I see another (additional) dimension, or possibility opened by the burning of the book. Of course the act of burning a book is sacrilegious or at the very least shocking but that’s part of the style. It’s a hyperbole coding for something less shocking: the necessary distance one should take with tradition. Maybe the student wanted to write his own book, based on tradition evidently (the oral teaching of his master is seen by the student as primordial), but also radically departing here or there from tradition. Maybe he was not content with writing comments in the margins of someone else’s book.
like a koan, how to read a book and not read a book — Punshhh
That's not my interpretation, it's canonical. As I said before, I think it’s one of the most distinctive ideas in Buddhism, I can’t think of a parallel in the Biblical religions. — Wayfarer
Many similarities have been noted between Buddhist and process philosophy, of whom H. was an exponent. But that only goes so far. — Wayfarer
Pfhorrest asked about that recently. It’s a saying by Master Dōgen, a much later Buddhist master who was the originator of Sōtō Zen. It's a very pithy aphorism about the transformation of the understanding that the Zen practitioner goes through: first, naive realism (mountains are mountains); then the 'realisation of śūnyatā' (everything is inter-dependent, 'mountains' [i.e. anything] have no essential being); but then an integrated understanding, whereby mountains are seen as mountains again, albeit with subtle and mature insight. — Wayfarer
Let’s re-wind. Parable of the raft. What impresses me about this parable is its self-deprecating nature. The Buddha is, after all, teaching ‘a doctrine of salvation’ - release from all earthly sorrows. And yet, he compares ‘the dhamma’ that he teaches, to a makeshift raft, cobbled together from twigs and branches, and furthermore says that, once it’s served its purpose, it is to be let go, left behind. In some ways, it’s a very prosaic, even a homely, metaphor. — Wayfarer
As for Yang Yi - I’m not familiar with the name. I understand that a lot of Zen’s telling of its own story has been greatly embellished over history, in fact the IEP article I mentioned on Hui Neng describes this. But Zen history belongs in the domain of ‘sacred narrative’, and doesn’t pretend to be what we would call objective. Not that it’s ‘only myth’, either. — Wayfarer
I’d need to see the reference. — Wayfarer
Zen places a lot of emphasis on 'subitism' which is a sudden and radical transformation or conversion. — Wayfarer
I'm privileged and honored to inform you that Yang Yi (947 AD - 1020 AD) was a court official in the Song Dynasty of China who, because of the Ch'an masters he rubbed shoulders with, insisted and ensured that Zen be treated as special transmissions outside of scripture and...wait for it...also made it a point to stress on sudden enlightenment, both defining features of Zen today. — TheMadFool
Thanks — Wayfarer
Yang Yi' doesn't seem to appear when I search the text. — Wayfarer
Yang Yi' doesn't seem to appear when I search the text.
— Wayfarer
This is most unfortunate — TheMadFool
What similarities/differences do you see between The Day Of Reckoning in Abrahamic religions and Buddha's advice to let go of the dhamma after it's served its purpose, its purpose being nirvana? — TheMadFool
if the dhamma is only a means to an end, — TheMadFool
goodness has the same worth as the food and water monks eat and drink to sustain themselves in their quest for nirvana - they're both only of instrumental value to enlightenment — TheMadFool
The spiritual values advocated by Buddhism are directed, not towards a new life in some higher world, but towards a state utterly transcending the world, namely, Nibbana (Nirvāṇa). In making this statement, however, we must point out that Buddhist spiritual values do not draw an absolute separation between the beyond and the here and now. They have firm roots in the world itself for they aim at the highest realization in this present existence. Along with such spiritual aspirations, Buddhism encourages earnest endeavor to make this world a better place to live in. — Nyanoponika Thera
according to Buddhism and the Abrahamic triad the first and foremost obstacle on our path towards nirvana and heaven is bad karma and sin respectively — TheMadFool
To me, the comparison seems preposterous, pardon me for so saying. Completely different. The 'Day of Reckoning' is apocalyptic and cosmic, 'the end days', the end of the world or of an epoch.
As I said, the Parable of the Raft is much more prosaic, and in my mind, much more believable, on that account. It's saying 'don't get attached to the idea of Buddhism'. Don't make an idol - which is ironic, as it certainly has happened, in my view. It's concerned with liberating insight. Really, there is no direct equivalent for 'liberating insight' in current Western religious culture, although some of the more mystically-inclined have it. There are some analogies for it in Western religious culture, but it's practical advice about unbinding the self from its attachments and projections. It's very down-to-earth, not apocalyptic and visionary. — Wayfarer
It's nothing like that. It's not 'only' anything. The ultimate importance of realising the goal of Nirvāṇa is never deprecated or downplayed in Buddhism, not for a minute. The early Buddhist texts are full of exhortations, of warnings. 'Hasten and strive'. The consequences of not hearing, or not heeding, are dire in the extreme. Buddhist texts have voluminous and excruciating depictions of hell realms. — Wayfarer
Recall that verse I quoted ends 'Understanding the Dhamma as taught compared to a raft, you should let go even of Dhammas, to say nothing of non-Dhammas.' To say nothing of non-Dhammas. So the hindrances - non-dhammas - are to be abandoned and overcome. It's almost like 'it goes without saying' that these have to be abandoned — Wayfarer
That is gravely mistaken - 'instrumentalism' is one of the main attributes of modern materialistic culture, for which everything is a means to an end, but there is no real end! I think Buddhism would agree with the statement of Aristotelian virtue ethics, that virtue is its own reward. In any case, one does not practice compassion and cherish others for any instrumental reason or for another end, or to get somewhere or gain something. That attitude is always the diametrical opposite of the 'way-seeking mind'. One of the first Buddhist books I ever read, Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind, has many exhortations to 'abandon all ideas of gaining something'. That's what makes it a religious or spiritual practice. If it a strategy for getting something, even an imagined Nirvāṇa, then it's 'spiritual materialism'.
And Nirvāṇa is not 'heaven', it's not a domain of ethereal delights. — Wayfarer
'Avidya' (ignorance) is not the same as the Biblical notion of sin. It is a cognitive affliction rather than corruption of the will. There are overlaps and similarities but also crucial differences. It's a subject of study in Comparative Religion. In any case, in Zen, the factor of liberation is 'insight into the true nature'. Yes, there are parallels especially with (e.g.) Meister Eckhardt's sermons, but Eckhardt cannot be taken to typify Christian doctrine (in fact he was charged with heresy). — Wayfarer
The exclamation 'what are you saying?' is to remind Mu-nan of the importance of the fundamental tenet of Zen, which is 'direct pointing' and not reliant on words and letters (notwithstanding the voluminous literature which Zen has produced!) — Wayfarer
The point of any real spiritual teaching is simply to allow you to forget about your own self-importance and just learn to be (a) happy and (b) useful. In order to do that, you have to cut through a lot of social conditioning and various kinds of other crap that has encumbered you from childhood onwards. — Wayfarer
The point of any real spiritual teaching is simply to allow you to forget about your own self-importance and just learn to be (a) happy and (b) useful. In order to do that, you have to cut through a lot of social conditioning and various kinds of other crap that has encumbered you from childhood onwards.
— Wayfarer
To me, such statements always raise the question of whether the problem which we are addressing arises primarily from thought content, or from the medium of thought itself. One argument for the later theory is that human psychological suffering would seem to be universally present in every time and place, irregardless of the culture and philosophies of that time and place. — Hippyhead
How then are we to attain nirvana? By stumbling onto it? By not being a Buddhist for to be a Buddhist is to affirm nirvana as a goal? How? My friend, how? While this is technically a logical paradox, I do sense a childish silliness in insisting this puzzle be solved before we can get anything done in Buddhism. What say you? — TheMadFool
Ah yes, the voluminous literature about nothingness. — Hippyhead
It's unfortunate there is no one on the forum who has had the Zen epiphany — jgill
Epiphanies are real. Of course there are also ‘false epiphanies’. And simply because one has an epiphany, doesn’t mean enlightenment.
One of the Zen teachers I follow, Meido-roshi, frequently comments that it’s not that difficult to have an initial experience of satori (which is a term for epiphany), but that it’s extraordinarily difficult to integrate it and develop it fully so that it becomes stable and deep. — Wayfarer
I've never been through Koan training, and likely never will. — Wayfarer
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