Unit 3: Heterodox Ethical Systems
Table of Contents
Buddha Ethics: Pañcaśīla and Astāńgikamārga
Buddhist ethics is grounded in the Four Noble Truths, with the ethical life being the "path" (the Fourth Noble Truth) to the cessation of suffering (Duḥkha). The goal is Nirvāṇa.
The Four Noble Truths (Foundation):
- There is Suffering (Duḥkha).
- There is a cause of suffering (Samudāya - i.e., craving or Tṛṣṇā).
- There is a cessation of suffering (Nirodha - i.e., Nirvāṇa).
- There is a path to the cessation of suffering (Mārga).
Buddhist ethics *is* this path (Mārga).
1. Pañcaśīla (The Five Precepts)
This is the basic code of ethical conduct for all lay Buddhists. It is a set of voluntary abstentions:
- Abstain from taking life (Pāṇātipātā veramaṇī...) - This is the principle of Ahiṃsā (non-violence).
- Abstain from taking what is not given (Adinnādānā veramaṇī...) - i.e., stealing.
- Abstain from sexual misconduct (Kāmesumicchācārā veramaṇī...).
- Abstain from false speech (Musāvādā veramaṇī...) - i.e., lying, divisive speech, harsh speech.
- Abstain from intoxicants that lead to heedlessness (Surāmerayamajjapamādaṭṭhānā veramaṇī...).
2. Astāńgikamārga (The Noble Eightfold Path)
This is the complete and systematic path to enlightenment, which includes ethical conduct, mental discipline, and wisdom.
The path is divided into three groups:
| Group | Path | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Wisdom (Prajñā) | 1. Right View | Understanding the Four Noble Truths and the nature of reality (e.g., impermanence). |
| 2. Right Intention | Having the intention of renunciation, non-ill-will, and harmlessness. | |
| 2. Ethical Conduct (Śīla) | 3. Right Speech | Abstaining from lying, gossip, harsh speech, and idle chatter. |
| 4. Right Action | Following the Five Precepts (Pañcaśīla). | |
| 5. Right Livelihood | Avoiding professions that harm others (e.g., weapon trading, butchery, selling intoxicants). | |
| 3. Mental Discipline (Samādhi) | 6. Right Effort | Cultivating good qualities and abandoning bad qualities. |
| 7. Right Mindfulness | Being fully aware of one's body, feelings, mind, and reality in the present moment. | |
| 8. Right Concentration | Developing deep meditative states (Samādhi) that lead to enlightenment. |
Jaina Ethics: Aṇuvrata and Mahāvrata
Jaina ethics is perhaps the most rigorous in its emphasis on non-violence.
Metaphysical Foundation: The universe is full of Jīva (souls, life), which are found in humans, animals, plants, and even "non-living" things like water and wind. Karma is seen as a subtle physical matter that sticks to the soul due to passions, weighing it down and trapping it in Saṃsāra.
Ethical Goal: The goal is Mokṣa, which is achieved by stopping the influx of new karma (Saṃvara) and shedding all old karma (Nirjarā). This leads to the soul becoming pure and light, floating to the top of the universe.
The core of Jaina ethics is the Pañca Mahāvrata, or the Five Great Vows.
Ahiṃsā Paramo Dharmaḥ
"Non-violence is the highest virtue (Dharma)."
Aṇuvrata vs. Mahāvrata
Jainism prescribes two different levels of ethical vows, one for monks and nuns, and one for lay followers.
| The Vow | Mahāvrata (The "Great Vow") (For Monks & Nuns) | Aṇuvrata (The "Lesser Vow") (For Lay People) |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Ahiṃsā (Non-violence) | Absolute. Must not harm any life (even microscopic) in thought, word, or deed. (e.g., they wear mouth-cloths, sweep the ground). | Relative. Must not harm any sentient life (humans, animals) intentionally. Harm in professions like farming is accepted as a necessity. |
| 2. Satya (Truthfulness) | Absolute. Must not speak any untruth, even if it is pleasant. | Relative. Must not tell gross lies, especially those that cause harm (e.g., perjury, harmful gossip). |
| 3. Asteya (Non-stealing) | Absolute. Must not take anything that is not given, even a blade of grass. | Relative. Must not commit theft, robbery, or use false measures in business. |
| 4. Brahmacharya (Celibacy) | Absolute. Complete celibacy in thought, word, and deed. | Relative. Chastity. Remaining faithful to one's spouse. |
| 5. Aparigraha (Non-possession) | Absolute. Complete renunciation of all possessions, including clothes (for Digambara monks). | Relative. Limiting one's possessions and wealth to one's needs and giving the rest in charity. |
Cārvāka Ethics
The Cārvāka school (also called Lokāyata) is the only "heterodox" school that is also fully materialist. This foundation dictates its unique ethical position.
Metaphysical Foundation (or lack thereof):
- Epistemology: Pratyakṣa (perception) is the only valid source of knowledge (pramāṇa).
- Rejection of Metaphysics: They reject inference (anumāna) and testimony (śabda). Therefore, they reject everything that cannot be perceived:
- God
- Soul (Ātman)
- Afterlife (Heaven, Hell)
- Karma and Rebirth (Saṃsāra)
- Reality: The world is made of only the four perceivable elements (earth, water, fire, air). Consciousness is just a by-product of these elements, which dissolves at death.
The Cārvāka Ethic: Hedonism
Given this worldview, the Cārvāka ethics are a form of Hedonism (the pursuit of pleasure).
- The Goal: Since there is no afterlife, the only goal of human life is to maximize pleasure (Kāma) and minimize pain (Duḥkha) in this life.
- Rejection of Puruṣārthas: They reject Dharma and Mokṣa as "fictions" invented by priests. They accept only Artha (wealth) and Kāma (pleasure) as legitimate goals. Artha is the means to the end of Kāma.
- Core Tenet: They argue that one should not avoid pleasure just because it is mixed with pain.
"No one gives up eating fish because of the bones... One should not give up pleasure for fear of pain."
- Famous Verse:
"Yāvaj jīvet sukhaṃ jīvet, ṛṇaṃ kṛtvā ghṛtaṃ pibet"
"As long as you live, live happily; take a loan (ṛṇa) and drink ghee (clarified butter)."