Showing posts with label Buddhist physics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhist physics. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Unraveling Mind and Body (Part II of II)

Ayya Susila and Yogi Seven (Wisdom Quarterly)


PART I... Each contains eight inseparable characteristics: solidity (earth), cohesion (water), temperature (fire), movement (wind), color, smell, taste, and nutritive essence. The apparent elements break down to sub-components of existence.

This is crucial to understand because, by penetrating conventional truth with wisdom, we are able to realize ultimate truth.

Ultimate Truth
Ultimate truth refers to things that cannot be further broken down into smaller components. They cannot be further broken down because they are the final and irreducible sub-components of existence that exist by reason of their own intrinsic nature (sabhāva).

For example, "earth" element in the human body (or any animate thing) exists as the intrinsic characteristic of relative hardness or softness. "Fire" element exists as the intrinsic characteristic of relative heat and cold.

Whereas body is a conventional truth, its elements are ultimate truth -- the final, irreducible components of existence. No amount of analysis can further break them down.

Of these two realities, Abhidharma deals primarily with ultimate truth.

This book is divided into three parts. Part I describes ultimate reality, which in Abhidharma is fourfold: Three folds comprise the totality of conditioned existence. Consciousness and mental factors are what we conventionally call the “mind.” Matter is what we conventionally call the “body.”

The coming together of mind and matter is what we conventionally call “I,” self, living being, person, animal, or whatever the case may be. It is surprising, but “I” is simply a conventional truth, a concept, whereas consciousness, mental factors, and matter are ultimate truths.

These three ultimate truths are conditioned dharmas (things, phenomena). They are produced by causes and conditions and are subject to alteration, dissolution, and passing away. These three are indeed subtle and profound dharmas that cannot be seen by the ordinary

However, they can be discerned by intensified-mind developed by concentration and wisdom.

Nirvana, the fourth ultimate reality, is unconditioned. That is to say, it is not produced by any cause or condition. It stands by itself. Therefore, it does not change. Nirvana can be experienced here and now. The path is one of undergoing a gradual training of morality, concentration, and wisdom detailed by the Buddha, who pointed out the way to enlightenment.



Part II of the book describes rebirth and Dependent Origination. The basic law of karma, the lawful regularity of causes and effects, is generally recognized. What is generally not understood is how karma acts as a link at the time of death.

The near-death cognitive process is detailed showing that at the moment of rebirth, consciousness (called death-proximate consciousness) in the present life gives rise to rebirth-linking consciousness connecting to the next life. They are linked together by the karma (action or seed) that ripens at death without a transmigrating soul crossing over life after life. This process of death and rebirth is impersonal, merely the arising of suffering. How does this suffering arise, and how is it to cease?

The Buddha revealed the problem of suffering and its solution, explaining it in a profound teaching called Dependent Origination. On account of not seeing this truth, he and we went on suffering for an inconceivably long time bound to the wheel or round of death and rebirth. The two root causes of the dilemma are ignorance and craving. They give rise to suffering (dukkha, unsatisfactoriness, distress).

With the cessation of causes and conditions, effects cease. Dependent Origination reveals the conditional arising of an “ego” or “individual,” conventionally speaking, how it cycles through the beginningless wheel of rebirth, undergoes the round of existence and death.

The profound teaching of Dependent Origination consists of 12 interrelated factors. These factors are links in a causal chain. The chain encompasses all three periods of time: past, present, and future lives. Each factor is entirely dependent on the preceding factor as its support or condition; it in turn becomes the condition or support for the subsequent factor.

The factors are merely mind and matter governed by causality. The final cessation of all suffering is brought about by practicing the Noble Eightfold Path, which is the Buddha's threefold training of morality, concentration, and wisdom. This book is a guide along that path.



Part III describes the actual practice (concentration and insight) that brings about the realization of what has been learned. Concentration is frequently overlooked nowadays in favor of mindfulness. But we will see that mindfulness is not enough for the realization of nirvana, which is why the Buddha included the factor "right concentration" in the Noble Eightfold Path and defined it in terms of absorptions (jhānas). There are many ways to develop concentration. The easiest is perhaps mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati).

Because it is one of the easiest serenity meditation (samatha) subjects to learn and because a practitioner is able to develop it to the level of absorption, it is systematically detailed here. But it is taught in such a way as to be easily understood and followed. With it antidotes to the Five Hindrances that obstruct serenity and insight (sensual desire, ill-will, sleepiness, restlessness, and doubt) are also detailed. After successfully reaching the first level of absorption, one can directly proceed to the development of insight by discerning mental factors one by one.

In order to realize that the body ultimately consists of four elements (manifesting as many forms of derived materiality), two related meditations are introduced -- contemplating the body's 32 parts as taught in the ancient discourses and as taught at Pa Auk meditation centers.

And finally a moment-to-moment insight practice is revealed that emphasizes mindfulness and wisdom that releases one from clinging and suffering. The practice begins as sense objects impinge on sense bases and is applicable in formal meditation and daily life.

Unraveling the mysteries of the human mind may seem like an overwhelming task. But it is exactly for this reason that Abhidharma is studied, making it a systematic path that produces immediate results for ordinary people.

The subject, in practice, is actually easily understood. In theory it can be made endlessly complex to no advantage. Combining philosophy and practice unravels the mystery and, with patience and effort, brings one to full comprehension.



This book is not intended for light reading, in spite of the fact that it may be approached lightly. It is intended to be a serious practice manual. Without practice, the topic seems ponderous and metaphysical, requiring readers to be slow, exacting, and careful not to jump to unfounded conclusions. Many of these intellectual pitfalls are avoided by simple and consistent practice.

The ease with which one comprehends Abhidharma will of course vary from person to person, depending on the quality of one’s existing understanding of Buddhism. But the purpose of the book is to present the subject in direct, simple, and straightforward language without assuming previous knowledge of Buddhism, which should enable even beginners to understand deeply.

The subjects are interrelated and in sequence. Evaluating, presuming, and concluding without actually reading and practicing are pitfalls best avoided. The mind, like a parachute, only works when it is open. It is up to each person to practice what the Buddha taught as a practice not as a theory. Read, question, and apply the antidotes consistently and in this way honor the Buddha who pointed out the path to the end of suffering.

“Those who understand the meaning and the truth and who practice in accordance with the truth few, while those who fail to do so are many. Those who are stirred by things that are truly stirring are few, while those who are not are many. Those who strive with balance are few, while those who do not are many” (AN I, xix: 1).

Be one of the few.

Monday, October 3, 2011

Matter that moves faster than light found!

Wisdom Quarterly
Photons (light) are far from ultimate materiality. But how about neutrinos or quanta? There exist subatomic particles Buddhism refers to as kalapas. Name-and-form (nama-rupa) are intimately related, with the more subtle mind ("name") taking precedence.

In Buddhist physics -- gone into great detail in the Abhidharma ("Higher-Teaching"), one of the three divisions of the Buddha's teachings (Dharma), "ultimate particles" are referred to as kalapas.

Those able to see them (as a function of absorption- and insight-meditation called jhana- and vipassana-bhavana) consistently refrain from calling them "atoms."

It's not that Einstein was wrong; it's that we are not told about everything he found. Tesla and he fashioned a unified field theory just before he passed away. The government got those notes and equations. The true story is novelized by Sean David Morton in Sands of Time.

Our modern subatomic theory is wrong. And the next theory (string, quantum, torsion, etc.) is likely to be wrong as well. Why?

Public science does not yield ultimate truth. What happens behind the closed doors of the military-industrial complex is another story altogether. As far as what the public is told or college students taught, it is always a game of catch up with allegiance to Einstein at all costs.

How in the world could a meditator ever know and see subatomic particles? The answer is simple. Mind (cittas) arises faster than materiality (kalapas).

Both are incredibly fast, but by watching ultimate-matter (rupa-kalapas) with "higher mind" (adhicitta), which is purified by right-concentration (samma-samadhi, defined by the Buddha as mastery of the first four absorptions), it becomes possible to record these particles-of-perception and subsequently review them. How? Just as one might record an event with a high speed camera and then review it at normal speed.

Whether or not anyone considers this a satisfying explanation, it is not a meditation "theory." It happens. Wisdom Quarterly: American Buddhist Journal is well aware of people who can do it. Some even say it is necessary to do to systematically attain enlightenment in this very life. Why? The mind/heart stops clinging when it knows-and-sees that everything (mentally and materially) is radically impermanent, arising and passing away almost instantaneously.
  • It is not wise to debate it when it is possible to practice it and see for oneself. Seeing is believing, whereas our thinking is deceiving. Einstein did not think, as we popularly imagine. Few mathematicians or artists do. (Eckhart Tolle, a joyful unitarian with Buddhist leanings) explains this as "presence," or thought-free awareness and inspiration, being in the now after one has struggled by rational means.
Einstein saw/intuited the big picture in an instant and developed the math to make sense of it: "The intuitive mind is a sacred gift, and the rational mind is a faithful servant. We have created a society that honors the servant and has forgotten the gift" - Albert Einstein.

Subatomic neutrino tracks: detecting travel faster than light (Dan Mccoy/Corbis)

Neutrinos Travel Faster Than Light
Adrian Cho (News.sciencemag.org, Sept. 22, 2011)
Fat lady singing? The OPERA particle detector may have spotted neutrinos traveling faster than light, which would bring down the curtain on special relativity as an exact theory. If it's true, it will mark the biggest discovery in physics in the past half-century: Elusive, nearly massless, subatomic particles called neutrinos appear to travel just faster than light, a team of physicists in Europe reports. If so, the observation would wreck Einstein's theory of special relativity, which demands that nothing can travel faster than light. In fact, the result would be so revolutionary that it's sure to be met with skepticism all over the world. "I suspect that the bulk of the scientific community will not take this as a definitive result unless it can be reproduced by at least one and preferably several experiments," says V. Alan Kostelecky, a theorist at Indiana University, Bloomington. He adds, however, "I'd be delighted if it were true." More
  • Faster-than-light particles found, scientists claim: Particle physicists detect neutrinos traveling faster than light, a feat forbidden by Einstein's theory of special relativity. It is a concept that forms a cornerstone of our understanding of the universe and the concept of time -- nothing can travel faster than the speed of light. But now it seems that researchers working in one of the world's largest physics laboratories, under a mountain in central Italy, have recorded particles traveling at a speed that is supposedly forbidden by Einstein's theory of special relativity.
Neutrinos are "faster than light": (WND) Recent tests have revealed that a neutrino beam from a CERN lab in Geneva, Switzerland, to the 454 miles remote INFN Gran Sasso lab in Italy seemed to travel 0.0025 percent faster through earth than the speed of light in a vacuum. Some undisputed pillars of classical physics will completely totter if this experiment turns out...

Unified Field Theory SOLVED (equation)

Wisdom Quarterly
The Heart Sutra in Korean Zen (Ch'an, Seon) Buddhism (somewhereindhamma blog)

And the answer is... First of all, there is a Buddhist physics? Yes, Buddhism teaches practical physics necessary for releasing the mind/heart from clinging to illusion and suffering.

And the answer is... Wait. Does an answer make sense without posing the original question? In The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, we learned that THE ANSWER to "life, the universe, and everything" was "42." With that information in hand, we should have been happy. But we were not, because what exactly was the question?

"How many roads must a Man travel?" "At what age does enlightenment dawn?" ... "What is 6 times 7?"

Bodhi Dharma (above) found "zen" (jhana) after emptying his mind, just as Einstein noted that a solution cannot be found at the level of the problem. Hard at fun or fun at work, Einstein did not give up on solving the UFT equation. "Hard work" is no way to find something this elusive (The Masters of Enlightenment: Albert Einstein/Lowdensitylifestyle.com).

Similarly, amateur physicists hanker for a working equation, but most of us have forgotten the question. In the Hitchhiker's Guide, The Question was not well formed. As such, it was not properly posed to the semi-sentient supercomputer who calculated for generations to produce The Answer.

Albert Einstein, Nikola Tesla, and the founder of Raytheon worked very hard before Einstein died in search of the answer.

Apparently, they found it. But Einstein died just after he formulated the equation, according to the controversial author Sean David Morton. He is not speculating but reporting. His sources, unfortunately, remain secret -- at their own request. And out of deference to their wishes Morton has novelized the story of how the answer was found, where it has been all this time, and what has been done with it by the military and parts of the government we know very little about.

Rest assured, something has been done with it. It is not a breakthrough to the secretive powers that be. And the fact that mainstream scientists are allowed to report that some particles, perhaps the most numerous in the universe (shy neutrinos that rarely interact), move faster than light goes to show secret science has moved so far ahead that it does not matter if we are now openly told special relativity is far from the whole story. Oh yeah, the answer is:

S = -MgC*dsb

This is a working equation (solution) for Einstein's Unified Field Theory. It should make about as much sense as E=MC2 or 42. Fortunately, it is explained in Sean David Morton's new book Sands of Time. We believe. And there are many reasons people should look to intuitive-futurists for mind-bending solutions that elude great mathematical geniuses. As the Buddha learned under the Bodhi Tree (and possibly Newton, Adam, and Eve under an apple tree), the answer does not come from muscling, pushing, straining, or "efforting." Instead, it comes from letting go.
  • [Of course, this right brain letting go makes more sense and seems more effective if it is done after putting forward extreme effort by using the left brain, as Watson and Crick found out when vision gave them the double-helix design they could not force out of their rational calculations.]
Time really is not different from space. Time-space echoes what Mahayana Buddhist thinkers may have been hinting at in the famous Heart (of Wisdom) Sutra when they spoke of what Mu Soeng [an American of Indian descent who spent 11 years as an ordained Korean Zen Buddhist monk in Korea] translates "space-time" as "point-instants" in explaining that "Form is emptiness, and emptiness is form."
  • Points are kalapas (particles), and cittas (consciousness moments or cognitions) are instants in the older Theravada Buddhist commentaries Mahayana Buddhists were trying to explain and improve on. Thank you to PasaDharma Zen Group for its ongoing study of this important text:

Monday, July 4, 2011

Why do we exist? (Physics and Buddhism)

Matter and antimatter phenomenology (xenomorphic.co.uk)

A Step Closer to Explaining our Existence
John Roach (Cosmic Log, MSNBC)
Why are we here? It remains one of the most perplexing unexplained mysteries of the universe. But particle physicists are gaining more confidence in a result from an atom smashing experiment that could be a step toward providing an answer: We exist because the universe is full of matter and not the opposite, so-called antimatter. When the Big Bang occurred, equal parts of both should have been created and immediately annihilated each other, leaving nothing leftover to build the stars, planets, and us. More

During insight meditation the body becomes transparent and particles become visible in the mind door (Buddhist-images.co.uk)

Why do "we" exist? (Buddhism answers)

Dharmachari Seven (Wisdom Quarterly)
Of course, ultimately speaking, we do not. That is what it means to say all conditioned things are impersonal (not self, anatta). What are "conditioned things"? They are the constituents of being, of clinging, of the delusion that things are self, perm
anent, or able to bring lasting satisfaction. It should be more obvious that there is a self. But what is the nature of that self?

Self, soul, ego, personality, "I" all refer to five functionally integrated components -- the physical and the psychological. The physical or material components of the self are the four characteristics of matter (called the Great Elements, mahabhuta). They further break down to what is called derived materiality* that make the sense organs, which are just configurations of the Four Great Elements. All of this is referred to as one group labelled "form."

The other Five Aggregates
feel closer -- sensations, perceptions, mental formations (such as volition), and consciousness. They cling to the illusion of a "self" in
dependent of them, in possession of them, controlling them. The self originates dependent on them. The illusion of our actual existence arises dependently originated on the aggregation of these five groups of factors. That is the self (soul, atta, atman, I, me, mine)! But what is the nature of the self? Looked at closely -- in a particle physics lab (in the case of form and kalapas) or in a meditation hall after emerging from the four absorptions (in the case of consciousness and cittas) -- it becomes perfectly clear that they are:
  • radically impermanent (arising, turning, passing)
  • unsatisfactory (disappointing, distressing, unpleasant)
  • impersonal (not subject to control, following their own nature, not able to be clung to, dependent on karma, not self, not me, not mine, devoid of an owner and in that sense "empty").
It is completely incorrect to say we are "nothing." What we call a "self" is composed of many things. However, as with all "things," the composite is not what it seems.

Buddhist phenomenology, the "Five Aggregates of Clinging" (khandha)

Under the penetrating analysis of meditation (for purifying concentration and analytical insight, jhana and vipassana), even form is revealed. In Buddhist physics, form is seen as kalapas ("particles of perception") as explained in the Abhidharma. In Buddhist psychology, the aggregates of self-awareness are called cittas (mind moments, processes, consciousnesses, which make the most sense to me as being comparable to neuronal impulses, bearing in mind that there are neurons in the heart and throughout the gut as well as the spine, nerves innervating the body, and concentrating in the brainstem and cavity of the skull but in no way limited to the skull).

Why?
What is impelling the process, what causes the "self" to re-arise after passing away? Karma. This is not a guess. It is revealed by the insight-meditation practice of Dependent Origination, tracing back this life through the chain of causation, which the mind discovers is not in this life. It is not the same self -- which is passing away all the time -- but a self dependent past causes and present conditions.



Meditation (virtue, concentration, insight) is the key to realization.


Moral of the Story
All of this is directly, personally verifiable. We don't own a large hadron collider; yet, it is possible for the mind to be collected and intensified (through optimal-concentration, samma-samadhi) to discern kalapas. None of this is to be taken on faith. None of this is dogma. It is all experiential. And this is sure: If one does not make the effort to realize
the Truth (not "learn" it or "believe" but realize it for oneself), whatever the Truth is, one will not become enlightened or liberated from ignorance and illusion. Without liberation, disappointment is certain (not eventually but in every moment).

Particle Physics

Buddhist Physics

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Buddhist Physics: particles change "flavor"

Seven Dharmachari (Wisdom Quarterly), LiveScience.com
The MINOS neutrino experiment is located in a cavern half a mile deep in the Soudan Underground Lab, Minnesota. (Yet people doubt there are DUMBs in the US). A mural of famous scientists is painted onto the rock wall (Fermilab).

Buddhist Physics made visible
It shocked me that at a meditation retreat, the revered monk and scholar was explaining how particles-of-perception could literally be observed. The mind purified and intensified through absorption- (jhana) and honed by insight- (vipassana) practice became able to perceive the smallest particles in Buddhist physics.

I had always thought these things theoretical and, although terribly interesting, beside the point. But they were the point. To gain enlightenment, one would have to examine and analyze these ephemeral objects. The purpose of doing so is direct realization that "everything that is of a nature to arise is of a nature to pass away." This is the teaching of radical impermanence.

It is not that eventually things crumble; rather in every moment in every way, things are changing and transforming.

One startling aspect of this teacher (Pa Auk Sayadaw)'s instruction, derived from the Abhidharma and Path of Purification, was the notion that particles-of-perception had "flavor" and "odor." This went against everything I understood about such gross physical phenomena. But had I known then as I know now that ordinary meditators in attendance were seeing them, were enjoying absorption and gaining liberating insight, I should have been much more amazed at that.

What is invisible and transient will become visible through practice. It will not, however, become any less transient. So how in the world will the mind/heart ever see a subatomic particle? The answer is easy to understand, hard to accomplish. The mind perceives it and, like a photograph, lays down a memory trace. That trace can be reviewed even if what it is a trace of happened so incredibly quickly as to be incomprehensible.

Stanford Univ., Los Alamos National Lab (particleadventure.org/KarlTate/LiveScience)

Seeing the transition (anicca, transition or flux), instability (dukkha, disappointment or unsatisfactoriness), and composite nature (anatta, impersonality or emptiness) first hand is what liberates the heart/mind from clinging to things as if they are real, able to yield satisfaction or able to be possessed.

If the mind/heart (other more subtle particles called cittas, the elements or moments of consciousness in Buddhist psychology) sees the "true nature" of things, it withdraws. It naturally lets go. And unbound, unentangled, detached from them, it is freed just for an instant.

But that instant is enough to undo the hold of samsara, this clinging to self, suffering, and rebirth -- giving way to the first stage of enlightenment (stream entry), the gateway, the all important noble attainment. Imagine what surprise, then, to hear science use the term "flavor" to describe the transitory nature of these same unbelievably small and short lived particles! Here's the story LiveScience.com:

Exotic Particle Changes Flavor as Scientists Watch
Scientists have observed the rare phenomenon of one type of exotic particle transforming into another, which could reveal secrets about the evolution of the universe.

The particles are two types of chargeless, nearly massless species called neutrinos, which come in three flavors: muon, electron, and tau. In past experiments, physicists have measured the change of muon neutrinos to tau neutrinos and electron neutrinos to muon or tau neutrinos. But no one has definitively seen muon neutrinos turn into electron neutrinos.

Now two separate experiments -- one in Japan and one in Minnesota -- have both found evidence for this transformation as well. More

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Elusive "Antimatter" trapped in Lab

LiveScience.com (June 6, 2011) According to the laws of physics, the world should not exist. To explain why we're here, scientists are re-creating the universe's fiery beginnings by pitting matter against antimatter and watching them annihilate (popsci.com).

Antimatter, an elusive type of matter [Buddhist, rupa] that's rare in the universe, has now been trapped for more than 16 minutes -- an eternity in particle physics.

In fact, scientists who've been trapping antihydrogen atoms at the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) in Geneva say isolating the exotic particles has become so routine that they expect to soon begin experiments on this rare substance.


Antimatter is like a mirror image of matter. For every matter particle (a hydrogen atom, for example), a matching antimatter particle is thought to exist (in this case, an antihydrogen atom) with the same mass, but the opposite charge.

"We've trapped antihydrogen atoms for as long as 1,000 seconds, which is forever" in the world of high-energy particle physics, said Joel Fajans, a University of California, Berkeley professor of physics who is a faculty scientist at California's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory and a member of the ALPHA (Antihydrogen Laser Physics Apparatus) experiment at CERN.

All matter (gross and fine, sensual and supersensual) is subordinate to mind; yet, mind and matter are interdependent everywhere except the four immaterial (arupa) planes, which are mind only. See Buddhist cosmology's 31 Planes of Existence.

Trapping antimatter is difficult, because when it comes into contact with matter, the two annihilate each other. So a container for antimatter can't be made of regular matter, but is usually formed with magnetic fields. More

Strange Quarks and Muons, Oh my! Nature's tiniest particles dissected
Wacky Physics: The coolest little particles in nature
Twisted Physics: 7 mind-blowing findings