Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. D.T. Suzuki (born October 18, 1870, Kanazawa, Japan—died July 12, 1966, Kamakura) was a Japanese Buddhist scholar and thinker who was the chief interpreter of Zen Buddhism to the West.. Suzuki studied at the University of Tokyo.Early in his youth he became a disciple of Sōen, a noted Zen master of the day, and under his guidance attained the experience of satori (sudden enlightenment ...

  2. A ZEN LIFE : D. T. Suzuki Remembered . Edited by Abe Masao with photographs by Francis Haar. New York and Tokyo: Weatherhill, 1986; pp. xix + 250. ISBN 0-8348-0213-9 This fine volume fulfills a long overdue need: an evaluation and tribute to the life and spiritual task undertaken by D. T. Suzuki. As Abe Masao states in his

  3. A Zen Life: D.T. Suzuki [DVD]. Tokyo: Japan Inter-Culture Foundation, 2006. A documentary film celebrating the life and ideas of Suzuki and containing interviews with many people who knew him. The portrayal of Suzuki is sympathetic and steers clear of the controversies that emerged around him. Jaffe, Richard M. “Introduction.”

  4. Contact Marty Gross Productions, Inc. videos@martygrossfilms.com or tel. 416 536 3355. A ZEN LIFE - D.T. Suzuki is the first documentary film to present the extraordinary life of Dr. D. T. Suzuki. This vivid portrait of the man and his times includes rare footage of Suzuki himself and reminiscences by many whose lives and thinking he influenced.

  5. 11 de nov. de 2020 · Generations of Americans and Europeans learned about Zen Buddhism and its influence on Japanese culture from Suzuki Daisetz (D. T. Suzuki). This article commemorates the 150th anniversary of ...

  6. 15 de sept. de 2022 · Zen Buddhism. Of all the forms of Buddhism propounded by Suzuki Daisetsu (Daisetz) Teitarō 鈴木大拙貞太郎 ‎ ( 1870–1966 )—or, more commonly, D. T. Suzuki—he is best known for his writings on Zen 禅 ‎. It is the type of Buddhism he himself practiced and the one that made the deepest impression on him.

  7. 17 de jun. de 2008 · This litany of names is merely suggestive of the massive impact that D. T. Suzuki had on western culture — an influence that is documented in a new film, A Zen Life — because so far we haven’t mentioned the 100 or so books that have found their way (by now) into the hands of millions of people throughout the world: works that include ...