Wheels of Fire: The Buddha’s Radical Teaching on Process

While metaphysics investigates the fundamental nature of reality and ponders what exists, epistemology asks how we can even know what exists. Do our experiences truly grant us access to ‘reality’? Can our judgement of the world be justified? From Socrates declaring all he knows is that he knows nothing, Descartes worrying if the world around us is real, John Locke insisting there is no such things as innate knowledge, through to the more technical arguments of the modern day around whether evidence can rationally constrain or inform our beliefs: philosophers throughout the ages have endlessly debated questions around our capacity for and access to knowledge. These issues remain central to both continental and analytic philosophy, in phenomenology and the philosophy of mind, respectively. Western philosophers have struggled to comprehend the nature of consciousness and how it fits into a larger picture of the world.

The origin of the modern concept of consciousness is often attributed to Locke’s Essay Concerning Human Understanding, published in 1690. Locke defined consciousness as “the perception of what passes in a man’s own mind”. His essay influenced the 18th-century view of consciousness, and his definition appeared in Samuel Johnson’s celebrated Dictionary (1755).  “Consciousness” (French: conscience) is also defined in the 1753 volume of Diderot and d’Alembert‘s Encyclopédie, as “the opinion or internal feeling that we ourselves have from what we do”. In the late 20th century, philosophers like Hamlyn, Rorty, and Wilkes have disagreed with Kahn, Hardie and Modrak as to whether Aristotle even had a concept of consciousness. Aristotle does not use any single word or terminology to name the phenomenon; it is used only much later, especially by John Locke.  Caston contends that for Aristotle, perceptual awareness was somewhat the same as what modern philosophers call consciousness. These confusions are in a large degree caused by the lacking of practices with deep mind focused introspection in the tradition of western culture. As a result, western society so far remain perplexed with the concept of “What is our true self“.

Spiritual teacher Krishnamurti once said, “We are facing a tremendous crisis; a crisis which the politicians can never solve because they are programmed to think in a particular way – nor can the scientists understand or solve the crisis; nor yet the business world, the world of money. The turning point, the perceptive decision, the challenge, is not in politics, in religion, in the scientific world; it is in our consciousness. One has to understand the consciousness of mankind, which has brought us to this point.” Socrates, the Greek Philosopher who had a solid feeling of ethics and laws, once expressed, “An unexamined life is not worth living.” For one to find the reason and work of his life, this statement emphatically asks one to examine himself first and after that others in the society to find the meaning and happiness of life.

With these line of thought in mind, I want to share with you the article Wheels of Fire: The Buddha’s Radical Teaching on Process by long time Buddhist practitioner Lila Kate Wheeler . In this article, she talked about how Buddha define consciousness, and how Buddhism teaching has merged into the Western philosophical thoughts in the last one hundred fifty years. She wrote in such clarity about Buddhism teaching in the context of a westerner, offering a much needed bowl of chicken soup for the soul transformation in a time of many social crisis.

I think, therefore I am? 3

Human consciousness is the awareness or perception of something by a person. The Sixth Patriarch of Zen, Huineng taught us that the essence of mind is Consciousness. And Consciousness is characterized as no birth no death, no increase nor decrease, neither clean nor filthy, as defined in the famous Heart Sutra.

As legend has it, Huineng was a poor, illiterate young man from southern China who was selling firewood when he heard the customer reciting the Diamond Sutra, and he had an awakening experience. Following the customer’s lead, Huineng set out to search for enlightenment in Monastery, and started the journey of self discovery and actualization. The fifth Patriarch noticed Huineng’s exceptional gift. Several months after Huineng’s arrival, Hongren challenged his monks to compose a verse that expressed their understanding of the dharma. If any verse reflects the truth, Hongren said, the monk who composed it will receive the robe and bowl and become the Sixth Patriarch.

Shenxiu (Shen-hsiu), the most senior monk, accepted this challenge and wrote this verse on a monastery wall.

The body is the bodhi tree.
The heart-mind is like a mirror.
Moment by moment wipe and polish it,
Not allowing dust to collect.

When someone read the verse to the illiterate Huineng, the future Sixth Patriarch knew Shenxiu had missed it. He knew it did not express the essence of true nature. So Huineng dictated the following verse for another to write for him:
Bodhi originally has no tree,
The mirror(-like mind) has no stand.
Buddha-nature (emptiness/oneness) is always clean and pure;
Where might dust collect?

While Shenxiu explanation is applicable to earlier stage of practice, for the laymen, beginner and intermediate level of practitioner, Huinengs poem illuminate the ultimate meaning of the mind, and so is the best commentary to answer the question about “what is the essence of mind”. This can be understood as advocating the sudden awakening to emptiness/oneness. It was a masterpiece that revealed the transient and illusory nature of everything. Shenxiu used the bodhi tree as a metaphor for the body, so Huineng pointed out that bodhi — the enlightenment of the soul — was not dependent on the body. It is the spiritual self that experiences the awakening to a greater reality. The physical self is only a temporary means for us to journey through the material world, and work toward that awakening.

Shenxiu compared the soul to a mirror, and the mind as the stand holding it, so Huineng pointed out that this, too, was not the ultimate truth. The soul is your true self, and it is eternally constant. The mind, like the body, is a tool created by the soul for the purpose of perfecting itself. This is why your mind is always changing — learning new things, evolving various ideas, and so on — but no matter how much it changes, you are still you. This “you-ness” that never changes is your true self, and it does not depend on the constantly changing states of your mind.

In the clarity of Huineng’s view, we can see that all the temptations and distractions of the world are just as illusory as the body and the mind. The difficulties we face may be challenging and exhausting, but they cannot last forever. Similarly, all the things we chase after — money, material possessions, fame and fortune — become completely meaningless when we die. Huineng said “nothing’s there initially” because none of it is real compared to the true self.

Oneness is the idea that everything in the universe is interconnected.  Therefore the idea of being separate from the matter we can see around us is considered an illusion.  This point of view is mirrored in science in a phenomenon in wave mechanics called quantum entanglement. This relationship connects both particles so that whatever happens to one particle is reflected by the other particle instantaneously, irrespective of time and space.  This experiment implies that everything we see or experienced has one single interconnected source.  Again modern science proved the truth of the universe simply captured in the Buddhist belief.

I think, therefore I am?

We’ve been taught to think of consciousness as the product of brain activity. To Descartes, this activity was the final proof of existence. He famously said that ” I think, therefore I am.” He was wrong. It isn’t thought that produces awareness. It is awareness that produces thought.

J. Donald Walters wrote in his book Awaken to Super-consciousnessHow to Use Meditation for Inner Peace, Intuitive Guidance, and Greater Awareness, “Descartes’s explanation was the product of an essentially Western bias: that rational thought is the best, if not the only, key to understanding. Since the time of the Greeks, this bias has been firmly entrenched. And because of it, it is not surprising that scientists nowadays view computers, and the similarities between them and the way the brain works, as evidence that consciousness itself is the product of computer-like activity in the brain. They define thought as a pattern of electrons, merely, moving through a circuit of brain cells. “

Walters took the example of having a computer to reproduce, by a random selection of words, some great work of literature, such as the Bible. Conceivably, after a few billion, trillion, or zillion tries it might get all of the words right, and in the right sequence. But the result would have no more literary value than random patterns of clouds in the sky, which may fleetingly resemble mountain ranges, houses, or human faces before moving on to assume other shapes. The only way for this process to become meaningful would be for someone consciously to recognize what the computer had done and to stop the process in time.

In this way, Walters demonstrated Descartes’ view is a fallacy. The truth is Consciousness is not the product of brain activity, rather, it is the fundamental reality without which thinking as a conscious activity could never take place. Scientists have came to the same conclusion as Donald Walters. In fact, there is a striking parallel that exists between Quantum Physics and how human mind functions as revealed in the Eastern philosophies like Buddhism.  Heisenberg, one of the key pioneers of Quantum mechanics had this to say,  “What we observe as nature is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning.” In other words, what we observe as reality is only what our lens of observation has defined. A famous experiment in Quantum Physics called double slip indicated particles’  behavior were dependent on whether or not these particles were being observed.  When not observed, supposed particles took up wave-like behavior, demonstrating a state of infinite potential.  However when observed, the particles took up well-defined locations, acting as solid matter. This clearly validated the Buddhist teaching that what you see is only a result of what you think, in other words, our perception defines our reality. 

The latest computer technology Artificial intelligence (AI) is defined as the ability of a computer or a robot controlled by a computer to do tasks that are usually done by humans because they require human intelligence and discernment.  It was founded as an academic discipline in 1956 and has since received mammoth amount of resources for R&D. As the experiments indicated above, Buddhist monks may not be the best scientists, but what we hold today as revolutionary ways of scientific breakthrough is no news to the Buddhas who have studied these things for millennia.