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Sha, Zhiyi - MED - Neurology Department, University of Minnesota neurology.umn.edu |
Zhiyi (Chinese: 智顗; pinyin: zhì yǐ; Wade-Giles: Chih-I; Japanese: Chigi) (538–597) is traditionally listed as the fourth patriarch, but actually is the founder of the Tiantai tradition of Buddhism in China. Zhiyi is famous for being the first in the history of Chinese Buddhism to elaborate a complete, critical and systematic classification of the Buddhist teachings, in order to explain the seemingly contradictory doctrines of Buddhism. He is also regarded as the first major figure to make a significant break from the Indian tradition, to form an indigenous Chinese system. Born with the surname Chen (陳) in Huarong, Jing Prefecture (荊州華容), Zhiyi left home to become a monk at eighteen, after the loss of his parents and his hometown Jiangling that fell to the Western Wei army when Zhiyi was seventeen. At 23, he received his most important influences from his first teacher, Nanyue Huisi (慧思) (515-577), a meditation master who would later be listed as Zhiyi's predecessor in the Tiantai lineage. After a period of study with Huisi, he spent some time working in the southern capital of Jinling (金陵). Then in 575 he went to Tiantai mountain for intensive study and practice with a group of disciples. Here he worked on adapting the Indian meditation principles of śamatha and vipaśyanā (translated as "zhi" and "guan") into a complex system of self-cultivation practice that also incorporated devotional rituals and confession/repentance rites. Then in 585 he returned to Jinling, where he completed his monumental commentarial works on the Lotus Sutra, the Fahua wenzhu (587), and the Fahua xuanyi (593). Among his many important works are the Mohe Zhiguan, Liumiao Famen, Fahua Wenzhu, and Fahua Xuanyi. Of the works attributed to him (although many may have been written by his disciples), about thirty are extant. Chappell (1987: p. 247) holds that Zhiyi: "...provided a religious framework which seemed suited to adapt to other cultures, to evolve new practices, and to universalize Buddhism."[1] Zhiyi and Bodhidharma were contemporaneous[2], though Zhiyi had royal patronage whilst Bodhidharma did not.
[edit] Four SamadhiChih-i developed a curriculum of practice which was distilled into the 'Four Samadhi' (Chinese: 四種三昧[3]; Wade-Giles: ?).[4] These Four Samadhi were expounded in Zhiyi's 'Mohe Zhiguan' (Chinese: 摩訶止観, Jpn.: Makashikan).[5] The Mohe Zhiguan is the magnum opus of Zhiyi's maturity and is held to be a "grand summary" (p. 2) of the Buddhist Tradition according to his experience and understanding at that time.[2] The text of the Mohe Zhiguan was refined from lectures Zhiyi gave in 594 in the capital city of Chin-ling and was the sum of his experience at Mount T’ien-t’ai c.585 and inquiry thus far.[6] Parsing the title, 'zhi' refers to "ch’an meditation and the concentrated and quiescent state attained thereby" (p. 4) and 'guan' refers to "contemplation and the wisdom attained thereby" (p. 4).[7] Swanson (2002: p. 4) reports that Chih-i held that there are two modes of 'chih-kuan': that of sitting in meditation 坐, and that of “responding to objects in accordance with conditions” 歴縁対境, which is further refined as abiding in the natural state of a calm and insightful mind under any and all activities and conditions.[7] Swanson (2002: p. 1) states that Zhiyi in the Mohe Zhiguan:
The "Samadhi of One Practice" (Chinese: 一行三昧; Chinese: Yixing Sanmei; Japanese: ichigyō sanmai) which is also known as the "samadhi of oneness" or the "calmness in which one realizes that all dharmas are the same" (Wing-tsit Chan), is one of the Four Samadhi that both refine, mark the passage to, and qualify the state of perfect enlightenment expounded in the Mohe Zhiguan.[9] The term "Samadhi of Oneness" was subsequently used by Daoxin.[10] The Four Samadhi:
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