________________
948
Arvind Sharma
be simple, as a tree, containing only one soul, or complex, as a turnip. which contains countless souls; earth-bodies, which include earth itself and all things derived from the earth, such as stones, clay, minerals and jewels; water--bodies, found in all forms of water in rivers, ponds, seas, and rain; fire-bodies, in all lights and flames, including lightning; and windbodies, in all sorts of gases and winds.12
(6) According to Hermann Jacobi, "That plants possess souls is an opinion shared by other Indian philosophers".
But the Jains have developed this theory in a remarkable way. Plants in which only one soul is embodied are always gross; they exist in the habitable part of the world only. But those plants of which each is a colony of plant-lives may also be subtle, i. e. invisible, and in that case they are distributed all over the world. These subtle plants are called nigoda; they are composed of an infinite number of souls forming a very small cluster, have respiration and nutrition in common, and experience the most exquisite pains. Innumerable nigodas form a globule, and with them, the whole space of the world is closely packed, like a box filled with powder. The nigodas furnish the supply of souls in place of those who have reached nirvana. But an infinitesimally small fraction of one single nigoda has sufficed to replace the vacancy caused in the world by the nirvana of all the souls that have been liberated from the beginningless past down to the present. Thus it is evident that the samsära will never be empty of living beings. 13
(7) Ninian Smart seems to detect in the Jain doctrine that the nigoda is not subject to Karma, a distinct feature of Jain thought He writes:
Even lower than these are infinite number of animalcules, which do not individually possess organs, but cluster together to share in processes of respiration and nutrition. The law of karma and circulation of life-monads through successive bodies, through process of rebirth, are features of existence of living beings above level of animalcules. Infrequently, life-monads achieve liberation and are taken out of circulation; but from time to time some animalcules 'rise' and enter karmic circulation. This, then, is the back-cloth, teeming with life, against which quest for liberation is undertaken.14
111
The above survey reveals that a different unique aspect of Jain thought is identified by different scholars once they get past its major distinguishing features as a school of Indian thought. This seems to suggest that
Jain Education International
For Private & Personal Use Only
www.jainelibrary.org