Introduction
The Text
The text reproduced here is based on the edition, The Arthaviniścaya-sūtra & its commentary (Nibandhana) by N. H. Samtani (Patna, 1971), updated to include the corrections he printed in that work on pp. 180-181, most of which were also printed in his translation of the same, Gathering the Meanings (Berkeley, 2002), on pp. 309-310.
Samtani’s edition does not list all the variants found in the mansucripts, and sometimes simply summarises differences. To list all variants may even be undesirable, given the large number of variants there are anyway, but it does leave someone looking at the text now unsure as to what the exact state of the manscripts is.
The additions Samtani made to the text, including such things as numbering, and sometimes text that was wanting from the manuscripts, he marked with round brackets, which is maintained here. He also sometimes included text and made other amendments, which he clarified in the notes: where I have noticed these I have placed them in square brackets, as Samtani’s notes are not included here.
I have also sometimes reverted to the manuscript readings when there seemed to be little reason to follow him in the changes he made. These are noted as they occur. I have made some editorial corrections and additions I think are needed, and to distinguish them from Samtani’s they are placed in curly braces. I have also changed the layout, and added further numbering for clarity, but I have not included the numbering from his base manuscript in this transliteration.
To summarise, Samtani’s original additions are placed in round brackets ().
His deviations from the base manuscript I have placed in square brackets [].
My own additions have been placed in curly braces {}.
I have repunctuated throughout, but I have preferred to use normal Roman-style punctuation only in the transliteration. In the original printed text there was a mixture of Roman- and Devanāgarī-style punctuation, the latter being characterised by the daṇḍa ( | ).
The Compilation
When I started work on this project I thought we were dealing with a Dīrgha-type text that had been overlooked in the Pāḷi tradition. Once I became more familiar with the text – or rather texts, as there are very great variations involved in the rescension of this text See Samtani’s collection of major variants in his Appendices to the edition of the text. – I came to a different conclusion.
It appears to have started as a collection of topics found in the Dharma, together with their explanations, that has been expanded as the work developed. There is more than one way this might have happened, and what follows is simply a suggestion that would make sense of the material.
It could be then that there was at the core a set of categories around meditation practice. These would be:
(8) The Four Absorptions
(9) The Four Formless Attainments
(10) The Four Spiritual States
(11) The Four Ways of Practice
(12) The Four Cultivations of Meditation
(13) The Four Ways of Attending to Mindfulness
…
(20) The Sixteen Modes of Mindfulness while Breathing
(21) The Four Factors of a Stream Enterer
conceived of as originally appearing in successive order.
As (13) The Four Ways of Attending to Mindfulness are also the first of the things on the side of Awakening (Bodhi-pakṣya-dharma), these were then also attracted into the work, breaking up the strict meditation sequence, by adding 14-19.
(8) The Four Absorptions
(9) The Four Formless Attainments
(10) The Four Spiritual States
(11) The Four Ways of Practice
(12) The Four Cultivations of Meditation
(13) The Four Ways of Attending to Mindfulness
(14) The Four Right Strivings
(15) The Four Bases of Spiritual Power
(16) The Five Faculties
(17) The Five Strengths
(18) The Seven Factors of Awakening
(19) The Noble Eightfold Path
(20) The Sixteen Modes of Mindfulness while Breathing
(21) The Four Factors of a Stream Enterer
It is possible that the more doctrinal categories at the beginning of the work were also part of the original text, as having a background in doctine has always been considered central to the meditation tradition as well.
(1) The Five Components
(2) The Five Components that provide Fuel for Attachment
(3) The Eighteen Elements
(4) The Twelve Sense-Spheres
(5) The Twelve Factors of Conditional Origination
(6) The Four Noble Truths
(7) The Twenty-Two Faculties
This was probably then expanded with other basic factors and explanations, especially the categories concerning the Buddha near the end of the text 22-27, until it achieved something like its present size, at which point standard introductions and endings were added on to make it more like a normal sūtra. Note that there is a discrepancy in the numbers mentioned: at the beginning of the sūtra it states that 1,250 monastics attended, and at the end that only 500 attained Awakening.
If we accept this explanation of the growth of the work, then we can speculate that we are dealing with three or four separate sections. After the introduction we get some standard doctrinal categories, sections 1-7 (Five Components, Five Components that provide Fuel for Attachment, Eighteen Elements, Twelve Spheres, Twelve Factors of Conditional Origination, The Four Noble Truths, The Twenty-Two Faculties).
This is followed by the main meditation categories, 8-12 (Four Absorptions, Four Formless Attainments, Four Spiritual States, Four Ways of Practice, Four Cultivations of Concentration, Four Ways of Attending to Mindfulness).
We then have the sections that complete the Factors of Awakening, 14-19 (Four Right Abandonings, Four Paths to Spiritual Power, Five Faculties, Five Strengths, Seven Factors of Awakening, Noble Eightfold Path); and we continue with meditation sections 20 & 21 (Sixteen Modes of Mindfulness while Breathing, Four Factors of a Stream Enterer).
The work then concludes with sections 22-27, which are concerned with the special qualities of the Buddha:
(22) The Ten Strengths of a Realised One
(23) The Four Confidences
(24) The Four Analytical Knowledges
(25) The Eighteen Special Qualities of the Buddha
(26) The Thirty-Two Marks of a Great Man
(27) The Eighty Secondary Characteristics
Ven. Sujāto has convincingly shown that the Satipaṭṭhānasutta in the Dīgha- and Majjhima-nikāya-s Bhikkhu Sujato, A History of Mindfulness, How Insight Worsted Tranquillity in the Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta (pdf, no date given). of the Pāḷi tradition has undergone a similar expansion, and it is doubtless true of other discourses in the Pāḷi canon also, This was noticed very early on, see for instance Rhys-Davids’ introduction to his translation of that Mahāparinibbānasuttaṁ, DN 16, in Sacred Book of the East, Vol III, p. 71 (Oxford, 1910). and was undoubtedly a way that the texts changed during the period of the oral tradition.
This doesn’t, in my view, make the discourse less interesting or useful, as nothing in it departs far from the early teaching that is common to all traditions. All but two of these topics listed and discussed have early Pāḷi canonical equivalents. See below for the three that do not find parallels.
Contents
The compilation consists of various categories, which are presented in three different ways, they are simple lists; expanded lists, where the list itself analyses the contents; and then others, which are listed first, and then analysed in detail according to their factors. When we look at the contents in this way we can see that we are dealing with a very heterogeneous collection.
The following are simply listed, and not explained in any way:
(1) The Five Components
(2) The Five Components that provide Fuel for Attachment
(3) The Eighteen Elements
(4) The Twelve Sense-Spheres
(7) The Twenty-Two Faculties
(17) The Five Strengths
(25) The Eighteen Special Qualities of the Buddha
(27) The Eighty Secondary Characteristics
The following are lists, which contain within themselves their explanation:
(8) The Four Absorptions
(9) The Four Formless Attainments
(10) The Four Spiritual States
(13) The Four Ways of Attending to Mindfulness
(14) The Four Right Strivings
(15) The Four Bases of Spiritual Power
(20) The Sixteen Modes of Mindfulness while Breathing
(21) The Four Factors of Stream Entry
(22) The Ten Strengths of a Realised One
(23) The Four Confidences
The following are listed first, then explained in detail:
(5) The Twelve Factors of Conditional Origination
(6) The Four Noble Truths
(11) The Four Ways of Practice
(12) The Four Cultivations of Meditation
(16) The Five Faculties
(18) The Seven Factors of Awakening
(19) The Noble Eightfold Path
(24) The Four Analytical Knowledges
(26) The Thirty-Two Marks of a Great Man
The three types of categories also occur in what is the closest discourse to this one found in the Pāḷi canon, the Saṅgītisuttaṁ DN 33. Not all of the topics listed here though, are listed there, and those that are listed there are sometimes treated differently. For instance the Five Faculties are listed in Saṅgīti, but not analysed as here, and the Five Strengths are not listed at all in the former discourse.
What I have taken as the core topics here, 8-13, are also found in the Saṅgīti, as are 5 of the 8 following topics, 14-21, which I think may have been central to the original collection. As the Saṅgīti only really covers topics up to 10 in number it is not surprising that certain categories which exceed that number are not found there.
It is interesting to note that the Four Noble Truths, the Noble Eightfold Path and all the categories concerning the Buddha’s special qualities are missing from the Pāḷi work also.
There are three topics found in this sūtra that do not find parallels in the Pāḷi canon, they are (24) The Four Analytical Knowledges, (25) The Eighteen Special Qualities of the Buddha and (27) The Eighty Secondary Characteristics, which are only found in the post-Canonical stages of the development of the Pāḷi texts. I speculated above that these were part of the material which was added to the central core at a later date.
The Material
However it was collected, there is no doubt that this is one of the best collections of doctrinal items found in any discourse that has come down to us, and collects together some of the most important teachings of the Buddha, and analyses many of them.
If there was one discourse that could be recommended to anyone trying to get an overview of the early teaching, especially on meditation, then this be would it, and that is a high recommendation given that there are so many discourses available to us.
I am currently working on a similar collection assembled from the Pāḷi texts, that could be used in a pedagogical way to summarise some of the main teachings found in the Pāḷi canon, and hope to publish that work soon after this one.
Ānandajoti Bhikkhu
November, 2016