Chung Tai Chan Zen Buddhist Monastery, Puli City Area, Taiwan, Republic of China, by De Mann Jean-Pierre. . . Buy this art print at AllPosters.com.
A Japanese term derived from the Sanskrit word meaning 'meditation' (dhyāna), Zen is a major school of Japanese MahayanaBuddhism.
Credited to the South Indian Pallava prince-turned-monk Bodhidharma, who came to China during the rise of Tamil Buddhism in Tamilakam, Zen claims to transmit the spirit of Buddhism, or the total enlightenment as achieved by the founder of the religion, the Buddha.
Zen has its basis in the conviction that the world and its components are not many things. They are, rather, one reality. The one is part of a larger wholeness to which some people assign the name of God. Reason, by analyzing the diversity of the world, obscures this oneness. It can be apprehended by the non-rational part of the mind the intuition. Enlightenment about the nature of reality comes not by rational examination but through meditation.
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