Dictionary of Philosophy of Religion

(Amelia) #1
249

Z


ZEN BUDDHISM. A branch of
Mahāyāna Buddhism that developed in
China as Ch’an beginning in the seventh
century CE. It later spread to Vietnam
(where it is known as Thiቲn Buddhism),
Korea, and Japan. Zen Buddhism stresses
a form of sitting meditation known as
zazen and other practices in order to cul-
tivate experiential wisdom, believing that
excessive focus on texts and theoretical
knowledge can deter one from experien-
tially realizing bodhi (enlightenment or
awakening). Chinese and Vietnamese
Zen are much gentler compared to the
shocking Japanese Rinzai. Within Japanese
Zen, the two main schools are Soto
and Rinzai. Soto Zen is a calm version of
Japanese Zen where practitioners spend
most of their time in sitting meditation
and wait to realize enlightenment. In Soto
Zen, the meditator does not focus on
anything, so if a thought arises, they are to
acknowledge it and let it fade away. Rinzai
Zen, on the other hand, is the school that
the West has adopted. Rinzai has a strong
focus on the koan (a statement or ques-
tion-and-answer that does not make
any logical sense, such as “What is the


Buddha? The rooster crows at daybreak.”)
and the awakening stick (a flat wooden
rod that is used on meditators as a
reminder to stay focused or to encourage
“sudden enlightenment”). The Rinzai
meditator focuses on breathing and the
koan in hopes of attaining satori, or
“sudden enlightenment.” Zen, as a whole,
is a very individualistic tradition, mean-
ing that it is up to the individual to
decide how to practice Zen and there
are no set rules on how to practice; the
individual or the school can pick and
choose which, if any, Buddhist doctrines
to accept. Zen does, however, emphasize
the importance of questioning every-
thing, otherwise the follower is no better
than a parrot who repeats words without
knowing the significance. Zen prides
itself on being illogical, and the use of the
koan and the awakening stick are exam-
ples of non- rational ways of reaching
enlightenment.

ZENO OF CITIUM (344–262 BCE). A
stoic philosopher from Citium in Cyprus,
Zeno is considered the founder of the
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