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Zen Training: Methods and Philosophy by Katsuki Sekida
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Zen Training: Methods and Philosophy (Shambhala Classics)

by Katsuki Sekida

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139244,445 (4.07)1
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Shambhala (2005), Paperback, 264 pages

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Inside viewpoint of what zen training is and what happens when you meditate. Not meditation instruction manual, but clinical viewpoint. First of it's kind.

Zen and the Brain by Austin and Meditative Mind by Goleman cover some of the same issues, but each book has little different viewpoint. ( )
  beeswax | Sep 13, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0834801140, Paperback)

First published in 1975, Zen Training has become a classic of Zen literature. It was one of the first books to demystify religion without debunking it, to explain hitherto esoteric practices in lucid, everyday terms. It offers concrete guidelines for practicing zazen, seated meditation. Posture, breathing, the function of the abdominal muscles, muscle tone, and the mechanisms of wakefulness and attention are clearly and scientifically explained, so that one learns what actually happens in doing zazen, why it leads to certain psychological experiences, and what their significance is. There is also a chapter on koans that goes far to clarify what for many has seemed one of the most frustrating and baffling aspects of Zen. Again, the reader is told how actually to deal with koans and how they operate as catalysts of enlightenment. The author also draws many significant parallels between Zen and Western philosophy and psychology, comparing traditional Zen concepts with the theories of being and cognition of such thinkers as Heidegger and Husserl. Zen Training marked a turning point in Zen literature in its critical reevaluation of the enlightenment experience called kensho, which the author believes has often been emphasized at the expense of other important aspects of Zen training. The aim of zazen is seen not as the achievement of such experiences as satori or kensho but as the attainment of absolute samadhi, that condition of utters stillness in which thought is cut off, the mind is empty, yet one is in a state of extreme wakefulness and awareness. Absolute samadhi is considered the precondition of any kensho experience of lasting value, and indeed as "the foundation of all Zen activities." This book also goes beyond the earlier stages of Zen training to describe the more advanced stages: what happens after kensho, and above all, how one lives as well as trains in Zen.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:19 -0400)

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