Meeting the Myriad Things
Pocket
2025
Engelsk
A Zen Practitioner's Guide to Dogen's Genjokoan
A fresh commentary on Dogens most famous teaching that offers a concise guide to awakening Buddha mind for the contemporary Zen practitioner.
In the words of Eihei Dogen, the thirteenth-century Buddhist monk who introduced the Soto school of Zen to Japan, To study the Buddha way is to study the self. To study the self is to forget the self. To forget the self is to be actualized by myriad things. Centuries later, these enigmatic words from his seminal Genjokoan (Actualizing the Fundamental Point) are still studied in Zen communities the world over.
But what did Dogen really mean when he encouraged studying the self to forget the self? In this innovative new commentary, respected Zen teacher Shinshu Roberts takes readers on a journey to understand Japans great Buddhist philosopher. In contrast to prevailing Western commentaries, Robert''s applies her deep familiarity with Dogens work to illuminate the text as a cohesive wholea unified story in which Dogen teaches how to develop ones eye of practice.
In addition to a full translation of Dogens Genjokoan, this volume includes the commentary Okikigaki-sho (Notes of What Was Heard and Extracted) written by two of Dogens direct studentsthe first time an English translation of this highly influential work has appeared in print.
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