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  • In the previous lecture we talked about the first

  • two noble truths, the Buddha's diagnosis of the human predicament.

  • Now we're going to talk about the third and fourth

  • noble truths which contain the Buddhist prescription, the cure

  • for what ails us and also they point to

  • meditation which we'll then talk about in some depth.

  • Now I guess you could call the first two

  • noble truths the bad news and good news, respectively.

  • The bad news is that human life

  • is full of [FOREIGN] of suffering, of unsatisfactoriness.

  • And the good news in the second noble truth

  • is that we have at least isolated the cause.

  • The cause is craving.

  • Clinging to things that are not going to last forever.

  • Well in that sense I guess you could say that they third and

  • fourth noble truths are respectively, more good news and then some bad news.

  • The third noble truth tells us what the cure is.

  • It is the abandonment of craving and of clinging.

  • The fourth noble truth spells out the path you

  • have to follow if you're going to attain full liberation.

  • And it turns out that it is an Eightfold Path.

  • There are eight things that you have to master if you want to be liberated.

  • So it starts with right view, which is to

  • say getting a proper understanding of the Buddhist's teaching.

  • And there there are a lot of other right

  • things I'm not going to get into all of them.

  • But at the end we didn't right mindfulness

  • and right concentration; which point us to meditation.

  • Now some people might be surprised that there's so

  • much stuff on the path, that isn't about meditation.

  • I think there's an idea in the West, that

  • what Buddhist mainly do is sit around and meditate.

  • Well actually, in Asia, most Buddhists don't meditate at all.

  • Most lay Buddhists do not meditate.

  • A lot of Buddhist monks meditate.

  • But if they're meditating really seriously and certainly

  • if they're meditating with a hope of reaching nirvana,

  • you can bet that they're going to be

  • paying attention to all eight parts of the path.

  • Another thing that may surprise people about the Eightfold

  • Path is these three parts of the path here.

  • These three factors which are about ethical behavior and cultivating virtue.

  • I think there's an idea in the West that

  • Buddhism doesn't have this kind of hangup about moral conduct

  • that the Abrahamic religions have you know, there's not all

  • these oppressive lists of do's and dont's, no Ten Commandments.

  • Well actually these three parts of the path have quite a bit

  • of overlap with the Ten Commandments and in some ways they're more demanding.

  • This factor right here, right speech.

  • Says that you not only have to avoid saying things that are

  • not true, you actually have to avoid saying mean things about people.

  • Avoid ideal gossip.

  • And I don't know about you, but if I were to try to

  • completely eliminate gossip from my life,

  • that would take some pretty serious reform.

  • Maybe if you offered me nirvana in exchange for

  • it, I could do it, but I'm not honestly sure.

  • Then when we get to the meditative part of the

  • path, there's more heavy lifting to be done, more hard work.

  • And one reason the work is hard

  • is because, remember, to get to liberation, we're

  • supposed to abandon craving, abandon clinging, we're

  • supposed to lose our aversion to unpleasant things.

  • And that's obviously not going to be easy.

  • Meditation isn't the only thing that goes

  • into cultivating that kind of discipline, but

  • it's a big part of it and it's going to take a lot of work.

  • There's another reason that meditation is going to involve

  • work if you want to get all the way to Nirvana.

  • And that is that remember, this isn't just liberation, it's enlightenment.

  • It's seeing the essence of reality clearly as the Buddha taught it.

  • And part of doing that is back up here in the first factor of the path, right view.

  • That's when you try to gain

  • an intellectual understanding of Buddhist doctrine.

  • But it's in the meditative part of the path where

  • you try to gain an experiential understanding of Buddhist doctrine.

  • So, for example, with the idea of impermanence you would meditate and,

  • and thereby gain just an intuitive

  • apprehension of the impermanence of things.

  • The impermanence of your feelings, of your thoughts,

  • and of everything that comes into your mind and

  • this apprehension would in turn reinforce the intellectual understanding

  • of Buddhist doctrine and strengthen your commitment to it.

  • Now you might ask, if it takes so much work.

  • To attain liberation, how many people have actually done it?

  • Well, this question came up in a conversation I recently had

  • on a website I run called

  • bloggingheads.tv, where we have video dialogues.

  • I was talking to a very highly esteemed Buddhist scholar and monk named Biku

  • Bodi just to give you some idea of what a serious scholar he is.

  • This is a sizable chunk of the Buddhist Canon.

  • And the connected discourses of the Budha.

  • It's more than 2000 pages of translation and commentary.

  • And this is the achievement of Biku Bodi the person I was talking to.

  • And so I was talking to him, and

  • I thought, well he's obviously a serious Buddhist.

  • He says he meditates a lot.

  • He's sitting there in a monastery.

  • Maybe he's attained enlightenment.

  • Maybe I'll ask him.

  • Maybe this is kind of a personal question, but have you attained liberation?

  • [LAUGH] No, not by a long shot.

  • Not by a long shot.

  • Yeah.

  • [LAUGH] So are there people alive today that you think have attained liberation?

  • I would say there is quite possible maybe some monks in maybe Thailand.

  • [LAUGH] Maybe Burma.

  • Maybe a few in the forest or Sri Lanka.

  • Well he may not have attained Nirvana but he does seem happy.

  • And for that matter I've seen a lot of happy buddhists.

  • Now you may wonder, you know, what is the deal here?

  • I mean we've got a whole religion that is supposedly devoted

  • to helping people reach nirvana and virtually nobody ever reaches it?

  • What kind of religion is that?

  • You know, with Christianity it seems a lot more straightforward.

  • The idea is to get to heaven and all you have to do is accept Jesus as your savior.

  • Well actually, for lay Buddhists in Asia, the kind of incentive structure if

  • you will, is a lot more like that in Christianity than you might imagine.

  • They may not aspire to escape the cycle of

  • rebirth in this life, which is what nirvana would accomplish.

  • They can hope to get a more favorable rebirth in the next round.

  • And that can include going to a kind of heaven where they will not stay forever.

  • But stay for a very long time before another rebirth.

  • And the way they do this is to pursue virtuous behavior.

  • And that increases their chances of a favorable rebirth.

  • So the religion does make sense on its own terms.

  • I want to emphasize that there are people that

  • would disagree with Biku Bodi about this liberation thing.

  • There are people who will tell you that

  • they are enlightened, and who am I to judge.

  • And there are meditation teachers who will

  • insist that yes, liberation is within reach.

  • Still, I think it's safe to say that for most of us, nirvana

  • is not going to happen today, next week, next month, next year, next decade.

  • Still there is some good news.

  • You know, if you can't attain full

  • liberation, there is such thing as partial liberation.

  • If you can't eliminate all your suffering, you can eliminate some of it.

  • If you can't reach complete equanimity you can

  • get more tranquility and balance than you have now.

  • And your life, according to reports from people who have

  • done this, your life can change considerably and even be transformed.

  • So, I guess the way I think of meditative

  • practice is, is being on a kind of spectrum.

  • So, one end you have strictly therapeutic practice.

  • Maybe you, you come home from work stressed out and you do

  • ten minutes of meditation and you feel better and, and that's it.

  • You don't think of any Buddhist doctrines that may be associated with meditation.

  • And then at the other end of the spectrum, there's Nirvana.

  • Way, way down there.

  • But then I would say that at some point as you move toward the

  • Nirvana end of the spectrum, you enter

  • a zone that we could call spiritual practice.

  • Not just therapeutic but spiritual practice.

  • Now, what does that mean?

  • Well, first of all, this is just my definition.

  • You know, there's no official definition of spiritual.

  • But what I would say is that if practice qualifies for the term

  • spiritual, then the motivation is not just about self-help.

  • There is a desire to, to become a better person,

  • to help others, and to see the world more clearly.

  • And there's the beginning of an

  • understanding that there's a connection between

  • these two goals of becoming a better person, seeing the world more clearly.

  • So, there's a desire to kind of strip yourself of some of

  • the delusions and misperceptions that seem to be natural for human beings.

  • And in the process become a better person.

  • So you're trying to align yourself with the truth about the

  • world, the truth about other people, about yourself and with moral truth.

  • Of course, it's good news that you reduce your suffering in the process.

  • And it's fine that this is one thing that sustains the practice, but that's.

  • Just not all that it's about.

  • Now, I don't want to over emphasize this

  • distinction between the therapeutic and the spiritual.

  • Because for one thing, even if you just

  • reduce your stress, then you're probably going to

  • see the world a little more clearly, and

  • you're probably going to become a better person.

  • If only in the sense of making the people around you

  • less unhappy than you might make them when you're stressed out.

  • And also, if you're doing this kind of therapeutic

  • practice, it may happen that you start expanding the practice.

  • You, you don't want to just get a, get rid of your stress.

  • You realize that, that this can help with anxiety.

  • With sorrow and so on, you may start meditating more.

  • And I think it tends to happen when people do that.

  • That they do become better people and more considerate of others.

  • In fact, one interesting thing about Buddhism is this

  • kind of organic connection between self-help and helping others.

  • It's not automatic.

  • And maybe that's why the Buddha included explicit ethical strictures.

  • But there is something natural about the progression

  • from helping yourself to becoming a more considerate person.

  • Still, when I think about practice, it qualifies for the term spiritual,

  • I do think about the aspiration being about more than self help.

  • So kind of the driving dissatisfaction isn't just about the fact

  • that we're born into these machines that sometimes make us suffer.

  • It's that we're born into these machines that make it hard to see things

  • clearly, that fill us with misperceptions that lead us to make other people suffer.

  • Now a lot of you have probably seen the movie The Matrix.

  • And in that movie the character played by Keanu Reeves realizes that he

  • and everyone else on the planet is actually living in a dream world.

  • They, they've actually, what they thought was reality is really just an

  • hu, an hallucination And it's been

  • inflicted on them by their robot overlords.

  • And Keanu Reeves then joins a rebellion that aims to attain complete liberation.

  • Now I don't think either modern psychology or mainstream

  • Buddhism tells us that we're quite that deluded about reality.

  • But it is interesting that a lot

  • of western Buddhists identify with that movie.

  • They call it a dharma movie.

  • They, they saw in, in it a kind of allegory.

  • And they and they see themselves as being in the process of overcoming

  • delusion in a very significant sense and, and, and kind of fighting for liberation.

  • And, and I do think that, Buddhist practice in the

  • spiritual sense, involves having a little Keanu Reeves, in you know?

  • Just, just saying you know, I just want to see the

  • truth or at least come as close to that, as possible.

  • I want to see things more clearly.

  • Now, I hope I haven't sounded too dismissive in

  • the course of this segment about full fledged enlightenment.

  • I mean, I think it's, it's a very interesting

  • question what enlightenment in a Buddhist sense would feel like.

  • And in fact, later in the course, we're going to be

  • talking to some people who if not enlightened are a

  • lot closer to that than I am and, and we're

  • going to hear what they have to say about this.

  • And I'm interested in particular in the question of, Is enlightenment as described

  • by Buddhists, is that something like what a psychologist might say your

  • consciousness would be like if we stripped it of all the mispreceptions and

  • delusions that seem to be kind of built into us by natural selection.

  • So that's going to come later in the course, but right now in the

  • next segment of this lecture, we're

  • going to turn to the subject of meditation.

  • We're going to talk about different kinds of

  • meditation, and about what they have to offer.

In the previous lecture we talked about the first

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