Abstract
Received traditions of Prajñāpāramitā interpretation embrace a hermeneutic in
which truth and falsehood are one and the same. This philosophy has deep roots in
Indian Buddhism, and it gained prominence in Europe and her colonies through the
writings of D. T. Suzuki and his devotee, Edward Conze. It is relatively easy to show
that the “contradictions” that form the main axiom of their reading are the result of
misunderstanding the texts they relied on. Having done this I discuss a new way of
understanding Prajñāpāramitā which shifts the emphasis towards an epistemological
reading along the lines of Sue Hamilton’s epistemic approach to Pāli texts. I show how
Prajñāpāramitā makes sense in relation to a particular type of meditation practice that
aimed to bring about the cessation of sensory experience leaving the meditator in a state
of contentless awareness which early Buddhists called suññatāvihāra, “dwelling in [the]
absence [of sensory experience].”