|
One of the six heretical teachers contemporaneous with the
Buddha. He held (*1) that there is no cause, either
ultimate or remote, for the depravity of beings or for their rectitude. The
attainment of any given condition or character does not depend either on one's
own acts, nor on the acts of another, nor on human effort. There is no such
thing as power or energy or human strength or human vigour. All beings (sattā),
all lives (pānā), all existent things (bhūtā), all living substances (jīvā),
(*2) are bent this way and that by their fate, by the necessary conditions of
the class to which they belong, by their individual nature; it is according to
their position in one or other of the six classes (abhijāti) that they
experience ease or pain.
There are fourteen hundred thousands of principle genera
or species (pamukhayoniyo), again six thousand others and again six hundred.
There are five hundred kinds of kamma - there are sixty two paths (or modes of
conduct), sixty two periods, six classes among men, eight stages of a prophet’s
existence (atthapurisabhūmi), (*3) forty nine hundred kinds of occupation, forty
nine hundred Ājīvakas, forty nine hundred Wanderers (Paribbājaka), forty nine
hundred Nāga abodes (or species), two thousand sentient existences (vīse
indriyasate), three thousand infernal states, thirty six celestial, mundane or
passionate grades (rajodhātuyo), seven classes of animate beings (saññigabbhā),
or beings with the capacity of generating by means of separate sexes, seven of
inanimate production (asaññigabbhā), seven of production by grafting (niganthagabbhā),
seven grades of gods, men, devils, great lakes, precipices, dreams.
(*1) D.i.53 f. Makkhali, his views and his followers are
also referred to at M.i.231, 238, 483, 516f.; S. i.66, 68; iii.211; iv.398;
A.i.33f., 286; iii.276, 384; also J. i.493, 509; S. iii.69 ascribes the first
portion of the account of Makkhali's views (as given in D.i.53)
that there is no cause, no reason for depravity or purity to
Pūrana Kassapa. A.i.286 apparently confounds Makkhali with Ajita Kesakambala,
and A.iii.383f. represents Pūrana Kassapa as though he were a disciple of
Makkhali.
(*2) Buddhaghosa (DA.i.160 ff.) gives details of these
four classes showing how they are meant to include all that has life on this
earth, from men down to plants. But the explanation is very confused and makes
the terms by no means mutually exclusive.
(*3) Buddhaghosa gives them as babyhood, playtime, trial
time, erect time, learning time, ascetic time, prophet time, and prostrate
time, with (very necessary) comments on each.
There are eighty four thousand periods during which both
fools and wise alike, wandering in transmigration, shall at last make an end of
pain. This cannot be done by virtue, or penance, or righteousness. Ease and
pain, measured out as it were with a measure, cannot be altered in the course of
transmigration (samsāra); there can be neither increase nor decrease thereof
both fools and wise alike, wandering in transmigration, exactly for the allotted
term, shall then, and then only, make an end of pain.
Makkhali's views as given in the Buddhist books are
difficult to understand, the Commentators themselves finding it a hopeless task.
He seems to have believed in infinite gradations of existence; in his view, each
individual thing has eternal existence, if not individually, at least in type.
He evidently had definite conceptions of numerous grades of beings, celestial,
infernal and mundane, as also of the infinity of time and the recurrent cycles
of existence. He seems to have conceived the world as a system in which
everything has a place and a function assigned to it, a system in which chance
has no place and which admits of no other cause whatever, of the depravity or
purity of beings, but that which is implied in the word Fate or Destiny (niyati).
All types of things and all species of beings, however, are individually capable
of transformation that is of elevation or degradation in type. His theory of
purification through transmigration (samsārasuddhi) probably meant perfection
through transformation (parinatā) -
transformation which implies not only the process of constant change, but also a
fixed orderly mode of progression and retrogression. All things must, in course
of time, attain perfection (for a discussion on Makkhali and his doctrines see
Barua.: Pre buddhistic Indian Philosophy, 297ff).
Makkhali's followers are known as the Ājīvakas (q.v.).
According to the books, the Buddha considered Makkhali as
the most dangerous of the heretical teachers: "I know not of any other single
person fraught with such loss to many folk, such discomfort, such sorrow to
devas and men, as Makkhali, the infatuate (A.i.33). The Buddha also considered
his view the meanest - just as the hair blanket
is reckoned the meanest of all woven garments, even so, of all the teachings of
recluses, that of Makkhali is the meanest (A.i.286). Buddhaghosa (DA.i.166f)
draws particular distinction between the moral effect of Makkhali's doctrine on
the one hand and that of the doctrines of Pūrana Kassapa and Ajita on the other.
Pūrana, by his theory of the passivity of the soul, denied action; Ajita, by his
annihilationistic theory denied retribution; whereas Makkhali, by his doctrine
of fate or non causation, denied both action and its result.
Very little is known of the name and the life of Makkhali.
The Buddhist records call him Makkhali Gosāla. Buddhaghosa explains (DA.i.143f;
MA.i.422) that he was once employed as a servant; one day, while carrying an
oil-pot along a muddy road, he slipped and fell through carelessness, although
warned thus by his master: "Mā khali," (stumble not) -
hence his name. When he found that the oil pot was broken, he fled; his master
chased him and caught him by his garment, but he left it and ran along naked. He
was; called Gosāla, because he was born in a cow shed. According to Jaina
records (e.g. Uvāsaga-dasāo, p.1), he is called Gosāla Mankhaliputta; he was
born at Saravana near Sāvatthi, his father's name being Mankhali and his
mother's Bhaddā. His father was a Mankha i.e., a dealer in pictures
- and Gosāla followed this profession until he
became a monk.
The philosopher's true name ( Barua., op. cit., 298) seems
to have been Maskarin, the Jaina Prakrit form of which is Mankhali and the Pāli
form Makkhali. "Maskarin" is explained by Pāninī (VI.i.154) as "one who carries
a bamboo staff" (maskara). A Maskarin is also known as Ekadandin. According to
Patañjali (Mahābhāsya iii.96), the name indicates a School of Wanderers who were
called Maskarins, not so much because they carried a bamboo staff as because
they denied the freedom of the will. The Maskarins were thus fatalists or
determinists.

|