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One of the six famous
heretical teachers of the Buddha's day. He was a great skeptic, his teaching
being the evasion of problems and the suspension of judgment. His doctrines seem
to have been identical with those of the Amarāvikkhepikas (Eel wrigglers) who,
when asked a question, would equivocate and wriggle like an eel. Sañjaya's
teachings are given at D.i.58; cf. the "Eel wrigglers" at D.i.27.
It is probable that Sañjaya suspended his judgments only
with regard to those questions the answers to which must always remain a matter
of speculation. It may be that he wished to impress on his followers the fact
that the final answer to these questions lay beyond the domain of speculation,
and that he wished to divert their attention from fruitless enquiry and direct
it towards the preservation of mental equanimity.
Buddhaghosa gives us no
particulars about Sañjaya, beyond the fact that he was the son of Belattha
(DA.i.144). Sanskrit texts call him Sañjayī Vairatiputra (E.g., Mtu.iii.59f) and
Sañjayi Vairattīputra (E.g., Dvy. 143,145).
He is evidently identical with Sañjaya the
Paribbājaka who
was the original teacher of Sāriputta and
Moggallāna (Vin.i.39). It is said that
when these two disciples left Sañjaya to become pupils of the Buddha, they were
joined by two hundred and fifty others. Sañjaya then fainted, and hot blood
issued from his mouth. Vin.i.42; according to DhA.i.78, Sāriputta and Moggallāna
tried to persuade Sañjaya to accept the Buddha's doctrine, but they failed, and
only one half of his disciples joined them. The Paribbājaka
Suppiya was
also a follower of Sañjaya (DA.i.35).
Barua. thinks (Op. cit., 326) that the Aviruddhakas
mentioned in the Anguttara (A.iii.276) were also followers of Sañjaya -
that they were called Amarāvikkhepakā for their philosophical doctrines, and
Aviruddhakā for their moral conduct.

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