Khuddaka Nikaya - Nettippakarana ( The Guide ) - Specification Section Part 3-3
ACCORDING TO 
KACCANA THERA 
TRANSLATED FROM THE PALI BY 
BHIKKHU NANAMOLI
Pali Text Society
Mode 3 
[The Ninefold Thread in the Mode of Conveying a Construing] 
119. Herein, what is the Mode of Conveying a Construing ? The 
Mode of Conveying a Construing is this: 
(i.e., whether surd or not)' (quoted in Burmese-script Pali dictionary Sadda-
ttharatandvali). 
1V7/2 l
Anusandhi-vacana—statement of sequence [of meaning]' : another 
syntactical term. NettiA says 'uttered by a hearer (disciple); for it is so 
called since it occurs by following sequentially upon {anusandhetvd) a state-
ment of the Blessed One's' (p. 67). This would apply to the explanatory 
discourse by the Elder Maha-Kaccana in, e.g., M. Sutta 18. The meaning 
is thus not the same as that of the sandhi at §§198ff. 
117/3 'Nltatiha—whose meaning is already guided' and l
neyyattha—whose 
meaning needs guiding' occur at A. i, 60; they can be paraphrased by 'with 
explicit meaning' and 'with implicit meaning' respectively, though recollecting 
that 'meaning' here means 'meaning-as-aim'. The remaining 4 kinds are 
from the fourth chapter (§760). 
117/4 l
Vdsand—morality': fm. y/vas 'to dwell', see Sn. 1009, Miln. 263, 
Vis, 185. Here contexts show the meaning to be cultivation of merit, hence 
'morality' ; but cf. Vin. iv, 120, where it is allowed to 'treat ' or 'cure' (vasetum) 
clay in order to prevent it from becoming ill-smelling. 
117/5 Spelling nibbedha in all eds., which implies \/vidh, ( = Skr.\/vyadh); 
yet possibly one might read nibbheda ('breaking out ' fm. \/bhid) in all instances. 
See abhinibbhidd and n. 326/1. There seems to be some real fusion of these 
two and with \/vid (nibbidd, 'dispassion'). 
'Looking for right and wrong construing 
In the case of all the Conveyings
, 
Plane and resort [will] demonstrate 
The Mode Conveying a Construing' (§7). 
120. What does it construe ? The four Principal Appeals to 
Authority (see A. ii, 167). These are the appeal to the Enlightened 
One as authority, the appeal to a community as authority, the 
appeal to several elders as authority, and the appeal to a single 
elder as authority. These are the four Principal Appeals to 
Authority.
1 
121. [In all such appeals to authority] (These terms and 
phrasing must , in the case of the Thread, be 
conformable to the ways of entry [to it],
1
and, in 
the case of the Out-guiding (Discipline) , be seen 
[there] for oneself) (A. ii, 167), and they must , in 
the case of the essential natur e of the idea,
2
be 
adaptabl e [to it]. 
122. [22] What is the Thread to whose ways of entry they must be 
conformable (see also §§351fT.) ? The four Noble Truths. 
123. What is the Outguiding (Discipline) where they must be seen 
for oneself ? The outguiding of lust, the outguiding of hate, and 
the outguiding of delusion. 
124. What is the essential nature of the idea to which they must be 
adaptable ? Dependent arising (see §462; S. ii, 25). 
125. If, in the case of the Noble Truths, there is a way of entry 
[to them],
1
and if, in the case of the Outguiding of defilements, it is 
120/1 This passage clearly takes mahapadesa to be made up of mahaJ
r 
apadesa, not maha+padesa. Ref. in PED to A. ii, 167 should thus be under 
apadesa, not under padesa, and ref. D. ii, 123 should be added there; CPD 
does not mention under apadesa. The meaning is thus clearer; for it is not 
the authority itself so much as the appeal made to the authority, the correct-
ness of the appeal being recommended to be checked against the Suttas and 
the Vinaya. 
121/1 For otdrayitabba ('must be conformable to the ways of entry'—i.e. , to 
the 4 Truths) see Introduction (sect. 8). 
121/2 Dhammata (lit. 'idea-ness'—the particular idea by which the 'thing' 
is recognised) combines the notions of 'idea' (dhamma), 'nature' (pakati), 
and 'essence' (bhava—in its post-Pitaka use), rather in the sense of the English 
expression 'I t is of the essence . . .'. What is referred to here is dependent 
arising as the essential conditionedness of all being. 
125/1 l
Avatarati—there is a way of entry' : = otarati; not in PED, see CPD; 
but the rendering 'to descend' in CPD, while literal, does not suit this context
seen for oneself, and if, in the case of the essential nature of the idea, 
there is no running counter [to it], then there is no generation of 
taints. Whatever is [so] construable from among the four Principal 
Appeals to Authority can be accepted, whatever it is construable by 
and however it is construed. 
126. When [in the Thread] someone is asked a question, [the 
question] should be fathomed and investigated as to the terms thus: 
'How many terms are there in the question (see §§63f.) ? If all the 
terms are in concord about a single meaning, that is a single question. 
If four terms are in concord about a single meaning, that is a single 
question. If three terms are in concord about a single meaning, 
that is a single question. If two terms are in concord about a single 
meaning, that is a single question. If one term is in concord about 
a single meaning, that is a single question.' 
127. When scrutinizing it, what one needs to recognize is this: 
'Now are these ideas different in meaning and different in phrasing, 
or have these ideas a single meaning, only1
the phrasing being 
different V (cf. M. i, 297). 
128. How would that be ? According as the deity asked the 
Blessed One the following questions: 
((
The world: by what is it struck down ? 
And then by what is it beset ? 
What barb has it been entered by ? 
And by what harassed1
constantly V) (S. i, 40). 
129. These four terms asked are three questions: How is that 
recognized ? Because the Blessed One answered the deity as 
follows: 
(6
Mortality strikes down the world. 
And then it is beset by ageing. 
And craving's barb has entered it. 
And wishes harass it constantly
9
) (S. i, 40). 
130. Herein, ageing and death are two of the determined charac-
well; it requires the more specific sense of 'to allow or provide a way of entry 
into (i.e., the 4 truths)'. What is meant is given in full in the 12th Mode 
(§§351ff.). 
127/1 ''Eva—only': this very commonly met with meaning not in PED. 
128/1 'Dhiipayita—harassed': no meaning that fits given in PED; lit. 
'smoked', but here NettiA glosses by santdpita; cf. Psalms of the Brethren 448. 
So also dhupayana (§136). Cf. dhupdyati at A. ii, 215. 
teristics of the determined; for ageing is alteration of what is 
steady) [and] death is (subsidence) (A. i, 152).
1 
131. Herein, there is a difference between the meanings of ageing 
and of death. For what reason ? [23] Because those who die in 
the womb never become aged. And there is death among the gods 
though their physical frames do not age.
1
One can get by2
ageing, 
but death one cannot get by, except for what is in the province of 
those possessing supernormal success (power; see D. ii, 99). 
132. Now when it is said 'Craving's barb has entered it', those without 
lust are seen to age and die. And if craving were the same as ageing 
and death, then that being so, all those who were youthful would be 
without craving. And [if], in the way that craving is the origin of 
suffering, so too were ageing and death [the origin of suffering], then 
that [ageing and death] would actually be the origin of suffering and 
craving would not be the origin of suffering; but ageing and death 
are not the origin of suffering, and craving is the origin of suffering. 
And [if], in the way that craving is exterminable by the path, so 
[too ageing and death were the same], then ageing and death would 
also be exterminable by the path. 
133. By means of this kind of construction it can be examined with 
various other
1
reasons whether the construction is seen for oneself 
and [whether] otherness of meaning is co-ordinated (cf. §§465ff.); 
And it should be examined as to phrasing as well. 
134. Now in the case of the two ideas, namely 'barb' and 'harass-
ment' (§128), there is oneness of meaning; for no difference is con-
struable between the meanings of 'wishes' and 'craving' (§129). 
When craving's intent is not fulfilled, anger and spite arise with 
respect to the nine Grounds for Annoyance (see A. v, 408). 
135. By means of this construction there is otherness in the 
meanings of ageing, of death, and of craving. 
136. However, when the Blessed One calls this by the two names, 
'wishes' and 'craving', it is in virtue of the external grounds which 
130/1 Read Jar a yam thitassa annaikattam; maranam vayo. 
131/1 For the death of gods see Iti. 76f. 
131/2 'Patikkamam katum—to get by' : not in PED, lit. 'to make a by-pass' ; 
cf. parikkamandya (M. i, 43). Perhaps the reading here should be parikka-
mam. 
133/1 This use of annanianna as 'various others' or 'this and other' is 
unusual, perhaps peculiar to this work, the normal meaning being 'each other' 
or 'mutual'. NettiA says 'anruimannehl ti annehi kdrarm/papattlhi: atthato 
ce anriatiam tadannam pi; byanjanato gavesitabban ti attho" (p. 72). 
are its object that it is called by him by the two names, 'wishes' 
and 'craving'; for all craving has the single characteristic of cleaving 
to. Just as all fire has the single characteristic of heating, though 
it has various other names according to its consumption [assumed], 
that is to say, 'log-fire' and 'grass-fire' and 'brushwood-fire' and 
'cowdung-fire' and 'chaff-fire' and 'rubbish-fire' (cf. M. i, 259), yet 
all fire has only the characteristic of heating, so too, all craving has 
only one characteristic, namely the characteristic of cleaving to, 
[24] though it is called by various other names according to the 
fuel-consumption [assumed] that is its object, that is to say, 'wishes' 
and 'craving' and 'barb' and' harassment'
1
and 'the Current' and 
'attachment' and 'affection (moisture)' and 'torment' and 'the 
Creeper' and 'conceiving [in terms of "I " and "mine"]' and 'res-
ponsibility' and 'need' and 'thirst' and 'expectant-relishing'; yet 
all craving has only one characteristic, namely the characteristic of 
cleaving to, according as it is stated in the [Mode of Conveying] 
Synonyms (see §§285ff.): 
137. (Need and longing, expectant relishing, 
Enticements
1
on the several elements based, 
Hankering whose being is rooted in unknowing: 
To all that with its root I put an end) 
(Pel7;cf . S. i, 181; see §286). 
138. That is synonymous with craving, according as the Blessed 
One said: ( Tissa, when someone is not without lust, not without will, 
not without love, not without thirst, not without fever, for form . . .for 
feeling . . . for perception . . . for determinations . . . for conscious-
ness . . . ) all of which argument can be cited in detail (cf. S. iii, 107). 
139. This synonym for Craving1
is construable in this way: 'All 
access to suffering has for its root determinations [conditioned] by 
craving for sensual desires.' I t is not construable in this way: 'AH 
136/1 'Saritd—current' might mean 'memory-maker' and refer to the sara-
sankappa of, say, M. iii, 132 or to the samanussarato of M. iii, 217, depending 
on the root. 
137/1 ''Sard—enticements': the word is not in the Samyutta text , which 
differs a good deal from this quotation. NettiA (p. 99) equates with tanhd 
but does not explain the word anywhere. 
139/1 C, Ba and Bb agree that the words tanhdy* etarh vevamnam evarh 
yujjati are one clause. Ba and Bb append it to what goes before, while C 
begins the following passage with it, which seems preferable. 
access to dispassion has for its root some requisite of craving for 
sensual desires.'
2 
By means of this construction it can be examined with various 
other reasons. 
140. For just as
1
the Blessed One teaches ugliness to a person of 
lusting temperament, teaches loving kindness to a person of hating 
temperament, teaches dependent-arising to a person of deluded 
temperament—for if he taught to a person of lusting temperament 
the heart-deliverance of loving kindness, or the pleasant way with 
sluggish acquaintanceship, or the pleasant way with swift acquain-
tanceship, or the kind of abandoning heralded by insight, the 
teaching could not be construed—, so too, whatever conforms with 
the abandoning of lust, whatever conforms with the abandoning of 
hate, and whatever conforms with the abandoning of delusion, [25] 
can all be construed under the Mode of Conveying a Construing, 
after investigating it under the Mode of Conveying an Investigation, 
so far as the plane of knowledge extends. 
141. When someone abides in loving kindness, the teaching is not 
construable thus: '111 will keeps gripping his heart,' the teaching is 
construable thus: '111 will is abandoned and disappears in him.' 
142. When someone abides in compassion, the teaching is not con 
struable thus: 'Cruelty keeps gripping his heart,' the teaching is 
construable thus: 'Cruelty is abandoned and disappears in him.' 
143. When someone abides in gladness, the teaching is not con-
struable thus: 'Boredom keeps gripping his heart,' the teaching is 
construable thus: 'Boredom is abandoned and disappears in him.' 
144. When someone abides in onlooking-equanimity, the teaching is 
not construable thus: 'Lust
1
keeps gripping his heart,' the teaching 
is construable thus: 'Lust is abandoned and disappears in him.' 
145. When someone abides in the signless, the teaching is not con-
struable thus: 'His cognizance occurs by means of this or that by 
following signs,' the teaching is construable thus: 'Any sign is 
abandoned and disappears in him.' 
146. When the [conceiving 'I] am' is absent, the teaching is not 
139/2 l
Kdmatanhdparikkhdramulako—has for its root some requisite of 
craving for sensual desires' is explained by NettiA to be objective sensual 
desires (desired things) as the basis for subjective sensual desire (craving). 
Cf. distinction between vatthu-kdma and kilesa-kdma at Ndl. 1. 
140/1 Where PTS has yathd Bhaga-va C has ya(ti aha Bhagavd, Ba and Bb 
yaihd hi Bhagavd. 
144/1 Cf. M. i, 424, which has putigha here, not ruga. 
construable thus * "I do not see thus 'I am this', yet the barb of 
uncertainty and wondering 'What am I ?, How am I V1
keeps 
gripping my cognizance,''' the teaching is construable thus ' "The 
barb of uncertainty and wondering is abandoned and disappears 
[in me]." ' 
147. [Again,] when1
someone has entered upon the first meditation, 
the teaching is not construable thus 'Lust for sensual desires and 
ill will occur
2
in his distinction,' the teaching is construable thus 
'They occur in his inferior state,' or alternatively, the teaching is 
not construable thus 'Perception and attention accompanied by 
what is without thinking occur in his inferior state,' the teaching 
is construable thus 'They occur in his distinction.' 
148. When someone has entered upon the second meditation, the 
teaching is not construable thus 'Perception and attention accom-
panied by what has thinking and explorating occur in his dis-
tinction,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in his inferior 
state;' or alternatively, the teaching is not construable thus 
'Perception and attention accompanied by what has pleasure due to 
onlooking-equanimity occur in his inferior state,' the teaching is 
construable thus 'They occur in his distinction.' 
149. [26] When someone has entered upon the third meditation, the 
teaching is not construable thus 'Perception and attention accom-
panied by what has pleasure due to happiness occur in his distinc-
tion,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in his inferior 
state;' or alternatively, the teaching is not construable thus 
'Perception and attention accompanied by mindfulness whose 
purity is due to onlooking-equanimity occur in his inferior state,' 
the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in his distinction.' 
150. When someone has entered upon the fourth meditation, the 
teaching is not construable thus 'Perception and attention accom-
panied by what has [pleasure due to] onlooking-equanimity1
occur 
146/1 Where PTS has kisminci katasmin ti, Ba has kinci gatasmin ti and 
Bb and C kisinl ti kathasml ti, NettiA ignores. Since the allusion is certainty 
to M. i, 8, Bb and C are right and the resolution is as follows kim asml? ti, 
katham asml? ti. 
147/1 The words yatha vd pana at PTS p. 25, line 23 ( = beginning of §147) 
must relate forward to the evam at PTS p. 26, line 38 ('so too' in §156). 
Consequently §§147-56 are one sentence in the Pali, regardable as beginning 
with the 'just as .. . ' which is followed in due course by the ' .. . so too . . .' 
147/2 'Sarhvattanti—occur': this meaning, not infrequent, not given in 
PED; cf. nibbattati and pavattati. 
150/1 Read upekkhdsukhasahagatd.
in his distinction,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in 
his inferior state;' or alternatively, the teaching is not construable 
thus 'Perception and attention accompanied by the base consisting 
of infiniteness of space
2
occur in his inferior state,' the teaching is 
construable thus 'They occur in his distinction.' 
151. When someone has entered upon the base consisting of 
infiniteness of space, the teaching is not construable thus 'Perception 
and attention accompanied by form occur in his distinction,' the 
teaching is,construable thus 'They occur in his inferior state;' or 
alternatively, the teaching is not construable thus 'Perception and 
attention accompanied by the base consisting of infiniteness of 
consciousness occur in his inferior state,' the teaching is construable 
thus 'They occur in his distinction.' 
152. When someone has entered upon the base consisting of 
infiniteness of consciousness, the teaching is not construable thus 
'Perception and attention accompanied by the base consisting of 
infiniteness of space occur in his distinction,' the teaching is con-
struable thus 'They occur in his inferior state;' or alternatively, the 
teaching is not construable thus 'Perception and attention accom-
panied by the base consisting of no-owning1
occur in his inferior 
state,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in his dis-
tinction.' 
153. When someone has entered upon the base consisting of no-
150/2 'Akasa—space': PED derives from prefix d-f (Skr.)\/kds 'to shine 
forth' (though it is a mystery how space, which is devoid oirupa, can do that) . 
The old Pali definitions are all negative and imply the prefix a- to be a 
strengthened negative (as in dkincanna) + either\/kds (Skr.^/kds) 'to display', 
'to shine' or else -\/kas (Skr. (\/krs) 'to draw a line', 'to plough a furrow'; 
akasa is then either 'that which does not shine forth' or 'that on which no 
line can be drawn' (cf. Simile at M. i, 127: impossibility of drawing a picture 
on space (akasa)). See negative definition in Vibhdviru Tikd ad Abhidhamma-
tthasangaha: 'Na kassatl ti dkaso, na kdso va dkdso\ The very late and 
Sanskritized Abhidhdnappadipikd Tikd admits a positive definition, however: 
l
Bhusam kasante dippante padatthd etend ti dkdso; na kassati na vilekhiyati 
ti va akaso\ 
152/1 l
dkincanndyatana—base consisting of no-owning': PED derives 
dkincanna from neg. prefix a-+pron. kim -\ suffix -carta; but the word seems 
rather to be a negative derivative of ^/kic ('to press', 'to obstruct'); see M. i, 
298 'rdgo kincano ('lust is an owning'), etc., explained at MA. ii, 354 by kincati 
— maddati. Cf. also kincanatd (so read) at M. ii, 263 and MA. iv, 64 = Vis. 654. 
The words
l
n'atthi kinci* (M. i, 41) in the description of the dkincahridyatana 
are then a play on the two different words kind (pron.) and kirfcawi (subst. 
fm. \/kic). Otherwise well rendered by 'base consisting of nothingness'. 
owning, the teaching is not construable thus Terception and 
attention accompanied by the base consisting of infiniteness of 
consciousness occur in his distinction,' the teaching is construable 
thus 'They occur in his inferior state;' or alternatively, the teaching 
is not construable thus Terception and attention accompanied by 
the base consisting of neither perception nor non-perception occur in 
his inferior state,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in 
his distinction.' 
154. When someone has entered upon the base consisting of neither 
perception nor non-perception, the teaching is not construable thus 
'The accesses to perception occur in his distinction,' the teaching is 
construable thus 'They occur in his inferior state;' or alternatively, 
the teaching is not construable thus Terception and attention 
accompanied by cessation of perception and feeling1
occur in his 
inferior state,' the teaching is construable thus 'They occur in his 
distinction.' 
155. The teaching is not construable thus 'Cognizance is healthy 
when it does not submit to directive management,'
1
the teaching is 
construable thus 'Cognizance is healthy when it submits to directive 
management.' 
156. That is how all the ninefold Thread should, after being in all 
ways (§62) investigated in accordance with the Mode of Conveying 
an Investigation, be construed in accordance with the Mode of 
Conveying a Construing, doing so according to the True Idea, 
according to the Outguiding (Discipline), [27] and according to the 
Master's Dispensation. 
157. That is why the venerable Maha-Kaccana said: 
'Looking for right and wrong construing 
In the case of all the Conveyings' 
Plane and resort [will] demonstrate 
The Mode Conveying a Construing' (§7). 
The Mode of Conveying a Construing is ended. 
154/1 NettiA points out that such perception and attention in this case 
accompany the preparatory work done by one who has decided to enter 
upon the attainment of cessation of perception and feeling (p. 76). 
155/1 i
Abhinihdra—directive management': what is meant is, making and 
keeping a resolution, but the word also has a technical reference to the develop-
ment of the 5 supernormal abhinfia belonging to worlds (see, e.g., D. i, 76).
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