Buddhism (Theravāda) · Source book
Happiness
Dhammapada Chapter XV — Happiness (vv. 197–208)
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 Sukha-vagga defines true happiness (sukha) as freedom from the afflictions that bind worldly life — hatred, ailing, greed, possessiveness, and the craving for victory — and locates the highest happiness in peace, contentment, health, and nibbāna. It closes with the social condition of happiness: keeping company with the wise and the elect, not with fools.
Atomic statements
Ch15-C1: Live happily, free from hatred among the hating. (OPERATIONAL / ETHICS+MIND)
- Dhp 197: "Let us live happily then, not hating those who hate us! among men who hate us let us dwell free from hatred!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch15-C2: Live happily, free from ailments among the ailing. (OPERATIONAL / MIND+DISCIPLINE)
- Dhp 198: "Let us live happily then, free from ailments among the ailing! among men who are ailing let us dwell free from ailments!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: supporting
Ch15-C3: Live happily, free from greed among the greedy. (OPERATIONAL / CRAVING+MIND)
- Dhp 199: "Let us live happily then, free from greed among the greedy! among men who are greedy let us dwell free from greed!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch15-C4: Live happily owning nothing, feeding on happiness like the bright gods. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+LIBERATION)
- Dhp 200: "Let us live happily then, though we call nothing our own! We shall be like the bright gods, feeding on happiness!"
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch15-C5: Victory breeds hatred; the contented who gives up victory and defeat is happy. (FOUNDATIONAL / ETHICS+CRAVING)
- Dhp 201: "Victory breeds hatred, for the conquered is unhappy. He who has given up both victory and defeat, he, the contented, is happy."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch15-C6: No fire like passion, no throw like hatred, no pain like the body; no happiness higher than rest. (FOUNDATIONAL / CRAVING+LIBERATION)
- Dhp 202: "There is no fire like passion; there is no losing throw like hatred; there is no pain like this body; there is no happiness higher than rest."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Ch15-C7: Hunger is the worst disease, the body the greatest pain; knowing this truly is Nirvana, the highest happiness. (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+IMPERMANENCE)
- Dhp 203: "Hunger is the worst of diseases, the body the greatest of pains; if one knows this truly, that is Nirvana, the highest happiness."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: nibbāna (Müller: "Nirvana").
Ch15-C8: Health, contentment, trust, and Nirvana are the greatest goods. (FOUNDATIONAL / LIBERATION+ETHICS)
- Dhp 204: "Health is the greatest of gifts, contentedness the best riches; trust is the best of relationships, Nirvana the highest happiness."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core · Untranslatable: nibbāna (Müller: "Nirvana").
Ch15-C9: Tasting solitude and the law brings freedom from fear and sin; the company of the wise is happiness, of fools is suffering. (OPERATIONAL / DISCIPLINE+PRACTICE)
- Dhp 205–208: "He who has tasted the sweetness of solitude and tranquillity, is free from fear and free from sin…" / "The sight of the elect (Arya) is good… if a man does not see fools, he will be truly happy." / "He who walks in the company of fools suffers a long way… company with the wise is pleasure, like meeting with kinsfolk." / "Therefore, one ought to follow the wise… as the moon follows the path of the stars."
- Stance: assert · Importance: core
Step 4 — Clusters
| Cluster | Atomic statements | Intent |
|---|---|---|
| Freedom amid affliction | C1, C2, C3, C4 | Dwell free from hatred, ailing, greed, possession |
| Beyond winning and losing | C5, C6 | Contentment surpasses victory; rest is the highest happiness |
| Nirvana as highest happiness | C7, C8 | Health, contentment, and nibbāna are the supreme goods |
| Company shapes happiness | C9 | Solitude, the law, and the wise yield happiness; fools, suffering |
Step 5 — Internal tensions
No genuine contradiction. "Free from ailments among the ailing" (C2) is read figuratively (mental/spiritual health amid affliction), consistent with the chapter's pattern of inner freedom amid outer conditions.
Step 6 — Synthesized chapter principles
Ch15-P1: True happiness is dwelling free from affliction amid the afflicted
Live free from hatred among the hating, free from greed among the greedy, free from ailing among the ailing — happiness is inner freedom amid surrounding affliction.
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: ETHICS+MIND · Covers: C1, C2, C3 · Evidence: Dhp 197–199
Ch15-P2: Own nothing, contend for nothing — contentment is happiness
Calling nothing one's own, and giving up both victory and defeat, the contented person is happy and feeds on happiness like the bright gods; victory only breeds hatred.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: CRAVING+ETHICS · Covers: C4, C5 · Evidence: Dhp 200–201
Ch15-P3: Passion, hatred, and the body are the supreme afflictions; rest is the supreme happiness
There is no fire like passion, no loss like hatred, no pain like the body — and no happiness higher than rest.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: CRAVING+LIBERATION · Covers: C6 · Evidence: Dhp 202
Ch15-P4: Nirvana is the highest happiness
Health, contentment, and trust are the greatest goods, but knowing truly the nature of hunger and the body is nibbāna — the highest happiness of all.
- Tier:
FOUNDATIONAL· Domain: LIBERATION · Covers: C7, C8 · Evidence: Dhp 203–204 · Untranslatable: nibbāna ("Nirvana").
Ch15-P5: Solitude, the law, and the company of the wise yield happiness
One who tastes solitude and the law is free from fear and sin; keep company with the wise and the elect, never with fools, as the moon follows the stars.
- Tier:
OPERATIONAL· Domain: DISCIPLINE+PRACTICE · Covers: C9 · Evidence: Dhp 205–208
Step 7 — Traceability
| Principle | Atomic statements | Verses |
|---|---|---|
| Ch15-P1 | C1, C2, C3 | Dhp 197–199 |
| Ch15-P2 | C4, C5 | Dhp 200–201 |
| Ch15-P3 | C6 | Dhp 202 |
| Ch15-P4 | C7, C8 | Dhp 203–204 |
| Ch15-P5 | C9 | Dhp 205–208 |
Step 8 — Quality
- Coverage: 12/12 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): Ch15-P1, P2, P3, and P5 read as intelligible ethical/psychological claims about contentment, non-contention, and good company — among the most cross-tradition-portable content in the Dhammapada (Stoic ataraxia, monastic detachment, and many wisdom traditions converge here).
- Frame-dependent warrants flagged: Ch15-P4 names nibbāna explicitly as "the highest happiness." The claim (the supreme good lies beyond worldly pleasures, in a state of peace/release) converges cross-tradition, but the content of that supreme good — nibbāna as the extinguishing of craving and the conditioned, not beatific union with God or eternal life — diverges sharply. Note also "feeding on happiness like the bright gods" (C4): the devas are a cosmological reference, illustrative rather than load-bearing. Flag for the Atlas: claim converges, telos (nibbāna) diverges.