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Volume Three: With a blow of destiny, the king appears. Twenty-nine, the Great Emperor of Vicissitudes, the Prajna Demon Head

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    The clear and deep beauty of the sky above the Eternal Monument, the moment when they faced each other from afar, the moment when the heaven-defying man's eyes were still in the flow of time, his heart hurt like a knife, he knew that she had no feelings for him,  A look of disdain fell on him, the light was like pain.  The woman on the Eternal Monument turned her gaze to the titled figures who had appeared. Two dark and miserable names were juxtaposed. The profound memories were still lingering: "Are you awake? Or are you?  Have you forgotten me? I have always kept my memory firmly in mind, and my tears will never dry up. Along the countless time and space, I will not let gothe more reluctant I am to leave." The names in the darkness are clearly [Vicissitudes of the Emperor] and [Prajna]  Demon Head].  "Prajna", also known as wisdom, wisdom, also translated as boruo, boruo, prajna, boluo, etc., is a Buddhist term, meaning wisdom or insight, and is one of the three non-leakages.  "The Sanskrit word "Three Without Outflows", a Buddhist term, refers to the study of increasing precepts, increasing the mind (increasing the mind), and increasing the study of wisdom. Precepts, concentration, and wisdom, namely the three "no leaks", can achieve liberation from life and death in the three realms.  The path of practice that eliminates worries and achieves enlightenment. "Prajna is consciousness, knowledge or understanding.  Prajna is the comparative form, which means higher, greater, surpassing, and transcending.  Therefore, it is literally a kind of advanced perceptual ability, the ability to distinguish right from wrong and make simple choices between laws. All sentient beings have this ability.  People with prajna can choose the right path based on their own observation.  Lack of prajna means ignorance and ignorance.  Prajna can be divided into worldly prajna and supramundane prajna.  The so-called transcendental prajna is the ability to understand dependent origination, break ties, and stop troubles.  To obtain this kind of prajna wisdom, we need the help of cultivation and compliance with the precepts and concentration.  The definitions of wisdom and wisdom are similar. The difference is that wisdom has a smaller scope and mainly refers to worldly prajna, which means being able to make choices and decisions; while prajna wisdom has a larger scope.  The word "Prajna" first appeared in the "Tao Xing Prajna Sutra" translated by the eminent monk Zhilou Jiacheng of the Eastern Han Dynasty.  Prajna mostly refers to wisdom in China. "Shishuo New Philology" records: Yin Zhongjun was deposed in Dongyang. He began to read Buddhist scriptures and "Vimalak¨©rti" for the first time. He suspected that Prajna Paramita was too much. Later he read "Essay" and hated this phrase.  few.  Buddhists believe that Prajna wisdom is different from the wisdom of the world. Wisdom is light and frivolous, so it cannot be called Prajna. It is the right view generated through insight; the wisdom of reality arises due to the realization of the emptiness of the Vajra-nature Tathagata.  There is no equivalent term for Prajna in China. Although it means wisdom, it is not enough to express the meaning of Prajna. Therefore, translators do not directly translate it into Chinese as wisdom, but use transliteration.  "The Theory of Great Wisdom": The reality of Prajna concentration is very deep and heavy, and wisdom is shallow, so it cannot be called it. ????????????? In general Dharma gatherings, Mahaprajnaparamita is often recited, as Mahaprajna is great wisdom.  Paramita is translated as the other shore, and Miduo is translated as reaching, which should mean reaching the other shore. Prajna Paramita is the ultimate and perfect wisdom, which Buddhism calls supreme wisdom or reality wisdom, just like the wisdom of the Buddha who experienced the truth under the bodhi tree.  The wisdom of scientists is incomplete and incomplete wisdom, which is called expedient wisdom in Buddhism.  The thought of Prajna can be summed up as the emptiness of false existence. It is said that ignorance arises when it is separated from desire, and when ignorance disappears, actions will disappear, and even the pure accumulation of great suffering will occur.  .  (To be continued)
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