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In the Zen tradition archery (or swordsmanship) is not just a sport or a form of self-defence but an art, a religious ritual and one of the many possible paths to Enlightenment. Few Westerners have tried as hard as Eugen Herrigel, a German professor who lived for many years in Japan, to learn Zen from a Master. In this classic text he gives an unsparingly honest account of how he was initiated, step by step, into the 'Great Doctrine' of archery. At first he was baffled by what he was taught - that art must become artless, that the archer must aim at himself - yet gradually he began to glimpse the depth of wisdom concealed in such paradoxes. While many Western writers on Zen serve up second-hand slogans, Herrigel's hard-won insights were his own discoveries. His fine book offers a beautifully lucid introduction to one of the most haunting and subtle spiritual traditions in the world.
Since its original publication in 1953, Zen in the Art of Archery
has become one of the classic works on Eastern philosophy, the
first book to delve deeply into the role of Zen in philosophy,
development, and practice of Eastern martial arts. Wise, deeply
personal, and frequently charming, it is the story of one man's
penetration of the theory and practice of Zen Buddhism.
Eugen Herrigel, a German professor who taught philosophy in
Tokyo, took up the study of archery as a step toward the
understanding of Zen. Zen in the Art of Archery is the account of
the six years he spent as the student of one of Japan's great Zen
masters, and the process by which he overcame his initial
inhibitions and began to look toward new ways of seeing and
understanding. As one of the first Westerners to delve deeply into
Zen Buddhism, Herrigel was a key figure in the popularization of
Eastern thought in the West, as well as being a captivating and
illuminating writer.
A precise description of the techniques used in Zen training.
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