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(Pakudha Kātiyāna, Kakudha Kaccāyana, Kakuda Kātiyāna)
Head of one of the six heretical sects of the Buddha's
time. In the Sāmaññaphala Sutta (D.i.56),
Ajātassattu is said to have visited
him and obtained from him an exposition of his teaching, which was to the effect
that the four elements - earth, fire, air,
water; pleasure, pain, and the soul - these
seven things were eternally existent and unchangeable in their very nature; that
there is no intentional activity of consciousness in them. His doctrine is,
therefore, one of non action (akiriya vāda). When one, with a sharp sword,
cleaves a head in twain, no one is thereby deprived of life, a sword has merely
penetrated into the interval between seven elementary substances (cf. the
doctrine of the Cartesians, that there is no sin in taking the life of lower
animals because they have no soul). In other words, there is no such act as
killing, or hearing, or knowing, etc.; no conceptions of, or distinction
between, good and bad, knowledge and ignorance, etc.
Pakudha's teachings are also referred to in the
Sandaka
Sutta (M.i.517), and there described at even greater length, but here his name
is not mentioned.
Buddhaghosa adds (DA.i.144) that Pakudha avoided the use
of cold water, using always hot; when this was not available, he did not wash.
If he crossed a stream he would consider this as a sin, and would make expiation
by constructing a mound of earth. This is evidence of the ascetic tendency in
his teaching on matters of external conduct. His teaching is, however, described
as nissirikaladdhi.
We are told (M.i.250; ii.4) that Pakudha's followers did
not hold him in high esteem, in contrast to the devotion felt for the Buddha by
his followers. Pakudha did not welcome questions, and displayed annoyance and
resentment when cross examined. Elsewhere (E.g., M.i.198; S. i.66; Sn.p.91)
however, he is spoken of as having been highly honoured by the people, a teacher
of large and well reputed schools, with numerous followers. But he did not lay
claim to perfect enlightenment (S.i.68).
Pakudha Kaccāyana's name is spelt in several ways. Some
texts give his personal name as Kakudha, or Kakuda. In the Prasnopanisad (Barus:
Prebuddhistic Indian Philosophy, 281; see also Dvy.143; Mtu.i.253, 256, 259;
iii.383) mention is made of a Kakuda Kātyāna, a younger contemporary of
Pippalāda. There he is called Kabandhin, which name, like Kakuda, means that he
had a hump on his neck or shoulder.
Buddhaghosa says (DA.i.144; SA.i.102) that Pakudha was his personal name and Kaccāyana that of his gotta. The Kaccāyana (or
Kātiyāna, as it is sometimes called) was a brahmin gotta.
Pakudha is mentioned as having been, in a past life, one
of the five ditthigatikas mentioned in the
Mahābodhi Jātaka (J.v.246). He is
also mentioned in the Milindapañha as one of the teachers visited by
Milinda.
The whole account is either a plagiarism of the Sāmaññaphala Sutta or else the
teachers referred to only belonged to the same respective schools of thought.

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