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Title: | Human Actions Illustrated in Zen’s Ox-Herding Pictures |
Authors: | Yong Zhi |
Keywords: | philosophy religions Buddhism Zen enlightenment poetics theory of action literary criticism |
Issue Date: | 17-Oct-2012 |
Publisher: | www.mdpi.com/journal/humanities |
Citation: | Tsai, Chang-hsiung. Emancipation through Action: A Philosophical Inquiry into the Linchilu: The Record Sayings of Chan Master Lin-Chi. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1998. |
Series/Report no.: | Humanities;166–177 |
Abstract: | The enlightenment from Zen’s perspective is the experiences of action that
reveal a horizon of new consciousness. This event of enlightenment is the process of action
rather than the outcome of action. Therefore, actions are not just the means to
enlightenment but the very core of it. The actions of enlightenment from Zen’s perspective
cannot be adequately described and explained in logical terms. Unlike most other Buddhist
schools, Zen does not engage in extensive philosophical discourses; its classical literatures
are mostly artistic in nature, consisting of collections of koans, poetry, and paintings, etc.
The ten ox-herding pictures of Zen Buddhism are recognized as the classical illustration of
Zen’s spiritual journey, as it vividly depicts the practice of Zen in a poetic and
metaphorical way. They present a visual parable of the path to enlightenment in a narrative
sequence of a boy’s searching, seeing, wrestling, riding, and transcending of the ox. |
Description: | The enlightenment from Zen’s perspective is the experiences of action that
reveal a horizon of new consciousness. This event of enlightenment is the process of action
rather than the outcome of action. Therefore, actions are not just the means to
enlightenment but the very core of it. The actions of enlightenment from Zen’s perspective
cannot be adequately described and explained in logical terms. Unlike most other Buddhist
schools, Zen does not engage in extensive philosophical discourses; its classical literatures
are mostly artistic in nature, consisting of collections of koans, poetry, and paintings, etc.
The ten ox-herding pictures of Zen Buddhism are recognized as the classical illustration of
Zen’s spiritual journey, as it vividly depicts the practice of Zen in a poetic and
metaphorical way. They present a visual parable of the path to enlightenment in a narrative
sequence of a boy’s searching, seeing, wrestling, riding, and transcending of the ox. |
URI: | http://repository.fuoye.edu.ng/handle/123456789/136 |
ISSN: | 2076-0787 |
Appears in Collections: | Department of English and Literary Studies Journal Publication
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