Cuti is the end of an uppatti bhava, and marana is the end of a jÄti within uppatti bhava. There can be many jÄtis (births) within an uppatti bhavaĀ for humans and animals.
August 17, 2022; revised September 3, 2024
Introduction
1. There can be many jÄtis within a uppatti bhava. See āBhava and JÄti ā States of Existence and Births Therein.ā That holds particularly true for the human and animal realms. There usually is one jÄti within uppatti bhava in the Deva and Brahma realms.
- An uppatti bhava starts at a paį¹isandhi moment and ends at a cuti moment. For example, if a Deva dies and gets a āhuman existence (bhava),ā the cuti of that Deva bhava is immediately followed by a paį¹isandhi to grasp the human bhava.
- That human uppatti bhava can last many thousands of years. At the moment of paį¹isandhi to the human bhava, only a manomaya kÄya (human gandhabba) is born. That human gandhabba will get into many wombs during that time and be born with physical human bodies many times. A human babyās birth (jÄti) ends in physical death (marana) within about 100 years.
- At the end of the human bhava, that human gandhabbaās life will end (cuti), and paį¹isandhi to a new existence will occur unless that lifestream has attained the Arahant stage. Marana (death of a physical body) usually does not end the human bhava. See Ref. 1 for details.
- If the above is not clear, please ask questions at the forum. With that summary, we can now discuss the details.
Bhava and Gati
2. The Buddha divided all existences into five main categories based on predominant gati. The āGati Sutta (AN 9.68)ā lists those five main categories: Hell (niraya), the animal realm (tiracchÄna,) the hungry ghost realm (peta,) humans (manussa,) and Deva. Many suttas (including Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta) sometimes lump the DevÄs in the six Deva realms and BrahmÄs in 20 Brahma realms into one category as DevÄs.
- When a lifestream is in a specific existence, it will predominantly have the gati associated with that realm. While in Deva realms, that living beingĀ mainly displays āDeva gati.āĀ For example, DevÄs in the lower six realms still crave sensual pleasures, i.e., kama raga. BrahmÄs in the higher 20 realms donāt have cravings for sensual pleasures. But neither will engage in akusala kamma during their life as Deva/Brahma.
- A lifestream in a niraya realm will have the gati of a āhell being.ā During such an existence, no pleasant thoughts arise, for example, and mostly, a painful and angry mindset persists. This bhava has dosa (extreme anger/hate) as the base; of course, moha is there, too.
- In a hungry ghost (peta) realm, the mindset/gati will be that of one constantly in hunger pains. This gati is based on lobha (extreme greed) and moha.
- The animal realm has āall three defiled gati,ā i.e., lobha, dosa, and moha.
3. Human (manussa) existence is unique in many ways.
- A human can cultivate gati corresponding to any of the 31 realms, not just the primary five categories mentioned in the Gati Sutta.
- We can see some humans who behave like DevÄs: Some engage in giving, helping others, etc., and cultivate gati to be born in the six Deva realms. Others develop (anariya/Ariya) jhÄna corresponding to various Brahma realms and will be reborn in the corresponding Brahma realms.
- Some humans cultivate āapayagami gati,ā leading to birth in the niraya, peta, asura, and animal realms. Those who develop extreme anger/hate (and thus kill, rape, and abuse others) will be born in the niraya (hell.) Some cultivate extremely greedy gati (and steal, take bribes, etc.) and become destined to the peta realms. An animalĀ bhava has developed with both greed and hate. An animal bhava has a mixture of both. Since ignorance is also there, they will have all three āsanā (that is the root of the word ātirisan = three sansā for an animal in Sinhala.) See #3 of āLÅbha, DÅsa, MÅha versus RÄga, Paį¹igha, AvijjÄ.ā
- Humans can cultivate āhuman gatiā that will allow another human bhava in the future. āHuman gatiā is similar to the gati of DevÄs in the lower six realms but with an enhanced craving for sensory pleasures.
Connection to AggaƱƱa Sutta
4. To make some connections, let us digress to the introductory post āBuddhism and Evolution ā AggaƱƱa Sutta (DN 27)ā.
Per āAggaƱƱa Sutta (DN 27), at the beginning of a ānew Earthā (after a āloka vinÄsayaā or the ādestruction of the existing Erathā), only the realms above the Äbhassara Brahma realm are populated. Destruction of Earth (and the Sun) would have led to the destruction of lower realms. As explained in that post, all sentient beings would have moved up to or above the Äbhassara Brahma realm by the time of āloka vinÄsaya.ā
- When a new Earth forms after billions of years, an uncountable number of Äbhassara BrahmÄsĀ will be at the end of their lifetimes, and they will first be reborn in the human realm with āBrahma-likeā subtle bodies. Then over millions of years, those āBrahma-likeā bodies will evolve into the denser physical bodies we have today.
- After millions of years (especially after evolving into denser bodies,) some will start engaging in akusala kamma when the āold habits (gati)ā return. They had been hiding as āanusaya.ā First, some will be reborn in the animal realm; then, the other three lower realms will start populating as more humans leave the human bhava and āproceed downward.ā Before the arrival of the animals, plant life will gradually come into existence. See Ref. 2 for more details on gati and anusaya.
5. The point is that the human realm is the ābase station.ā This is where the seeds (kamma bija/kamma bhava) to be born in all other realms are cultivated.
- That point can be clearly illustrated with an Abhidhamma analysis, which I hope to do. But the following is a summary.
- Only a human mind can generate all 81 (121) types of citta. On the other hand, arupÄvacara BrahmÄs mainly generate only eight types of citta. The human realm is like a training school. Those humans taking a ādownward pathā by engaging in akusala kamma end up in apÄyÄs; those who cultivate arupÄvacara jhÄnÄs are born in an arupÄvacara BrahmaĀ realm, etc.
- Those uncountable number of āBrahma-likeā humans at the beginning of a ānew Earthā will slowly start populating all other realms, mainly the lower realms. Of course, some will even move up to realms higher than the Äbhassara Brahma realm.
6. Almost all the living beings in the apÄyÄs now had beenĀ āBrahma-likeā humans at the beginning of the mahÄ kappa, i.e., at the beginning of this Earth when it was first formed.
- It is worthwhile to contemplate that. There are less than eight billion people on Earth right now. But in the backyard of a house, there can be more small insects, ants, worms, and other tiny creatures. Scientists estimate one quadrillion (one million billion) ants on Earth. There are even more living beings in the oceans than in the land.
- Therefore, when the Earth formed several billion years ago, there must have been an accountable number of humans with āBrahma-likeā subtle bodies. Most of them took ādownward paths.ā Of course, we can see only the animals, not those born in the other realms in apÄya.
- Thus, Buddhaās explanation is exactly the opposite of Darwinās theory of evolution. However, the theory of evolution will be proven to be incorrect in the future.
- Of course, scienceās position that the whole universe came into existence in a āBig Bangā is also not consistent with Buddha Dhamma, as I discussed in āBuddhism and Evolution ā AggaƱƱa Sutta (DN 27)ā. So far, several of the Buddhaās original teachings ā which were thought to be incorrect by science a few hundred years ago ā have now been confirmed by science. SeeĀ Ref. 3.
Series of āCuti SuttÄsā
7. It is informative to look at a series of suttas on what happens at the end of human bhava, i.e., the ācuti momentā of leaving the human bhava. Remember that (per #1 above) grasping of a new existence happens only at the ācuti momentā at the end of the human bhava, not atĀ āmaranaā or the death of a physical human body.
- There is a sutta that says (upon exiting any existence) that getting a human existence is very rare; see āNakhasikha Sutta (SN 20.2).ā
- Then, there are a series of suttas specific to different types of originating and destination bhava.
āGood Rebirthsā Are Rare
8. The series of specific suttas start with the āManussacutiniraya Sutta (SN 56. 102)ā which says, ā..those who die as humans (not the physical death, but cuti) and are reborn as humans are few, while those who die as humans and are reborn in hell are many ā¦.ā
- Then the following suttasĀ say that those who die as humans and are reborn in the animal and hungry ghost realms are many:Ā āManussacutitiracchÄna Sutta (SN 56. 103),ā and āManussacutipettivisaya Sutta (SN 56. 104).ā
- The āManussacutidevanirayÄdi Sutta (SN 56. 105)ā says those who die as humans and are reborn in Deva realms are few, but born in niraya are many. Then the āDevacutinirayÄdi Sutta (SN 56. 106)ā states, āwho die as DevÄs and are reborn as DevÄs are few, while those who die as DevÄs and are reborn in hell, animal realm, or the hungry-ghost realm are many.ā
- Note that āManussacutiniraya Suttaā is āManussa cuti niraya Suttaā and indicates a human grasping a niraya bhava at the cuti moment. The other suttas have similar names.
- Many such combinations are shown in the rest of the series. It is a good idea to click through the rest of the suttas.
Summary
9. Cuti is the end of an uppatti bhava, and marana is the end of a jÄti within an uppatti bhava. There can be many jÄtis (births) within an uppatti bhavaĀ for humans and animals.
- DevÄs and BrahmÄs have only a single jÄti (birth) to that uppatti bhava.
- An uppatti bhava ends at the cuti moment.
- It is only for humans (and animals) that āmaranaā takes place at the death of a physical body; that is not the end of the human (animal) bhava. On the other hand, DevÄs and BrahmÄs are born (jÄti) at paį¹isandhi and reach the end of that existence at the cuti moment.
- It is extremely difficult to get a uppatti bhava at or above human bhava. Most cuti-paį¹isandhi transitions grasp a bhava in the four lowest realms or the apÄyÄs. It is critical to keep that in mind.
References
1.Ā āGati, Bhava, and JÄtiā and āCuti-Paį¹isandhi ā An Abhidhamma Description.ā
2. āThe Law of Attraction, Habits, Character (Gati), and Cravings (Äsava)ā and ā9. Key to ÄnapÄnasati ā How to Change Habits and Character (Gati).ā
3. ā31 Realms Associated with the Earth.ā Also, see the last two subsections in āDhamma and Science.ā