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Buddhism (Theravāda) · Source book

The Downward Course

Dhammapada Chapter XXII — The Downward Course (vv. 306–319)

N=1 fine-grained distillation. Source: Müller, SBE X (1881), Gutenberg #2017. Quote anchors are working text pending Phase 7 char-for-char verification. Methodology & tags: ../00-methodology.md.

Chapter role

The vagga (Niraya-vagga, "the hell chapter") catalogues the conduct that leads downward — to niraya (hell), the lower destiny in the karmic cosmology. Its function is deterrent: it names lying, hypocrisy in the robe, parasitic living, adultery, and slack discipline as roads to the evil path, then closes with the discernment that distinguishes the good path from the evil one.

Atomic statements

Ch22-C1: Lying and denying one's own deeds both lead to hell; in the next world both are alike men of evil deeds. (FOUNDATIONAL / KARMA+TRUTH)

  • Dhp 306: "He who says what is not, goes to hell; he also who, having done a thing, says I have not done it. After death both are equal, they are men with evil deeds in the next world."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C2: The yellow robe over an unrestrained life does not save; such evil-doers go to hell by their deeds. (OPERATIONAL / PRACTICE+ETHICS)

  • Dhp 307: "Many men whose shoulders are covered with the yellow gown are ill-conditioned and unrestrained; such evil-doers by their evil deeds go to hell."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C3: To live parasitically on the land's charity while unrestrained is worse than swallowing a red-hot iron ball. (OPERATIONAL / ETHICS+DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 308: "Better it would be to swallow a heated iron ball, like flaring fire, than that a bad unrestrained fellow should live on the charity of the land."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting · Depends on: Ch22-C2

Ch22-C4: Coveting a neighbour's wife yields bad name, restless bed, punishment, and hell — so no man should think of it. (OPERATIONAL / ETHICS+CRAVING)

  • Dhp 309–310: "Four things does a wreckless man gain who covets his neighbour's wife,--a bad reputation, an uncomfortable bed, thirdly, punishment, and lastly, hell." / "…therefore let no man think of his neighbour's wife."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C5: Asceticism wrongly practised, like a grass-blade badly grasped, wounds and leads to hell. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+PRACTICE)

  • Dhp 311: "As a grass-blade, if badly grasped, cuts the arm, badly-practised asceticism leads to hell."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C6: A careless act, broken vow, and half-hearted obedience bring no great reward. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+PRACTICE)

  • Dhp 312: "An act carelessly performed, a broken vow, and hesitating obedience to discipline, all this brings no great reward."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Ch22-C7: Whatever is to be done should be done vigorously; a careless pilgrim only spreads the dust of his passions. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 313: "If anything is to be done, let a man do it, let him attack it vigorously! A careless pilgrim only scatters the dust of his passions more widely."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C8: Leave the evil deed undone (one repents it); do the good deed (one does not repent); guard the self like a frontier fort, missing no moment. (OPERATIONAL / KARMA+DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 314–315: "An evil deed is better left undone, for a man repents of it afterwards; a good deed is better done, for having done it, one does not repent." / "Like a well-guarded frontier fort… so let a man guard himself. Not a moment should escape, for they who allow the right moment to pass, suffer pain when they are in hell."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch22-C9: Misplaced shame, misplaced fear, and misplaced prohibition — under false doctrine — lead to the evil path; right discernment of the forbidden leads to the good path. (FOUNDATIONAL / TRUTH)

  • Dhp 316–319: "They who are ashamed of what they ought not to be ashamed of… enter the evil path." / "They who fear when they ought not to fear… enter the evil path." / "They who forbid when there is nothing to be forbidden… enter the evil path." / "They who know what is forbidden as forbidden, and what is not forbidden as not forbidden, such men, embracing the true doctrine, enter the good path."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
Falsehood & hypocrisy C1, C2, C3 Lying and the unworthy robe lead downward
Sense-misconduct C4 Adultery / coveting brings fourfold ruin
Slack vs vigorous discipline C5, C6, C7 Half-hearted practice yields no fruit; do it wholeheartedly
Karmic prudence C8 Avoid the deed you will repent; guard every moment
Discernment of paths C9 Right judgement of shame/fear/prohibition divides the paths

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None genuine. The chapter is uniformly deterrent; vv. 316–319 use parallel antithesis (false vs true doctrine), not contradiction.

Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles

Ch22-P1: Falsehood leads downward

Lying — including denying one's own deeds — is a karmic road to hell; truthfulness about one's acts is presupposed by the good path.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: KARMA+TRUTH · Covers: C1 · Evidence: Dhp 306

Ch22-P2: The robe without restraint condemns rather than saves

Outward religious form (the yellow gown) over an unrestrained life leads to hell; to live on the community's charity while undisciplined is worse than swallowing fire.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: PRACTICE+ETHICS · Covers: C2, C3 · Evidence: Dhp 307–308

Ch22-P3: Sense-misconduct brings fourfold ruin

Coveting another's spouse yields bad name, unrest, punishment, and hell; such craving is to be refused outright.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: ETHICS+CRAVING · Covers: C4 · Evidence: Dhp 309–310

Ch22-P4: Discipline must be wholehearted, not slack

Badly-practised asceticism wounds; careless acts, broken vows, and hesitant obedience bear no reward. Whatever is to be done must be done vigorously, and the self guarded like a fort, leaving no evil deed undone-to-be-repented and missing no moment.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: DISCIPLINE+PRACTICE · Covers: C5, C6, C7, C8 · Evidence: Dhp 311–315

Ch22-P5: Right discernment divides the good path from the evil

Misplaced shame, fear, and prohibition (under false doctrine) lead to the evil path; knowing the forbidden as forbidden and the permitted as permitted (under true doctrine) leads to the good path.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: TRUTH · Covers: C9 · Evidence: Dhp 316–319

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Verses
Ch22-P1 C1 Dhp 306
Ch22-P2 C2, C3 Dhp 307–308
Ch22-P3 C4 Dhp 309–310
Ch22-P4 C5, C6, C7, C8 Dhp 311–315
Ch22-P5 C9 Dhp 316–319

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: 14/14 verses captured by ≥1 atomic statement (100%).
  • Orphaned: 0%.
  • Principles: 5 (within the 3–12 range).
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): Ch22-P1 (falsehood), P3 (adultery), P4 (wholehearted effort), and P5 (right discernment) read as intelligible ethical claims without presupposing Buddhist metaphysics. The CLAIMs converge cross-tradition; the WARRANT diverges where "hell" (niraya) names a karmic rebirth-destiny rather than an Abrahamic eternal damnation — flag P1, P2, P3, P4 for the Atlas: the destination niraya and the karmic mechanism are frame-specific even where the moral prohibition is shared.