PRAJNA-PARAMITA
There are two ways of dealing with Nature according
to Zen. One is to distinguish, describe, analyze, and, in pursuit of
practical ends, manipulate it from the outside. This is to
deal in concepts and acts that are disjunctive and misleading.
The other way is to contemplate Nature, much as the
Taoist of China does, from the position of one who is
indistinguishably one with it. By identifying oneself
with Nature, one acquires prajna-paramita, the wisdom that has
gone beyond--to the beyond that is within.
There is a metaphor that perfectly suggests what
prajna-paramita means. It is the metaphor of crossing a river by raft or
ferry to get to the farther shore, Nirvana in Buddhism. The nearer bank
of the river is this world, known to the senses. From it one cannot
imagine at all what the farther shore in the distance is like.
But the ferry arrives, piloted by the Buddha, and when
one boards it (i.e. adopts the Buddhist view) and begins the crossing, the
receding nearer bank gradually loses reality and the far shore begins to take
shape.
At length only the far shore seems real, and when one
arrives there and leaves behind him the river and the ferry, they too lose all
reality, because one has now gained final release, which alone is utterly real.
Here the former bank, the river, the ferry, the
Buddha, and even the goal from the start of gaining the far
shore, Nirvana, are equally and completely void, done with.
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