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One of the six well known teachers, contemporaneous with the Buddha. He is
said to have taught the doctrine of non-action (akiriya), denying the result of
good or bad actions (D.i.52 f); probably the more correct description of
Kassapa's teaching would be niskriyavāda - i.e., an affirmation that the soul is
passive, unaffected by the good or the bad done by us, the ultimate reality
lying beyond good or evil.
Elsewhere (S.iii.69; v.126), however, he is mentioned as an ahetuvādin,
denying hetupaccaya (condition and cause - i.e., the efficacy of kamma),
which teaching, in the Sāmaññaphala Sutta
(D.i.53; see also A.iii.383, where the teaching of Chalabhijātiyo is also
attributed to Pūrana), is attributed to
Makkhali Gosāla.
Buddhaghosa says (DA.i.142; he could not
have been a slave. Kassapa is a brahmin gotta. The SNA (372) calls him an
ājīvaka) that Pūrana Kassapa came by his name from the fact that as a result of
his birth the number of slaves in a certain household reached one hundred. Owing
to this fact he was never found fault with, even when he failed to do his work
satisfactorily. But, in spite of this, he was dissatisfied and fled from his
masters. He then had his clothes stolen by thieves and went about naked. His
gotta name was Kassapa. He had a following of five hundred, among whom was the
deva putta Asama (S.i.65, see also Ajātasattu).
He was consulted by the Licchavis Abhaya
(S.v.126) and Mahāli (S.iii.68) and by the wanderer Vacchagotta (S.iv.398). He
claimed to be omniscient. (A.iv.428; here we probably have a more correct
explanation of his name, Pūrana - i.e., in his claim to have attained
perfect wisdom, pūranañānna).
A story in the Dhammapada Commentary (DhA.iii.208)* states that when the
heretics were unable to prevent the Buddha from performing the Twin Miracle
under the Gandamba, they fled discomfited. Pūrana Kassapa was among them, and in
the course of his flight, he came across one of his followers, a farmer, who was
on his way to see him, carrying a vessel of broth and a rope. Pūrana took the
vessel and the rope, and going to the banks of the river near Sāvatthi, tied the
vessel round his neck and threw himself into the stream. There was a circle of
bubbles on the water and Pūrana was reborn in Avīci.
The Milindapañha (p. 4 f) also mentions a Pūrana Kassapa, contemporary with
Milinda. This perhaps refers to a teacher descended from the same school who is
credited with the view that the earth rules or sustains the world. v.l. Purāna.
* For a different version see Rockhill: op. cit., 80. According to this
legend, Kassapa must have died in the sixteenth year of the Buddha's ministry.
This is hardly reconcilable with the statement that Ajātasattu consulted him.

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