This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0002224291 Reproduction Date:
Mettā (Pali) or maitrī (Sanskrit) is benevolence,[1][2] friendliness,[3][4][5] [2][4] amity,[3] friendship,[4] good will,[4] kindness,[3][6] close mental union (on same mental wavelength),[4] and active interest in others.[3] It is one of the ten pāramīs of the Theravāda school of Buddhism, and the first of the four sublime states (Brahmavihāras). This is love without clinging (upādāna).
The cultivation of benevolence (mettā bhāvanā) is a popular form of meditation in Buddhism. In the Theravadin Buddhist tradition, this practice begins with the meditator cultivating benevolence towards themselves,[7] then one's loved ones, friends, teachers, strangers, enemies, and finally towards all sentient beings. In the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, this practice is associated with tonglen (cf.), whereby one breathes out ("sends") happiness and breathes in ("receives") suffering.[8] Tibetan Buddhists also practice contemplation of the Brahmavihāras, also called the four immeasurables, which is sometimes called 'compassion meditation'.[9]
Mettā meditation is regularly recommended to the Buddha's followers in the Pali canon. The canon generally advises radiating metta in each of the six directions, to whatever beings there may be.[10] A different set of practical instructions, still widely used today, is found in the 5th CE Visuddhimagga. In addition, variations on this traditional practice have been popularized by modern teachers and applied in modern research settings.
Modern instruction for the cultivation of benevolence – such as is found in the works of Sharon Salzberg,[11] the Triratna Buddhist Community's Kamalashila,[5] and Matthieu Ricard[12] – is often based in part on a method found in Buddhaghosa's 5th-century CE Pāli exegetical text, the Path to Purification (Pali:Visuddhimagga), Chapter IX.[13][14]
This traditional approach is best known for identifying successive stages of meditation during which one progressively cultivates benevolence towards:
Mettā signifies friendship and non-violence, "a strong wish for the happiness of others" and also less obvious or direct qualities such as showing patience, receptivity, and appreciation. Benevolence is a very specific feeling – a caring for the well-being of another living being, independent of approving or disapproving of them, or expecting anything in return.[21] Practice includes reciting specific words and phrases in order to evoke a "boundless warm-hearted feeling," or visualizing suffering and wishing well for those beings. Non-referential compassion, also known as "pure compassion", involves simply experiencing the feeling of caring for another sentient being.[21] One special technique recommended by Matthieu Ricard is to "imagine" the state of another.[21] Richard J. Davidson has shown metta to induce changes in the tempoparietal lobe.[22] Benevolence is the application of love to suffering. Metta is applied to all beings and, as a consequence, one experiences another of the sublime states: joy (mudita), which is true happiness in another being's happiness.
All sentient beings desire happiness and do not desire misery. Think deeply about how, in this beginning-less cycle of existence, there is not one sentient being who has not been my friend and relative hundreds of times. Therefore, since there is no ground for being attached to some and hating others, I shall develop a mind of equanimity toward all sentient beings. Begin the meditation on equanimity by thinking of a neutral person, and then consider people who are friends and foes.
The Pali Canon says that there is a number of benefits from the practicing of metta meditation, including:
The Canon also upholds fully ripened metta development as a foremost antidote to ill will:
Monks, whatever grounds there are for making merit productive of a future birth, all these do not equal a sixteenth part of the liberation of mind by benevolence. The liberation of mind by benevolence surpasses them and shines forth, bright and brilliant.
A few recent psychological studies suggest that benevolence meditation may impact health and well-being. One study done at Stanford University suggests that a short 7 minute practice of benevolence meditation can increase social connectedness.[25] Benevolence meditation has also been shown to reduce pain and anger in people with chronic lower back pain.[26] Researcher Barbara Fredrickson at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill found that benevolence meditation can help boost positive emotions and well-being in life, fostering the personal resources that come from experiencing positive emotion.[27] More research is needed to see whether benevolence meditation is appropriate for all populations, whether it works similarly for everyone, and to understand how much practice is needed for the benefits of the practice to manifest.
An EEG study by Richard J. Davidson of people who meditate in metta, with a minimum of 10,000 hours practice, showed substantial differences in the magnitude of gamma waves as well as gamma synchronization, particularly during meditative sessions, and directly afterwards. During baseline states, where the subject was not engaged in the practice of metta, there was a signature brain wave pattern that distinguishes the metta practitioners, lay people as well as monks, from people, at baseline, who have not extensively practiced compassion meditation. This study also showed, during meditation, an increase in the activity of brain areas such as the temporoparietal junction, insula, and amygdala can increase the subject's ability to see things from another's perspective, and actually change the area of the brain that is involved with the autonomic system so that the meditator's heartbeat increases. These studies show that the amygdala is modulated during compassion meditation.[22] Compassion meditation has been shown to lower the participants reaction to inflammation and distress, both of which are associated with, "major depression, heart disease and diabetes," in response to stressors, a change that was dependent on the amount of time spent practicing, with practitioners who spent more time meditating having corresponding more significant changes in their brains.[28]
In the Pāli Canon, statements regarding the use of benevolence (metta) traditionally employ one or more of the following devices, often using a stock formula:
The well-known Kakacupama Sutta and Karaniya Metta Sutta use striking metaphors to give these traditional devices vitality. Other canonical materials, such as in the Paṭisambhidāmagga, elaborate on these basic devices in a manner that is perpetuated by the later traditional commentaries. Other canonical sources, such as the Abhidhamma, underline the key role of benevolence in the development of wholesome karma.
May these beings be free from animosity, free from oppression, free from trouble, and may they look after themselves with ease!
In the Sutta To Cunda the Silversmith (Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta, AN 10.176), the Buddha explains that mental or intentional purity (manasā soceyyaṃ) is threefold: non-greed, non-ill-will and non-delusion. Regarding the manifestation of non-ill-will the discourse describes a virtuous person in the following manner (in English and Pāli):
He or she bears no ill will and is not corrupt in the resolves of his heart. [He thinks,] 'May these beings be free from animosity, free from oppression, free from trouble, and may they look after themselves with ease!'[29]
Avyāpannacitto hoti appaduṭṭhamanasaṃkappo, 'ime sattā averā avyāpajjā anīghā sukhī attānaṃ pariharantu'ti.[30]
This basic statement of intention and verse can also be found in several other canonical discourses.[31]
In over a dozen discourses, the following description (in English and Pāli) is provided for radiating loving-kindness in six directions:[32]
One abides, having suffused with a mind of benevolence one direction of the world, likewise the second, likewise the third, likewise the fourth, and so above, below, around and everywhere, and to all as to himself; one abides suffusing the entire universe with benevolence, with a mind grown great, lofty, boundless and free from enmity and ill will.[33]
So mettāsahagatena cetasā ekaṃ disaṃ pharitvā viharati. Tathā dutiyaṃ. Tathā tatiyaṃ. Tathā catutthiṃ. Iti uddhamadho tiriyaṃ sabbadhi sabbattatāya sabbāvantaṃ lokaṃ mettāsahagatena cetasā vipulena mahaggatena appamāṇena averena abyāpajjena pharitvā viharati.[34]
In the canon, this basic formula is expanded upon in a variety of ways. For instance, a couple of discourses[35] provide the following description of "the path to the company of Brahmā" (brahmānaṃ sahavyatāya maggo) along with a memorable metaphor:
Incorporating facets of the above textual methods in a series of increasingly vivid similes, the Parable of the Saw Discourse (Kakacupama Sutta, MN 21) provides the following culminating scenario:
In gladness and in safety, May all beings be at ease.
Even as a mother protects with her life Her child, her only child, So with a boundless heart Should one cherish all living beings.
The Karaniya Metta Sutta (Sn 1.8) combines both the interpersonal and radiant aspects of canonical expressions of benevolence.
By one who is skilled in goodness, And who knows the path of peace: ... Wishing: In gladness and in safety, May all beings be at ease.
atthakusalena yaṃ taṃ santaṃ padaṃ abhisamecca ... Sukhino vā khemino hontu sabbe sattā bhavantu sukhitattā
Whether they are weak or strong, omitting none, The great or the mighty, medium, short or small,
tasā vā thāvarā vā anavasesā Dīghā vā ye mahantā vā majjhamā rassakāṇukathūlā
Those living near and far away, Those born and to-be-born – May all beings be at ease!
ye ca dūre vasanti avidūre Bhūtā vā sambhavesī vā sabbe sattā bhavantu sukhitattā
Or despise any being in any state. Let none through anger or ill-will Wish harm upon another.
nātimaññetha katthaci naṃ kañci Byārosanā paṭighasaññā nāññamaññassa dukkhamiccheyya
Her child, her only child, So with a boundless heart Should one cherish all living beings;
ekaputtamanurakkhe Evampi sabbabhūtesū mānasaṃ bhāvaye aparimānaṃ
Spreading upwards to the skies, And downwards to the depths; Outwards and unbounded, Freed from hatred and ill-will.
mānasaṃ bhāvaye aparimānaṃ Uddhaṃ adho ca tiriyañca asambādhaṃ averaṃ asapattaṃ
Free from drowsiness, One should sustain this recollection. This is said to be the sublime abiding
vā yāvatassa vigatamiddho Etaṃ satiṃ adhiṭṭheyya brahmametaṃ vihāraṃ idhamāhu
The pure-hearted one, having clarity of vision, Being freed from all sense desires, Is not born again into this world.[39]
silava dassanena sampanno kamesu vineyya gedham Na hi jatu gabbhaseyyam punar eti.[40]
According to the Pāli commentaries, the Buddha originally gave this instruction (of benevolence meditation) to monks who were being harassed by the tree spirits of a forest in which the monks were trying to meditate. After doing this meditation in the forest it is said that the spirits were so affected by the power of benevolence that they allowed the monks to stay in the forest for the duration of the rainy season.
May all beings be free from enmity, affliction and anxiety, and live contentedly.
In the Khuddaka Nikāya's Paṭisambhidāmagga, traditionally ascribed to Ven. Sariputta, is a section entitled Mettākathā (Ps. 2.4, "Instruction on Loving-Kindness").[42] In this instruction, a general formula (below, in English and Pāli), essentially identical to the aforementioned Cunda Kammaraputta Sutta verse (especially evident in the Pāli), is provided for radiating benevolence:
"May all beings be free from enmity, affliction and anxiety, and live contentedly."[41]
Sabbe sattā averā abyāpajjā anīghā sukhī attānaṃ pariharantu.[43]
In addition, this instruction categorizes twenty-two ways in which "the mind-deliverance of benevolence" (mettācetovimutti) can be radiated as follows:
Moreover, the directional pervasions can then be applied to each of the unspecific and specific pervasions. For instance, after radiating benevolence to all beings in the east (Sabbe puratthimāya disāya sattā ...), one radiates it to all beings in the west and then north and then south, etc.; then, one radiates it to all breathing things in this fashion (Sabbe puratthimāya disāya pāṇā ...), then all creatures, persons, and so forth until such is extended for all those born in the lower realms.
What are the three causes of good karma? The absence of lust, hate and dullness.
In the Abhidhamma's Dhammasaṅgaṇi, the causes of "good" or "wholesome" (kusala) and "bad" or "unwholesome" (akusala) karmic states (dhammā) are described (Dhs. 188ff.). The three causes of wholesome karma are stated to be the non-greed, non-hate and non-delusion (alobho adoso amoho; cf. kleśā). Non-hate is then defined in the following manner:
The absence of hate, hating, hatred; love, loving, loving disposition; tender care, forbearance, considerateness; seeking the general good, compassion; the absence of malice, of malignity; that absence of hate which is the root of good (karma).[45]
Yo adoso adussanā adussitattaṃ metti mettāyanā mettāyitattaṃ anuddayā anuddayanā anuddayitattaṃ hitesitā anukampā avyāpādo avyāpajjho adoso kusalamūlaṃ, ayaṃ vuccati adoso.[46]
Buddhism, India, Pali, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar
Gautama Buddha, Tibetan Buddhism, Sīla, Mahayana, Hinduism
Buddhism, Gautama Buddha, Śīla, Pāli Canon, Pali
Sri Lanka, Buddhism, Sanskrit, Indo-Aryan languages, Devanāgarī
Psychology, God, Quran, Emotion, Neuroscience
Buddhism, Gautama Buddha, Karuṇā, Śīla, Pinyin
Buddhism, Nirvana, Sīla, Gautama Buddha, Pali Canon
Buddhism, Śīla, Dāna, Gautama Buddha, Pali Canon
Buddhism, Gautama Buddha, Pali, Anguttara Nikaya, Śīla
Māna, Śīla, Dāna, Gautama Buddha, Buddhism