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- Confucianism,
Daoism, Buddhism-Related Web Pages
(See 5 Chinese Classics)
- Key
Terms: Buddhism in India, Early China
- 3 Major Phases before Chan/Zen
Buddism:
- 1) Early Indian Buddhism
(Nikaya Buddhism), 2) Two-Fold Truth of Mahayana
Buddhism, 3) Early Philosophical Schools of
Chinese Buddhism.
- Key
Terms: Early Chan (Zen) Buddhism in China
- Notes
on the Platform Sutra of Hui-neng
- The Platform Sutra is
an early Chinese Chan (Zen) scripture and the source
of the Sudden Gradual distinction.
- Notes
on the Sudden/Gradual Distinction
- The distinction between Sudden
and Gradual awakening (enlightenment) began in China
in the eighth century in the Chan (Zen) school.
Sudden awakening was regarded as superior to the
gradual cultivation of enlightenment. Eventually,
this supremacy of sudden awakening became the norm
for all of East Asian Buddhism (China, Japan,
Korea).
- Mark Unno,
"The Nembutsu as the Path of the Sudden Teaching,"
unpublished paper, IASBS Conference, 1995
- Explains Shinran's view of Sudden Awakening in Pure
Land Buddhism.
- Key
Terms: Dogen's Zen Buddhism
- Notes on
Dogen's "Genjokoan"
- Dogen's Zen Buddhism in
Medieval Japan (Kamakura Period 1185-1333) draws on
the sudden/gradual distinction.
- Key
Terms: Shinran's Pure Land Buddhism (Shin Buddhism)
- Mark Unno,
"The Nembutsu of No Meaning and the Problem of
Genres," The
Pure Land: New Series 10-11 (1994), 105-121.
- Notes on Zen
Abbess Mugai:
Evidence of a female Zen master during the Kamakura
Period.
- Outline
of Japanese Buddhism from the Sixth through the
Twelfth Centuries (Asuka through Heian Periods)
- Summaries
of Selected Readings
- Natalie
Goldberg on Writing in Zen, from The Sun magazine
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