Poisoned Arrow 🌱 simile
Dissatisfied with unanswered questions, the venerable Mālukyaputta demands explanations about the world, life force, and what happens to a realized one after death. The Buddha replies with a simile of a man struck by a poisoned arrow who refuses treatment until every trivial detail about the arrow and the archer is explained. Such delay would inevitably lead to death. Likewise, speculative views do not bring freedom from suffering.
The Buddha critiques the Nigaṇṭhas’ belief that all suffering is determined by past deeds and erased by extreme asceticism. Instead, he explains how right effort applied to present causes of suffering leads to dispassion, detailing the gradual training that culminates in complete liberation.
The Buddha uses a simile of a dart dipped in poison to explain how acquisitions, respect, and popularity are vicious, bitter, and severe, obstructing the attainment of the unsurpassed safety from bondage.