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< Introduction to Buddhism I >
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What is the Meaning of “Emptiness”?
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Hi everyone.
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Sorry, raising a question in such a
large group makes me a little nervous.
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So, please bear with me.
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The question that I have relates
to the concepts of emptiness.
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Emptiness has come up
in a few of your Dharma talks,
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your videos and textbooks a few times.
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It also comes up in many of the traditional texts
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and Sutras like Diamond Sutra, Heart Sutra.
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Whenever I read through what emptiness
means in the Buddhist concept
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it leaves me a bit more confused
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and sometimes a little bit dampened
and slightly demotivated.
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The reason is because the way
I understand it is very shallow.
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I understand it as because of the impermanence
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because of the causality being
dependent on each other,
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things become empty or things are empty.
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But my challenge and difficulty
with understanding the concept is
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how do I approach it so that I'm not
undermining what is important in life
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for instance family relationships
that matter, ambitions that matter.
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That's my question.
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So the emptiness, we usually express
that using the Chinese character
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for me is not filled, right empty.
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But as you know how a word is interpreted
really depends on the context
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of what came before
and what follows after.
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So the same word actually
means multiple things.
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But for example, if you claim that
this word can only mean one thing,
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then that's different. But what emptiness
really refers to is that one word
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can mean multiple things
depending on the context.
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That's what emptiness means.
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So emptiness in this context
does not mean a complete absence
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of something or a complete void.
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It really means that
everything is contextual,
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depends on the context of how those words
or what definition that word belongs to.
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So let's take an example.
So somebody may look at you
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and claim that you are a good person.
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Another person may look at you
and say you are a bad person.
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So when somebody claims
that you're a good person
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that means that Joe,
you have an essence of goodness in you.
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And if somebody says you're a bad person
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then you have something within you that,
that person is perceived as bad.
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So whether you have a
bad factor or a good factor
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that's something that's intrinsic to you.
Then that's the opposite of emptiness.
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But what emptiness refers to is that
it's all about that person's perception
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as being good, or that person's
perception as being bad.
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But there's nothing intrinsic
within you that's good or bad.
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So in other words, you don't have an
essential kind of form or an element
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or an attribute within you
that somebody can point to
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and say that's good or that's bad.
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It is just their perception of you
in that space and time context
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in which they claim
that you are good or bad.
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So in that case when somebody says you are
a bad person or you're a good person.
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Then I can say that
she is neither good nor bad.
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She is just, she is empty.
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So that in that case empty
doesn't means that you don't exist,
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that there's nothing,
or there's just a void.
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It just means that there's
no attribute within you,
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or an essence within you intrinsically
that we can call as good or bad.
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Say we have this thing.
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Somebody actually ate a little bit
of this thing and got healed.
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And so that person said
'Okay this is a great medicine’.
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But somebody else actually ate the
same thing and then actually got sick.
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And that person pointed the same
thing and said that's poison.
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So is this thing medicine or poison?
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There are three things.
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One is 'This is medicine',
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and one 'This is poison'.
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The third is that it has medicinal
properties or it has poisonous properties.
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But this thing itself is empty.
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That means that it neither has
toxic properties nor medicinal properties.
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That means that this is just the thing.
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But in whatever context and situation,
this thing has been applied to
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sometimes has medicinal attributes
or sometimes it has toxic attributes.
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So that's when you use the word
empty or Gong (공) to refer to that
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this is neither medicinal nor toxic,
you are neither good nor bad person.
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So all existence whether that's biological
a thing or non biological organic
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or even a thought,
a mental phenomena
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and it's just empty
it's neither good nor bad.
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And it is just what it is.
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So that's why we call it
or label it as empty
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because that's the truth it is what it is.
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However that thing how it's represented or
manifest really depends on the situation
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the context and the connections
in which it is allowed to manifest.
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So in some situations, you are a person
in some situations, you're a bad person.
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In some situations this thing is a
medicine in other it is a poison.
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So when we say Gong (공) the empty,
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that is kind of what a thing is
what a phenomenon is.
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But however it's represented
within the context or situation
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it finds itself in and that
is what we call Form.
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Therefore if you really truly understand
that all essence of all existence
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is really empty then there's
no cause for you to suffer.
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Because you realize the person
is neither bad nor good.
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That doesn't mean
that person does not exist.
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That just means that the person in this
situation in this space and time context
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under this specific set of conditions
may appear to be good or bad to me.
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Doesn't look like
you are fully clear on that.
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I am thinking of how you mention
good or bad sometimes is empty.
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At the same time I can't help
to think of historical dictators
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that have caused a lot of hurt.
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But also at the same time
I have in my head explained to myself
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that they have violated
the precepts. That's all.
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So even the precepts themselves are empty.
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I guess I am still a little confused about the precepts being empty.
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Do you mean they are dependent on the historical age we're in the society that we're in?
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There's no ethical precepts that we can absolutely say that this is the truth.
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That this is the way regardless of the situation and time and space that we find ourselves in, because that actually is a very dangerous path.
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So what Buddha taught is that the proper way the right way is always determined
by the space and time of the situation that we are under.
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It's basically setting a compass down in a new place and seeing where it points north
and that's when you find the right way.
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So everything is dependent even though the proper path on that, that's the middle way.
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And the concept of that middle way as it transition over to Mahayana Buddhism,
it became translated or understood as emptiness.
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So the emptiness, the concept and the words, actually was a criticism against Theravada
kind of rigid traditionalism in which they claimed that a certain set of ethical constructions was the way.
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And so the criticism in Mahayana against that was that the construct should be empty.
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So basically the original criticism which Theravada's rigid absoluteness
of the way wast hat there is no fixed way and that eventually
got translated and kind of consolidated into the word emptiness.
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Basically when someone claims that this the truth,
then the criticism is that there's' nothing that you can point to
and say that's the absolute truth
and that got translated into that sense of emptiness.
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So the fact that we misunderstand emptiness or the concept
because of the word that we use in space, but it's only a part of all.
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We usually obsess over somebody else, if we like that person.
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And we want to make that person behave the way we want them to behave.
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So if they don't behave accordingly then we feel bitter.
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And if that disappointment becomes too much then we just let go,
and we become indifferent to them.
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If we realize this concept of emptiness then we can actually let go of our obsession.
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Then we can allow him or her to behave as they want.
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If they ask for our help, Then we help.
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If they don't ask for help, then we don't help.
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So we're neither indifferent in this case nor obsessive.