Cover image of show Dīgha Nikāya, PaliVerse Podcast Series—The Chapter on the Aggregate of Morality

Dīgha Nikāya, PaliVerse Podcast Series—The Chapter on the Aggregate of Morality

Podcast by Alexander & Serene, produced by Paliverse

English

History & religion

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About Dīgha Nikāya, PaliVerse Podcast Series—The Chapter on the Aggregate of Morality

What the Buddha actually taught is far deeper than most Dhamma talks suggest. These podcast series go beyond the familiar surface — beyond "be kind," "let go," "be in the present moment" — and into the actual discourses of the Pali Canon, read the way the Theravāda tradition has always read them: root text first, then the ancient commentary and sub-commentary, each layer entering only where it genuinely deepens what came before. Plain English. No personal interpretation. No opinions. Just the teachings opened up the discourse, one by one, for anyone willing to go deeper.

All episodes

8 episodes

episode Mahā Sīhanāda Sutta ( DN8): The Great Discourse on the Lion’s Roar — The Authentic Path to Full Liberation artwork

Mahā Sīhanāda Sutta ( DN8): The Great Discourse on the Lion’s Roar — The Authentic Path to Full Liberation

What actually makes a life a spiritual life? In this episode we open the Mahā Sīhanāda Sutta — the Great Discourse on the Lion's Roar — the eighth discourse of the Dīgha Nikāya, and one of the Pāli Canon's clearest statements of what genuinely constitutes the holy life. A naked ascetic named Kassapa approaches the Buddha with a rumour: that the Buddha condemns all austere asceticism. The Buddha denies it — but then turns the conversation inside out. He lays out the full catalogue of ancient Indian ascetic practice (the nakedness, the food restrictions, the hemp garments, the bed of thorns), agrees that such a life is difficult, and then makes a single devastating observation: a slave girl who brings water could do all of it. The real difficulty — the real asceticism — lies somewhere the outward eye cannot see. From there the Buddha unfolds the gradual training in morality, mind, and wisdom; sounds his fourfold "lion's roar" of supremacy in the noble path; and meets Kassapa's request for ordination with a four-year offer that the Buddha cuts short, seeing the readiness already there. Kassapa becomes an arahant before the discourse closes. We work through the sutta in its three traditional layers — the root text, the Aṭṭhakathā commentary, and the Ṭīkā sub-commentary — preserving the scholarly precision while keeping the language accessible. The commentaries supply the scene at Vulture's Peak with Nigrodha and Sandhana, count the one hundred and ten distinct lion's roars that give the sutta its name, and explain why the Buddha waived Kassapa's probation. Read the full Mahā Sīhanāda Sutta in all three layers — and put your own questions to the text — at paliverse.org [http://paliverse.org].

22 May 2026 - 27 min
episode Jāliya Sutta (DN7): The Discourse to the Wanderer Jāliya — The Question the Path Dissolves artwork

Jāliya Sutta (DN7): The Discourse to the Wanderer Jāliya — The Question the Path Dissolves

Two wanderers come to the Buddha with a forced choice: is the soul the same as the body, or is the soul one thing and the body another? They want him to pick a side. He refuses both — and instead lays out a path that walks past the question altogether. In this seventh discourse of the Long Collection of the Pali Canon, the Buddha shows what happens when a metaphysical question is met not with an answer but with a path. Stage by stage — through morality, the four meditative absorptions, the inclining of the mind toward knowledge and vision, and finally the destruction of the deep contaminations of the mind — he shows where each side of the question stops applying. Only at the final stage does the question itself lose its grip. The wanderers came with a trap. The commentary tells us they had pre-built it: either answer would have caught the Buddha in a named wrong view — the view that beings simply end at death, or the view that an eternal soul survives the body. The Buddha refused both. He demonstrated, in real time, the middle way that the trap had been designed to bypass. This episode walks through the Jāliya Sutta in three layers — the root text, the ancient commentary, and the sub-commentary — showing how the tradition has carried this teaching through the centuries. Plain English. No personal interpretation. Just what the Buddha taught, opened up carefully, for anyone willing to go deeper. To read the sutta in full and ask questions interactively, visit paliverse.org [http://paliverse.org]. If you wish to support our cause, please click here [https://www.paypal.com/donate?token=_CRI9jkO4_fEuh38f7NPMzOaz-giIYRsV2tOgx0PU_zNxav2oyhYHNwUsq1_98Z0YRNKLG89aAhYdKpd].

8 May 2026 - 15 min
episode Mahāli Sutta (DN6): The Discourse to the Nobleman Mahāli — What the Holy Life is Actually For artwork

Mahāli Sutta (DN6): The Discourse to the Nobleman Mahāli — What the Holy Life is Actually For

In Vesālī, a Licchavi nobleman named Mahāli arrives at the Pinnacled Hall with a puzzle. A man called Sunakkhatta, who had spent three years training near the Buddha, told him something strange. He could see divine forms — the visible bodies of beings on subtler planes. But he could not hear divine sounds. Did those sounds simply not exist? Or did Sunakkhatta fail to hear sounds that were really there? The Buddha's answer opens a much larger question. What is concentration of mind actually for? What does the holy life under him produce? And why, when two wanderers once pressed him on whether the soul is the same as the body or different, did he refuse to take a side — even though, he said, he knew and saw? In this episode of the PaliVerse podcast, the sixth discourse of the Dīgha Nikāya, we walk through the Mahāli Sutta carefully, in the company of the tradition that has carried it through the centuries. The Buddha explains the lawful relationship between one-sided and both-sided training in concentration (ekaṃsabhāvito samādhi) and the supernormal senses of divine sight and divine hearing. He shows Mahāli — who infers that such attainments must be the goal — that they are not. He names what the holy life is actually for: the four noble fruits, defined not by what is achieved but by what is eliminated and what becomes impossible. Stream-entry. Once-returning. Non-returning. Arahantship. And he names the path: the Noble Eightfold Path, of which right concentration is one factor among eight. The discourse then takes one further step. The Buddha narrates an earlier exchange with the wanderers Muṇḍiya and Jāliya, who had pressed him on the soul-and-body question. He walks them through the four absorptions, the supernormal knowledges, and finally the elimination of the mental corruptions (āsava) — and shows that only at the last stage does the question itself dissolve. Not refused. Not avoided. The frame in which it could be asked is gone. We close with four explanations from the Aṭṭhakathā and Ṭīkā that deepen the discourse: why Sunakkhatta could not, in this life, attain the divine ear; what happened to him afterwards, and how his resentment cost him the attainments he had already gained; why the wanderer episode is included in this sutta at all, and how it speaks directly to a view Mahāli was holding; and what the absorptions can, and cannot, do for the question of self. In this episode: * Vesālī, the Pinnacled Hall, and the Licchavi assembly * Sunakkhatta's three-year training and partial attainment * One-sided and both-sided concentration of mind * Divine sight (dibba-cakkhu) and divine hearing (dibba-sota) * The structural pivot: why the supernormal powers are not the goal * The four noble fruits and the ten mental fetters (saṃyojana) eliminated at each * The Noble Eightfold Path * The wanderers' question on soul (jīva) and body (sarīra) * Identity-view (sakkāya-diṭṭhi) and why the arahant's silence is not evasion * Commentarial layer: Sunakkhatta's past act, his disrobing, and the concurrent loss of his attainments * Sub-commentarial layer: why concentration alone does not dissolve the soul-body frame Every word of teaching in this episode comes directly from the Pāli Canon. The voices are produced with AI; every script is reviewed and corrected by human experts before release. No personal agenda. No opinions added. To read the Mahāli Sutta in all three traditional layers — root text, Aṭṭhakathā, and Ṭīkā — visit paliverse.org [http://paliverse.org]. If you wish to support our cause, please click here: http://bit.ly/4feYZkN [http://bit.ly/4feYZkN]

5 May 2026 - 22 min
episode Kūṭadanta Sutta (DN5): The Discourse to the Brahmin Kūṭadanta —The Sacrifice That Frees artwork

Kūṭadanta Sutta (DN5): The Discourse to the Brahmin Kūṭadanta —The Sacrifice That Frees

A wealthy brahmin named Kūṭadanta has prepared a great sacrifice. Three thousand five hundred animals stand tied to posts — seven hundred bulls, seven hundred bullocks, seven hundred heifers, seven hundred goats, and seven hundred rams — waiting for slaughter. He has heard that the ascetic Gotama is said to know the threefold accomplishment of sacrifice with its sixteen requisites, and he goes to ask the Buddha how best to perform what he is about to perform. What follows is a conversation that turns the question itself inside out. The Buddha does not condemn sacrifice. He does not refuse the question. He answers it — and in answering, transforms the meaning of every word in it. In this episode of the PaliVerse Project Podcast Series, we walk through the Kūṭadanta Sutta — the fifth discourse of the Dīgha Nikāya — read in all three of its traditional layers: the root text spoken by the Buddha himself, the ancient commentary preserved by scholar-monks across the centuries, and the sub-commentary that pauses where the commentary itself leaves room. The Buddha's answer to Kūṭadanta begins with a story. Once upon a time there was a king named Mahāvijita — wealthy, of great riches, who wished to perform a great sacrifice. His chaplain told him something he had not been expecting: do not begin with the post and the fire. Begin with the country itself. Banditry was widespread. The king's first instinct was to crush it by force. The chaplain told him to do the opposite — give seed and food to those who farm, capital to those who trade, food and wages to those in service. Only then, when the doors of the houses stood open at night, would the country be ready for an offering. From there the chaplain laid out the sixteen requisites — four consents the king must seek, eight qualities the king himself must possess, four qualities required of the brahmin who conducts the ceremony. And the threefold accomplishment turned out not to be three rituals, but three steady states of mind held across time: before the act, during the act, after the act. No regret. No wavering. No unfinished business in the mind of the giver. Then the description of the sacrifice itself. No cattle were killed. No goats and sheep were killed. No trees were cut down for posts. No servants were threatened or weeping as they prepared. Those who wished to help, helped. Those who did not wish to, did not. The sacrifice was accomplished with ghee, oil, butter, curds, honey, and molasses. That was the model Kūṭadanta had come to ask about. But then the Buddha goes further. Is there, he asks, a sacrifice less troublesome and more fruitful than even that? There is. The perpetual gift — the smaller, repeated giving that does not end. And less troublesome still, with greater fruit? The dwelling built for any practitioner who comes seeking shelter. And greater than that? Going for refuge. And greater still? A life shaped by the five training rules. And greater again? The meditative absorptions. And at the top of the ladder, the direct knowing that ends the forward momentum into further existence altogether. Each step quieter than the last. Each step requiring less from the world outside, and more from the world inside. And then the moment the discourse turns from a teaching into an act. Kūṭadanta does not only acknowledge what he has heard. He sends a man to the sacrificial enclosure. Untie them. Untie all of them. I give them life. Let them eat green grass. Let them drink cool water. And let a cool breeze blow upon them. Only after the animals walk free does the Buddha give him the teaching the Buddhas have themselves discovered. And in that very seat, the stainless eye of the Teaching opens in him. If you wish to support our cause, please click here: http://bit.ly/4feYZkN [http://bit.ly/4feYZkN]

2 May 2026 - 29 min
episode Soṇadaṇḍa Sutta (DN4): The Discourse to Soṇadaṇḍa — Morality and Wisdom Alone Make the Brahmin artwork

Soṇadaṇḍa Sutta (DN4): The Discourse to Soṇadaṇḍa — Morality and Wisdom Alone Make the Brahmin

A brahmin with every credential the ancient world could offer — pure birth, Vedic mastery, beauty, wealth, royal patronage — is led step by step to strip them all away. What remains changes everything. The Soṇadaṇḍa Sutta is one of the most elegant philosophical dialogues in the entire Pāli Canon. In this episode, and Serene walk you through the complete teaching — drawing on both the original sutta and the ancient commentary by Buddhaghosa (Sumaṅgalavilāsinī) — to reveal how the Buddha dismantled an entire worldview with a single question, and why the man who understood the answer still could not live it. You will hear about five hundred brahmins trying to stop their teacher from visiting the Buddha, a man paralysed by anxiety over his own reputation, the systematic reduction of five brahmin qualities down to two, the unforgettable hand-washing-hand simile, and a startling ending where understanding the truth is not enough. In this episode: — The city of Campā, the Gaggarā lotus pond, and the fragrant campaka grove — Soṇadaṇḍa's twelve credentials and the brahmins' attempt to stop him — His twenty-nine counter-arguments praising the Buddha — The anxiety spiral: fame, wealth, and the terror of public humiliation — The Buddha reads his mind and asks the perfect question — Five qualities stripped to four, to three, to two — The nephew Aṅgaka: beauty, learning, and birth without morality — "Wisdom is cleansed by morality, morality is cleansed by wisdom" — The complete path: morality, jhāna, and the higher knowledges — Soṇadaṇḍa's turban, whip, and umbrella — the compromises of a man who could not let go — Why he did not attain awakening despite hearing the full teaching About PaliVerse PaliVerse is an AI-powered platform dedicated to making the Pāli Canon accessible to everyone. Ananda and Serene are trained AI entities with full access to the Tipiṭaka, its commentaries (Aṭṭhakathā), and sub-commentaries (Ṭīkā). Every episode is reviewed and corrected by human scholars before publication. Read the full translation, explore the commentary, and use the interactive study tools at https://paliverse.org [https://paliverse.org] If you wish to support our cause, please click here: http://bit.ly/4feYZkN [http://bit.ly/4feYZkN]

29 Apr 2026 - 24 min
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