| frame | Arya [[Nagarjuna]] Emptiness (Skt. śūnyatā; Tib. སྟོང་པོ་ཉིད་, tongpa nyi, Wyl. stong pa nyid) — the absence of inherent existence in all phenomena, which was explained by the Buddha in the sutras of the three turnings | second turning of the Wheel of Dharma, and further elaborated upon by masters such as Nagarjuna and Chandrakirti.
Sogyal Rinpoche says:
:“Unfortunately, the word ‘emptiness’, which is used to translate the Sanskrit term shunyata, carries a connotation of a nothing-ness, or a void. Happily, there is a wonderful definition in Tibetan that captures its true meaning: Tib. རྟག་ཆད་དང་བྲལ་བ་, tak ché dang dralwa, which translates as: ‘free from permanence and non-existence'.
:Generally, all philosophies tend to fall into one of two extremes: ‘eternalism‘: believing in the existence or permanence of something, or ‘nihilism‘: believing in non-existence. Shunyata goes beyond both of these extremes, because it is neither permanent nor non-existing, and that is, ultimately, how things are.”
Shunyata is often compared to space, which is defined in Buddhism as the complete openness, or 'unobstructedness', which allows anything to occur. Likewise, because reality is 'empty' and not fixed in any way, it is said that anything is possible. As Nagarjuna said:
:To whomever emptiness is possible, :All things are possible.
There are many synonyms for emptiness. As it says in Distinguishing the Middle from Extremes: :Emptiness, in short, has these synonyms: :Suchness, authentic limit of reality, :Absence of marks, absolute, :And dharmadhatu. [I.14]
In his commentary to this verse, Mipham Rinpoche explains that emptiness is called “suchness” because it does not change into anything else; just as it was before, so it remains after. Likewise, it is called “authentic limit of reality” because it is the authentic, unmistaken way entities are. It is called “the absence of marks” because the nature of emptiness is the cessation of all marks of conceptual elaboration. It is called the “ultimate truth” because it is the sphere that the sacred wisdom of the noble ones engages in. It is called the “dharmadhatu“ because it is by observing this that all the qualities of the path arise, and so it is the space (dhatu), or the cause, of all noble qualities.
Nagarjuna does not put forward emptiness as another view about reality. In fact, he says:
:The victorious ones say that emptiness :Undermines all dogmatic views, :Those who take a dogmatic view of emptiness :Are said to be incurable.
And:
:I prostrate to Gautama, :Who, out of compassion, :Taught the sacred Dharma :That leads to the relinquishing of all views.
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