Pragmatic Buddhism essence
The Four Noble Truths, which include the Eightfold Path, are the doctrinal notions on which there is unanimous agreement among Buddhist groups of all denominations. The most pragmatic scholars, those who consider that knowledge must be put into action if it is to become wisdom, maintain that not only are the Four Noble Truths the entrance door to the Teachings, but that they alone make up the whole doctrinal essence.
Still the sole Noble Truths might not satisfy those who dislike matters of faith. The Buddha said in his first discourse, Setting in Motion the Wheel of Truth (Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta in Pali), that the statement of each of the Noble Truths is to be understood, its necessity is to be realized, and its accomplishment is to be actually experienced. The first of these three statements, the need to grasp and comprehend each of the truths, generates the demand for some additional notions. And the selection of these few notions is the source of disagreements about the essence of the Teachings among the several proposals.
Gustavo Estrada, the pragmatic Colombian author, suggests that the Buddha himself might have resolved this issue in the short version of the discourse known as The Four Foundations of Mindfulness (Satipaṭṭhāna Sutta in Pali). In addition to the Three Characteristics and the Three Refuges, the essence of the Teachings is completed by the five items that the Buddha enumerates in the fourth section of that important discourse. This section, which is known as the Dhammãnupassanã or the contemplation of the Teachings, lists the five items which in their logical sequence (not as they appear in the discourse) are:
The Four Noble Truths (ariya-sacca in Pali, arya-satya in Sanskrit) are the statements that summarize the Teachings (suffering, thirst, extinction and noble path).
The Five aggregates of individuality (khandha in Pali, Skandha in Sanskrit) are the aspects or phenomena of existence (physical body or form, sensations, perceptions, conditioned formations and cognition) that create in human beings the appearance or illusion of a soul—a permanent immaterial substance. The significance of the aggregates is quite important in Buddhist doctrine as they are required for the comprehension of the Buddha’s summary of the First Noble Truth: "The five aggregates of individuality generate suffering."
The Seven factors of Inner Awakening (Bojjhanga in Pali, bodhyanga in Sanskrit) are the factors (attention or mindfulness, reflection on the Teachings, persistence or energy, enthusiasm or joy, serenity, ecstasy and equanimity) that contribute to progress in the walk of the Noble Path. Attention (more precisely right attention), the first factor, includes both the permanent alertness of everything that happens to or within us and the practice of meditation as the best technique to strengthen our ability to hold awareness.
The Five Hindrances to Direct Knowledge (nīvarana in Pali, nīvarana in Sanskrit) are situations or circumstances (sensuality, hostility, torpor, nervousness, doubt) that obstruct or get in the way of direct knowledge. Together with the Seven Factors of Inner Awakening, the Five Hindrances are expressions of the sixth habit of the Noble Path—right effort—which encourages all kind of actions that favor progress toward the cessation of suffering and persuade against any deviations from the Noble Path.
The Twelve Spheres of Mind Activity (saláyatana in Pali, Ayatana in Sanskrit), six senses (six internal sense bases) and their corresponding objects (six external sense bases), are the group of the six pairs formed by eyes, ears, nose, tongue, sense body and brain with visible things, sounds, smells, tastes, physical contact and thoughts, respectively. The twelve spheres stress the role of external objects in inner experience. External objects may be pleasant, unpleasant or neutral; the sensations that result from our contact with them might also be pleasant, unpleasant or neutral. Control over both external objects and the sensations they generate (second aggregate of individuality) is limited. Control over perceptions, the nervous system processing of sensations, is not only significant but subject to improvement through the application of the Teachings. But most important, this control is instrumental in the elimination of suffering. The six sense side of the twelve spheres acts as intermediary between phenomena, the six sense objects, on one side, and perceptions, conditioned formations and cognition (third, fourth and fifth aggregate respectively), on the other. The phenomena from which the sense objects originate take place either out of our physical form (sights, sounds, smells) or within our body (thoughts, body functions).
Pragmatic Buddhism considers everything beyond these seven notions (characteristics, refuges, noble truths, aggregates, factors of inner awakening, obstacles of direct knowledge, and spheres of mind activity) as indeterminate (metaphysical beings, immaterial entities), unnecessary (spiritual masters or gurus, rituals) or useless (legends, metaphysical places).
Groups and organizations
Pragmatic Buddhists are not affiliated to any specific Buddhist tradition and are not trained on any particular lineage. Though some organizations present themselves as Pragmatic Buddhists, they still follow teachers or practice rituals used by some of the branches of religious Buddhism. Consequently, they do not fit within the definition above. On the other hand, there are groups, followers of the Teachings of the Buddha, that, in spite of not using of such denomination, they are definitely pragmatic. Most branches of the so called Vipassana movement fit in this unspecified “pragmatic” category; in general, their accounts make no reference to beliefs, rituals or any practice that could be associated to religious systems.
Pragmatic Buddhism and spirituality
In spite of any semantic consideration Buddhism is, in the eyes of the entire world, the great twenty-five-century- old religion and a Buddhist is someone who follows such religion. This is why the “pragmatic” qualifier is required. Within such consideration, two points deserve attention. One, Pragmatic Buddhism does share with Buddhism, with the religion and the philosophy, the essence of the Buddha’s Teachings which is common to all Buddhist schools and branches.
Two, Pragmatic Buddhism is spiritual in spite of its reluctance to deal with metaphysical issues. Pragmatic Buddhism fits quite well within the non-religious or atheist spirituality as defined by the French contemporary philosopher André Comte-Sponville. This writer states that it is possible to be spiritual without beliefs in metaphysical entities. The important matter, according to the French philosopher, is not about God, religion or atheism but about spiritual life. Comte-Sponville defines Spirituality as "our finite relationship to infinity, our temporal experience of eternity, our relative access to the absolute."[11] To the question of whether human beings can do it without religion, Comte-Sponville replies (parentheses are added to the quote): “yes, we can do it with no religion but we cannot live or, at least, we should not live without communion (sense of community: Buddhism's sangha), fidelity (to a set of principles: Buddhism's Dhamma) and love (Buddhism's loving-kindness or Metta which develops when the mind is free from hate or ill-will).” Therefore, the practice of Pragmatic Buddhism—the pragmatic walk of the eightfold path to eliminate suffering— satisfies the spiritual longings of people of all faiths (as long as their beliefs do not exclude openmindedness) or of no faith at all, agnostic thinkers or atheists alike.
References
1. See, for example, Samyutta Níkāya 56.31: Simsapa sutta.
2. Majjhíma Nikāya 63: Cuula-malunkhya sutta.
3. Anguttara Níkāya 10.96: Kokanuda sutta; Majjhíma Nikaaya 72: Aggi-Vacchagotta Sutta; Samyutta Níkāya 44.1- 44.11: Abyākata-samyutta.
4. Conze,Edward (1997). Buddhism: Its Essence and Development(New York: Riverhead Books) .
5. Hahn, Thich Nhat (1998). The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching. Berkeley, California: Parallax Press .
6. William Hart (1987), The Art of Living, Vipassana Meditation as Taught by S. N. Goenka (New York: HarperCollins Publishers)
7. J .Krishnamurti: 3rd Seminar Madras 16 Jan 1981
8. Stephen Batchelor. Buddhism without Beliefs (1997) (New York: Riverhead Books.
9. Lama Surya Das(1998) Awakening the Buddha Within (New York: Broadway Books).
10. Estrada, Gustavo (2008). Hacia el Buda desde el Occidente. Cummings, Georgia: Axess Book Printing .
11.Comte-Sponville, André (2007). The Little Book of Atheist Spirituality. London: Penguin Group .