| Chapter IX  WHAT IS ABHIDHAMMA   PITAKA?  (a) Abhidhamma, the Higher Teaching of   the Buddha. Abhidhamma is the third great division of the   Pitaka. It is a huge collection of systematically arranged, tabulated and   classified doctrines of the Buddha, representing the quintessence of his   Teaching. Abhidhamma means Higher Teaching or Special   Teaching; it is unique in its abstruseness, analytical approach, immensity of   scope and conduciveness to one's liberation. The Buddha dhamma has only one taste, the taste of   liberation. But in Suttanta discourses, the Buddha takes into consideration   the intellectual level of his audience, and their attainments in parami. He   therefore teaches the dhamma in conventional terms (vohara vacana), making   references to persons and objects as I, we, he, she, men, woman, cow, tree,   etc. But in Abhidhamma the Buddha makes no such concessions; he treats the   dhamma entirely in terms of the ultimate reality (paramattha sacca). He analyses   every phenomenon into its ultimate constituents. All relative concepts such   as man, mountain, etc. are reduced to their ultimate elements which are then   precisely defined, classified and systematically arranged. Thus in Abhidhamma everything is expressed in terms   of khandhas, five aggregates of existence; ayatanas, five sensory organs and   mind, and their respective sense objects; dhatu, elements; indriya,   faculties; sacca, fundamental truths; and so on. Relative conceptual objects   such as man, women, etc. are resolved into ultimate components of khandhas,   ayatanas, etc. and viewed as an impersonal psycho-physical phenomenon, which   is conditioned by various factors and is impermanent (anicca), suffering   (dukkha) and is without a permanent entity (anatta). Having resolved all phenomena into ultimate   components analytically (as in Dhammasangani and Vibhanga) it aims at   synthesis by defining inter-relations (paccaya) between the various   constituent factors (as in Patthana). Thus Abhidhamma forms a gigantic edifice   of knowledge relating to the ultimate realities which, in its immensity of   scope, grandeur, subtlety, and profundity, properly belongs only to the   intellectual domain of the Buddha.read more (b) The seven books of Abhidhamma. The Suttanta Pitaka also contains discourses dealing   with analytical discussions and conditional relationship of the five   aggregates. Where the need arises subjects such as the five aggregates,   ayatanas, etc. are mentioned in the sutta discourses. But they are explained   only briefly by what is known as the Sutta Method of Analysis (Suttanta   bhajaniya), giving bare definitions with limited descriptions. For example,   khandhas, the five aggregates, are enumerated as the corporeal aggregate, the   aggregate of sensation, the aggregate of perception, the aggregate of mental   formations (volitional activities) and the aggregate of consciousness, They   may be dealt with a little more comprehensively; for instance, the corporeal   aggregate may be further defined as corporeality of the past, the present or   the future; the corporeality which is internal or external, coarse or fine,   inferior or superior, far or near. The Sutta Method of Analysis does not   usually go further than this definition. But the Abhidhamma approach is more thorough, more   penetrating, breaking down each corporeal or mental component into the   ultimate, the most infinitesimal unit. For example, Rupakkhandha, corporeal   aggregate, has been analysed into twenty eight constituents; Vedanakkhandha,   the aggregate of sensation, into five; Sannakkhandha, the aggregate of   perception, into six; Sankharakkhandha, the aggregate of mental formations,   into fifty; and Vinnanakkhandha, the aggregate of consciousness, into eighty   nine. Then each constituent part is minutely described with its properties   and qualities and its place in the well arranged system of classification is   defined. A complete description of things require also a   statement of how each component part stands in relation to other component   parts. This entails therefore a synthetical approach as well, to study the   interrelationship between constituent parts and how they are related to other   internal or external factors. Thus the Abhidhamma approach covers a wide field of   study, consisting of analytical and synthetical methods of investigation,   describing and defining minutely the constituent parts of aggregates,   classifying them under well-ordered heads and well-arranged systems and   finally setting out conditions in which they are related to each other. Such   a large scope of intellectual endeavour needs to be encompassed in a   voluminous and classified compilation. Hence the Abhidhamma Pitaka is made up   of seven massive treatises, namely,  (i)   Dhammasangani, containing detailed enumeration of all phenomena with an   analysis of consciousness (citta) and its concomitant mental factors   (cetasikas);  (ii)   Vibhanga, consisting of eighteen separate sections on analysis of phenomena   quite distinct from that of Dhammasangani; (iii)   Dhatukatha, a small treatise written in the form of a catechism, discussing   all phenomena of existence with reference to three categories, khandha,   ayatana and datu  (iv)   Puggalapannatti, a small treatise giving a description of various types of   individuals according to the stage of their achievement along the Path; (v)   Kathavatthu, a compilation by the Venerable Moggaliputta, the presiding thera   of the third Great Synod in which he discusses and refutes doctrines of other   schools in order to uproot all points of controversy on the Buddha dhamma;  (vi)   Yamaka, regarded as a treatise on applied logic in which analytical procedure   is arranged in pairs;  (vii)   Patthana, a gigantic treatise which together with Dhammasangani, the first   book, constitutes the quintessence of the Abhidhamma Pitaka. It is a minutely   detailed study of the doctrine of conditionality, based on twenty four   paccayas, conditions or relations. (c) Conventional Truth (Sammuti Sacca)   and Ultimate Truth (Paramattha Sacca). Two kinds of Truth are recognised in the Abhidhamma   according to which only four categories of things, namely, mind   (consciousness), mental concomitants, Materiality and Nibbana are classed as   the Ultimate Truth; all the rest are regarded as apparent truth. When we use   such expression as 'I', 'you', 'man', 'Woman', 'person', 'individual', we are   speaking about things which do not exist in reality. By using such   expressions about things which exist only in designation, we are not telling   a lie; we are merely speaking an apparent truth, making use or conventional   language, without which no communication will be possible. But the Ultimate Truth is that there is no 'person',   'individual' or 'I' in reality. There exist only khandhas made up of corporeality,   mind (consciousness) and mental concomitants. These are real in that they are   not just designations, they actually exist in us or around us.  -ooOoo- | 
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