Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, Intro | based on these texts are written in Chinese, or Tibetan,
2 1, 1 (1)| good many commentaries were written on the book, and it is considered
3 1, 1 (1)| Many commentaries have been written on it by the prominent Buddhist
4 1, 1, 12 | confessed the monk, "as it~is written in characters. How could
5 1, 2 (1)| Cross-legged Meditation') was written soon after his return from
6 1, 2 (1)| many important books were written, and the following are chief
7 1, 2 (2)| the important Zen books written by these masters, Ro-ji-tan-kin,
8 1, 3, 2 | spoken by Shakya Muni or written by some later Buddhists.
9 1, 3 (1)| there were, however, no written sutras to disprove their
10 1, 3 (1)| seem to have set out with written sutras. In addition to this,
11 1, 3 (1)| that all the sutras were written at once in these days, but
12 1, 3 (1)| following points: (1) It is written in a style quite different
13 1, 3 (1)| the Hinayana sutras, but written by their respective authors.~(
14 1, 3 (1)| The Hinayana sutras were written with a plain style in Pali,
15 1, 3, 5 | black and white, but one written in heart and mind. On one
16 1, 3, 5 | transcends time and space. It is written with the characters of heaven,
17 1, 3, 5 | with which the sutra is written." Shakya Muni read that
18 1, 3, 6 | of gravitation not in a written page, but in a falling apple.
19 1, 3, 7 | thousands of books have been written on these grand names and
20 1, 3, 8 | The Scripture of Zen is written with facts simple and familiar,
21 1, 3, 8 | which the Zen Scripture is written. Even a, b, c, etc., when
22 1, 5 (2)| may be said to have been written for the purpose of stating
23 1, 8, 13 | has to go. Some poems were written by Chinese and Japanese
24 Appen, Pref | twenty commentaries were written on it both by the Chinese
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