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accumulation of factual knowledge (Verstand) . We can know all about Japan--its ... is its cultural forms, its biography is its history, its patterns are its ...
Thomas P. Kasulis
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06133972236.html
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compassion, and in its varied history it has never been found engaged in warlike activities. How is...important of Japanese society: its goal-oriented behavior. [4] According to Nakamura Hajime, "Japanese ...
David R. Loy
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06134772242.html
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philosophically. It reached its first full flowering in the works of Tiantai Zhiyi 之顗 (538-597), was ...way or another, either as inspiration or as foil. Its Japanese form, Tendai, shaped the mainstream of ...
Brook Ziporyn
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06204272519.html
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special branch of Indian religion and philosophy, almost unknown in its essence ...which, I was gald to see, was kindly received by its readers. My object to-night is to ...
DR. HANS KOESTER
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06262172701.html
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the Five Doctrines," [4]) which is, in its overall intent, devoted to demonstrating two things: (1)...
p. 405
svabhaava, which is the thing in its nature of being dependent on other conditions for its ...
Francis H. Cook
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06272572730.html
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thereforeappropriate to talk of affinity rather than of influence. This affinityfinds its expression in ...respond to that intent, which sets up its own standard and formsthe basis for moral judgement. ...
John Magnus Michelsen
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06283872772.html
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Thus any moral belief is in principle subject to re-examination of its relevance to actual situations ...speak, an integrity of its own quite apart from its possible sub-sumption under a pre-established ...
Cua, A. S.
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06323972922.html
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theory of freedom, it is understandable why, as the advent of natural science made its impact felt ...reason, its opposite being "the mind's passive reception of idea impressed upon it from without."6 ...
Nagatomo, Shigenori
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06335372967.html
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history is something objective, and its materials or facts, though these are quite an indefinite element...can never be duplicated, and this uniqueness in its metaphysical sense, or in its deepest sense, I ...
Daisetz Teitaro Suzuki
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06335472968.html
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It developed in China and Japan, later taking the form of the 'Zen sect', with its own particular ...and practice, Zen, in the course of its long history, has come to have its own particular forms ...
Masao Abe
|english|buddha|buddhism|
http://www.fjdh.cn/wumin/2009/04/06340172973.html