B
In classical Buddhism (especially Theravāda), the standard model is 8 jhānas—four form (rūpa) jhānas and four formless (arūpa) attainments. There isn’t an official “9–10 jhānas” in the early canon, but later meditation traditions and modern teachers sometimes extend the numbering.
Here’s how the “9–10 jhānas” idea usually shows up:
1) Standard system (1–8)
- 1st–4th jhāna (form realm): progressively deeper absorption with increasing equanimity and one-pointedness.
- 5th–8th (formless attainments):
5. Infinite space
6. Infinite consciousness
7. Nothingness
8. Neither-perception-nor-non-perception
These are the core, widely recognized set.
2) “9th jhāna” (often: cessation)
In some commentarial and modern maps, the next step is:
- Cessation of perception and feeling (nirodha-samāpatti)
This is not a “mental state” in the usual sense—it’s described as a temporary suspension of conscious experience (only for advanced non-returners in classical doctrine). Some teachers label this as the 9th jhāna, though that numbering is non-standard.
3) “10th jhāna” (modern or system-dependent label)
There is no universally accepted 10th jhāna in traditional Buddhism. When it appears, it usually refers to one of these:
- Post-cessation re-emergence + insight phase (sometimes treated as a distinct attainment in modern frameworks)
- Or a teacher’s custom extension beyond classical cessation
- Occasionally used loosely to include “fruition” states (phala samāpatti) or deep insight stages
So “10th jhāna” is best understood as a modern mapping choice, not a canonical category.
Key takeaway
- Canonical model: 8 jhānas
- Extended model (some traditions): adds cessation as 9th
- 10th: not standard; depends on teacher/system, often interpretive
If you want, I can map how different traditions (Theravāda commentaries, modern Vipassanā teachers, and some Mahāyāna/Vajrayāna systems) each reinterpret the jhāna ladder—it gets interesting because they don’t all agree on what “absorption” even means.
No comments:
Post a Comment