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Index
Cover
Copyright
Contents
About the Author
PART I: Background
CHAPTER 1: Connections between Buddhism and historical Chinese Culture
PART II: A Brief Introduction to the Contents of Buddhist Study
CHAPTER 2: The Background of Indian Culture
CHAPTER 3: The Contribution to Humankind and the World Made by Sdakyamuni's Leaving Home and Attaining Enligfitenment
CHAPTER 4: Mahayana Buddhism and Hinayana Buddhism
CHAPTERS 5: Mahayana Thought
PART III: An Outline of the Zen School
CHAPTER 6: Zen and Its Hoots
CHAPTER 7: Influences on the Development of Zen Before the Early T'ang Dynasty
CHAPTER 8: The Sixth Patriarch of Zen
CHAPTER 9: The Great Flourishing of Zen in the Early T'ang Dynasty
PART IV: Some Keys to Studying Zen
CHAPTER 10: On the Use of Colloquialisms
CHAPTER 11: Understanding Some Important Technical Terms
CHAPTER 12: Important Points in Reading Zen Classics
PART V: The Heart and Goal of Zen
CHAPTER 13: The True Goal of Zen Study
CHAPTER 14: The Process of Zen: Mental Work and Insight
CHAPTER 15: Nirvana and the Aim of Zen
CHAPTER 16: On the Zen Fashion of Emphasizing Concentration on a Word or Saying Diring and After the Sung and Yuan Dynasties
CHAPTER 17: The Doctrine of the Three Barriers and the Realm of Zen Investigative Meditation Since the Yuan and Ming Dynasties
PART VI: The Relationship Between Zen and Neo-Confucianism
CHAPTER 18: The Sources of Zen Buddhism's Influence on Neo-Confucianism
CHAPTER 19: Neo-Confucianism and the Sayings and Doings of the Zen Masters
PART VII: Zen and Chinese Literature
CHAPTER 20: Zen and the Evolution of the Realm of Ideas in Literature of the Sui and T'ang Dynasties and Thereafter
CHAPTER 21: The Importance of the Relationship of Zen and Literature
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