Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1, 1 (1)| nihilistic view, but the real meaning is anything but nihilistic.
2 1, 1, 12 | but he could find a new meaning in Buddhist terms, and show
3 1, 2, 7 | but I fail to grasp its meaning.' The elder said: 'You go
4 1, 2, 7 | to comprehend the hidden meaning of all this. I shall leave
5 1, 3, 6 | Goethe, perceiving a profound meaning in Nature, says: "Flowers
6 1, 3, 8 | a, b, c, etc., have no meaning whatever. They are but artificial
7 1, 5, 13 | good and bad nature has no meaning whatever. According to the
8 1, 6, 7 | important,~and has profound meaning. Wherever we go we find
9 1, 6, 17 | suspicion of the existence or meaning of the message, or a dog
10 1, 6, 17 | without any hint of its meaning, or a savage could gaze
11 1, 6, 18 | Has not even grass some meaning? Does not even a stone tell
12 1, 8, 1 | have grasped the profound meaning implied in these problems,
13 1, 8, 9 | supernatural power in a meaning entirely different from
14 1, 8, 13 | the Cowherd correspond in meaning to the Five Ranks of Merit
15 1, 8, 16 | of things! He can find a meaning in every form of life. He
16 Appen, 3 (5)| highest epithet of the Buddha, meaning one who comes into the world
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