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sect. The title translates roughly to "The
Mysterious Records of Immovable Wisdom". The book is a series of three discourses addressed to samurai but applicable to everyone who desires an introduction to Zen philosophy, the book makes little use of Buddhist terminology and instead focuses on
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Individually and broadly speaking, one could say that Fudōchishinmyōroku deals with technique, how the self is related to the Self during confrontation, and how an individual may become a unified whole.
113:– or any person, for that matter – can know the difference between what is right and what is mere selfishness, and can understand the basic question of knowing when and how to die.
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Taiaki, "Annals of the Sword Taia", (太阿記) written perhaps to
Munenori or possibly to Ono Tadaaki, head of the Ittō school of swordsmanship and an official instructor to the
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All three chapters/essays are addressed to the samurai class, and all three seek to unify the spirit of Zen with the spirit of the sword.
263:: The first patriarch of Ch'an (Zen) Buddhism in China; he is said to have arrived in that country from India in either A.D. 470 or 520
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Between these, Reiroshu, "The Clear Sound of Jewels", deals with the fundamental nature of humans: how a swordsman,
175:(1118–90): A Shingon priest of the late Heian period famous for his wanderings and highly admired as a poet
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Mugaku (1226–86): A Chinese priest of the Linchi (Rinzai) sect, invited to Japan by Hojo
Tokimune in 1278
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Fudōchishinmyōroku (The
Mysterious Record of Immovable Wisdom) is divided into the following sections:
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Taiaki deals more with the psychological aspects of the relationship between the self and the other.
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Daito
Kokushi (1282–1337): A follower of Daio Kokushi regarded to be the founder of Zen at Daitokuji
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Nai Chi Hsu T'ang (1185–1269): Also known as Hsu T'ang Chih Yu; a
Chinese monk of Linchi Buddhism
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describing situations followed by an interpretation. Its contents make an effort to apply
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181:(372–289 BC): A Chinese philosopher, the most famous Confucian after Confucius himself
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Hotto
Kokushi (1207–98): A monk of the Rinzai sect who traveled to Sung China in 1249
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187:(1155–1225): Also widely known by the name Jichin; a poet and monk of the Tendai sect
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Daio
Kokushi (1234–1308): A monk of the Rinzai sect who studied Buddhism in China
269:(637–713): Commonly known as Hui Neng; a pivotal figure in the development of Zen
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Kogaku Osho (1465–1548): An
Arinzai monk who taught Zen to the Emperor Go-Nara
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Fudōchishinmyōroku, "The
Mysterious Record of Immovable Wisdom", written to
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The Unfettered Mind – Writings of the Zen Master to the Sword Master
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239:(Li T'ai Po, 701–62): One of the great poets of T'ang period China
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Shao K'ang-chieh (1011–77): A scholar of the Northern Sung Dynasty
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The Fan-i Ming-i Chi, a Sung Dynasty Sanskrit-Chinese dictionary
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Shonin (1239–89): Founder of the Jodo sect of Pure Land Buddhism
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Throw the Gourd into the Water Push It Down and It Will Spin
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Sōhō refers to many poems and sayings, including those of:
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Throw a Ball into a Swift Current and It Will Never Stop
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Of the three essays in the treatise, two were letters:
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The Interval into Which Not Even a Hair Can Be Entered
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The Namu Amida Butsu, "Homage to the Buddha Amitabha"
199:(1263–1323): A Chinese Zen priest of the Yuan Dynasty
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The Mind of the Existent Mind and the Mind of No-Mind
302:Takuan Soho, translated by William Scott Wilson,
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169:Bukkoku Kokushi (1256–1316): A Buddhist priest
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156:Water Scorches Heaven, Fire Cleanses Clouds
144:Engender the Mind with No Place to Abide
153:Sever The Edge Between Before and After
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120:The Affliction of Abiding in Ignorance
135:The Right Mind and the Confused Mind
123:The Immovable Wisdom of All Buddhas
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84:and teacher to two generations of
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333:Edo-period books about Buddhism
44:written in the 17th century by
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57:Buddhism to martial arts.
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132:Where One Puts the Mind
223:Doctrine of the Mean
38:Buddhist philosophy
31:Fudōchi Shinmyōroku
18:The Unfettered Mind
323:Martial arts books
231:Golden Light Sutra
147:Seek the Lost Mind
78:Yagyū Shinkage-ryū
197:Zhongfeng Mingben
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328:Edo-period works
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261:Bodhidharma
46:Takuan Sōhō
317:Categories
290:References
80:school of
338:Zen texts
205:Pi Yen Lu
161:Citations
267:Ta Chien
61:Chapters
306:, p. 3.
179:Mencius
86:shōguns
173:Saigyō
111:daimyō
93:shōgun
50:Rinzai
25:不動智神妙録
243:Ippen
237:Li Po
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281:The
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185:Jien
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