What is Nibbana?
Nirvana (Nirúvaúna)
(nŒr-v„1ne, ner-)
n.
[Sanskrit, nirvƒNam, a blowing
out, extinction, nirvana: nis-, nir-, out,
away + vƒti, it blows. Pali, nibbana; Jap.,
nehan]
1. Often Nirvana,
a. Buddhism. The ineffable
ultimate in which one has attained
disinterested wisdom and compassion.
b. Hinduism. Emancipation from
ignorance and the extinction of all
attachment.
2. An ideal condition
of rest, harmony, stability, or
joy.
3. The ability to
consciously pause an activity or activities
of the mind. Her mind became inactive, the
result was the experience of
nirvana.
4. A state
of liberation from unhappiness. Illumination,
characterized by the merging of the
individual, transitory I in consciousness.
Nirvana frees one from suffering and fear of
death. It is the highest, transcendent
consciousness, referred to in the
Bhagavad-Gita as brahman-nirvana, in the
Upanishads as turiya, in yoga as
nirbija-samadhi, and in Vedanta as
nirvikalpa-samadhi.
5. The goal of
spiritual practice in all branches of
Buddhism. In the understanding of early
Buddhism, it is departure from the cycle of
unhappiness and entry into an entirely
different mode of existence. It requires
complete overcoming of the three unwholesome
roots--undisciplined-desire, hatred, and
delusion (akushala). Nirvana is unconditioned
(asamskrita) consciousness. Its
characteristic marks are pausing the
activities of the mind in a state of
consciousness.
6. In Mahayana,
nirvana is an emphasis on the unified nature
of the world. Nirvana is conceived as a human
experience of oneness with unconditioned
consciousness (the absolute). Which gives
insight into the unity of the world
(samsara), body, mind and soul. It is a state
of transcending conditioned consciousness. It
is also described as dwelling in the
experience of the intense bliss in cognizing
one's identity with unconditioned
consciousness. It is freedom from attachment
to the states of unhappiness, satisfaction
and happiness.
7. In the West
nirvana has often been misunderstood as mere
annihilation; even in early Buddhism it was
not so conceived. Nirvana literally means
"The blowing out of a candle". The fire that
goes out does not pass away, but merely
becomes invisible by passing into a conscious
experience of space (akasha); thus the term
nirvana does not indicate annihilation but
rather entry into another mode of existence
and experience. The fire that comes forth is
the self. From consciously experiencing space
the self dissolves momentarily. Self-flame
thus returns back, and the conscious
experience of space dissolves. Thus nirvana
is a special experience not conceived by the
perception of sight, but rather by
consciously discarding conditioned brainwave
activity. It is an experience that takes
place in time but is also a timeless
experience. This is the "emptiness" which is
referred to in Buddhist Sutras.
8.9. In
Hinayana two types of nirvana are
distinguished: nirvana which consists of
knowledge and nirvana where knowledge exists
though in an uncreated form. Both being
experiences of different modes of
consciousness. It is reached through
successively overcoming the various states of
mind; knowledge of unhappiness, knowledge of
satisfaction and knowledge of happiness. For
the overcoming of each state a specific
"realm of knowledge" is acquired. For the
Sautrantikas nirvana is just the
transcendence of the lower states of
knowledge; unhappiness, satisfaction and
happiness, but not their complete
disappearance. The knowledge of nirvana is
based on knowledge of unhappiness,
satisfaction and happiness. Therefore,
transcendence means additional knowledge, not
discarding of knowledge. In the Vatsiputriya
school, which puts forth the idea of the
"individual" (pudgala, anatman), nirvana is a
positive state in which the individual's
knowledge continues to exist and grow, but is
easily turned off when not needed. Leaving a
bright clear consciousness associated with
sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell.
Thinking becomes focused, direct and
clear.
10. In Mahayana nirvana has
a positive character, since it is state of
awareness of one's identity with unclouded
consciousness. The experience of unity that
encompasses the experiencer includes one's
own body and mind. In this view, there is no
essential distinction between the soul, mind,
body or world, because they are experienced
in an interconnected way.
11. Two
types of nirvana are distinguished:
indeterminate (apratishthita-nirvana) and
complete (pratishthita-nirvana). In
actuality, the experiencer moves between both
types of nirvana. Having the capability to
cease the activities of the mind and to
create mental activity in various
combinations of thought, seeing, hearing and
remembering, etc.
12. The
Madhyamikas see nirvana as emptiness
(shunyata), which they define as "coming to
rest of the manifold creations of the mind."
This means the cessation or absence
(temporarily) of the activity of the mind.
Nirvana is a conscious experience of the
oneness with reality that had always existed,
only is not recognized. Nirvana and samsara
are not different if one perceives the world
in its true nature, which is emptiness. It is
our discriminating mind that prevents us from
recognizing this true nature.
13.
Nirvana for the Yogachara is the awareness
that the world as we know it is a
manifestation of the mind. This "mind-only"
teaching is the cessation of discrimination
of the world, nirvana and all objects.
Experiences are made of objects in the
presence of the senses interacting with the
mind. The perception that the objects seen
are separate from the mind are created as a
result of an unconsciousness mind. This
school recognizes two types of nirvana: that
of the arhat, with whom, only silent
knowledge remains. It is a coming to rest, a
consciously experienced bliss. The nirvana of
the Buddha is seen as a conscious exercise of
compassion. Where the Buddha knowingly seeks
ways to help others attain nirvana. In this
form of nirvana, which exhibits a positive
character and represents conscious unity with
all beings, the individual continues in
force.
14. In Zen Buddhism nirvana
is the realization of the true nature of the
mind (consciousness), which is identical with
the true nature of how human beings
experience their world--the buddha-nature
(bussho). This realization is only possible
through wisdom. Thus nirvana is often equated
with prajna. In the Zen sense, prajna and
nirvana are two aspects of the same state.
Nirvana is the state in which a person lives
who has attained prajna and thus also insight
into his own mind or true nature; and prajna
is the wisdom of a person who has attained
nirvana. "The Bodhisattva's nirvana is
perfect tranquillity, but it is not
extinction nor inertness." Buddha,
Lankavatara Scripture, Goddard.
15.
Early Chinese Buddhism, which originated the
Nirvana School in the 5th century, includes
the teachings of the Mahaparinirvana-sutra.
The teachings of this sutra are nirvana is
eternal, joyous, personal, and pure in
nature. This contrasts with the view put
forward in the Prajnaparamita-sutra, in which
nirvana is described as the realization of
emptiness (shunyata). All beings possess
buddha-nature and can attain buddhahood. In
this sense the true self is like the
Tathagata. The Nirvana school also originated
the practice, so characteristic of Chinese
Buddhism, of dividing the teachings of the
Buddha into phases. The Mahaparinirvana-sutra
is considered to be the last of the Buddha's
discourses.
Nibbana: Pali
//nibbana//, Sanskrit //nirvana//. The
meaning is "extinction," that is, of the
"fires" of lust, hate, and delusion, or, more
briefly, of craving and ignorance, and so
nibbana is a name for the third Truth as
liberation. The word is made up of the prefix
//nir// (not) and //vana// (effort of
blowing; figuratively, craving); probably the
origin was a smith's fire, which goes out or
becomes extinguished (//nibbayati//) if no
longer blown on by the bellows; but the
simile most used is that of a lamp's
extinguishment (//nibbana//) through
exhaustion of wick and oil. Wheel Publication No. 17. c 1981, 1995 Buddhist Publication
Society.