Abstract
Buddhists point to the soteriological value not only of the dispelling of
ignorance, but the arising of insight or wisdom which constitutes the salvific goal of practice.
Madhyamaka’s unique conception of the ultimate nature of reality makes this cognition of what
is metaphysically ultimate distinct from other kinds of knowledge, as these soteriologically
valuable cognitive states aim at something unlike anything else so known: the lack of ‘own-
being,’ or emptiness, of all reality. After considering and rejecting some popular interpretations
of the Madhyamaka Buddhist tradition regarding this soteriologically valuable epistemological
state, I propose that a Thomistic conception of the Gift of Wisdom might provide a model that
explains the unique nature of such insight into ultimate reality and its soteriological value. In
short, wisdom involves a direct nonjudgmental veridical self-awareness arising from a good
moral character, which is therefore also indirectly a direct nonjudgmental awareness of what
ultimate reality is like. The final part will address the obvious dissimilarities between Christian
and Buddhist metaphysics which might be thought to undermine these epistemological parallels
and show, by contrast, that Christians are uniquely placed among theists in sharing many
relevant features of Madhyamaka metaphysics that undergird parallels even in soteriological
aims.