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The character 無 in cursive script. See also an animation showing the stroke order for calligraphy. The character 無 in seal script. Mu (Japanese/Korean), and Wu (Chinese traditional: 無, simplified: 无 pinyin: wú Jyutping: mou2), is a word which has been roughly translated as "no", "none", "null", "without", and "no meaning". While used in Japanese and Chinese mainly as a prefix to indicate the absence of something (e.g., 無線/无线 musen or wúxiàn for "wireless"), in English it is better known as a response to certain koans and other questions in Zen Buddhism, intending to indicate that the question itself was meaningless. The best-known mu koan is as follows: A monk asked Zhaozhou, a Chinese Zen master (known as Jōshū in Japanese), "Has a dog Buddha-nature or not?" Zhaozhou answered, "Wú" (in Japanese, Mu).[citation needed] Some earlier Buddhist thinkers maintained that animals did have the Buddha-nature, others believed that they did not.[citation needed] Therefore, to answer "no" is to deny their wisdom, whereas to say "yes" is to blindly follow their teachings.[citation needed] Zhaozhou's answer has been interpreted to mean that such categorical thinking is a delusion, that yes and no are both right and wrong.[citation needed] This koan is traditionally used by Rinzai school to initiate students into Zen study.[citation needed] [edit] Cultural references
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