Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 4, 6 | skull appeared to him in a dream, and said: 'What you said
2 1, 4, 7 | be no more than a stupid dream of the vulgar; if all phenomena
3 1, 5, 18 | Consciousness, but men still dream a dream of illusion. Bells
4 1, 5, 18 | Consciousness, but men still dream a dream of illusion. Bells and clocks
5 1, 6, 10 | phenomenal universe is a dream and a vision, we may admit
6 1, 6, 11 | life is real or an empty dream, we are at a loss to understand.~
7 1, 6, 12 | what are they? A bare dream dreamed in a dream!~What
8 1, 6, 12 | bare dream dreamed in a dream!~What is morality, then?
9 1, 7, 1 | an idle, or rather evil, dream. Vegetarianism and celibacy
10 1, 8, 5 | true men of old did not dream when they slept. Their breathing
11 1, 8, 9 | I shall tell you of a dream I dreamed." The other inclined
12 1, 8, 9 | divine my fortune by the dream." Thereupon Yang Shan fetched
13 Appen, 2, 3 | before him. While in the dream he fancies that there exist
14 Appen, 2, 4 | the objects seen in the dream (which are compared with
15 Appen, 2, 4 | ought not to identify the dream with the things dreamed,
16 Appen, 2, 4 | things dreamed with the dream itself. In other words,
17 Appen, 2, 4 | And) when you awake your dream may disappear, but the things
18 Appen, 2, 4 | are not identical with the dream, then they would be really
19 Appen, 2, 4 | existent things. If the dream is not the same as the things
20 Appen, 2, 4 | a seer, and a seen, in a dream.~Thus those Vijñanas also
21 Appen, 2 (1)| use of the simile of the dream.'~
22 Appen, 2, 4 | but does not that unreal dream necessarily presuppose the
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