The nature was born before heaven and earth.
It spans both the past and present, it is constantly here.
Its essence is wonderfully and profoundly empty,
perfectly brilliant and serene,
unfathomably vast
and great. "
- Imakita Kōsen (1816-1892)
- Imakita Kōsen (1816-1892)
- Linji Yixuan (618-907)
The Record of Linji
- Huang Po (? - 850)
The Zen Teaching of Huang-Po:
On the Transmission of Mind
- Dogen (1200 - 1253)
"Mountains and Water Sutra" in Shobogenzo
- Roland Barthes (1915 – 1980)
Camera Lucida: Reflections on Photography
- James Clerk Maxwell (1831 - 1879)
- Hongzhi Zhengjue (1091–1157)
Cultivating the Empty Field:
The Silent Illumination of Zen Buddhist Master Hongzhi
- Alan Watts (1915 - 1973)
"To return to the difficulty which has been stated with respect both to definitions and to numbers, what is the cause of their unity? In the case of all things which have several parts and in which the totality is not, as it were, a mere heap, but the whole is something beside the parts, there is a cause."
- Aristotle (384–322 BC)