The World.
I say, friend, that where one is not born, does not age or
die, or pass from one state to another, or arise again — that ‘world’s end’ is
not to be known, seen or reached by travelling. Yet I say that there is no end
of dukkha without reaching world’s end. Rather, it is in this fathom-long body,
endowed with perception and mind, that I make known the world, the arising of
the world, the cessation of the world and the way to the cessation of the
world. (S.I,62)
The Buddha was fundamentally a meditator who focused
primarily on subjective experience rather than objective reality. Thus while
most people understand the world as an external reality, the Buddha understands
it through how we perceive and interpret it. This is really the only way in
which we can truly come to understand reality, which is actually only a
perception and interpretation in our own mind. And, most importantly, it is in
our own mind that we can end dukkha. This underscores the importance of mental
development or meditation as the means of realizing the truth of ‘the world’.
(Commentary by Ajahn Thiradhammo)
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