Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 1, 2 | introduction, not of the dead scriptures, as was repeatedly
2 1, 3, 2 | the fetters of old dogmas, dead creeds, and conventions
3 1, 3, 5 | must be based not on the dead Scriptures, but on living
4 1, 3, 7 | Phien continued. 'They are dead,' was the reply. 'Then,
5 1, 3, 7 | for them to convey, are dead and gone. So then what you,
6 1, 4, 2 | through ceaseless changes. The dead faith, immutable and conventional,
7 1, 4, 4 | Therefore, Zen declares even a dead clod of earth to be imbued
8 1, 4 (1)| abandoned in the charnel-field, dead for one, two, or three days,
9 1, 4, 9 | consists mainly of change. A dead, unchanging abstract truth,
10 1, 6, 7 | comes within us. What was dead and indifferent before grows
11 1, 6, 8 | the universe as a thing dead, inert, and standing still.
12 1, 6, 13 | the earth will become a dead sphere quite unsuitable
13 1, 7, 8 | hates~And loves, and all dead deeds come forth again,~
14 1, 8, 16 | death and no birth. "The dead," says Chwang Tsz, "have
15 Appen, 1 | are the spirits of the dead (which they believe in)?
16 Appen, 1 (2)| fought with Tu Hwui, the dead father of his concubine
17 Appen, 1 | the Six Worlds3 for the dead, they do not necessarily
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