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March 8, 2014
Table of Contents
1 Introduction
Zen

Wikipedia

 
Image:BodhidharmaYoshitoshi1887.jpg|thumb|250px|Bodhidharma, woodblock print by Yoshitoshi, 1887.
Zen is the Japanese name of a well known branch of Mahayana|Mahāyāna Buddhism, practiced originally in China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam. It stresses the role of meditation in pursuing Enlightenment (Buddhism)|enlightenment. Besides this, it has been termed, by one Western commentator, "a way of life, work, and art." Because Zen is the common name for this branch in Japanese language|Japanese as well as in English language|English, this article will concern itself both with Zen as practiced in Japan and with Zen as an international phenomenon. For specific information on related practices in other countries, see the articles at the right.
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Traditionally, Zen traces its roots back to Indian Buddhism, where it was known by "dhyana|dhyāna" (ध्यान), a Sanskrit term for meditation. This name was transliterated into Chinese as Chan|Chán (禪 / simplified 禅); "Chán" was later borrowed into Korean language|Korean as Seon, Vietnamese language|Vietnamese as Thien|Thiền and into Japanese as "Zen."

According to traditional accounts, Zen was founded in China by a Central Asian or Indian Buddhist monk, Bodhidharma (Daruma in Japanese). He was the 28th in the line of transmission from the Buddha's disciple Kasyapa. He traveled from Conjeeveram, near Madras (now Chennai), India, to Guangzhou (Canton), China in 520, where he met the Liang-dynasty (502-557) emperor Wudi and had a famous exchange declaring that good deeds were useless (conferred no merit) for gaining enlightenment. He then went to a monastery near Luoyang in eastern China and, according to legend, spent nine years meditating before a cliff wall before accepting any disciples.

As a legendary culture hero Bodhidharma has also been linked to the Shaolin Temple and the subsequent spread of East Asian martial arts in the oral traditions of schools like Karate and T'ai Chi Ch'uan, as well as in much popular wuxia fiction.

Later, Korea|Korean monks studying in China learned what was by then called Chan, and which had by then been influenced somewhat by Chinese Taoism. After the tradition was expanded to Korea, it came to be called Seon there. Korean monks then brought it to Japan around the 7th century|seventh century, where it came to be called Zen.
<!-- This is a table. Skip past it to edit the article. --> |-
Zen
Sanskrit Name
Sanskrit ध्यान dhyana|dhyāna
Chinese Name
Hanyu Pinyin Chan|Ch?n
Wade-Giles Ch'an2
Cantonese language|CantonesJyutping|e Jyutping sim4
Traditional Chinese character|Traditional character
Simplified Chinese character|Simplified character
Korean language|Korean Name
Revised Romanization of Korean|Revised Romanization Seon
McCune-Reischauer Sŏn
Hangul
Hanja
Japanese language|Japanese Name
Romaji Zen
Kanji
Vietnamese language|Vietnamese Name
Vietnamese_alphabet|Quốc ngữ Thien|Thiền

It is important to note, however, that Chan, Seon and Zen continued to develop separately in their home countries, and all maintain separate identities to this day. Although lineage lines in China, Korea, Japan and elsewhere appear to show direct descent from Bodhidharma, changes in belief and practice have inevitably appeared with the profusion of Chan/Seon/Zen.

The Japanese Zen scholar D.T. Suzuki maintained that a Zen satori (awakening) was the goal of the training, but that what distinguished the tradition as it developed in China, Korea, and Japan was a way of life radically different from that of Indian Buddhists. In India, the tradition of the mendicant (holy beggar, bhikku in Pali) prevailed, but in China social circumstances led to the development of a temple and training-center system in which the abbot and the monks all performed mundane tasks. These included food gardening or farming, carpentry, architecture, housekeeping, administration, and the practice of folk medicine. Consequently, the enlightenment sought in Zen had to stand up well to the demands and potential frustrations of everyday life.



The following Zen traditions still exist in Japan: Rinzai, Soto, and Obaku School|Obaku. Originally formulated by the eponymous Chinese master Linji (Rinzai in Japanese), the Rinzai school was introduced to Japan in 1191 by Eisai. Dogen, who studied under Eisai, would later carry the Caodong, or "Soto" Zen school to Japan from China. Obaku was introduced in the 17th century by Ingen, an Chinese monk.

Some contemporary Japanese zen teachers, such as Daiun Harada and Shunryu Suzuki have criticized Japanese Zen as being a formalized system of empty rituals with very few Zen practitioners ever actually attaining realization. They assert that almost all Japanese temples have become family businesses handed down from father to son, and the Zen priest's function has largely been reduced to officiating at funerals.



Zen is not necessarily a Buddhist religion (but see the next section on Practices). Rather, it is a way of living. Nevertheless all Zen schools stress the admiration of the historical Gautama Buddha|Buddha as their principle inspiration.

Though Zen meditation practice does derive from the Buddha's original Eightfold Path teaching, where dhyana is one element of the eightfold way, Zen has been occasionally criticized by other Buddhists for not adequately emphasizing the other elements of the Eightfold Path and for not emphasizing study of the traditional Tripitaka|Buddhist canon or for being ignorant of or unconcerned with Buddhist philosophy in general.

Such claims are often overpublicized. In practice, most Zen teachers, monks and centers have good relationships with those of other Buddhist schools and often cooperate with them. Much of those claims is probably due to the personal, sometimes paradoxal and often disconcerting methods of transmission that Zen uses.



Zen teachings often criticize textual Hermeneutics|study and the pursuit of worldly accomplishments, concentrating primarily on meditation in pursuit of an unmediated awareness of the processes of the world and the mind. Zen, however, is no mere quietistic doctrine: the Chinese Chan master Baizhang (720-814 CE), (Japanese language|Japanese: Hyakujo), left behind a famous saying which had been the guiding principle of his life, "A day without work is a day of no eating." When Baizhan was thought to be too old to work in the garden, his devotees hid his gardening tools. In response to this, the master then refused to eat, saying "No working, no living."

These teachings are in turn deeply rooted in the Buddhist textual tradition, drawing primarily on Mahayana|Mahāyāna sutras composed in India and China, particularly the Heart Sutra, the Diamond Sutra, the Lankavatara Sutra, and the Samantamukha Parivarta, a chapter of the Lotus Sutra. The body of Zen doctrine also includes the recorded teachings of masters in the various Zen traditions.

Zen is not primarily philosophy of an intellectual variety. In explaining the Zen Buddhist path to Westerners, Japanese Zen teachers have frequently pointed out, moreover, that Zen is a way of life and not solely a state of consciousness. D.T. Suzuki wrote that the aspects of this life were: a life of humility; a life of labor; a life of service; a life of prayer and gratitude; and a life of meditation.

Zazen
Zen meditation is called zazen. Zazen translates approximately to "sitting meditation", although it can be applied to practice in any posture. During zazen, practitioners usually assume a lotus position|lotus, half-lotus, Burmese posture|Burmese, or seiza sitting position. Rinzai practitioners typically sit facing the center of the room, while Soto practitioners sit facing a wall. Awareness is directed towards complete cognizance of one's posture and breathing. In this way, practitioners seek to transcend thought and be directly aware of the universe.

In Soto, shikantaza meditation ("just-sitting") that is, a meditation with no objects, anchors, "seeds," or content, is the primary form of practice. Considerable textual, philosophical, and phenomenological justification of this practice can be found in Dogen's Shobogenzo.

The teacher
Because the Zen tradition emphasizes direct communication over scriptural study, the role of the Zen teacher is crucial. Generally speaking, a Zen teacher is a person ordained in any tradition of Zen to teach the dharma, guide students of meditation and perform rituals; in some cases, especially in modern Zen movements, a person not formally ordained may be able to fulfill some or all of these roles. Honorific titles associated with teachers typically include, in Chinese: Fashi (法師) or Chanshi (禪師); in Korean, Sunim or Seon Sa; in Japanese: Roshi or Sensei; and in Vietnamese, Thich adopted in place of a surname. Note that many of these titles are common among Buddhist priests of all schools.

The term Zen master is often used to refer to important teachers, especially ancient and medieval ones. However, there is no specific criterion by which one can be called a Zen master. The term is less common in reference to modern teachers, because they are generally reluctant to proclaim themselves "masters."

Koan practice
Image:Wu (negative).png|130px|left|thumb|Chinese character for w? (Japanese language|Japanese: mu).
The Zen schools (especially but not exclusively Rinzai) are associated
with koan|koans (Japanese; Chinese: gongan; Korean: gong'an). The
term originally referred to legal cases in
Tang Dynasty|Tang-dynasty China.

In some sense, a koan embodies a realized principle, or law of reality. Koans often appear paradoxical or linguistically meaningless. The 'answer' to the koan involves a transformation of perspectve or consciousness, which may be either radical or subtle, akin to the experience of metanoia in Christianity.

An example of a Zen koan is: "Two hands clap and there is
a sound. What is the sound of one hand?" It is sometimes said that
after diligent practice, the practitioner and the koan become one.
Though most Zen groups aim for a "sudden" enlightenment, this usually
comes only after a great deal of preparation.

For examples of 'successful' koan practice resulting in enlightenment experiences, see the anecdotes of Rinzai koan practice recounted in the book 'The Three Pillars of Zen' by Philip Kapleau. For examples of years of futile and fruitless koan practice see the book 'After Zen' by Janwillem van de Wetering.

Zen teachers advise that the problem posed by a koan is to be taken quite seriously, and to be approached quite literally as a matter of life and death. There is a sharp distinction between right and wrong ways of answering a koan &mdash; though there may be many "right answers", practitioners are expected
to demonstrate their understanding of the koan and of Zen with their whole being.

The Zen student's mastery of a given koan is presented to the teacher
in a private session (called dokusan in Japanese). The answer to a
koan is more dependent on "how" it is answered rather than the
correctness of the answer. Or, to put it somewhat differently, the
answer is a function not merely of a reply, but of a whole
modification of the student's experience; he or she must live the
answer to the koan rather than merely offering a correct statement.

There is no single correct answer for any given koan, though there may
be a set of correct and a set of incorrect answers, and, indeed,
students in a cheating mindset would often compile books of
accepted answers to koans to help prepare for the interview. These
collections are of great value to modern scholarship on the subject.

Some Zen teachers advise that traditional Zen koan practice is not for everyone, and that it may be too foreign for most westerners to relate to sufficiently to get 'results'. Consequently, some western Zen teachers have been known to use some of the paradoxical sayings from the Bible, for those western students who have an affinity for it, to meditate on as a form of koan practice.




Some of the traditional zen fables describe Zen masters using controversial methods of 'teaching', which modern zen enthusiasts may have a tendency to interpret too literally. For example, though Zen and Buddhism deeply respect life and teach non-violence, the founder of the Zen Rinzai school, Linji said: "If you meet the Buddha, kill the Buddha. If you meet a Patriarch, kill the Patriarch."
buddhism
A contemporary Zen Master, Seung Sahn, has echoed this teaching in saying that in this life we must all 'kill' three things: first we must kill parents; second we must kill Buddha; and last, we must kill the zen teacher (e.g. Seung Sahn). Of course, kill here is not literally killing. What is meant is to kill one's devotion to teachers or other external objects. Rather than see concepts outside of themselves, zen practitioners must integrate these objects with their concepts of self.

In practice, most zen centers in the west are very conservative, bourgeois, and mundane, emphasizing the practice schedules, and everyday household chores such as cooking, cleaning, and gardening as the path of enlightenment. Very rarely is anything like the radical iconoclasm of the traditional Zen fables encountered.



Since the 1930s in the United Kingdom, and at least since the
1950s in the United States, the West has had a growing interest
in Zen. The Expressionist and Dada movements in art tend to
have much in common thematically with the study of koans and
actual Zen.

The British-American philosopher Alan Watts had a personal
interest in the Zen school of Buddhism and wrote and lectured
extensively on it. He was interested in it as a vehicle for a mystical
transformation of consciousness, and also in the historical example of
a non-Western, non-Christianity|Christian way of life that had
fostered both the practical and fine arts.

The Dharma Bums, a novel written by Jack Kerouac and
published in 1959, gave its readers a look at how a fascination
with Buddhism and Zen was being absorbed into lifestyle
experimentation by a small group of mainly west-coast American
youths. Besides the narrator, the main character in this novel was
Gary Snyder, thinly veiled as "Japhy Ryder" by his friend
Kerouac. The story was based on actual events that occurred when
Snyder pursued formal Zen studies in Japanese monasteries between
1956 and 1968.

Many youths in the Beat generation and among the hippies of the
1960s and 1970s misunderstood the goals and methods of Zen.
While the scholar D.T. Suzuki may have brought attention to
concepts in Zen such as humility, labor, service, prayer, gratitude,
and meditation, the "hip" subculture often focused on states of
consciousness in themselves. Japanese Zen master
Zenkei Shibayama commented: "It may be true that the effect which
such scientifically prepared hallucinogen|drugs as LSD produce
may have some superficial resemblance to some aspects of Zen
experience.... When the effect of the drug is gone, the psychological
experience one may have had is also weakened and dispersed, and does
not endure as a living fact."

The book Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, by
Robert M. Pirsig, deals with the notion of "quality" from the
point of view of the main character. The book is largely based on the
author's experience with archery instruction. Pirsig explains in
the book that, despite its title, the book "should in no way be associated
with that great body of factual information relating to orthodox Zen Buddhist
practice."

Many modern students have made the mistake of thinking that since much
of Zen sounds like nonsense, especially in translation and out of
context, any clever nonsense is also Zen. This is not the case
&mdash; see koan &mdash; although the Church of the SubGenius
and especially Discordianism have been influenced by this idea.



  • Hakuin Ekaku

  • Huangbo Xiyun

  • karesansui

  • Ryokan

  • Tathagatagarbha doctrine




  • Open Directory Project: http://www.dmoz.org/Society/Religion_and_Spirituality/Buddhism/Lineages/Zen/Centers/ Zen Centers

  • http://www.acmuller.net/ddb Digital Dictionary of Buddhism

  • http://www.ciolek.com/WWWVL-Zen.html Zen Buddhism WWW Virtual Library


Category:Branches of Buddhism
Category:Japanese religion
Category:Zen|*

de:Zen
et:Zen-budism
es:Zen
eo:Zen-budhismo
fr:Zen
id:Zen
it:Buddhismo Zen
he:זן
nl:Zen
ja:禅
no:Zen
pl:Zen
pt:Zen
ru:Дзен
sv:Zen
zh:禅宗

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Zen".


Last Modified:   2005-04-13


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