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Just Sitting and Just Saying: The Hermeneutics of Dōgen’s Realization-Based View of Language
Author Heine, Steven (著)
Source Religions
Volumev.12 n.2
Date2021.02
PublisherMDIP
Publisher Url https://www.mdpi.com/
LocationBasel, Switzerland [巴塞爾, 瑞士]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteThis article belongs to the Special Issue Language and Concepts in Relation to Enlightenment on and off the Cushion in Chan/Zen Buddhism
KeywordDōgen; Sōtō Zen; Treasury of the True Dharma Eye; zazen; non-thinking; kōan; waka; hermeneutics; Zen pivot; realizational model
AbstractThis paper explicates the complex relationship between contemplative practice and enlightened activity conducted both on and off the meditative cushion as demonstrated in the approach of the Sōtō Zen Buddhist founder Dōgen (1200–1253). I examine Dōgen’s intricate views regarding how language, or what I refer to as just saying, can and should be used in creative yet often puzzling and perplexing ways to express the experience of self-realization by reflecting the state of non-thinking that is attained through unremitting seated meditation or just sitting (shikan taza). In light of the sometimes-forbidding obscurity of his writing, as well as his occasional admonitions against a preoccupation with literary pursuits, I show based on a close reading of primary sources that Dōgen’s basic hermeneutic standpoint seeks to overcome conventional sets of binary oppositions involving uses of language. These polarities typically separate the respective roles of teacher and learner by distinguishing sharply between delusion and insight, truth and untruth, right and wrong, or speech and silence, and thereby reinforce a hierarchical, instrumental, and finite view of discourse. Instead, Dōgen inventively develops expressions that emphasize the non-hierarchical, realization–based, and eminently flexible functions of self-extricating rhetoric such that, according to his paradoxical teaching, “entangled vines are disentangled by using nothing other than entwined creepers,” or as a deceptively straightforward example, “the eyes are horizontal, and the nose is vertical.”
Table of contents1. Introduction
2. On Overcoming Dualities
3. Situating Dōgen’s Standpoint in Theoretical and Historical Contexts
4. Prominent Interpreters Engaging the Complexity of Dōgen Discourse
5. Dōgen’s Hermeneutic Standpoint
6. Thinking, Not Thinking, and Non-Thinking
7. Dōgen’s Creative Interpretation of “Two Moons” Kōan
8. Conclusions
ISSN20771444 (E)
DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/rel12020081
Hits129
Created date2021.11.15
Modified date2023.06.19



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