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Heart Sutra: Buddhism in the Light of Quantum Reality▪P22

  ..续本文上一页logical standard of living along with a

  powerful intentionality; toward social justice

  throughout the world.[20]

  Compare this to the sentiments echoed by a contemporary Zen master in the context of the Heart Sutra:

  The Prajnaparamita gives us a solid ground to

  making peace with ourselves, for transcending the

  fear of birth and death, the duality of this and

  that. In the light of emptiness, everything is

  everything else, we inter-are, everyone is

  responsible for everything that happens in life.

  When you produce peace and happiness in yourself,

  you begin to realize peace for the whole world.

  With the smile that you produce in yourself, with

  the conscious breathing you establish within

  yourself, you begin to work for peace in the

  world. To smile is not to smile only for yourself;

  the world will change because of your smile. When

  you practice sitting meditation, if you enjoy even

  one moment of your sitting, if you establish

  serenity and happiness inside yourself, you

  provide the world with a solid base of peace. If

  you do not give yourself peace, how can you share

  it with others

   [21]

  [edit]

  References

  [1] Leonard, George, The Silent Pulse, p.xii.

  [2] Capra, Frithjof, The Tao of Physics, pp.197-98.

  [3] Conze, Edward, Buddhist Wisdom Books, p.18.

  [4] Dumoulin, Heinrich., Zen Buddhism, A History, Vol.1,

  p. 35.

  [5] Conze, Edward quoted by Donald Lopez, Jr. in The Heart

  Sutra Explained, p. 3.

  [6] Lopez, Donald, Jr., The Heart Sutra Explained, p.7.

  [7] Leonard, George, The Silent Pulse, pp.32-34.

  [8] Kornfield, Jack, "The Smile of the Buddha," Ancient

  Wisdom and Modern Science, p.101.

  [9] Leonard, George, The Silent Pulse, p.176.

  [10] Capra, Frithjof, "The New Vision of Reality," Ancient

  Wisdom and Modern Science, p.138.

  [11] Ibid, p.138.

  [12] Capra, Frithjof. Tao of Physics, pp.198-99.

  [13] Chang, Garma C.C., Buddhist Teaching of Totality,

  pp.60-61.

  [14] Abe, Masao, Zen and Western Thought, p. 94.

  [15] Govinda, Lama Angarika,Creative Meditation and

  Multi-Dimensional Consciousness, p.11.

  [16] Ibid, pp. 60-61.

  [17] Heisenberg Werner, quoted by Frithjof Capra, "The New

  Vision of Reality," Ancient Wisdom and Modern Science,

  p. 137.

  [18] Hanh, Thich Nhat, The Heart of Understanding, pp.

  50-51.

  [19] Leonard, George, The Silent Pulse, p.89.

  [20] Ibid, p.177.

  [21] Hanh, Thich Nhat, The Heart of Understanding, pp.51-52.

  [edit]

  Bibliography

  Abe, Masao. Zen and Western Thought. Honolulu: University of

  Hawaii Press, 1985.

  Capra, Frithjof. Tao of Physics. Boston: Shambala, 1976.

  ------"The New Vision of Reality: Toward a synthesis of

  Eastern Wisdom and Modern Science" in Ancient Wisdom and

  Modern Science. Albany: State University of New York Press,

  1984.

  Chang, Garma C.C. Buddhist Teaching of Totality.

  University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1971.

  Conze, Edward. Buddhism: Its essence and development. New

  York: Harper and Row, 1975.

  ------Buddhist Thought in India. Ann Arbor: University of

  Michigan Press, 1967.

  ------Buddhist Wisdom Books. New York: Harper and Row, 1972.

  ------Selected Sayings from the Perfection of Wisdom.

  Boulder: Prajna Press, 1978.

  ------Thirty Years of Buddhist Studies. Columbia:

  University of South Carolina Press, 1968.

  Dumoulin, Heinrich. Zen Buddhism: A History (Vol.1). New

  York: Macmillian Publishing Co. 1988.

  Fox, Douglas A. The Heart of Buddhist Wisdom. Lewiston, N.Y:

  Edwin Mellen Press, 1985.

  Govinda, Lama Angarika. Creative Meditation and

  Multi-Dimensional Consciousness. Wheation, IL: Theosophical

  Publishing House, 1976.

  Hanh, Thich Nhat. The Heart of Understanding. Berkeley:

  Parallax Press, 1988.

  Kenney, Jim. "Particle, Wave, and Paradox" in Fireball and

  the Lotus, edited by Ron Miller and Jim Kenney. Santa Fe:

  Bear & Company, 1987.

  Kornfield, Jack. "The Smile of the Buddha: Paradigms in

  Perspective" in Ancient Wisdom and Modern Science, edited by

  Stanislav Graf. Albany: State University of New York Press,

  1984.

  Kothari, D.S. "Atom and the Self" in The Evolution of

  Consciousness, edited by Kishore Gandhi. New York: Paragon

  House, 1983.

  Leonard, George. The Silent Pulse. New York: E.P. Dutton,

  1978.

  Lopez, Donald S. The Heart Sutra Explained. Albany: State

  University of New York Press, 1988.

  Murti, T.R.V. The Central Philosophy of Buddhism. London:

  George Allen & Unwin Ltd. 1955.

  Streng, Frederick. Emptiness: A Study in Religious Meaning.

  Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1977.

  Talbot, Michael. Mysticism and the New Physics. New York:

  Bantam Books, 1980.

  Wallace, Alan B. Choosing Reality: A contemplative view

  of Physics and the Mind. Boston: Shambala, 1989.

  

  Primary Point Press isthe publications pision of the Kwan Um School of Zen. It has published Gathering of Spirit: Women Teaching in American Buddhism, edited by Ellen Sidor (1987) and Ten Gates: The Kong-an Teaching of Zen Master Seung Sahn (1987). It has reprinted Only Don”t Know: The Teaching Letters of Zen Master Seung Sahn (1982) and Thousand Peaks: Korean Zen--Tradition and Teachers by Mu Soeng Sunim (1987).

  The Kwan Um School of Zen is a network of centers under the spiritual direction of Zen Master Seung Sahn and senior teachers. The school publishes Primary Point, an international journal of Buddhism. More information about the Kwan Um School of Zen, including a list of centers worldwide, may be received by contacting the school at:

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