Buddhism (Theravāda) · Source book
Old Age
Dhammapada Chapter XI — Old Age (vv. 146–156)
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
This vagga meditates on the body's decay and the inevitability of aging and death (anicca), contrasting the perishable body with imperishable virtue. It contains the celebrated "house-builder" verses (153–154) — traditionally Gautama's words at awakening — and closes by warning that a youth wasted without discipline ends in regret.
Atomic statements
Ch11-C1: Why laughter and joy in a world always burning? Seek a light amid the darkness. (EXHORTATION / IMPERMANENCE+DISCIPLINE)
- Dhp 146: "How is there laughter, how is there joy, as this world is always burning? Why do you not seek a light, ye who are surrounded by darkness?"
- Stance: question · Importance: core · Note: "always burning" evokes the pervasiveness of dukkha; cf. the Fire Sermon.
Ch11-C2: The body is a dressed-up lump — wounded, sickly, fragile, with no real strength or hold. (FOUNDATIONAL / IMPERMANENCE+SELF)
- Dhp 147: "Look at this dressed-up lump, covered with wounds, joined together, sickly, full of many thoughts, which has no strength, no hold!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: contemplation of the body's unattractiveness (asubha); undercuts clinging to a "self" in the body.
Ch11-C3: This body is wasted, diseased, and frail; it breaks to pieces, and life ends in death. (FOUNDATIONAL / IMPERMANENCE)
- Dhp 148: "This body is wasted, full of sickness, and frail; this heap of corruption breaks to pieces, life indeed ends in death."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch11-C4: White bones thrown away in autumn give no pleasure to behold. (OPERATIONAL / IMPERMANENCE+CRAVING)
- Dhp 149: "Those white bones, like gourds thrown away in the autumn, what pleasure is there in looking at them?"
- Stance: question · Importance: supporting
Ch11-C5: The body is a fortress of bones plastered with flesh and blood, housing age, death, pride, and deceit. (FOUNDATIONAL / IMPERMANENCE+SELF)
- Dhp 150: "After a stronghold has been made of the bones, it is covered with flesh and blood, and there dwell in it old age and death, pride and deceit."
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting
Ch11-C6: Even kings' chariots and the body decay, but the virtue of the good never decays. (FOUNDATIONAL / IMPERMANENCE+ETHICS)
- Dhp 151: "The brilliant chariots of kings are destroyed, the body also approaches destruction, but the virtue of good people never approaches destruction,--thus do the good say to the good."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: the pivot — virtue (sīla) outlasts the perishable.
Ch11-C7: The unlearned man ages like an ox — his flesh grows but not his wisdom. (OPERATIONAL / TRUTH)
- Dhp 152: "A man who has learnt little, grows old like an ox; his flesh grows, but his knowledge does not grow."
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting
Ch11-C8: Having sought the house-builder through many births, I have found him; the house is broken, craving extinguished, the mind reaching the Eternal (Nirvana). (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+CRAVING)
- Dhp 153–154: "Looking for the maker of this tabernacle, I shall have to run through a course of many births, so long as I do not find (him); and painful is birth again and again. But now, maker of the tabernacle, thou hast been seen; thou shalt not make up this tabernacle again. All thy rafters are broken, thy ridge-pole is sundered; the mind, approaching the Eternal (visankhara, nirvana), has attained to the extinction of all desires."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: the awakening verses; "maker of the tabernacle" = craving (taṇhā), the builder of rebirths; "extinction of all desires" = nibbāna.
Ch11-C9: Those who neither disciplined themselves nor gained treasure in youth perish, or sigh after the past, in old age. (EXHORTATION / DISCIPLINE)
- Dhp 155–156: "Men who have not observed proper discipline, and have not gained treasure in their youth, perish like old herons in a lake without fish." / "Men who have not observed proper discipline…lie, like broken bows, sighing after the past."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Note: "treasure" = spiritual merit/wisdom, not material wealth.
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| The world ablaze | C1 | Urgency: seek the light amid burning impermanence |
| The decaying body | C2, C3, C4, C5 | The body is fragile, corruptible, no fit object of attachment |
| Virtue endures | C6, C7 | All perishes but virtue; the unlearned age without growing |
| Awakening & wasted youth | C8, C9 | Craving conquered ends rebirth; undisciplined youth ends in regret |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
None genuine. The bleak imagery of decay (C2–C5) and the triumphant awakening verse (C8) are complementary: confronting impermanence is the very means by which craving is extinguished.
Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles
Ch11-P1: The body is perishable and no fit object of clinging
This body is a fragile, corruptible heap — wounded, diseased, destined to break and die; contemplating its decay undercuts attachment to it.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: IMPERMANENCE+SELF · Covers: C2, C3, C4, C5 · Evidence: Dhp 147–150 · Untranslatable: anicca (impermanence); cf. anattā (the body is not a self)
Ch11-P2: All things perish but virtue endures
Kings' chariots and the body alike approach destruction, but the virtue of the good never decays; the unlearned merely age in body, not in wisdom.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: IMPERMANENCE+ETHICS · Covers: C6, C7 · Evidence: Dhp 151–152
Ch11-P3: Craving is the builder of rebirths; its extinction is liberation
Craving is the "house-builder" that constructs life after life; once it is seen and broken, no further rebirth is framed and the mind attains the extinction of all desires.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: LIBERATION+CRAVING · Covers: C8 · Evidence: Dhp 153–154 · Untranslatable: taṇhā ("maker of the tabernacle"), nibbāna ("the Eternal / extinction of all desires")
Ch11-P4: A world afire demands urgency; squandered youth ends in regret
Why rejoice while the world burns? Seek the light now — for those who neglected discipline and gained no spiritual treasure in youth perish, or pine after the past, in age.
- Tier:
EXHORTATION· Domain: DISCIPLINE+IMPERMANENCE · Covers: C1, C9 · Evidence: Dhp 146, 155–156 · Untranslatable: dukkha ("always burning")
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Verses |
|---|---|---|
| Ch11-P1 | C2, C3, C4, C5 | Dhp 147–150 |
| Ch11-P2 | C6, C7 | Dhp 151–152 |
| Ch11-P3 | C8 | Dhp 153–154 |
| Ch11-P4 | C1, C9 | Dhp 146, 155–156 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: 11/11 verses captured by ≥1 atomic statement (100%).
- Orphaned: 0%.
- Principles: 4 (within the 3–12 range).
- Traceability: 100%.
Step 9 — Validation
- Standalone comprehension (frame-independent): Ch11-P1 (the body decays; do not over-cling to it) and Ch11-P2 (virtue outlasts material things) read as intelligible meditations on mortality and are broad cross-tradition convergence candidates — memento mori and "virtue endures" have wide analogues. Ch11-P4's urgency converges as a claim about not wasting one's life. Ch11-P3, however, is sharply frame-dependent: its CLAIM (craving is what binds us; releasing it frees us) may converge with ascetic strands elsewhere, but its WARRANT — craving as the literal builder of many births, ended in nibbāna — presupposes rebirth and the unconditioned, and P1's force ultimately rests on anicca/anattā (the body is not a self). Frame-divergent foundations flagged for the Atlas.