Whitehead's `actual entity' and the Buddha's anaatman

By Kenneth K.Inada
Philosophy East and West 21,no.3(July 1971).
(c)by The Uneversity Press of Hawaii
p.303-315


. p.303 This paper will attempt a general metaphysical dialogue between A. N. Whitehead and the Buddha. To be sure, the time gap between the two is enormous. However, considering the fact that there has been continuity in Buddhist faith and practice up to the present, we can accept the Buddha's thoughts as contemporary. As for Whitehead, especially in his later works he makes several references to the Buddha, and in these we are able to discern two divergent aspects: [1] his knowledge of Buddhism was generally based on a popular understanding of the times, and thus his critical views concerning it were basically and distressingly wrong,(l) and [2] however misinformed he may have been, his philosophy shows strains of thought remarkably similar to those of the Buddha. I will explore the second aspect. Whitehead has been taken to task by Whiteheadians and non-Whiteheadians alike. Among other things, he has been accused of being either too vague or too profoundly abstract, of pointing and yet seemingly not pointing at the reality of things. There is indeed much to be said in this regard, but it must be admitted that Whitehead's philosophy, much of which had to do with the metaphysical accounting of nature in flux, required and used new terms, terms that were strange and incomprehensible except to those who were attuned and sympathetic to process philosophy. Like many other philosophers before him, Whitehead was grounded in mathematics and looked to it as a model and a tool for describing the nature of things. He was deeply concerned with the meaning and effects of symbolism in the natural order. The Buddha, both in and after his time, attracted the same kinds of charges that are lodged against Whitehead. Even today, scholars (most of whom are, alas, non-Buddhists) criticize the Buddha (and Buddhism) for advancing nihilism, negativism, mysticism, relativism, indifferentism, aloofness, passivity, resignation, and so forth. Buddha's statements, like Whitehead's, are at times _________________________________________ Kenneth K. Inada is Professor of Philosophy at the State University of New York at Buffalo. 1. For example, he consistently errs in understanding Buddhism in each of the following assertions: [1] there is a savior in Buddhism just as in Christianity; [2] the souls of the blessed return to God; [3] Buddhism discourages the sense of active personality; [4] the moral aims of Buddhism are directed to altering the first principles of metaphysics; and [5] the multiplicity of finite enduring individuals was relegated to a world of appearances, and the ultimate reality was centered in an Absolute. See Religion in the Making (Cambridge: At the University Press, 1926) , particularly pp. 139-141. In these assertions it is clearly seen that he interprets Buddhism as a religion of the popular type which accepts such elements as a savior, a soul, and man's resignation from life. Though of later development throughout Asia, this type of Buddhism was the first to make contact with and an impact on the Western mind. He also confuses Buddhism with the orthodox Vedaantic type of religion where man is in illusion (maayaa) until he is able to elevate himself by a supreme effort and thus become immersed in the reality of the ultimate (Brahman). p.304 so cryptic that they simply lend themselves to all kinds of interpretations and fabrications, some of which, unfortunately, are drastically apart from the original idea or true import. In a sense, the Buddha also indulged in a new vocabulary. Thus, on this count too, he was charged with being vague, inconsistent, and abstract. For example, he was criticized for discoursing on the unreality rather than the reality of things, which clearly shows that the new language he advanced was either rejected or ignored by his opponents. But it is to be acknowledged that the Buddha caused a major revolution in India with regard to man's outlook on the reality of things. He had to be "unorthodox" in his expressions in reference to the content of his enlightened nature. As a consequence, the Buddha coined new terms and phrases which were against tradition and religion. He did resort to old terms, to be sure, but he deftly turned these into words with different contextual meaning; he also went ahead to use seemingly illogical terms or, in a very dramatic way, he turned the old familiar terms literally up-side-down. Such terms as anaatman (nonself), in contradistinction to the accepted term, aatman (self), or anitya (impermanence), instead of nitya (permanence) , are indeed difficult to understand, much less accept, in a tradition-bound culture. But the insight of the Buddha proved to be fruitful and enduring, as history has attested. We must now attempt to see where the Buddha and Whitehead converge in the discourse on the nature of ultimate reality. In the search for a common ground and perspective the most natural and fruitful area on which to concentrate would be man's nature. Both men were intensely concerned with its ultimate status, and the Buddha, even without the benefits of scientific methodology and technique, was able to present a remarkably sound view. Thus the dialogue between the two should be meaningful and significant only as we comprehend the similar strains in their ways of thinking. Obviously the dialogue cannot be a strict one-to-one comparison of details or minutiae in the Buddha's and Whitehead's complete concepts of man. That would be an impossible task not only on the historical count but also with respect to the cultural differences which ultimately dictate the type of meaning specifically conveyed by the terms in use. Moreover, it should be noted at the outset that the aim or goal of man in the two concepts differs quite drastically, especially in the realm of religious experience, so that some comparative analysis would have to be left out. However, if the more basic points are focused on the results should be rewarding. The paper will then concentrate on Whitehead's concept of an actual entity (or actual occasion) as a basis for comparison with the Buddhist concept of anaatman (the nonbifurcated-bifurcating "self").(2) These concepts are seemingly ____________________________ 2. I have now come to understand the anaatman concept as a nonbifurcated-bifurcating "self" because in the aatman concept there are involved at all times two vital components or aspects. On the one side there is the "bifurcated self," which presents a situation p.305 incompatible, but it would be worth our while to examine them closely. I am quite mindful of the fact that the concept of an actual entity is really the alpha and omega of Whiteheadianism, so that to discuss it means at once to implicate the rest of the concepts abounding in this system of thought. Curiously enough, the same is also true of the doctrine of anaatman. In this respect both systems are on common ground, and both strictly adhere to the naturalistic rule or creed of the self-sufficiency of the nature of things. The two concepts in question will then be treated as a framework within which the relevances of the respective complementary doctrines will be exhibited. ACTUAL ENTITY Whitehead was a man of rare vision. He was profoundly religious. In one of his more famous religious statements, he remarked: "I hazard the prophecy that that religion will conquer which can render clear to popular understanding some eternal greatness incarnate in the passage of temporal fact."(3) He made this remark quite late in his life, but the idea seems to have haunted him for a long time. Perhaps it is not amiss to say that the deep concern for the temporal fact and what it entails had compelled him to reexamine or reappraise the whole function of philosophy. Whether he succeeded finally in presenting his case to popular understanding remains an open question, although the challenge is constantly present. We are easily attracted to the rational and abstractive (symbolic) processes, thinking that one could continue the processes without relating the abstracted elements to the immediacy of concrete events. Whitehead was cognizant of the limitations of logic, language, and the whole symbolic process in man. But, in the ultimate sense, he says there is no "mere awareness, mere private sensation, mere emotion, mere purpose, mere appearance, mere causation."(4) _____________________________________________________ where the so-called self is taken to be something static, structural, and thus is even looked upon as a lifeless entity. This is the realm of pure abstraction or symbolism. On the other side there is the "bifurcating self" which, by virtue of being thought of in its nature of isolation or independence, continues the process of fragmentation or abstractive discrimination of different realms of existence. The status of an I, an ego, a subject aloof from the experiential process in which it is dynamically involved, is thereby advanced. Thus the process only furthers the whole bifurcating series in the continuity of being. The bifurcating self necessarily relies on the bifurcated self and thus keeps going the perpetual quest for discriminative physical and mental realms and their elements. The true self or anaatman is not grasped or achieved so long as this quest goes on. It will be seen later in the discussion that the Buddha admonished those who indulge in extremes (antas) of all kinds, for they are not able to experience the middle path (madhyamaa pratipad). 3. A. N. Whitehead, Adventures of Ideas (New York: Macmillan Co., 1933), p. 41. 4. A. N. Whitehead, Process and Reality (New York: Social Science Book Store, 1941), p.27. p.306 Events or things do not occur in a total vacuum nor can they be definitively treated as such. In this connection he repeatedly warned against falling into the fallacy of misplaced concreteness.(5) He not only showed what abstractions are and how they arise but, more important, focused on the basic fact of the coherent ontological nature of things. In Science and the Modern World, he clearly asserted: Of course, substance and quality, as well as simple location, are the most natural ideas for the human mind. It is the way in which we think of things, and without these ways of thinking we could not get our ideas straight for daily use. There is no doubt about this. The only question is, How concretely are we thinking when we consider nature under these conceptions? My point will be, that we are presenting ourselves with simplified editions of immediate matters of fact. When we examine the primary elements of these simplified editions, we shall find that they are in truth only to be justified as being elaborate logical constructions of a high degree of abstraction. Of course, as a point of individual psychology, we get at the ideas by the rough and ready method of suppressing what appear to be irrelevant details. But when we attempt to justify this suppression of irrelevance, we find that, though there are entities left corresponding to the entities we talk about, yet these entities are of a high degree of abstraction. Thus I hold that substance and quality afford another instance of the fallacy of misplaced concreteness.(6) Again: I also express my conviction that if we desired to obtain a more fundamental expression of the concrete character of natural fact, the element in this scheme which we should first criticise is the concept of simple location.... To say that a bit of matter has simple location means that, in expressing its spatiotemporal relations, it is adequate to state that it is where it is, in a definite finite region of space, and throughout a definite finite duration of time, apart from any essential reference of the relations of that bit of matter to other regions of space and to other durations of time. Again, this concept of simple location is independent of the controversy between the absolutist and the refativist views of space or of time.(7) When Whitehead made the profound statement that "nature is closed to mind," he quickly added that "this closure of nature does not carry with it any metaphysical doctrine of the disjunction of nature and mind."(8) Rather than disjunction he was interested in the unity and continuity of the temporal facts in nature. Thus despite the "spatialization" of the elements of nature and the corresponding abstractions wrought from them, he was particularly concerned about how these can return, as it were, within the inclusive whole. _______________________________ 5. Ibid., pp. 11, 27. Also, the most systematic expression of this fallacy is presented in chapters 3 and 4 of Science and the Modern World (New York: Macmillan Co., 1948). 6. Science and the Modern World, pp. 76-77. 7. Ibid., p. 84. 8. A. N. Whitehead, The Concept of Nature (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 1957), p.4. p.307 According to Whitehead, this can be done by speculative philosophy. It is "the endeavour to frame a coherent, logical, necessary system of general ideas in terms of which every element of our experience can be interpreted."(9) In the endeavor, he goes on to say: Whatever is found in 'practice' must lie within the scope of the metaphysical description. When the description fails to include the 'practice', the metaphysics is inadequate and requires revision. There can be no appeal to practice to supplement metaphysics, so long as we remain contented with our metaphysical doctrines. Metaphysics is nothing but the description of the generalities which apply to all the details of practice. No metaphysical system can hope entirely to satisfy these pragmatic tests. At the best such a system will remain only an approximation to the general truths which are sought. In particular, there are no precisely stated axiomatic certainties from which to start. There is not even the language in which to frame them.(10) Thus philosophers can never hope to formulate metaphysical first principles because of weakness of insight and deficiency of language.(11) Moreover, "we can never catch the actual world taking a holiday from their sway."(12) The only alternative is to capture these metaphysical principles by "flashes of insight" and develop an "asymptotic approach to a scheme of principles."(l3) Thus Whitehead has made it plain that the world structure in entirety cannot be known by principles or universals, but it is not a hopeless task to work from the aspect of "things as they are" in their becomingness to the greater generalized characterization of those things in the "inclusive whole."(l4) In this scheme, there is the rational as well as the empirical side, or there are the coherent, logical, and necessary aspects as well as the adequate and applicable aspects. It is a comprehensive scheme in which there is interconnectedness through and through. But we must start from somewhere and Whitehead does this on the sure ground of human experience. He says, "the ultimate facts of immediate actual experience are actual entities, prehensions, and nexuus."(l5) They are, as it were, on display in every experience. They are interrelated terms in the immanent sense. Thus he says, "just as the relations modify the natures of the relata, so the relata modify the nature of the relation. The relationship is not a universal. It is a concrete fact with the same con- _________________________________ 9. Process and Reality, p. 4. 10. Ibid., p. 19. 11. Ibid., p. 6. 12. Ibid., p. 7. 13. Ibid., p. 6. 14. Speaking of the purpose of philosophy, he says: "Its business is to explain the emergence of the more abstract things from the more concrete things.... The true philosophic question is, How can concrete fact exhibit entities abstract from itself and yet participated in by its own nature?" Ibid., p. 30. 15. Ibid. p.308 creteness as the relata."(16) This is his doctrine of relatedness or mutual immanence, a doctrine which prevents one from isolating or locating an actual entity in any well-defined context. The actual entities are the "final things of which the world is made up, "(17) and are the basis of the relatedness. Thus they cannot be empty or vacuous actualities. They "involve each other by reason of their prehensions of each other,"(18) or it is the nature of each being to be a potential for every becoming. Thus the togetherness or unity of these entities by virtue of their prehensions is the fact of a nexuus. According to Whitehead, a prehension involves a "subject," the datum, and the subjective form which refers to the "affective" aspect of the "subject." As prehensions are the order of becoming in nature from the smallest entity to the largest, the gradation or hierarchy of being is possible. The human organism is a complex higher order of being, a society of actual entities; it is also called a "grouping of occasions." In this respect, the traditional notions of personal identity, ego, soul, individuality, etc., would have to be reassessed, and if they are to be admitted they must be seen within the context of related entities. Whitehead is keen on justifying the doctrines of becoming, being, and the relatedness of actual entities. He cannot speak of one without implicating the others. Thus, "Whenever we attempt to express the matter of immediate experience, we find that its understanding leads us beyond itself, to its contemporaries, to its past, to its future, and to the universals in terms of which its definiteness is exhibited."(19) Moreover, in the immediate experience he speaks of nonsensuous perception, which has a great role in qualifying that experience. For example, the knowledge of our immediate past is such a perception.(20) A perception of this nature is also an aspect of the continuity of nature, albeit in an unseen way. In a more particular sense, the actual entity in terms of its subjective form issues forth the continuity of its own being. The actual entity consequently is never static or independent; it is perpetually becoming. It has its prehensions and nexuus in harmony with the becomingness of nature. It also has its "objectively immortal" aspect, the not-being of being in the passage of subjective forms. (21) The "objectively immortal" aspect, in turn, is the potential for the prehensions by other actual entities. The passage from past to present and into the future is the creative _________________________________ 16. Adventures of Ideas, p. 201. 17. Process and Reality, p. 27. 18. Ibid., p. 29. 19. Ibid., p. 21. 20. Adventures of Ideas, pp. 232-235. 21. "The not-being of occasions is their 'objective immortality.' A pure physical prehension is how an occasion in its immediacy of being absorbs another occasion which has passed into the objective immortality of its not-being. It is how the past lives in the present. It is causation. It is memory.... It is a basic element from which springs the selfcreation of each temporal occasion. Thus perishing is the initiation of becoming. How the past perishes is how the future becomes." Ibid., p 305. p.309 advance of each actual entity. Such an advance means that something novel is taking place or that the diversified world of elements becomes unified in terms of the concrescence of that actual entity. Each entity then prehends the pure potentials or eternal objects which constitute the forms of definiteness with respect to the entity. In the context of the dynamic novel concrescence of each actual entity, the traditional view of the self breaks down. Each "self" is no longer vacuous or independent;each is coherently related to every other entity and each presents itself potentially for the concrescence by others; and each prehends the eternal objects determinately to reveal the nexuus of itself. In short, the "self" is too complex an entity to be easily analyzed into a system of organic or nonorganic structure. It entails both and much more. There is something beyond the perishing transient nature of being. It can readily be seen in the light of the foregoing brief discussion that Whitehead employed quite a sophisticated vocabulary in order to express the elements at play or interplay in experience, the temporal fact. In a way, he was compelled to do so in the hope of seeking greater adequacy and applicability. On the whole, he was reacting against traditional beliefs and modes of thinking based on simple location. He thus admits to the use of neologisms.(22) ANAATMAN As we now turn to the Buddha, we find a remarkably similar situation existing. As with Whitehead, there is a reappraisal of traditional beliefs and modes of thinking and the consequent development of a unique philosophy. The dominant view during the Buddha's times was the Vedaantic monistic conception of the universe. Man was part of the whole scheme of things, but he generally had a very insignificant role. His self or personal soul (jiiva) was for the most part relegated to an illusory form of existence, and only by a supreme spiritual effort could he elevate himself and ultimately unite with the Brahman, the absolute pure ground of existence. It was strictly a metaphysical idealism of the first order. The Buddha was influenced by the Vedaantic view of life, to be sure, but in time he sensed its futility, its inability to cope with the hard facts of life-birth, disease, old age, and death. The answer lay not in the spiritual unity, if that was possible at all, of aatman-Brahman. For the Buddha, the illusory (maayaa) nature attributed to man was a fictitious metaphysical cover. In this condition there were no adequate means to describe and to alleviate the present plight of man within his empirical nature. And so the Buddhist literature dramatically records that the would-be Buddha set out to find the answers to _______________________________ 22. For the treatment of neologisms, see Adventures of Ideas, pp.294-301. p.310 man's ills by taking up traditional yoga, but later experienced its inadequacy; then he took a different meditative tack and was awakened to the truth of things. The ultimate truth he gained was the middle doctrine (madhyamaa pratipad) .(23) It is the ontological principle in Buddhism, for it expresses the nature of the supreme moment of experience in the transient nature of things. It is also the abandonment of abstract metaphysical notions unrelated to that moment. Thus the Buddha declares: This world, Kaccaayana, usually bases [its view] on two things: on existence and on non-existence. Now he, who with right insight sees the uprising of the world as it really is, does not hold with the non-existence of the world. But he, who with right insight sees the passing away of the world as it really is, does not hold with the existence of the world. Grasping after systems, imprisoned by dogmas is this world, Kaccaayana, for the most part. And the man who does not go after that system-grasping, that mental standpoint, that dogmatic bias, who does not grasp at it, does not take up his stand upon it, [does not think]: 'It is my soul! (aatman)'... who thinks:...'that which arises is just Ill (du.hkha), that which passes away is Ill.'... this man is not in doubt, is not perplexed. Knowledge herein is his that is not merely another's.' Thus far, Kaccaayana, he has right view. Everything exists:... this is one extreme. Nothing exists:... this is the other extreme. Not approaching either extreme the Tathaagata (i.e., the Buddha) teaches you a doctrine by the middle [way].(24) The middle doctrine or way is never a rational or a psychological middle. It is not even a balanced middle between any two points or a middle sought in any quantitative or qualitative analysis. The Buddha's message in the passage above is clearly one of seeking the true unclouded nature of one's own being, a being which is what it is, or in technical terms, the thusness of being (yathaabhuutam). The Buddha's great insight here is to indicate that man is a constantly bifurcating creature, that he bases his whole epistemological viewpoints upon the two extremes (anta) of existence (bhava) and nonexistence (vibhava, abhava). Or, in more common terms, man builds up his world of knowledge by implicitly positing the extremes of something and nothing in the world, and continues to function in the fashion of an "either/or" logic, despite the fact that the world of logic, which is the realm of abstraction, is not always in one-to-one correspondence with the world of reality (yathaabhuutam). Nevertheless, man grasps at a system which is another form of abstraction because he seeks rational clarity and coherency even at the expense of losing the more basic aspects of the nature of total experience. Thus every view, _____________________________________ 23. Proclaimed in the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta of the Samyutta Nikaaya, V. 420; allegedly the first words of the Buddha at Sarnath, near Banaras. 24. Samyutta Nikaaya II. 15; also, III. 135. The translation is from The Book of Kindred Sayings, trans. Mrs. Rhys Davids, Pali Text Society Translation Series, no. 10 (London: Luzac & Co., 1952), pt. II, pp. 12-13. p.311 concept, or dogma, if unwarily maintained, becomes an abstract entity in an already abstracted framework. The meta-metaphysical series or process knows no end since man constantly bifurcates and, what is more, he is unmindful of his own bifurcated state of being. There is thus a dual aspect in man, who suffers (du.hkha) by virtue of his bifurcated state (the I, me, ego, etc.) and the bifurcating process he indulges in. It was against this dual aspect underlying the aatman concept that the Buddha revolted, and he substituted in its stead the ˙anaatman theory. Consequently, the right insight into the rise and passing away of one's own experience belongs to the anaatman, and is never possible with the aatman or self-concept. It is the grasp of the ontological coherency in the total experiential process. The venerable Raahula once asked the Buddha: "How, lord, should one know, how should one see, so that in this body, together with its consciousness, and likewise in all external objects, he has no more idea of 'I' and 'mine,' no more leanings to conceit?"(25) The Buddha replied: Whatsoever material object, Raahula, be it past, future or present, inward or outward, subtle or gross, low or high, far or near, one regards thus:... "this is not mine; this am not I; this is not the Self of me,"... that is seeing things by right insight as they really are. Thus knowing, Raahula, thus seeing, in this body, together with its consciousness, and likewise in all external objects, one has no idea of "I" and "mine," no more leanings to conceit.(26) On another occasion the Buddha referred to the so-called personal identity claimed by some with respect to the three temporal moments as "merely names, expressions, turns of speech, designations in common use in the world. And of these a Tathaagata (one who has won the truth) makes use indeed, but is not led astray by them."(27) The Buddha's dying words allegedly were: "All compounded nature of things is impermanent or subject to decay."(28) Immediately after the Buddha's demise, one of the disciples clarified the profound statement thus: They all, all beings that have life, shall lay Aside their complex form... that aggregation Of mental and material qualities, That gives them, or in heaven or on earth, Their fleeting individuality! E'en as the teacher... being such a one, ________________________________________ 25. Ibid., III. 136. The Book of Kindred Sayings (London: Luzac & Co., 1954), pt. III, p. 115. 26. Ibid. Also, the Nakulapitar section of the Samyutta Nikaaya, III. 1-5, carries the same discussion on not setting up a self or an I. 27. Po.t.t.hapada Sutta of the Diigha Nikaaya, Sutta IX. The translation is from The Dialogues of the Buddha, trans. T. W. Rhys Davids, Sacred Books of the Buddhists, vol. 2 (London: Luzac & Co., 1956), pt. I, p. 263 28. Mahaaparinibbaana Sutta of the Diigha Nikaaya, II. 120, 156. p.312 Unequalled among all the men that are, Successor of the prophets of old time, Mighty by wisdom, and in insight clear... Hath died!(29) Accordingly, the human organism is compounded, an aggregate of "mental and material qualities." These refer to the five skandhas, which are [1] corporeality (ruupa), [2] feeling or sensitive nature (vedanaa) , [3] primary imagery (sa^mj~naa), [4] interplay of the imagery or activity thereof (sa^mskaara) , and [5] conscious play or discriminative knowledge ( vij~naana ). Any of the above cannot be identified with a self or a being so as to assert "I feel" or "I am conscious, " as if feeling and consciousness are separate entities. In separation they lose all meaning but in unity they gain something. They are all intimately bound together to form the unit of becoming that we conventionally call the self. The classic expression of the unit of becoming is presented in the Questions of King Milinda (Milindapa~nha, 25) , where the learned monk questions the validity of assigning reality to the constituent parts of a chariot. He points out that the wheels are not the chariot; nor is the carriage, etc. But the chariot is. Likewise, the constituent parts of a king or a monk lack reality in themselves but the king or monk does exist, albeit in a conventional sense. Thus man's conglomerate existence cannot be reduced to its parts: he is a unique complex entity in the becomingness of nature. In another suutra, the analysis of the five skandhas goes a step further to condemn them as a burden of existence.(30) Each one of the skandhas is said to be corruptible and also the source of suffering (du.hkha). The reason for this is that the so-called self or ego is constantly grasping or clinging to the elements derivable in each of the skandhas. Looked at from another angle, the assertion of a personal identity or a self is the fact of the skandhas burdening or asserting themselves. The burdening process takes the form of a phenomenon of permanently settling down or a restraining bond with respect to the elements of the function despite the overbearing transient nature of things. A contradiction then arises in which there is permanence on the one hand and impermanence on the other. Such a situation becomes a cause for uneasiness or delusion, which is a form of suffering. It can now be seen that a self or aatman would be difficult to justify in the light of transiency or impermanence. The other alternative, nonself or anaatman, fares much better, for it does not have to adhere strictly to a structural analysis. It is in constant harmony or rhythm with passage. But now, the question arises, how does the Buddha explain the continuity of human experience? At this juncture, he introduces the concept of dependent or relational _________________________________ 29. Ibid., II. 157. The Dialogues of the Buddha (London: Luzac & Co., 1959), pt. II, p. 175. 30. Samyutta Nikaaya III. 25. On the Burden. Translation from The Book of Kindred Sayings, pt. III, pp. 24-31. p.313 origination (pratiityasamutpaada), which is commonly called the Wheel of Life or Becoming. No experience or event, according to this concept, happens in isolation. Each arises from and is within a multidimensional background. Thus the Wheel begins (quite arbitrarily, since any element in it could be taken to be the point of inception) in the following manner: Conditioned by ignorance activities come to pass, conditioned by activities consciousness; thus conditioned [arises] name-and-shape; and sense arises, contact, feeling, craving, grasping, becoming, birth, decay-and-death, grief, suffering... even such is the uprising of this entire mass of ill. But from the utter fading away and ceasing of ignorance [arises] ceasing of activities, and thus comes ceasing of this entire mass of ill.(31) Consequently, the Wheel of Life, similar in nature to the five skandhas, can be looked upon as the cause of suffering, but it also can be the basis for a way out. The five skandhas and the twelve elements of the Wheel express the empirical nature in man and yet the Buddha, paradoxical as it might seem, expounds the middle doctrine within such a context. In short, the anaatman must be sought within the becomingness of things. This spirit was captured very well by Buddhagho.sa quite a few centuries later: There is no doer (attaa, aatman) who does the deed (Kamma, karma); Nor one who reaps the content (phala) of the deed as such. The aggregates of being (Khandhas, skandhas) continue to become. This alone is the correct view [of the reality of experience].(32) Again: There is suffering (dukkha, du.hkha) but none who suffers; Doing exists but none who does (i.e., no doer) There is cessation (nirodha) but none who ceases (i.e., the extinguished person in the nirvaa.nic realm) The path (magga, maarga) exists but not the goer (i.e., one who experiences empirical or tangible elements)(33) And thus in a very cryptic way the concept of anaatman has been advanced. Its discovery must be considered one of the greatest insights by an Asian. Many of us are only now feeling its full impact. CONCLUSION We have seen that the actual entity and anaatman are dynamic concepts and, consequently, that they do not lend themselves to any static description or analysis. This does not mean, however, that all descriptive or analytic attempts or devices must be ruled out completely. These are vitally important, espe- _________________________________ 31. The Book of Kindred Sayings, pt. II, p. 13. 32. Visuddhimagga XIX. 602. 33. Ibid., XVI. 513. p.314 cially to ordinary thinking and understanding based on such thinking. Both Whitehead and the Buddha acknowledged the fact that although language and the thought process go a long way in promoting man's knowledge of things, they have limitations, and in the final analysis they fail to help man grasp reality as such. Whitehead said it quite pointedly: "Only what is clearly and distinctly conceived (or perceived) is verbalized. Frequently, however, that which is verbalized is superficial."(34) Since both men were interested in man's temporal process, they concentrated on the "elements" that can be divulged in that process without being restricted to or caught up in the "elements" themselves. They worked from the inside, the human experience, to treat the myriad "elements" at play. Where Whitehead had the whole Western philosophical and scientific tradition to rely on in refining his theories, the Buddha principally worked alone and finally revolted against the prevailing dogmatic tradition. The Buddha's view was in a way revolutionary, in that wisdom entailed the vision of an ontological absolute in the flux of things rather than the traditional unity with the metaphysical absolute in the flux of things. In this respect, both men disdained to resort to school metaphysics, since it would lead to more problems and result in inane descriptions. Where Whitehead resorted to an increasingly inclusive method of "descriptive generalization" grounded in concrete experiential elements, and hoped for a syno ptic vision of things in process, the Buddha plunged straight into the disciplinary and introspective course in order to control the rise of suffering states of being and thereby view things as they really are (yathaabhuutam, or the achievement of the nirvaa.nic realm). Both were empiricists in this respect: Whitehead remained with the tangible aspects of experience as far as possible but made way for the acceptance of nonexperiential data in the end; the Buddha, on the other hand, sought an absolute ground of existence in the experiential components themselves and, in so doing, had to reappraise the whole order of things so that the ground of understanding paralleled and ultimately coincided with the reality of things. For both the passage of the temporal fact must be unhampered in the physical as well as the mental realm. Whitehead is understandably more scientific in treating the rise of abstractions, but the Buddha too accounted for their rise, the whole realm of symbolism, and the dubious role of dogmatic views (d.r.s.ti). The Buddha always invoked the principle of indeterminacy or indescribability (avyaak.rta) when anything definitive or absolute was demanded, because he saw that definitive answers on the abstrac tive or symbolic level only vitiate the temporal fact in passage. _______________________________ 34. A. H. Johnson, "Whitehead as Teacher and Philosopher, " Philosophy and Phenomenological Research XXIX, no. 3 (Mar. 1969), 360. P.315 In analyzing the temporal fact, both saw the need for a twofold approach, the morphological and the genetic. A temporal fact can be "seen" morphologically in the sense of a structure but not genetically; and yet both aspects are only complementary phases of each other. As Whitehead says, "An actual entity is to be conceived both as a subject presiding over its own immediacy of becoming, and a superject which is the atomic creature exercising its function of objective immortality."(35) This is an attempt to accommodate the static, structural aspect within the dynamic becoming. The Buddha too gave a morphological analysis of experience by way of the five skandhas, twelve aayatanas, and eighteen dhaatus, but in the ultimate sense these had to be subsumed under the genetic process. Thus for both the genetic process was supreme, and was that into which all the elements of the structural analysis had to be framed. Both men took the world, inclusive of man, to be nonbifurcated or, in Whiteheadian terms, to have no disjunctive reality. Both, however, acknowledged the fact that man is basically a bifurcating creature, forever asserting his own individuality. And yet, as Whitehead rightly observes, "process and individuality require each other. In separation all meaning evaporates."(36) For the Buddha, there is a continuity of the becoming process by virtue of the carry-over of the subjectivity-corporeality (naama-ruupa) in different forms. Such forms are relative to the contents of the five skandhas, etc., as they are involved in the experiential process. Thus for both there is no room for mere personal identity, self, mind, or ego. Whitehead, like the Buddha, dismisses the notion of a consciousness that is prior to experience."(37)He even goes to the extent of saying that "mental operations do not necessarily involve consciousness."(38) The nonbifurcated world means that there is interconnectedness. Here both men worked within the monadic structure.(39) Where Whitehead introduced the doctrine of mutual immanence of actual entities, the Buddha also expounded on the nature of a unique relational origination (pratiityasamutpaada) where all experiential arisings are involved in the total relational sense. For both there was a serious repudiation of any "vacuous actuality." _____________________________________ 35. Process and Reality, p. 71. 36. A. N. Whitehead, Modes of Thought (New York: Macmillan Co., 1938), p. 133. In the same vein, he says,"One main doctrine, developed in these lectures, is that 'existence' (in any of its senses) cannot be abstracted from 'process.' The notions of 'process' and 'existence' presuppose each other." Ibid., p. 131. 37. "The principle that I am adopting is that consciousness presupposes experience, and not experience consciousness." Process and Reality, p. 83. 38. Ibid., p. 130. 39. There is a feeling that the germs of monadology may have been an Asian import rather than a coincidence since Leibniz had access to the material on cosmology and philosophy brought back by the Jesuit fathers from their trips to Asia.