Types of Karma
Translated from the Visuddhi-Magga
The kinds of karma are those already briefly mentioned, as consisting of the
triplet beginning with meritorious karma and the triplet beginning with bodily
karma, making six in all.
To give them here in full, however, meritorious karma consists of the eight
meritorious thoughts which belong to the realm of sensual pleasure and show
themselves in alms-giving, keeping the precepts, etc., and of the five meritorious
thoughts which belong to the realm of form and show themselves in ecstatic
meditation,--making thirteen thoughts; demeritorious karma consists of the
twelve demeritorious thoughts which show themselves in the taking of life etc.;
and karma leading to immovability consists of the four meritorious thoughts
which belong to the realm of formlessness and show themselves in ecstatic meditation.
Accordingly these three karmas consist of twenty-nine thoughts.
As regards the other three, bodily karma consists of the thoughts of the body,
vocal karma of the thoughts of the voice, mental karma of the thoughts of the
mind. The object of this triplet is to show the avenues by which meritorious
karma etc. show themselves at the moment of the initiation of karma.
For bodily karma consists of an even score of thoughts, namely, of the eight
meritorious thoughts which belong to the realm of sensual pleasure and of the
twelve demeritorious ones. These by exciting gestures show themselves through
the avenue of the body.
Vocal karma is when these same thoughts by exciting speech show themselves
through the avenue of the voice. The thoughts, however, which belong to the
realm of form, are not included, as they do not form a dependence for subsequent
consciousness. And the case is the same with the thoughts which belong to the
realm of formlessness. Therefore they also are to be excluded from the dependence
of consciousness. However, all depend on ignorance.
Mental karma, however, consists of all the twenty-nine thoughts, when they
spring up in the mind without exciting either gesture or speech.
Thus, when it is said that ignorance is the dependence of the karma-triplet
consisting of meritorious karma etc., it is to be understood that the other
triplet is also included.
But it may be asked, "How can we tell that these karmas are dependent on
ignorance?" Because they exist when ignorance exists.
For, when a person has not abandoned the want of knowledge concerning misery
etc., which is called ignorance, then by that want of knowledge concerning
misery and concerning anteriority etc. he seizes on the misery of the round of
rebirth with the idea that it is happiness and hence begins to perform the
threefold karma which is its cause; by that want of knowledge concerning the
origin of misery and by being under the impression that thus happiness is
secured, he begins to perform karma that ministers to desire, though such karma
is really the cause of misery; and by that want of knowledge concerning cessation
and the path and under the impression that some particular form of existence will
prove to be the cessation of misery, although it really is not so, or that
sacrifices, alarming the gods by the greatness of his austerities, and other
like procedures are the way to cessation, although they are not such a way, he
begins to perform the threefold karma.
Moreover, through this non-abandonment of ignorance in respect of the Four Truths,
he does not know the fruition of meritorious karma to be the misery it really is,
seeing that it is completely overwhelmed with the calamities, birth, old age, disease,
death, etc.; and so to obtain it he begins to perform meritorious karma in its three
divisions of bodily, vocal, and mental karma, just as a man in love with a heavenly
nymph will throw himself down a precipice. When he does not perceive that at the end
of that meritorious fruition considered to be such happiness comes the agonizing
misery of change and disappointment, he begins to perform the meritorious karma above
described, just as a locust will fly into the flame of a lamp, or a man that is greedy
after honey will lick the honey-smeared edge of a knife. When he fails to perceive the
calamities due to sensual gratification and its fruition, and, being under the impression
that sensuality is happiness, lives enthralled by his passions, he then begins to
perform demeritorious karma through the three avenues, just as a child will play with
filth, or one who wishes to die will eat poison. When he does not perceive the misery
of the change that takes place in the constituents of being, even in the realm of
formlessness, but has a perverse belief in persistence etc., he begins to perform
mental karma that leads to immovability, just as a man who has lost his way will
go after a mirage.
As, therefore, karma exists when ignorance exists but not when it does not exist,
it is to be understood that this karma depends on ignorance. And it has been said as follows:
"O priests, the ignorant, uninstructed man performs meritorious karma, demeritorious
karma, and karma leading to immovability. But whenever, O priests, he abandons his
ignorance and acquires wisdom, he through the fading out of ignorance and the coming
into being of wisdom does not even perform meritorious karma."
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