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The Five Vidyas

Ven. Akou Lamo Rinpoche
Ven. Akou Lamo Rinpoche

Vidya is an ancient Sanskrit word that has been incorrectly translated as “area of knowledge” or “science” or wisdom” but none of those translations are correct. The vidyas of ancient India are divided into the five major vidyas and the five minor vidyas. A Buddhist academic program in India and later in Tibet was organized around teaching these ten vidyas, with emphasis on the first five. A Buddhist scholar or practitioner would be ranked according to how well he or she manifested these vidyas. Vidyas is used in many different contexts to mean different things. Taken literally, it represents the opposite of ignorance, which is a-vidya or darkness. You might say that vidya then represents the essential truth of everything or all that is bright and good. However, as H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III has explained, these five major categories are much more complex and subtle than their headings would suggest. To think of them as just five items or categories would be incorrect. We would be wrong in our understanding of the five vidyas. Venerable Akou Lamo Rinpoche in the treasure book H.H. Dorje Chang Buddha III states it very clearly: “Everything in the universe can be classified into five aspects of brightness and darkness. To develop everything that is good in the universe and that benefits living beings is classified as ‘bright.’ That which confuses and is evil is classified as ‘dark.’ This is the real meaning of the five vidyas of which the Buddha spoke.”

The five vidyas in the Buddhist context represent the underlying principles of the universe. They are comprehensive and profound and totally encompass everything in the universe with life or without life, the spiritual and the material. Everything–all dharmas–are contained in the five vidyas. All animate and inanimate, conditioned and unconditioned phenomena in the entire universe are expressed in the five vidyas. It is essential that they be understood and mastered, if one is to obtain the full power of the Buddha-dharma. You could even say that they are the Buddha-dharma. That is because the Buddha-dharma includes all truth, including the truths of modern day science. However, strictly speaking, these truths are not Buddhist truths or truths that belong to Buddhism. They are the underlying principles of truth and the original nature of all phenomena. They represent the entire interrelated Truth of the Universe.

Different Buddhist sects and also certain non-Buddhist groups understand some aspects of these vidyas, but only a Buddha can understand these universal truths in their entirety. This knowledge was the Buddha’s awakening–His “Enlightenment.” These five principles existed before the coming of the Buddha and were not changed or altered by the arrival of the Buddha. However, the Buddha was able to comprehend the inner-most truth of these principles and thus gain their power. That is part of what is meant by the term Buddha-dharma.

Overview of the Five Vidyas

Cikitsvidya

Vidya of Healing (Medicine)

This vidya does include all aspects of what we normally think of as medicine like diagnosis of illnesses and the various healing modalities. However, it also includes anything where you take something coarse or rough and then refine or correct it. It includes everything where something goes from a bad state to a better state. The healing vidya includes all activities that improve a situation or thing. Anything that is refined or changed to be good is considered part of the healing vidya in this ancient way of understanding universal principles.

Silpakarmasthanavidya

Vidya of Craftsmanship (Art and Technology)

Everything that is beautiful and artistic is included within this vidya. It not only includes the ability to create works of art, like sculpture or painting, or technological innovations, but also anything where you express yourself. Whatever brings enjoyment and happiness to people is part of the craftsmanship vidya.

Sabdavidya

Vidya of Sound (Speech and Grammar, Communication)

This vidya does not simply involve spoken or written words or singing, although they are part of it. All delightful sounds and any sound that is beneficial to living beings emitted from animate beings or inanimate things compose the sound vidya.

Hetuvidya

Vidya of Causality (Cause and Effect or Buddhist Logic)

This vidya is often translated as “logic” but it is not the logic of Western philosophy. It is the logic of the Law of Cause and Effect. Understanding this principle can enable you to see both past (causes) and future (effects). The causality vidya relates to all matters and all dharmas, all levels of conditional and unconditional phenomena, the entire logical relationship among them, the relationship of cause and effect, and so on. What the causality vidya covers is countless and includes many fields of modern science.

Adhyatmavidya

Vidya of Inner Realization (Enlightenment, Supernormal Powers)

This vidya is the hardest to understand and is unique to Buddhism. Most of our courses are part of this vidya. Understanding one’s mind and seeing one’s original nature is a state of realization that is part of the inner vidya. At the highest level, this includes the magnificent, limitless, complete, and perfect enlightenment powers of the Buddha.

Most of the curriculum focuses on the last vidya–the Inner Vidya, which enables the student to develop the others. However the students are encouraged to develop all the vidyas through everything they do–to behave like Bodhisattvas and do the work of Bodhisattvas: fixing what is broken, healing what is not good to make it better, bringing joy and happiness to those around them, creating beauty, and communicating effectively so as to bring peace and solve problems. One of the required courses in the Xiuixing Seminary Program and an elective in the others, is a course where the student looks at what he or she does that is or could be part of one or more than one of the vidyas and reflects on what else he or she can do to do Bodhisattva work. Perhaps not changing the work, but certainly changing the attitude toward that work.

More information on the Five Vidyas and how they have been manifested by holy persons can be found in two courses offered by Learning from Buddha College and Seminary: G03(A) Evolution of Buddhism & the Five Vidyas and G40(A)-Thus Have I Seen: The Marvelous True Buddha Dharma and Its Power to Transform.”

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