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2023/05/31

An Inquiry into the Good : Nishida, Kitaro: Amazon.com.au: Books

An Inquiry into the Good : Nishida, Kitaro: Amazon.com.au: Books

https://www.scribd.com/document/584796701/An-Inquiry-into-the-Good-Kitar%C5%8D-Nishida


An Inquiry into the Good Paperback – 29 January 1992
by Kitaro Nishida (Author)
4.4 out of 5 stars 36 ratings

An Inquiry into the Good represented the foundation of Nishida's philosophy-reflecting both his deep study of Zen Buddhism and his thorough analysis of Western philosophy-and established its author as the foremost Japanese philosopher of this century. In this important new translation, two scholars-one Japanese and one American-have worked together to present a lucid and accurate rendition of Nishida's ideas. "The translators do an admirable job of adhering to the cadence of the original while avoiding unidiomatic, verbatim constructions."-John C. Maraldo, Philosophy East and West



"More accurate and critical than the first translation into English of Nishida's earliest book. . . . An important addition to library collections of twentieth-century philosophy, Japanese intellectual history, and contemporary Buddhist thought."-Choice

"A welcome new translation of a work by probably the most original and influential of modern Japanese philosophers."-Hidé Ishiguro, Times Literary Supplement

"Undoubtedly the most important work for anyone in the West interested in understanding modern Japanese thought. This work premiered Japanese philosophy as modern but has also shown unusual staying power. In the late twentieth century Japanese thinkers, both religious and secular, insist on its importance and relevance."-William R. La Fleur, University of Pennsylvania

Paperback ‏ : ‎ 218 pages
4.4 out of 5 stars 36 ratings


Nishida Kitaro
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Ted Hamill
5.0 out of 5 stars All we really perceive is our perceptions and we need to be conscious of our own consciousness.Reviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 29 September 2017
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A thought provoking book, a very different way of looking at perception and a view of religion that posits it's all about perception of reality and not just about right belief and right action. Those things will follow if perception is real. I'm going to have to read it a few times but it's a discovery.
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Oscar B.
5.0 out of 5 stars Buen libroReviewed in Mexico 🇲🇽 on 29 September 2020
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Bien. Muy interesante.
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Jon Henry Avery
5.0 out of 5 stars A Refreshing PhilosophyReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 27 August 2020
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A lot of philosophy is dry and difficult to grasp, but the philosophy in this book is refreshing and intuitively understandable. In fact, the author begins by using intuition to clarify how the individual awareness of our own ideas, emotions, and will is a unity in difference (self-knowledge). Then he shows how the perception of our surroundings is directly experienced as a unity of subject and object before separating the two for theoretical and practical purposes (external reality). Next he links this inner experience and perception of outer reality to the goal of self-development and growth (ethics), which naturally leads to the principle of the infinitely unifying power in all things (God) of which every individual thing is a manifestation. I highly recommend this short book for a refreshing approach to philosophy.

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Fred Evans
4.0 out of 5 stars Good dealReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 16 January 2014
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just got another copy of Nishida's first work. Every time somebody sees me reading this book, for years now, they borrow it and I never see the book again. Got this one used, good shape, good shipping, not too much writing in it, I am happy. Gonna stay home with this copy until I finish it again! This book is NOT about Zen at all. If you are new to Buddhism get this for later use. You will use it! Its mostly a compilation of the thoughts of Satoru.

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Bjørn
1.0 out of 5 stars SukkkReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 27 December 2019
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August 24, 2019
I don’t think I expected to like this book as much as I did. It was definitely a change of pace from the more polemical style of philosophy you get out of the western thinkers Nishida often name drops. Whereas they tend to present their arguments in reaction to competing schools of thought, An Inquiry Into The Good is presented more like a broad survey of philosophical trends that he draws from wherever he can find insight to support his unifying project: to ground a conception of ethics in the metaphysics of “Pure Experience”.

The book’s structure unfolds in a similar way to Spinoza’s Ethics, starting with a metaphysical discussion of reality as rooted in “Pure Experience” where subject and object are one, then moving on to a kind of psychology of consciousness, before exploring the question of “The Good”, and ending on the topic of religion and God. But Spinoza isn’t the only western thinker Nishida engages with in this highly syncretic text. Hume, Hegel, Leibniz, Augustine, Christ, and even Goethe and Wilde among others figure throughout; though I get the sense he was most influenced by Spinoza and Hegel and possibly most in tension with Kant. However, Nishida doesn’t just draw on the West for material; Eastern thought, especially Zen Buddhism, is ever operating in the background. Though, I’m not as read up on that aspect so I can’t comment much. Nishida writes clearly and in a straightforward manner that never assumes of the reader too much familiarity with the philosophers he mentions, making it an accessible read.

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[최민자의 한국학 산책] 한국학, 무엇이 문제인가 일요서울

[최민자의 한국학 산책] 한국학, 무엇이 문제인가 <  일요서울i

[최민자의 한국학 산책] 한국학, 무엇이 문제인가
기자명 성신여대 정치외교학과 명예교수
입력 2023.05.26


한국은 유엔무역개발회의(UNCTAD) 설립 이래 최초로 개발도상국에서 선진국으로의 지위 변경(2021.7.2.)이 이루어지면서 명실공히 선진국으로 진입하게 되었다. 문화적으로도 한류 현상이 아시아를 넘어 미국과 유럽 등지로 확산되면서 한국어·한국학 교육 및 한국 상품에 대한 관심도 높아지고 있다.

하지만 세계적으로 부상하고 있는 한국의 국제적 위상과는 달리 국가적·민족적·문화적 정체성은 제대로 정립되지 못하고 있고 한국학은 뿌리 없는 꽃꽂이 식물과도 같이 생명력이 결여되어 있다. 또한 한국학은 현대과학의 방법론을 기용하지 못한 채 ‘낡은’ 전통에 머무르고 있으며, 한국산(産) 정신문화의 진면목은 드러나지 못하고 있다. 한국학 콘텐츠의 빈곤과 불균형 또한 여전히 해소되지 못하고 있다.

한국학이 직면한 딜레마는 크게 세 가지 측면에서 고찰해 볼 수 있다.

첫째, 한국학이 직면한 최대의 딜레마는 우리 역사의 뿌리이자 한국 사상 및 문화의 원형을 담고 있는 우리 상고사(上古史: 삼국 정립 이전 광의의 고대사)에 대한 제도권 합의의 부재로 인해 한국학 교육 자체가 뿌리 없는 꽃꽂이 교육, 생명력을 상실한 교육이 되었다는 것이다. 그렇게 된 것은 우리 역사가 외적의 강압과 내부의 사대주의자들과 정권 탈취 세력의 기만책으로 인하여, 그리고 결정적으로는 일제의 민족말살정책에 의해 조직적으로 위조되어 삼국 정립 이전의 유구한 역사가 상당 부분 소실되었기 때문이다. 그리하여 한국학 관련 서적들도 연구의 시대적 범위를 대부분 삼국시대 이후에 집중함으로써 한국학 콘텐츠의 심대한 빈곤과 불균형을 초래했다.

둘째, 한국학이 직면한 또 하나의 딜레마는 사대주의와 서구적 보편주의(유럽중심주의)의 망령, 그리고 ‘자학적(自虐的)’ 역사관인 반도사관(식민사관)에 함몰되어 역사의 진실을 직시하지 못한다는 것이다. 그로 인해 역사철학적 및 정치철학적 토양이 척박해지고 극명한 이분법에 기초한 한반도의 이념적 지형이 고착화되면서 심지어는 우리 역사 자체가 정쟁(政爭)의 도구가 되고 있다는 것이다. 한국학 연구의 바탕이 되어야 할 우리 역사가 권력의 시녀 노릇이나 한다면, 어떻게 한국학이 인류 사회의 원대한 미래적 비전을 담을 수 있겠는가. 한국학의 한계성은 우리 내부의 정치적인 요인도 있겠지만, 더 본질적으로는 수천 년의 영광스러운 우리 상고사를 잃어버림으로 인해 반도사관이 고착화되고 민족적 자존감이 심대하게 훼손되면서 우리 민족집단 자체가 스스로를 ‘주변적 존재’로 인식하게 됨으로써 사대주의가 발흥하게 된 것과 맥을 같이 한다.

셋째, 한국학이 직면한 또 다른 딜레마는 목하 진행 중인 한·중 역사전쟁과 한·일 역사전쟁이 한국의 역사문화 침탈은 물론 정치적 노림수를 가진 고도의 정치적 기획물이라는 것이다. 중국의 한국 고대사 침탈은 2002년부터 중국 정부가 나서서 고구려 등을 ‘중국 지방 정부’로 편입하는 작업을 국책사업으로 공식 진행하면서 시작되는데 이것이 이른바 ‘동북공정’이다. 유네스코 세계유산위원회(2004.7)에서 중국이 신청한 고구려 ‘세계문화유산’ 등재가 결정되자, 환인·집안(集安) 등지의 유적에 ‘중국의 지방정권’이라는 안내문이 게시되었다. 바이두 백과사전(2016)에는 고조선‧부여‧고구려‧발해를 중국사의 나라로 서술하는 작업이 완료되었다.

그러나 요하문명의 대표 문화로 꼽히는 홍산문화 유적이 발굴되면서 그 문화의 주인공이 전형적인 동이족으로 밝혀짐에 따라 홍산문화는 중국 황하문명의 원류인 것으로 주목받고 있다.

다음으로 한·일 역사전쟁은 일제가 한반도 침략을 노골화하던 시기인 1880년대부터 시작되어 지금까지도 계속되고 있다. 중국에 있는 광개토대왕릉 비문의 몇 자를 파괴·변조하여 마치 왜(倭)가 백제를 정벌하고 신라 등을 궤멸시킨 것처럼 역사적 사실을 왜곡하는가 하면, 일본의 야마토(大和)정권이 4세기 후반에 한반도에 진출해서 6세기 중엽까지 임나일본부라는 관청을 설치하고 약 200년간 한반도 남부를 지배했다는 역설을 조작했다. 또한 일제강점기 조선총독부에 조선사편수회가 설치되면서 환국·배달국·단군조선과 북부여에 이르기까지 무려 7천 년이 넘는 우리 상고사를 신화라는 이유로 잘라 없애버렸다. 그리하여 우리 역사는 결정적으로 뿌리가 뽑혀버렸다.

문명사적 대전환기에 ‘한국학’이라는 간판을 내걸고 일제가 날조한 역사나 읊조리며 사대주의와 서구적 보편주의의 망령에 사로잡혀 문명의 파편이나 주워 담는 식의 종속적 한국학이 되어서는 안 된다.


성신여대 정치외교학과 명예교수 mzchoi33@naver.com

Posted by Sejin at May 31, 2023
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Nishida - Place and Dialectic Two Essays by Nishida Kitaro

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Nishida - Place and Dialectic Two Essays by Nishida Kitaro




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Place and Dialectic: Two Essays by Nishida Kitaro Hardcover – 1 December 2011
by Kitaro Nishida (Author), John W M Krummel (Translator), Shigenori Nagatomo (Translator)
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Place and Dialectic presents two essays by Nishida Kitaro, translated into English for the first time by John W.M. Krummel and Shigenori Nagatomo. Nishida is widely regarded as one of the father figures of modern Japanese philosophy and as the founder of the first distinctly Japanese school of philosophy, the Kyoto school, known for its synthesis of western philosophy, Christian theology, and Buddhist thought. The two essays included here are ''Basho'' from 1926/27 and ''Logic and Life'' from 1936/37. Each essay is divided into several sections and each section is preceded by a synopsis added by the translators.

282 pages
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Oxford University Press
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1 December 2011





Nishida: Last Writing Paper


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Place and Dialecticis an outstanding and at times brilliant translation of two essays central to the work of the Japanese philosopher Nishida Kitaro including his trailblazing essay 'Basho.' The translators' sensitivity for the nuances of the Japanese and English languages as well as their first-rate understanding of Nishida's place in the history of philosophy ensure the quality of this must-read for anyone interested in philosophy. This translation will go a long way of making the philosophy of Nishida accessible to those unfamiliar with the Japanese philosophical tradition and language as it highlights Nishida's unique contribution to world philosophy. ― Gereon Kopf, Associate Professor of Religion, Luther College
Review
"Place and Dialecticis an outstanding and at times brilliant translation of two essays central to the work of the Japanese philosopher Nishida Kitaro including his trailblazing essay 'Basho.' The translators' sensitivity for the nuances of the Japanese and English languages as well as their first-rate understanding of Nishida's place in the history of philosophy ensure the quality of this must-read for anyone interested in philosophy. This translation will go a long way of making the philosophy of Nishida accessible to those unfamiliar with the Japanese philosophical tradition and language as it highlights Nishida's unique contribution to world philosophy." -- Gereon Kopf, Associate Professor of Religion, Luther College "This book decisively elevates the level of Nishida studies, making it amply clear that Nishida developed his thought in response to Western philosophers. 'Basho' (1926) and 'Logic and Life' (1936), meticulously translated here with copious notes, are essential works, wherein Nishida's core philosophical vision, which took shape in the notion of basho (place) and the dialectical world, is unfolded. A must-read for anyone seriously interested in philosophizing on a global stage." -- Michiko Yusa, Professor of Japanese & East Asian Studies, Western Washington University "Nishida was the foremost philosopher of twentieth-century Japan, and the translators of this volume deserve our gratitude for making two of his most significant essays available in English. Now a wider audience can appreciate a truly global thinker of fierce intelligence elaborating an idea of 'place,' or topos, that is clearer and perhaps deeper than Plato's chora, as well as a life-rooted logic that is more Heraclitean than Aristotelian." --Graham Parkes, Professor of Philosophy and Head of the School of Philosophy & Sociology, University College Cork

From the Publisher
John W.M. Krummel is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Shigenori Nagatomo is Professor of Comparative Philosophy and East Asian Buddhism at Temple University.
About the Author
John W.M. Krummel is Assistant Professor of Religious Studies at Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Shigenori Nagatomo is Professor of Comparative Philosophy and East Asian Buddhism at Temple University.
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Publisher ‏ : ‎ Oxford University Press (1 December 2011)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 282 pages


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I was born and raised in Tokyo, Japan in a bilingual, bicultural family, to an American father and a Japanese mother. I attended the American School in Japan from Kindergarten to 12th grade. I received my BA with a major in Philosophy from Earlham College, Richmond, Indiana in 1988. I received my MA in Philosophy from the New School for Social Research, Graduate Faculty, NYC, NY in 1994 with a thesis on Heidegger and Foucault. I then received my Ph.D. in Philosophy from the New School for Social Research in 1999 with a dissertation on Heidegger's interpretation of Kant's notion of the imagination. I then received an additional Ph.D. in Religion from Temple University, Philadelphia, PA in 2008 with a dissertation on Nishida's dialectical philosophy in relation to Buddhism and Hegel. I am currently Associate Professor and Chair in the Dept. of Religious Studies at Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY; and Assistant Editor of Journal of Japanese Philosophy, SUNY Press; Associate Editor of the International Journal of Social Imaginaries, Brill; and Editor of the Social Imaginaries Book Series, RLI.

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Brian C.
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb volume of Nishida translations...Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 30 May 2013
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This volume consists of two long essays "Basho" and "Logic and Life" as well as an excellent translator's introduction. The essays serve as good general introductions to some important Nishida concepts: the concept of basho (enveloping universals), contradictory identity, action-intuition, and the historical world, among others. Nishida is an extremely dense writer. Do not expect an easy read with this text. If you have never read any Nishida before you should definitely start with An Inquiry into the Good . It is, by far, Nishida's most accessible work and there is no way you will be able to follow anything in this book without first achieving some mastery of An Inquiry into the Good.

Most of Nishida's works after An Inquiry into the Good read, to me, almost like notes. They remind me of the abbreviated notes I take when I am working out ideas. I know what I mean so I do not need to spell everything out. I provide just enough information to remind myself later what I was thinking. I do not think Nishida is being purposely obscure, he laments the fact that "after many repetitions in the foregoing discussion ultimately I could not adequately express what I was thinking" (102). The reader is likely to lament the unclarity in places as well. Nishida almost never gives examples and he constantly says things like "And this is how the standpoint of the will arises" as if the connection to what he was just saying was obvious when in reality it is anything but obvious. It often feels like he is skipping steps.

That is why I think this is such an excellent volume. Not only does the translator provide an excellent, and lengthy, introduction to the two essays, placing them in context, and explaining some of the most important concepts and necessary background information, but the notes to the text are extremely extensive and almost constitute a line by line commentary in places. They are not quite line by line but, to put things in perspective, the first essay is around 50 pages and there are 315 footnotes, which run about 30 pages. The notes are pretty much all explanatory notes and they are extremely helpful. I cannot over-emphasize how helpful it was having the notes. I wish that all Nishida translations included such copious notes.

This volume is a bit pricy but, if you are serious about Nishida's philosophy, I think it is definitely a volume that is worth owning. It explains some concepts that are really central to Nishida's philosophy, and central in understanding his last work Last Writings: Nothingness and the Religious Worldview and, since there are not that many secondaries on Nishida in English, the notes are extremely helpful in clarifying Nishida's often frustratingly dense prose.
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The Invention of Religion in Japan Jason Ananda Josephson

The Invention of Religion in Japan
Jason Ananda Josephson


The invention of religion in Japan was a politically charged boundary-drawing exercise that extensively reclassified the inherited materials of Buddhism, Confucianism, and Shinto. 

Jason Ananda Josephson, Assistant Professor of Religion, Williams College (2007– present).
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4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars    20 ratings 4.2 on Goodreads 78 ratings
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Winner of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion: 2013 Distinguished Book Award

Throughout its long history, Japan had no concept of what we call "religion." There was no corresponding Japanese word, nor anything close to its meaning. But when American warships appeared off the coast of Japan in 1853 and forced the Japanese government to sign treaties demanding, among other things, freedom of religion, the country had to contend with this Western idea. 

In this book, Jason Ānanda Josephson reveals how Japanese officials invented religion in Japan and traces the sweeping intellectual, legal, and cultural changes that followed. 

More than a tale of oppression or hegemony, Josephson's account demonstrates that the process of articulating religion offered the Japanese state a valuable opportunity. 
In addition to carving out space for belief in Christianity and certain forms of Buddhism, Japanese officials excluded Shinto from the category. Instead, they enshrined it as a national ideology while relegating the popular practices of indigenous shamans and female mediums to the category of "superstitions"
--and thus beyond the sphere of tolerance. 

Josephson argues that the invention of religion in Japan was a politically charged, boundary-drawing exercise that not only extensively reclassified the inherited materials of Buddhism, Confucianism, and Shinto to lasting effect, but also reshaped, in subtle but significant ways, our own formulation of the concept of religion today. This ambitious and wide-ranging book contributes an important perspective to broader debates on the nature of religion, the secular, science, and superstition.
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Contents 
 
Preface and Acknowledgments 
A Note on Texts and Translations 
 
Introduction 
The Advent of Religion in Japan 
Obscure Obstacles 
Unlearning Shūkyō 
Unlearning “Religion” 
Overview of the Work 
 
1. The Marks of Heresy: Organizing Difference in Premodern Japan 
Difference Denied: Hierarchical Inclusion 
Strange Aberrations: Exclusive Similarity 
Hunting Heretics 
 
2. Heretical Anthropology 
Contested Silences: Two Versions of the Acts of the Saints 
Demonic Dharma 
Japanese Heretics and Pagans 
 
3. The Arrival of Religion 
Negotiating “Religion” 
Taxonomy and Translation: Category in the Webs of Meaning 
Unreasonable Demands 

4. The Science of the Gods 
Shinto as a “Nonreligion” 
The Way of the Gods 
Celestial Archeology: The Advent of European Science in Japan 
The Science of the Gods: Philology and Cosmology 
Ritual Therapeutics for the Body of the Nation 
The Gods of Science 
From Miraculous Revolution to Mechanistic Cosmos 
 
5. Formations of the Shinto Secular 
Secularism Revisited 
Hygienic Modernity and the World of Reality 
Secular Apotheosis 
 
6. Taming Demons 
The Demons of Modernity 
Restraining the Wild 
Monstrous Gods 
Evil Cults 
Disciplining Buddhism, Expelling Christianity 
 
7. Inventing Japanese Religion 
Religion in Japanese International Missions 
Controlling the Heart: Debating the Role of Religion in the Modern State 
Inventing “Japanese Religions” 
 
8. Religion within the Limits 
Internal Convictions 
External Controls 
The Birth of Religious Studies in Japan 
Conclusion 

The Invention of Superstition 
The Invention of the Secular 
The Invention of Religion 
The Third Term 
Postscript 
 
Appendix: Religion Explained


==== 
Editorial Reviews
Review

"The Invention of Religion in Japan is truly revolutionary. Original, well researched, and engrossing, it overturns basic assumptions in the study of Japanese thought, religion, science, and history.... This book will absolutely reshape the field."--Sarah Thal, University of Wisconsin-Madison

“Jason ­Ananda Josephson astutely analyzes how Japanese definitions of religion sought to contain Christian missionary agendas and to position Japan advantageously vis-à-vis Western nations while at the same time radically reconfiguring inherited traditions and articulating new ideological norms for Japanese citizens. His broad erudition allows him to place the case of Japan in transnational perspective and to offer persuasive theoretical insights into the mutually constitutive nature of religion, superstition, and the secular. This study is illuminating reading for anyone interested, not only in modern Japan, but in the complex interconnections of religion, modernity, and the politics of nation states.” (Jacqueline Stone, Princeton University)

“Written with remarkable clarity, this book makes an excellent contribution to the study of the interface of traditional Japanese religions and politics. Highly recommended.”- Choice

“The range of Japanese primary sources consulted in his book is prodigious, as is his familiarity and usage of multidisciplinary theoretical works. . . . Josephson has used well-documented examples of the creation of various Japanese belief systems in the modern era to suggest a new model for understanding the colonial past of religious studies and to provide new tools and models for grappling with continuing change in religious studies theory. . . . Josephson’s book is erudite, informative, and interesting. It should be a worthwhile read for Japan scholars as well as scholars and students interested in religious studies theory and history.”- Will Hansen, H-Shukyo

“Josephson’s book is a highly insightful and ingenious application of the constructivist approach to religion—the method of reverse-engineering the clockwork that makes the concept tick in particular historical and cultural cases. . . . By putting the stress on invention, Josephson foregrounds this backstage business of making, and in doing so, he demonstrates, to brilliant effect, the novelty and power of the products that resulted. . . . Josephson’s book will no doubt be generating further exciting inventions for some time to come.” -Japan Review


“Jason Ananda Josephson’s book on the ‘invention of religion’ is an informative, well-argued, and stimulating discussion of an important topic that should be fascinating to anyone interested in religion in modern Japan or religion in any historical or cultural context.”-Paul L. Swanson | International Bulletin of Missionary Research   

“Jason Josephson’s The Invention of Religion in Japan offers a creative theoretical apparatus that many students of Japanese religion and history will find immediately useful. . . . Josephson boasts a formidable linguistic skill set and a corresponding fluency with theoretical material; he puts both to extensive use in this wide-ranging book. . . . Josephson upends the familiar Saidian account of Europe’s masterful encounter with the passive ‘Orient,’ showing that Japanese interpreters played active roles in formulating European understandings of the new academic field of ‘Japanese religions.’”-Religious Studies in Japan 

“Josephson admirably traces the development of ‘religion’ in Japan and the West, and he constantly reminds of how this invention was inextricably interwoven with international politics and diplomatic relationships. . . . Josephson presents a sophisticated analysis of the invention of religion in Japan by applying theoretically and empirically based explanations that rely on primary source data in multiple languages to contest previous notions of ‘religion’ and assumptions within the academic study of religion. In that respect, The Invention of Religion in Japan can help scholars of religions in Japan and elsewhere continue to refine and shape our understanding of ‘religion’ in modernity.”-Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion   

“This book is an advance in the literature. Tightly edited, it synthesizes a heavy mass of information and uses judicious combinations of primary, secondary, and theo retical literature to tell its story. The author’s linguistic abilities are exceptional, and he has done deep background research into varied European and Japanese literatures that help him address the various specific problems raised in his enterprise. Readers who are not Japan specialists will find the issues framed by interesting anecdotes and well-chosen historical information.”-Journal of Religion in Japan   

“The book is a linguistic and textual tour de force that challenges many preconceptions about the development of studies of religion in Japan as well as about religion as a defined, or definable, category in Japanese contexts. Its thesis, that “religion” as a conceptual category did not exist prior to Western incursions into Meiji Japan and that it thus needed to be invented by the Japanese, is argued convincingly and will make many who have held alternative viewpoints think again. Josephson also offers some new insights into the contentious terminology of the religious and the secular by focusing on Japanese concerns with heresy and “superstition,” which were critical definitional categories through which the “religious” and the “secular” were framed. . . . One hopes very much that people outside of religious studies do not look at Josephson’s title and think this is a book solely about religion. Indeed, it would not have been amiss to have titled the book “Politics, Diplomacy, and the Invention of Religion,” for it is as much of relevance to students of politics, diplomacy, international relations, and law as it is to those of religious studies.”-Ian Reader | Monumenta Nipponica   

“Theoretically sophisticated and intellectually ambitious, Josephson’s book challenges the long-held assumption that religion is a universal component of human experience….Josephson’s work is a skillful exercise in semiotic analysis, drawing on sources in Japanese, Chinese, Portuguese, French, German, Dutch, Norwegian, Spanish, and Italian, and it illuminates the role of the Japanese as observers of the West, not merely as objects of Western observation….In this way, Josephson uses the transnational approach not only to revise a long-standing problem in Japanese historiography but also to deconstruct hegemonic Western concepts.”-Cross-Currents   “Josephson weaves together a fresh narrative of Japanese nation-building in its relation to religion. . . . Sophisticated yet highly readable, The Invention of Religion in Japan will be edifying reading for general readers and students as much as for specialists.”-Jeff Schroeder | The Eastern Buddhist 

“[C]onvincingly describe[es] the reception of the term ‘religion’ in Japan not as an ‘imposition’ and thus passive reception of a foreign concept but as an active and deliberate acquisition. . . . [Josephson] does a brilliant job in showing how ‘religion’ was used by state officials, scientists, and other protagonists in late 19th-century Japan as exactly what it is: a free-floating signifier with a strong discursive force that can be of great use for different processes of negotiation and naturalization.”-Inken Prohl | Religion   

"This is an important book. . . . It requires us to rethink how we understand and classify Shinto, Buddhism, Confucianism, and Christianity in both premodern and modern settings. . . . [Josephson's] analysis of Japan is Foucauldian in virtually every dimension—not only of its religion, but also of its use of knowledge as power and of the 'disciplining of bodies' by authorities through regimens on hygiene, mental illness, sexual deviance, and imprisonment."-Journal of Japanese Studies   

“The book brilliantly weaves two genealogies of scholarship, making it deeply interesting to students of either one: studies examining the construction of State Shinto in the Meiji period as a nonreligious expression of modern Japanese identity with a generation of critical scholarship on the academic study of religion. . . . [Josephson] has produced an elegant argument that religion (including its co-products, the secular and the superstitious) was not so much imposed on Japan, but rather, in the discursive gap created by Western missionary and diplomatic incursions, invented in Japan by the Japanese to serve the late nineteenth-century modernization project. In short, the book describes, in far-ranging discussions, how religion became the first modern manufactured product with the origin label ‘Made in Japan.’”-Journal of Asian Studies   

“Presents an exciting challenge to the field of Japanese religious studies. . . . Josephson sheds much light on how the Western category of religion was adapted, interpreted, and transformed in Japan at the turn of the twentieth century. . . . A powerful addition to the field and a must-read.”-Mark W. MacWilliams | Numen 

  “An important contribution. . . . Studies such as Josephson’s . . . that examine classification as a collaborative, situationally-specific exercise linked not just to ideas but to social interests, legal systems, and administrative structures . . . are an important corrective to those who understand situations of contact as merely involving the passive vanquished simply doing the bidding of invading conquerors.”-Russell T. McCutcheon | Numen   

“Josephson’s investigation of the category of religion as it developed in modern Japan is a helpful addition to the field, and, to be honest, I have already begun assigning it in seminars. . . . This book [will be] useful in comparative and theoretical courses on religion and will no doubt appeal to anyone studying Japanese religions and Japanese history. . . . One of his most useful contributions is the use of the trinary model of ‘real,’ ‘superstition,’ and ‘religion’ to understand how the modern worldview is enacted and created. Moreover, his consideration of diplomacy and domestic law as key factors in the construction and negotiation of conceptual categories will be of interest to scholars in many fields. I highly recommend this book.”-Journal of Religion

=====
About the Author
Jason Ānanda Josephson-Storm is Chair and Associate professor of religion at Williams College.
Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ University of Chicago Press (October 3, 2012)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 387 pages
Customer Reviews: 4.9 4.9 out of 5 stars    20 ratings
-----
Jason Ananda Josephson Storm
Jason Ānanda Josephson Storm is Professor of Religion and Chair of Science & Technology Studies at Williams College. He received his PhD from Stanford University, his MTS from Harvard University, and has held visiting positions at Princeton University, École Française d'Extrême-Orient, Paris, Ruhr Universität and Universität Leipzig, Germany. 

He is the author of 
  • "The Invention of Religion in Japan" (2012, winner of the Society for the Scientific Study of Religion- Distinguished Book of the Year Award), 
  • "The Myth of Disenchantment: Magic, Modernity and the Birth of the Human Sciences" (2017), and 
  • "Metamodernism: The Future of Theory" (2021), all published by the University of Chicago Press.
 ===

From the United States
Bookwyrm
4.0 out of 5 stars How Religion Came to Be Defined in Japan
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2019
Verified Purchase
I like to consider myself a casual scholar (meaning I’m not a professional and it is not my career) of religion and religion in Japan (and I don’t mean necessarily how they affect each other, I mean as topics and areas of study). The Invention of Religion in Japan is both a look at history itself, and how religion fits into it. It discussed how the Japanese had their set of beliefs, like folk beliefs that later became categorized with Shinto, and Buddhism, but, because they were a part of life, they were not defined as a “religion”, so when the Japanese encountered Christianity, they struggled to define their beliefs. Christianity was originally seen as a heretical form of Buddhism.

I recommend this book to anyone who is interested in religious studies, the history of Japan, or Japan in general.
2 people found this helpful
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JS
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent academic overview
Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2017
Verified Purchase
I skimmed this book at the bookstore when it came out and found that it mostly overlapped with research I have already done. At last, I am writing on this subject again so I decided I had to own a copy. I just wanted to affirm that this is a very well-researched book which introduces an important topic which remains trendy in religious studies. It is backed up very strongly by Japanese and Western academic consensus, but it also contains plenty of stuff that was new for me. I highly recommend this book to undergrads considering a religion major, as well as people who want a summary of various topics related to the formation of the religious category in Japan.
4 people found this helpful
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David Henry
5.0 out of 5 stars A challenging read--in more ways than one.
Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2018
Verified Purchase
Incredible not only as an introduction to a fascinating period in Japanese history, but also as an examination of the concept of "religion" and the assumptions that underlie our idea of a modern, secular, free society. My only mistake was getting the kindle edition--buy a hard copy to share with friends.

Fair warning, though, this is not a popular-level history. It is academic. Share it with your friends, but share it with your *nerd* friends.
4 people found this helpful
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Jeremy Bellay
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesting read with profound implications
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2012
Verified Purchase
Josephson makes a profound argument about the nature of the category of religion through a detailed examination of how that category was formulated in Japan following Japan's encounter with The West. The implications of this work spill well beyond the bounds of Japanese religions, and "The Invention of Religion in Japan" can be read as a study of how a new shared concept comes into being. However, unlike many books making arguments about that nature of human culture, Josephson supports his arguments with a detailed historical narrative. I found the book to be extremely readable and many of the stories of early Japan-Western interaction are downright entertaining. I heartily recommend it to anyone interested in religion, Japan, or the formation of shared conceptual categories.
18 people found this helpful
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cbest
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing book!
Reviewed in the United States on January 6, 2013
Verified Purchase
Written by a friend from high school, The Invention of Religion in Japan was a requested Christmas gift for my son. Sixty pages into the book he called me to say that the book is amazing. He told me that it opens new territory in the understanding of the development of Buddhism in Japan and the effects of the intersection with Christianity on both the Japanese and Europeans who brought Christianity to Japan. Included are old Japanese documents and accounts that the author translated into English.
11 people found this helpful
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David K Groff
5.0 out of 5 stars This is an excellent overview of the history of State Shinto and its ...
Reviewed in the United States on February 8, 2017
Verified Purchase
This is an excellent overview of the history of State Shinto and its development as a tool both for control and for adaptation to international assumptions about religion.
3 people found this helpful
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Calvin
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful dissection of what is science
Reviewed in the United States on December 16, 2016
Verified Purchase
Wonderful dissection of what is science, religion, and how they interweave. A must for any student of Japanese religion
One person found this helpful
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Justin Stein
5.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Classic in the Field
Reviewed in the United States on October 5, 2022
Essential reading for those interested in the development of modern Japanese religion. As other reviewers have said, this is an academic text, not a popular history, and there is some theory about how historical actors made sense of religious difference as well as the relationship between religion, superstition, and science, but it is all relatively accessible. I've read it several times and it's always a treat.
One person found this helpful
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From other countries  Ana Flowers
5.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 19, 2015
Verified Purchase
very good book if you want to learn more about history of Japan.
One person found this helpful
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Posted by Sejin at May 31, 2023
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The Zen Doctrine of NO MIND | Suzuki

The Zen Doctrine of NO MIND PDF | PDF | Zen | Buddhist Meditation
Suzuki



2015.57108.Zen-Doctrine-Of-No-Mind.pdf



































Zen Doctrine of No Mind: The Significance of the Sutra of HuiNeng

by Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki (Author), Christmas Humphreys (Editor)
4.1 out of 5 stars    57 ratings

Dedicated largely to the teaching of Hui Neng, this volume covers the purpose and technique of Zen training, and goes further into the depths of Zen than any other work of modern times. Here we find no reliance on scripture or a Savior, for the student isshown how to go beyond thought in order to achieve a state of consciousness beyond duality.
==============
From other countries

Joe
4.0 out of 5 stars Zen demystified, maybe.Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 7 February 2014
Verified Purchase
No Mind is an attempt to debunk or reverse the belief that the Zen experience is obtained by the practice of meditation, or any practice, that you start and then stop before you go back to your life. The argument is based entirely on research with no reference to the authors personal experience. I believe this is because the original intended audience were educated Buddhists who are guided, and misguided, by doctrine. The book attempts to correct a pervasive misguidance by going back to the source.
However I would not have associated the term "guidance" with ancient Zen literature. It seems to the modern, and probably to the ancient, reader that the Zen Masters deliberately encoded their message to mystify the student and thereby somehow maintain the Zen experience as virtually unattainable.
Refreshingly, starting on page 123, Suzuki addresses this perception directly and sincerely. I personally found this most valuable and unexpected.
I recommend this book if you are prepared to read it over a period of time and allow it to manifest as experience. You can't understand or express Zen directly in words. You can only experience it, however the words somehow cause the experience, and then you understand a little more than before.
I docked a star because I would have liked more of the author and maybe less of the ancients. However for the intended audience I am sure the book is perfect.

14 people found this helpfulReport

William D George
5.0 out of 5 stars Best sixth patriarch delineation (D. T. Suzuki)Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 19 June 2022
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Essence Zen

One person found this helpfulReport

Keith McL
5.0 out of 5 stars Very DetailedReviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 24 April 2020
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To me, Hui Neng is one of the pivotal Zen Masters. He points to a zazen that is natural but is not quietism..

The author, D.T. Suzuki was a life long Zen practitioner. So he adds details that Waddell, Braverman, Haskel and others do not.

Still, this is not an easy read. But it is a well worthwhile read.
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cprmj
5.0 out of 5 stars Expands your AwarenessReviewed in Canada 🇨🇦 on 27 November 2020
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This is a challenging read, but for the serious wayfarer it can be life enriching. It is the difference between living a life of endless distraction and one where, even the most mundane task is filled with Zen.
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Amazon Customer
4.0 out of 5 stars Most interesting.Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 13 December 2019
Verified Purchase
Possibly one of my favorite Zen books. I've read it numerous times. It's comprehensive, deep without being difficult and enlightening.

4 people found this helpfulReport

Lhaw
5.0 out of 5 stars UNOBSCURE The Buddha You ARE!Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 17 January 2015
Verified Purchase
This Book.. Oh how Inconceivably Relevant. If your Destiny is to Study Consciousness, this has the answers that can get you to Insights & Miracles that are Transcendental Existence in this Life. It's 'HOW' (so to speak) to transcend mind; to Intuit THE Escape from enthrallment on Samara. Just recognize that regardless of the verbiage used in this fabulous Work to describe "IT" (even though it is NOT actually an it..), whether "No-Mind", "Emptiness", "Unconscious", or several other terms it uses, they are *synonyms* for your Buddha-Nature, & you CAN Recall IT by Allowing what this work Guides you to, WITHIN THIS! Get it NOW, & One Day, when It Calls, you'll open it like a "Messiah's Handbook", & be AMAZED!

8 people found this helpfulReport

mukunda777
5.0 out of 5 stars Like Marpa the Translator to the TibetansReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 11 October 2014
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D.T. Suzuki's enduring contribution to Zen Buddhism in the West cannot be emphasized strongly enough. Like Marpa the Translator to the Tibetans, D. T. deserves the title "Bodhisattva to the Western World". All of his writings are worth reading again and again ( as I have been doing for the past forty-five years...and will continue to do until I regain Union). This book on the Sixth Chan Patriarch, Hui Neng, clearly illumines the transition from Indian, "Tathagatha" Chan to Chinese, "Patriarch" Chan with great clarity and power. A "must read" for the serious practitioner of Zen Buddhism and a very fine introduction ( as are all his books) to this most elegant expression of religious endeavor.

13 people found this helpfulReport

BernieM
3.0 out of 5 stars Testing...Reviewed in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 on 26 October 2017
Verified Purchase
Totally authentic, I have no doubt, but I find the text somewhat opaque. Zen can be difficult enough without linguistic and syntax problems. Perhaps I wasn't in the best frame of mind. If I'm honest, I get on a lot better with Alan Watts.

One person found this helpfulReport

John R
2.0 out of 5 stars GREAT READS DON'T READ LIKE THIS. LEAVE THIS ONE ON THE SHELF.Reviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 27 August 2016
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Weighted down by style and lack of clarity, rather than elucidating the heart of Zen. Woefully poor.
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HF Perlmutter
5.0 out of 5 stars ReliableReviewed in the United States 🇺🇸 on 2 February 2021
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As described, quick shipper
====

Displaying 1 - 10 of 19 reviews
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Anthony Buckley
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January 17, 2009
Hui-Neng, known as the Sixth Zen Patriarch, established the idea that enlightenment came suddenly and that it should not be sought by slowly and progressively cleaning the mirror of one's mind. Suzuki's free-flowing exploration of the Sutra of Hui-Neng is not nearly as obscure as one might expect. I read it a long time ago, and in looking at it again, I find that it had more of an impact on me than I had realized.
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Lysergius
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July 14, 2019
Suzuki's writings have a clarity that helps to illumine what is a difficult subject. Well worth the effort. This is an intro to the more complex Essays.
zen

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J Benedetti
98 reviews
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September 16, 2013
Fu kicked a dog which happened to be there, and the dog gave a cry and ran away. The monk made no response, whereupon Fu said: 'Poor dog, you were kicked in vain.'

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Frank Thompson
25 reviews
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July 1, 2020
I first read this book over fifty years ago, as a student. In those days Zen was a very trendy thing, and there were many writers popularizing various more or less half baked views of Zen. I liked this book because although it was no more comprehensible than the rest, it seemed to have been long enough in the oven, and even had a cherry on top.

The book ostensibly concerns the famous gatha of Hui Neng, by means of which he ascended to the position of the sixth Patriarch of Chinese Zen Buddhism. But I’ve come tot the conclusion that it is actually a not too subtle diatribe against certain tendencies which linger in Zen down to the present day.

If you read this book, you will probably feel that it leaves you no wiser about what “no-mind” really is. In fact the notable thing about Hui Neng’s gatha, and the view of Zen he promulgated, is not so much what it is, but what it isn’t. Suzuki points out time and time again that Hui Neng and his followers were deeply opposed to the “gradual” school of Zen, to the idea that performing ritual meditations for year after year would finally lead one to Buddhahood. Quoting Huangbo Xiyun he says “If you wish to attain Buddhahood by practising the six virtues of perfection and all the ten-thousand deeds of goodness, this is prescribing a course, and since beginningless time there have never been Buddhas graduating from a prescribed course.”

From this standpoint, the view of Hui Neng and his school might easily be compared to the school of protestantism founded by Martin Luther as a reaction to the Catholic teaching that by giving donations to the church salvation might be attained. And just as the Catholic church still thrives in some parts of the world so the “dust-wiping” gradualist tendency still exists in some schools of Zen, and as you can imagine, such cults are a lot easier to get into than to get out of.

What Suzuki actually means by “no-mind” is harder to fathom than what he doesn’t mean. But a glimpse might be found in a quotation from Shen Hui, “Prajna is spoken of when it is seen that this body is unattainable, remaining perfectly quiescent and serene all the time, and yet functioning mysteriously in ways beyond calculation.” This certainly points to a very dynamic view of the unconscious, and something very far from simply a mirror from which impure thoughts have been erased. It reminds me strongly of the famous Einstein quote, “To know that what is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself as the highest wisdom and the most radiant beauty, which our dull facilities can comprehend only in the most primitive forms--this knowledge, this feeling, is at the center of true religiousness.”

If you are vaguely curious about Zen you might not get a lot from this book, but if you plan to venture into Zen training you should definitely read it, and ponder it well.

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Ryan
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October 27, 2019
Buddhism holds appeal for me, though I know little about it. What I understand of it has enticed me to look deeper. While reading The Zen Doctrine of No-mind, a bit by a favorite comedian kept coming to mind. Tim Minchin is an Aussie musical comedian. The bit? “If you open your mind too much, your brain will fall out.” It seems to me that it both captures my more cynical, ironic reading of the book, and an earnest, concise synopsis of the philosophy espoused in it.

On the cynical side, the book is impenetrably dense. Some of this is linguistic. Buddhism originated in India, the book is written in the early twentieth century by a Japanese scholar about a Chinese Zen master from over a millennium ago. The author is self-aware about this barrier:

"I sometimes find myself at a loss to present the exact meaning of the Chinese writers whose translations are given… The Chinese sentences are very loosely strung together, and each component character is not at all flexible. While read in the original, the sense seems to be clear enough, but when it is to be presented in translation more precision is required to comply with the construction of the language used, in our case English. To do this, much violence is to be practiced on the genius of the original Chinese."

But language is not the only limitation. The Zen worldview denies that enlightenment is to be had by intellectual examination. It follows then that a book trying to illuminate that perspective may struggle. A good number of pages are dedicated to anecdotes and dialogues usually involving a student and a master. As often as not, the anecdotes end with the master striking the student. I would be lying if I claimed any clarity from these pages. The author himself opines at the end of one such story, “…the trouble with Zen is that it always refuses to remain ordinary, though claiming to be ordinary.”

You tell me.

On the more earnest side, Zen is an acceptance of dichotomy and a rejection of classification. Which is to say, a thing is any two diametrically opposed characterizations and neither of those things all at once. The eponymous doctrine of no-mind is a rejection of the mind’s role in enlightenment. It would thus not be demeaning to say, “if you open your mind too much, your brain will fall out.”

That is the best I got. I cannot pretend to understand but I’m not sure any great Zen master would celebrate if I claimed that I did.

====
    Posted by Sejin at May 31, 2023
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