
XXII.1.
nor something other than the “groups”;
the “groups” are not in him, nor is he in them;
The “fully completed” does not possess the “groups.”
What, then, is the “fully completed”?
XXII.2.
And how can he exist as something else (parabhava) (“other-existence”) if he is not “that which exists by itself” (svabbava)?
XXII.3.
How will that which is a non-individual self become the “fully completed”?
XXII.4.
What would that “fully completed” reality be without either a self-existence or other-existence?
XXII.5.
It is dependent now; therefore it exists dependent on something.
XXII.6.
And whatever is not non-dependent—how will it become dependent?
XXII.7.
There would not exist in any way a “fully completed” being without being dependent on the “groups”.
XXII.8.
How is the “fully completed” being perceived by being dependent?
XXII.9.
And if there is no self-existence whatever, how is an other-existence possible?
XXII.10.
How is that empty “fully completed one” known through that which is empty?
XXII.11.
nor that there is non-emptiness.”
Nor that both exist simultaneously,
nor that neither exists;
the purpose for saying “emptiness” is for the purpose of conveying knowledge.
XXII.12.
How, then, will “the end,” “without end,” and the rest of the Tetralemma apply to bliss?
XXII.13.
By him who so imagines nirvana the notion is crudely grasped.
XXII.14.
The Buddha “exists” or “does not exist” after death.
XXII.15.
Those, completely defeated by description, do not perceive the “fully completed” being.
XXII.16.
The “fully completed” being is without self-existence and the world is without self-existence.
Source: Orientalia