Book Title: Kathavatthu And Vijnanakaya
Author(s): Johannes Bronkhorst
Publisher: Johannes Bronkhorst
Catalog link: https://jainqq.org/explore/269549/1

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Page #1 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ KATHAVATTHU AND VIJNANAKAYA Johannes BRONKHORST* The Kathavatthu and the Vijnanakaya share two topics of discussion: the existence of the pudgala and the existence of past and future. Both texts agree in rejecting the existence of the pudgala, using to some extent the same arguments. They disagree where the existence of past and future is concerned: they do not exist according to the Kathavatthu, according to the Vijnanakaya they do exist. The latter text ascribes the mistaken idea that past and future do exist to someone called Maudgalyayana. It seems at first sight plausible to identify this Maudgalyayana with the presumed promulgator of the Kathavatthu, described as Moggaliputta Tissa by the Pali sources. According to these same sources, Moggaliputta played a leading role in the Council of Pataliputra, where the Vibhajyavadins read Theravadins expelled certain heretics. If we assume that these heretics included the Sarvastivadins, we get the following picture: The Kathavatthu, or at least the portion that contains the two topics of discussion mentioned above, was composed soon after the Council of Pataliputra in order to refute the expelled heretics; the Vijnanakaya was composed subsequently to answer the arguments of Moggaliputta, i.e., of the Kathavatthu1. However, this picture is hard to reconcile with the wording of our two texts. Consider first the existence of past and future as discussed in the Vijnanakaya. This text presents a number of arguments which differ but little from each other. They all centre around one fundamental assumption, viz., that in one single person (pudgala) two mental events cannot simultaneously take place. For example, when an object is observed which is itself of a mental nature, e.g., desire, the mental event which is the object of perception and the one that is its subject cannot simultaneously exist. In this situation one is forced to admit that something non-present exists, or else that no such vision is possible, which is against the scriptures. * Section de langues et civilisations orientales Universite de Lausanne. BFSH 2 - CH. 1015 Lausanne - SUISSE. This view was held, e.g., by E. Frauwallner (1952: 667). Page #2 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ 58 Bronkhorst: Kathavatthu and Vijnanakaya - These arguments make sense, and there is no reason to doubt that they played a key role among the Sarvastivadins from an early date onward. Yet the Kathavaithu ignores them completely. There is even reason to think that it did not know them. In the sections 1.6.23 f. this text argues that if all conditions for perception - i.e., in the case of vision, the eye, visible objects, eye-consciousness, light and attention - exist in the past, perception of past objects with a past sense-organ should take place, which is absurd. A similar argument applies to the perception of future objects with a future sense-organ. In the course of this discussion it becomes clear that only perception of present objects with a present sense-organ is acceptable to the Kathavatthu and to its opponent. This is explicitly stated to be true also of the perception of dhammas by the mind (mana): only present dhammas are cognized by the present mind. But this shows that the author of this part of the Kathavatthu did not know the line of reasoning which we find in the Vijnanakaya. The traditional account, according to which the author of the Kathavatthu himself confronted the heretics and investigated their doctrines, seems difficult to maintain in the face of so much ignorance. Let us now consider the discussion regarding the existence of the pudgala in our two texts. The Vijnanakaya rejects the pudgala in its second Skandhaka; the discussion consists of the following clearly distinguishable parts: (i) One and the same pudgala cannot at one time be one thing, say an inhabitant of hell, and at another time something different, say an animal; this argument is repeated with many variations (II. I. 1-42; p. 537a 1. 27 p. 542b 1. 5). (ii) The acceptance of a pudgala entails certain unacceptable views (II. I. 5-6; p. 542b 1. 6 p. 543c 1. 1). (iii) The object of benevolence (maitri) is not the pudgala (II. II. 1-4; p. 543c 1. 2 p. 545b l. 12). (iv) The pudgala is neither samskrta nor asamskrta, and as a result it cannot exist (II. II. 5; p. 545b l. 13-19). (v) No pudgala is observed (II. III. 1-4; p. 545b 1. 20 f.) 3. The most interesting among these parts, for our present purposes, is (iii), which deals with the object of benevolence. In this part, and only here, the Sunyavadin (the name which is here reserved for the denyer of 2 I use the divisions introduced by La Vallee Poussin (1925) in his translation. 3 It is not exactly clear where the discussion of the pudgala ends. Certainly the last part of the second chapter (the Pudgalaskandha) belongs really to the third one; see La Vallee Poussin, 1925: 376 n. 1. Page #3 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ Bronkhorst: Kathavatthu and Vijnanakaya 59 , the pudgala) is attacked by the Pudgalavadin; this is then followed by an answer to this attack. One has in this case the impression that the author of the Vijnanakaya had before him a text of the Pudgalavadins in which they claimed that benevolence requires a pudgala as object, since it could not possibly be directed toward the five skandhas. The Sunyavadin replies by describing the mechanism of knowledge and the like, which leaves no place for a being (sattva) as object of benevolence. Also part (v) is of interest. The extensive discussion of the process of knowledge and of what is known seems meant to answer the claim that the pudgala can be perceived. It seems safe here to conclude that the author of the Vijnanakaya made an effort to answer concrete 'proofs' of the existence of a pudgala, and responded, in all probability, directly to a text of the Pudgalava. dins. At the same time it is clear that the two parts (iii) and (v) are primarily defensive and are by themselves far weaker arguments against the existence of a pudgala than the remaining parts (i), (ii) and (iv). The Kathavatthu contains sections that correspond to parts (i), (ii) and (iv) of the Vijnanakaya*, but none corresponding to (iii) and (v). It is true that it contains much else pertaining to the question of the existence of the pudgala, but much of this makes the impression of being exercices in logic, which indeed they may have been. The conclusion must be that the Kathavanthu could afford to ignore the arguments of the Pudgalavadins and concentrate on its own refutation of the latters' point of view. This in its turn seems to show that the confrontation between Kathavatthu and Pudgalavadins was less direct. Again we are led to believe that the author of the Kathavatthu had never himself confronted the opponents he criticizes. The evidence we have considered so far seems to agree with Bechert's convincing analysis (1961) of the Pali passages that describe the Council of Pataliputra, where Moggaliputta supposedly played a major role. The Council, we learn from this analysis, was not concerned with doctrinal differences among the Buddhists; those who were expelled were rather monks who did not live in accordance with the rules of Vinaya. The Kathavathu - or its oldest parts -- may have been - Vk part (i): Kv 1.1.155, 158-170, 180-182, 219-224. Vk part (ii): Kv 1.1.212. Vk part (iv): Kv 1.1.225-227. * Kv 1.1.199 answers briefly the view that the Buddha sees the puggala. . See Watanabe, 1983: 154f., who refers to A.K. Warder's article "The earliest Indian logic" (Proceedings of the 25th International Congress of Orientalists, 1963, vol. 4, pp. 5668). Page #4 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ Bronkhorst: Kathavatthu and Vijnanakaya composed when, after this purification of the sangha of the Asokarama in Pataliputra, the remaining community of monks of this monastery decided to write down its positions regarding the points of dispute that existed between the nikayas. No direct confrontation with the upholders of the alternative doctrines, nor indeed any profound knowledge of these doctrines is now to be assumed on the part of the author or authors of the original Kathavatthu. But if the Kathavatthu was indeed a local product of the Asokarama in Pataliputra, which does not presuppose more than superficial contact with, or even knowledge of the opposed doctrines, it is less than selfevident that the Vijnanakaya should react to it. We have seen, on the contrary, that where the existence of the pudgala is concerned, the Vijnanakaya appears to react to a text, or to arguments, of the Pudgalavadins. What is more, one gains the impression that the Kathavatthu borrowed some of the arguments of the Vijnanakaya, leaving out others. 60 With regard to the discussion of the existence of past and future the situation is slightly more complicated. If it is true that the Vijnanakaya presents the original arguments of the Sarvastivadins, and I see no reason to doubt this, it is hard to see why it should react to a sectarian work like the Kathavatthu which had completely missed the point of these arguments. Few certain conclusions can be drawn from the above observations. The exact relationship between Kathavatthu and Vijnanakaya remains obscure. But one thing seems certain: these portions of the Kathavatthu were not written in direct exchange of views with the opponents. Rather than representing a direct confrontation of different views, these portions of the Kathavatthu attack alternative points of view without heeding, or even knowing, the arguments that support them. Bibliography Aung, Shwe Zan, and Rhys Davids, C.A.F. (tr.) (1915): Points of Controversy or Subjects of Discourse (Kathavatthu). London: PTS. (PTS Translation Series No. 5). Bechert, H. (1961): "Asoka's 'Schismenedikt' und der Begriff Sanghabheda". WZKS 5, 18-52. Frauwallner, Erich (1952): "Die buddhistischen Konzile". (ZDMG 102, 240261). Kleine Schriften (Wiesbaden 1982) p. 649-670. Kathavatthu. PTS ed. by Arnold C. Taylor. Vol. I. London. 1894. For a translation see Aung and Rhys Davids, 1915. Page #5 -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ________________ Bronkhorst: Kathavatthu and Vijnanakaya 61 La Vallee Poussin, Louis de (1925): "La controverse du temps et du Pudgala dans le Vijnanakaya". Etudes Asiatiques I. (Publ. EFEO, Vol. 29) Pp. 343 376. Vijnanakaya = T. 1539 (tome 26). For a French translation of the first two chapters see La Vallee Poussin, 1925. Watanabe, Fumimaro (1983): Philosophy and its Development in the Nikayas and Abhidhamma. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass.