Kyozan: A True Man of Zen: Difference between revisions
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::Printing by Mohndruck, Gütersloh, West Germany | ::Printing by Mohndruck, Gütersloh, West Germany | ||
::Introduction: [[Sw Anand Robin]] M.A.(Cantab.) | ::Introduction: [[Sw Anand Robin]] M.A.(Cantab.) | ||
:: <gallery widths=300px heights= | :: <gallery widths=300px heights=220px > | ||
Image:Kyozan - Cover-front & back.jpg|Cover-front & back. | Image:Kyozan - Cover-front & back.jpg|Cover-front & back. | ||
Image:Kyozan - Endpaper-front.jpg|Endpaper-front. | Image:Kyozan - Endpaper-front.jpg|Endpaper-front. |
Revision as of 00:03, 31 December 2015
- Kyōzan was such a simple and ordinary man that, as his own master put it, if it was possible for him to become enlightened, then it is possible for anyone. These discourses - based on anecdotes about Kyōzan's life and on a selection of exquisite haikus - are filled with that promise. Osho uses Kyōzan's life to make Zen as accessible to the contemporary seeker as preparing a cup of tea.
- notes
- time period of Osho's original talks/writings
- Dec 3, 1988 to Dec 6, 1988 : timeline
- number of discourses/chapters
- 4
editions
Kyozan: A True Man of Zen
Cover-front & back. Endpaper-front. Pages VI - VII. Pages VIII - IX. Pages X - XI. Pages XII - XIII. Pages XIV - XV. Pages 54 - 55. Pages 58 - 59. Endpaper-back. | |
Kyozan: A True Man of Zen
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