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Jain
Reality
Jainism states that the universe is without a beginning or an end,
and is everlasting and eternal. Six fundamental entities (known as
Dravya) constitute the universe. Although all six entities are eternal,
they continuously undergo countless changes (known as Paryaya). In
these transformations nothing is lost or destroyed. Lord Mahavir explained
this phenomena in his Three Pronouncements known as Tripadi and proclaimed
that Existence or reality (also known as Sat) is a combination of
appearance (Utpada), disappearance (Vyaya), and persistence (Dhrauvya)
Prakrit Name |
Meaning |
Characteristics |
Utpada |
Origination of a state |
Mode (paryay) |
Vyaya |
Cessation of a state |
Mode (Paryay) |
Dhrauvya |
Permanence |
Substance (Dravya) |
Here the phases, the
changes of all substances are not only countless, they are infinite.
The Omniscient Tirhankaras are not able to say all the phases – paryays
in their sermon throughout their lives.
While Jainism does not believe in the concept of God as a creator,
protector and destroyer of the universe, the philosophical concepts
of Utpada, Vyaya, and Dhrauvya are consistent with the Trinity concepts
of those religions believing in God. This indicates that Jainism is
not an atheistic religion. However Jainism emphasizes freedom of soul
from karma and gaining liberation through self-effort, not the "grace"
of a Supreme Being.
The Six Universal Substances or Entities (Dravyas) :
Prakrit Name |
English Name |
Characteristics |
1 Jiva |
Soul or Consciousness |
Living substance |
2. Pudgal |
Matter |
Nonliving substance |
3 Dharma |
Medium of motion |
Nonliving substance |
4 Adharma |
Medium of rest |
Nonliving substance |
5 Akasha |
Space |
Nonliving substance |
6 Kala or Samay |
Time |
Nonliving substance |
To begin with - the world, according
to the Jainas, is composed of two principles viz. The Unconscious
(Ajiva) and conscious (Jiva).
Ajiva
Ajiva is surely an unconscious component of what we ordinarily
call the material world but is not to be identified with Maya
of the Vedanta. Maya has no reality independent of the Brahma.
The Ajiva, on the contrary, is as real, self-existent and eternal
(having neither origin nor annihilation) as the Jiva. Nor is the
unconscious in any way similar to Sunya or the void of Budhdhist
nihilists. The Jain Ajiva is a reality. It is however not the
same as the prakrti of the Sankhya school. For although the latter
is self-existent, real in itself and eternal, it is held to be
one. The Ajiva of the Jainas, on the contrary, is manifold and
more than one. But again it is not to be identified with the Anu
or atom of the Nyaya and the Vaisesik philosophers, on that account.
Besides the material atoms, there are other Unconscious Reals,
according to the Jainas. The Ajiva is of five kinds, each self-existent,
real in itself and eternal, -- viz. Pudgal (matter), Dharma (subsidiary
principle of motion), Adharma (subsidiary principle of rest),
Kala (subsidiary principle of mutation) and Akasha (space).
Pudgala
Roughly speaking Pudgala is what is ordinarily known as matter,
Pudgala has form and is characterized by the attributes of being
seen, tasted, touched and smelt. Sound, union, the subtle, the
gross, the corporeal, the sundered, darkness, shade, light and
heat are the various modes that arise from Matter, which is their
ultimate basic substance. It may be said in this connection that
the Jaina conceptions of Sound, Light and Heat as modifications
of Matter foreshadow the corresponding modern theories to some
extent an account for photography, radio etc. According to the
philosophers of the Nyaya school, Darkness and Shadow are not
real they are pure negations. Obviously, the Jaina views regarding
Darkness and Shadow are opposed to those of the Naiyayikas.
Matter has been accepted as a Real from the earliest dawn of speculative
thought; all physicists from the time of Democritus up to the
modern age have also recognized its atomic character. The outlines
of scientific materialism of today that atoms are infinite in
number, that they are the subtlest possible ultimate units of
matter and that the formation and dissolution of the gross things
are the respective effects of the mutual combinations and separations
of atoms, were clearly conceived by the Jaina thinkers. It appears,
however, that the atoms conceived by the Indian philosophers were
infinitely subtler than the atoms as conceived by the Greek school.
According to the latter, atoms were after all but the smallest
possible bits of gross matter. The Nyaya Vaisesika school, on
the other hand, held that the atoms, though material in substance,
were absolutely devoid of all grossness, in as much as “they had
neither an interior nor an exterior.” In a similar manner, the
Jainas went beyond the Greek theory and maintained, “an infinite
number of atoms may be located in one and the same point of space”.
On the other hand, it is to be noticed that there is a general
agreement between the Nyaya Vaisesika school of Atomists and the
western Atomists that the material atoms are eternal and indestructible.
The Vaibhasika and Sautrantika sections of the Buddhist philosophers
contended that the material atoms, though real, are but momentary
in duration and the vedantists also like modern physicists expressly
held that the atoms are destructible.
The Jainas hold that the atoms are eternal in some sense and non-eternal
also in some sense. So far as Pudgala or their substantial basis
is concerned, they are certainly eternal. In so far as the atoms
are also the limit of all gross things, they are eternal, - ‘Shashwata’.
In some sense again, it is not proper to call the atoms “ the
ultimate basic cause” of the gross things. For atoms are products,
in some respects. The Jainas are opposed to the conception that
atoms are ultimate Real “in a beginningless state of pure atomicity,”
on the ground that such atoms would be pure abstractions and unable
to produce gross things. The Jaina view accordingly, is that the
atomic and the gross are equally real modifications of Pudgala
and that the question as to which is prior to the other, does
not arise, in as much as each is found to come out of the other.
In the case of atoms, what we know is that they are come across
only when the gross things are dissolved and in this sense, the
atoms are non-eternal. Atoms are non-eternal in other respects
also viz., new properties of Sneha etc., are found to be generated
in them when a chemical combination of atoms is to take place,
so that, so far as those new properties are concerned, the atoms
may be said to be non-eternal.
Dharma
Dharma is ordinarily understood as pious act. The Jaina metaphysics
attributes a special meaning to Dharma. It is conceived as a real,
self-existent and eternal substance, which makes possible, the
motion of a moving substance. Dharma, however, is not an active
principle. As a substance, it is absolutely passive and does not
move a thing. Just as the water in a tank does not actually move
a moving fish but is an indispensable condition of its motion,
Dharma, in the same manner is the passive, basic and indispensable
condition of the motions of animals and material things, which
move themselves. Dharma is an inactive, although necessary, condition
of motion. As a substance, it is formless and eternal.
Adharma
As one in the Jaina list of metaphysical substances, Adharma is
the principle, which is the indispensable condition of all rests
of stopping things. Like Dharma Adharma is absolutely passive,
eternal and formless. Adharma does not actively operate in order
to stop a thing in motion but just as the blinding darkness is
the passive cause of a traveler’s moving no further, Adharma is
a passive, although invariable condition of all stoppages of moving
animals and things in motion.
The physicists maintain that motion and rest are determined by
the essential nature of the moving and the resting things. The
Vedic school of philosophers in ancient India meant almost the
same thing by saying that it is Adrista, an unseen force generated
within a being that makes it move or stop. The Jainas agreed with
these views to some extent and held that for the causes of motions
and rests of things, we are to look into their essential natures.
All the same, however, the Jainas admitted the independent reality
of Dharma and Adharma as principles of motion and rest. They say
that although the essential natures of things are responsible
for their movements and stoppages, their actual motions and rests
require something more that is to say, subsidiary conditions in
as much as they move and rest within a particular part of the
sky. These conditions, the Jainas pointed out, were Dharma and
Adharma, which were perfectly real, though absolutely passive.
Dharma and Adharma conceived only as subsidiary although real
principles are thus peculiar conceptions in Jainism. In other
respect, the Jaina principles of motion and rest are unique. According
to all schools of thinking, each moving and resting being has
its own cause, - the peculiar Adrista, - for its movements and
rests. Motion and rest are thus not unitary and all-pervasive
principles. According to Jainas, however, Dharma and Adharma are
cosmic reals, - of which, the conditions of particular motions
and rests in particular cases, are but particular instances, “modifications”
as the Jainas say. The Jainas point out that simultaneous motions
and rests of infinitely varied things of the world, show that
underlying the conditions of these motions and rests there must
be two Cosmic Principles viz. of Dharma and Adharma, as the ultimate
basis of these conditions.
Akasha (Space)
Akasha is expansive space, which holds the other substances viz.
matter, the conscious, and the principles of motion and rest and
of change. Akasha is so called because all substances are “revealed”
or “contained” in it. It is a passive substance, eternal and expensive.
The Jainas divide space in two parts, which they call respectively
the Loka and the Aloka. The former is filled with substances animate
and inanimate and the principles of change, motion and rest. The
Aloka is a void space beyond this Loka.
Newton recognized its reality. Even Berkeley was compelled to
admit some sort of objectivity of it. The Jaina conception of
space as a real is not essentially different from that of the
Realistic schools of today. To Einstein also, space is an existent
reality in some sense.
With thinkers of Nyaya and Vaisheshika schools of philosophy,
Akasha is a mode of substance having the specific property of
sound. The Jainas, on the contrary, hold that Akasha is not a
form of matter and sound is not an attribute. According to them
Akasha is the passive container of all things and sound is a mode
of matter itself (and not its quality). The Stoics held that an
infinite expanse of real void space encompasses the filled space
of the world. The Jaina view of the Aloka is obviously in agreement
with the Stoic theory of void space.
Kala
Kala is ordinarily understood as Time. It is the principle underlying
all changes. It is to be observed, however that things change
in accordance with their own nature and that Kala is not the substance
actively effecting any change in them. Like Dharma and Adharma,
it is a passive principle, - an indispensable condition of phenomenal
changes occurring in things. It is eternal and formless. Kala
is not conceived by the Jainas as one single pervasive substance,
as in other systems of philosophy. Kala with the Jainas is a continuous
series of atomic moments, although each of these is strictly separate
from the other – a series, which is compared to “a heap of jewels.”
The Nyaya and Vaisheshika schools of philosophy in ancient India
agreed with the Jainas in admitting the reality of time but that
even in modern times thinkers like Bergson recognize it. Newton
spoke of “absolute, true and mathematical time” as an independent
reality.
Soul (Jiva)
Different from the above five kinds of the Ajiva or unconscious
Reals, is the conscious real substance, called, Jiva.
On account of its connection with the above unconscious substance,
the conscious Real i.e. the soul is conceived by the Jainas to
be in a state of bondage and unhappiness. The Samsara or the empirical
world, so far as a particular soul is concerned, is beginningless.
But the existential series, although, it thus stretches far into
the infinite past, is not without termination. For the Jiva is
essentially free and although it has been in bondage during the
infinite past, it will be emancipated as soon as it extricates
itself from the clutches of matter, - Karma, as it is called.
Jivas are of two kinds. Bhavya are those possessing emancipative
nature and those not possessing emancipative nature are Abhavya.
Jainism thus maintains that final emancipation is possible for
a Jiva.
The Jiva is described by the Jainas as having the following attributes.
It is existent and eternal; formless; of the same extent as its
body; possessing cognition, a real enjoyer of the fruits of its
own actions; an active agent; maker of its own destiny; has the
power of feeling; is conscious, has bondage and emancipation (salvation).
Some facts of biological interest seem to have been foreshadowed
in the Jaina doctrine of the Jiva. For instance the Jainas believed
in the existence of minute one-sensed animal-cules in the form
of air and water; the microscopic organisms of modern biology
will be found to be similar to these one-sensed animals of the
Jainas. The ancient Jaina theory of the vegetables having life
and a sensing power akin to touch, supports to modern biological
investigations.
Feeling (chetana) and Apprehension (Upayoga), psychologically
speaking, are of course the most important aspects of consciousness.
The soul is the only living substance, which possesses knowledge.
Like energy, soul is invisible and does not occupy any space.
An infinite number of souls exist in the universe. In its pure
form (a soul without attached karma particles), each soul possesses
infinite knowledge, vision, power and bliss. In its impure form
(a soul with attached karma particles) each soul possesses limited
knowledge, vision, power and bliss.
Matter is a nonliving substance, and possesses the characteristics
such as touch, taste, smell and color. It is the only substance
that occupies space. Karma is considered as a matter in Jainism.
Extremely minute particles constitute karma. These particles cannot
be seen even by any microscopic equipment (similar to electrons).
The entire universe is filled with such particles.
The medium of motion helps the soul and matter to migrate from
one place to another in the universe. The medium of rest helps
them to rest. The space is divided into two parts. The space belonging
to the Loka (universe) is called Lokakasha and the space outside
the Loka (universe) called Alokakasha, which is empty or void.
Time measures the changes in soul and matter. The wheel of time
incessantly rolls on in a circular fashion. In the first half
circle it revolves from the descending to the ascending stage
(Utsarpini) where human prosperity, happiness and life span increases.
In the second half circle it proceeds from the ascending stage
to the descending stage (Avasarpini) where prosperity, happiness
and life span decreases. Each half circle is further sub-divided
into six-zone known as six eras.
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