Results 181 to 190 of about 60,666 (237)
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THE CHINESE DOCTRINAL ACCEPTANCE OF BUDDHISM

Journal of Chinese Philosophy, 1997
L'A. etudie la nature l'esprit continental chinois afin d'expliquer l'acceptation doctrinale, ideologique et methodologique du bouddhisme par la pensee chinoise ancienne representee par les traditions confucianiste et taoiste. Examiannt la triade cosmologique ciel-terre-humanite propre au concept de Tao et le processus dynamique de l'etre et du non ...
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Buddhisms in Diaspora: The Canadian Context of Chinese Buddhism

2019
Abstract Any discussion of Chinese Buddhist diaspora communities in Canada must account for the broader context within which they have been subsumed. To a great extent the timing and nature of Chinese Buddhist activity in Canada was determined by a legacy of racism and harsh immigration laws that were not fully reformed until the late
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The language of Chinese Buddhism

International Journal of Chinese Linguistics, 2018
AbstractThis is a more detailed introduction of the language of Chinese Buddhism based on our latest research of Buddhist Chinese, which is a modern Chinese historical linguistic category applied to a form of written Chinese originated for and used in Buddhist texts, including the translations into Chinese of Indian Buddhist scriptures and all Chinese ...
Qingzhi Zhu, Bohan Li
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Chinese language and Buddhism

2019
This chapter gives an overview of important issues related to the Chinese language in the context of Buddhism as well as Buddhist philosophy and culture. First, important technical terms in Chinese Buddhism are introduced to outline Buddhist views on language, with focus on Chan genres and their unique manipulation of language.
Jiandao Shi, Jianxun Shi, Jiajuan Xiong
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The Characteristics of Chinese Buddhism

Contemporary Chinese Thought, 2010
(2010). The Characteristics of Chinese Buddhism. Contemporary Chinese Thought: Vol. 41, No. 4, pp. 38-46.
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The Reinterpretation of Chinese Buddhism

The China Quarterly, 1965
China was the second country in the Buddhist world to have a Communist government. The first was Mongolia. But Mongolia was isolated both geographically and by its form of Buddhism (shared only with Tibet). Chinese Buddhists, on the other hand, had been building closer ties with their brethren in South-East Asia for more than half a century. Their form
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Chinese Buddhism

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1926
Lucius C. Porter, Lewis Hodous
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Buddhism and the Chinese Tradition

Diogenes, 1964
Probably the most momentous experience in the contacts and mergings among civilizations in the Far East—one shared by China, Japan and Korea—is the introduction of Buddhism from India. This is, of course, a subject on which much has already been written, and even when narrowed to China alone its complexities do not lend themselves readily to summary ...
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Truth and Tradition in Chinese Buddhism: A Study of Chinese Mahayana Buddhism

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1969
R. L. Backus   +2 more
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Buddhism in Chinese History

Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies, 1960
Lien-sheng Yang, Arthur F. Wright
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