I.: The Pivotal Lotus Story and Dogen's Worldview
II.: Hermeneutics and Discourse Styles in Study of the Lotus Sutra
and Dogen
III.: Selected East Asian Interpretations of the Story
IV.: Dogen's Interpretations of this Lotus Sutra Story
V.: Dogen's View of Earth, Space, and Time Seen in Mahayana
Context
Afterword: Implications of Dogen's Mahayana Worldview
Endnotes
Bibliography
Taigen Dan Leighton is an Adjunct Professor at the Graduate Theological Union, Institute of Buddhist Studies and author of Faces of Compassion: Classic Bodhisattva Archetypes and Their Modern Expression. He is primary co-translator and editor for several Zen translations, including D=ogen's Extensive Record and Cultivating the Empty Field. He is also a S=ot=o Zen priest and Dharma heir.
"Among the eminent Buddhist figures of premodern Japan, perhaps
none has drawn more attention in the West than the Zen master
D=ogen (1200-1253). In a fresh approach, this volume moves beyond
D=ogen's explicitly Zen heritage to explore his indebtedness to the
imagery and rhetorical strategies of the Lotus S=utra in
articulating his vision of practice. Leighton is sensitive to the
playfulness and creativity of D=ogen's hermeneutics. His study will
be
welcomed by readers interested in the Mah=ay=ana as literature and
in situating D=ogen within the broader intellectual currents of his
day." -- Jacqueline I. Stone, author of Original Enlightenment and
the
Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism
"This book is an exploration of D=ogen's writings on space and
time, especially as they relate to the central message of the Lotus
S=utra. It demonstrates unity of practice and book learning in
Japanese Zen and the unity of the Zen tradition and Buddhist
teaching traditions such as Tendai and Kegon. Anyone interested in
philosophical or literary aspects of D?gen 's teachings and their
relationship to Buddhist scriptures will find much to savor.
Buddhist practitioners who wish to know how traditional scriptures
can speak to contemporary concerns will find much to digest. " --
William Bodiford, author of Soto Zen in Medieval Japan
"This richly woven study brings us new insights into the dynamic
role of Earth in Mahayana Buddhist understandings of enlightenment.
Leighton reveals a transmission of the Buddha Dharma in which the
utter reality of the phenomenal world is not to be questioned, nor
is impermanence to be transcended. Time and space are rather to be
experienced as the spiritually nourishing womb of our awakening.
Right now, when ecological crises imperil the future of
conscious
life, and when, at the same time, Gaia theory invites us to
understand ourselves as intrinsic parts of a living Earth, this
work of scholarship is good news indeed." -- Joanna Macy, author
Coming Back
to Life
"A premier translator of two of D=ogen's major works, Eihei Shingi
and Eihei Koroku, has now turned his sights to an analysis of
D=ogen in East Asian theoretical contexts with illuminating
results. This very thoughtful, informative, and highly original
study makes a significant contribution to both D=ogen and Lotus
S=utra studies by showing how D=ogen's Zen is rooted in Mahayana
worldview, and also how the Lotus Sutra was a key resource for
Japanese
Zen. Leighton does an outstanding job of juxtaposing the seminal
Lotus S=utra with the main writings of D=ogen, along with other
prominent thinkers in Zen and Chinese and Japanese Buddhism. He
also sheds important light
on contemporary applications and interpretations of Buddhist
theory." -- Steven Heine, author of D=ogen and the Koan
Tradition
"Among the eminent Buddhist figures of premodern Japan, perhaps
none has drawn more attention in the West than the Zen master
D=ogen (1200-1253). In a fresh approach, this volume moves beyond
D=ogen's explicitly Zen heritage to explore his indebtedness to the
imagery and rhetorical strategies of the Lotus S=utra in
articulating his vision of practice. Leighton is sensitive to the
playfulness and creativity of D=ogen's hermeneutics. His study will
be
welcomed by readers interested in the Mah=ay=ana as literature and
in situating D=ogen within the broader intellectual currents of his
day." -- Jacqueline I. Stone, author of Original Enlightenment and
the
Transformation of Medieval Japanese Buddhism
"This book is an exploration of D=ogen's writings on space and
time, especially as they relate to the central message of the Lotus
S=utra. It demonstrates unity of practice and book learning in
Japanese Zen and the unity of the Zen tradition and Buddhist
teaching traditions such as Tendai and Kegon. Anyone interested in
philosophical or literary aspects of D=ogen 's teachings and their
relationship to Buddhist scriptures will find much to savor.
Buddhist practitioners who wish to know how traditional scriptures
can speak to contemporary concerns will find much to digest. " --
William Bodiford, author of Soto Zen in Medieval Japan
"This richly woven study brings us new insights into the dynamic
role of Earth in Mahayana Buddhist understandings of enlightenment.
Leighton reveals a transmission of the Buddha Dharma in which the
utter reality of the phenomenal world is not to be questioned, nor
is impermanence to be transcended. Time and space are rather to be
experienced as the spiritually nourishing womb of our awakening.
Right now, when ecological crises imperil the future of
conscious
life, and when, at the same time, Gaia theory invites us to
understand ourselves as intrinsic parts of a living Earth, this
work of scholarship is good news indeed." -- Joanna Macy, author
Coming Back
to Life
"A premier translator of two of D=ogen's major works, Eihei Shingi
and Eihei Koroku, has now turned his sights to an analysis of
D=ogen in East Asian theoretical contexts with illuminating
results. This very thoughtful, informative, and highly original
study makes a significant contribution to both D=ogen and Lotus
S=utra studies by showing how D=ogen's Zen is rooted in Mahayana
worldview, and also how the Lotus Sutra was a key resource for
Japanese
Zen. Leighton does an outstanding job of juxtaposing the seminal
Lotus S=utra with the main writings of D=ogen, along with other
prominent thinkers in Zen and Chinese and Japanese Buddhism. He
also sheds important light
on contemporary applications and interpretations of Buddhist
theory." -- Steven Heine, author of D=ogen and the Koan
Tradition
"Leighton has produced yet another work of consummate scholarship
that expands our understanding not only of the S=ot=o Zen founder
D=ogen (1200-1253) but also of Zen Buddhism in general.
...Leighton's clear, articulate prose renders D=ogen's writings
alive, accessible and relevant to life in the twenty-first
century." --Philosophy East and West.
"Taigen Dan Leighton has done it again."--Pamela D. Winfield,
Meredith College
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