Honolulu, HI, US: University of Hawaii Press. The records of Mazu and the making of classical Chan literature. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press. Seeing through Zen: Encounter, transformation, and genealogy in Chinese Chan Buddhism. Religion as revolution in Chinese Historiography: Hu Shi (1891–1962) on Shen-Hui (684–758). Berkeley, CA USA: Murata Center for Buddhist Translation and Research. The platform Sutra of the Sixty Patriarch. Yanagida Seizan’s landmark works on Chinese Ch’an. Paper presented at the 4th International Conference Ganhwa Seon. The Annual Report of Researches of Matsugaoka Bunko, 16, 123–152. The characteristics of the Japanese Daruma Sect. Study on the history of the establishment of Dogen Zen. The study of Zen Buddhism in Song Dynasty: Caodong School of Zen in China and Dogen Zen, 16, 123–152. Zen’s Chinese heritage: The masters and their teachings. Bloomington, Indiana US: World Wisdom.įerguson, A. Zen Buddhism: A history Volume 1: India and China. North Clarendon, VT, US: Tuttle Publications.ĭumoulin, H. The wholehearted way: A translation of Eihei Dogen’s Bendowa with commentary by Kosho Uchiyama Roshi. New York, US: North Point Press.ĭogen, E., Uchiyama, K., Okumura, S., & Leighton, T. Moon in a dewdrop: Writings of Zen master Dogen. New York: Books on Demand.ĭogen, E., & Tanahashi, K. Records of the transmission of the lamp: Volume I the Buddhas and Indian Patriarchs. Burlingame, CA, USA: Buddhist Text Translation Society.ĭaoyuan, S., & Whitfield, R. The Sixth Patriarch’s Dharma Jewel Platform Sutra. Keywordsīuddhist Text Translation Society. The emergence of different schools of Chinese Zen is often attributable to overlapping, yet somewhat distinct perspectives on these three domains. Ishii argues that there are three key theses that had shaped and adapted the practice of Zen Buddhism: These are self, Zen practice (zazen and koan), and enlightenment. Knowing the history of Zen Buddhism in China is relevant to behavioral health practitioners as the core perspectives systematized in China remain central in Zen Buddhism today where many acceptance- and mindfulness-based practices were originated. More specifically, Shudo Ishii, Ph.D., an emeritus of Komazawa University, the oldest Soto Zen Buddhism University in Japan, presents the history of Zen Buddhism in China, and highlights its core perspective on enlightenment, practice, and everyday living (this chapter). The present chapter, Zen and Zen Buddhism, offers a brief history of Zen Buddhism for behavioral health professionals that may not have been exposed to the context with which Zen and mindfulness practices rose out of.
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