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How to explain and solve the "wisdom" in Buddhism! ! !
An article I wrote earlier hopes to help you. Sanskrit is universal, and Chinese is wisdom. This means that you can't get everything according to all the rules, but you can achieve everything for all sentient beings.

A real Buddhist student will become more and more wise when he establishes a positive belief and studies Buddhism more deeply. Of course, this wisdom is not learned from the outside, but from the inside. If you learn, you can only say that you are smart. This kind of cleverness is called "discriminating wisdom" in Buddhism, which is one of the eight difficulties. The wisdom of the world is that the world relies on wisdom, refuses to practice modestly, and even slanders Buddhism. Therefore, wisdom is endogenous. In Buddhism, Sanskrit wisdom is Prajna.

Why do people who study Buddhism have higher wisdom than those who don't study Buddhism, or those who study other religions and non-Buddhism?

For example, people who learn the way of Confucius and Mencius (note: this is not to belittle Confucianism), such as "Mencius Confessions": "Therefore, the people of Sri Lanka are entrusted with great responsibilities from heaven, and they must first suffer from their minds, work hard on their bones and muscles, starve their bodies, empty their bodies, and do things in disorder, so their perseverance benefits them. "Let's see if there are any masters in this sentence. This master is "Tian", that is, "God" with different names. Since having a master means believing in God, believing in God, and believing that everything is decided by God. You are the emperor's destiny, you can't object, ordinary people. If we believe in God, you may be afraid not to object to this matter, but Buddhism says that there is no such thing, and everything is in your own hands. The theory of Buddhism is that you have to pay for yourself. This is not for God to decide. According to Buddhism, God is not the master. You made yourself an emperor, you made yourself a beggar.

On the question of fate, we can see from only one example that people who study Buddhism are smarter than those who don't.