Hugues Le Gendre

Zen Mind, Beginner's Mind: Informal Talks on Zen Meditation and Practice

de Shunryu Suzuki (éd. de 2011)

Quatrième de couverture

“In the beginner’s mind there are many possibilities, but in the expert’s there are few.” So begins this most beloved of all American Zen books. Seldom has such a small handful of words provided a teaching as rich as has this famous opening line. In a single stroke, the simple sentence cuts through the pervasive tendency students have of getting so close to Zen as to completely miss what it’s all about. An instant teaching on the first page. And that’s just the beginning. In the forty years since its original publication, Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind has become one of the great modern Zen classics, much beloved, much reread, and much recommended as the best first book to read on Zen. Suzuki Roshi presents the basics—from the details of posture and breathing in zazen to the perception of nonduality—in a way that is not only remarkably clear, but that also resonates with the joy of insight from the first to the last page. It’s a book to come back to time and time again as an inspiration to practice, and it is now available to a new generation of seekers in this fortieth anniversary edition, with a new afterword by Shunryu Suzuki’s biographer, David Chadwick.

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Évaluations

Ma note :
La note de la communauté Goodreads : 4.21 pour 45 675 personnes
J'ai lu ce livre 1 fois : le 15 juil. 2018
Il fait partie des 277 livres de ma bibliothèque annotée.

Mon commentaire

A lire plusieurs fois car les paradoxes sont nombreux (c'est normal avec le Zen).