Prajnaparamita: Difference between revisions
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==Literature== | ==Literature== | ||
*[[Heart Sutra]] | *[[Heart Sutra]] | ||
*[[Six mother scriptures]] | |||
*[[Verse Summary of the Prajnaparamita]] | *[[Verse Summary of the Prajnaparamita]] | ||
Revision as of 16:20, 12 November 2010
Prajñaparamita (Skt. Prajñāpāramitā; Tib. sherchin; wyl. sher phyin) – literally, ‘transcendent wisdom’.
- the sixth of the paramitas: perfect non-conceptual wisdom.
- the class of Buddhist literature that was mainly discovered by Nagarjuna in the second century. Its central topic is emptiness.
- the female deity who is the embodiment of transcendent wisdom.
Definition
"Prajnaparamita is the wisdom of directly realizing the non-conceptual simplicity of all phenomena, which has arrived at, or will lead one to, non-abiding nirvana."[1]
Subdivisions
According to the teachings of the Abhisamayalankara, there are four subdivisions:
- natural prajnaparamita
- scriptural prajnaparamita
- path prajnaparamita
- resultant prajnaparamita
Literature
Notes
- ↑ From The Words of Jikme Chökyi Wangpo by Khenpo Tsöndrü.