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đ Join the Affiliate Program Now Alan Watts
The World as Emptiness, Part 4: The Eightfold Path
We now come to the most complicated of all. Number four, mÄrga. MÄrg, in Sanskrit, means âpath,â and the Buddha taught an eightfold path for the realization of nirvÄáča. This always reminds me of a story about Dr. Suzuki, who is a very, very great Buddhist scholar, and many years ago he was giving a fundamental lecture on Buddhism at the University of Hawaii. And heâd been going through these four truths, and he said:
Ah, fourth Noble Truth is called Noble Eightfold Path. First step of Noble Eightfold Path called shĆken. ShĆken in Japanese means âright view.â For Buddhism, fundamentally, is right view. Right way of viewing this world. Second step of Noble Eightfold Path isâoh, I forget second step, you look it up in the book.
Well, Iâm going to do rather the same thing. What is important is this: the eightfold path has really got three divisions in it. The first are concerned with understanding, the second division is concerned with conduct, and the third division is concerned with meditation. And every step in the path is preceded with the Sanskrit word samyak, in which sam is the keyword. In Pali: samma. And so, the first step, samyak drishti, which meansâdrishti means a âview,â âa way of looking at things,â a âvision,â an âattitude,â something like that. But this word samyak is in ordinary texts on Buddhism almost invariably translated âright.â This is a very bad translation. The word is used in certain contexts in Sanskrit to mean âright,â âcorrect,â but it has other and wider meanings. Sam meansâlike our word âsum,â which is derived from itââcomplete,â âtotal,â âall-embracing.â It also has the meaning of âmiddle wade,â representing, as it were, the fulcrum, the center, the point of balance in a totality. Middle wade way of looking at things. Middle wade way of understanding the dharma. Middle wade way of speech, of conduct, of livelihood, and so on. Now, this is particularly cogent when it comes to Buddhist ideas of behavior.