom may see forests or fields, a person heading for a rebirth in hell may feel the heat of infernal fire, a person heading for a ghostly realm may see a ghost coming to take him or her away;

Apart from these three manifestations, there is yet another alternative. The kamma that is to produce rebirth in the next existence does not appear as a memory image of something that was previously done, but appears to the mind door as if it were being done at that very moment just before death. For example, the dying person may feel as though she is actually quarrelling with her husband, although the quarrel occurred many years ago.

DEATH AND REBIRTH
Thereafter, attending to the object thus presented, the stream of consciousness continually flows, inclining mostly towards the state into which one is to be reborn. Then, either at the end of a cognitive process or at the dissolution of bhavanga, the death citta arises and ceases. Within this terminal process the kammic cittas, by reason of their weakness, occur for only five mind-moments. This process lacks original productive kammic potency, but acts rather as the channel for the past kamma that has assumed the rebirthgenerative function. At the time of death, kamma-born kalapas no longer arise starting with the presence sub-moment of the seventeenth citta preceding the death citta. Kamma-born kalapas that arose earlier occur until the death citta and then cease together with it. Following that, the kalapas born of citta and nutriment come to a cessation. Then the body remains a mass of inanimate material phenomena born of temperature and continues as such until the corpse is reduced to dust. Immediately following the dissolution of the death citta, there arises in a new existence the rebirth-linking citta, having thesame object as that in the final cognitive process of the previous life. This rebirth citta is a resultant citta produced by the kamma responsible for the objects apprehended during the final, but crucial, moments of consciousness prior to death. Simultaneous with its arising, this same kamma produces kalapas which set off a chain reaction by generating more kalapas born of the internal fire-element and nutriment and thereafter by combination with the external fire-element and nutriment. In the meantime, the cittas following the rebirth-citta will also start to produce kalapas, all this leading eventually to an intricate mass of kalapas arising and passing away which can be identified as a foetus, or the spontaneous body of the new being (hell being, spirit, deva, or brahma).

The rebirth-linking citta is followed by sixteen bhavanga cittas. Then a mind-door cognitive process occurs in which the seven kammic cittas develop an attachment to the new existence. These cittas take for object the rebirth citta. When this process ends, the bhavanga again arises and perishes, and continues thus whenever there is no intervention of a cognitive process. In this way the stream of consciousness flows on from birth till death, and from death to new birth, “revolving like the wheel of a cart” (see Diagram 7 for a graphic explanation).
This is a microscopic view of death and rebirth according to the Abhidhamma model. Even if one cannot thoroughly understand the sequence of the cittas and kalapas involved in this transitional process, one need not be unduly anxious. While the above explanation clarifies the Theravada assertion that rebirth occurs immediately after death, it is not essential for understanding the principles of skilful dying, which will be
discussed in the following chapters.
 

Y2K

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RIPENING ORDER OF REBIRTH GENERATING KAMMA

WHAT WOULD BE more significant and useful to one is, I think, to understand the law that governs the order in which certain types of kamma present themselves to the mind in the few crucial moments before death. The kammas we have performed in the course of life are extremely varied: which particular type of kamma takes priority over others in determining rebirth? According to the Abhidhamma, weighty kamma gets foremost priority in producing rebirth, followed by near-death kamma, habitual kamma and reserve kamma.

WEIGHTY KAMMA
Weighty kamma is kamma of such powerful moral weight that it cannot be replaced by any other kamma as the determinant of rebirth. On the unwholesome side, weighty kamma means the kammic potential generated by any one of the following:
maliciously creating a schism in the Sangha;
the wounding of a Buddha;
the murder of an arahant;
matricide;
parricide;
a fixed wrong view that denies the basis for morality (see p. 43).

On the wholesome side, weighty kamma means the attainment of the jhanas and maintaining the jhana attainment until death, after which, it will generate rebirth in a brahma world appropriate to the jhana attainment. If one attains jhana in a two-week retreat, and then goes back to the world without maintaining it, then the jhana attainment will not qualify as weighty kamma during death. Or if one were to develop the jhana and later were to commit one of the heinous crimes mentioned above, the good kamma would be obliterated by the evil deed, and the latter would generate rebirth into a woeful state. For example, Devadatta lost his psychic powers and was reborn in hell for wounding the Buddha and causing a schism in the Sangha.

But if someone were first to commit one of the heinous crimes, he or she would not be able later to attain jhana, path (magga) or fruition (phala) because the evil kamma would have created an insurmountable obstruction. Thus King Ajatasattu,


while listening to the Buddha’s Discourse on the Fruits of Recluseship, had all the other conditions for reaching streamentry (sotàpatti), but because he had killed his father, King Bimbisara, he could not attain the path and fruition. However, the Buddha predicted that after having repaid their kammic debts, both Devadatta and Ajatasattu would, in some future existence, attain enlightenment as Paccekabuddhas [Solitary
Buddhas].
 

kalyanamithra

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  • May 12, 2008
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    Y2K said:
    FOURFOLD KAMMA

    IN ORDER TO gain a clearer understanding of the role of kammain dying and rebirth, a holistic introduction to the nature ofkamma and some of its various aspects would be helpful. As thesubject of kamma is both profound and complex, a ratheracademic approach has been adopted here which, I hope, willnot deter or discourage the general reader. However, if the following discussion is too dry, technical or boring, this chaptercould be set aside and returned to subsequently.
    ...
    ...
    ...
    ...
    the woeful planes; thereafter, such volition has no further power to produce rebirth-linking. However, such kamma can continue to exercise the other three functions, as well as the function of producing results during the course of existence, even for a hundred thousand aeons or more into the future (see pp. 9-10 for the kammic potential created by volition).
    Pinwath mithurani,

    There's a vast difference in Buddhism
    - as practiced today (e.g. with lot of artificial classifications)
    - as preached by sammasambuddha gauthama...

    I have nothing to say if your interest in Buddhism is just scholarly..

    If not, and if you are learning Buddhism to end the samsaraic existence...
    Please be careful...

    I have already made some relevant comments in the thread
    http://www.elakiri.com/forum/showthread.php?t=97204

    View expressed by Sammasambuddha Gautama on Kamma can be found in quite a number of sutta deshana including:
    Kamma Sutta, Chula Kamma Vibhanga Sutta, Maha Kamma Vibhanga Sutta, etc.

    Theruwan saranai!