Parable: A disciple asked his Zen teacher, "What is mind?" The teacher suddenly shouted and clapped his hands. The disciple shuddered at the surprise. The teacher said, "This is mind—pure awareness of the moment without any thoughts or definitions." This parable, like a flash of lightning, illustrates the fleeting nature of pure perception that precedes conceptualization.
Doubt (Skt. saṃśaya; тиб. Di Tashome):
It's like a swing, oscillating between two or more possibilities. Imagine not being able to remember if you turned off the iron when you left the house. Your mind is torn between two options: "turned off" and "didn't turn off", causing a feeling of anxiety. Doubt is a natural part of our cognitive process when we are faced with a lack of information or conflicting data.
Example: You are offered to invest money in a new project that sounds very tempting. On the one hand, you see the potential benefit, on the other hand, you feel apprehension and uncertainty.
Parable: One day a man was standing on the bank of a river and could not decide whether to ford it or to take a boat. He doubted whether it was shallow enough to make the boat capsize. His doubts paralyzed him like fetters, and he was never able to get to the other side. interfering with decision-making and action.
False cognition (Skt. Viparaya-jñāna; тиб. People She):
It's like a mirage in the desert, a misperception or a misunderstanding of reality. Imagine that in the desert you see a mirage, a shiny surface that looks like water. Your mind mistakenly interprets the visual sensations as water, when in fact it's just hot sand. False cognition is a distortion of reality where our mind mistakes an illusion for reality. This can be due to a lack of information, bias, or simply a perceptual error.
Example: You look at a straight stick that is half submerged in water, and it appears to be broken at the water-air interface. This is an optical illusion – a false perception caused by the refraction of light.
Parable: One night, a man was walking along the road and saw a rope coiled up in the dark. He was frightened, thinking it was a snake, and he ran away. Only in the morning, in the light of the sun, did he see that it was just a rope. This classic Buddhist parable, like a lantern in the night, illustrates how our minds can misinterpret reality, creating fears and illusions there, where there are none.
Understanding these seven types of perception is like a clue to the mystery, helping us to become more aware of how our minds interact with the world and how errors in our cognition can arise. This is the first step to developing wisdom and the ability to see things as they really are. As one wise Buddhist monk said, "To get rid of illusions, we must first understand how they arise." Exploring these seven aspects of our perception is an important step on this path that leads to a clearer and more conscious understanding of ourselves and the world.
Now let us deepen our understanding of these seven facets of our perception, as if peering into the ancient wisdom scrolls of the Buddhist teachings, which, like light, shed truth on the nature of our mind.
Direct Perception: Buddhist texts, like echoes of centuries, emphasize the paramount importance of direct experience as the foundation of true knowledge. In the Majhima Nikaya, the Buddha, like a wise teacher, exhorts us to see things as they are, without the mediation of concepts or interpretations.
"Oh bhikkhus, when you see the form with the eye, you simply see the form. When you hear a sound with your ear, you just hear the sound. When you smell a smell through your nose, you just smell the smell. When you taste with your tongue, you just taste it. When you touch your body, you just feel the touch. When you know a thought with your mind, you simply know a thought."
This passage emphasizes the need for awareness and being in the present moment, without immediately labeling and judging our sensory experiences.
Inference: Buddhist logic (pramana), like a sharp sword, attaches great importance to inference as a valid source of knowledge. However, the Buddhist texts, likewise warnings, remind us of the need to distinguish between superficial understanding based on reasoning and deep understanding that arises from meditation and contemplation. The Golden Light Sutra speaks of the importance of distinguishing between these two types of understanding.