The Four Noble Truths
A four-step diagnosis of why life feels unsatisfying — and a claim that there is a cure.
The Four Noble Truths (Pali cattāri ariyasaccāni) are the Buddha's first teaching, and they read less like commandments than like a doctor's diagnosis: name the illness, find its cause, confirm there is a cure, then prescribe the treatment. The phrase is most literally "the truths of the noble ones" — the realities that those far along the path see clearly. The key point is that these are meant to be things a clear mind can verify for itself, not articles of faith one must simply accept.
Truth one: there is dukkha. This word is usually translated "suffering," but it is far broader — it covers obvious pain and grief, but also the subtle dissatisfaction that even good things carry, because nothing pleasant lasts. Birth, aging, sickness, loss, and simply not getting what we want all fall under it. The point is honest description, not gloom.
Truth two: dukkha has an origin — craving (taṇhā, "thirst"). It is the restless wanting that reaches for pleasure, for life and experience to continue, or for unwanted things to go away. This thirst keeps the mind agitated and, in Buddhist understanding, keeps beings cycling through rebirth.
Truth three: because dukkha has a cause, it can end. Let go of the craving and the dissatisfaction it powers ceases. That cessation is called nirvāṇa — a deep, lasting freedom and peace. (It is not annihilation, and not a blissful afterlife reward; it is the present un-binding of a mind no longer driven by thirst.)
Truth four: there is a practical path to that end — the Noble Eightfold Path, a balanced program of ethical living, mental discipline, and wisdom. The whole scheme is thus realistic but hopeful: it takes suffering seriously precisely because it insists suffering can be undone.
How it traveled
- 佛說大般泥洹經Nanjing · 380redefines
- 央掘魔羅經Nanjing · 450redefines
Key passages(20)
The Buddha and His Dhamma · B. R. Ambedkar
In the Buddha's Words: An Anthology of Discourses from the Pali Canon · Bhikkhu Bodhi
The Noble Eightfold Path: Way to the End of Suffering · Bhikkhu Bodhi
Mindfulness: A Practical Guide to Awakening · Joseph Goldstein
The Word of the Buddha: An Outline of the Teaching of the Buddha in the Words of the Pali Canon · Nyanatiloka Mahāthera
The Art of Living: Vipassana Meditation as Taught by S.N. Goenka · S. N. Goenka
It's Easier Than You Think: The Buddhist Way to Happiness · Sylvia Boorstein
Old Path White Clouds: Walking in the Footsteps of the Buddha · Thich Nhat Hanh
The Heart of the Buddha's Teaching: Transforming Suffering into Peace, Joy, and Liberation · Thich Nhat Hanh
The Essentials of Buddha-Dhamma in Meditative Practice · Sayagyi U Ba Khin
What the Buddha Taught · Walpola Rahula