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by Bhikkhu Bodhi
Anicca vata sankhara "Impermanent, alas, are all
formations!" is the
phrase used in Theravada Buddhist lands
to announce the death of a loved one, but I have not quoted this line
here in order to begin an obituary. I do so simply to introduce the
subject of this essay, which is the word sankhara itself.
Sometimes a single Pali word has such rich implications that merely to
sit down and draw them out can shed as much light on the Buddha's
teaching as a long expository article. This is indeed the case with
the word sankhara. The word stands squarely at the heart of the
Dhamma, and to trace its various strands of meaning is to get a
glimpse into the Buddha's own vision of reality.
The word sankhara is derived from the prefix sam,
meaning "together," joined to the noun kara,
"doing, making." Sankharas are thus
"co-doings," things that act in concert with other things,
or things that are made by a combination of other things. Translators
have rendered the word in many different ways: formations,
confections, activities, processes, forces, compounds, compositions,
fabrications, determinations, synergies, constructions. All are clumsy
attempts to capture the meaning of a philosophical concept for which
we have no exact parallel, and thus all English renderings are bound
to be imprecise. I myself use "formations" and
"volitional formations," aware this choice is as defective
as any other.
However, though it is impossible to discover an exact English
equivalent for sankhara, by exploring its actual usage we can
still gain insight into how the word functions in the "thought
world" of the Dhamma. In the suttas the word occurs in three
major doctrinal contexts. One is in the twelvefold formula of
dependent origination (paticca-samuppada), where the sankharas
are the second link in the series. They are said to be conditioned by
ignorance and to function as a condition for consciousness. Putting
together statements from various suttas, we can see that the sankharas
are the kammically active volitions responsible for generating rebirth
and thus for sustaining the onward movement of samsara, the
round of birth and death. In this context sankhara is virtually
synonymous with kamma, a word to which it is etymologically
akin.
The suttas distinguish the sankharas active in dependent
origination into three types: bodily, verbal, and mental. Again, the sankharas
are divided into the meritorious, demeritorious, and
"imperturbable," i.e., the volitions present in the four
formless meditations. When ignorance and craving underlie our stream
of consciousness, our volitional actions of body, speech, and mind
become forces with the capacity to produce results, and of the results
they produce the most significant is the renewal of the stream of
consciousness following death. It is the sankharas, propped up
by ignorance and fueled by craving, that drive the stream of
consciousness onward to a new mode of rebirth, and exactly where
consciousness becomes established is determined by the kammic
character of the sankharas. If one engages in meritorious
deeds, the sankharas or volitional formations will propel
consciousness toward a happy sphere of rebirth. If one engages in
demeritorious deeds, the sankharas will propel consciousness
toward a miserable rebirth. And if one masters the formless
meditations, these "imperturbable" sankharas will
propel consciousness toward rebirth in the formless realms.
A second major domain where the word sankharas applies is
among the
five aggregates. The fourth aggregate is the sankhara-khandha,
the aggregate of volitional formations. The texts define the sankhara-khandha
as the six classes of volition (cha cetanakaya): volition
regarding forms, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile objects, and ideas.
Though these sankharas correspond closely to those in the
formula of dependent origination, the two are not in all respects the
same, for the sankhara-khandha has a wider range. The aggregate
of volitional formations comprises all kinds of volition. It
includes not merely those that are kammically potent, but also those
that are kammic results and those that are kammically inoperative. In
the later Pali literature the sankhara-khandha becomes an
umbrella category for all the factors of mind except feeling and
perception, which are assigned to aggregates of their own. Thus the sankhara-khandha
comes to include such ethically variable factors as contact,
attention, thought, and energy; such wholesome factors as generosity,
kindness, and wisdom; and such unwholesome factors as greed, hatred,
and delusion. Since all these factors arise in conjunction with
volition and participate in volitional activity, the early Buddhist
teachers decided that the most fitting place to assign them is the
aggregate of volitional formations.
The third major domain in which the word sankhara occurs is
as a designation for all conditioned things. In this context the word
has a passive derivation, denoting whatever is formed by a combination
of conditions; whatever is conditioned, constructed, or compounded. In
this sense it might be rendered simply "formations," without
the qualifying adjective. As bare formations, sankharas include
all five aggregates, not just the fourth. The term also includes
external objects and situations such as mountains, fields, and
forests; towns and cities; food and drink; jewelry, cars, and
computers.
The fact that sankharas can include both active forces and
the things produced by them is highly significant and secures for the
term its role as the cornerstone of the Buddha's philosophical vision.
For what the Buddha emphasizes is that the sankharas in the two
active senses the volitional formations operative in dependent
origination, and the kammic volitions in the fourth aggregate
construct the sankharas in the passive sense: "They
construct the conditioned; therefore they are called volitional
formations. And what are the conditioned things they construct? They
construct the body, feeling, perception, volitional formations, and
consciousness; therefore they are called volitional formations" (SN XXII.79).
Though external inanimate things may arise from purely physical
causes, the sankharas that make up our personal being the
five aggregates are all products of the kammically active sankharas
that we engaged in our previous lives. In the present life as well the
five aggregates are constantly being maintained, refurbished, and
extended by the volitional activity we engage in now, which again
becomes a condition for future existence. Thus, the Buddha teaches, it
was our own kammically formative sankharas that built up our
present edifice of personal being, and it is our present formative sankharas
that are now building up the edifices of personal being we will
inhabit in our future lives. These edifices consist of nothing other
than sankharas as conditioned things, the conditioned
formations comprised in the five aggregates.
The most important fact to understand about sankharas, as
conditioned formations, is that they are all impermanent:
"Impermanent, alas, are formations." They are impermanent
not only in the sense that in their gross manifestations they will
eventually come to an end, but even more pointedly because at the
subtle, subliminal level they are constantly undergoing rise and fall,
forever coming into being and then, in a split second, breaking up and
perishing: "Their very nature is to arise and vanish." For
this reason the Buddha declares that all sankharas are
suffering (sabbe sankhara dukkha) suffering, however, not
because they are all actually painful and stressful, but because they
are stamped with the mark of transience. "Having arisen they then
cease," and because they all cease they cannot provide stable
happiness and security.
To win complete release from suffering not only from
experiencing suffering, but from the unsatisfactoriness intrinsic to
all conditioned existence we must gain release from sankharas.
And what lies beyond the sankharas is that which is not
constructed, not put together, not compounded. This is Nibbana,
accordingly called the Unconditioned asankhata the
opposite of what is sankhata, a word which is the passive
participle corresponding to sankhara. Nibbana is called the
Unconditioned precisely because it's a state that is neither itself a sankhara
nor constructed by sankharas; a state described as visankhara,
"devoid of formations," and as sabbasankhara-samatha,
"the stilling of all formations."
Thus, when we put the word sankhara under our microscope, we
see compressed within it the entire worldview of the Dhamma. The
active sankharas consisting in kammically active volitions
perpetually create the sankhara of the five aggregates that
constitute our being. As long as we continue to identify with the five
aggregates (the work of ignorance) and to seek enjoyment in them (the
work of craving), we go on spewing out the volitional formations that
build up future combinations of aggregates. Just that is the nature of
samsara: an unbroken procession of empty but efficient sankharas
producing still other sankharas, riding up in fresh waves with
each new birth, swelling to a crest, and then crashing down into old
age, illness, and death. Yet on it goes, shrouded in the delusion that
we're really in control, sustained by an ever-tantalizing, ever
receding hope of final satisfaction.
When, however, we take up the practice of the Dhamma, we apply a
brake to this relentless generation of sankharas. We learn to
see the true nature of the sankharas, of our own five
aggregates: as unstable, conditioned processes rolling on with no one
in charge. Thereby we switch off the engine driven by ignorance and
craving, and the process of kammic construction, the production of
active sankharas, is effectively deconstructed. By putting an
end to the constructing of conditioned reality, we open the door to
what is ever-present but not constructed, not conditioned: the asankhata-dhatu,
the unconditioned element. This is Nibbana, the Deathless, the
stilling of volitional activities, the final liberation from all
conditioned formations and thus from impermanence and death. Therefore
our verse concludes: "The subsiding of formations is
blissful!"
| Source: Copyright © 1999 Buddhist Publication Society Access to Insight edition © 2005
For free distribution. This work may be republished, reformatted, reprinted, and redistributed in any medium. It is the author's wish, however, that any such republication and redistribution be made available to the public on a free and unrestricted basis and that translations and other derivative works be clearly marked as such. |
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