Great doubt Practicing Zen in the world

Yuanlai, 1575-1630

Book - 2016

"Learn to face and overcome the pitfalls of Zen practice--self-indulgence, suppression, speculation, asceticism--with this first complete translation of a Zen classic. "In Zen practice, the essential point is to arouse doubt. What is this doubt? When you are born, for example, where do you come from? You cannot help but remain in doubt about this. When you die, where do you go? Again, you cannot help but remain in doubt. Since you cannot pierce this barrier of life and death, suddenly doubt will coalesce right before your eyes. Try to put it down, you cannot; try to push it away, you cannot. Eventually you will break through this doubt block and realize what a worthless notion life and death is -- ha! As the old worthies said: �...39;Great doubt, great awakening; small doubt, small awakening; no doubt, no awakening.'"--Boshan. There are many ways in which we may delude ourselves in practice. Doubt, Boshan argues, can be a powerful tool that rouses us from the complacency that comes with intellectual musing, ascetic striving, emotional suppression and quiet meditation. Great Doubt presents for the first time complete translations of Boshan's key works on working with doubt: "Exhortations for Those Who Don't Arouse Doubt" and "Exhortations for Those Who Do Arouse Doubt." This little book contains the most powerful medicine for the diseases that plague spiritual practice."--

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Subjects
Published
Somerville, MA : Wisdom [2016]
Language
English
Chinese
Main Author
Yuanlai, 1575-1630 (author, -)
Other Authors
Jeff Shore (translator)
Physical Description
xi, 108 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781614292302
  • Foreword
  • Introduction
  • Translation
  • Exhortations for Those Who Don't Rouse Doubt
  • Exhortations for Those Who Rouse Doubt
  • Commentary
  • A Commentary on Exhortations for Those Who Don't Rouse Doubt
  • A Commentary on Exhortations for Those Who Rouse Doubt
  • Acknowledgements
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Two short texts on the Zen concept of "great doubt" by Boshan (1575-1630), a Chinese Buddhist master also known as Wuyi Yuanli and Dayi, have been translated by Shore, professor of Zen in the modern world at Kyoto's Hanazono University (a private institution affiliated with the Rinzai school of Japanese Zen). Making use of the rhetorical device of parallelism, the short sections in "Exhortations for Those Who Don't Rouse Doubt" and "Exhortations for Those Who Rouse Doubt" address ways the agile human mind can evade or disrupt the experience of great doubt, which Shore calls a "foundation of Zen practice." In this clear, lively translation, Boshan addresses the reader directly with vivid metaphors and stern (sometimes humorous) admonishments. He pulls no punches as he describes myriad hazards and pitfalls, including intellectualization, attachment to calm meditation, speculation, emptiness, asceticism, and "putting on airs," that allow one to decisively, in Shore's words, "seal... off every possible escape" from certainty. Shore provides a helpful overview of great doubt and a brief commentary that puts Boshan's advice in perspective for modern practitioners. These concise texts, not previously available in their entirety in English, offer classic wisdom to those exploring Zen paths. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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