IT HAS BEEN SAID THAT,
after the Buddha, the single most important figure in the entire
Buddhist tradition was a monk named Acharya Nagarjuna, sometimes called
the Second. Buddha. As is the case with many religious giants, we know
little about the historical Nagarjuna. Scholars usually place him
sometime in the late second century C.E., but he may have lived a
hundred years before or after that period. According to tradition,
Nagarjuna was a scholar-monk at Nalanda University, the great Buddhist
center of learning in northeast India. Although we know him through his
body of writings, we don’t really know how many “Nagarjunas” there
actually were, for it is unlikely that all the works attributed to him
were written by the same person. There may well have been three or four
monks all writing under the same name.
We do know that
Nagarjuna’s writings are the basis for the Madhyamaka, or “Middle Way,”
school of Buddhism and that Nagarjuna himself became the most
influential figure in the development of Mahayana Buddhism, which had
begun to emerge during the first century B.C.E. out of disagreements
within the Indian sangha about the path to enlightenment. This is
despite the fact that his writings never mention many of the signature
Mahayana ideas, such as the bodhisattva ideal or the identity of form
and emptiness. This raises the intriguing possibility that this pivotal
figure in the rise of Mahayana may not himself have been a Mahayanist.
The most famous
by far of all the writings attributed to Nagarjuna–and, not
incidentally, the most important philosophical text in the Buddhist
tradition–is the Miziamadhyamakakarika (“Root Verses on the Middle.
Way”). The Karikas, as they are often called, are composed of about four
hundred and fifty short stanzas, which were eventually divided into
twenty-seven chapters. These chapters address the major philosophical
issues of his time–including the nature of causality and conditionality,
motion and action, the self, its suffering and bondage, nirvana, and
the Buddha–but Nagarjuna’s profound insights have proven to be timeless.
Unfortunately
for the general reader, Nagarjuna’s Sanskrit, although not lacking in
grace or precision, is impersonal and dense. The Karikas were meant to
be memorized rather than read, and they would normally have been
supplemented by the oral commentary of a teacher. But even then,
Nagarjuna’s philosophy is notoriously difficult to understand (which
might help explain why he is more revered than studied).
Some Buddhists
might think of such a philosophical investigation as incompatible with
their contemplative or devotional practice. But that is like separating
meditation from wisdom. Absorption in one’s meditation practice develops
calmness and clarity, yet peace of mind by itself is not the goal of
the Buddhist spiritual path. Buddhism also emphasizes insight–seeing
through the thought-constructions that our minds are usually stuck
in–and it is these forms of reified thought that Nagarjuna deconstructs.
Nagarjuna’s
philosophical approach was revolutionary, but;he probably did not think
of himself as a radical, which may be why he did not emphasize the
Mahayana connection. His innovations are firmly rooted in the original
teachings of the Buddha, who refused to discuss metaphysical questions.
The Buddha said that debating such issues as whether the world had a
beginning or not or what happens to an enlightened person after death
was like being struck by an arrow and refusing to be treated until one
knows what wood the arrow was made of, who shot it, and so forth.
Instead of offering a speculative explanation of the world, the Buddha’s
approach was pragmatic. He compared his dharma to a raft, which should
wisely be used to cross the river of life and death. Once having
crossed, how– ever, one should not carry it everywhere on one’s back.
Nevertheless, in the years after the Buddha’s passing, the compilers of
the Abhidharma (“higher teaching”) extracted a metaphysics from his
teachings.
We might regard
Nagarjuna’s philosophy as linguistic therapy: it uses language to
reveal how language deceives us. We assume that the world we experience
is the real world, but this is delusion. The world as we normally
understand it is a linguistic construct. Clinging to conceptual
elaborations (prapancha) causes suffering, for they do not accurately
reflect how the world actually is. As it turns out, our common sense
view of the world is not commonsense at all, because an unconscious
metaphysics is built into the ways we ordinarily use language.
Nagarjuna’s
rigorous logic analyzes these ways of thinking and reveals that they are
inconsistent and self-contradictory. By his own account, that is all he
does. He does not try to replace our deluded ways of thinking with a
correct understanding with which we can identify. Instead, the true
nature of things (including ourselves) becomes apparent when we let go
of our delusions. Our emotional and mental turmoil is replaced by a
beatitude or serenity (shiva) that cannot be grasped but can be lived.
Buddhism is
“the middle way,” yet that has meant different things at different
times. The Buddha discovered a middle way between hedonism and
asceticism. He also taught a middle way between eternalism (the self
survives death) and annihilationism (the self is destroyed at death),
for there is no self and never has been. Nagarjuna elucidated a middle
position between being (things exist) and nonbeing (things do not
exist). That middle position is shunyata. usually translated as
“emptiness.”
Shunyata does
not mean nonexistence or a void, nor does it describe some transcendent
reality such as brahman or God. shunyata simply signifies that things
have no self-being or “essence” of their own. Everything arises and
passes away according to causal conditions. For Nagarjuna, shunyata is a
heuristic concept, a shorthand device used to refer to this absence of
self-existence. Yet the term is often misunderstood. For some, shunyata
means that nothing whatsoever exists in any way. Such nihilism is
dangerous, because then it makes no difference what we do or do not do,
and there is no point in trying to follow a spiritual path. This
misconstrues Nagarjuna’s basic project, which is not to describe the
world but to refute the ways in which we (mis)understand the world.
Nagarjuna was
scathingly critical toward those who interpret shunyata as nothingness:
woe to those who hold it, for it’s like grasping a snake by the wrong
end.
They confuse
two different levels of truth, the conventional (samvriti) and the
ultimate (paramartha). The conventional is not ultimately true, but it’s
needed in order to point to the ultimate. Shunyata is a conventional
truth that helps L1S realize the ultimate, which cannot be expressed in
words. Shunyata is itself empty, but it is useful only for pointing Out
that nothing has self-existence. Shunyata helps pry us free from our
attachment to things. But since shunyata has meaning only in relation to
something that is not-empty, and since ultimately there are no
self-existing things, there is therefore no shunyata, either. As with
the Buddha’s raft; we need to let go of shunyata, too. The “ultimate
truth” does not refer to some other transcendent reality. As another
Madhyamika, Atisha, later expressed it: “If you use reason to examine
the conventional world as it appears to us, you can find nothing that is
real
(that has
self-existence). That not-finding is itself the ultimate.”
Nagarjuna
addressed the philosophical controversies of his day, but the
theoretical positions he criticized were based on ordinary ways in which
we humans understand ourselves and our world. Our basic delusion is the
taken-for-granted distinction between things and their activities.
Deceived by language, we divide up the world into nouns and verbs,
subjects and predicates. We understand the world as a collection of
separate things, interacting in external space and time, arising and
passing away.
This delusion
includes the way we think about ourselves, of course. We usually
distinguish our self from our actions and from the events that happen to
us–including illness, old age, and death, the classic examples of
suffering that inspired the Buddha’s spiritual quest. Because we think
of our own being as separate from events, and from everything else, we
anticipate with dread the inevitable fate that awaits our individual
selves.
AGAIN AND again
in different ways, the Karikas refute this thought-constructed
distinction between objects and processes by analyzing how that very
distinction distorts our understanding of causality, motion, perception,
time, and so forth. Nagarjuna’s basic approach is almost always the
same: The particular distinction being examined is shown to be
incomprehensible, because, having been made, the two different terms no
longer fit back together. The basic problem, the source of our
suffering, is that our commonsense ways of understanding ourselves as
separate from but also in the world assume this delusive distinction.
For example,
consider the relationship between the self and its ever-changing mental
and physical states (one’s thoughts, emotions, bodily feelings, etc.).
Is the self the same as those states, or different from them? We say, “I
am hungry r angry, or confused],” which implies that “I” am constantly
changing. But we also have a sense of an “I” that persists unchanged:
the “I” that works is the same “I” that gets a paycheck at the end of
the month. In everyday life we constantly fudge this inconsistency.
Sometimes we understand ourselves one way, sometimes the other, but
understanding ourselves as things that both change and stay the same is
really a contradiction. Nagarjuna’s explanation for the inconsistency is
that the self is shunya, “empty.” In modem terms, my sense of self is
an impermanent, ever-changing construct.
Nagarjuna also
applies his method to Buddhist constructs. What about nirvana? It too is
a shunya concept. If nirvana is something causally unconditioned, a
reality that does not arise or pass away, then there is no way for us to
get there. If it is conditioned, then it too will pass away, like every
other conditioned thing. Neither alternative provides spiritual
salvation. Letting go of the ways of thinking in which we are normally
stuck allows us to experience the world as it really is. This, “the end
of conceptual elaborations (prapancha),” is how Nagarjuna refers to
nirvana.
Nagarjuna never
actually claims, as is sometimes thought, that “samsara is nirvana.”
Instead, he says that no difference can be found between them. The koti
(limit, boundary) of nirvana is the koti of samsara. They are two
different ways of experiencing this world. Nirvana is not another realm
or dimension but rather the clarity and peace that arise when our mental
turmoil ends, because the objects with which we have been identifying
are realized to be shunya. Things have no reality of their own that we
can cling to, since they arise and pass away according to conditions.
Nor can we cling to this truth. The most famous verse in the Karikas
(25:24) sums this up magnificently: “Ultimate serenity is the
coming-to-rest of all ways of ‘taking’ things, the repose of named
things. No truth has been taught by a Buddha for anyone anywhere.”
The
methodological thoroughness with which Nagarjuna uses concepts to
undermine the thought-constructed ways in which we understand the world
has long led critics–Buddhist and non-Buddhist, Eastern and Western–to
accuse him of nihilism. Indeed, it is likely that the Yogachara school
of Buddhism, which emphasizes the reality of consciousness, arose partly
as a response to such nihilistic interpretations. Evidently some later
Buddhist thinkers were concerned that Nagarjuna’s exclusively negative
approach–using language solely to remove the delusions created by
language–needed to be supplemented by more positive descriptions of the
Buddhist path and goal. Eventually the Madhyamaka and Yogachara
approaches became understood as complementary, providing what is
generally accepted as the basic philosophy of Mahayana.