The term 'PÄramitÄ' or 'PÄramÄ«' (''
Sanskrit'' and ''
PÄli'' respectively)
[1] means "Perfect" or "Perfection". In
Buddhism, the Paramitas refer to the perfection or culmination of certain virtues. In Buddhism, these virtues are cultivated as a way of purification, purifying (
karma) and helping the aspirant to live an unobstructed life, while reaching the goal of
Enlightenment.
The Paramitas in Theravada Buddhism
The Theravadin teachings on Paramitas can be found in books (the
Buddhavamsa,
Jatakas and
Avadanas) and commentaries which have been added to the
Pali Canon at a later time, and thus they are not an original part of the Theravadin teachings
[2]. Also, the oldest parts of the
Sutta Pitaka (for example:
Majjhima Nikaya,
Digha Nikaya,
Samyutta Nikaya and the
Anguttara Nikaya) to not have any mention of the paramitas
[3]. Some scholars even refer to the teachings of the paramitas as a semi-Mahayana
[4] teaching which was added to the scriptures at a later time, in order to appeal to the interests and needs of the lay-community, and to popularize their religion
[5].
Canonical sources
In
Theravada Buddhism's
canonical Buddhavamsa[6] the Ten Perfections (''dasa pÄramiyo'') are (original terms in Pali):
# ''
DÄna parami'' : generosity, giving of oneself
# ''
Sīla parami'' : virtue, morality, proper conduct
# ''
Nekkhamma parami'' : renunciation
# ''
PaÃ±Ã±Ä parami'' : transcendental wisdom, insight
# ''
Viriya (also spelt vīriya) parami'' : energy, diligence, vigour, effort
# ''
Khanti parami'' : patience, tolerance, forbearance, acceptance, endurance
# ''
Sacca parami'' : truthfulness, honesty
# ''
(adhitthana) parami'' : determination, resolution
# ''
MettÄ parami'' : loving-kindness
# ''
UpekkhÄ (also spelt upekhÄ) parami'' : equanimity, serenity
Two of the above virtues,
Metta and
Upekkha, also comprise two of the Four Immeasurables (
Brahmavihara).
Traditional Theravada practice
Bodhi (2005) maintains that, in the earliest Buddhist texts (which he identifies as the first four
nikayas), those seeking suffering's extinction (''
nibbana'') pursued the
Noble Eightfold Path. As time went on, a
backstory was provided for the
multi-life development of the
Buddha; as a result, the ten perfections were identified as part of the path for the Buddha-to-be (Pali: ''
bodhisatta''; Sanskrit: ''
bodhisattva''). Over subsequent centuries, the paramis were seen as being significant to both aspirants of Buddhahood and of
arahantship. Thus, Bodhi (2005) summarizes:
:"It should be noted that in established TheravÄda tradition the pÄramÄ«s are not regarded as a discipline peculiar to candidates for Buddhahood alone but as practices which must be fulfilled by all aspirants to enlightenment and deliverance, whether as
Buddhas,
paccekabuddhas, or
disciples. What distinguishes the supreme bodhisattva from aspirants in the other two vehicles is the degree to which the pÄramÄ«s must be cultivated and the length of time they must be pursued. But the qualities themselves are universal requisites for deliverance, which all must fulfill to at least a minimal degree to merit the fruits of the liberating path."
[7]
The Paramitas in Mahayana Buddhism
In
Mahayana Buddhism, the
Lotus Sutra (''Saddharmapundarika''), lists the Six Perfections as (original terms in Sanskrit):
# ''
DÄna'' paramita: generosity, giving of oneself (in Chinese, 布施波羅蜜)
# ''
Śīla paramita'' : virtue, morality, discipline, proper conduct (æŒæˆ’波羅蜜)
# ''
(kshanti) paramita'' : patience, tolerance, forbearance, acceptance, endurance (å¿è¾±æ³¢ç¾…蜜)
# ''
Vīrya paramita'' : energy, diligence, vigour, effort (精進波羅蜜)
# ''
DhyÄna paramita'' : one-pointed concentration, contemplation (禪定波羅蜜)
# ''
PrajÃ±Ä paramita'' : wisdom, insight (智慧波羅蜜)
Note that this list is also mentioned by the Theravada commentator
Dhammapala, who says it is equivalent to the above list of ten.
[8]
In the
Ten Stages (''Dasabhumika'') Sutra, four more Paramitas are listed:
:7. ''
UpÄya paramita'': skillful means
:8. ''
(pranidhana) paramita'': vow, resolution, aspiration, determination
:9. ''
Bala paramita'': spiritual power
:10. ''
JñÄna paramita'': knowledge
Notes
1. Technically, ''pÄramitÄ'' is both Sanskrit and Pali (see, for instance, Rhys Davids & Stede, 1921-25, p. 454, entry for "PÄramitÄ," retrieved 30 Jun 2007); although, the Pali literature makes far greater reference to ''pÄramÄ«''. Bodhi (2005) states:
:"The word ''pÄramÄ«'' derives from ''parama'', 'supreme,' and thus suggests the eminence of the qualities which must be fulfilled by a bodhisattva in the long course of his spiritual development. But the cognate ''pÄramitÄ'', the word preferred by the MahÄyÄna texts and also used by PÄli writers, is sometimes explained as ''pÄram'' + ''ita'', 'gone to the beyond,' thereby indicating the transcendental direction of these qualities." (Velthuis convention lettering replaced with Pali diacrits.)
2. ‘[The Jatakas] originally did not form part of [the Theravadins] scriptures' Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, Motilal Banararsidass Publishers (Delhi), 2nd Edition, 1978, p. 224’
3. ‘[the Theravadins’] early literature did not refer to the paramitas.’ Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, Motilal Banararsidass Publishers (Delhi), 2nd Edition, 1978, Dutt, p.228
4. ‘The incorporation of paramis by the Theravadins in the Jatakas reveals that they were not immune from Mahayanic influence. This happened, of course, at a much later date;’ Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, Motilal Banararsidass Publishers (Delhi), 2nd Edition, 1978, p. 219
5. ‘It is evident that the Hinayanists, either to popularize their religion or to interest the laity more in it, incorporated in their doctrines the conception of Bodhisattva and the practice of paramitas. This was effected by the production of new literature: the Jatakas and Avadanas.' Buddhist Sects in India, Nalinaksha Dutt, Motilal Banararsidass Publishers (Delhi), 2nd Edition, 1978, p. 251. The term 'Semi-Mahayana' occurs here as a subtitle.
6. Buddhavamsa, chapter 2. For an on-line reference to the Buddhavamsa's seminality in the Theravada notion of ''parami'', see Bodhi (2005).
In terms of other examples in the Pali literature, Rhys Davids & Stede (1921-25), p. 454, entry for "PÄramÄ«," (retrieved 2007-06-24) cites Jataka i.73 and Dhammapada Atthakatha i.84. Bodhi (2005) also mentions Acariya Dhammapala's treatise in the Cariyapitaka-Atthakatha and the Brahmajala Sutta subcommentary (''tika'').
7. Bodhi (2005). (Converted the document's original use of the Velthuis convention to Pali diacritics.)
8. The passage is translated in Bodhi (1978), p. 314.
Sources
★
Bodhi, Bhikkhu (1978). ''The All-Embracing Net of Views''. Kandy:
Buddhist Publication Society.
★ Bodhi, Bhikkhu (ed.) (1978, 2005). ''A Treatise on the Paramis: From the Commentary to the Cariyapitaka by Acariya Dhammapala'' (The Wheel, No. 409/411). Kandy:
Buddhist Publication Society. Retrieved 30 Jun 2007 from "Access to Insight" at http://accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/bodhi/wheel409.html.
★
Rhys Davids, T.W. & William Stede (eds.) (1921-5). ''The Pali Text Society’s Pali–English Dictionary''. Chipstead:
Pali Text Society. A general on-line search engine for the PED is available at http://dsal.uchicago.edu/dictionaries/pali/.
See also
★
Pañca-Parameá¹£á¹hi
External links
★
Compassion and Bodhicitta
★
Renunciation by T. Prince, a free distribution article on the Buddhist conception of renunciation
★
A Tibetan view of the Six Perfections
★
Lama Zopa Rinpoche's view of the Six Perfections
★
A Zen view of the Six Perfections