Read The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Online
Authors: John Bowker
1. In the Four Noble Truths, dukkha is represented as ‘birth, old age, sickness and death; grief, sorrow, physical and mental pain, and despair; involvement with what one dislikes and separation from what one likes; not getting what one wants; in summary, the five groups of grasping (It is by comparison with
pañc’up
d
nakkhandh
, cf.
SKHANDHA
) are a source of suffering’.
2. Threefold dukkha is ordinary mental and physical pain (
dukkha-dukkhat
), that is, pure or intrinsic suffering; suffering as the result of change (
viparin
ma-dukkhat
), owing to the impermanent and ephemeral nature of things; and suffering due to the formations (
sa
kh
ra-dukkhat
;
sankhara
), that is, the sense of
sa
s
ra
or our own temporality and finiteness.
3. It is maintained that all sentient beings—whether gods, humans,
pretas
, animals, or inhabitants of hell—are subject to dukkha. Gods suffer the least in the hierarchy of different beings, and the inhabitants of hell the most.