Ignorance

Written By Paul Baffier
Dzogchen Terms | The Dzogchen basics
In this article, Paul defines ignorance (ma rig pa) as: being unaware of one’s own nature, and thus believing in the existence of a self and a phenomenal reality that exist independently.
Series: The Dzogchen Terms
Ignorance (ma rig pa)
Ignorance (ma rig pa) is the failure to recognize one’s own nature—empty and luminous—and thus the belief in the existence of a self and a phenomenal reality that exist independently. It is the absence (ma) of awareness of what is most fundamental and intimate within us : primordial evidence (rig pa).
More precisely, the Great Perfection distinguishes three modes of ignorance:
-
causal ignorance of the single primordial manifestation (bdag nyid gcig pa) of the nature of mind in all phenomena: causal ignorance is the mother of all our troubles, the source of all our illusory scenarios, the non-knowledge of the primordial ground (ye gzhi); but also the presence of the primordial evidence “within” this very ignorance;
-
innate or “spontaneously arising” ignorance (lhan skyes ma rig pa): this is the grasping at a permanent self, master and possessor of its aggregates — which are, however, transitory and subject to destruction — leading to the suffering of endless rebirths; a blind ignorance that neither sees nor knows;
-
acquired or “fully imputed” ignorance (kun brtags ma rig pa): this is the erroneous conceptual view of “labelling” (brtags) all phenomena — which are, however, not established or empty in essence and whose appearance is produced by subject-object duality — as existing independently on their own; this erroneous view is “acquired” in the sense that it is learnt through educational, cultural or philosophical systems which do not teach the conditioned co-production of phenomena. It is an active aspect of ignorance that recognizes something other than what truly is.
More Posts
The mountain is alive! 3
In “The mountain is alive! 3” Paul speaks of the mountain’s definite impact on human life and redefines its place among other forms of being.
Me, me, me (and the others?)
In “Me, me, me (and the others?)” Damien talks about meeting an “I” beyond the ego and an “other” free of any idea of the other, Dzogchen way
The game of withdrawal and rejection
In this first article of the series “Living together”, Nils makes the link between the three fundamental emotions that guide our lives, and their true nature.



