And as you say it is not scripture, but rather a collection of personal thoughts forming a lineage from teacher to student through the generations. So all that is being lost is this lineage some personal thoughts therein and an emotional attachment and significance of such a document.
There is a sense that those significant insights had by the teacher have been conveyed to the student already, verbally. That any significant insights conveyed from the previous generation by the teacher of the teacher along with the six generations before that would have been conveyed only verbally and any attempts to formulate them in the written word in the book would loose some verbal direct transmission and would rather become a confusing distraction from the task at hand. — Punshhh
If he had learned everything, then just like those before him, he would have learned the value of the book. — Metaphysician Undercover
But that doesn't allow for the fact that in Zen/Ch'an Buddhism the basic principle of the practice is 'special transmission outside the scriptures'. — Wayfarer
I think this is one of the seminal texts which differentiates Buddhism from the Biblical religions, and religion generally - even many ritual forms of Buddhism itself - as they do indeed 'put the raft on a pedestal'. (Note also the image of 'the raft' being makeshift, hastily constructed with whatever is at hand. Nothing mass-produced or pre-planned!) — Wayfarer
What about the value of the "special transmission" which is the act of passing down the book? — Metaphysician Undercover
The point of Zen is 'transmission outside words and letters'. It's an esoteric tradition so what is 'transmitted' is strictly speaking indescribable, certainly not a written text, even though Zen has them. — Wayfarer
It means that the master has chosen the successor, or something like that, like an act of anointment. — Metaphysician Undercover
The body is the Bodhi Tree,
The mind is like a mirror bright.
At all times we must polish it.
So not to let the dust alight.
Fundamentally there is no bodhi-tree
Nor a stand of mirror bright.
Since all is empty from the start,
Where can any dust alight?
Zen tries to free the mind from the slavery of words and the constriction of logic — jgill
I think we all need to apprehend that there is so much meaning in actions which are not a use of words; words are just an accessory of convenience. — Metaphysician Undercover
I mean, if you are interested. If Buddhism is for you, then avoiding this dicussion is then also for you. — Coben
Not if it's good advice. Then it would be good advice.That's quite a condescending remark. — Wayfarer
One can point just as well in an internet forum.I have endeavoured to present, and to stay true to, Buddhist sources throughout this discussion. Insofar as it's 'a discussion', then no, it's not meditation, nor is it living in a Zen monastery, but then, this is an Internet philosophy forum. — Wayfarer
Before one studies Zen, mountains are mountains and waters are waters; after a first glimpse into the truth of Zen, mountains are no longer mountains and waters are no longer waters; after enlightenment, mountains are once again mountains and waters once again waters. — Dogen
I like your interpretation of the dhamma as a raft, to be used to cross the ocean of samsara and then to be discarded — TheMadFool
It also reminds me of Hercalitus... — TheMadFool
What do you make of the following Zen quote: — TheMadFool
So look at Hui Neng's poem. — Metaphysician Undercover
[An] important theme that Huineng preaches concerns the fundamentally “non-dual” nature of existence. This, too, is prone to be misunderstood. Huineng never espouses a mushy notion that “All is One” so much as challenge the assumption that a person stands apart from her/his immediate situation. His target is the self-conscious sense of separation that tends to arise out of deliberative thinking and living. Thus, his focus is not so much theoretical as practical; one must not get caught up in speculative thought but realize ("make rea"l) Buddha, one’s true nature, and act accordingly. This fundamental unity comes through in his famous dharma verse through which he won Hongren’s robe. By countering Shen Xiu’s verse and with it's implied assumptions of duality, Huineng graphically tells us that we must not think of our minds as something distinct that “we” must polish to reflect truth. Rather, we are truth, immediately and directly.
He then takes us to the nothingness which precedes creation, and all such symbolism, implying that the fundamental acts of creation are of greater importance than the acts which use symbols. — Metaphysician Undercover
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