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Glossary›Anatta

Glossary

Anatta

Core Buddhist teaching that no permanent, unchanging self or soul exists in any phenomenon—one of the Three Marks of Existence alongside impermanence and suffering.

What is Anatta?

Anatta (Pali) or anātman (Sanskrit) is the Buddhist doctrine of “non-self”—that no unchanging, permanent self exists. The term is a composite Pali word consisting of an (not) and attā (self-existent essence). In Buddhism, the three marks of existence are three characteristics of all existence and beings, namely anicca (impermanence), dukkha (suffering), and anattā (without a lasting essence).

Anatta does not claim that human beings do not exist or function in the world. Rather, it refutes the notion that any component of experience—body, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, or consciousness—contains or constitutes a permanent, essential “self.” The Buddhist critique of ātman is subtle and goes beyond simply denying that a self exists. At the heart of the matter is how to regard the very word “exists”.

Origins & Lineage

The Anattalakkhaṇa Sutta (Pali) or Anātmalakṣaṇa Sūtra (Sanskrit), is traditionally recorded as the second discourse delivered by Gautama Buddha. In this discourse, the Buddha analyzes the constituents of a person’s body and mind (khandha) and demonstrates that they are each impermanent (anicca), subject to suffering (dukkha) and thus unfit for identification with a “self” (attan).

The concept of anatta, or anatman, is a departure from the Hindu belief in atman (“the self”). In Sanskrit the word ātman is used by Hindus for the soul, that most essential part of the self that is deeply embedded in the body but is immaterial and indestructible and reincarnates when one dies. Buddhists reject this idea as a comforting but mistaken viewpoint.

The teaching appears throughout the Pali Canon—the earliest Buddhist texts preserved by the Theravada tradition—and forms a cornerstone of all Buddhist schools, including Mahayana, Vajrayana, and Zen. This is the central doctrine of Buddhism, without understanding which a real knowledge of Buddhism is altogether impossible. It is the only really specific Buddhist doctrine, with which the entire Structure of the Buddhist teaching stands or falls.

How Anatta Is Practiced

Anatta is not merely a philosophical position; it is a lived, experiential realization cultivated through meditation. In the Anattalakkhana Sutta, the Buddha explicitly states that if the aggregates were truly “self”, they would be under one’s control and not subject to change. However, because they are impermanent and conditioned, they cannot be identified as “me” or “mine”.

In Vipassana (insight meditation), practitioners observe bodily sensations, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness with equanimity, directly experiencing their arising and passing. By systematically cultivating concentrative focus (Samatha), insight-oriented awareness (Vipassana), and compassion-based practices (Metta), practitioners can progressively deepen consciousness and develop refined meta-cognitive insights.

In Zen, anatta is approached through shikantaza (“just sitting”) and koan practice, dissolving the sense of a separate observer. In Advaita-influenced practice, self-inquiry (atma vichara) questions “Who am I?” to reveal the absence of a fixed referent.

The practice involves recognizing the five aggregates (skandhas)—form, feeling, perception, mental formations, and consciousness—as impermanent processes rather than possessions of a self. The Buddha simply taught that you’ll experience much less suffering if you refrain from identifying any thing as “self”.

Anatta Today

Contemporary practitioners encounter anatta primarily through:

  • Vipassana retreats: S.N. Goenka (1924–2013), a student of Sayagyi U Ba Khin. Goenka’s approach—offered through non-sectarian, donation-based 10-day retreats—made the practice accessible to people of all backgrounds.
  • Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR): While often secularized, MBSR draws on insight meditation practices rooted in anatta.
  • Insight Meditation Society and other Western retreat centers offering teachings from Joseph Goldstein, Sharon Salzberg, Jack Kornfield, and others.
  • Zen centers practicing zazen and koan study under teachers in the Soto and Rinzai lineages.
  • Thai Forest Tradition monasteries teaching from the Pali Canon, led by figures like Ajahn Chah and his Western students.

Books, podcasts, and online sanghas now make anatta teachings globally accessible, though direct transmission through a qualified teacher remains the traditional standard.

Common Misconceptions

“Anatta means there is no self at all.” The Anatta Lakkhana Sutta does NOT say that there is no self. You will not find a single place in the Buddhist Sutras or Suttas where the Buddha says “There is no self”. Rather, the teaching is that no permanent, unchanging self can be found within the five aggregates.

“Anatta is nihilism.” Anatta does not deny conventional personhood or moral responsibility. It denies only an eternal essence.

“Realizing anatta is depressing.” Many practitioners report the opposite: relief, freedom, and compassion arise when the burden of defending a fixed identity dissolves.

“Anatta is the same as Western psychology’s ‘ego death.’” While there are parallels, Buddhist anatta is embedded in an ethical and soteriological framework (the Four Noble Truths, Eightfold Path) absent in secular psychology.

Some Buddhist traditions and scholars interpret the anatta doctrine to be strictly in regard to the five aggregates rather than a universal truth. Religious studies scholar Alexander Wynne calls anattā a “not-self” teaching rather than a “no-self” teaching.

How to Begin

For intellectual grounding, read Thanissaro Bhikkhu’s Selves & Not-self: The Buddhist Teaching on Anatta (available free at dhammatalks.org)—a series of eight talks on anatta, or not-self, given at a ten-day retreat in Provence, France.

For practice:

  • Attend a 10-day Vipassana retreat in the Goenka tradition (dhamma.org) to experience impermanence and non-self directly.
  • Begin a daily sitting practice observing sensations, feelings, and thoughts without identifying with them.
  • Study the Anattalakkhaṇa Sutta alongside a teacher or commentary.
  • Join weekly meditation groups (sangha) where anatta is discussed experientially, not just philosophically.

The path to realizing anatta is gradual. Start with the breath, the body, and simple mindfulness. With sustained practice, the direct insight that “this is not me, this is not mine, this is not my self” arises not as belief, but as lived truth.

Related terms

vipassanaaniccadukkhasunyatabuddhismself inquiry
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