Prajñā or paññā, is a Buddhist term often translated as "wisdom", "intelligence", or "understanding". It is described in Buddhist commentaries as the understanding of the true nature of phenomena. In the context of Buddhist meditation, it is the ability to understand the three characteristics of all things: anicca, dukkha, and anattā. Mahāyāna texts describe it as the understanding of śūnyatā. It is part of the Threefold Training in Buddhism, and is one of the ten pāramīs of Theravada Buddhism and one of the six Mahāyāna pāramitās.
Etymology
Prajñā is often translated as "wisdom", but according to Buddhist bioethics scholar Damien Keown, it is closer in meaning to "insight", "non-discriminating knowledge", or "intuitive apprehension".
jñā can be translated as "consciousness", "knowledge", or "understanding".
Pra is an intensifier which can be translated as "higher", "greater", "supreme" or "premium", or "being born or springing up", referring to a spontaneous type of knowing.
Pali scholars T. W. Rhys Davids and William Stede define paññā as "intellegence, comprising all the higher faculties of cognition" and "intellect as conversant with general truths". British Buddhist monk and Pāli scholar Ñāṇamoli Bhikkhu translates Prajñā, as "understanding", specifically the "state of understanding". Ñāṇamoli Bhikkhu notes that Pāli makes a distinction between the "state of understanding" and the "act of understanding" in a way different than English does.
Role in Buddhist traditions
Paññā is the fourth virtue of ten pāramīs found in late canonic and Theravādan commentary, and the sixth of the six Mahāyāna pāramitās. It is the third level of the Threefold Training in Buddhism consisting ofsīla, samādhi, and paññā.
Theravada Buddhism
Theravada Buddhist commentator Acariya Dhammapala describes paññā as the comprehension of the characteristics of the dhammas. Sri Lankan Buddhist scholar David Kalupahana, translates dhammas as meaning "phenomena" or "things". Dhammapala states that paññā has the attribute of penetrating the true nature of phenomena. Abhidharma commentaries relate that there are three types of paññā.
Learned paññā, or knowledge or wisdom that is acquired from books or listening to others.
Reflective paññā, or knowledge or wisdom that is acquired from thought or logic and reasoning.
Thai Buddhist monk and meditation master Ajahn Lee classifies the first two types of paññā as Dhamma on the theory level and the last as Dhamma on the practice level. Ajahn Lee states that this results in two levels of paññā: mundane paññā which is the comprehension of worldly and Dhamma subjects, and transcendent paññā which is an awareness of the supramundane that is realized by enlightened beings. Abhidharma commentaries describe seven ways to gain paññā''.
Asking a wise person
Keeping things clean
Balancing the five faculties
Avoiding foolish people
Associating with wise people
Reflecting on and analyzing the Dhamma
Having the mind inclined towards developing wisdom
''Vipassanā Paññā''
states in his commentary and meditation treatise, the Visuddhimagga, that there are many different types and aspects of paññā but does not define them all. Buddhaghosa specifies paññā in relation to Buddhist meditation as being specifically vipassanā-paññā. Vipassanā-paññā meaning insight knowledge endowed with virtue. Buddhaghosa defines vipassanā-paññā as “knowing in a particular mode separate from the modes of perceiving and cognizing.”. Buddhaghosa makes the analogy of how a child, villager and money-changer sees money to explain his definition. The child can perceive coins through the senses but does not know the value, the villager knows the value of the coins and is conscious of the coins characteristics as a medium of exchange, and the money-changer has an understanding of the coins that is even deeper than the surface understanding the villager has because the money-changer can identify which coins are real or fake, which village created it, etc. Paññā in the context of Buddhist meditation is described as essentially being the ability to understand the three characteristics of all things, namely impermanence, suffering and non-self. Buddhaghoṣa states that the function of paññā is "to abolish the darkness of delusion" in order to understand the "individual essence of states".
Mahāyāna Buddhism
Buddhist studies scholar Paul Williams states that Mahayana Buddhist tradition considers the analysis of prajñā found in the Abhidharma texts to be incomplete. According to Williams, the Abhidharma description of prajñā stops at the discernment of dharmas as the final reality, but Mahayana and some non-Mahayana schools go on to teach that all dharmas are empty. Buddhist scholar John Makransky describes dharmas in this sense to mean, "phenomena". Williams goes on to say that the meaning of prajñā according to Mahayana Prajñāpāramitā sutras is ultimately the state of understanding emptiness. Religious studies scholar Dale S. Wright, points to the Heart Sutra which states that those who want "to practice the profound perfection of wisdom should view things in this way ". Wright states this view is not wisdom, but having the view will make you wise. According to Williams, Indo-Tibetan Buddhist tradition also has another understanding of prajñā,'' that is a meditative absorption or state of consciousness that results from analysis and leads to the ultimate truth.