Prolific translator Cleary (The Essential Confucius, not reviewed,
etc.) has gathered together excerpts from the Prajnaparamita
sutras, which come to us from Mahayana Buddhism. These selections
are not for the fainthearted. Drawn from The Scripture on Perfect
Insight Awakening to Essence, The Essentials of the Great Scripture
on Perfect Insight, Key Teachings on the Great Scripture of Perfect
Insight, The Questions of Suvikrantavikramin, and other works, they
address the question of "perfect insight." The often arcane
selections are made intelligible to the uninitiated by Cleary's
useful introduction and commentaries, but, refreshingly, Clearly
does not water down the writings or package the teachings so that
any dilettante can painlessly digest them. On the contrary, he
writes that those stuck in a stage of spiritual development where
they still need dogma and rules will find the "gnostic insight of
Buddhism... imperceptible and effectively unavailable." The
original sources concur: Perfect insight, we learn, is "like a
bonfire,/Ungraspable from the four directions." So just what is
this perfect insight? Another passage puts it succinctly: It is
"the practice of rising above all worlds." Proceed with caution:
Like the rabbis who cautioned anyone under 40 not to study
Kabbalah, some Buddhist teachers have warned that people may be
harmed by hearing about perfect insight before they're ready.
(Kirkus Reviews)
The Prajnaparamita ("perfection of wisdom") sutras are one of the
great legacies of Mahayana Buddhism, giving eloquent expression to
some of that school's central concerns: the perception of
"shunyata," the essential emptiness of all phenomena; and the ideal
of the bodhisattva, one who postpones his or her own enlightenment
in order to work for the salvation of all beings.
The Prajnaparamita literature consists of a number of texts
composed in Buddhist India between 100 BCE and 100 CE. Originally
written in Sanskrit, but surviving today mostly in their Chinese
versions, the texts are concerned with the experience of profound
insight that cannot be conveyed by concepts or in intellectual
terms. The material remains important today in Mahayana Buddhism
and Zen.
Key selections from the Prajnaparamita literature are presented
here, along with Thomas Cleary's illuminating commentary, as a
means of demonstrating the intrinsic limitations of discursive
thought, and of pointing to the profound wisdom that lies beyond
it.
Included selections from:
"The Scripture on Perfect Insight Awakening to Essence" "The
Essentials of the Great Scripture on Perfect Insight" "Treatise on
the Great Scripture on Perfect Insight" "The Scripture on Perfect
Insight for Benevolent Rulers" "Key Teachings on the Great
Scripture of Perfect Insight" "The Questions of Suvikrantavikramin"
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