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Bhava
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| Translations of भव | |
|---|---|
| English | being, worldly existence, becoming, birth, be, production, origin;[1] habitual or emotional tendencies. |
| Sanskrit | भव (IAST: bhava) |
| Pali | भव (bhava) |
| Vietnamese | hữu |
| Glossary of Buddhism | |
| Translations of भाव | |
|---|---|
| English | feeling, emotion, mood, becoming |
| Sanskrit | भाव (IAST: bhāva) |
| Pali | भाव (bhāva) |
| Burmese | ဘာဝ (MLCTS: bàwa̰) |
| Khmer | ភព (phob) or ភាវៈ (phiaveak) |
| Mon | ဘာဝ ([həwɛ̀ʔ]) |
| Sinhala | භව or භවය |
| Thai | ภวะ (RTGS: phawa) or ภาวะ (RTGS: phawa) |
| Glossary of Buddhism | |
The Sanskrit word bhava (भव) means being, worldly existence, becoming, birth, be, production, origin,[1] but also habitual or emotional tendencies.
In Buddhism, bhava is the tenth of the twelve links of Pratītyasamutpāda.[2] It is the link between reincarnations.[3] In the Thai Forest Tradition, bhava is also interpreted as the habitual or emotional tendencies which leads to the arising of the sense of self, as a mental phenomenon.[4]
In Buddhism
[edit]In Buddhism, bhava (not bhāva, condition, nature) means being, worldly existence, becoming, birth, be, production, origin[1] experience,[3] in the sense of rebirths and redeaths, because a being is so conditioned and propelled by the karmic accumulations.[3]
The term bhāva (भाव) is rooted in the term bhava (भव), and also has a double meaning, as emotion, sentiment, state of body or mind, disposition and character,[5] and in some context also means becoming, being, existing, occurring, appearance while connoting the condition thereof.[6]
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Bhava is the tenth of the twelve links of pratītyasamutpāda (dependent origination), which describes samsara, the repeated cycle of our habitual responses to sensory impressions which leads to renewed jāti, birth. Birth is usually interpreted as rebirth in one of the realms of existence, namely heaven, demi-god, human, animal, hungry ghost or hell realms (bhavacakra) of Buddhist cosmology.[3] In the Thai Forest Tradition, bhava is also interpreted as the habitual or emotional tendencies which leads to the arising of the sense of self, as a mental phenomenon.[4]
In the Jātakas, in which the Buddha didactically reminds various followers of experiences they shared with him in a past life, the hearers are said not to remember them due to bhava, i.e. to having been reborn.[7]
In Hinduism
[edit]This section needs expansion. You can help by adding missing information. (May 2016) |
Bhava appears in the sense of becoming, being, existing, occurring, appearance in the Vedanga literature Shrauta Sutras, the Upanishads such as the Shvetashvatara Upanishad, the Mahabharata and other ancient Hindu texts.[6]
See also
[edit]- Bhava samadhi – State of ecstatic consciousness
- Rebirth (Buddhism)
- Svabhava – Hindu and Buddhist concept and term
- Twelve Nidanas
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Monier Monier-Williams (1898), Sanskrit English Dictionary, Oxford University Press, Archive: भव Archived 13 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, bhava
- ^ Julius Evola; H. E. Musson (1996). The Doctrine of Awakening: The Attainment of Self-Mastery According to the Earliest Buddhist Texts. Inner Traditions. pp. 67–68. ISBN 978-0-89281-553-1.
- ^ a b c d Thomas William Rhys Davids; William Stede (1921). Pali-English Dictionary. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 499. ISBN 978-81-208-1144-7.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b DeGraff, Geoffrey (2013). With Each & Every Breath. A Guide to Meditation (PDF). pp. 10–11.
- ^ भव Archived 7 July 2017 at the Wayback Machine, Sanskrit English Dictionary, Koeln University, Germany
- ^ a b Monier Monier-Williams (1899), Sanskrit English Dictionary, Oxford University Press, Archive: भाव Archived 13 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, bhAva
- ^ Caroline A.F. Rhys Davids, Stories of the Buddha (Being Selections from the Jātakas), 1989, Dover Publications, Introduction, pp. xix, also see pp. 2, 6, 11, etc.
Bhava
View on GrokipediaEtymology and Core Concepts
Linguistic Origins
The term bhava derives from the Sanskrit root bhū, which fundamentally means "to be," "to become," or "to exist," evolving into a noun that signifies existence, birth, production, or a state of being.[4] This root conjugation produces related forms such as bhavati, the third-person singular present indicative meaning "he/she/it becomes" or "is," highlighting the dynamic process of manifestation or transition.[5] The semantic range of bhava thus encompasses both ontological becoming and the resultant condition of entity or emotion. In early Vedic literature, including the Rigveda, the root bhū and its derivatives like bhava appear in contexts of cosmic generation, often denoting "becoming" as an imperative ("be!") or in relation to worldly origins, with extensions to concepts of "earth" or "world" through cognates such as bhūmi (earth) and bhuvan (world, being).[6] By classical Sanskrit, the term's usage broadens to include psychological dimensions, such as emotional states or habitual tendencies, reflecting a shift from primarily physical or cosmic existence to inner conditions of mind and sentiment.[7] Cognates of bhava persist in related Indo-Aryan languages: in Pali, it directly corresponds as bhava, emphasizing "becoming" or "existence" in existential processes.[8] In Prakrit dialects, the form remains bhava or similar, retaining connotations of state or origin, as seen in inscriptions and texts where it aligns closely with Sanskrit usage.[3] This continuity underscores the term's adaptability across Middle Indo-Aryan vernaculars. The connotations of generation and manifestation in bhava trace to the Proto-Indo-European root *bʰuH- (or *bʰewh₂- in some reconstructions), meaning "to grow," "to become," or "to be," which also yields cognates like Latin fui ("I was") and Greek phuomai ("I become").[9] This ancient linguistic heritage informs bhava's layered meanings, providing a basis for its later applications in philosophical traditions.Philosophical Meanings
In Indian philosophy, bhava encompasses core meanings that span ontological, psychological, and processual dimensions, serving as a foundational concept for understanding existence and mental processes. Ontologically, bhava denotes "being" or "existence," representing the manifested state of reality in contrast to abhava (non-being or absence), as articulated in classical systems like Nyāya-Vaiśeṣika where it is posited as a real entity with its own cause.[10] Psychologically, it refers to emotional states or moods, such as attachment (rāga) or aversion (dveṣa), which bind the self (ātman) to phenomenal experience and hinder liberation in traditions like Vedānta.[11] Processually, bhava signifies "becoming" or "arising," capturing the dynamic transition from potentiality to manifestation, akin to the unfolding of conditioned states in early philosophical discourse.[12] Early texts like the Upaniṣads employ bhava to describe states of worldly attachment within the cycle of manifestation, portraying it as mental conditions that perpetuate bondage. For instance, the Śvetāśvatara Upaniṣad outlines eight bhavas as mental states—virtue, unrighteousness, knowledge, ignorance, dispassion, attachment, superhuman power, and its absence—arising from ignorance and sustaining the illusory identification with the body and world.[13] These bhavas reflect the intermediate phase of existential flux, where the self navigates between eternal essence and transient phenomena, emphasizing bhava as a condition of conditioned being rather than absolute reality. Bhava is distinguished from related concepts such as saṁskāra (latent impressions or subconscious tendencies formed by past experiences) and karma (action or its consequences), positioning it as the emergent state of formation that bridges volition and outcome. While karma initiates causal chains through deliberate acts and saṁskāra stores their subtle residues influencing future inclinations, bhava manifests as the active psychological or existential mode—such as a disposition toward attachment—that actualizes these in the present moment of becoming.[11] This intermediate role underscores bhava's function as a transitional locus, where mental and ontological processes converge without being reducible to prior imprints or subsequent effects. In non-sectarian texts like Patañjali's Yoga Sūtras, bhava relates to mental dispositions (bhāva-pratyaya) that shape cognition and samādhi states, often arising from prior karmic residues as innate tendencies toward absorption. For example, Sūtra 1.19 describes bhava-pratyayo in videhas (disembodied beings) and prakṛti-layins (those merged with nature), where inherent mental states lead to higher awareness without effortful practice, yet fall short of ultimate isolation (kaivalya).[14] Here, bhava highlights the conditioned yet potent role of psychological formation in spiritual evolution, distinct from deliberate yogic discipline.Bhava in Buddhism
Role in Dependent Origamation
In the Buddhist doctrine of dependent origination (paṭicca-samuppāda), bhava occupies the tenth position in the twelvefold chain of conditioned phenomena, arising from clinging (upādāna) and serving as the condition for birth (jāti).[15] This link represents the process of "becoming" or existence, wherein the deluded identification with a self—fueled by prior clinging—establishes the basis for future rebirth and the perpetuation of saṃsāra.[16] As articulated in the Pāli Canon, "With clinging as condition, becoming [bhava]; with becoming as condition, birth," bhava thus bridges the psychological impulses of attachment to the physical and experiential manifestations of renewed existence. Bhava is not merely passive existence but an active process conditioned by kammic volitions, manifesting in three primary realms: the sensual realm (kāmabhava), the realm of form (rūpabhava), and the formless realm (arūpabhava).[15] It encompasses two interrelated aspects: kamma-bhava, which refers to the intentional actions (kamma) generated in the present life that condition future rebirths, and upapatti-bhava, the resultant states of rebirth in specific realms arising from those actions.[16] For instance, meritorious or demeritorious deeds rooted in clinging propel the individual toward corresponding existential modes, such as rebirth in higher or lower realms, thereby sustaining the cycle of suffering (dukkha).[17] This dual structure underscores bhava's role as both a cause (through kamma) and an effect (through rebirth), highlighting the interdependent nature of conditioned arising. The cessation of bhava is integral to the unraveling of dependent origination, achieved through the abandonment of clinging via insight into impermanence (anicca) and non-self (anattā).[15] When bhava is eradicated, birth and subsequent aging, death, sorrow, and lamentation do not occur, leading to the cessation of suffering.[16] In the Pāli discourses, this is exemplified in teachings where bhava is tied to the delusion of ownership over a life-form, which insight reveals as conditioned and unreliable, thereby disrupting the chain at its kammic foundation. Thus, understanding bhava's conditioned role empowers the practitioner to transcend cyclic existence toward nibbāna.Interpretations Across Buddhist Schools
In Mahayana Buddhism, particularly within the Yogācāra school, bhava is interpreted as a mental construct deeply intertwined with the ālaya-vijñāna, or storehouse consciousness, which serves as the repository of karmic seeds that propel the continuity of existence across rebirths. This consciousness underlies the process of becoming by perfusing latent impressions (vāsanās) that shape perceptual experience and perpetuate saṃsāra, extending beyond mere physical rebirth to encompass the subtle mental fabrication of reality. Comparative studies note similarities between ālaya-vijñāna and the Theravāda concept of bhavanga in their roles in sustaining karmic continuity without positing an eternal self.[18] Vajrayāna traditions, building on Mahāyāna foundations, view bhava as the karmic propulsion toward rebirth within the twelve links of dependent origination, where clinging generates actions that determine future existences in the realms.[19] Theravāda interpretations, as elaborated by Buddhaghosa in the Visuddhimagga, delineate bhava into kamma-process becoming (volitional actions generating future results) and rebirth-process becoming (the resultant aggregates manifesting as new existence), emphasizing its impermanence (anicca) as a flux of mentality-materiality devoid of inherent essence. Cessation occurs through insight meditation (vipassanā), contemplating bhava's rise and fall to eradicate clinging, culminating in the arahant's destruction of the fetter of becoming. In contrast, Zen (Ch'an) Buddhism accentuates bhava's emptiness (śūnyatā), realizing it as devoid of self-nature through direct satori, where impermanence reveals all phenomena as interdependent and transient, dissolving the illusion of substantial existence without analytical deconstruction.[20][21] Modern scholarly analyses, such as those reconstructing early discourses, affirm bhava across schools as conditioned existence antithetical to liberation, with Theravāda's focus on its cessation via the Noble Eightfold Path highlighting interpretive continuity while Mahāyāna expansions underscore its mind-dependent nature. Buddhaghosa's detailed exegesis in the Visuddhimagga remains seminal, portraying bhava's abandonment through progressive path knowledges that foster dispassion toward all forms of becoming.[22]Bhava in Hinduism
In Philosophical Texts
In Advaita Vedanta, as articulated in Adi Shankara's commentaries, bhava-rupa (existent form) pertains to the empirical realm (vyavaharika satyam), where avidya or maya acts as the material cause, giving rise to the apparent world much like a seed sprouts into a plant, yet this is ultimately mithya (illusory) when contrasted with the absolute sat of Brahman, which remains unaltered and eternal.[23] In the Bhakti traditions, particularly as expounded in the Bhagavata Purana, bhava represents the profound devotional emotion that matures into pure love (prema), serving as the bridge to union with the divine. This stage of bhava-bhakti is depicted as an intense, heartfelt attachment that transcends ritualistic practice, where the devotee's emotions—such as longing and surrender—dissolve the sense of separation, culminating in ecstatic merger with Bhagavan, as illustrated in narratives of devotees like the gopis whose bhava leads to direct divine intimacy.[24] The Nyaya and Vaisheshika schools incorporate bhava into their ontological framework as a fundamental category denoting positive existence (bhava padartha), encompassing the six primary realities—substance, quality, action, generality, particularity, and inherence—that constitute the real world, in contrast to abhava (non-existence). In this realist metaphysics, bhava is absolute and independent, forming the basis for all cognizable entities and causal processes, thereby providing a structured analysis of reality beyond mere illusion.[25] References to bhava in the Bhagavad Gita, particularly in Chapter 2, connect it to the eternal cycle of birth and death (samsara), portraying existence (bhava) as the domain of the transient body while emphasizing the soul's immortality as prerequisite for moksha (liberation). In verse 2.16, Krishna declares that the unreal has no existence (nasato vidyate bhava), underscoring the impermanence of worldly becoming, which binds one to repeated births and deaths, and only through realization of the eternal atman can one transcend this cycle to attain freedom.[26]In Performing Arts and Aesthetics
In the Nāṭyaśāstra of Bharata Muni, a foundational Sanskrit treatise on dramaturgy composed between 200 BCE and 200 CE, bhāva denotes the mental or emotional states that form the core of performative expression, with eight primary sthāyi bhāvas (permanent emotions)—rati (love), hāsya (mirth), śoka (sorrow), krodha (anger), utsāha (heroism), bhaya (fear), jugupsā (disgust), and vismaya (wonder)—serving as the psychological foundation for evoking rasa, the aesthetic relish or flavor experienced by the audience.[27][28] These bhāvas are not merely internal feelings but are externalized through dramatic techniques to immerse spectators in a shared emotional transcendence, where bhāva matures into rasa via supportive elements like vibhāva (determinants or stimulants, such as setting or character interactions) and anubhāva (consequents or involuntary physical reactions, like trembling or tears).[27] This distinction underscores bhāva as the enduring emotional core, distinct from the transient triggers (vibhāva) and manifestations (anubhāva) that amplify its dramatic impact in theater and dance.[29] In Indian classical dance forms such as Bharatanatyam and Kathakali, bhāva is vividly realized through abhinaya (expressive acting), employing mudrās (hand gestures) and facial nuances to convey inner states and foster audience immersion. In Bharatanatyam, a South Indian solo dance tradition, dancers use aṅgikābhinaya (body language) and hastābhinaya (hand gestures) to depict bhāvas like krodha through sharp eye movements and dynamic poses, drawing directly from Nāṭyaśāstra principles to blend narrative storytelling with emotional depth.[29] Similarly, in Kathakali, a Kerala-based theatrical dance-drama, elaborate sātvika abhinaya (subtle emotional portrayal) utilizes stylized eye and eyebrow movements alongside vibrant costumes to externalize bhāvas such as bhaya or vismaya, enabling performers to embody mythological characters and evoke rasa in viewers through heightened physical and gestural precision. These techniques ensure that bhāva transcends the performer, creating a communal aesthetic experience rooted in ancient dramatic theory.[29] The concept of bhāva has evolved from its origins in ancient Sanskrit theater as outlined in the Nāṭyaśāstra—where it integrated poetry, music, and mime for ritualistic performances—to its refinement in medieval treatises like the Abhinaya Darpana (c. 10th century CE), influencing the codification of regional dance styles during the Bhakti movement.[30] By the 19th and 20th centuries, as Indian classical dances like Bharatanatyam were revived from temple and court traditions amid colonial influences, bhāva adapted to modern stages, emphasizing psychological subtlety over overt ritual while preserving rasa-oriented immersion in contemporary interpretations.[31] This progression highlights bhāva's enduring role in bridging historical performative rituals with accessible aesthetic expressions in global contexts.[32]Comparative and Broader Contexts
Similarities and Differences Between Traditions
In both Buddhism and Hinduism, the concept of bhava shares an ontological foundation as "becoming" or existential process, rooted in the common Indic vocabulary of Sanskrit where it derives from the verbal root bhū meaning "to be" or "to become," and is intrinsically linked to samsara, the cyclical process of birth, death, and rebirth perpetuating conditioned existence.[3] This shared understanding positions bhava as a dynamic state of arising and transformation within the wheel of suffering and continuity.[33] A key divergence lies in bhava's characterization: in Buddhism, it functions as an impersonal causal mechanism within the doctrine of dependent origination (pratītyasamutpāda), specifically as the tenth link that conditions rebirth into one of the realms without implying a permanent self, emphasizing an automated process fueled by ignorance and craving leading to further suffering.[22] In contrast, Hinduism often interprets bhava more personally, as an emotional or devotional state (bhāva-bhakti) in bhakti traditions, where it denotes intimate attitudes of love, surrender, or longing toward the divine, or as transient moods (sthāyī-bhāva) in aesthetic theory that evoke refined emotional relish (rasa) in performing arts.[1] In Jainism, bhava refers to mental states or thought-activities that influence the soul's karmic bondage and transmigration, sharing the karmic dimension with Buddhist and Hindu views but emphasizing ethical purification for liberation.[3] This personal dimension in Hinduism integrates bhava into paths of relational devotion or knowledge, differing from Buddhism's non-theistic, process-oriented view. Historical interactions between these conceptualizations intensified during the Gupta period (c. 320–550 CE), when Buddhist scholars composed systematic works elaborating bhava within causal chains, while contemporaneous Hindu texts like early Puranas and bhakti hymns began emphasizing devotional bhava amid royal patronage that supported both traditions, fostering mutual borrowings in metaphysical vocabulary without fully resolving doctrinal tensions.[34] Ultimately, the traditions contrast in their soteriological aims for bhava: Buddhism seeks its complete cessation through insight into emptiness, culminating in nirvāṇa as the unconditioned release from the cycle of becoming, whereas Hinduism pursues transcendence of bhava's bindings via bhakti (devotional immersion) or jñāna (discriminative knowledge), realizing unity with Brahman and liberating the self from samsaric flux.[35]Influence in Modern Thought
Modern Indian philosopher Sri Aurobindo reinterprets bhava within his integral yoga, transforming it into a vehicle for evolutionary consciousness. In his framework, saksi-bhava (witness attitude) represents a detached yet engaged state of awareness, enabling the ascent from mental limitations to supramental consciousness as part of humanity's spiritual evolution.[36] This evolves traditional bhava from emotional devotion in bhakti to a progressive force in cosmic transformation, where consciousness drives the integration of matter and spirit toward divine realization.[37] In cultural applications, Satyajit Ray incorporated elements of bhava and its aesthetic counterpart rasa into his filmmaking, evoking nuanced emotional depths in narratives of human struggle. Ray's Apu Trilogy (1955–1959) applies rasa theory—rooted in bhava as internalized emotion—to portray life's transient joys and sorrows, blending realism with subtle expressive moods that resonate universally while retaining Indian poetic sensibility. This approach influenced global cinema by demonstrating how bhava-driven empathy can humanize social critiques without melodrama.[38] Contemporary scholarship since 2000 has explored bhava in mindfulness practices that blend Buddhist insight with Hindu devotional elements, emphasizing emotional cultivation for holistic well-being. Post-2000 studies highlight bhava's integration into hybrid therapies, where devotional attitudes enhance present-moment awareness, countering bhava's samsaric connotations in Buddhism with transformative emotional presence in yoga-infused mindfulness.[39] For instance, research on sakshi (witnessing) practices draws on bhava to foster non-attached observation, bridging Hindu self-inquiry with Buddhist sati for stress reduction and ethical living in secular contexts.References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Reconstruction:Proto-Indo-European/b%25CA%25B0uH-
