FACTOID # 170: Apparently, the Federated States of Micronesia is the place to leave - and Afghanistan is the place to go.
 
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Encyclopedia > Southern Chan
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Southern Chan (pron. djenn) is the zen school that evolved from Hui Neng (Jap. Eno) - the sixth Chinese patriarch in the Dhyana tradition. At the same time there evolved the Northern School. The southern chan school is mainly considered the one that has maintained the 'origin' from Bodhidharma with its 'sudden enlightenment' versus the northern schools 'gradual enlightenment'. Hui Neng further propagated the idea of 'no mind' as a development of the previous wue of 'one mind'. Southern chan is the tradition in which Lin Chi practised and today it is represented in China by the Hsu Yun school, in Japan by the Rinzai school and in Korea by the Chogye Order. - Dao Chuan Shih


  Results from FactBites:
 
Chinese Philosophies & Religions, Regent Tour China (787 words)
The southern school evolved under the powerful influence of Hui-neng (638-713), who is recognized as the sixth great patriarch of Zen and the founder of its modern interpretation.
The goal of adherents of the southern Chan is to gain transcendental, or highest, wisdom from the depths of one's unconscious where it lies dormant.
Chan flourished in China during the T'ang and Song dynasties (960-1279) and its influences were strongly felt in literature and painting.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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