All people in the world, including the Thai people, are
now in the same situation as were the Kalama people of
Kesaputtanigama, India, during the time of the Buddha. Their
village was in a place through which many religious teachers
passed. Each of these teachers taught that his personal doctrine
was the only truth, and that all others before and after him
were wrong. The Kalamas could not decide which doctrine
they should accept and follow. The Buddha once came to their
village and the Kalamas brought up this problem with him:
that they did not know which teacher to believe. So the Buddha
taught them what is now known as the Kalama Sutta, which
we will examine here.
Nowadays, worldly people can study many different
approaches to economic, social, and technological development.
The universities teach just about everything. Then, regarding
spiritual matters, here in Thailand alone we have so many
teachers, so many interpretations of the Buddha's teachings,
and so many meditation centers that nobody knows which
teaching to accept or which practice to follow. Thus it can be
said that we have fallen into the same position as the Kalamas
were in.
The Buddha taught them, and us, not to accept or believe
anything immediately. He gave ten basic conditions to beware
of in order to avoid becoming the intellectual slave of anyone,
even of the Buddha himself. This principle enables us to know
how to choose the teachings which are truly capable of quenching
suffering (dukkha). The ten examples which the Buddha gave
in the Kalama Sutta follow.
1. Ma anussavena : do not accept and believe just
because something has been passed along and retold through
the years. Such credulity is a characteristic of brainless people,
or "sawdust brains," such as those in Bangkok who once
believed that there would be disasters for the people born in
the "ma years" (those years of the traditional twelve year
Thai calendar whose names begin with "ma," namely, years
five through eight--small snake, big snake. horse, and goat).
2. Ma paramparaya : do not believe just because some
practice has become traditional. People tend to imitate what
others do and then pass the habit along, as in the story of the
rabbit frightened by the fallen bael fruit *(The same story as "Chicken Little").
The other animals
saw it running at full-strength, and then so frightened and
excited each other that they ran after it. Most of them tripped
and fell, broke their necks, or tumbled to death off cliffs.
Any vipassana practice that is done in imitations of others, as
a mere tradition, leads to similar results.
3. Ma itikiraya : do not accept and believe merely
because of the reports and news spreading far and wide through
one's village, or even throughout the world. Only fools are
susceptible to such "rumors," for they refuse to exercise their
own intelligence.
4. Ma pitakasampadanena : do not accept and believe
just because something is cited in a pitaka. The word "pitaka, "
which is used for the Buddhist scriptures, means anything
written or inscribed upon any suitable writing material.
Memorized teachings which are passed on orally should not be
confused with pitaka. Pitakas are a certain kind of conditioned
thing which are under humanity's control. They can be created,
improved, and changed by human hands. So we cannot trust
every letter and word in them. We need to use our powers of
discrimination to see how those words can be applied to the
quenching of suffering. The various schools of Buddhism all
have their own canons, among which there are discrepancies.
5. Ma takkahetu : do not believe just because something
fits with the reasoning of logic (takka). This is merely one
branch of study used to try to figure out the truth. Takka,
what we call "logics," can go wrong if its data or its methods
are incorrect.
6. Ma nayahetu : do not believe just because something
is correct on the grounds of naya (deductive and inductive
reasoning) alone. These days, naya is called "philosophy." In
Thailand, we translate the word "philosophy" as "prajna, "
which the Indian people cannot accept because "naya" is only
one point of view. It is not the highest or absolute wisdom
which they call "panna" or "prajna." Naya, or nyaya, is
merely a branch of thought which reasons on the basis of
assumption or hypotheses. It can be incorrect if the reasoning
or choice of assumptions is inappropriate.
7. Ma akaraparivitakkena : do not believe or accept just
because something appeals to one's common sense, which is
merely snap judgements based on one's tendencies of thought.
We like using this approach so much that it becomes habitual.
Boastful philosophers like to use this method a great deal and
consider it to be clever.
8. Ma ditthinijjhanakkhantiya : do not believe just
because something stands up to or agrees with one's
preconceived opinions and theories. Personal views can be wrong.
or our methods of experiment and verification might be
incorrect, and then will not lead to the truth. Accepting what
fits our theories may seem to be a scientific approach, but
actually can never be so, since its proofs and experiments are
inadequate.
9. Ma bhabbarupataya : do not believe just because
the speaker appears believable. Outside appearances and the
actual knowledge inside a person can never be identical. We
often find that speakers who appear credible on the outside
say incorrect and foolish things. Nowadays, we must be wary
of computers because the programmers who feed them data
and manipulate them may feed in the wrong information or
use them incorrectly. Do not worship computers so much, for
doing so goes against this principle of the Kalama Sutta.
10. Ma samano no garu ti : do not believe just because
the samana or preacher, the speaker, is "our teacher." The
Buddha's purpose regarding this important point is that no
one should be the intellectual slave of someone else, not even
of the Buddha himself. The Buddha emphasized this point
often, and there were disciples, such as the venerable Sariputta,
who confirmed this practice. They did not believe the Buddha's
words immediately upon hearing them, but believed only after
adequately considering the advice and putting it to the test of
practice. See for yourselves whether there is any other religious
teacher in the world who has given this highest freedom to his
disciples and audiences! Thus in Buddhism there is no dogmatic
system, there is no pressure to believe without the right to
examine and decide for oneself. This is the greatest special
quality of Buddhism which keeps its practitioners from being
the intellectual slaves of anyone, as explained above. We Thais
should not volunteer to follow the West as slavishly as we are
doing now. Intellectual and spiritual freedom is best.
The ten examples of the Kalama Sutta are a surefire
defense against intellectual dependence or not being one's
own person: that is, neglecting one's own intelligence and
wisdom in dealing with what one hears and listens to, what is
called in Dhamma language paratoghosa ("sound of others").
When listening to anything, one should give it careful attention
and full scrutiny. If there is reason to believe what has been
heard and it results in the genuine quenching of suffering,
then one finally may believe it one-hundred percent.
The principle of the Kalama Sutta is appropriate for
everyone, everywhere, every era, and every world -even for
the world of devas (gods). Nowadays the world has been shrunk
by superb communications. Information can be exchanged
easily and rapidly. People can receive new knowledge from
every direction and corner of the globe. In the process, they
don't know what to believe and, therefore, are in the same
position as the Kalamas once were. Indeed, it is the Kalama
Sutta which will be their refuge. Please give it the good
attention and study it deserves. Consider it the greatest good fortune
that the Buddha taught the Kalama Sutta. It is a gift for
everyone in the world. Only people who are overly stupid will
be unable to benefit from this advice of the Buddha.
The Kalama Sutta is to be used by people of all ages.
Even children can apply its principles in order to be children
of awakening (bodhi), rather than children of ignorance (avijja).
Parents should teach and train their children to know how to
understand the words and instructions they receive, to see
how reasonable the words are and what kind of results will
come from them. When parents teach or tell their children
anything, the children should understand and see the benefits
of practicing what they are told. For example, when a child is
told not to take heroin, that child should believe not merely
because of fear. Rather, seeing the results of taking heroin, the
child fears them and then willingly refuses the drug on her or
his own.
None of the items in the Kalama Sutta state that children
should never believe anyone, should never listen to anyone.
They all state that children, and everyone else, should listen
and believe only after having seen the real meaning of
something and the advantages they will receive from such belief
and its subsequent practice. When a teacher teaches something,
having the children see the reason behind the teaching won't
make the children obstinate. For the obstinate ones, gently
add a bit of the stick and let them think things over again.
Children will understand the principle of the Kalama Sutta
more and more as they grow up. They will complete all ten
items themselves as they become fully mature adults, if we
train children by this standard.
A scientific world such as today's will be able to accept
gladly all ten tenets of the Kalama Sutta as being in line with
the scientific method and approach. There is not the least
contradiction between the principles of science and those of
the Kalama Sutta. Even the eighth item, which states that one
should not accept something just because it agrees with one's
own preconceived theories, does not contradict scientific
principles. True scientists emphasize experimental verification,
not their own concepts, opinions, and reasoning, as their main
criterion for acctepting something as true. Due to these standards
of the Kalama Sutta, Buddhism will meet the expectations
and needs of true scientists.
If one follows the principle of the Kalama Sutta, one
will have independent knowledge and reason with which to
understand the meaning and truth of ideas and propositions
heard for the first time. For example, when one hears that
greed, hatred, and delusion are dangerous and evil, one
understands thoroughly and instantly, because one already knows
through personal experience what these thing are like. One
believes in oneself rather than in the speaker. The way of
practice is the same in other cases. If a statement is about
something one has never seen or known before, one should
try to understand or get to know it first. Then one can consider
whether or not to accept the newly received teaching or advice.
One must not accept something just because one believes in
the speaker. One should take one's time, even if it means dying
before finding out. The Kalama Sutta can protect one from
becoming the intellectual slave of others, even on the highest
levels.
There's a problem everytime a new kind of medicine
comes out and gets advertised up and down all over the place.
Should we offer ourselves as guinea pigs to test it, out of
belief in the advertisements? Or should we wait until we have
sufficient reason to try just a little of it first, to see if it truly
gives good results, before fully relying on it? We should respond
to new statements and teachings as we respond to new medicines,
by depending on the principles in the Kalama Sutta as a true
refuge.
The Kalama Sutta requires us to have wisdom before
having faith. If one wants to have faith come first, then let it
be the faith which begins with wisdom, not faith which comes
from ignorance. The same holds true in the principle of the
Noble Eightfold Path: take wisdom or right understanding
as the starting point, then let faith grow out of that wisdom
or right understanding. Thai is the only safe approach. We
ought never to believe blindly immediately upon hearing
something, nor should we be forced to believe out of fear,
bribery, and the like.
The world nowadays is so overwhelmed by the power of
advertising that most people have become its slaves. It can
make people pull out their wallets to buy things they don't
need to eat, don't need to have, and don't need to use. It's so
commonplace that we absolutely must offer the principle of
the Kalama Sutta to our human comrades of this era.
Propaganda is much more harmful than ordinary advertising or
what is called paratoghosa in Pali. Even with ordinary
advertising, we must depend on the principle of the Kalama Sutta,
to say nothing of needing this principle to deal with outright
propaganda, which is full of intentional deceptions. So we
can say that the Kalarna Sutta is beneficial even in solving
economic problems.
I ask you all to consider, investigate, and test whether
there is found anywhere greater spiritual freedom than is
found in the Kalama Sutta. If someone says that Buddhism is
a religion of freedom, can there be any reason to dispute or
oppose that statement? Does this world which is intoxicated
with freedom really know or have freedom in line with the
principle of the Kalama Sutta? Is the lack of such freedom
caused by blind ignorance and indifference regarding the
Kalama Sutta? Some people even claim that it teaches us not
to believe or listen to anything. Moreover, some actually say
that the Buddha preached this sutta only for the Kalamas
there at that time. Why don't we open our eyes and take
notice that people nowadays have become intellectual slaves,
that they have lost their freedom much more than those
Kalamas in the time of the Buddha? Human friends, fellow
worshippers of freedom, I ask you to consider carefully the
essence and aim of the Kalama Sutta and the Buddha's
intention in teaching it. Then, your Buddhist quality of awakening
will grow fat and robust, rather than skinny and weak. Don't
go foolishly hating and fearing the Kalama Sutta. The word
"Thai" means "freedom." What kind of freedom are you
going to bring to our "Thainess"? Or what kind of Thainess
is fitting and proper for the Thainess of Budithists, the disciples
of the Buddha?
Now let us look further to see the hidden benefits and
advantages in the Kalama Sutta. The sutta, can help us to avoid
the tactless and narrow-minded talk which leads to violent
clashes and disputes. For example, it is foolish to set up an
unalterable rule for all families regarding who, husband or wife,
will be the front legs and who the hind legs of the elephant.
It all depends on the conditions and circumstances of each
specific family. According to the principles in the Kalama
Sutta and the law of conditionality (idappaccayata), we only
can say which roles are appropriate for whom depending on
the circumstances of each individual family. Do not speak
one-sidedly and go against natural principles.
Regarding abortion, people argue until black and red
in the face about whether or not it should be done, without
investigating to find out in which cases it should and in which
cases it should not. Once we follow the principles of the
Buddhist way of reasoning, each situation itself will tell as
what is proper and what is not. Please stop insisting on
onesided positions.
In the case of meat-eating versus vegetarianism, people
blindly argue for one extreme or the other. The problem is that
people are attached to regarding food as either meat or as
vegetable. For Buddhists, there is neither meat nor vegetables;
there are only elements in nature. Whether the eater or the
eaten, it's all merely natural elements. The situations where
we should eat meat and the circumstance in which we shouldn't
can be discerned by using the principle of the Kalama Sutta.
For just this reason, the Buddha never decisively said to eat
only meat or only vegetables, to not eat meat or not eat
vegetables. To speak so carelessly is not the way of Buddhists.
To say that democracy is always and absolutely good is
to speak with one's head in the sand. Those who insist on it
haven't considered that a democracy of selfish people is worse
than a dictatorship under an unselfish person who rules for
the sake of Dhamma and justice. A democracy of selfish people
means freedom to use their selfishness in a most frightening
and awful manner. Consequently, problems drag on endlessly
among those people who have a democracy of selfishness. Stop
saying that democracy is absolutely good or that dictatorship
is absolutely good. Instead, stick to the principle that both will
be good if they are based in Dhamma. Each population should
choose whichever system suits the particular circumstances
which it faces.
To say that the Prime Minister exclusively must be an
elected member of parliament, and never someone who the
people haven't chosen directly, is to babble as if deaf and
blind* (This issue has been a dangerous point of contention between the
military and progressive politicians, which has led to coup attempts).
Really, we must look to see how the situation ought to
be and what the causes and conditions are, then act correctly
according to the law of conditionality. This is the true Buddhist
way, befitting the fact that Buddhism embodies democracy in
the form of dhammic socialism. Therefore, the election of
members of parliament, the establishment of a government,
the structuring of the political system, and even the course of
social and economic development should be carried out using
the principle of the Kalama Sutta. Please consider each example.
You soon will discover the fact that we must rely upon the
principle of the Kalama Sutta.
More than ever the modern world needs the Kalama
Sutta as its basic operating principle. The world is spinning
fast with the defilements of humanity. It is shrinking due to
better transportation and communications. And it is about to
self-destruct because proper awareness, intelligence, and wisdom
are lacking. Under the power of defilement, the world is
worshipping materialism, sex and luxury, because it lacks
standards like that of the Kalama Sutta. No one knows
how to make choices in line with its principle. Consequently,
the world is wholly unfit for peace, while increasing in crime
and other harmful evils every moment. Let's eliminate all
these problems and evils by relying on the Kalama Sutta as
our standard. So let's yell at the top of our lungs, "Help!
Kalama Sutta, help us!"
In conclusion, the Kalama Sutta never forbids us to
believe in anything; it merely implores us to believe with
independent intelligence and wisdom. It never forbids us to
listen to anything; it merely asks us to listen without letting
our intelligence and wisdom become enslaved. Furthermore,
it helps us to be able to think, consider, investigate, and decide
with great subtlety and precision, so that we can find golden
needles in haystacks as huge as mountains.
Please come, Kalama Sutta! Come invest yourself in the
hearts and minds of all Buddhists, of all human beings, in
this modern world.