Objects of Focus for Developing Shamatha and Vipashyana

The Four Categories of Objects of Focus

In A Grand Presentation of the Graded Stages of the Path (Lam-rim chen-mo), Tsongkhapa (rJe Tsong-kha-pa Blo-bzang grags-pa) explained that in the sutras Buddha taught, in general, four categories of objects of focus for yogis to employ in meditation. He also cites the explanation that Asanga gave in Shravaka (Listener) Stages of Mind (Nyan-sa, Skt. Śrāvakabhūmi) concerning the persons for whom each variety of the last three categories of objects of focus is intended.

The four categories are:

  • Pervasive objects of focus (khyab-pa’i dmigs-pa)
  • Objects of focus for cleansing one’s behavior (spyad-pa rnam-par sbyong-ba’i dmigs-pa)
  • Objects of focus with knowledge (mkhas-pa’i dmigs-pa)
  • Objects of focus for cleansing oneself of disturbing emotions and attitudes (nyon-mongs-pa rnam-par sbyong-ba’i dmigs-pa).

None of the objects for focus are objective entities (rang-mtshan, individually characterized phenomena). Rather, they are the mental derivatives (gzugs-brnyan, mental reflections) of them that are the appearing objects (snang-yul) to the mental consciousness focusing on them conceptually with valid mental cognition. The mental derivatives are static (permanent) meaning/object categories (don-spyi, meaning categories). Through their partial veil, the conceptual cognition cognizes a static conceptual representation (snang-ba) of the involved object (’jug-yul) of the cognition. In other words, meditation begins as a conceptual process and trains mental consciousness, not sensory consciousness. Non-conceptual meditation with mental consciousness is only possible once one has achieved a seeing pathway mind (path of seeing) and become a highly realized being, an arya.

The Karma Kagyu and Sakya traditions teach focusing on a visual object, such as a Buddha statue, as a method for gaining concentration. This instruction does not contradict the above explanation. This is because these traditions mean focusing on the Buddha statue as a commonsense object (’jig-rten-la grags-pa). According to their assertions, the objects of visual cognition are merely moments of colored shapes. Commonsense objects, such as a Buddha statue, are cognized only by conceptual mental cognition. This is because commonsense objects that extend over time and that extend over the sensibilia cognized by other senses are mentally labeled here on the basis of a sequence of visually cognized moments of colored shapes. Unlike in the Gelug tradition, however, the mental derivatives that are the appearing objects of conceptual cognition are the static conceptual representations of the commonsense objects. They are partially veiled, however, by the static categories that the conceptual representations represent.

[See: Objects of Cognition: Advanced Gelug and Non-Gelug Presentations]

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