Three Characteristics of Existence (Ti-lakkhana)
ti-lakkhana: the '3 characteristics of
existence', or signata, are impermanence (anicca,
q.v.), suffering or misery (dukkha, q.v.; s. sacca, dukkhatá),
not-self (anattá,
q.v.).
"Whether
Perfect Ones appear in the world, or whether Perfect Ones do not appear in the
world, it still remains a firm condition, an immutable fact and fixed law: that
all formations are impermanent, that all formations are subject to suffering,
that everything is without a self'' (A. III, 134).
"What do you
think, o monks: Is corporeality (rúpa) permanent or impermanent? - Impermanent,
o Venerable One. - Are feeling (vedaná), perception (saññá), mental
formations (sankhára) and consciousness (viññána), permanent
or impermanent? - Impermanent, o Venerable One.
"But that,
which is impermanent, is it something pleasant or painful? - It is painful, o
Venerable One.
"But, of what
is impermanent, painful and subject to change, could it be rightly said, 'This
belongs to me, this is I, and this is my ego'? - No, Venerable One.
"'Therefore,
whatever there is of corporeality, feeling, perception, mental formations and
consciousness, whether past, present or future, one's own or external, gross or
subtle, lofty or low, far or near, of all these things one should understand,
according to reality and true wisdom: 'This does not belong to me, this is not
me, this is not my ego' " (S. XXII, 59).
"In one who
understands eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and all the remaining formations as
impermanent, painful and not-self, in him the fetters (samyojana,
q.v.) are dissolved" (S. XXXV, 53).
It is the full
comprehension of the 3 characteristics by direct meditative experience which
constitutes liberating insight. About their relation to the three gateways of
liberation', s. vimokkha
I.