The perfection of wisdom
The wisdom that sees through to how things really are - and the famous texts that try to say it.
"Perfection of wisdom" (prajñāpāramitā, from prajñā, "wisdom," and pāramitā, "perfection") names two things at once: the highest kind of understanding a person can develop, and the family of Buddhist scriptures that teach it. It belongs to the Mahāyāna traditions - the "Great Vehicle," the broad movement that took shape around two thousand years ago and put the aspiration to help all beings at its heart.
The wisdom in question is not cleverness or book-learning. It is a direct seeing of "emptiness" (śūnyatā): the recognition that nothing - no object, no self, not even Buddhist ideas themselves - exists as a fixed, self-contained thing. Everything arises in dependence on causes and conditions, so everything is "empty" of its own independent essence. Importantly, this does not mean nothing exists; ordinary things still work exactly as they do. What dissolves is the illusion that they stand on their own. Realizing this loosens the grasping that drives suffering, while leaving the everyday world of cause and effect fully in place. It is wisdom paired with compassion, not a retreat from caring about others.
The scriptures that teach this range from enormous works of many thousands of lines down to the very short and beloved Heart Sūtra and Diamond Sūtra. They often speak in deliberate paradox - a bodhisattva (a being committed to awakening for the sake of all) saves countless beings while seeing that, ultimately, there are no fixed, separate "beings" to save. The point is not to deny ordinary reality but to hold it without clinging. This wisdom is counted as the culminating one among the bodhisattva's trained virtues, the insight that crowns and guides all the rest.
Key passages(20)
A Buddhist Bible · Dwight Goddard
The Perfection of Wisdom in Eighteen Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Then the Lord asked Śatakratu, head of the gods, “Kauśika, which of these two options would you choose: to have this Jambudvīpa filled right to the top with the physical remains of tathāgatas and to
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太虛大師全書.第五編 法性空慧學(第1卷-第8卷) · The Chinese Buddhist Canon (大藏經)
The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Then the Blessed One asked Śakra, mighty lord of the gods, “Kauśika, if you could possess Jambudvīpa, filled to the brim with the relics of the tathāgatas, and if someone were to present you with th
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The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines · The Tibetan Kangyur (84000)
Then the venerable Subhūti said to the Blessed One, “Blessed Lord, this perfection of wisdom is profound. Blessed Lord, this perfection of wisdom is established for a great purpose. It is establishe
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Modern teachers who discuss this idea
Modern and living teachers whose books take up The perfection of wisdom. These works are still in copyright, so we can’t show the text here — each links out to the book.
- Dwight GoddardA Buddhist Bible(1932)View on Amazon→