DALAI LAMA ON THE SELF
In a dharma talk from Dharamsala, India, on
December 19-20, 2011, the Dalai Lama talked about the nature of the
self. "Who do we mean when we say 'I?'" he
asked. For instance, the "I" we are as a baby is not the
same "I" we are as an adult.
He went on to present the well-known analogy
of a cart, pointing out that a cart is made of parts, the wheels, the box,
the pull bar, and so forth. In the same way, a person,
an "I," is made up of components. They
are called "skandhas" in Buddhism. These
are (1) the body, (2) the sense-perception, (3) the feelings, (4) the
"sankharas" (difficult to translate but meaning approximately
the instincts and the subconscious), (5) the faculty of reason.
It is the union of these "skandhas" that constitutes an
individual.
As long as the "skandhas" are held together
the individual functions as a single being, lives, and has a history, even
as each component is in perpetual flux. The body changes from day to
day only a little less conspicuously than the mental states.
At death the union dissolves, the
"skandhas" disperse, and the individual, the "I," ceases to
exist. In this way, then, the "I" is merely an appearance, and
as only an appearance it does not carry on after
death. This is the Buddhist doctrine of "anatta," no-self.
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