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Sunyatasaptati
Arya Nagarjuna
Translated by Christian Lindtner
[1] Though the Buddhas have spoken of duration, origination, destruction, being, non-being, low, moderate, and excellent by force of worldly convention, [they] have not done [so] in an absolute sense.
[2] Designations are
without significance, for self, non-self, and self-non-self do not exist. [For]
like nirvana, all expressible things are empty (sunya) of
own-being.
[3] Since all things
altogether lack substance — either in causes or conditions, [in their] totality,
or separately — they are empty.
[4] Being does not
arise, since it exists. Non-being does not arise, since it does not exist. Being
and non-being [together] do not arise, due to [their] heterogeneity.
Consequently they do not endure or vanish.
[5] That which has
been born cannot be born, nor can that which is unborn be born. What is being
born now, being [partly] born, [partly] unborn, cannot be born
either.
[6] A cause has an
effect when there is an effect, but when there is no [effect] the [cause]
amounts to no cause. It is inconsistent that [the effect] neither exists nor
does not exist. It is illogical that [the cause is active] in the three
times.
[7] Without one,
there are not many. Without many, one is not possible. Whatever arises
dependently is indeterminable.
[8] The twelve
dependently arising members, which result in suffering, are unborn. They are
possible neither in one mind nor in many.
[9] Permanent is
not, impermanent is not, not-self is not, self is not, impure is not, pure is
not, pleasure is not, and suffering is not. Therefore the perverted views do not
exist.
[10] Without these,
ignorance based on the four bad views is not possible. Without this [ignorance],
the formative forces do not arise. The same [is true] for the [ten] remaining
[dependently arising members].
[11] Ignorance does
not occur without the formative forces [and] without it the formative forces do
not arise. Caused by one another, they are not established by
own-being.
[12] How can that
which is not established by own-being create others? Conditions established by
others cannot create others.
[13] A father is not
a son, a son is not a father. Neither exists except in correlation with the
other. Nor are they simultaneous. Likewise for the twelve
members.
[14] Just as
pleasure and pain depending on an object in a dream do not have [a real] object,
so neither that which arises dependently nor that which it arises in dependence
on exists.
[15] Opponent: If
things do not exist by own-being, then low, moderate, and excellent and the
manifold world are not established and cannot be established, even through a
cause.
[16] Reply: If
own-being were established, dependently arising things would not occur. If [they
were] unconditioned, how could own-being be lacking? True being also does not
vanish.
[17] How can the
non-existing have own-being, other-being, or non-being? Consequently, own-being,
other-being, and non-being [result from] perverted views.
[18] Opponent: If
things were empty, origination and cessation would not occur. That which is
empty of own-being: How does it arise and how does it cease?
[19] Reply: Being
and non-being are not simultaneous. Without non-being, no being. Being and
non-being would always be. There is no being independent of
non-being.
[20] Without being
there is no non-being. [Being] neither arises from itself nor from [something]
else. This being so, this [being] does not exist: So there is no being, and
[therefore] no non-being.
[21] If there is
being there is permanence; if there is non-being there is necessarily
annihilation. When there is being, these two [dogmas] occur. Therefore [one
should] not accept being.
[22] Opponent: These
[dogmas] do not occur due to continuity: Things cease after having caused [an
effect]. Reply: As before [see v. 19], this [continuity] is unestablished. It
also follows that the continuity would be interrupted.
[23] Opponent: [No!]
The Buddha's teaching of the path aims at showing origination and cessation, not
sunyata! Reply: To experience the two as mutually exclusive is a
mistake.
[24] Opponent: If
there is no origination and cessation, then to the cessation of what is nirvana
due? Reply: Is not liberation this: that by nature nothing arises and
ceases?
[25] If nirvana
[resulted] from cessation, [then there would be] destruction. If the contrary,
[there would be] permanence. Therefore it is not logical that nirvana is being
or non-being.
[26] If a definite
cessation did abide, it would be independent of being. It does not exist without
being, nor does it exist without non-being.
[27] The marked is
established through a mark different from the marked; it is not established by
itself. Nor are the [two] established by each other, [since what is] not
established cannot establish the not-established.
[28] In this [way],
cause, effect, feeling, feeler, and so forth, the seer, the visible, and so
forth — whatever may be — all are explained, without exception.
[29] The three times
do not exist (substantially) since they are unfixed and are mutually
established, since they change [and] are not self-established, [and] since there
is no being. They are merely discriminations.
[30] Since the three
marks of the conditioned — origination, duration, and cessation — do not exist,
there is not the slightest conditioned or unconditioned
[phenomenon].
[31] The
non-destroyed does not cease, nor does the destroyed. The abiding does not
abide, nor does the non-abiding. The born is not born, nor is the
unborn.
[32] Composite and
non-composite are not many [and] not one; are not being [and] are not non-being;
are not being-non-being. All [possibilities] are comprised within these
limits.
[33] Opponent: The
Bhagavat, the Teacher, has spoken of karma's duration, of karma's nature, and of
karma's result, and also of the personal karma of living beings and of the
non-destruction of karma.
[34] Reply: Karma is
said to lack own-being. [Karma] that is not born is not destroyed. From that
again I-making is born. But the belief that creates it is due to
discrimination.
[35] If karma had
own-being the body created by it would be permanent. So karma would not result
in suffering and would therefore be substantial.
[36] Karma is not
born from conditions and by no means from non-conditions, for karma-formations
are like an illusion, a city of gandharvas, and a mirage.
[37] Karma has
klesas as its cause. [Being] klesas, the karma-formations are of impassioned
nature (klesatmaka). A body has karma as its cause. So [all] three are empty of
own-being.
[38] Without karma,
no agent. Without these two, no result. Without these, no enjoyer.
Therefore things are void.
[39] When — because
the truth is seen — one correctly understands that karma is empty, karma does
not arise. When [karma] is no more, what arises from karma arises no
more.
[40] Just as when
the Lord Tathagata magically projects an apparition and this apparition again
projects another apparition-
[41] In that case
the Tathagata's apparition is empty (not to mention the apparition [created] by
the apparition!). Both of them are but names, merely insignificant
discriminations.
[42] Just so, the
agent is like the apparition, and karma is like the apparition [created] by the
apparition. By nature [they are] without significance: mere
discriminations.
[43] If karma
possessed own-being, there would be no nirvana nor deeds [of an] agent. If
[karma] does not exist, the pleasant or unpleasant result created by karma does
not exist.
[44] 'Is' and 'is
not' and also 'is-is not' have been stated by the Buddhas for a purpose. It is
not easy to understand!
[45] If form is
material (bhautika) in itself, it does not arise from the elements (bhuta). It
is not derived from itself—It does not exist, does it? —nor from anything else.
Therefore it does hot exist [at all].
[46] The four [great
elements] are not [found] in one [element], nor is one of them [found] in [any
of] the four. How can form be established With the four great elements as [its]
cause?
[47] Since it is not
conceived directly, [it seems form does] not exist. But if [you maintain it to
be conceived] through a mark, that mark, born from causes and conditions, does
not exist. And it would be illogical [if form could exist] without a
mark.
[48] If mind could
grasp form, it would grasp its own own-being. How could a [mind] that does not
exist (since it is born from conditions) really conceive absence of
form?
[49] Since one
moment of mind cannot within [the very same] moment grasp a form born (as
explained), how could it understand a past and a future form?
[50] Since color and
shape never exist apart, they cannot be conceived apart. Is form not
acknowledged to be one?
[51] The sense of
sight is not inside the eye, not inside form, and not in between. [Therefore] an
image depending upon form and eye is false.
[52] If the eye does
not see itself, how can it see form? Therefore eye and form are without self.
The same [is true for the] remaining sense-fields.
[53] Eye is empty of
its own self [and] of another's self. Form is also empty. Likewise [for the]
remaining sense-fields.
[54] When one
[sense-field] occurs simultaneously with contact, the others are empty. Empty
does not depend upon nonempty, nor does non-empty depend upon
empty.
[55] Having no
[independent] fixed nature, the three [namely, indriya, visaya, and vijnana]
cannot come into contact. Since there is no contact having this nature, feeling
does not exist.
[56] Consciousness
occurs in dependence on the internal and external sense-fields. Therefore
consciousness is empty, like mirages and illusions.
[57] Since
consciousness arises in dependence on a discernible object, the discernible does
not exist [in itself]. Since [the conscious subject] does not exist without the
discernible and consciousness, the conscious subject does not exist [by
itself].
[58] [In a relative
sense] everything is impermanent, but [in the absolute sense] nothing is
permanent or impermanent. [If there] were things, they would be either permanent
or impermanent. But how is that [possible]?
[59] Since the
entities 'desire', 'hatred', and 'delusion' arise through perverted views about
pleasant and unpleasant, desire, hatred, and delusion do not exist by
own-being.
[60] Since one [may]
desire, hate, and be deluded regarding the very same [thing], [the passions] are
created by discrimination. And that discrimination is nothing
real.
[61] That which is
imagined does not exist. Without an imagined object, how can there be
imagination? Since the imagined and the imagination are born from conditions,
[they are] sunyata.
[62] Through
understanding the truth, ignorance, which arises from the four perverted views,
does not exist. When this is no more, the karma-formations do not arise. The
remaining [ten members vanish] likewise.
[63] The thing that
arises in dependence upon this or that does not arise when that is absent. Being
and non-being, composite and non-composite are at peace — this is
nirvana.
[64] To imagine that
things born through causes and conditions are real the Teacher calls ignorance.
From that the twelve members arise.
[65] But when one
has understood by seeing fully that things are empty, one is no longer deluded.
Ignorance ceases, and the twelve spokes [of the wheel] come to a
halt.
[66]
Karma-formations are like the city of gandharvas, illusions, mirages, nets of
hair, foam, bubbles, phantoms, dreams, and wheels made with a
firebrand.
[67] Nothing exists
by virtue of own-being, nor is there any non-being here. Being and non-being,
born through causes and conditions, are empty.
[68] Since all
things are empty of own-being, the incomparable Tathagata teaches dependent
co-origination regarding things.
[69] The ultimate
meaning consists in that! The perfect Buddhas, the Bhagavats, have [only]
conceived the entire multiplicity in reliance upon worldly
convention.
[70] The worldly
norms [dharmas] are not violated. In reality [the Tathagata] has not taught the
Dharma. Not understanding the Tathagata's words, [fools] fear this spotless
discourse.
[71] The worldly
principle, "This arises depending on that," is not violated. But since what is
dependent lacks own-being, how can it exist? That is certain!
[72] One with faith
who tries to seek the truth, one who considers this principle logically [and]
relies [upon] the Dharma that is lacking all supports leaves behind existence
and non-existence [and abides in] peace.
[73] When one
understands that "This is a result of that" the nets of bad views all vanish.
Undefiled, one abandons desire, delusion, and hatred and gains
nirvana.