The Sun of Wisdom: Teachings of the Noble Nagarjuna

The Sun of Wisdom is a commentary on one of the classics of Buddhist literature by one of the great Tibetan masters, Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso. Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way was written by Nagarjuna in the 2nd century and is a commentary on the Buddha’s teachings on the nature of appearance and emptiness.

The Buddha prophesied that someone would come 400 years after his death to give a perfect explanation of his teachings, and Nagarjuna fulfilled the prophecy. Khenpo Rinpoche uses Nagarjuna’s text and modern master Ju Mipham’s commentary as a framework to explain and illustrate the most important verses. He deconstructs the ideas and shows how they apply to your everyday experience, and how you can put them into practise.

Three Turnings of the Wheel

Before we look at some of the ideas in this book, it’s important to understand that the teachings are given in three stages. Each stage is a Turning of the Wheel of Dharma, and the teachings are aimed at different levels of analysis.

The first turning is the stage of no analysis where you learn about the causes of suffering and the self, and you take appearances to be real.

The second turning is the stage of slight analysis where you start to want to change, to let go of suffering and long for liberation. Here is where you learn about emptiness and how nothing really exists because it lacks inherent nature. (Don’t worry, we’ll get into what that means later…)

The final turning is the stage of thorough analysis where you learn that the true nature of reality transcends both of the above stages. It neither exists nor doesn’t exist.

So if a teaching is a refutation of existence then it’s helping you to let go of things as being real. If a teaching talks about freedom from concepts then it’s helping you understand that reality exists beyond concepts. The Fundamental Wisdom of the Middle Way is a teaching on emptiness and the true nature of reality and the mind. It’s called the Middle Way because it lies between all possible extremes and beyond all concepts.

Emptiness can’t be grasped by the intellect and can only be experienced directly. Nagarjuna uses logical reasoning to point in the direction of this truth. He shows how you can use the rational mind to analyse everything that appears, and so gain clarity and certainty in your understanding.

Reality is not as it appears

Everything that appears to exist arises due to various causes and conditions, but these causes also depend upon other causes, and so on. For example, consider a seed and a plant – which came first? To grow the plant you need the seed, but the seed comes from the plant. Also the seed won’t grow without soil, water, and favourable conditions. Does the seed cause the plant? Does the plant cause the seed? A seed can’t pop into existence on its own without cause, and neither can a plant.

To inherently exist a form would have to arise spontaneously from nothing without cause. You can see from this that a cause can’t exist before its result. And the result can’t exist before its cause. Cause and result can’t exist simultaneously. Therefore any form that arises due to causes and conditions, does not inherently exist. Its appearance is empty. This applies to everything that arises, including your feelings, thoughts, and consciousness. It’s instructive to look at opposites too, such as light and dark, clean and dirty, happiness and suffering. Which comes first? Can light exist without dark? What does up mean without down?

If something actually existed it would have to exist on its own, objectively and without depending on anything else. It would have its own inherent nature. Since everything does depend on something else in order to exist, or appear, things don’t have any inherent nature or existence. They are empty of true existence. So no thing can be said to truly exist.

Sometimes people get confused at this point, and think that reality is nothingness, but this isn’t what emptiness means. Reality appears to exist, but things only appear in relationship to everything else. Emptiness is no-thingness. Those who can see the true nature of reality don’t think that things are real, but they don’t think that there is nothing either. They understand the union of appearance and emptiness. Everything is free to arise due to the coming together of causes and conditions. If things did exist and had their own inherent existence, nothing would be possible because things wouldn’t be able to arise.

“With a water-moon, for example, not a single particle of the moon exists there in the water, so it cannot be called existent. At the same time, that appearances do appear due to the coming together of causes and conditions is undeniable, and this eliminates the extreme of nonexistence. For example, no one could deny the vivid appearance of the moon there in the water. Therefore, in order to follow the Middle Way that falls into neither the extreme of existence nor that of nonexistence, we must understand that all phenomena are the union of appearance and emptiness, like dreams, illusions, and water-moons.”

Emptiness is what makes everything possible. If reality wasn’t empty of existence, then it wouldn’t be able to exist!

“There is not a single phenomenonThat is not dependently arisen.Therefore, there is not a single phenomenonThat is not empty.” – Nagarjuna

Selflessness and Emptiness

Khenpo Rinpoche says a city is a great place to train in recognising illusion because modern technology has created so many empty forms, like films, TV, email, and the internet (and this blog!). In order to stop thinking that something exists you can meditate on the ‘non-affirming negation of existence’ which, if you follow it through to its logical conclusion, leaves nothing remaining. Non-affirming negation says something doesn’t exist but doesn’t say anything else exists in its place.

For example, the Buddha said, “The eye is empty of the eye.” The eye doesn’t exist in the normal sense of the word, but there is the appearance of the eye. The eye that appears is empty of essence, or self.

There are two types of selflessness: of the individual and of phenomena. Selflessness is just a synonym for emptiness; others include: actual reality, dharmadhatu (expanse of genuine reality), dharmata (essential reality), and the precise nature of reality. Genuine reality can’t be experienced by the intellect, or expressed or represented in any form. The only way to talk about the true nature of reality is to say what it isn’t. It can only be negated. Doing this dissolves your made up concepts of what you think it is.

Remember that the true nature of reality goes beyond either existing or not existing. Something neither exists, nor doesn’t exist, nor is some combination of the two, nor is something that is neither of them. You have to start from where you are. If you think things exist, first you need to learn that they don’t exist before you can drop any concepts you have about reality. If you think things don’t exist, then you learn that reality transcends both existence and non-existence. Here are the four perspectives again:

You can think something exists
You can think something doesn’t exist
You can think something both exists and doesn’t exist
You can think something neither exists nor doesn’t exist

The true nature of reality is beyond all these positions and beyond any concept you can have of what it might be, or not be. Once you understand this it’s impossible to assert anything about the true nature of reality. But when talking about conventional appearances, you need to be able to use appropriate designations of terms otherwise you can’t say anything about anything, which misses the point completely!

Emptiness is Empty

What’s the point of all this philosophising and tying the mind up in confusing negations? The idea is to apply this logical deduction to everything you experience in your life so you can remember that things only appear to be what they are – they’ll soon become something else. You can then experience things that would normally be painful or difficult as open, spacious and relaxed. This takes a lot of practise, but you can start with minor suffering (like missing the bus, or watching politicians on TV) and work up to the larger problems (like grief or fear).

Happiness and suffering are the way things appear to be. Duality is appearance, and happiness and suffering are concepts. Genuine reality transcends them both. That’s hard to accept when you’re in the middle of an extreme experience, but ultimately, all the suffering in the world comes from either thinking that there is something or that there is nothing – from ideas of existence or non-existence. Recognising that appearances don’t inherently exist can take the sting out of suffering and eliminate the extremes of life.

Khenpo Rinpoche says you have to really think about this, and really analyse it and meditate on it, and then apply it to your life. Otherwise you can read something like, “As for mind, there is no mind! Mind is empty of essence,” and it’s just words, an opinion, or a guess. There’s no understanding of the truth of the words. So you must take the four perspectives and apply them to everything – no exceptions.

In my novel about spiritual awakening, Addled, Zoe Popper is struggling with the fear that has arisen in her practice. In this short extract her teacher, Adam teaches her about the four perspectives:


Yes, emptiness doesn’t exist either! It just appears to, like everything else. Emptiness can only exist in relation to something that isn’t empty. Empty and not empty exist in dependence on each other, so neither of them exists.

In the end, if suffering was real we could never be free of it – it would be our permanent nature – and that’s impossible. Permanent, impermanent, finite, infinite – all are dependently arisen, like reflections. Samsara and nirvana too. Samsara doesn’t exist, it never began and will never end. It’s a mistaken thought about reality. Nirvana is the correction of that mistake, but both samsara and nirvana are empty. There is no awakening, no enlightenment, no Buddha.

Being in samsara is like dreaming but not realising it, whereas nirvana is lucid dreaming – recognising the dream for what it is.

“When one is free of the murkiness of clinging to things as being real, causes and conditions shine like reflections in clear pools of water, as vivid manifestations of appearance-emptiness. Knowing them to be this way, one gains precise knowledge of what to do and what not to do. …It is just like when you stand in front of a mirror and the reflection of your face appears within it. Knowing all the while that the reflection is not real, you can still use that reflection to remove stains from your face and make yourself look beautiful.”

Needless to say, this book is not for beginners. If you haven’t come across the philosophy underpinning emptiness and non-being, you may struggle – but don’t let that put you off. This is a brilliantly lucid book and richly rewarding. One to return to and study over time as your practice and understanding deepens.

Further Reading: