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T. P. Kasulis

Författare till Zen Action/Zen Person

8+ verk 296 medlemmar 4 recensioner

Om författaren

Inkluderar namnet: Thomas P. Kasulis

Verk av T. P. Kasulis

Associerade verk

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Avoid like the plague authors who try to rationalize religion with scientific analogies.
 
Flaggad
Vertumnus | 1 annan recension | Jun 20, 2022 |
'You have asked permission to practice zen meditation in this temple, but tell me: What is zen?' After some hesitation and embarrassed smiling, I said something about Zen's being a way of life rather than a set of dogmas. Laughter filled the tatami-matted reception room. 'Everyone comes here to study Zen, but none of them knows what Zen is. Zen is-knowing thyself. You are a Western philosopher and you know of Socrates' quest. Did you assume Zen would be something different?'

Of the many books on Zen Buddhism, Zen Action/ZenPerson is the first by a professional American philosopher with training in East Asian languages. Zen practice, and the full range of Asian philosophies preceding the develoment of Japanese Zen Buddhism. This book is also the first thorough investigation of the intimate relationship between Zen doctrine and Zen practice. For many readers, Kasulis' work will clarify some of the key terms left obscure in the pioneering works of such writers as D.T. Suzuki and Alan Watts.

'For the thoughtul Westerner this must be one of the most clear and perceptive accounts of Zen available.'-Times Literary Supplement

'Kasulis' expositions may be considered to be a corner-stone in our understanding of Zen Buddhism. A well-presented, immensely rewarding book.'-The Middle Way

'A must for any reading list dealing seriously with Buddhism or Japanese culure.'-Choice

Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I The context of nothingness
Chapter 1 The cultural setting: Context and personal meaning
Three Japanese words for 'Person'
Contextual meaning in interpersonal communication
The Zen context of the person
Two strands of nothingness
Chapter 2 Nagarjuna: The logic of emptiness
Nagarjuna: A response to Abhidharma Analysis
Two Nagarjuna critiques
The implications of Nagarjuna's theory of emptiness
Nagarjuna's emptiness and Zen's nothingness
Part II Personal meaning in Zen practice
Chapter 5 Zen and reality
Zen's rejectionof conceptual categories
The retrospective reconstruction of reality
Experience and the analytic mode: Two criticisms
Chapter 6 Dogen's phenomenology of Zazen
Dogen's philosophical project
Dogen's account of Zazen
Thinking, not-thinking, without-thinking
Cultivation-authentication
Genjokuan: A central concept
Part III The person as act
Chapter 9 Zen action/Zen person
Nothingness and without-Thinking
Without-thinking and language
Zen action/Zen person
Chapter 10 Philosophical postscript: Toward a Zen humanism
Zen in the West
Morita therapy: Zen humanism in modern Japan
Zen humanism for the West
Chapter 3 Chinese Taoism: The pre-ontolgy of nonbeing
The absolute and the relative Taoa: Being and nonbeing in Taoism
The allegory of the bell
Taoist nonbeing and zen nothingness
Chapter 4 No-mind: The Zen response to nothingness
Mu as context of the Zen person
No-mind: The response to Mu
Heidegger's Gelassenheit: A Western parallel to No-mind?
The true person of no status
Cahpter 7 Dogen: Person as presence
Dogen on the self
Dogen on good and evil
The philosophical significance of Dogen's ethics
The person as presence
Chapter 8 Hakuin: the psycho-dynamics of Zen training
Hakuin's road to realization
The great doubt and the great death
Zen tactics
Dogen Zen and Hakuin Zen
Notes
Glossary
Works cited
Index
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
AikiBib | 1 annan recension | May 29, 2022 |
Kasulis's Shinto: The Way Home avoids the two most common pitfalls of writing about Shinto: treating it as a "book religion" or taking everything offered by Japanese proponents of "national learning" at face value. Instead Kasulis first introduces the history of Shinto and his views on what Shinto means for "common people", and proceeds to analyze its relation to the above pitfalls: why does Shinto get often the book religion treatment and what led to the apperance of national learning proponents and the pre-war State Shinto.

The downside is that particularly the first few chapters about the "meaning" of Shinto are in a somewhat popular style and attempt to summarize large swathes of Japanese thought and history in a very small space. This leads to "no true Scotsman" arguments which refer to the idea of an essential, lasting Japaneseness ("nihonjinron"). But to be fair, wading into the row on Japanese identity would require an entire book, so using this shortcut is understandable, and some questions of related to Japaneseness are discussed in later chapters.

Despite a few problems, this is still the best introduction to Shinto I've read in English. However, I'd recommend some prior reading on Japanese history before taking on this book.
… (mer)
 
Flaggad
sinivalas42 | 1 annan recension | Aug 20, 2014 |
Zen for the advanced reader.
 
Flaggad
JhonnSch | 1 annan recension | Nov 23, 2010 |

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Statistik

Verk
8
Även av
4
Medlemmar
296
Popularitet
#79,168
Betyg
3.9
Recensioner
4
ISBN
21
Språk
1

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