Zen Buddhism, Selected WritingsZen Buddhism as it has been discovered by the West in our time emerges as one of the great challenges to Western philosophy, psychology, and religion. The present volume, composed of the work of D. T. Suzuki, Zen's chief exponent in English, and presented to Western readers by William Barrett, is intended to introduce the general reader to the history and spirit of Zen. |
Contents
The Sense of Zen | 3 |
Zen in Relation to Buddhism Generally | 27 |
The History of Zen | 59 |
Copyright | |
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Common terms and phrases
abiding absolute answer artist attained awakened Bodhi-Dharma Bodhisattva body Buddha Buddha-nature Buddhahood called China Chinese conception consciousness contradiction Dharma dhism Dhyana Dhyana and Prajna disciples discourse doctrine dualistic emptiness Enlightenment eternity expressed fact feeling grasp hsin hsing Hui-neng human Hung-jen idea illumination inner intellect Isan Joshu koan koan exercise living logical Ma-tsu Mahakasyapa Mahayana means meditation ment mind mondo monk asked mountains mystic Nature negation ness never Nirvana Nirvana Sutra no-mind Obaku object once one's self-nature original philosophy practical Prajna Prajnaparamita psychology pure question quietism reality realize reason religion religious replied Rinzai Samadhi satori scious sense sermons Shen-hsiu Shen-hui sitting sixth patriarch spiritual Sumiye Sung dynasty śūnyatā Sutra talk Tathagata tathatā teaching things thought tion truth of Zen Tung-shan ultimate Uncon Unconscious understand Ungan utter Vimalakirti Western words wu-nien Zen Buddhism Zen experience Zen masters



