Wú-zhuó púsà 無著菩薩 (*Asaṅga, “Unattached”; conventionally c. 290–360 CE), Indian Buddhist Yogācāra master, the founder (with his younger brother Vasubandhu) of the Yogācāra-Vijñānavāda philosophical tradition. Per traditional Indic-Buddhist hagiography (the Pó-sǒu pán-dòu zhuàn 婆藪槃豆傳, T2049, by Paramārtha), Asaṅga was a brāhmaṇa of Gandhāra origin, who at first was ordained in the Sarvāstivāda but, dissatisfied with the doctrinal completeness of abhidharma, withdrew to a forest retreat and through deep meditation received the Yogācāra teachings directly from the future Buddha Maitreya in Tuṣita heaven; from these revelations he composed the foundational Yogācāra works (Mahāyāna-saṃgraha, Abhidharmasamuccaya, Yogācārabhūmi) and converted his brother Vasubandhu to Mahāyāna.

His surviving Sanskrit and Chinese-translation works include: the Mahāyāna-saṃgraha (Shè-dà-shèng lùn 攝大乘論, T1592–94); the Abhidharmasamuccaya (Dà-shèng āpídámó jí lùn 大乘阿毘達磨集論, T1605); the Vajracchedikā-vyākhyā commentaries T1510a, T1510b, and T1513; and several other Yogācāra treatises. The Yogācārabhūmi (T1579) is also traditionally credited to him though modern scholarship (Schmithausen) treats it as the work of his school rather than of Asaṅga personally. Per DILA Buddhist Person Authority A001022.

Works in the Kanripo corpus (attributed): KR6c0030 Jīngāng bōrě lùn (T1510a); KR6c0031 Jīngāng bōrě bōluómì jīng lùn (T1510b); KR6c0034 Néngduàn jīngāng bōrě bōluómìduō jīng lùn shì (T1513); and many others throughout KR6h.