sn 56.11
SN

The Setting in Motion of the Wheel of the Dhamma Sutta (Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta)

Four Noble Truths
Noble Eightfold Path

First published: February 15, 2026

What you learn

The Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path, which form the foundational framework of Buddhist practice. You will understand the Middle Way between indulgence and self-mortification, and learn the three aspects of understanding each truth. This discourse establishes the diagnostic framework of suffering and its origin, along with the cure of cessation and the path to liberation.

Where it sits

This is the starting point for all Buddhist practice and represents the core structure of Buddhism. It encompasses ethics, meditation, and wisdom as the essential components of the Buddhist path.

Suggested use

Return to this sutta whenever you need to review the fundamentals of Buddhist practice or when explaining Buddhism's core structure to someone new. It serves as an essential reference point for understanding all subsequent Buddhist teachings.

Guidance

Start here. Read the original text in the other tabs.

SN 56.11 — The Setting in Motion of the Wheel of the Dhamma (Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta)

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Guidance (not part of the sutta)

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What this discourse is really about

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This is Buddhism's foundational teaching—the essential framework for understanding why life feels difficult and what we can do about it. The Buddha is offering a diagnosis and treatment plan for the human condition. He's saying: "Here's why you suffer, here's where that suffering comes from, here's the good news that it can end, and here's exactly how to make that happen."

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The Four Noble Truths work systematically: they diagnose the problem of suffering, trace it to its source in craving, promise that recovery is possible, and prescribe the eight-step path to get there. This teaching identifies root causes and provides a complete solution rather than addressing only symptoms.

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What makes this teaching so revolutionary is the middle way approach. Instead of saying "indulge everything" or "deny everything," the Buddha offers a balanced path that's both realistic and transformative. This balanced approach provides skillful development that leads to genuine freedom.

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Key teachings

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  • The Middle Way: Avoiding both extreme indulgence and extreme denial, finding a balanced approach to spiritual practice that's sustainable and effective.
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  • Four Noble Truths: The framework for understanding suffering—that it exists, has a cause (craving), can end, and there's a path to end it.
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  • Noble Eightfold Path: The practical method with eight interconnected areas of development: right view, intention, speech, action, livelihood, effort, mindfulness, and concentration.
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  • Craving as the root: Suffering comes not from external circumstances but from our internal craving for things to be different than they are.
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  • Three phases of understanding: Each truth has three aspects—recognizing it, doing something about it, and completing that work.
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Common misunderstandings

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  • "Buddhism is pessimistic": The First Truth isn't saying life is only suffering, but that suffering is an unavoidable part of life that deserves honest acknowledgment.
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  • "Just stop wanting things": The teaching isn't about eliminating all desires, but understanding how craving (desperate clinging) creates suffering.
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  • "The path is linear": The eight aspects of the path work together simultaneously, not as a step-by-step sequence you complete once.
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Try this today

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  • Notice the middle way: When you catch yourself in an extreme (overindulging or being too harsh), pause and ask: "What would the middle ground look like here?"
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  • Identify craving vs. preference: Pick one thing that's bothering you today and explore: "Am I simply preferring something different, or am I desperately craving it to change?"
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  • Practice one path factor: Choose one aspect of the eightfold path (right speech or right mindfulness) and pay special attention to it throughout your day.
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If this landed, read next

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  • MN 10 for practical instructions on developing right mindfulness
  • MN 117 for a detailed exploration of the Noble Eightfold Path
  • SN 22.85 for understanding how clinging creates suffering
  • MN 26 for the Buddha's own journey to finding the middle way
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Related Suttas