1.4.8

The Three Marks of Existence

Test yourself

The Three Marks of Existence

Buddhism follows Three Marks of Existence - three teachings from the Buddha to help followers understand the nature of existence.

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Mark one - Anicca

  • The first mark is Anicca - impermanence.
  • When the Buddha saw both old age and death in the Four Sights of his travels, he realised that life comes into being and then decays.
  • Nothing is permanent. This is true of all living things.
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Samsara

  • The Buddha saw this as a mark of human existence.
  • People are born. They grow young and strong. They grow old and weak, and then they die.
  • The Buddha taught that for human beings this cycle starts again, and human life follows a cycle of birth and death.
  • In Buddhism, this cycle is called samsara.
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Mark two - Dukkha

  • The second mark, Dukkha, translates to suffering or pain. Living in luxury brought the Buddha no happiness because it could not please him. It actually caused him suffering. This is a mark of human life.
  • Throughout their lives, human beings have things that they want. Usually getting what they want leads to craving another thing and so they are never happy.
  • This is because none of these things are permanent. What seems to bring happiness is just temporary. It passes like everything else.
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Mark three - Anatta

  • The third mark of existence is Anatta. This has no translation but generally means ‘not-self’.
  • This belief is quite different from Christianity. Christians believe that they are a body and a soul.
  • The body may die but their soul lives on, and so the person hopes that they will be united with God in heaven.
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The Buddha's beliefs on Anatta

  • The Buddha taught that there is no such thing as the soul.
  • People hope and that who they are lives on after death – having the same likes, the same beliefs, the same memories.
  • But Anatta says that we must let go of that clinging to ‘me’ to what is ‘mine’. Even the person is impermanent.
  • Only when someone accepts this are they able to escape from the cycle of birth, suffering, death and rebirth.

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1Year 7

1.1Origins of Abrahamic Faith

1.2Judaism

1.3Christianity

1.4Buddhism

2Year 8

3Year 9

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