印度學佛教學研究
Online ISSN : 1884-0051
Print ISSN : 0019-4344
ISSN-L : 0019-4344
松源崇岳の人と思想
石井 修道
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ジャーナル フリー

2005 年 54 巻 1 号 p. 128-135,1250

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In this article I have re-examined the stupa inscription for Songyuan Chongyue (松源崇岳), which was written by Lu You (陸游) and included in his Weinan Anthology. According to the inscription, Songyuan was enlightened upon hearing Mi'an Xianjie's (密庵咸傑) instructions on Muan Anyong's (木庵安永) phrase, “opening one's mouth is not on the tongue.” Muan Anyong was a second-generation successor to Dahui (大慧). Afterward, this phrase came to represent Songyuan's teaching. The phrase's meaning is examined on the basis of two of his general lectures (普説), in which both the experience of great enlightenment based on the koan and having an encounter with a good Zen master are important. Thus this koan becomes referred to as “a single koan that exhausts the great earth” and “the koan of the immediate manifestation of one's original allotment.”
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© 日本印度学仏教学会
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