Hello Sangha,
today I picked the Shobogenzo out of my shelf and looked at the Kokyo/The eternal mirror-Chapter. I remembered that I found it very inspiring.
I try to read the Shobogenzo in the manner Nishijima was stressing out when he emphasized the three philosophies and one reality. But I'm not sure if i get it the right way...
So, as far as I understand Dogen, he speaks about the metaphor of a mirror that reflects everything and has no beginning nor end.
While we can make it an idea, a concept we will miss it. It's just another thought appearing in the mirror, we (the mirror) can never see itself in purity, yet all the reflections are not separated from the mirror.
While reading, I reminded myself of Sekkei Harada, when he spoke about consciousness in a way that sounds pretty materialistic almost kind of stoistic to me. And for sure it's right in some way... Consciousness depends on factors like birth and so on, and we are the five skandhas.
He said that the function of the skandhas are the true self that depends on causes and conditions. So, to see thoughts, emotions, feelings, body, desire, attachment and so on are just functions itself... I said it sounds stoic because I feel reminded of quotes like, I think it was Epicurus who said something like "death is nothing to us, because a dead body experiences no sensation, no good and bad, and the absence of sensation is nothing to us".
I agree, yet, I think it seems very materialistic, almost nihilistic.
So, holding a concept of a mirror, like a universal consciousness that embraces everything and reducing everything to the skandhas and "when I die the entire universe dies with me (kodo Sawaki)" / when matter dies, consciousness cannot be established and there's nothing left - both are like the two extremes nishijima was talking about. Both are right in some way but cannot bring our understanding beyond the intellectual understanding.
Therefore it seems like with our actions and with the action of zazen we can realize that mirror which is always there - if we, or not, are entangled with this reflections. and when the day comes and this body-mind-system will die, probably there will no reflection remain. The mirror cannot perceive itself, but it is beyond life and death, beyond existence and non existence. And if there will be something in the mirror, we cannot speak of death at all.
Sorry for so much text
Gassho,
Horin
Stlah
Gesendet von meinem BLA-L29 mit Tapatalk
today I picked the Shobogenzo out of my shelf and looked at the Kokyo/The eternal mirror-Chapter. I remembered that I found it very inspiring.
I try to read the Shobogenzo in the manner Nishijima was stressing out when he emphasized the three philosophies and one reality. But I'm not sure if i get it the right way...
So, as far as I understand Dogen, he speaks about the metaphor of a mirror that reflects everything and has no beginning nor end.
While we can make it an idea, a concept we will miss it. It's just another thought appearing in the mirror, we (the mirror) can never see itself in purity, yet all the reflections are not separated from the mirror.
While reading, I reminded myself of Sekkei Harada, when he spoke about consciousness in a way that sounds pretty materialistic almost kind of stoistic to me. And for sure it's right in some way... Consciousness depends on factors like birth and so on, and we are the five skandhas.
He said that the function of the skandhas are the true self that depends on causes and conditions. So, to see thoughts, emotions, feelings, body, desire, attachment and so on are just functions itself... I said it sounds stoic because I feel reminded of quotes like, I think it was Epicurus who said something like "death is nothing to us, because a dead body experiences no sensation, no good and bad, and the absence of sensation is nothing to us".
I agree, yet, I think it seems very materialistic, almost nihilistic.
So, holding a concept of a mirror, like a universal consciousness that embraces everything and reducing everything to the skandhas and "when I die the entire universe dies with me (kodo Sawaki)" / when matter dies, consciousness cannot be established and there's nothing left - both are like the two extremes nishijima was talking about. Both are right in some way but cannot bring our understanding beyond the intellectual understanding.
Therefore it seems like with our actions and with the action of zazen we can realize that mirror which is always there - if we, or not, are entangled with this reflections. and when the day comes and this body-mind-system will die, probably there will no reflection remain. The mirror cannot perceive itself, but it is beyond life and death, beyond existence and non existence. And if there will be something in the mirror, we cannot speak of death at all.
Sorry for so much text
Gassho,
Horin
Stlah
Gesendet von meinem BLA-L29 mit Tapatalk
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