"While I am thinking about it there is a very good book on Buddhism recently 
out called 'Buddhism, Plain and Simple', by Steve Hagen and published by Tuttle 
Publishing. I recommend you get it because it shows the similarities, between 
the MOQ and Zen Buddhism more clearly than any other I have seen."

Pirsig to McWatt, May 6th 1998.


--- 

  
   "When buddhas look at the world, they don't _see_ solidity.  They don't 
_see_ selves_.  They see only flux.
 
   "This is not to say that the awakened no longer see forms like the rest of 
us.  They do.  But they _see_ forms --- or, rather, "formness" --- illusory.  
They _see_ that all things arise together.  They _see_ that the apparent 
existence of anything is dependent on all that it is not.  And they _see_ this 
dependence as nothing other than change and motion themselves.
 
   "The Buddha called this phenomena dependent arising.  Dependent arising is 
the formula, "When this arises, that becomes."  When the days lengthen, spring 
flowers bloom.  When days shorten, autumn colors appear and leaves fall from 
the trees.  Spring glowers are inseparable from lengthening days; autumn colors 
are inseparable from days of less and less light.  Indeed, spring flowers _are_ 
the longer days; fall color _are_ the shorter days.  In Reality, all phenomena 
work together as a seamless whole. 

   "Dependent arising is not vague, mystical, remote, intellectual stuff.  The 
buddha-dharma is very practical and down-to-earth.  Just pay very close 
attention to your actual experience, and you'll _see_ it for yourself."  
 
 
   (Hagen, Steve, ‘Buddhism: Plain and Simple’, p.146)
 
 
 

___
 

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