Hi, Anthony.  You see the dark side, I see the light side. You see
'incompatibility', I see a variety of  meditation types for people of
different  personality types, preferences, and degrees of practice
experience.

--ED



--- In [email protected], "SteveW" <eugnostos2000@...> wrote:


> Hi Anthony. I think that there is a clear difference between any form
of insight-awareness and single-point concentration.

I think the same too, but your or my 'opinion' does not count for much.
But what you say is what the Buddha has stated; what the most ancient
Thervada Buddhist teachings say; what Tibetan Buddhism says; and what
zazen comprises.



> I don't say "zen meditation" because I have noticed that there are
differing opinions on this list as to what
that term means. However, I do think that both are useful in their own
way. IMO.
Steve


The opinion of lay folk does not count for much, and that includes my
opinions, except for this opinon.         --ED



--- In [email protected]
</group/Zen_Forum/post?postID=gC8tF7TTbvmvB7lC2t90W1bQTTA-Pr50KhsmpOMRoH\
9lftb2xG6MEt9lCIIqgEn4lYDqV4yWMcG6FKKovMAHlMIa5w> , Anthony Wu
<wuasg@...> wrote:
>
> Steve/ED,
>
> IMO, zen meditation is incompatible with concentration on anything
such as vipassana or visualization (e.g. in Tantra), though I don't deny
they have their merits. What do you think?

> So you cannot do everything down the list because some of them
contradict with
others.
>
> Anthony







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