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Work #4

The Dhammapada

Anonymous (attributed to the Buddha, compiled by the early sangha)
c. 3rd century BC (Pali recension; verses likely older) · Pali
Verse anthology, 26 chapters · Theravāda Buddhism (received across all Buddhist traditions)

No self, no enduring substance, no creator — liberation is the cessation of craving in this very life

Attribute Fingerprint

Rows where works disagree are highlighted in gold. The full ontology grid is shown.

Attribute The Dhammapada
Time · Extent Infinite
Time · Ontological Status Relational
Time · Grain Discrete
Time · Freedom Deterministic
Time · Traversability Cyclical
Time · Dimensionality One
Time · Direction Uni-directional
Space · Extent Infinite
Space · Ontological Status Relational
Space · Curvature Undefined
Space · Dimensionality Three
Space · Locality Local
Matter · Extent Finite
Matter · Ontological Status Relational
Matter · Conservation Non-conserved
Matter · Dimensionality Three
Matter · Locality Local
Observer · Time Instance Multiple
Observer · Space Instance Single
Observer · Knowledge Extent Total
Observer · Knowledge Retainment Total
Observer · Physicality Embodied
Observer · Agency Active
Observer · Number Plural
Observer · Metaphysical Agency None
Observer · Moral Authority Scripture
Observer · Theological Method
Energy · Extent Finite
Energy · Ontological Status Emergent
Energy · Conservation Non-conserved
Energy · Dispersibility Irreversible
Information · Ontological Status Relational
Information · Cosmic Conservation Non-conserved
Information · Personal Conservation Conserved
Information · Granularity Discrete

Dimension-by-Dimension Evidence

What each work's passages reveal about its stance on each of the six dimensions.

Time

The Dhammapada

Time is the medium of arising and passing — every conditioned thing is impermanent (anicca). The cycle of rebirth (saṃsāra) is real but beginningless and to be transcended rather than completed. "The world is on fire" (Dhammapada 146) — time is not a neutral container but the rhythm of decay. The Abhidhamma developed a more elaborate ontology of discrete momentary dharmas; the Dhammapada's verses are consistent with that picture without requiring it.

Space

The Dhammapada

Space is presupposed rather than thematised. The verses are concerned with the field of mental and ethical action, not with cosmology. Where space appears, it is the lived space of the practitioner — forest, village, monastery, the body — not Newtonian extension. Causality is local: actions have consequences that ripen for the doer (Dhammapada 117, 119).

Matter

The Dhammapada

The material body is one of the five skandhas (rūpa, form) — a composite that arises and dissolves. The body is not a privileged site of selfhood; the verses repeatedly use it as the paradigm of impermanence: "This body, alas, will soon lie on the ground, discarded, without consciousness, like a useless log of wood" (Dhammapada 41). Matter is real, relationally constituted, and unstable.

Observer

The Dhammapada

The empirical "person" is plural in the sense of being a stream of distinct mental events without a unifying self (anatta). Knowledge in the highest sense is total — the arahant has nothing more to do — but it is gained immediately, in this very life, through practice rather than discursive reason. There is no creator and no providence: the practitioner is on her own. "By oneself, indeed, is evil done; by oneself is one defiled. By oneself is evil left undone; by oneself, indeed, is one purified" (Dhammapada 165).

Energy

The Dhammapada

Not thematised as such; the closest analogue is the karmic momentum that propels rebirth. Karma is not energy in the physical sense but a moral-volitional analogue: actions accumulate force, condition further actions, and the whole system is dissipative — energy in this sense is irreversible (each action only adds to the burden until extinguished by liberation).

Information

The Dhammapada

No persisting substantive self carries information across lives — instead, the karmic deposit propagates. This is conservation of information in a deflationary sense: the *pattern* persists across discontinuous moments without a metaphysical bearer. The discrete mind-moment ontology of the Abhidhamma reads Information Granularity as Discrete.

Internal Tensions

Where each work's argument pulls against itself.

The Dhammapada

The Dhammapada's most discussed tension is between strict anatta (no-self) and the framework of karma and rebirth — what is reborn, if there is no self? The Pali commentarial tradition resolves this by distinguishing conventional from ultimate truth and treating the rebirth-bearer as the conditioned stream rather than any persisting entity. The attribute fingerprint reflects this resolution: Observer Number is Plural (each jīva-stream is distinct), but no enduring self is posited.