Glossary ![[go up]](../../../../icon/scrollup.gif)
Pali-English
Abhidhamma: (1) In the discourses of the Pali canon, this term simply means "higher Dhamma," and a systematic attempt to define the Buddha's teachings and understand their interrelationships. (2) A later collection of analytical treatises based on lists of categories drawn from the teachings in the discourses, added to the Canon several centuries after the Buddha's life.
Arahant: A "worthy one" or "pure one;" a person whose mind is free of defilement and thus is not destined for further rebirth. A title for the Buddha and the highest level of his noble disciples.
Asava: Effluent; fermentation. Four qualities — sensuality, views, becoming, and ignorance — that "flow out" of the mind and create the flood of the round of death and rebirth.
Bodhisatta: "A being (striving) for Awakening;" the term used to describe the Buddha before he actually became Buddha, from his first aspiration to Buddhahood until the time of his full Awakening. Sanskrit form: Bodhisattva.
Deva: Literally, "shining one." An inhabitant of the heavenly realms.
Dhamma: (1) Event; a phenomenon in and of itself; (2) mental quality; (3) doctrine, teaching; (4) nibbana. Sanskrit form: Dharma.
Hinayana: "Inferior Vehicle," a pejorative term — coined by a group who called themselves followers of the Mahayana, the "Great Vehicle" — to denote the path of practice of those who adhered only to the earliest discourses as the word of the Buddha. Hinayanists refused to recognize the later discourses, composed by the Mahayanists, that claimed to contain teachings that the Buddha felt were too deep for his first generation of disciples, and which he thus secretly entrusted to underground serpents. The Theravada school of today is a descendent of the Hinayana.
Idappaccayata: This/that conditionality. This name for the causal principle the Buddha discovered on the night of his Awakening emphasizes the point that, for the purposes of ending suffering and stress, the processes of causality can be understood entirely in terms of forces and conditions that are experienced in the realm of direct experience, with no need to refer to forces operating outside of that realm.
Jhana: Mental absorption. A state of strong concentration focused on a single sensation or mental notion.
Kamma: Intentional act. Sanskrit form: karma.
Mandala: Microcosmic diagram, used as a power circle and object of contemplation in the rituals of Tantric Buddhism.
Mara: The personification of evil and temptation.
Nibbana: Literally, the "unbinding" of the mind from passion, aversion, and delusion, and from the entire round of death and rebirth. As this term also denotes the extinguishing of a fire, it carries connotations of stilling, cooling, and peace. "Total nibbana" in some contexts denotes the experience of Awakening; in others, the final passing away of an arahant. Sanskrit form: nirvana.
Pali: The canon of texts preserved by the Theravada school and, by extension, the language in which those texts are composed.
Patimokkha: Basic code of monastic discipline, composed of 227 rules for monks and 310 for nuns.
Samana: Contemplative. Literally, a person who abandons the conventional obligations of social life in order to find a way of life more "in tune" (sama) with the ways of nature.
Samsara: Transmigration; the round of death and rebirth.
Sangha: On the conventional (sammati) level, this term denotes the communities of Buddhist monks and nuns; on the ideal (ariya) level, it denotes those followers of the Buddha, lay or ordained, who have attained at least stream-entry.
Stupa: Originally, a tumulus or burial mound enshrining relics of a holy person — such as the Buddha — or objects associated with his life. Over the centuries this has developed into the tall, spired monuments familiar in temples in Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Burma; and into the pagodas of China, Korea, and Japan.
Tadi: "Such," an adjective to describe one who has attained the goal. It indicates that the person's state is indefinable but not subject to change or influences of any sort.
Tathagata: Literally, "one who has become authentic (tatha-agata)," an epithet used in ancient India for a person who has attained the highest religious goal. In Buddhism, it usually denotes the Buddha, although occasionally it also denotes any of his arahant disciples.
Theravada: The "Teachings of the Elders" — the only one of the early schools of Buddhism to have survived into the present; currently the dominant form of Buddhism in Thailand, Sri Lanka, and Burma.
Vinaya: The monastic discipline, whose rules and traditions comprise six volumes in printed text.
English-Pali
Although I have tried to be as consistent as possible in rendering Pali terms into English, there are a few cases where a single English term will not do justice to all the meanings of a Pali term. Although the rule of one English equivalent per one Pali word makes for consistency, any truly bilingual person will know that such a rule can create ludicrous distortions of meaning in translation. Thus, while I have not consciously used one English term to translate two different Pali terms, there are cases where I have found it necessary to render a single Pali term with two or more English terms, depending on context. Citta in some cases is rendered as mind, in others as intent. Similarly, loka is rendered either as cosmos or world, manas as intellect or heart, ayatana as medium or sphere, upadana as clinging or sustenance, and dhamma as phenomenon, quality, or principle.
Also, with some of the Pali terms that play a central role in explaining the teaching, I have chosen equivalents that do not follow general usage. In the following list I have indicated these equivalents with asterisks; explanations for these choices are provided at the end of the list.
acquisition — upadhi
	aggregate — khandha
	alertness — sampajañña
	appropriate attention — yoniso manasikara
	Awakening — bodhi
	awareness — cetas
	becoming — bhava
	clear knowing — vijja
	clinging — upadana
	compounded — sankhata
	concern — ottappa
	conscience — hiri
	contemplative — samana
	conviction — saddha
	cosmos — loka
	craving — tanha
	dependent co-arising — paticca samuppada
	desire — chanda
	dimension — ayatana
	directed thought — vitakka
	discern — pajanati
	discernment — pañña
	discrimination — vimamsa
	disenchantment — nibbida
	dispassion — viraga
	effluent — asava
	emptiness — suññata
	evaluation — vicara
	fabricated — sankhata
	fabrication — sankhara
	fetter — sanyojana
	frame of reference* — satipatthana
	gnosis — añña
	good will — metta
	heart — manas
	inconstant* — anicca
	insight — vipassana
	intellect — manas
	intent — citta
	intention — cetana
	letting go — vossagga
	medium — ayatana
	mind — citta
	non-fashioning — atammayata
	not-self — anatta
	origination — samudaya
	perception — sañña
	persistence — viriya
	pertinent — opanayika
	phenomenon — dhamma
	prerequisite — upanisa
	property — dhatu
	quality — dhamma
	release — vimutti
	relinquishment — patinissagga
	requisite condition — paccaya
	resolve — sankappa
	self-awakening — sambodhi
	sensuality — kama
	skillful — kusala
	stream-entry — sotipatti
	stress* — dukkha
	Such — tadi
	sustenance — upadana
	theme — nimitta
	this/that conditionality — idappaccayata
	tranquillity — samatha
	transcendent — lokuttara
	transmigration — samsara
	Unbinding* — nibbana
	Unfabricated — asankhata
	world — loka
Fabrication: Sankhara literally means "putting together," and carries connotations of jerry-rigged artificiality. It is applied to physical and to mental processes, as well as to the products of those processes. Various English words have been suggested as renderings for sankhara — such as "formation," "determination," "force," and "constructive activity" — but "fabrication," in both of its senses, as the process of fabrication and the fabricated things that result, seems the best equivalent for capturing the connotations as well as the denotations of the term.
Frame of reference: The literal rendering of satipatthana is "foundation of mindfulness" or "application of mindfulness," both of which require a great deal of explanation to make them intelligible in English. However, the actual function of satipatthana in practice is precisely that of the English idiom, frame of reference. Although adopting this rendering requires some inconsistency in translating sati — using "reference" here, and "mindfulness" otherwise — this seems a small price to pay for instant intelligibility in an otherwise obscure term.
Inconstant: The usual rendering for anicca is "impermanent." However, the antonym of the term, nicca, carries connotations of constancy and dependability; and as anicca is used to emphasize the point that conditioned phenomena cannot be depended on to provide true happiness, this seems a useful rendering for conveying this point.
Stress: The Pali term dukkha, which is traditionally translated in the commentaries as, "that which is hard to bear," is notorious for having no truly adequate equivalent in English, but stress — in its basic sense as a strain on body or mind — seems as close as English can get. In the Canon, dukkha applies both to physical and to mental phenomena, ranging from the intense stress of acute anguish or pain to the innate burdensomeness of even the most subtle mental or physical fabrications.
Unbinding: Because nibbana is used to denote not only the Buddhist goal, but also the extinguishing of a fire, it is usually rendered as "extinguishing" or, even worse, "extinction." However, a study of ancient Indian views of the workings of fire (see The Mind Like Fire Unbound) will reveal that people of the Buddha's time felt that a fire, in going out, did not go out of existence but was simply freed from its agitation and attachment to its fuel. Thus, when applied to the Buddhist goal, the primary connotation of nibbana is one of release and liberation. According to the commentaries, the literal meaning of the word nibbana is "unbinding," and as this is a rare case where the literal and contextual meanings of a term coincide, this seems to be the ideal English equivalent.
Indexes ![[go up]](../../../../icon/scrollup.gif)
Index of Similes![[Go to top of page]](../../../../icon/scrollup.gif)
Note: Numbers refer to the translated passages (§) from the Canon.
Acrobat: 47
Ancient city: 239
                Archer: 173
                Baby boy: 61
                Ball of saliva: 181
                Ball of sealing wax: 142
                Banyan tree: 128
                Bathman: 150
                Beauty queen: 40
                Borrowed goods: 138
                Bowl of water: 133
                Bronze bowl: 57
                Butcher: 30
                Carpenter: 159
                Carpenter's adze: 20
                Cat: 157
                Chain of bones: 138
                Chariot: 150
                City made of bones: 140
                Cook: 35
                Cowherd: 1
                Dream: 138
                Drops of water on heated iron pan: 60; 181
                Drops of water on lotus leaf: 181
                Earth: 180
                Elephant: 33; 157; 163
                Field: 220
                Fire: 97; 180; 207
                Fletcher: 59
                Footprint of elephant: 79
                Fruits of a tree: 138
                Goldsmith: 182
                Grass torch: 138
                Guest house: 112
                Hawk and quail: 37
                Heated jar: 225
                Hen and eggs: 20
                House with windows: 234
                Impenetrable darkness: 192
                Impurities in gold: 132; 160
                Insects falling into flame: 135
                Iron ball: 68
                Island in middle of river: 91
                Ivory carver: 64
                Ladle in soup: III/A
                Leaves in hand: 188
                Leper: 139
                Light of moon: 79
                Lotuses in pond: 150
                Lump of flesh: 138
                Man going from village to village: 64
                Man holding quail: 161
                Man in debt: 134
                Man in love with woman: 59
                Man in prison: 134
                Man stabbed by spears: 193
                Man standing on tall building: 64
                Man walking quickly: 159
                Man with good eyes: 159; 181
                Man wrapped in white cloth: 150
                Mirror: 6
                Moisture: 220
                Monkey trap: 38
                Mountain cow: 162
                Ocean: I/B; 18; 42
                Ocean-going ship: 20
                Pain in healthy person: 175
                Painted picture: 142; 234
                Park: 67
                Person reflecting: 150
                Pile of dust: 44
                Pit of glowing embers: 138
                Pool of water: 64; 144; 157
                Pot: 108
                Potter: 64
                Potter's vessels: 19
                Puddle in cow's footprint: 144
                Puppets: 142
                Quail in hand: 161
                Rabbit: 157
                Raft: 113; 114
                Rag in road: 144
                Rain of gold coins: 141
                Rain on mountains: 125; 238
                Reflection of one's face: 58, 64
                Ridged roof: 75
                River: 131
                River Ganges: 13; 49; 90
                Road through desolate country: 134
                Royal frontier fortress: 73; 99
                Sack of grain: 30
                Salt crystal: 13
                Scented woods: 77
                Seed: 184; 220
                Shadow: 8
                Sheaves of reeds: 228
                Sick man: 134; 144
                Six animals tied together: 39
                Slave: 134
                Snap of fingers: 181
                Sound of drums: 64
                Space: 180
                Spike of bearded wheat: 109
                Spring-fed lake: 150
                Stakes for impaling animals: 191
                Strong man: 159; 181
                Sun ray: 234
                Thicket of views: 51
                Thoroughbred horse: 177
                Tree: 26; 128; 208
                Tuft of cotton seed: 68
                Turban on fire: 58
                Turner: 30
                Unbroken colt: 177
                Vina: 86
                Water: 180
                Water jar: 150
                Water tank: 150
                Wheel of chariot: 8
                Wind: 110; 180
                Young woman or man: 58; 64; 159
Index of Persons ![[Go to top of page]](../../../../icon/scrollup.gif)
Note: Numbers refer to the translated passages (§) from the Canon.
Ajita Kesakambalin: 240
Ananda, Ven.: 36; 48; 64; 67; 68; 115; 152; 166; 174; 176; 181; 214; 220; 231; 237; 240
                Anathapindika: 135; 187
                Anuruddha, Ven.: 45; 161; 167
                Bodhisatta: 1; 161; 239
                Brahma: 124; 177
                Byagghapajja (TigerPaw): 117
                Ciravasi: 209
                Dasama: 174
                Dhammadinna, Sister: 105; 148; 204; 223
                Frying Pan: 47
                Gandhabhaka: 209
                Gavampati, Ven.: 194
                Godha: 116
                Indra: 177
                Jatila Bhagiya, Sister: 176
                Jivaka: 142
                Kaccayana, Ven.: 186
                Kalamas: 2
                Kundaliya: 92
                Magandiya: 139
                Maha Kassapa, Ven.: 56
                Maha Kotthita, Ven.: 201; 228
                Maha Moggallana, Ven.: 45; 57; 147
                Mahanama: 116
                Makkhali Gosala: 240
                Mara: 24; 37; 221
                Moliyasivaka: 14
                Mundika: 61
                Nigantha Nataputta: 240
                Pañcakanga: 61
                Paharada: 18
                Pajapati: 177
                Pakudha Kaccayana: 240
                Pañcakanga: 61
                Purana Kassapa: 240
                Rahula, Ven.: 6; 180
                Sandha, Ven.: 177
                Sañjaya Belatthaputta: 240
                Sariputta, Ven.: 56; 57; 74; 89; 107; 144; 167; 172; 175; 198; 201; 202; 203; 216; 227; 228
                Sona, Ven.: 86
                Subha, Sister: 142
                Subhadda, Ven.: 240
                Udayin, Ven.: 60; 175; 176
                Uggahamana: 61
                Unnabha: 67
                Uttiya, Ven.: 27; 99
                Vassakara: 152
                Visakha: 105; 148; 223
Index of Subjects ![[Go to top of page]](../../../../icon/scrollup.gif)
Note: Numbers refer to the page numbers from the 1996 printed edition of the book; the numbers in parentheses (§) refer to the translated passages from the Canon.
- Abhidhamma: v, 58, 74, 84, 154
- Ajivakas: 4
- Arahantship: 47, 58, 64, 93 (§34), 175
- attainment of, 68 (§22), 151 (§86), 152 (§88), 253 (§167), 340 (§240)
- factors leading to, 138, 152, 248ff., 252 (§166)
- qualities of arahant, 135 (§67), 151 (§87), 183 (§106), 188, 232
 
- Astronomy: 3, 21, 59
- Attention, appropriate (yoniso manasikara):, iv, 23, 28, 29, 29ff. (§1), 35ff (§6), 38, 109ff. (§51), 113 (§53), 155ff., 200, 279, 306ff., 308, 337 (§239);
- and discernment, 283;
- and listening to the Dhamma, 192;
- as factor of stream-entry, 140 (§70);
- as feeding the factors for Awakening, 158, 165ff. (§§95-6);
- in frames-of-reference practice, 160;
- see also Questions, appropriate
 
- Attention, inappropriate: 109ff. (§51),158, 165ff. (§95), 199 (§125);
- wrong view arising from, 277 (§187);
- and name-and-form, 305;
- see also Questions, inappropriate
 
- Awakening, stages of: see Stream-entry, Once-returning, Non-returning, Arahantship
- Balance in meditation practice: 27, 81, 127, 157, 169 (§97);
- Buddha's Awakening: 1ff.;
- Causality: vii;
- linear, 11ff., 40;
- meditation as mastery of, 10, 18, 77;
- synchronic, 11ff.;
- Vedic and Samana views of, 4;
 
- Chaos theory: vii, 13, 22, 301;
- Commentaries: v, ix;
- Concentration: 8, 24, 59, 75ff., 124ff.;
- mastery of, 125, 127;
- noble right concentration, 125, 174ff., 179 (§106), 231, 234 (§150), 250, 262, 307;
- relation to discernment, 155 174, 226, 255;
- right concentration, 72, 173, 177 (§101), 223ff.;
- wrong concentration, 173, 177 (§101), 227, 237ff. (§152);
 - see also Jhana
 
- Consciousness: 23, 42, 290, 292ff. (§197), 298 (§207), 302, 303ff., 307ff., 314 (§210), 320 (§218), 321 (§220), 325 (§225), 331 (§232)
- released from its object, 25, 44, 309ff., 333 (§235)
 
- Conviction: 39, 137ff., 140ff. (§71, §72, etc.) 173, 188ff., 205;
- Cosmological mode of awareness: 39ff., 43ff., 156, 159
- Dependent co-arising (paticca samuppada): 8, 10, 23, 42ff., 79, 227, 250, 271, 279, 292, 299ff., 304ff., 318 (§216), 319 (§217);
- Dhamma-Vinaya (doctrine & discipline): 9, 19, 190;
- see also Vinaya
 
- Discrimination: defined, 106
- Doubt: 33 (§2), 71 (§25), 110 (§51), 143 (§74), 191, 312 (§209) 326 (§225), 335 (§237), 339 (§240);
- see also Conviction
 
- Effluents (asava): 4, 6ff., 32, 43, 109ff. (§51), 124, 130 (§64), 180 (§106), 230, 231, 256 (§173), 305
- Emotion: 78, 263 (§179)
- Entry into emptiness: see Frames-of-reference practice
- Fabricated realm (sankhata): 6, 15, 291, 301;
- see also Unfabricated realm
 
- Faith: see Conviction
- Feedback loops: vii, 11, 14, 22, 43, 281, 300ff.;
- in dependent co-arising, 301, 304ff.;
- in frames-of-reference meditation, 160;
- in the seven sets, 62ff., 136, 138, 176;
- in this/that conditionality, 13, 41, 300;
- involving abandoning craving and knowing, 281;
- involving attention/intention and concentration/discernment, 8;
- involving concentration, equanimity and mindfulness, 159;
- involving ignorance and action, 43
 
- Feeding/starving the factors: 106, 154, 157ff., 165ff. (§96)
- Fire imagery: v, 6, 290ff., 303, 311
- Four modes of practice: 147 (§84), 148 (§84)
- Four Noble Truths: 7, 43;
- Frames-of-reference practice: 45, 72ff.;
- Free will: 13, 42
- Friendship with admirable people: 28, 29, 69 (§23), 113 (§53), 140 (§70), 189, 190, 195 (§115), 196 (§117)
- Generosity: 17, 19, 61, 174, 189ff., 196 (§§ 120ff.), 278
- Heavens & hells 32, 46, 49ff. (§9), 53 (§11), 130 (§64), 193, 198 (§122), 199 (§124), 202 (§128), 278
- see also Kamma
 
- Holography: vii, 62;
- holographic nature of the seven sets, 155, 175ff.;
- see also Chaos theory
 
- Imponderables (four): 41, 53
- Intention: see Kamma
- Jains: 4, 6ff., 40, 42
- Jhana: 114 (§55), 122 (§61), 125, 139 (§69), 140 (§72), 142 (§73), 223ff.;
- Kamma: i, 7ff.;
- Lokayatans: 4, 21
- Mandelbrot set: 41
- Meditation techniques:
- Metaphysics: 14, 46
- Music theory: 25ff., 59;
- musical analogies to meditation, 138, 150ff. (§86)
 
- Name-and-form (nama-rupa): 23, 303ff.;
- Narrative mode of awareness: 39ff., 43ff., 156, 159
- Noble eightfold path: abandoned upon reaching the goal, 175, 186 (§113);
- Non-fashioning: 9, 25, 64, 79, 139, 160, 173, 232, 263, 265 (§179) 270 (§183), 271ff., 274, 283, 308ff.;
- Non-linearity: 11, 24, 40, 42, 300
- Non-returning: 64, 90 (§30), 174, 203 (§130), 230ff., 248ff., 340 (§240)
- Not-self: 70 (§23), 110 (§51), 157, 159, 232, 256 (§173), 280
- Number symbolism: 59
- Once-returning: 64, 174, 340 (§240)
- Patimokkha: 37 (§7), 69 (§23), 71 (§25), 201 (§126)
- Phenomenological mode of awareness: 40ff., 107, 156, 159ff., 273
- Phenomenology: vi;
- Present (time): 8, 10, 13;
- as focal point for practice, 15, 19, 26, 40, 61, 302;
- and entry into emptiness, 282ff.;
- see also Phenomenological mode of awareness; This/that conditionality; Time
 
- Pure Abodes: 64;
- see also Heavens & hells
 
- Questions: appropriate, 155ff., 191, 306, 310;
- inappropriate, 155, 159, 279, 304ff.;
- four types of, 156;
- see also Attention, appropriate; Attention, inappropriate;
 
- Reason: 17
- Refuge: 16, 38, 49 (§9), 105 (§ 48)
- Restraint: 49 (§9), 52 (§11), 67ff. (§22), 98ff. (§39), 106, 108 (§50) 110ff., 161 (§92)
- Samana: 3;
- as one "in-tune" with Dhamma, 27, 59;
- see also Ajivakas; Jains; Lokayatans
 
- Sarvastivadin Canon: v, 74
- Scale invariance: vii, 42, 47, 274
- Shamanism: 3, 6
- Skill: development of, 7, 105ff., 307;
- mastery of, 22ff., 107, 119ff. (§61), 124, 126,
 
- Stream-entry: 38, 64, 172ff., 340 (§240)
- Sublime attitudes (brahma-vihara): 60, 61, 81;
- Supranormal powers: 124, 127ff., 128 (§64), 133 (§66), 135 (§68), 230, 250
- Survival beyond death: 4
- Thai forest tradition: vi
- This/that conditionality (idappaccayata): 8, 10, 12, 13, 15, 22ff., 40, 155, 273ff., 281, 283, 300, 319 (§217);
- see also Causality
 
- Time: 8, 10, 300ff.;
- disbanding of, 23;
- see also Present; This/that conditionality
 
- Unbinding: 2, 5ff., 9;
- as health, 16;
- fire imagery of, 6, 311;
- knowledge of, 44ff.;
- of the Buddha, 19;
- see also Buddha's Awakening: Two knowledges; Unfabricated realm
 
- Unfabricated realm: 6, 9, 12, 14, 18, 64, 125, 263, 274, 282ff., 301, 310;
- as a separate type of consciousness, 290;
- see Fabricated realm; Non-fashioning
 
- Upanishads: 4
- Veda and Vedists: 3ff., 7, 40
- Vinaya: 19, 84
- see also Dhamma-vinaya
 
- Virtue: 17, 60ff., 178ff. (§§103ff.), 278;
- as foundation for concentration, 59ff.
 
- Wheel symbolism: 284, 301, 305;
Bibliography
The following secondary sources were useful in placing the teachings of the Pali canon in their historical context, both social and intellectual:
- Jayatilleke, K. N. Early Buddhist Theory of Knowledge. London: George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 1963.
- Warder, A. K. Indian Buddhism, 2d. ed. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1980.
- __________. Outline of Indian Philosophy. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1971.
- __________. "Prologomena to a History of Indian Science" in New Paths in Buddhist Research, edited by A. K. Warder. Durham, N. C.: Acorn Press, 1985.
- Weiss, Mitchell G. "Caraka Samhita on the Doctrine of Karma" in Karma and Rebirth in Classical Indian Traditions, edited by Wendy Doniger O'Flaherty. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1980.
- Two books by Ernest G. McClain — The Myth of Invariance andThe Pythagorean Plato (New York: Nicholas-Hays, 1976 and 1978), dealing with the influence of music theory on the thought of ancient civilations, ranging from Greece to India — inspired me to look for traces of musical theory in the teachings of the Pali canon. The following books were useful in my research into ancient Indian music theory and the role that the word nimitta (theme) played in that theory:
- Bhattacharya, Arun. A Treatise of Ancient Hindu Music. Columbia, Mo.: South Asian Books, 1978.
- Warder, A. K. Indian Kavya Literature. Volume One: Literary Criticism. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1989.
- __________. Pali Metre. London: Pali Text Society, 1967.
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