Zen experience defies all thinking and linguistic description and
simply affirms what is evidently real: "The ordinary way--that
precisely "is" the Way." After questioning the nature of reality,
the Zen student discovers that what remains is what "is." Although
it seems that Zen would not lend itself to philosophical
discussion, that all conceptualization would dissolve in light of
this empiricism, in this volume, the author demonstrates that the
"silence" of Zen is in fact pregnant with words.
A variety of topics are discussed: the experience of satori, ego
and egolessness, Zen sense and nonsense, koan practice, the
influence of Zen on Japanese painting and calligraphy and much
more.
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