The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines
Chapter 15
Toh 9
Degé Kangyur, vol. 26 (shes phyin, nyi khri, ka), folios 1.b–382.a; vol. 27 (shes phyin, nyi khri, kha), folios 1.b–393.a; and vol. 28 (shes phyin, nyi khri, ga), folios 1.b–381.a
Imprint
Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group
under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha
First published 2023
Current version v 1.1.14 (2024)
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84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha is a global non-profit initiative to translate all the Buddha’s words into modern languages, and to make them available to everyone.
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Table of Contents
Summary
The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines is among the most important scriptures underlying both the “vast” and the “profound” approaches to Buddhist thought and practice. Known as the “middle-length” version, being the second longest of the three long Perfection of Wisdom sūtras, it fills three volumes of the Kangyur. Like the two other long sūtras, it records the major teaching on the perfection of wisdom given by the Buddha Śākyamuni on Vulture Peak, detailing all aspects of the path to enlightenment while at the same time emphasizing how bodhisattvas must put them into practice without taking them—or any aspects of enlightenment itself—as having even the slightest true existence.
Acknowledgements
Translation by the Padmakara Translation Group. A complete draft by Gyurme Dorje was first edited by Charles Hastings, then revised and further edited by John Canti. The introduction was written by John Canti. We are grateful for the advice and help received from Gareth Sparham, Greg Seton, and Nathaniel Rich.
This translation is dedicated to the memory of our late colleague, long-time friend, and vajra brother Gyurme Dorje (1950–2020), who worked assiduously on this translation in his final years and into the very last months of his life. We would also like to express our gratitude to his wife, Xiaohong, for the extraordinary support she gave him on so many levels.
The translation was completed under the patronage and supervision of 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
The generous sponsorship of Kris Yao and Xiang-Jen Yao, which helped make the work on this translation possible, is most gratefully acknowledged.
Text Body
Chapter 15
Then the gods thought, “What should those who hear the Dharma from the elder Subhūti seek to be?”
Thereupon the venerable Subhūti, knowing in his own mind the thoughts in the minds of those gods, said to them, “Divine princes! The Dharma taught by me resembles a magical display. Divine princes! Those who listen to my Dharma should also seek to resemble a magical display. Divine princes! The Dharma taught by me resembles a phantom. Divine princes! Those who listen to my Dharma should also seek to resemble a phantom. They will not hear anything at all, nor will they actualize anything at all.”
Then the gods inquired of the venerable Subhūti, “Blessed Subhūti, are those beings like a magical display, and are those who listen to the Dharma like a magical display? Are those beings like a phantom, and are those who listen to the Dharma like a phantom?”
“Divine princes, it is so! It is so!” replied Subhūti. “Those beings are like a magical display, and those who listen to the Dharma are also like a magical display. Those beings are like a phantom, and those who listen to the Dharma are also like a phantom. Divine princes, those beings [F.21.a] are like a dream, like a magical display.
“Divine princes, physical forms are also like a dream, like a magical display. Divine princes, feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are also like a dream, like a magical display. Divine princes, the eyes are also like a dream, like a magical display. The ears, the nose, the tongue, the body, and the mental faculty are also like a dream, like a magical display. Divine princes, sights are also like a dream, like a magical display. {Ki.II-III: 15} Sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are also like a dream, like a magical display. Visual consciousness is also like a dream, like a magical display. Auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are also like a dream, like a magical display. Visually compounded sensory contact is also like a dream, like a magical display. Aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are also like a dream, like a magical display. Feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are also like a dream, like a magical display. Feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are also like a dream, like a magical display. The earth element is also like a dream, like a magical display. The water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are also like a dream, like a magical display. Fundamental ignorance is also like a dream, like a magical display. Formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are also like a dream, like a magical display.
“The perfection of generosity [F.21.b] is also like a dream, like a magical display. The perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are also like a dream, like a magical display. The emptiness of internal phenomena is also like a dream, like a magical display. The [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are also like a dream, like a magical display. The applications of mindfulness are also like a dream, like a magical display. The correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are also like a dream, like a magical display. The truths of the noble ones, the meditative concentrations, the immeasurable attitudes, the formless absorptions, the aspects of liberation, the serial steps of meditative absorption, the gateways of liberation—emptiness, signlessness, and wishlessness—the extrasensory powers, the meditative stabilities, the dhāraṇī gateways, the ten powers of the tathāgatas, the four fearlessnesses, the four kinds of exact knowledge, and the distinct qualities of the buddhas are also like a dream, like a magical display.
“The fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is also like a dream, like a magical display. The fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, and individual enlightenment are also like a dream, like a magical display. Divine princes, complete enlightenment is also like a dream, like a magical display.”
Then, the gods asked the venerable Subhūti, “Blessed Subhūti, when you say that enlightenment is also like a dream, like a magical display, in that case do you also say that nirvāṇa is like a dream, like a magical display?”
“Divine princes, [F.22.a] I do say that nirvāṇa also is like a dream, like a magical display,” replied Subhūti. “If there were anything else more sublime than nirvāṇa, that too, I say, would be like a dream, like a magical display. If you ask why, divine princes, it is because being like a dream and being like a magical display on the one hand, and nirvāṇa on the other, are not two things, and are not to be divided into two.”
Then, the venerable Śāradvatīputra, the venerable Mahāmaudgalyāyana, the venerable Mahākauṣṭhila, the venerable Mahākātyāyana, the venerable Pūrṇa Maitrāyaṇīputra, and the venerable Mahākāśyapa, along with many thousands of bodhisattvas, inquired of the venerable Subhūti, “Blessed Subhūti, who will have confidence in this perfection of wisdom, which is so profound, {Ki.II-III: 16} so hard to discern, so hard to realize, so peaceful, so clear, so subtle, and so noble?”
Then the venerable Subhūti replied to those great śrāvakas and those bodhisattva great beings, “Venerable ones! Irreversible bodhisattvas will have confidence in this perfection of wisdom, which is so profound, which is extremely hard to investigate, which is so subtle, so clear, so hard to realize, so peaceful, so noble, so utterly sublime, and which is to be known by the learned and the wise. Those individuals who discern the truth, arhats who are free from contaminants and who have fulfilled their intentions, beings who have carried out their duties with respect to the conquerors of the past and cultivated the roots of virtuous action under many tens of millions of buddhas, and noble sons or noble daughters who have been accepted by a spiritual mentor—all of these will have confidence in this perfection of wisdom, [F.22.b] which is so profound, so hard to investigate, so hard to discern, so hard to realize, so peaceful, so utterly sublime, and which is to be known by the learned and the wise.
“They will not construe the notion that physical forms are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is consciousness [and the aforementioned aggregates]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are unceasing, [F.23.a] and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that physical forms are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is physical forms. They will not construe the notion that feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, and consciousness are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is consciousness [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the eyes are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the eyes are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the eyes are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the eyes are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are nonarising, [F.23.b] and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the eyes are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the eyes are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the mental faculty [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that they eyes are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the eyes. They will not construe the notion that the ears, nose, tongue, body, and mental faculty are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the mental faculty [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that sights are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is mental phenomena [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that sights are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is mental phenomena [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that sights are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is mental phenomena [and so forth]. [F.24.a] They will not construe the notion that sights are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is mental phenomena [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that sights are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is mental phenomena [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that sights are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is mental phenomena [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that sights are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is sights. They will not construe the notion that sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, and mental phenomena are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is mental phenomena [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is visual consciousness. They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is visual consciousness. [F.24.b] They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is visual consciousness. They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is visual consciousness. They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is visual consciousness. They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is visual consciousness. [F.25.a] They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is mental consciousness [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visual consciousness is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is visual consciousness. They will not construe the notion that auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, and mental consciousness are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is mental consciousness [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally [F.25.b] compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that visually compounded sensory contact is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, and mentally compounded sensory contact are void, [F.26.a] and they will not construe the notion that voidness is mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and [F.26.b] feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, [F.27.a] feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact. They will not construe the notion that feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, and feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the earth element is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is wishless, [F.27.b] and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the consciousness element [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the earth element is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the earth element. They will not construe the notion that the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, and the consciousness element are void, [F.28.a] and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the consciousness element [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that ignorance is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is unceasing, [F.28.b] and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is aging and death [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that ignorance is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is ignorance. They will not construe the notion that formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, and aging and death are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is aging and death [and so forth]. [B29]
“They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. [F.29.a] They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are unceasing, [F.29.b] and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of generosity is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the perfection of generosity. They will not construe the notion that the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, and the perfection of wisdom are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the perfection of wisdom [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the emptiness of internal phenomena. [F.30.a] They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the emptiness of internal phenomena is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the emptiness of internal phenomena. They will not construe the notion that the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, [F.30.b] and the noble eightfold path are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are unceasing, [F.31.a] and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the noble eightfold path [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the applications of mindfulness are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the applications of mindfulness. They will not construe the notion that the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, and the noble eightfold path are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the noble eightfold path [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the truths of the noble ones. {Ki.II-III: 17} They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. [F.31.b] They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the truths of the noble ones are void, [F.32.a] and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the truths of the noble ones. They will not construe the notion that the [other fruitional attributes], up to and including the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas, are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. [F.32.b] They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth]. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa is void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the fruit of entering the stream to nirvāṇa. They will not construe the notion that the fruit of being destined for only one more rebirth, the fruit of no longer being subject to rebirth, arhatship, individual enlightenment, and all-aspect omniscience are void, [F.33.a] and they will not construe the notion that voidness is all-aspect omniscience [and so forth].
“They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are nonarising, and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the conditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the conditioned elements are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the conditioned elements.
“They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are empty, and they will not construe the notion that emptiness is the unconditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are signless, and they will not construe the notion that signlessness is the unconditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are wishless, and they will not construe the notion that wishlessness is the unconditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are nonarising, [F.33.b] and they will not construe the notion that nonarising is the unconditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are unceasing, and they will not construe the notion that noncessation is the unconditioned elements. They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are peace, and they will not construe the notion that peace is the unconditioned elements. {Ki.II-III: 18} They will not construe the notion that the unconditioned elements are void, and they will not construe the notion that voidness is the unconditioned elements.
“Divine princes,360 this formulation explains how there is no one at all who will have confidence in this perfection of wisdom, since it is so profound, and so forth, and so utterly sublime—so much so that it should be known by the learned and the wise. If you ask why, it is because nothing at all is expressed and explained in it. Insofar as there is nothing at all that is expressed or explained in it, there are no beings at all who will have confidence in it.”
Then the venerable Śāradvatīputra addressed the venerable Subhūti as follows: “Venerable Subhūti, in this perfection of wisdom, have the three vehicles—that is to say, the vehicle of the śrāvakas, the vehicle of the pratyekabuddhas, and the vehicle of the completely awakened buddhas—not been extensively presented? Has the acceptance of bodhisattva great beings not been taught, and has the path of the bodhisattvas, commencing from the time of their initial setting of the mind on enlightenment and continuing as far as their tenth setting of the mind on enlightenment, also not been taught? That is to say, have the perfection of generosity, the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, the perfection of wisdom, all the aspects of emptiness, the four applications of mindfulness, [F.34.a] the four correct exertions, the four supports for miraculous ability, the five faculties, the five powers, the seven branches of enlightenment, the noble eightfold path, the four truths of the noble ones, the four meditative concentrations, the four immeasurable attitudes, the four formless absorptions, the eight aspects of liberation, the nine serial steps of meditative absorption, the gateways of liberation—emptiness, signlessness, and wishlessness—the five extrasensory powers, the meditative stabilities, the dhāraṇī gateways, the ten powers of the tathāgatas, the four fearlessnesses, the four kinds of exact knowledge, and the distinct qualities of the buddhas also not been taught?
“Has the emanational play of bodhisattva great beings, owing to their extrasensory power and miraculous ability, not also been taught? And then is it not the case that bodhisattva great beings will practice the perfection of wisdom and take birth miraculously; is it not the case that they will have extrasensory powers that know no diminishing; is it not the case that they will indeed be excellently endowed with those roots of virtuous action through which they will seek to serve, respect, honor, and worship those lord buddhas; is it not the case that they will never interrupt the continuity of any Dharmas that they hear from those lord buddhas, until they have attained all-aspect omniscience; is it not the case that they will always be absorbed [in meditation], without lacking meditative absorption; [F.34.b] and is it not the case that they will be endowed with inspired speech that is unimpeded, inspired speech that is uninterrupted, inspired speech that is rational, inspired speech that is well connected, inspired speech that is purposeful, and inspired speech that is distinguished and supramundane?”361 {Ki.II-III: 19}
“Venerable Śāradvatīputra, it is so!” replied Subhūti. “It is just as you have said. In this perfection of wisdom, the three vehicles—that is to say, the vehicle of the śrāvakas, the vehicle of the pratyekabuddhas, and the vehicle of the completely awakened buddhas—have been extensively taught. The acceptance of bodhisattva great beings has also been taught, and it is the case that [all those other attributes you mentioned] will come about, up to and including the endowment of inspired speech that is distinguished and supramundane, but they will do so without anything being apprehended!
“If you ask what is it that is not apprehended, this will come about without a self being apprehended; without sentient beings, life forms, living beings, life, living creatures, individuals, human beings, people, actors, experiencers, knowers, or viewers being apprehended; without physical forms being apprehended; without feelings, perceptions, formative predispositions, or consciousness being apprehended; without the eyes being apprehended; without the ears, nose, tongue, body, or mental faculty being apprehended; without sights being apprehended; without sounds, odors, tastes, tangibles, or mental phenomena being apprehended; without visual consciousness being apprehended; without auditory consciousness, olfactory consciousness, gustatory consciousness, tactile consciousness, or mental consciousness being apprehended; without visually compounded sensory contact being apprehended; [F.35.a] without aurally compounded sensory contact, nasally compounded sensory contact, lingually compounded sensory contact, corporeally compounded sensory contact, or mentally compounded sensory contact being apprehended; without feelings arising from visually compounded sensory contact being apprehended; without feelings arising from aurally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from nasally compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from lingually compounded sensory contact, feelings arising from corporeally compounded sensory contact, or feelings arising from mentally compounded sensory contact being apprehended; without the earth element being apprehended; without the water element, the fire element, the wind element, the space element, or the consciousness element being apprehended; without ignorance being apprehended; without formative predispositions, consciousness, name and form, the six sense fields, sensory contact, sensation, craving, grasping, the rebirth process, actual birth, or aging and death being apprehended; without the perfection of generosity being apprehended; without the perfection of ethical discipline, the perfection of tolerance, the perfection of perseverance, the perfection of meditative concentration, or the perfection of wisdom being apprehended; without the emptiness of internal phenomena being apprehended; without the [other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, being apprehended; without the applications of mindfulness being apprehended; without the correct exertions, the supports for miraculous ability, the faculties, the powers, the branches of enlightenment, or the noble eightfold path being apprehended; without the truths of the noble ones, the meditative concentrations, the immeasurable attitudes, the formless absorptions, [F.35.b] the aspects of liberation, the serial steps of meditative absorption, the gateways of liberation—emptiness, signlessness, and wishlessness—the extrasensory powers, the meditative stabilities, the dhāraṇī gateways, the ten powers of the tathāgatas, the four fearlessnesses, the four kinds of exact knowledge, great loving kindness, great compassion, or the eighteen distinct qualities of the buddhas being apprehended; and without the [fruits and realizations], up to and including all-aspect omniscience, being apprehended.”
Then the venerable Śāradvatīputra inquired of the venerable Subhūti, “Venerable Subhūti, why in this perfection of wisdom are the three vehicles extensively taught without anything being apprehended? Similarly, why is the acceptance of bodhisattva great beings taught without anything being apprehended, and why do [all those other attributes I mentioned], up to and including the endowment of inspired speech that is distinguished and supramundane, come about, without anything being apprehended?”
The venerable Subhūti replied to the venerable Śāradvatīputra, “Venerable Śāradvatīputra, it is owing to the emptiness of internal phenomena, {Ki.II-III: 20} the emptiness of external phenomena, and [the other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, that the three vehicles have been extensively taught without anything being apprehended. It is owing to the emptiness of internal phenomena, the emptiness of external phenomena, and [the other aspects of emptiness], up to and including the emptiness of the essential nature of nonentities, that the acceptance of bodhisattva great beings has been taught. Bodhisattva great beings will be endowed with inspired speech that is distinguished and supramundane, without anything being apprehended.” [F.36.a]
This completes the fifteenth chapter from “The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines.”
Colophon
It is said in the original Jangpa manuscript:
This [Tibetan translation of] The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines has been edited twice on the basis of the original “gold manuscript,” which had been [commissioned as] a commitment of the spiritual mentor Nyanggom Chobar, and it has also been edited on the basis of the manuscript kept at Yerpa. Since it is extant, scribes of posterity should copy [the text] according to this version alone.
In the [recast] version of The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines [Toh 3790] that was edited by master Haribhadra, and in some [other] manuscripts, the text ends with the seventy-first chapter entitled “Unchanging Reality.” In certain [other] manuscripts, including the original (phyi mo) [Toh 9], there are seventy-six chapters, with [F.380.b] the addition of the [seventy-second] chapter entitled “Distinctions in the Training of a Bodhisattva,” the [seventy-third] chapter entitled “The Attainment of the Manifold Gateways of Meditative Stability by the Bodhisattva Sadāprarudita,” the [seventy-fourth] chapter entitled “Sadāprarudita,” the [seventy-fifth] chapter entitled “Dharmodgata,” and the [seventy-sixth] chapter entitled “Entrustment.” This accords with earlier accounts and the authentic records of teachings received. Insofar as there are distinctions in the translation of these five later chapters, I have seen a few manuscripts where the terminology is slightly dissimilar, although there are no differences in meaning.
In general, throughout the present text there are all sorts of unique allusions and variations in the elaboration of the points that are expressed. In particular, in the chapter entitled “The Introductory Narrative,” there are some passages where the text corresponds to The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines.
At the time when the carving of the xylographs of this very text, along with those of the Multitude of the Buddhas (Buddhāvataṃsaka), was completed, in the presence of King Tenpa Tsering, the ruler of Degé, the beggar monk Tashi Wangchuk composed these verses at Sharkha Dzongsar Palace, where the wood-carving workshop was based. May they be victorious!
ye dharmā hetuprabhavā hetun teṣāṃ tathāgato bhavat āha teṣāṃ ca yo nirodho evaṃ vādī mahāśramaṇaḥ [ye svāhā]
“Whatever events arise from causes, the Tathāgata has told of their causes, and the great ascetic has also taught their cessation.”
Bibliography
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Secondary References in Tibetan and Sanskrit
shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa stong phrag nyi shu lnga pa (Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikāprajñāpāramitā) [The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines, the “eight-chapter” (le’u brgyad ma) Tengyur version]. Toh 3790, Degé Tengyur vols. 82–84 (shes phyin, ga–ca), folios ga.1.b–ca.342.a.
shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa stong phrag brgya pa (Śatasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitā) [The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines]. Toh 8, Degé Kangyur vols. 14–25 (shes phyin, ’bum, ka–a).
Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā [The Perfection of Wisdom in Twenty-Five Thousand Lines]. Sanskrit text of the Anurādhapura fragment, based on the edition by Oskar von Hinüber, “Sieben Goldblätter einer Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā aus Anurādhapura,” in Nachrichten der Akademie der Wissenschaften in Göttingen, Phil.-Hist.Kl. 1983, pp. 189–207. Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
Śatasāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā [The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines]. Sanskrit texts based on Ghoṣa, Pratāpacandra, Çatasāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā: A Theological and Philosophical Discourse of Buddha With His Disciples in A Hundred Thousand Stanzas. Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1902–14 (chapters 1–12); and on Kimura, Takayasu, Śatasāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā, II/1–4, 4 vols. Tokyo: Sankibo Busshorin, 2009–14. Available as e-texts, Part I and Part II, on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
The Larger Prajñāpāramitā. Sanskrit edition (mostly according to the Gilgit manuscript GBM 175–675, fols. 1–27) from Zacchetti, Stefano (2005). In Praise of the Light: A Critical Synoptic Edition with an Annotated Translation of Chapters 1-3 of Dharmarakṣa’s Guang zan jing, Being the Earliest Chinese Translation of the Larger Prajñāpāramitā. Bibliotheca Philologica et Philosophica Buddhica, Vol. 8. The International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology. Tokyo: Soka University, 2005. Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
The Larger Prajñāpāramitā. Sanskrit edition (Gilgit manuscript fols. 202.a.5-205.a.12, GBM 571.5–577.12) from Yoke Meei Choong, Zum Problem der Leerheit (śūnyatā) in der Prajñāpāramitā, Frankfurt: Europäische Hochschulschriften, Reihe 27, Bd. 97, 2006, pp. 109–33. Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
Daṃṣṭrasena. shes rab kyi pha rol tu phyin pa ’bum pa rgya cher ’grel pa (Śatasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitābṛhaṭṭīkā) [“An Extensive Commentary on The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines”], Toh 3807, Degé Tengyur vols. 91–92. Also in Tengyur Pedurma (TPD) (bstan ’gyur [dpe bsdur ma]), [Comparative Edition of the Tengyur], krung go’i bod rig pa zhib ’jug ste gnas kyi bka’ bstan dpe sdur khang (The Tibetan Tripitaka Collation Bureau of the China Tibetology Research Center). 120 volumes. Beijing: krung go’i bod rig pa dpe skrun khang (China Tibetology Publishing House), 1994–2008, vol. 54 (TPD 54) pp. 627–1439 and vol. 55 pp. 2–550.
Denkarma (ldan dkar ma; pho brang stod thang ldan dkar gyi chos ’gyur ro cog gi dkar chag). Toh 4364, Degé Tengyur vol. 206 (sna tshogs, jo), folios 294.b–310.a.
Phangthangma (dkar chag ’phang thang ma). Beijing: mi rigs dpe skrun khang, 2003.
Butön (bu ston rin chen grub). bde bar gshegs pa’i bstan pa’i gsal byed chos kyi ’byung gnas gsung rab rin po che’i mdzod. In gsung ’bum/_rin chen grub/ zhol par ma/ ldi lir bskyar par brgyab pa/ [The Collected Works of Bu-ston: Edited by Lokesh Chandra from the Collections of Raghu Vira], vol. 24, pp. 633–1056. New Delhi: International Academy of Indian Culture, 1965–71.
Jamgön Kongtrül (’jam mgon kong sprul). shes bya kun khyab mdzod [“The Treasury of Knowledge”]. Root verses contained in three-volume publication. Beijing: Mi rigs dpe skrun khang, 1982; Boudhnath: Padma Karpo Translation Committee edition, 2000 (photographic reproduction of the original four-volume Palpung xylograph, 1844). Translated, along with the auto-commentary, by the Kalu Rinpoche Translation Group in The Treasury of Knowledge series (TOK). Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 1995 to 2012. Mentioned here are Ngawang Zangpo 2010 (Books 2, 3, and 4) and Dorje 2012 (Book 6, Parts 1–2).
Nordrang Orgyan (nor brang o rgyan). chos rnam kun btus. 3 vols. Beijing: Krung go’i bod rig pa dpe skrun khang, 2008.
Tsongkhapa (tsong kha pa blo bzang grags pa). byang chub sems dpa’ sems dpa’ chen po rtagtu ngu’i rtogs pa brjod pa’i snyan dngags dpag bsam gyi ljong pa [“An Avadāna of the Bodhisattva-Mahāsattva Sadāprarudita”], in Lhasa (zhol) Kangyur vol. 34, folios 523.b–555.b (pp. 1046–1110). The same text is also to be found in Tsongkhapa’s Collected Works: gsung ’bum tsong kha pa (bkras lhun par rnying ldi lir bskyar par brgyab pa), vol. 3, Ngawang Gelek Demo, 1975, pp. 242–96.
Zhang Yisun et al. bod rgya tshig mdzod chen mo. 3 vols. Subsequently reprinted in 2 vols. and 1 vol. Beijing: Mi rigs dpe skrun khang, 1985. Translated in Nyima and Dorje 2001 (vol. 1).
Secondary References in English and Other Languages
Bhattacharya, B. [Illustrations of the Indikutasaya Copper Plaques], in Bulletin of the Baroda State Museum and Picture Gallery, I 1. Baroda: 1943-4.
Bodhi, Bhikkhu, trans. The Sūtra on the All-Embracing Net of Views. Kandy: Buddhist Publication Society, 1978.
Bongard-Levin, G.M., and Shin’ichirō Hori. “A Fragment of the Larger Prajñāpāramitā from Central Asia.” Journal of the International Association of Buddhist Studies 19, no. 1 (1996): 19-60.
Boucher, Daniel. “Dharmarakṣa and the Transmission of Buddhism to China.” Asia Major (Academia Sinica) no. 1/2, (2006): 13–37. http://www.jstor.org/stable/41649912.
Burchardi, Anne, trans. The Teaching on the Great Compassion of the Tathāgata (Tathāgatamahākaruṇānirdeśa, Toh 147). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2020.
Brunnhölzl, Karl. Gone Beyond: The Prajñāpāramitā Sūtras, The Ornament of Clear Realization, and its Commentaries in the Tibetan Kagyü Tradition. 2 vols. Ithaca: Snow Lion, 2010 and 2011.
Chimpa, Lama and Alaka Chattopadhyaya, trans. Tāranātha’s History of Buddhism in India. Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1980.
Choong, Yoke Meei. Zum Problem der Leerheit (śūnyatā) in der Prajñāpāramitā. Frankfurt: Europäische Hochschulschriften, Reihe 27, Bd. 97, 2006, pp. 109–33.
Conze, Edward (1962). The Gilgit Manuscript of the Aṣṭādaśasāhasrikā-prajñāpāramitā: Chapters 50 to 55 corresponding to the 5th Abhisamaya. SOR 26. Rome: ISMEO, 1962.
———, trans. (1973). The Perfection of Wisdom in Eight Thousand Lines and Its Verse Summary. Bolinas, CA: Four Seasons Foundation, 1973.
——— (1974). The Gilgit Manuscript of the Aṣṭādaśasāhasrikā-prajñāpāramitā: Chapters 70 to 82 corresponding to the 6th, 7th, and 8th Abhisamayas. SOR 46. Rome: ISMEO, 1974.
——— (1975). The Large Sūtra on Perfect Wisdom: With the Divisions of the Abhisamayālaṅkāra. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1975.
——— (1978). The Prajñāpāramitā Literature (Second edition). Tokyo: The Reiyukai, 1978.
Davidson, Ronald. “Studies in Dhāraṇī Literature I: Revisiting the Meaning of the Term Dhāraṇī.” Journal of Indian Philosophy 37, no. 2 (April 2009): 97–147.
Dayal, Har. The Bodhisattva Doctrine in Buddhist Sanskrit Literature. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1932. Reprinted Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1970.
Dharmachakra Translation Committee, trans. (2013). The Play in Full (Lalitavistara, Toh 95). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2013.
——— (2019a). The Jewel Cloud (Ratnamegha, Toh 231). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2019.
——— (2019b). The Precious Discourse on the Blessed One’s Extensive Wisdom That Leads to Infinite Certainty (Niṣṭhāgatabhagavajjñānavaipulyasūtraratnānanta, Toh 99). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2019.
——— (2022). The Heart of the Perfection of Wisdom, the Blessed Mother (Bhagavatīprajñāpāramitāhṛdaya, Toh 21). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2022.
Dorje, Gyurme, trans., (1987). “The Guhyagarbhatantra and its XIVth Century Tibetan Commentary Phyogs bcu mun sel.” 3 vols. PhD diss. University of London, School of Oriental and African Studies, 1987.
———, trans. (2012). Indo-Tibetan Classical Learning and Buddhist Phenomenology. Book 6, Parts 1–2 of Jamgön Kongtrul, The Treasury of Knowledge. Boston: Snow Lion, 2012.
Dudjom Rinpoche. The Nyingma School of Tibetan Buddhism: Its Fundamentals and History. 2 vols. Translated by Gyurme Dorje with Matthew Kapstein. Boston: Wisdom Publications, 1991.
Dutt, Nalinaksha. Pañcaviṃśati-sāhasrikā Prajñā-pāramitā. Calcutta Oriental Series 28. London: Luzac, 1934. Reprinted Delhi: Sri Satguru Publications, 1986.
Edgerton, Franklin. Buddhist Hybrid Sanskrit Grammar and Dictionary. 2 vols. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1953.
Falk, Harry. “The ‘Split’ Collection of Kharoṣṭhī texts.” ARIRIAB 14 (2011): 13–23.
Falk, Harry, and Seishi Karashima (2012). “A first‐century Prajñāpāramitā manuscript from Gandhāra – parivarta 1 (Texts from the Split Collection 1).” ARIRIAB 15 (2012): 19–61.
——— (2013). “A first‐century Prajñāpāramitā manuscript from Gandhāra – parivarta 5 (Texts from the Split Collection 2).” ARIRIAB 16 (2013): 97–169.
Ghoṣa, Pratāpacandra, ed. Çatasāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā: A Theological and Philosophical Discourse of Buddha With His Disciples in A Hundred Thousand Stanzas. Calcutta: Asiatic Society of Bengal, 1902–14. Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
Herrmann-Pfandt, Adelheid. Die Lhan Kar Ma: Ein früher Katalog der ins Tibetische übersetzten buddhistischen Texte, Kritische Neuausgabe mit Einleitung und Materialien. Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2008.
Hikata, Ryusho. Suvikrāntavikrāmi-paripṛcchā-Prajñāpāramitā-sūtra: Edited with an Introductory Essay. Fukuoka, 1958.
Hinüber, O. von. (1983) “Sieben Goldblätter einer Pañca-viṃśatisāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā aus Anurādhapura.” NAWG 7 (1983): 189–207.
——— (2014). “The Gilgit Manuscripts: An Ancient Library in Modern Research.” In From Birch Bark to Digital Data: Recent Advances in Buddhist Manuscript Research, edited by P. Harrison & J. Hartmann, 79–135. Vienna: 2014.
Kimura, Takayasu, ed. Śatasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā, II/1–4, 4 vols. Tokyo: Sankibo Busshorin, 2009 (II-1), 2010 (II-2, II-3), 2014 (II-4). Available as e-text (see links) on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
———, ed. Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā Prajñā-pāramitā, I–VIII, 6 vols. Tokyo: Sankibo Busshorin, 2007–9 (1-1, 1-2), 1986 (2-3), 1990 (4), 1992 (5), 2006 (6-8). Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
Kloetzli, Randy. Buddhist Cosmology. Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1983.
Konow, Sten. The First Two Chapters of the Daśasāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā: Restoration of the Sanskrit Text, Analysis and Index. Oslo: I Kommisjon Hos Jacob Dybwad, 1941.
Lamotte, Etienne (1998). Śūraṃgamasamādhisūtra: The Concentration of Heroic Progress, An Early Mahāyāna Buddhist Scripture. English translation by Sara Boin-Webb. London: Curzon Press.
——— (2001). The Treatise on the Great Virtue of Wisdom of Nāgārjuna (Mahāprajñāpāramitāśāstra). English translation by Gelongma Karma Migme Chodron. Unpublished electronic text, 2001.
Lethcoe, Nancy R., “Some Notes on the Relationship between the Abhisamayālaṅkāra, the Revised Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā and the Chinese Translations of the Unrevised Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā.” JAOS 96/4 (1976): 499–511.
Lopez, Donald S. The Heart Sūtra Explained: Indian and Tibetan Commentaries. Albany: SUNY, 1988.
Martini, Giuliana (a.k.a. Dhammadinnā). “Bodhisattva Texts, Ideologies and Rituals in Khotan in the Fifth and Sixth Centuries.” In Buddhism Among the Iranian Peoples of Central Asia, vol. 1 of Multilingualism and History of Knowledge, edited by Matteo de Chiara, Matteo, Mauro Maggi, and Giuliana Martini. Vienna: Verlag der Österreichen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2013.
Ñāṇamoli, Bhikkhu, trans. The Path of Purification by Buddhaghosa. Kandy: Buddhist Publication Society, 1979.
Negi, J.S., ed. Tibetan Sanskrit Dictionary (bod skad dang legs sbyar gyi tshig mdzod chen mo). 16 vols. Sarnath: Central Institute of Higher Tibetan Studies, 1993–2005.
Ngawang Zangpo, trans. Jamgön Kongtrul, The Treasury of Knowledge (Books Two, Three, and Four): Buddhism’s Journey to Tibet. Ithaca, NY: Snow Lion Publications, 2010.
Nyima, Tudeng and Gyurme Dorje, trans. An Encyclopaedic Tibetan-English Dictionary. Vol. 1. Beijing and London: Nationalities Publishing House and SOAS, 2001.
Obermiller, E. Prajñapāramitā in Tibetan Buddhism. Delhi: Book Faith India (reprint), 1999.
Padmakara Translation Group, trans. The Transcendent Perfection of Wisdom in Ten Thousand Lines (Daśasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitā, Toh 11). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2018.
Pagel, Ulrich “The Dhāraṇīs of Mahāvyutpatti # 748: Origins and Formation,” in Buddhist Studies Review 24 no. 2 (2007), 151–91.
Patrul Rinpoche. Kunzang Lama’i Shelung: The Words of My Perfect Teacher. Translated by the Padmakara Translation Group. Revised second edition, 1998. London: International Sacred Literature Trust and Sage Altamira, 1994–98.
Paranavitana, S. “Indikaṭusāya Copper Plaques.” EZ 3 (1933): 199–212.
Rhys Davids, Caroline A.F. Psalms of the Early Buddhists: II Psalms of the Brethren. London: Pali Text Society, 1913. See Internet Archive.
Sakya Pandita Translation Group, trans. The Sūtra on Reliance upon a Virtuous Spiritual Friend (Kalyāṇamitrasevanasūtra, Toh 300). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2011.
Salomon, Richard (2014). “Gāndhārī Manuscripts in the British Library, Schøyen and Other Collections.” In From Birch Bark to Digital Data: Recent Advances In Buddhist Manuscript Research, Edited by Paul Harrison and Jens-Uwe Hartmann. Vienna: Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften.
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Skilling, Peter, Prapod Assavavirulhakarn, Saerji: “Schøyen MS 2381/241 + 2382/uf18/2d + 2381/186: A (possible) Sanskrit parallel to the Pali Uruvela-sutta.” In Buddhist Manuscripts in the Schoyen Collection, Vol. IV, edited by Jens Braarvig and Jens-Uwe Hartmann. Oslo: Hermes Academic Publishing, 2013.
Sparham, Gareth, trans. (2006–2012). Abhisamayālaṃkāra with vṛtti and ālokā / vṛtti by Ārya Vimuktisena; ālokā by Haribhadra. 4 vols. Fremont, CA: Jain Publishing.
———, trans. (2022a). The Perfection of Wisdom in Eighteen Thousand Lines (Aṣṭādaśasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitā, Toh 10). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha.
———, trans. (2022b). The Long Explanation of the Noble Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand, Twenty-Five Thousand, and Eighteen Thousand Lines (*Āryaśatasāhasrikāpañcaviṃśatisāhasrikāṣṭādaśasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitābṛhaṭṭīkā, Toh 3808). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2022.
———, trans. (2024). The Perfection of Wisdom in One Hundred Thousand Lines (Śatasāhasrikāprajñāpāramitā, Toh 8). 84000: Translating the Words of the Buddha, 2024.
Stein, Lisa, and Ngawang Zangpo, trans. Butön’s History of Buddhism: In India and its Spread to Tibet, A Treasury of Priceless Scripture. Boston: Snow Lion, 2013.
Suzuki Kenta & Nagashima Jundo. “The Dunhuang Manuscript of the Larger Prajñāpāramitā.” In Buddhist Manuscripts from Central Asia: The British Library Sanskrit Fragments, vol. III/2, edited by S. Karashima, J. Nagashima & K. Wille: 593–821. Tokyo, 2015.
Vaidya, P.L. “Aṣṭasāhasrikā prajñāpāramitā.” In Buddhist Sanskrit Texts, vol. 4. Darbhanga: Mithila Institute, 1960. Available as e-text on Göttingen Register of Electronic Texts in Indian Languages (GRETIL).
Watanabe Shōgo, “A Comparative Study of the Pañcaviṃśatisāhasrikā Prajñāpāramitā.” JAOS 114/3 (1994): 386–96.
Zacchetti, Stefano (2005). In Praise of the Light: A Critical Synoptic Edition with an Annotated Translation of Chapters 1-3 of Dharmarakṣa’s Guang zan jing, Being the Earliest Chinese Translation of the Larger Prajñāpāramitā. Bibliotheca Philologica et Philosophica Buddhica, Vol. 8. The International Research Institute for Advanced Buddhology. Tokyo: Soka University.
——— (2015). “Prajñāpāramitā Sūtras.” In Brill’s Encyclopedia of Buddhism, vol. 1, edited by Jonathan Silk. Leiden: Brill.
——— (2021). The Da zhidu lun 大智度論 (*Mahāprajñāpāramitopadeśa) and the History of the Larger Prajñāpāramitā: Patterns of Textual Variation in Mahāyāna Sūtra Literature. Numata Center for Buddhist Studies: Hamburg Buddhist Studies 14, edited by Michael Radich and Jonathan Silk. Bochum / Freiburg: Projekt Verlag, 2021.
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