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Kenshō

Kenshō[note 1] (見性) is a Japanese term from the Zen tradition. Ken means "seeing", shō means "nature, essence".[4][2] It is usually translated as "seeing one's (true) nature", that is, the Buddha-nature or nature of mind.

Kenshō is an initial insight or awakening, not full Buddhahood.[5] It is to be followed by further training to deepen this insight, and learn to express it in daily life.[6][7][8]

The term kenshō is often used interchangeably with satori, which is derived from the verb satoru,[9] and means "comprehension; understanding".[web 1][note 2][note 3]

Terminology edit

The Chinese Buddhist term jianxing (simplified Chinese: 见性; traditional Chinese: 見性; pinyin: jiànxìng; Wade–Giles: chien-hsing) compounds:

  • jian 見 "see, observe, meet with, perceive";
  • xing 性 "(inborn) nature, character, personality, disposition, property, quality, gender".

History edit

Buddhist monks who produced Sanskrit-Chinese translations of sutras faced many linguistic difficulties:

  • They chose Chinese jian 見 to translate Sanskrit dṛś दृश् "see, look", and the central Buddhist idea of dṛṣṭi दृष्टि "view, seeing (also with the mind's eye), wisdom, false view".
  • Translators used xing 性 or zixing 自性 "self-nature" for Sanskrit svabhāva स्वभाव "intrinsic nature, essential nature".

Thus, jianxing was the translation for dṛṣṭi-svabhāva, "view one's essential nature".

The (c. 8th century) Chinese Platform Sutra (2, Prajñā "wisdom, understanding") first records jianxing.[13]

Pronunciations edit

The Standard Chinese pronunciation jianxing historically derives from (c. 7th century CE) Middle Chinese kienCsjäŋC.[citation needed] Sino-Xenic pronunciations of this term exist:

Meanings of kenshō edit

Translating kenshō into English is semantically complex.

Encyclopedic and dictionary definitions edit

Some encyclopedia and dictionary definitions are:

  • Soothill (1934): "To behold the Buddha-nature within oneself, a common saying of the Chan (Zen) or Intuitive School."[15]
  • Fischer-Schreiber (1991): Lit. "seeing nature"; Zen expression for the experience of awakening (enlightenment). Since the meaning is "seeing one's own true nature," kenshō is usually translated "self-realization." Like all words that try to reduce the conceptually ungraspable experience of enlightenment to a concept, this one is also not entirely accurate and is even misleading, since the experience contains no duality of "seer" and "seen" because there is no "nature of self' as an object that is seen by a subject separate from it.[10]
  • Baroni (2002): "Seeing one's nature," that is, realizing one's own original Buddha Nature. In the Rinzai school, it most often refers more specifically to one's initial enlightenment attained through kōan practice.[1]
  • Muller (year unknown): To see one's own originally enlightened mind. To behold the Buddha-nature within oneself, a common saying of the Chan school, as seen for example, in the phrase 'seeing one's nature, becoming Buddha' 見性成佛.[14]

Definitions by Buddhist scholars edit

Buddhist scholars have defined kenshō as:

  • D.T. Suzuki: "Looking into one's nature or the opening of satori";[16] "This acquiring of a new point of view in our dealings with life and the world is popularly called by Japanese Zen students 'satori' (wu in Chinese). It is really another name for Enlightenment (Annuttara-samyak-sambodhi)".[17][note 4]
  • Dumoulin (1988/2005): "Enlightenment is described here as an insight into the identity of one's own nature with all of reality in an eternal now, as a vision that removes all distinctions. This enlightenment is the center and the goal of the Zen way. Hakuin prefers the term "seeing into one's nature", which for him means ultimate reality. The Buddha nature and the cosmic Buddha body, wisdom (prajna), and emptiness (sunyata), the original countenance one had before one was born, and other expressions from the rich palette of Mahayana terms were all familiar to him from his continued study of the sutras and Zen literature."[19]
  • Peter Harvey (1990): "It is a blissful realization where a person's inner nature, the originally pure mind, is directly known as an illuminating emptiness, a thusness which is dynamic and immanent in the world."[20]
  • G. Victor Sogen Hori (2000): "The term consists of two characters: ken, which means "see" or "seeing", and sho, which means "nature", "character", "quality." To "see one's nature" is the usual translation for kensho".[2]

Definitions by Buddhist teachers and practitioners edit

Buddhist teachers and practitioners have defined kenshō as:

  • Jiyu-Kennett: "To see into one's own nature. The experience of enlightenment, satori."[21]
  • Myodo Ni Satomi, a student of Hakuun Yasutani (1993): "Seeing the-self, that is, the true self or Buddha nature."[22]

Further notions edit

According to Hori, the term kenshō refers to the realization of non-duality of subject and object in general,[23] but the term kenshō may also be applied in other contexts:[24] "How do you kenshō this?"[23]

Kenshō is not a single experience, but refers to a whole series of realizations from a beginner's shallow glimpse of the nature of mind, up to a vision of emptiness equivalent to the 'Path of Seeing' or to Buddhahood itself. In all of these, the same 'thing' is known, but in different degrees of clarity and profundity.[20][25]

"Kenshō" is commonly translated as enlightenment, a word that is also used to translate bodhi, prajna, satori and buddhahood. Western discourse tends to use these terms interchangeably, but there is a distinction between a first insight and the further development toward Buddhahood.

Insight versus experience edit

Kensho is insight, an understanding of our essential nature[26][20][19][23] as Buddha-nature, or the nature of mind, the perceiving subject itself, which was equated with Buddha-nature by the East Mountain school.[27]

Contemporary understanding also describes kensho as an experience, as in "enlightenment experience"; the term "enlightenment experience" is itself a tautology: "Kensho (enlightenment) is an enlightenment (kensho)-experience". The notion of "experience" fits in a popular set of dichotomies: pure (unmediated) versus mediated, noncognitive versus cognitive, experiential versus intellectual, intuitive versus intellectual, nonrational versus rational, nondiscursive versus discursive, nonpropositional versus propositional.[28]

The notion of pure experience (junsui kuiken) to interpret and understand kensho was introduced by Nishida Kitaro in his An Inquiry into the Good (1911), under influence of "his somewhat idiosyncratic reading of western philosophy",[29] especially William James, who wrote The Varieties of Religious Experience.[note 5] Wayne Proudfoot traces the roots of the notion of "religious experience" to the German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834), who argued that religion is based on a feeling of the infinite. The notion of "religious experience" was used by Schleiermacher to defend religion against the growing scientific and secular critique. It was adopted by many scholars of religion, of which William James was the most influential.[31][note 6] D.T. Suzuki, who introduced Nishida Kitaro to western philosophy, took over this notion of pure experience, describing it as the essence of all religions,[29] but best represented in what he considered the "superior Japanese culture and religion".[36][37]

The influence of western psychology and philosophy on Japanese Buddhism was due to the persecution of Buddhism at the beginning of the Meiji Restoration, and the subsequent efforts to construct a New Buddhism (shin bukkyo), adapted to the modern times.[38][39][35] It was this New Buddhism which has shaped the understanding of Zen in the west,[40] especially through the writings of D.T. Suzuki[41][42][35] and the Sanbo Kyodan, an exponent of the Meiji-era opening of Zen-training for lay-followers.[43]

The notion of "experience" has been criticised.[40][44][45][46] Robert Sharf points out that "experience" is a typical western term, which has found its way into Asian religiosity via western influences.[40][note 7] The notion of "experience" introduces a false notion of duality between "experiencer" and "experienced", where-as the essence of kensho is the realisation of the "non-duality" of observer and observed.[23][26] "Pure experience" does not exist; all experience is mediated by intellectual and cognitive activity.[28][48] The specific teachings and practices of a specific tradition may even determine what "experience" someone has, which means that this "experience" is not the proof of the teaching, but a result of the teaching.[49] A pure consciousness without concepts, reached by "cleaning the doors of perception"[note 8], would be an overwhelming chaos of sensory input without coherence.[51]

Ama Samy describes the notion of kensho-experience or awakening-experience as inherently dualistic and misguided:

How is this [awakening] offered to us? Does it come to us as a sudden blinding flash of light, as a great feeling of bliss, as a sudden ecstasy, in short, as some sort of experience? Is it an ‘experience’ that we come to in zazen? [...] People tend to hanker after experiences in meditation, the more psychedelic the better. ‘Having an experience’ is no big deal; a hard thump on the head, a dose of drugs, asphyxiation or deprivation of oxygen, autosuggestion or hypnosis can give you great ‘experiences’. Sometimes, people talk glibly of having had ‘an experience of Emptiness’. But the point we concern ourselves with is: who was there to have it? [52]

Daoxin remarks on the experience of "seeing emptiness":

The practice of bodhisattvas has emptiness as its realization: when beginning students see emptiness, this is seeing emptiness, it is not real emptiness. Those who cultivate the Way and attain real emptiness do not see emptiness or nonemptiness; they have no views.[53]

The notion of "experience" also over-emphasises kensho, as if it were the single goal of Zen-training, where-as the Zen-tradition clearly states that "the stink of Zen"[54] has to be removed and the "experience" of kensho has to be integrated into daily life.[6][4][8] In the Rinzai-school this post-satori training includes the study and mastering of great amounts of classical Chinese poetry, which is far from "universal" and culture-transcending. On the contrary, it demands an education in culture-specific language and behaviour, which is measured by specific and strict cultural norms.[55] Emphasising "experience" "reduces the sophisticated dialectic of Ch'an/Zen doctrine and praxis to a mere "means" or set of techniques intended to inculcate such experiences".[56]

Kenshō accounts edit

Classical accounts edit

Classical Zen texts, such as the Kao-seng-chuan (Biographies of Eminent Monks) and the transmission lists, called "Transmission of the Lamp"[note 9] the yü-lü genre[60] (the recorded sayings of the masters, such as the Linji yü lü); and the various koan-collections,[note 10] contain accounts of "enlightenment experiences". These accounts are not verbatim recordings of such "experiences", but well-edited texts, written down decades or even decennia after the supposed sayings and meetings.[61]

The Denkōroku, "The Record of the Transmission of the Light", written by Keizan Jōkin 瑩山紹瑾 (1268–1325), is an example of the "Transmission of the Lamp" genre. It contains literary accounts of the patriarchs of the Soto-lineage, from Shakyamuni Buddha to Koun Ejō, in which kensho plays a central role. They are not to be taken as literal accounts of awakening, but as stories underpinning the legitimacy of the Dogen-shu, which in its early history had seen a fierce internal conflict over the correct lineage during the Sandai sōron.[62][63][note 11]

Dōgen Zenji's awakening is recalled in the Denkoroku:

Once, during late-night zazen, Rujing told the monks, "Studying Zen is the dropping off of body and mind." Hearing this, the master was suddenly greatly awakened. He went at once to the Abbott's room and burned incense. Rujing asked him, "Why are you burning incense?" The master answered, "Body and mind have dropped off." Rujing said, "Body and mind have dropped off, the dropped-off body and mind." The master said, "This is a temporarily ability; you must not approve me without reason." Rujing replied, "I am not approving you without reason." The master asked, "Why are you not approving me without reason?" Rujing said, "You dropped off body and mind." The master bowed. Rujing said, "You have dropped off dropping off."[65]

Hakuin gives this description of his first kensho, when he was 21:[66]

At around midnight on the seventh and final night of my practice, the boom of a bell from a distant temple reached my ears: suddenly, my body and mind dropped completely away. I rose clear of even the finest dust. Overwhelmed with joy, I hollered out at the top of my lungs, "Old Yen-t'ou is alive and well! [...] After that, however, I became extremely proud and arrogant".[67]

Hakuin's kensho was not approved by Shoju Rojin, who subjected Hakuin to more koan-training. This resulted in a second kensho, where-after Hakuin left Shoju Rojin. It was only when he was 41 that he attained "his final great enlightenment":[66]

[W]hen Shoju had asked his reason for becoming a monk, his reply – that he had done it because he was afraid of falling into hell – had brought the scornful retort: "You're a self-centered rascal, aren't you!" Not until eighteen years later, upon attainment of his final great enlightenment at the age of forty-one, would Hakuin fully grasp the significance of Shoju's reproach and with it the true meaning of "post-satori" practice. Years later, when Hakuin asked his student Tōrei the same question, Tōrei's answer – "To work for the salvation of my fellow beings" – brought a laugh from Hakuin. "A much better reason than mine", he said.[66]

Contemporary accounts edit

Although the Zen tradition is reluctant to speak openly about the 'experience' of kensho,[68] personal accounts can be found in Zen texts.[note 12] Keido Fukushima, a 20th-century Rinzai abbott, gives the following description:

At Nanzenji there is a small hill. I used to walk near there, look at it, and often smile at the high school students who walked by there as well. One day as I walked by, I looked at the hill and it was truly amazing. I was totally lost as if there was no 'me'. I stood gazing at the hill. Some students walked by and one of them said something like 'look at that crazy monk'. Finally I came out of it. Life was never the same for me. I was free.[68][note 13]

Spontaneous kenshō edit

Kenshō may be attained without the aid of a teacher. For example, Richard Clarke (1933), who studied with Philip Kapleau, states that he had a spontaneous kensho when he was 13.[web 2] Dennis Genpo Merzel states he had what he described as an "awakening experience" in 1971:[web 3]

It was in February of that year, and I was 26 years old. My second serious relationship was ending, and I was feeling very confined and conflicted. I needed to get some space, so I went out to the Mojave desert for a three-day camping weekend with two friends. On the Friday, I hiked up a mountain alone. I knew nothing about meditation or spiritual practice. I was just sitting there, thinking about my life and the things going on. I felt I had gotten pretty screwed up for such a young age.

I could see my VW camper, my home for the weekend, parked a few miles away. But at the same time, I was aware that my home was back in Long Beach, California. And a natural koan came to me: Where is home? All of a sudden, I had a kind of breakthrough. I felt myself fall away, and I became one with the cosmos, one with the universe, one with all things. I knew in that moment that wherever I am, that is home; home is everywhere. I also knew who I was, beyond description, but let’s call it Big Mind.

That experience completely changed my life.[web 3]

More descriptions of "spontaneous kensho" can be found throughout the Zen-literature,[note 14]

Alternate accounts edit

Houn Jiyu-Kennett, a 20th-century Soto Zen Oshō,[77] i.e. "priest" or "teacher," and the first Western female Zen priest, had a prolonged religious experience[78] in the 1970s, including a series of visions and recalling past lives, when she was severely ill. She regarded these experiences as "a profound kensho (enlightenment) experience,"[79][80] constituting a third kensho,[78] and published an account of these visions, and an elaborate scheme of stages of awakening,[80] in How to Grow a Lotus Blossom.[78][81] Her interpretations, which parallel Christian mysticism,[82] were controversial,[80][83][78] and rejected by some as makyo ("illusion").[79][83] According to Jiyu-Kennett, such experiences are not uncommon,[note 15] but are rarely spoken of; she regarded publishing her own experiences as a way to acknowledge the existence and validity of such experiences, which, according to her, may contribute to further insight after initial awakening.[81][88] She acknowledged the risks and potential for controversy in publishing her account, but felt that the benefits of releasing such information outweighed the risks.[81]

Training towards kenshō edit

According to Harris, working towards kensho is usually a lengthy process stretched out over years or even decades.[89] Contrary to this, Victor Hori notes that with koan-study kensho may appear within six months. [90][note 16]

Sōtō tends towards a gradual approach, preferring to let the experiences happen on their own. Rinzai tends toward the use of Koans as a technique to unroot the habitual workings of the mind.[93]

During intensive zazen various hallucinations and psychological disturbances may arise. These are referred to as makyo. Distinguishing these delusions from actual kensho is the primary function of the teacher, as the student may be erroneously convinced they have realized kensho.

Rinzai edit

In the Rinzai school, kensho is seen as indispensable:

At some point in time we pass from imprisonment in ignorance and delusion to a true vision of Zen realization: "Our enlightenment is timeless, yet our realization of it occurs in time." According to this belief experiencing a moment of awakening in this life is of central importance.[94]

In the Rinzai-training, the student is expected to pour oneself totally into both koan-study and daily activities 'to become one' with it.[24] Kenshō is used to describe the first breakthrough in kōan study.[1][note 17]

Sōtō edit

Contemporary Japanese Sōtō downplays the importance of kenshō, due to the sectarian rivalry with Rinzai, which emphasizes kenshō. Nevertheless, kenshō also has its role in Sōtō. The "genjo-koan", or the "koan of everyday life" which "appears naturally in daily life",[95] is emphasized. Students are not encouraged to actively seek out kenshō experiences. In Sōtō practice kenshōs "are allowed to occur naturally, as a by-product of practice. Meditative training is seen as the unfolding of one great kenshō:[20]

According to the tradition of Soto Zen, although working on a koan is one way of attaining kensho, the best way is zazen. Indeed, Dogen, the founder of Soto Zen, expounded that zazen itself is enlightenment, and as long as the adept maintains a pure state of non-thinking in Zen, he is a Buddha.[96]

According to Brad Warner, in the Sōtō school there are two kinds of awakening.[97] One is the practice of shikantaza, which is the "actual enlightened activity of the Buddha".[97] The other is the accumulation of little bits of understanding, which come together, giving way to a deeper intuitive knowledge.[98]

Sanbō Kyōdan edit

Kenshō also plays a central in the Sanbō Kyōdan, a Japanese Zen organisation which played a decisive role in the transmission of Zen to the United States.[43] Yasutani, the founder of the Sanbo Kyodan, was disappointed about the lack of interest in kensho in the Soto school. Yasutani's emphasis on koan training and the importance of kensho was transmitted to his American students:[43]

He was especially vocal concerning the point of kenshō, seeing one's true nature. He spoke more openly about it then anyone of his times, going so far as to have a public acknowledgement of those who had experienced kensho in a post-sesshin ceremony of bowing in gratitude to the three treasures.[99]

It is also reflected in the inclusion of a relative great amount of kensho stories in "The Three Pillars of Zen", written by Philip Kapleau, a student of Yasutani.[4]

Training after kenshō edit

After kensho, further practice is needed to attain a natural, effortless, down-to-earth state of being, the "ultimate liberation", "knowing without any kind of defilement".[100] Kensho may bring insight, but not change the mental dispositions, a shortcoming experienced by both Hakuin[101] and modern teachers like Jack Kornfield[102] and Barry Magid.[103]

Further practice edit

Zen Buddhist training does not end with kenshō. Practice is to be continued to deepen the insight and to express it in daily life.[6][4][8][104] According to the contemporary Chan Master Sheng Yen:

Ch'an expressions refer to enlightenment as "seeing your self-nature". But even this is not enough. After seeing your self-nature, you need to deepen your experience even further and bring it into maturation. You should have enlightenment experience again and again and support them with continuous practice. Even though Ch'an says that at the time of enlightenment, your outlook is the same as of the Buddha, you are not yet a full Buddha.[7]

And the Soto Zen Master Jiyu-Kennett:

One can easily get the impression that realization, kenshō, an experience of enlightenment, or however you wish to phrase it, is the end of Zen training. It is not. It is, rather, a new beginning, an entrance into a more mature phase of Buddhist training. To take it as an ending, and to "dine out" on such an experience without doing the training that will deepen and extend it, is one of the greatest tragedies of which I know. There must be continuous development, otherwise you will be as a wooden statue sitting upon a plinth to be dusted, and the life of Buddha will not increase.[105]

To deepen the initial insight of kensho, shikantaza and kōan-study are necessary. This trajectory of initial insight followed by a gradual deepening and ripening is expressed by Linji Yixuan in his Three mysterious Gates, Dongshan Liangjie's (Japanese: Tōzan Ryōkan) Five Ranks, the Four Ways of Knowing of Hakuin,[106][107] and the Ten Ox-Herding Pictures[108][107] which detail the steps on the Path.

Seitai choyo edit

Post-awakening practice is called seitai choyo, the "long nurturing of the sacred fetus".[109][note 18] According to Spiegelberg,

[I]t means a return to the purely secular life, a complete submersion in work and in the changing events of the world. Thus, for decades, many Zenists, after their awakening, went among the people, living among beggars and leading an existence of hard physical labor. Thus it was proved whether or not the truth received was of permanent value, or whether it would vanish among mundane affairs.[111]

During the T'ang-era, the term became associated with the ideal of the recluse who leaves the world.[112] An ideal period of "twenty years" was taken for it, echoing a story from the Lotus Sutra about a prodigal son who wandered in poverty for twenty years before returning home.[113] References to these twenty years are found throughout the Chán-tradition, for example Linji, who is reported to have studied under Huang-po for twenty years,[113] and Daito, the founder of Daitoku-ji, who famously spent twenty years living under a bridge with beggars.[113]

Cultivating bodhicitta edit

According to Hakuin, the main aim of "post-satori practice"[114][115][116] (gogo no shugyo[109] or kojo, "going beyond"[117]) is to cultivate the "Mind of Enlightenment",[118][119] "benefiting others by giving them the gift of the Dharma teaching".[120][note 19] According to Yamada Koun, "if you cannot weep with a person who is crying, there is no kensho".[122] According to Kay,

The intuitive realisation of Buddhahood requires an attitude of selflessness and faith in one’s inherent enlightenment. Meditative awakening, or wisdom, forms only part of this realisation that must also manifest itself through acts of compassion and love.[123]

According to Barry, regarding Hakuin's practice after awakening,

Post-satori practice for Hakuin meant finally ceasing to be preoccupied with his own personal condition and attainment and to devote himself and his practice to helping and teaching others. Finally, at long last, he realized that true enlightenment is a matter of endless practice and compassionate functioning, not something that occurs once and for all in one great moment on the cushion.[web 4][note 20]

Self-purification and intellectual understanding edit

One also has to purify oneself by ongoing practice,[125][126] since

Kensho does not eradicate our unhealthy habits [...] There is a sudden awakening to the fact of "no-self" and then this insight has to be integrated into one's life which means that it has to be embodied and not just be a memory.[web 5]

And "experience" has to be supplemented by intellectual understanding and study of the Buddhist teachings;[127][128][129] otherwise one remains a zen temma, a "Zen devil".[130]

Sudden insight edit

Kenshō is described as appearing suddenly, upon an interaction with someone else, at hearing or reading some significant phrase, or at the perceiving of an unexpected sound or sight.[131] The idea of "sudden insight" has been hotly debated in the history of Zen. It became part of the Traditional Zen Narrative in the 8th century.[18]

Chinul, a 12th-century Korean Seon master, emphasized that insight into our true nature is sudden, but is to be followed by practice to ripen the insight and attain full Buddhahood. The contemporary Korean Seon master Seongcheol opposed this, emphasizing "sudden enlightenment, sudden cultivation". But Jiyu-Kennett, a contemporary western teacher, warns that attaining kenshō does not mean that a person is free from morality, the laws of karma, or the consequences of ones actions.[132] This warning is reflected in the Wild fox koan.

Mushi-dokugo and mushi-dokkaku edit

Kenshō may be attained without the aid of a teacher,[73] as in the case of mushi-dokugo[133] or (mushi-)dokkaku, a self-awakened pratyeka-buddha.[web 6]

Though the literal meaning is self-awakened or awakened on one's own, the emphasis in Zen, when using these terms, lies in the ultimate reliance on one's own insight, instead of the authority of a teacher:

It is awakening that is one's true master. With Shakyamuni, the awakening was his master. In other words, the awakened self is one's master. Apart from getting awakened to that master, there is no awakening. Here practitioner and master are of one body, not two. Instead of having another verify or confirm one's awakening, one does so for oneself. Of course in this case the self that is verified and the master who does verification are undivided. In their being completely identical is the autonomous, independent, or ultimate nature of the authenticity.[web 7]

Similarities with other traditions edit

While the Japanese term "kenshō" is generally used by practitioners of Zen Buddhism, the insight it refers to is not limited to Japanese Zen Buddhism, or even to Buddhism in general.[134][135]

Theravada edit

The Theravada tradition, which is best known in the west through the modern Vipassana movement, discerns four stages of enlightenment, in which Nirvana is reached in four succeeding sudden steps of insight.

Dzogchen edit

An analogy given by Dzogchen masters is that one's nature is like a mirror which reflects with complete openness, but is not affected by the reflections. Rigpa is the knowledge that ensues from recognizing this mirror-like clarity,[136] which cannot be found by searching nor identified.[137] One knows that there is a primordial freedom from grasping his or her mind.[138]

Advaita Vedanta edit

In Advaita Vedanta moksha is attained by jnana, insight-knowledge. In Shankara's philosophical synthesis insight samadhi is used as a subsidiary to this goal. Swami Vivekananda emphasized the experience of nirvikalpa samadhi as a means to validate religious, transcendental knowledge.[139]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ traditional Chinese and Japanese: 見性; ; "see [one's] nature[1][2][3]"
  2. ^ According to Fischer-Schreiber, kenshō and satori are nearly synonymous, with a customary distinction of using kenshō for an initial enlightenment experience that still requires deepening, and satori for the Buddhahood enlightenment of a Buddha or Zen patriarch.[10] Hakuin uses the word "satori" for initial insight, synonymous with kensho.[11]
  3. ^ The Japanese Zen-tradition has a rich vocabulaire of terms related to "enlightenment": awakenening (kaku), true awakening (shōgaku), perfect awakening (engaku), insight (sei), attaining the Way (jōdō), becoming Buddha (jōbutsu), opening the eye (kaigen), liberation (gedatsu), aythetication (shō), the great death (daishi), self-enlightenment without a teacher (mushi dokugo), great satori with full penetration (taigo tettei), and peerless perfect enlightenment (anokutara sanmyaku sanbodai).[12] The list is not exhausted with these terms.[12] Another term for deep awakening is daigo.
  4. ^ D.T. Suzuki has been criticized for his highly idealized and inaccurate picture of Japanese Zen.[18] Annuttara-samyak-sambodhi is the highest state of realization and awakening. Satori, or kensho, is a first glimpse into "nature", to be followed by further training.
  5. ^ Victor Sogen Hori notes that Nishida Kitaro, although using a western terminology, tried to express basic Mahayana Teachings: "He borrowed, for example, the term, junsui keiken, "pure experience", from William James, but then went on to say that, while for James the individual preceded pure experience, for him, pure experience preceded the individual. That reversal makes Nishida’s notion of pure experience resemble less the psychology of William James and more the Mahayana notion of sunyata.[30]
  6. ^ James also gives descriptions of conversion experiences. The Christian model of dramatic conversions, based on the role-model of Paul's conversion, may also have served as a model for western interpretations and expectations regarding kensho, similar to Protestant influences on Theravada Buddhism, as described by Carrithers: "It rests upon the notion of the primacy of religious experiences, preferably spectacular ones, as the origin and legitimization of religious action. But this presupposition has a natural home, not in Buddhism, but in Christian and especially Protestant Christian movements which prescribe a radical conversion."[32] See Sekida for an example of this influence of William James and Christian conversion stories, mentioning Luther[33] and St. Paul.[34] See also McMahan for the influence of Christian thought on Buddhism.[35]
  7. ^ Robert Sharf: "[T]he role of experience in the history of Buddhism has been greatly exaggerated in contemporary scholarship. Both historical and ethnographic evidence suggests that the privileging of experience may well be traced to certain twentieth-century reform movements, notably those that urge a return to zazen or vipassana meditation, and these reforms were profoundly influenced by religious developments in the west [...] While some adepts may indeed experience "altered states" in the course of their training, critical analysis shows that such states do not constitute the reference pont for the elaborate Buddhist discourse pertaining to the "path".[47]
  8. ^ William Blake: "If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is, infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thru' narrow chinks of his cavern."[50]
  9. ^ A literary device to establish a lineage. Both T'ien Tai and Chán took over this literary device, to lend authority to those developing traditions, and guarantee its authenticity.[57][58] Notable examples are the Anthology of the Patriarchal Hall (952) and the Jingde Records of the Transmission of the Lamp (published 1004). McRae considers Dumoulin's A History of Zen to be a modern example of this genre, disguished as scientific history;[59]
  10. ^ The two best known koan-collections (in the west) are the "Gateless Gate" and the "Blue Cliff Record". The Gateless Gate (Chinese: 無門關 Wumenguan; Japanese: Mumonkan) is a collection of 48 kōans and commentaries published in 1228 by Chinese monk Wumen (無門) (1183–1260). The title may be more accurately rendered as Gateless Barrier or Gateless Checkpoint. The Blue Cliff Record (Chinese: 碧巖錄 Bìyán Lù; Japanese: Hekiganroku) is a collection of 100 kōans compiled in 1125 by Yuanwu Keqin (圜悟克勤 1063–1135).
  11. ^ Cook: "It is probably safe to say that few if any reputable modern scholars, and probably not many even within the Soto priesthood itself, believe that many of the central events and characters in the Denkoroku are based on historical fact [...] The origins and early developments of Chinese Zen are just now becoming clearer, and the gradually emerging picture is very different from the traditional Zen history found in such works as Keizan's record".[64]
  12. ^ Kapleau gives ten different accounts of contemporary practitioners, including his own kensho under the initials "KP".[4] Sekida gives an elaborate account of his own kenshos,[69] and gives various accounts of others.[70] Satomi gives an account of becoming one with the mu-koan, the classical aimed kensho of the Sanbo Kyodan.[71] Maura O'Halloran also gives an account of herself becoming mu.[72]
  13. ^ Harris: "After this experience Gensho still had two more years of koan study".[68]
  14. ^ Sekida gives the example of a woman, who's "strong internal pressure (gidan) never stopped knocking from within at the door of her mind, demanding to be resolved [...] One day, when she was about to take a bath, a certain change occurred in her. Although this was later confirmed as kensho by a teacher, she had no idea what it was.[73] Philip Kapleau describes a man who had kensho, which was explained as a "conversion experience" by psychiatrists.[74] Flora Courtois gives an extensive account of her spontaneous kensho,[75] on which Yasutani comments.[76]
  15. ^ According to Kay, "Kennett’s visionary experiences – and also her ambivalence about the status of their content – are not unprecedented within the Zen tradition."[84] Soto literature includes numerous accounts,[84] as noted especially by Faure (2001) Visions of powere.[84][63] described by the founders of Soto Zen, Dogen and Keizan.[63] See also Williams (2005)[85] and Bodiford (1993).[86] Yet, Dogen and Keizan "also both warned against seeing visions or unusual spiritual experiences as the goal of practice."[87]
  16. ^ Houn Jiyu-Kennett, a western sei-kyoshi[91] or soto-priest, also is reported to have attained kensho after six months of training in a Soto-monastery.[92]
  17. ^ See [71] for a description of 'becoming one with'.
  18. ^ According to Kraft, one of the earliest expressions of this term is found in a 5th-century Chinese translation of the Prajnaparamitra Sutra on Benevolent Kings Protecting Their Countries.[110] In Chán-texts the term is first used by Mazu (709–788), and in Japan it was introduced by Dogen who learned it from his teacher T'ien t'ung Ju-ching (1163–1228).[110] See also Muso Soseki, Dialogues in a Dream translation, translated by Thomas Yuho Kirchner, for its meaning and application.
  19. ^ Shinkichi Takahashi: "After satori, teach."[121]
  20. ^ See also Katsuhiro Yoshizawa, The Religious Art of Zen Master Hakuin, pp.41–45, "Constant practice of the Four Universal Vows".[124]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Baroni 2002, p. 188.
  2. ^ a b c Hori 2000, p. 287.
  3. ^ Fowler 2005, p. 115.
  4. ^ a b c d e Kapleau 1989.
  5. ^ Sekida 1985, p. 226.
  6. ^ a b c Sekida 1996.
  7. ^ a b Yen 1996, p. 54.
  8. ^ a b c Kraft 1997, p. 91.
  9. ^ Suzuki 1994a, p. 88.
  10. ^ a b Fischer-Schreiber, Ehrhard & Diener 1991, p. 115.
  11. ^ Hakuin 2010.
  12. ^ a b Kraft 1997, p. 90.
  13. ^ Hanyu Da Cidian 汉语大词典, vol. 10, p. 314.
  14. ^ a b Muller n.d.
  15. ^ Soothill & Hodous 1934, p. 244.
  16. ^ Suzuki 1994b, p. 259.
  17. ^ Suzuki 1994b, p. 229.
  18. ^ a b McRae 2003.
  19. ^ a b Dumoulin 2005b, p. 380.
  20. ^ a b c d Harvey 1990, p. 275-276.
  21. ^ Jiyu-Kennett 2005b, p. 263.
  22. ^ Satomi & King 1993, p. 203.
  23. ^ a b c d Hori 1994, p. 30.
  24. ^ a b Hori 2000, p. 290.
  25. ^ Hori 1994, p. 31.
  26. ^ a b Samy 1998, p. 82.
  27. ^ Sharf 2014, p. 939.
  28. ^ a b Mohr 2000, p. 282.
  29. ^ a b Sharf 1995b, p. 248.
  30. ^ Hori 1999, p. 47.
  31. ^ Sharf 2000, p. 271.
  32. ^ Carrithers 1983, p. 18.
  33. ^ Sekida 1985, p. 196-197.
  34. ^ Sekida 1985, p. 251.
  35. ^ a b c McMahan 2008.
  36. ^ Sharf 1993.
  37. ^ Sharf 1995a.
  38. ^ Sharf 1995b, p. 246-248.
  39. ^ Victoria 2006.
  40. ^ a b c Sharf 1995b.
  41. ^ Sharf 1995b, p. 247-248.
  42. ^ Borup n.d.
  43. ^ a b c Sharf 1995c.
  44. ^ Mohr 2000, p. 282-286.
  45. ^ Low 2006, p. 12.
  46. ^ Samy 2014, p. 180-181.
  47. ^ Sharf 1995c, p. 1.
  48. ^ Samy 1998, p. 80-82.
  49. ^ Samy 1998, p. 80.
  50. ^ Quote DB
  51. ^ Mohr 2000, p. 284.
  52. ^ Samy 2015, p. 157-158.
  53. ^ Cleary 1986, p. 19.
  54. ^ Hori 2006, p. 143.
  55. ^ Hori 1999, p. 50-53.
  56. ^ Sharf 1995b, p. 266.
  57. ^ Chappell 1993, p. 181.
  58. ^ McRae 2003, p. 2–9.
  59. ^ McRae 2005.
  60. ^ Chappell 1993, p. 192.
  61. ^ Welter n.d.
  62. ^ Cook 2003, p. xi–xii.
  63. ^ a b c Faure 2001.
  64. ^ Cook 2003, p. 15.
  65. ^ Cook 2003, p. 255.
  66. ^ a b c Waddell 2010, p. xxii.
  67. ^ Hakuin 2010, p. 23.
  68. ^ a b c Harris 2004, p. 17.
  69. ^ Sekida 1985, p. 207-222.
  70. ^ Sekida 1985, pp. 194–206.
  71. ^ a b Satomi & King 1993, p. 106.
  72. ^ O'Halloran 2007, p. 78.
  73. ^ a b Sekida 1985, p. 138-139.
  74. ^ Kapleau 1980, p. 52.
  75. ^ Maezumi & Glassman 2007, p. 111-136.
  76. ^ Maezumi & Glassman 2007, p. 137-140.
  77. ^ Seikai Luebke, Why Are Roshi Jiyu Kennett’s Disciples So Reclusive? 2018-06-21 at the Wayback Machine
  78. ^ a b c d Kay 2007, p. 145.
  79. ^ a b Osto 2016, p. 65.
  80. ^ a b c Ford 2006, p. 143-144.
  81. ^ a b c Jiyu-Kennett 1993.
  82. ^ Kay 2007, p. 155.
  83. ^ a b Morgan 2004, p. 2014.
  84. ^ a b c Kay 2007, p. 149.
  85. ^ Williams 2005.
  86. ^ Bodiford 1993.
  87. ^ Watson n.d., p. 14.
  88. ^ Greenwell 2002, p. 52-53.
  89. ^ Harris 2004.
  90. ^ Hori 1994, p. 29.
  91. ^ Bluck 2006, p. 66.
  92. ^ Bluck 2006, p. 65.
  93. ^ Kasulis 2003.
  94. ^ Lachs 2012, p. 4.
  95. ^ Dogen n.d.
  96. ^ Kiew Kit 2002, p. 145.
  97. ^ a b Warner 2009, p. 28.
  98. ^ Warner 2009, p. 28-29.
  99. ^ Jaffe 1979.
  100. ^ Low 2006, p. 37-39.
  101. ^ Torei (2009), p. 175.
  102. ^ Jack Kornfield, A Path With a Heart
  103. ^ Magid, B (2013). Nothing is Hidden: The Psychology of Zen Koans. Wisdom
  104. ^ Maezumi & Glassman 2007, p. 54, 140.
  105. ^ Jiyu-Kennett 2005a, p. 225.
  106. ^ Low 2006.
  107. ^ a b Biographical essay by GHarada Sogaku
  108. ^ Mumon 2004.
  109. ^ a b Hori 2006, p. 145.
  110. ^ a b Kraft 1997, p. 41.
  111. ^ Spiegelberg 1957.
  112. ^ Kraft 1997, p. 41-42.
  113. ^ a b c Kraft 1997, p. 42.
  114. ^ Waddell 2010, p. xxv–xxvii.
  115. ^ Hakuin 2010, p. 33-34.
  116. ^ Hisamatsu 2002, p. 22.
  117. ^ Hori 2006, p. 144.
  118. ^ Hakuin 2010, p. 33.
  119. ^ Yoshizawa 2009, p. 41.
  120. ^ Hakuin 2010, p. 34.
  121. ^ Takahashi 2000, p. 165.
  122. ^ MacInnes 2007, p. 75.
  123. ^ Kay 2007, p. 129.
  124. ^ Yoshizawa 2009, p. 41-45.
  125. ^ Low 2006, p. 33-34.
  126. ^ Maezumi & Glassman 2007, p. 54.
  127. ^ Hori 2000, p. 295-297.
  128. ^ Low 2006, p. 35-37.
  129. ^ Kim 2007, p. 115.
  130. ^ Hori 2000, p. 297.
  131. ^ Dumoulin 2005b.
  132. ^ Jiyu-Kennett 1979, p. 51.
  133. ^ Faure 2001, p. 48.
  134. ^ Lathouwers 2000.
  135. ^ Grimstone 1985, p. 13.
  136. ^ Namdak 2006, p. 97.
  137. ^ Third Dzogchen Rinpoche 2008, p. 152.
  138. ^ Namdak 2006, p. 144-145.
  139. ^ Comans 1993.

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Web sources edit

  1. ^ Denshi Jisho – Online Japanese dictionary
  2. ^ Japanischer Buddhismus in Amerika. Chronik Ab 1970
  3. ^ a b Big Mind: An Interview with Genpo Roshi 2014-07-01 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Barbara O'Brien, What Is Enlightenment? And How Do You Know When You've "Got" It?
  5. ^ Gerry Reply by Gerry Shishin Wick
  6. ^ Kyosho. The Awakening Gong. No.350, September/October 2011. Pages 14–15 2013-06-28 at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ Shin'ichi Hisamatsu, On Mutually Going Into The Matter Of Self

Further reading edit

Soto

  • Dogen (2000), Enlightenment Unfolds. The Essential Teachings of Zen Master Dogen, Shambhala Publications Inc

Critical

  • An attempt at demythologizing Zen-practice, emphasizing the integration into daily life

External links edit

  • Rev.Master Jiyu-Kennett (2000), The Roar of the Tigress Volume I, An Introduction to Zen: Religious Practice for Everyday Life biography of Jiyu-Kennett, with a description of het kensho-experiences, and teishos by Jiyu-Kennett

kenshō, note, 見性, japanese, term, from, tradition, means, seeing, shō, means, nature, essence, usually, translated, seeing, true, nature, that, buddha, nature, nature, mind, initial, insight, awakening, full, buddhahood, followed, further, training, deepen, th. Kenshō note 1 見性 is a Japanese term from the Zen tradition Ken means seeing shō means nature essence 4 2 It is usually translated as seeing one s true nature that is the Buddha nature or nature of mind Kenshō is an initial insight or awakening not full Buddhahood 5 It is to be followed by further training to deepen this insight and learn to express it in daily life 6 7 8 The term kenshō is often used interchangeably with satori which is derived from the verb satoru 9 and means comprehension understanding web 1 note 2 note 3 Contents 1 Terminology 1 1 History 1 2 Pronunciations 2 Meanings of kenshō 2 1 Encyclopedic and dictionary definitions 2 2 Definitions by Buddhist scholars 2 3 Definitions by Buddhist teachers and practitioners 2 4 Further notions 3 Insight versus experience 4 Kenshō accounts 4 1 Classical accounts 4 2 Contemporary accounts 4 3 Spontaneous kenshō 4 4 Alternate accounts 5 Training towards kenshō 5 1 Rinzai 5 2 Sōtō 5 3 Sanbō Kyōdan 6 Training after kenshō 6 1 Further practice 6 2 Seitai choyo 6 3 Cultivating bodhicitta 6 4 Self purification and intellectual understanding 7 Sudden insight 8 Mushi dokugo and mushi dokkaku 9 Similarities with other traditions 9 1 Theravada 9 2 Dzogchen 9 3 Advaita Vedanta 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 13 Sources 13 1 Printed sources 13 2 Web sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksTerminology editThe Chinese Buddhist term jianxing simplified Chinese 见性 traditional Chinese 見性 pinyin jianxing Wade Giles chien hsing compounds jian 見 see observe meet with perceive xing 性 inborn nature character personality disposition property quality gender History edit Buddhist monks who produced Sanskrit Chinese translations of sutras faced many linguistic difficulties They chose Chinese jian 見 to translate Sanskrit dṛs द श see look and the central Buddhist idea of dṛṣṭi द ष ट view seeing also with the mind s eye wisdom false view Translators used xing 性 or zixing 自性 self nature for Sanskrit svabhava स वभ व intrinsic nature essential nature Thus jianxing was the translation for dṛṣṭi svabhava view one s essential nature The c 8th century Chinese Platform Sutra 2 Prajna wisdom understanding first records jianxing 13 Pronunciations edit The Standard Chinese pronunciation jianxing historically derives from c 7th century CE Middle Chinese kienCsjaŋC citation needed Sino Xenic pronunciations of this term exist kenshō 見性 or ケンショウ on yomi in Sino Japanese vocabulary Korean 견성 RR gyeonseong in Sino Korean vocabulary kiến tinh in Sino Vietnamese vocabulary 14 Meanings of kenshō editSee also Bodhi Prajna Buddha nature Sunyata Suchness Dharmakaya Alayavijnana Svasaṃvedana Mahamudra and Nondualism Translating kenshō into English is semantically complex Encyclopedic and dictionary definitions edit Some encyclopedia and dictionary definitions are Soothill 1934 To behold the Buddha nature within oneself a common saying of the Chan Zen or Intuitive School 15 Fischer Schreiber 1991 Lit seeing nature Zen expression for the experience of awakening enlightenment Since the meaning is seeing one s own true nature kenshō is usually translated self realization Like all words that try to reduce the conceptually ungraspable experience of enlightenment to a concept this one is also not entirely accurate and is even misleading since the experience contains no duality of seer and seen because there is no nature of self as an object that is seen by a subject separate from it 10 Baroni 2002 Seeing one s nature that is realizing one s own original Buddha Nature In the Rinzai school it most often refers more specifically to one s initial enlightenment attained through kōan practice 1 Muller year unknown To see one s own originally enlightened mind To behold the Buddha nature within oneself a common saying of the Chan school as seen for example in the phrase seeing one s nature becoming Buddha 見性成佛 14 Definitions by Buddhist scholars edit Buddhist scholars have defined kenshō as D T Suzuki Looking into one s nature or the opening of satori 16 This acquiring of a new point of view in our dealings with life and the world is popularly called by Japanese Zen students satori wu in Chinese It is really another name for Enlightenment Annuttara samyak sambodhi 17 note 4 Dumoulin 1988 2005 Enlightenment is described here as an insight into the identity of one s own nature with all of reality in an eternal now as a vision that removes all distinctions This enlightenment is the center and the goal of the Zen way Hakuin prefers the term seeing into one s nature which for him means ultimate reality The Buddha nature and the cosmic Buddha body wisdom prajna and emptiness sunyata the original countenance one had before one was born and other expressions from the rich palette of Mahayana terms were all familiar to him from his continued study of the sutras and Zen literature 19 Peter Harvey 1990 It is a blissful realization where a person s inner nature the originally pure mind is directly known as an illuminating emptiness a thusness which is dynamic and immanent in the world 20 G Victor Sogen Hori 2000 The term consists of two characters ken which means see or seeing and sho which means nature character quality To see one s nature is the usual translation for kensho 2 Definitions by Buddhist teachers and practitioners edit Buddhist teachers and practitioners have defined kenshō as Jiyu Kennett To see into one s own nature The experience of enlightenment satori 21 Myodo Ni Satomi a student of Hakuun Yasutani 1993 Seeing the self that is the true self or Buddha nature 22 Further notions edit According to Hori the term kenshō refers to the realization of non duality of subject and object in general 23 but the term kenshō may also be applied in other contexts 24 How do you kenshō this 23 Kenshō is not a single experience but refers to a whole series of realizations from a beginner s shallow glimpse of the nature of mind up to a vision of emptiness equivalent to the Path of Seeing or to Buddhahood itself In all of these the same thing is known but in different degrees of clarity and profundity 20 25 Kenshō is commonly translated as enlightenment a word that is also used to translate bodhi prajna satori and buddhahood Western discourse tends to use these terms interchangeably but there is a distinction between a first insight and the further development toward Buddhahood Insight versus experience editSee also Buddhist modernism Transcendentalism and Perennial philosophy Kensho is insight an understanding of our essential nature 26 20 19 23 as Buddha nature or the nature of mind the perceiving subject itself which was equated with Buddha nature by the East Mountain school 27 Contemporary understanding also describes kensho as an experience as in enlightenment experience the term enlightenment experience is itself a tautology Kensho enlightenment is an enlightenment kensho experience The notion of experience fits in a popular set of dichotomies pure unmediated versus mediated noncognitive versus cognitive experiential versus intellectual intuitive versus intellectual nonrational versus rational nondiscursive versus discursive nonpropositional versus propositional 28 The notion of pure experience junsui kuiken to interpret and understand kensho was introduced by Nishida Kitaro in his An Inquiry into the Good 1911 under influence of his somewhat idiosyncratic reading of western philosophy 29 especially William James who wrote The Varieties of Religious Experience note 5 Wayne Proudfoot traces the roots of the notion of religious experience to the German theologian Friedrich Schleiermacher 1768 1834 who argued that religion is based on a feeling of the infinite The notion of religious experience was used by Schleiermacher to defend religion against the growing scientific and secular critique It was adopted by many scholars of religion of which William James was the most influential 31 note 6 D T Suzuki who introduced Nishida Kitaro to western philosophy took over this notion of pure experience describing it as the essence of all religions 29 but best represented in what he considered the superior Japanese culture and religion 36 37 The influence of western psychology and philosophy on Japanese Buddhism was due to the persecution of Buddhism at the beginning of the Meiji Restoration and the subsequent efforts to construct a New Buddhism shin bukkyo adapted to the modern times 38 39 35 It was this New Buddhism which has shaped the understanding of Zen in the west 40 especially through the writings of D T Suzuki 41 42 35 and the Sanbo Kyodan an exponent of the Meiji era opening of Zen training for lay followers 43 The notion of experience has been criticised 40 44 45 46 Robert Sharf points out that experience is a typical western term which has found its way into Asian religiosity via western influences 40 note 7 The notion of experience introduces a false notion of duality between experiencer and experienced where as the essence of kensho is the realisation of the non duality of observer and observed 23 26 Pure experience does not exist all experience is mediated by intellectual and cognitive activity 28 48 The specific teachings and practices of a specific tradition may even determine what experience someone has which means that this experience is not the proof of the teaching but a result of the teaching 49 A pure consciousness without concepts reached by cleaning the doors of perception note 8 would be an overwhelming chaos of sensory input without coherence 51 Ama Samy describes the notion of kensho experience or awakening experience as inherently dualistic and misguided How is this awakening offered to us Does it come to us as a sudden blinding flash of light as a great feeling of bliss as a sudden ecstasy in short as some sort of experience Is it an experience that we come to in zazen People tend to hanker after experiences in meditation the more psychedelic the better Having an experience is no big deal a hard thump on the head a dose of drugs asphyxiation or deprivation of oxygen autosuggestion or hypnosis can give you great experiences Sometimes people talk glibly of having had an experience of Emptiness But the point we concern ourselves with is who was there to have it 52 Daoxin remarks on the experience of seeing emptiness The practice of bodhisattvas has emptiness as its realization when beginning students see emptiness this is seeing emptiness it is not real emptiness Those who cultivate the Way and attain real emptiness do not see emptiness or nonemptiness they have no views 53 The notion of experience also over emphasises kensho as if it were the single goal of Zen training where as the Zen tradition clearly states that the stink of Zen 54 has to be removed and the experience of kensho has to be integrated into daily life 6 4 8 In the Rinzai school this post satori training includes the study and mastering of great amounts of classical Chinese poetry which is far from universal and culture transcending On the contrary it demands an education in culture specific language and behaviour which is measured by specific and strict cultural norms 55 Emphasising experience reduces the sophisticated dialectic of Ch an Zen doctrine and praxis to a mere means or set of techniques intended to inculcate such experiences 56 Kenshō accounts editClassical accounts edit Classical Zen texts such as the Kao seng chuan Biographies of Eminent Monks and the transmission lists called Transmission of the Lamp note 9 the yu lu genre 60 the recorded sayings of the masters such as the Linji yu lu and the various koan collections note 10 contain accounts of enlightenment experiences These accounts are not verbatim recordings of such experiences but well edited texts written down decades or even decennia after the supposed sayings and meetings 61 The Denkōroku The Record of the Transmission of the Light written by Keizan Jōkin 瑩山紹瑾 1268 1325 is an example of the Transmission of the Lamp genre It contains literary accounts of the patriarchs of the Soto lineage from Shakyamuni Buddha to Koun Ejō in which kensho plays a central role They are not to be taken as literal accounts of awakening but as stories underpinning the legitimacy of the Dogen shu which in its early history had seen a fierce internal conflict over the correct lineage during the Sandai sōron 62 63 note 11 Dōgen Zenji s awakening is recalled in the Denkoroku Once during late night zazen Rujing told the monks Studying Zen is the dropping off of body and mind Hearing this the master was suddenly greatly awakened He went at once to the Abbott s room and burned incense Rujing asked him Why are you burning incense The master answered Body and mind have dropped off Rujing said Body and mind have dropped off the dropped off body and mind The master said This is a temporarily ability you must not approve me without reason Rujing replied I am not approving you without reason The master asked Why are you not approving me without reason Rujing said You dropped off body and mind The master bowed Rujing said You have dropped off dropping off 65 Hakuin gives this description of his first kensho when he was 21 66 At around midnight on the seventh and final night of my practice the boom of a bell from a distant temple reached my ears suddenly my body and mind dropped completely away I rose clear of even the finest dust Overwhelmed with joy I hollered out at the top of my lungs Old Yen t ou is alive and well After that however I became extremely proud and arrogant 67 Hakuin s kensho was not approved by Shoju Rojin who subjected Hakuin to more koan training This resulted in a second kensho where after Hakuin left Shoju Rojin It was only when he was 41 that he attained his final great enlightenment 66 W hen Shoju had asked his reason for becoming a monk his reply that he had done it because he was afraid of falling into hell had brought the scornful retort You re a self centered rascal aren t you Not until eighteen years later upon attainment of his final great enlightenment at the age of forty one would Hakuin fully grasp the significance of Shoju s reproach and with it the true meaning of post satori practice Years later when Hakuin asked his student Tōrei the same question Tōrei s answer To work for the salvation of my fellow beings brought a laugh from Hakuin A much better reason than mine he said 66 Contemporary accounts edit Although the Zen tradition is reluctant to speak openly about the experience of kensho 68 personal accounts can be found in Zen texts note 12 Keido Fukushima a 20th century Rinzai abbott gives the following description At Nanzenji there is a small hill I used to walk near there look at it and often smile at the high school students who walked by there as well One day as I walked by I looked at the hill and it was truly amazing I was totally lost as if there was no me I stood gazing at the hill Some students walked by and one of them said something like look at that crazy monk Finally I came out of it Life was never the same for me I was free 68 note 13 Spontaneous kenshō edit Kenshō may be attained without the aid of a teacher For example Richard Clarke 1933 who studied with Philip Kapleau states that he had a spontaneous kensho when he was 13 web 2 Dennis Genpo Merzel states he had what he described as an awakening experience in 1971 web 3 It was in February of that year and I was 26 years old My second serious relationship was ending and I was feeling very confined and conflicted I needed to get some space so I went out to the Mojave desert for a three day camping weekend with two friends On the Friday I hiked up a mountain alone I knew nothing about meditation or spiritual practice I was just sitting there thinking about my life and the things going on I felt I had gotten pretty screwed up for such a young age I could see my VW camper my home for the weekend parked a few miles away But at the same time I was aware that my home was back in Long Beach California And a natural koan came to me Where is home All of a sudden I had a kind of breakthrough I felt myself fall away and I became one with the cosmos one with the universe one with all things I knew in that moment that wherever I am that is home home is everywhere I also knew who I was beyond description but let s call it Big Mind That experience completely changed my life web 3 More descriptions of spontaneous kensho can be found throughout the Zen literature note 14 Alternate accounts edit The neutrality of this section is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Houn Jiyu Kennett a 20th century Soto Zen Oshō 77 i e priest or teacher and the first Western female Zen priest had a prolonged religious experience 78 in the 1970s including a series of visions and recalling past lives when she was severely ill She regarded these experiences as a profound kensho enlightenment experience 79 80 constituting a third kensho 78 and published an account of these visions and an elaborate scheme of stages of awakening 80 in How to Grow a Lotus Blossom 78 81 Her interpretations which parallel Christian mysticism 82 were controversial 80 83 78 and rejected by some as makyo illusion 79 83 According to Jiyu Kennett such experiences are not uncommon note 15 but are rarely spoken of she regarded publishing her own experiences as a way to acknowledge the existence and validity of such experiences which according to her may contribute to further insight after initial awakening 81 88 She acknowledged the risks and potential for controversy in publishing her account but felt that the benefits of releasing such information outweighed the risks 81 Training towards kenshō editSee also Zen practice According to Harris working towards kensho is usually a lengthy process stretched out over years or even decades 89 Contrary to this Victor Hori notes that with koan study kensho may appear within six months 90 note 16 Sōtō tends towards a gradual approach preferring to let the experiences happen on their own Rinzai tends toward the use of Koans as a technique to unroot the habitual workings of the mind 93 During intensive zazen various hallucinations and psychological disturbances may arise These are referred to as makyo Distinguishing these delusions from actual kensho is the primary function of the teacher as the student may be erroneously convinced they have realized kensho Rinzai edit In the Rinzai school kensho is seen as indispensable At some point in time we pass from imprisonment in ignorance and delusion to a true vision of Zen realization Our enlightenment is timeless yet our realization of it occurs in time According to this belief experiencing a moment of awakening in this life is of central importance 94 In the Rinzai training the student is expected to pour oneself totally into both koan study and daily activities to become one with it 24 Kenshō is used to describe the first breakthrough in kōan study 1 note 17 Sōtō edit Contemporary Japanese Sōtō downplays the importance of kenshō due to the sectarian rivalry with Rinzai which emphasizes kenshō Nevertheless kenshō also has its role in Sōtō The genjo koan or the koan of everyday life which appears naturally in daily life 95 is emphasized Students are not encouraged to actively seek out kenshō experiences In Sōtō practice kenshōs are allowed to occur naturally as a by product of practice Meditative training is seen as the unfolding of one great kenshō 20 According to the tradition of Soto Zen although working on a koan is one way of attaining kensho the best way is zazen Indeed Dogen the founder of Soto Zen expounded that zazen itself is enlightenment and as long as the adept maintains a pure state of non thinking in Zen he is a Buddha 96 According to Brad Warner in the Sōtō school there are two kinds of awakening 97 One is the practice of shikantaza which is the actual enlightened activity of the Buddha 97 The other is the accumulation of little bits of understanding which come together giving way to a deeper intuitive knowledge 98 Sanbō Kyōdan edit Kenshō also plays a central in the Sanbō Kyōdan a Japanese Zen organisation which played a decisive role in the transmission of Zen to the United States 43 Yasutani the founder of the Sanbo Kyodan was disappointed about the lack of interest in kensho in the Soto school Yasutani s emphasis on koan training and the importance of kensho was transmitted to his American students 43 He was especially vocal concerning the point of kenshō seeing one s true nature He spoke more openly about it then anyone of his times going so far as to have a public acknowledgement of those who had experienced kensho in a post sesshin ceremony of bowing in gratitude to the three treasures 99 It is also reflected in the inclusion of a relative great amount of kensho stories in The Three Pillars of Zen written by Philip Kapleau a student of Yasutani 4 Training after kenshō editSee also Sahaja and Post awakening sadhana After kensho further practice is needed to attain a natural effortless down to earth state of being the ultimate liberation knowing without any kind of defilement 100 Kensho may bring insight but not change the mental dispositions a shortcoming experienced by both Hakuin 101 and modern teachers like Jack Kornfield 102 and Barry Magid 103 Further practice edit See also Ten Bulls Zen Buddhist training does not end with kenshō Practice is to be continued to deepen the insight and to express it in daily life 6 4 8 104 According to the contemporary Chan Master Sheng Yen Ch an expressions refer to enlightenment as seeing your self nature But even this is not enough After seeing your self nature you need to deepen your experience even further and bring it into maturation You should have enlightenment experience again and again and support them with continuous practice Even though Ch an says that at the time of enlightenment your outlook is the same as of the Buddha you are not yet a full Buddha 7 And the Soto Zen Master Jiyu Kennett One can easily get the impression that realization kenshō an experience of enlightenment or however you wish to phrase it is the end of Zen training It is not It is rather a new beginning an entrance into a more mature phase of Buddhist training To take it as an ending and to dine out on such an experience without doing the training that will deepen and extend it is one of the greatest tragedies of which I know There must be continuous development otherwise you will be as a wooden statue sitting upon a plinth to be dusted and the life of Buddha will not increase 105 To deepen the initial insight of kensho shikantaza and kōan study are necessary This trajectory of initial insight followed by a gradual deepening and ripening is expressed by Linji Yixuan in his Three mysterious Gates Dongshan Liangjie s Japanese Tōzan Ryōkan Five Ranks the Four Ways of Knowing of Hakuin 106 107 and the Ten Ox Herding Pictures 108 107 which detail the steps on the Path Seitai choyo edit Post awakening practice is called seitai choyo the long nurturing of the sacred fetus 109 note 18 According to Spiegelberg I t means a return to the purely secular life a complete submersion in work and in the changing events of the world Thus for decades many Zenists after their awakening went among the people living among beggars and leading an existence of hard physical labor Thus it was proved whether or not the truth received was of permanent value or whether it would vanish among mundane affairs 111 During the T ang era the term became associated with the ideal of the recluse who leaves the world 112 An ideal period of twenty years was taken for it echoing a story from the Lotus Sutra about a prodigal son who wandered in poverty for twenty years before returning home 113 References to these twenty years are found throughout the Chan tradition for example Linji who is reported to have studied under Huang po for twenty years 113 and Daito the founder of Daitoku ji who famously spent twenty years living under a bridge with beggars 113 Cultivating bodhicitta edit See also Bodhicitta and Karuṇa According to Hakuin the main aim of post satori practice 114 115 116 gogo no shugyo 109 or kojo going beyond 117 is to cultivate the Mind of Enlightenment 118 119 benefiting others by giving them the gift of the Dharma teaching 120 note 19 According to Yamada Koun if you cannot weep with a person who is crying there is no kensho 122 According to Kay The intuitive realisation of Buddhahood requires an attitude of selflessness and faith in one s inherent enlightenment Meditative awakening or wisdom forms only part of this realisation that must also manifest itself through acts of compassion and love 123 According to Barry regarding Hakuin s practice after awakening Post satori practice for Hakuin meant finally ceasing to be preoccupied with his own personal condition and attainment and to devote himself and his practice to helping and teaching others Finally at long last he realized that true enlightenment is a matter of endless practice and compassionate functioning not something that occurs once and for all in one great moment on the cushion web 4 note 20 Self purification and intellectual understanding edit One also has to purify oneself by ongoing practice 125 126 since Kensho does not eradicate our unhealthy habits There is a sudden awakening to the fact of no self and then this insight has to be integrated into one s life which means that it has to be embodied and not just be a memory web 5 And experience has to be supplemented by intellectual understanding and study of the Buddhist teachings 127 128 129 otherwise one remains a zen temma a Zen devil 130 Sudden insight editMain article Subitism Kenshō is described as appearing suddenly upon an interaction with someone else at hearing or reading some significant phrase or at the perceiving of an unexpected sound or sight 131 The idea of sudden insight has been hotly debated in the history of Zen It became part of the Traditional Zen Narrative in the 8th century 18 Chinul a 12th century Korean Seon master emphasized that insight into our true nature is sudden but is to be followed by practice to ripen the insight and attain full Buddhahood The contemporary Korean Seon master Seongcheol opposed this emphasizing sudden enlightenment sudden cultivation But Jiyu Kennett a contemporary western teacher warns that attaining kenshō does not mean that a person is free from morality the laws of karma or the consequences of ones actions 132 This warning is reflected in the Wild fox koan Mushi dokugo and mushi dokkaku editMain article Mushi dokugo Kenshō may be attained without the aid of a teacher 73 as in the case of mushi dokugo 133 or mushi dokkaku a self awakened pratyeka buddha web 6 Though the literal meaning is self awakened or awakened on one s own the emphasis in Zen when using these terms lies in the ultimate reliance on one s own insight instead of the authority of a teacher It is awakening that is one s true master With Shakyamuni the awakening was his master In other words the awakened self is one s master Apart from getting awakened to that master there is no awakening Here practitioner and master are of one body not two Instead of having another verify or confirm one s awakening one does so for oneself Of course in this case the self that is verified and the master who does verification are undivided In their being completely identical is the autonomous independent or ultimate nature of the authenticity web 7 Similarities with other traditions editWhile the Japanese term kenshō is generally used by practitioners of Zen Buddhism the insight it refers to is not limited to Japanese Zen Buddhism or even to Buddhism in general 134 135 Theravada edit Main articles Theravada Vipassana and Vipassana movement The Theravada tradition which is best known in the west through the modern Vipassana movement discerns four stages of enlightenment in which Nirvana is reached in four succeeding sudden steps of insight Dzogchen edit Main articles Dzogchen and Rigpa An analogy given by Dzogchen masters is that one s nature is like a mirror which reflects with complete openness but is not affected by the reflections Rigpa is the knowledge that ensues from recognizing this mirror like clarity 136 which cannot be found by searching nor identified 137 One knows that there is a primordial freedom from grasping his or her mind 138 Advaita Vedanta edit Main articles Advaita Vedanta and Neo Advaita In Advaita Vedanta moksha is attained by jnana insight knowledge In Shankara s philosophical synthesis insight samadhi is used as a subsidiary to this goal Swami Vivekananda emphasized the experience of nirvikalpa samadhi as a means to validate religious transcendental knowledge 139 See also editEnlightenment in Buddhism Satori Daigo Mushi dokugo Shoshin Epiphany SamadhiNotes edit traditional Chinese and Japanese 見性 see one s nature 1 2 3 According to Fischer Schreiber kenshō and satori are nearly synonymous with a customary distinction of using kenshō for an initial enlightenment experience that still requires deepening and satori for the Buddhahood enlightenment of a Buddha or Zen patriarch 10 Hakuin uses the word satori for initial insight synonymous with kensho 11 The Japanese Zen tradition has a rich vocabulaire of terms related to enlightenment awakenening kaku true awakening shōgaku perfect awakening engaku insight sei attaining the Way jōdō becoming Buddha jōbutsu opening the eye kaigen liberation gedatsu aythetication shō the great death daishi self enlightenment without a teacher mushi dokugo great satori with full penetration taigo tettei and peerless perfect enlightenment anokutara sanmyaku sanbodai 12 The list is not exhausted with these terms 12 Another term for deep awakening is daigo D T Suzuki has been criticized for his highly idealized and inaccurate picture of Japanese Zen 18 Annuttara samyak sambodhi is the highest state of realization and awakening Satori or kensho is a first glimpse into nature to be followed by further training Victor Sogen Hori notes that Nishida Kitaro although using a western terminology tried to express basic Mahayana Teachings He borrowed for example the term junsui keiken pure experience from William James but then went on to say that while for James the individual preceded pure experience for him pure experience preceded the individual That reversal makes Nishida s notion of pure experience resemble less the psychology of William James and more the Mahayana notion of sunyata 30 James also gives descriptions of conversion experiences The Christian model of dramatic conversions based on the role model of Paul s conversion may also have served as a model for western interpretations and expectations regarding kensho similar to Protestant influences on Theravada Buddhism as described by Carrithers It rests upon the notion of the primacy of religious experiences preferably spectacular ones as the origin and legitimization of religious action But this presupposition has a natural home not in Buddhism but in Christian and especially Protestant Christian movements which prescribe a radical conversion 32 See Sekida for an example of this influence of William James and Christian conversion stories mentioning Luther 33 and St Paul 34 See also McMahan for the influence of Christian thought on Buddhism 35 Robert Sharf T he role of experience in the history of Buddhism has been greatly exaggerated in contemporary scholarship Both historical and ethnographic evidence suggests that the privileging of experience may well be traced to certain twentieth century reform movements notably those that urge a return to zazen or vipassana meditation and these reforms were profoundly influenced by religious developments in the west While some adepts may indeed experience altered states in the course of their training critical analysis shows that such states do not constitute the reference pont for the elaborate Buddhist discourse pertaining to the path 47 William Blake If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is infinite For man has closed himself up till he sees all things thru narrow chinks of his cavern 50 A literary device to establish a lineage Both T ien Tai and Chan took over this literary device to lend authority to those developing traditions and guarantee its authenticity 57 58 Notable examples are the Anthology of the Patriarchal Hall 952 and the Jingde Records of the Transmission of the Lamp published 1004 McRae considers Dumoulin s A History of Zen to be a modern example of this genre disguished as scientific history 59 The two best known koan collections in the west are the Gateless Gate and the Blue Cliff Record The Gateless Gate Chinese 無門關 Wumenguan Japanese Mumonkan is a collection of 48 kōans and commentaries published in 1228 by Chinese monk Wumen 無門 1183 1260 The title may be more accurately rendered as Gateless Barrier or Gateless Checkpoint The Blue Cliff Record Chinese 碧巖錄 Biyan Lu Japanese Hekiganroku is a collection of 100 kōans compiled in 1125 by Yuanwu Keqin 圜悟克勤 1063 1135 Cook It is probably safe to say that few if any reputable modern scholars and probably not many even within the Soto priesthood itself believe that many of the central events and characters in the Denkoroku are based on historical fact The origins and early developments of Chinese Zen are just now becoming clearer and the gradually emerging picture is very different from the traditional Zen history found in such works as Keizan s record 64 Kapleau gives ten different accounts of contemporary practitioners including his own kensho under the initials KP 4 Sekida gives an elaborate account of his own kenshos 69 and gives various accounts of others 70 Satomi gives an account of becoming one with the mu koan the classical aimed kensho of the Sanbo Kyodan 71 Maura O Halloran also gives an account of herself becoming mu 72 Harris After this experience Gensho still had two more years of koan study 68 Sekida gives the example of a woman who s strong internal pressure gidan never stopped knocking from within at the door of her mind demanding to be resolved One day when she was about to take a bath a certain change occurred in her Although this was later confirmed as kensho by a teacher she had no idea what it was 73 Philip Kapleau describes a man who had kensho which was explained as a conversion experience by psychiatrists 74 Flora Courtois gives an extensive account of her spontaneous kensho 75 on which Yasutani comments 76 According to Kay Kennett s visionary experiences and also her ambivalence about the status of their content are not unprecedented within the Zen tradition 84 Soto literature includes numerous accounts 84 as noted especially by Faure 2001 Visions of powere 84 63 described by the founders of Soto Zen Dogen and Keizan 63 See also Williams 2005 85 and Bodiford 1993 86 Yet Dogen and Keizan also both warned against seeing visions or unusual spiritual experiences as the goal of practice 87 Houn Jiyu Kennett a western sei kyoshi 91 or soto priest also is reported to have attained kensho after six months of training in a Soto monastery 92 See 71 for a description of becoming one with According to Kraft one of the earliest expressions of this term is found in a 5th century Chinese translation of the Prajnaparamitra Sutra on Benevolent Kings Protecting Their Countries 110 In Chan texts the term is first used by Mazu 709 788 and in Japan it was introduced by Dogen who learned it from his teacher T ien t ung Ju ching 1163 1228 110 See also Muso Soseki Dialogues in a Dream translation translated by Thomas Yuho Kirchner for its meaning and application Shinkichi Takahashi After satori teach 121 See also Katsuhiro Yoshizawa The Religious Art of Zen Master Hakuin pp 41 45 Constant practice of the Four Universal Vows 124 References edit a b c Baroni 2002 p 188 a b c Hori 2000 p 287 Fowler 2005 p 115 a b c d e Kapleau 1989 Sekida 1985 p 226 a b c Sekida 1996 a b Yen 1996 p 54 a b c Kraft 1997 p 91 Suzuki 1994a p 88 a b Fischer Schreiber Ehrhard amp Diener 1991 p 115 Hakuin 2010 a b Kraft 1997 p 90 Hanyu Da Cidian 汉语大词典 vol 10 p 314 a b Muller n d Soothill amp Hodous 1934 p 244 Suzuki 1994b p 259 Suzuki 1994b p 229 a b McRae 2003 a b Dumoulin 2005b p 380 a b c d Harvey 1990 p 275 276 Jiyu Kennett 2005b p 263 Satomi amp King 1993 p 203 a b c d Hori 1994 p 30 a b Hori 2000 p 290 Hori 1994 p 31 a b Samy 1998 p 82 Sharf 2014 p 939 a b Mohr 2000 p 282 a b Sharf 1995b p 248 Hori 1999 p 47 Sharf 2000 p 271 Carrithers 1983 p 18 Sekida 1985 p 196 197 Sekida 1985 p 251 a b c McMahan 2008 Sharf 1993 Sharf 1995a Sharf 1995b p 246 248 Victoria 2006 a b c Sharf 1995b Sharf 1995b p 247 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Unfolds The Essential Teachings of Zen Master Dogen Shambhala Publications IncCritical Stuart Lachs Coming Down from the Zen Clouds A Critique of the Current State of American Zen An attempt at demythologizing Zen practice emphasizing the integration into daily lifeExternal links editAma Samy Koan Hua t ou and Kensho Rev Master Jiyu Kennett 2000 The Roar of the Tigress Volume I An Introduction to Zen Religious Practice for Everyday Lifebiography of Jiyu Kennett with a description of het kensho experiences and teishos by Jiyu Kennett After Non Duality ablog centering on the question What happens after awakening Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kenshō amp oldid 1184341160, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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