The Analysis of Dependent Origination Sutta (Vibhaṅga Sutta)
First published: February 15, 2026
What you learn
You will learn the twelve links of dependent origination with precise definitions for each factor, from ignorance through aging and death. This discourse explains the mechanism of how suffering arises through a chain of conditions and how it ceases when those conditions cease, providing foundational understanding of the Four Noble Truths without invoking a permanent self.
Where it sits
This is core wisdom teaching in the Buddhist canon that explains the fundamental mechanism of suffering and rebirth. Understanding dependent origination provides the essential foundation for insight into how craving causes suffering and how its cessation brings freedom.
Suggested use
Study this sutta when investigating the nature of experience, seeking to understand how suffering arises, or developing insight into non-self. Regular contemplation of these links deepens your understanding of the causal nature of existence and supports the development of liberating wisdom.
Guidance
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SN 12.2 — The Analysis of Dependent Origination Sutta (Vibhaṅga Sutta)
sn12.2:gu:0001Guidance (not part of the sutta)
sn12.2:gu:0002This discourse provides precise definitions for each of the twelve links in dependent origination, the Buddha's explanation of how suffering arises and ceases. The Buddha systematically breaks down abstract terms like "ignorance," "formations," and "clinging" into concrete, observable phenomena that practitioners can identify in their direct experience.
sn12.2:gu:0004- Each link in dependent origination has a specific, observable definition—ignorance means not knowing the four noble truths, formations are bodily/verbal/mental activities, consciousness is awareness through the six senses
- The twelve links form a complete map of how suffering arises: from ignorance through formations, consciousness, name-and-form, sense bases, contact, feeling, craving, clinging, existence, birth, to aging-and-death
- Understanding cessation works in reverse—when ignorance ceases, formations cease; when formations cease, consciousness ceases, and so on until the entire mass of suffering ceases
- This teaching transforms dependent origination from philosophical concept into practical investigation tool for observing the mechanics of suffering
- Thinking dependent origination describes events across multiple lifetimes rather than processes observable in present-moment experience
- Viewing the twelve links as a linear sequence that happens once, rather than an ongoing cycle that can be observed moment by moment
- Assuming this is purely theoretical knowledge rather than a practical framework for investigating how suffering actually arises in one's experience
- When you notice suffering arising, trace it back through the links—what craving preceded this suffering? What feeling preceded the craving? What contact preceded the feeling?
- Observe moments when ignorance about the four noble truths leads to reactive formations (bodily tension, mental commentary, emotional responses)
- Practice identifying the six types of consciousness (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, mind) as they arise throughout your day
- The Great Discourse on Causation - for the Buddha's most detailed explanation of dependent origination
- At Kaccānagotta - for understanding how dependent origination relates to views of existence and non-existence
- The Sheaves of Reeds - for seeing how consciousness and name-and-form support each other