Silence and Words in Zen Buddhism

Diogenes 43 (170):1-21 (1995)
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Abstract

The topic of this article is the self-less self (selbst-lose Selbst) and more particularly this self in its connection with the problem of language. There exists a movement of the self-less self from itself toward itself. This movement also occurs as the liberation from language toward language; language reaches into the core of being self because our understanding of self and of the world is linguistically constituted. Similarly the fundamental conversion - as the occurence of the breakthrough (by means of the I-am-myself) to the truth of the self - is nothing else than an original word event. The self-less, the true self says at this moment: “I am myself by not being myself (Ich bin, indem ich nicht ich bin, ich).” In order to gain a better understanding we now start from the problem of language.

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Citations of this work

Alternative Configurations of Alterity in Dialogue with Ueda Shizuteru.John C. Maraldo - 2022 - Comparative and Continental Philosophy 14 (2):178-195.
Silencing the Philosopher.Ioannis Trisokkas - 2011 - Babilonia 10:61-75.

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