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Buddhism (Theravāda) · Source book

Thirst

Dhammapada Chapter XXIV — Thirst (vv. 334–359)

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 Taṇhā-vagga ("the thirst chapter") names taṇhā (craving/thirst) as the engine of saṃsāra — the creeping, branching, self-renewing root of rebirth and suffering. It diagnoses thirst's growth, prescribes digging up its root by knowledge, distinguishes the subtle "strong fetter" (attachment to family and possessions) from the obvious one, and culminates in the awakened one who, thirst destroyed, has received his last body — closing with the supremacy of the gift of the law.

Atomic statements

Ch24-C1: The thirst of a thoughtless man grows like a creeper; he runs from life to life like a monkey after fruit. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+KARMA)

  • Dhp 334: "The thirst of a thoughtless man grows like a creeper; he runs from life to life, like a monkey seeking fruit in the forest."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: Müller renders taṇhā "thirst."

Ch24-C2: Whom this fierce thirst overcomes, his sufferings increase like rank grass; whoever overcomes it sheds suffering like water off a lotus leaf. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+LIBERATION)

  • Dhp 335–336: "Whomsoever this fierce thirst overcomes… his sufferings increase like the abounding Birana grass." / "He who overcomes this fierce thirst… sufferings fall off from him, like water-drops from a lotus leaf."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C3: Dig up the very root of thirst, that Māra may not crush you again and again. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 337: "This salutary word I tell you… dig up the root of thirst, as he who wants the sweet-scented Usira root must dig up the Birana grass, that Mara (the tempter) may not crush you again and again, as the stream crushes the reeds."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: Māra (Müller: "the tempter").

Ch24-C4: As a felled tree regrows from a living root, pain returns again and again unless the feeders of thirst are destroyed. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+KARMA)

  • Dhp 338: "As a tree, even though it has been cut down, is firm so long as its root is safe, and grows again, thus, unless the feeders of thirst are destroyed, the pain (of life) will return again and again."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Depends on: Ch24-C3

Ch24-C5: Thirst runs in thirty-six channels and sweeps the misguided away; cut the sprouting creeper of passion at its root by knowledge. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+TRUTH)

  • Dhp 339–340: "He whose thirst running towards pleasure is exceeding strong in the thirty-six channels, the waves will carry away that misguided man…" / "The channels run everywhere, the creeper (of passion) stands sprouting; if you see the creeper springing up, cut its root by means of knowledge."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C6: Sunk in lust, men undergo birth and decay again and again; driven by thirst they run like a snared hare in fetters. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+KARMA)

  • Dhp 341–342: "A creature's pleasures are extravagant and luxurious; sunk in lust and looking for pleasure, men undergo (again and again) birth and decay." / "Men, driven on by thirst, run about like a snared hare; held in fetters and bonds, they undergo pain for a long time, again and again."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C7: Let the mendicant drive out thirst by striving after passionlessness. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+DISCIPLINE)

  • Dhp 343: "Men, driven on by thirst, run about like a snared hare; let therefore the mendicant drive out thirst, by striving after passionlessness for himself."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C8: One who, freed from the forest of lust, runs back to it — though free, runs into bondage. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING)

  • Dhp 344: "He who having got rid of the forest (of lust)… gives himself over to forest-life (i.e. to lust)… look at that man! though free, he runs into bondage."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Ch24-C9: The strongest fetter is not iron, wood, or hemp, but the care for jewels, sons, and wife — which drags down and is hard to undo; the wise cut it and leave the world. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+SELF)

  • Dhp 345–347: "Wise people do not call that a strong fetter which is made of iron, wood, or hemp; far stronger is the care for precious stones and rings, for sons and a wife." / "That fetter wise people call strong which drags down, yields, but is difficult to undo; after having cut this at last, people leave the world…" / "Those who are slaves to passions, run down with the stream… as a spider runs down the web which he has made himself…"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C10: Give up past, future, and present; with a wholly freed mind one does not again enter birth and decay. Doubt and craving for the delightful strengthen the fetters; dwelling on the non-delightful (the body's impurity) cuts Māra's fetter. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+LIBERATION)

  • Dhp 348–350: "Give up what is before, give up what is behind, give up what is in the middle… if thy mind is altogether free, thou wilt not again enter into birth and decay." / "If a man is tossed about by doubts… his thirst will grow more and more, and he will indeed make his fetters strong." / "If a man delights in quieting doubts, and, always reflecting, dwells on what is not delightful… he will cut the fetter of Mara."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: Māra.

Ch24-C11: He who has reached consummation — without thirst, without sin — has broken all life's thorns; this is his last body, and he is called the great sage; "having learnt myself, whom shall I teach?" (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+SELF)

  • Dhp 351–353: "He who has reached the consummation… without thirst and without sin… this will be his last body." / "He who is without thirst and without affection… he has received his last body, he is called the great sage, the great man." / "`I have conquered all, I know all… through the destruction of thirst I am free; having learnt myself, whom shall I teach?'"
  • Stance: assert · Importance: core

Ch24-C12: The gift of the law exceeds all gifts and the extinction of thirst overcomes all pain; pleasures destroy the foolish who seek no further shore, and gifts to the passionless / non-hating / unvain / lustless bring great reward. (EXHORTATION / LIBERATION+ETHICS)

  • Dhp 354–359: "The gift of the law exceeds all gifts… the extinction of thirst overcomes all pain." / "Pleasures destroy the foolish, if they look not for the other shore…" / "The fields are damaged by weeds, mankind is damaged by passion… by hatred… by vanity… by lust: therefore a gift bestowed on [the passionless / those who do not hate / those who are free from vanity / those who are free from lust] brings great reward."
  • Stance: assert · Importance: supporting

Step 4 — Clusters

Cluster Atomic statements Intent
Diagnosis of thirst C1, C2, C6 Thirst grows, propels rebirth, multiplies suffering
Uproot at the source C3, C4, C5 Only destroying the root (by knowledge) stops the regrowth
The path against thirst C7, C8, C10 Strive for passionlessness; relapse is bondage; free the mind
The subtlest fetter C9 Attachment to family/possessions is the strongest bond
The thirst-free sage C11 Consummation: last body, the great sage
The supreme gift C12 The law and the passionless surpass all

Step 5 — Internal tensions

None genuine. The chapter is a sustained, coherent treatment of taṇhā; the "strong fetter" of family (C9) intensifies, rather than contradicts, the general diagnosis.

Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles

Ch24-P1: Thirst (taṇhā) is the self-renewing root of rebirth and suffering

The thoughtless man's craving grows like a creeper and drives him from life to life; whoever it overcomes multiplies suffering, whoever overcomes it sheds suffering like water off a lotus.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: CRAVING+KARMA · Covers: C1, C2, C6 · Evidence: Dhp 334–336, 341–342 · Untranslatable: taṇhā ("thirst")

Ch24-P2: Craving must be uprooted at its source, or pain returns

Like a felled tree regrowing from a living root, suffering returns unless thirst's feeders are destroyed; dig up the root — cut the sprouting creeper by knowledge — so that Māra cannot crush one again and again.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: CRAVING+DISCIPLINE+TRUTH · Covers: C3, C4, C5 · Evidence: Dhp 337–340 · Untranslatable: Māra (Müller: "the tempter")

Ch24-P3: Strive for passionlessness; relapse into craving is self-made bondage

The mendicant drives out thirst by striving after passionlessness; one who, freed from the forest of lust, returns to it runs back into bondage though free.

  • Tier: OPERATIONAL · Domain: CRAVING+DISCIPLINE · Covers: C7, C8 · Evidence: Dhp 343–344

Ch24-P4: The subtlest, strongest fetter is attachment to family and possessions

Not iron or hemp but the care for jewels, sons, and wife is the strong fetter that drags down and is hard to undo; the wise cut it and leave the world.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: CRAVING+SELF · Covers: C9 · Evidence: Dhp 345–347

Ch24-P5: A wholly freed mind ends rebirth; the thirst-free sage receives his last body

Giving up past, future, and present and freeing the mind ends entry into birth and decay; dwelling on the non-delightful cuts Māra's fetter, and the one without thirst or sin has broken all life's thorns — this is his last body, the great sage who has learnt himself.

  • Tier: FOUNDATIONAL · Domain: LIBERATION+SELF · Covers: C10, C11 · Evidence: Dhp 348–353 · Untranslatable: Māra; nibbāna implied ("last body")

Ch24-P6: The gift of the law and the passionless surpass all

The gift of the law exceeds all gifts and the extinction of thirst overcomes all pain; pleasures destroy the foolish who seek no further shore, and a gift bestowed on the passionless, non-hating, unvain, and lustless brings great reward.

  • Tier: EXHORTATION · Domain: LIBERATION+ETHICS · Covers: C12 · Evidence: Dhp 354–359

Step 7 — Traceability

Principle Atomic statements Verses
Ch24-P1 C1, C2, C6 Dhp 334–336, 341–342
Ch24-P2 C3, C4, C5 Dhp 337–340
Ch24-P3 C7, C8 Dhp 343–344
Ch24-P4 C9 Dhp 345–347
Ch24-P5 C10, C11 Dhp 348–353
Ch24-P6 C12 Dhp 354–359

Step 8 — Quality

  • Coverage: 26/26 verses captured by ≥1 atomic statement (100%).
  • Orphaned: 0%.
  • Principles: 6 (within the 3–12 range).
  • Traceability: 100%.

Step 9 — Validation

  • Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): The psychological diagnosis (P1–P3: craving is self-renewing, must be uprooted at the source, relapse is bondage) and P4 (attachment as the strongest fetter) read as intelligible without Buddhist metaphysics — strong cross-tradition convergence candidates on the CLAIM. Frame divergence is sharp in the WARRANT: P1/P2 ground craving's cost in rebirth ("from life to life," pain returning "again and again"); P5's telos is the end of rebirth and the "last body" (nibbāna); and Māra (P2, P5) personifies death-and-craving. Flag P1, P2, P5 for the Atlas — the warrant (saṃsāra, rebirth, Nirvana, Māra) is frame-specific even where "desire breeds suffering" converges. Note also that P4's renunciation of family stands in tension with traditions affirming the primacy of the family — a divergence to surface, not paper over.