Ṣaḍdarśana, , the "Six Schools" or "Six Doctrines" of "orthodox" Indian philosophy are the schools that accept the authority of the Vedas and thus religiously are considered part of Hinduism [note].
Accepting the authority of the Vedas, however, does not mean actually using them. Mīmāṁsā and Vedānta are specifically the schools of interpretation of the Vedas; the other four are based on independent reasoning. "Heterodox" schools, which reject the authority of the Vedas, are found in separate religions, like Buddhism and Jainism, or with the rare, reviled "materialists," whose own texts have all been lost. The treatment follows P.T. Raju's The Philosophical Traditions of India [University of Pittsburgh Press, 1971, p.35]. This was the text for class I took in 1972 with K.N. (Kashi Nath) Upadhyaya (1930-2020) at the University of Hawai'i.
The fundamental division in Vedānta is whether Brahman and the Ātman are identical or different. If they are identical, we have a school of (अद्वैतवेदान्त), Advaita or "non-dual" Vedānta. A "non-dual" doctrine can also be called "Monism," that there is only one thing. If Brahman and the Ātman are different, we have a school of , Dvaita (द्वैत) or "dualistic" Vedānta. The Dvaita Vedānta of Madhva (1238–1317 AD) is a Theistic doctrine of a personal God, with the "five differences": that (1) Brahman is different from Ātmans, (2) Brahman is different from matter, (3) Ātmans are different from each other, (4) Ātmans are different from matter, and (5) pieces of matter are different from each other. Thus, it is a pluralistic metaphysics, not just dualistic.
In the "qualified" Advaita Vedānta of Ramanuja (1017–1137 AD), Brahman is a personal God, who nevertheless contains all reality, including multiple selves and the world. This may be called a "Pantheism" and is comparable to the metaphysics of Baruch Spinoza. The God of both Madhva and Ramanuja is identified as the devotionalistic deity Viṣṇu.
In the "unqualified" Advaita Vedānta of Shãnkara, Brahman is the only thing that exists, and the world and individual selves are part of illusion, Māya, (which is not illusion, but the creative power of God, for Theistic or other realistic versions of Vedanta). Since the Ātman, identical to Brahman, is not an individual self or soul, individuality over time and from life to life must be carried by the "subtle" bodies that are examined in the Māṇḍūkya Upaniṣad. Brahman is left without much in the way of positive characteristics, much like the "One" of Being in Parmenides. But there are three essential attributes of Brahman that are expressed in the formula, , Saccidānanda.
First is , sat, which is "existence." This is the same root as , satya, "truth," which turns up in the Satyāgraha, , or "Truth Force" of Mahātmā Gandhi. Second is , cit, which is consciousness. This diverges from the characterization of Being by Parmenides, who left the existence of both consciousness and the world unexplained. Here, the world, even as illusion, can exist as a representation within the consciousness of Brahman. Third and finally there is , ānanda, which is "bliss." "Ānanda" was also the name of the Buddha's personal attendant, who figures in many stories about the Buddha. Brahman is existence, consciousness, and bliss. The ultimate Self within each of us, the Ātman, is this also. So we do exist, and our consciousness is the consciousness of Brahman.
History of Philosophy, Indian Philosophy
I expected that Ṣaḍdarśana would be written in the Devanagari syllabary with a ligature combination for the retroflex d (ḍ) and the dental d. Given the regularities of such combinations, the word might look like this: . However, neither my wife nor I have been able to find such a ligature ever used. As is common in Hindi, Sanskrit in this case seems to write the two letters separately, with the virāma diacritic under the first to show that it is used without a vowel, thus: . Unicode, which automatically produces ligatures if you enter a virāma, does not produce a ligature for this combination: षड्दर्शन.
More substantively, "philosophy" itself in Sanskrit is , darśana-śāstra, where , darśana, is "seeing, appearance, view," or "thought, doctrine," and , śāstra, is "system, science" or "teaching." Thus, , dharma-śāstra, is a law code, a doctrine of dharma or "duty."
Another word for "philosophy" is found in Hindi: . This is actually read , falsafā, with a Sanskrit ligature, and where the "ph" is written with an underdot to indicate that it is an "f" from Persian or Arabic. There is no "f" in Sanskrit or Hindi. This word is clearly not borrowed from English or Greek, but from Arabic , falsafah (Unicode: فَلْسَفَة).
The tradition was that there were a "Hundred Schools" of philosophy that grew up during the Spring and Autumn Period (722-481) of the Chou (Zhou) Dynasty (1027-256 BC). Later in the Former Hàn Dynasty (206-25 AD), the historian Szu-ma Ch'ien [Sīmǎ Qiān, 司馬遷] (145-86 BC), in the Shih Chi, , "Historical Records," the first great systematic Chinese history, identified "Six Schools," Liu Chia, (or Liu Chiao, ). For these, the treatment below follows Fung Yu-lan's A Short History of Chinese Philosophy [Free Press, 1948, 1966, pp. 30-31].
The Chinese term for philosophy itself is , consisting of , "wise," and , "study." It is not clear to me if this is an ancient or a modern usage. A route along a canal in Kyōto, where one of the Kyōto School philosophers, Nishida Kitaro (1870-1945), used to stroll, is now called the , Tetsugaku-no-michi in Japanese, the "Philosopher's Walk" (literally, "Philosophy Way" or "Way of Philosophy"). This identification was probably suggested by the famous daily walk (Philosophenweg) that Immanuel Kant took in Königsberg. "Philosopher" itself is , Chê-hsüeh-chia [Wade-Giles].
While Fung Yu-lan was clearly using to mean "school," I was originally perplexed that this meaning was not immediately evident in Mathews' Chinese-English Dictionary [Harvard University Press, 1972, character #594, p.79], where the primary meaning is "a house, family, a home, relatives" (rather tellingly composed of a pig under roof, which we can imagine made for a prosperous home in much of rural China). However, a secondary meaning, "a suffix to indicate the agent... a specialist in any branch" (as used for "philosopher" above), includes the buried definition "a class or school." This is much clearer in the ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary, edited by John DeFrancis [University of Hawai'i Press, 2003, p.408], where the second definition is "school of thought." At the same time, Mathews defines [character #719, p.98] as "to teach, instruct," and "a sect, religions, doctrines," which may apply better to Confucianism and Taoism than to the other schools of philosophy. As seen below, in the expansion of the "six schools" to nine, the different meanings of the first character give rise to some ambiguity or confusion in the tradition.
Confucius himself had a simple moral and political teaching: to love others; to honor one's parents; to do what is right instead of what is of advantage; to practice "reciprocity," "don't do to others what you would not want yourself"; to rule by moral example instead of by force and violence; and so forth. Confucius thought that a ruler who had to resort to force had already failed as a ruler. This was not a principle that Chinese rulers always obeyed, but it was the ideal of benevolent rule.
During the T'ang Dynasty, the canon of Confucian Classics became the basis for the great civil service examinations that henceforth provided the magistrates and bureaucrats for the Chinese government. This system is still impressive, but it was not always to good effect. The founder of the Míng Dynasty (1368-1644) Chu Yüan-chang, an illiterate peasant who rose to expel the Mongols and win the throne, was suspicious of the influence of the scholars. He tried to balance the scholarly with the military establishment so that the scholars would not dominate the government.
Later, when the Chinese sent Admiral Chêng Ho [Zheng He], a Moslem eunuch who started out as a war prisoner slave, on seven great naval expeditions into the Indian Ocean between 1405 and 1433, it was the scholars who powerfully opposed engaging in anything so lowly as trade and dealing with such uncivilized barbarians. The expeditions, indeed, visited not only Indonesia and India, but penetrated into the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, and far down the east coast of Africa. The fleets were large, heavily manned, well armed, and contained, reportedly, ships of nine masts that were more than 400 feet long. But when the court faction of the scholars triumphed and ended the expeditions, they also destroyed their records and made it a capital offense to build anything larger than a two-masted ship.
This crippled Chinese trade and foreign involvement; and one is left to wonder just how world history would have been different had Vasco da Gama arrived in the Indian Ocean in 1498, just 65 years later, to discover an overwhelming and technologically equal or superior Chinese naval presence. In China itself, the scholars indeed went on to dominate the government and tip the balance against the military, which left the country so unprepared that in 1644 the forces of Manchuria were allowed in to deal with a rebellion. The Manchus took advantage of this to take over the country; and so the final Chinese Dynasty, the Ch'ing [Qing] (1644-1912), wasn't Chinese at all. This was probably not what the scholars would have wanted, but they had certainly brought it about.
Curiously, the Ch'ing adopted scholarly sensibilities; and although they prohibited things like foot binding among Manchu women, they nevertheless retained Ming naval and maritime policy xenophobia. This left China once again helpless when forces technologically superior to the Portuguese, especially the British, eventually arrived, irresistibly pressing for commercial access to the country. The scholars never did adapt, and the examination system was eventually abolished rather than modernized.
Although Taoism begins with considerable political advice, it ends up primarily dealing with art, beauty, and nature. Even Confucians, who otherwise concern themselves with moral and political discourse, could adopt a Taoist side through appreciation of nature and of arts like calligraphy. The proper Taoist sage, however, wanders the highways or lives in the mountains or forests alone -- the , "mountain and forest hermit" -- answering only in riddles questions put to him. This preference for the rural, individual, and paradoxical was certainly a factor in Taoist political advice not being taken very seriously. In this, they look like the Chinese equivalent of the Cynics in Greek philosophy. A Taoist Sage would never put himself forward, which is why it is probable that Lao Tzu, the "Old Master," despite legends about him meeting Confucius, did not exist. A true Taoist might think it too much to put his name on a book -- although, of course, later many did.
At left we see the Taoist mendicant "Master Gourd" from Robert van Gulik's Judge Dee story, Necklace and Calabash [1967]. Although the stereotype of the Taoist Sage is an asocial recluse, wanderer, and hermit, there is nevertheless the tradition that such person may nevertheless be the wisest in practical, including military, matters. A striking example of this is in The Romance of the Three Kingdoms, , where Liu Pei (Liu Bei), who would become the first Emperor of the Shu Han dynasty, seeks out the Taoist recluse Chu-ke Liang (Zhuge Liang), known as K'ung-ming (Kongming). Liu Pei travels three times to find and petition K'ung-ming before obtaining his services. Then K'ung-ming serves the Dynasty with superior administrative, diplomatic, strategic, and tactical abilities. Thus, while the prevalent political ideas of classical China are Confucian, there is the suspicion that the Taoists may know more about the way things work -- including magical abilities, which K'ung-ming also uses occasionally. Even Master Gourd of the Judge Dee story turns out to be involved in high level Chinese politics.
We see a bit of overlap again between Confucians and Taoists in the expression , "retired scholar." We have seen , "hidden, withdrawn," above for the Taoist hermit. But when attributed to a scholar, , it is simply "retirement." The retired Confucian, indeed, free of public office, becomes much more like a Taoist, although probably not wandering the highways or becoming a recluse in the mountains or forests.
Later Taoism grew into one of the three classical religions of China (the "Three Ways"), picking up many popular, especially magical beliefs (things like Chinese geomancy, , the art of discovering auspicious positions and orientations for homes, furniture, businesses, graves, etc.), monastic practices from Buddhism (to the disgust of Confucians), and especially a body of alchemical research whose purpose was to bring about immortality. Taoists thus worshipped a group of deities, the "Immortals," who were supposed to dwell on distant blessed islands. This desire for unnatural life extension seems to contradict the original thrust of philosophical Taoism, to allow Nature to take its course. The idea that mercury, because it preserved bodies so well in embalming (and there are some spectacular mummies found by Chinese archaeology), would be part of an elixir of immortality led to many deaths, including perhaps that of Shih-huang-ti himself, from mercury poisoning.
The Classics of Taoism are less entensive and less organized than those of Confucianism. Although Taoism counts as one of the Three Ways and thus is in one sense the equal of Confucianism and Buddhism, its books were not used for the civil service examinations and so are more of the status of the texts of other schools of philosophy than of the Confucian Classics.
This school achieved great historical significance when its views were adopted as official policy by the "First Emperor," Shih-huang-ti [] of the Ch'in [] Dynasty (255-207), tempermentally a political absolutist if there ever was one [note]. Shih-huang-ti had a ferocious and ruthless disposition that found the advice of the Legalist philosopher Li Szu [Li Si] agreeable. In 213, on Li Szu's urging, Shih-huang-ti outlawed all other schools of thought and began to burn their books. This may be why more is not known about the "Hundred Schools." Scholars who resisted the order were executed: 346 (or more) are supposed to have actually been buried alive [note]. The fall of the Ch'in Dynasty soon thereafter, which also led to the execution of Li Szu, was later seen as proof of the working of the Mandate of Heaven.
The Classics of Legalism consist of several texts:
There is one Classic of Mohism, the Mo Tzu [], named for its author.
Szu-ma Ch'ien's classification contains the schools of historical importance but one sometimes suspects that it may also artificially construct some "schools" out of disparate doctrines and thinkers. Nevertheless, there is a strong tradition, not only of the Six Schools, but of these together with three others, into the Nine Schools, . Indeed, there is a common expression in Chinese: , the "Three Religions and Nine Classes," or the "Three Great Teachings and the Nine Minor Traditions." The "Three Religions" are of course the "Three Ways" of Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism. On the other hand, , the "Nine Classes," has more than one meaning, as itself can mean "current," "class," "kind," or "set of persons." The expression can mean (1) the specific Nine Schools of philosophy, or "Nine
Traditions," given here, (2) "nine classes of literature," (3) "various religious sects and academic schools," or (4) it can mean "people in various trades," "people of all sorts," or "people of all walks of life." This latter usage curiously is said to have a derogatory overtone [note]. For our purposes, is rendered "Nine Schools." In various sources the Nine Schools tend to be given in a fixed order, begining with the Six Schools above and then passing into these, which use the more familiar :
Much of the information on the "Nine Schools" is simply gleaned out of dictionaries. These include Mathews' Chinese-English Dictionary [Harvard University Press, 1972], ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary, edited by John DeFrancis [University of Hawai'i Press, 2003], The Pinyin Chinese-English Dictonary, edited by Wu Jingrong [The Commercial Press, Beijing, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, 1979, 1985], and the Japanese Kōjien dictionary [5th printing, Tokyo Iwanami Shoten, 1999, 2005, entry for "Kyūryū," "Nine Classes"]. All these reference sources give the Nine Schools in exactly the same sequence, though often with slightly different translations. This indicates an ultimate common source in Chinese, but that is not cited.
History of Philosophy, Chinese Philosophy
The Hàn () Chinese are to be contrasted, for instance, with the Huí () Chinese, who are simply those who practice Islām, (i.e. the "religion of the Huí"), which is not one of the Three Ways. Since huí can also mean "Turks" or "Uigers," Moslem Chinese obviously were thought of as the equivalent of foreigners. Confucians originally thought of Buddhists as similarly un-Chinese; but Buddhism became so popular after the fall of the Later Hàn Dynasty (220 AD) that, by the time of the Suí (590-618) and T'ang [Táng] (618-906), it was accepted as properly Chinese. The Huí are still counted as an ethnic minority, some 6,490,000 as of 1980, and in the northern province of Ningxia constitute a majority of the population.
Although this usage has now lapsed, the Huí, or Huíhuí (), in the Ming dynasty meant Jews and Christians as well as Muslims. All three groups had come down the Silk Road from Central Asia. The original Christians in this case, of course, were the Nestorians who appeared at the T'ang court in 635. Jews as well as Muslims did not eat pork. They all used related sacred languages, like Arabic, Syriac, and Hebrew. They claimed many of the same prophets, like Abraham, Joseph, and Moses. To the Chinese then, although there might be some differences between these groups, they were more similar to each other than to anyone else, and very different in belief, language, and culture from the Chinese.
Shih-huang-ti, the "First Emperor," came to the throne as Wang Cheng in 247, changed his name, inventing the title of Emperor (), after the unification of China in 221, and died in 209.
Mao Tse-tung is reported as saying in 1958:
Mao is often compared, not surprisingly, to Shih-huang-ti.
A source on the Internet gave this interesting breakdown of the "Nine Schools" as the "Nine Classes," or perhaps "Nine Sets of Persons," in high, middle, and low forms. We go from exalted offices, to the respectable, to the disreputable. Of the latter, the only one that seem positively illegal in traditional China (where brothels and procurers could be legitimate) would be a robber -- however, one might not be elligible to enter the Chinese examination system unless from a family that had not engaged in these "base occupations" for three generations. This is all very different from the ancient theory of the Four Classes, , and it hardly seems exaustive in terms of possible offices, trades, crafts, or professions.
I've been trying to track down all the Chinese terms here. Those with tones have been identified. Many do not occur in the ABC Chinese-English Comprehensive Dictionary, by John DeFrancis [Hawai'i, 2003], or in translation pages on the internet. I have made some substitutions already, and more will be necessary. For instance, guī is glossed by DeFrancis as "boudoir; women's quarters." This is perhaps a promising start for "procurer," but it does not mean that by itself. We would need at least another character, but I do not see a bionome in DeFrancis or in Mathews' Chinese Dictionary [Harvard, 1972, character 3613] that would extend the meaning. If there is some other "gui" meaning "procurer," I have not found it. Similar problems occur elsewhere. Other characters could be provided, but I have limited it so far to the interesting Chinese character for a Buddhist monk, which by itself actually means the Sangha, the monastic community. "Monk" proper would be , with a suffix that I have added for "Taoist priest."
The "Six Schools," Rokushū, , in Japanese history are the speculative, doctrinal, and disciplinary schools of Buddhism that existed during the Nara Period, 710-794, when a permanent Japanese capital was first established, at Nara. As wel will see, the numbers of Buddhist schools expands as Japanese history continues.
The Nara Schools represent a mix of speculative metaphysics from India with a couple of important Chinese schools. The first three never really existed as distinct institutional entities and did not embody any novel religious doctrine or practice. The treatment follows Earl Miner, Hiroko Odagiri, & Robert E. Morrell, The Princeton Campanion to Classical Japanese Literature [Princeton University Press, 1985, p. 369-385].
Shū, , tends to be used for sects of Buddhism, or religions, while the term seen above, , means "household," "school," or "member of a school," as in , Juka in Japanese, "Confucianism" or a "Confucianist." , kyō in Japanese, can mean "teaching," "doctrine," "religion," etc. "Buddhism" is thus , with the character that is used in Chinese, or , with the simplified character that now tends to be used in Japanese, both pronounced Bukkyō in Japanese. Or "Buddhism" can be , Butsudō, the "Buddha Way." , bukka or, more commonly, bukke in Japanese, can mean a Buddhist, or, more commonly, a Buddhist priest (i.e. Japanese monk). The combination by itself means "religion."
The Six Schools expanded to Eight in the Heian Period (794-1185), when the capital moved permanently to Kyōto:
When the Tokugawa settled on Edo as their capital, in 1625 the Tōeizan, 東叡山, Kan'ei-ji, 寛永寺, Tendai Temple was founded at Ueno, northeast of the palace and castle of Edo, to guard the Demon Gate, just as at Kyōto. This also became the site of many of the Tokugawa burials. Without an actual moutain, however, Ueno has nothing like the presence of Mt. Hiei, which simply looms over Kyōto; and people are mainly attracted to Ueno Park for its spaces, its cherry blossoms, and its museums. The Tokugawa mausoleum there was destroyed in World War II, and the present Tokugawa burial monuments are closed to the public.
Most of the later Kamakura schools were essentially spinoffs from Tendai, which commemorates them with a hall on Mt. Hiei that displays the portraits of Kamakura founders who studied on the mountain.
Tendai itself emphasized Nirvāṇa in this life, the power of the Lotus Sutra -- , Myōhō-Renge-kyō in Japanese -- and devotion to the Buddha Amitābha, , Amida in Japanese, whose Pure Land was available to anyone who invoked the power of the Vow of Amida with the Nembutsu mantra: "Namu Amida Butsu []."
Tendai practice on Mt. Hiei was Lotus Sutra in the morning, Pure Land in the evening. This was vividly formalized by the Abbot Ryōgen in 936, when corresponding adjacent halls for Lotus and Pure Land practice were joined by a covered walkway -- creating a , Japanese Ninaidō, or "carrying hall," i.e. by analogy to the two buckets at the ends of a carrying pole. This duality is expressed in the saying Asa Daimoku, Yū Nembutsu, , (朝題目, 夕念佛, zhāotímù, xìniànfó), "Morning Daimoku [the title of the Lotus Sutra], Evening Nembutsu."
The dualism of this was subsequently broken by Hōnen, who posited the Nembutsu as the only effective practice in the Final Dharma Age of Mappō. Nichiren responded to this by asserting that only the Lotus Sutra was the final and effective practice in Mappō. Consequently, Asa Daimoku, Yū Nembutsu began to mean "can't make up your mind" -- their unity in Tendai practice was often forgotten.
However, since the focus of Pure Land and Lotus practices was different, with Pure Land preparing for the afterlife, with careful attention to deathbed ritual, and Nichiren Lotus devotion focusing on benefits in this life, there is no particular reason why these should exclude each other or be hostile. Thus, their unity in Tendai begins to sound more reasonable, and the "carrying hall" a vivid symbol.
The monastic army of Mt. Hiei was long a factor in the politics of Kyōto, until in 1571 it was destroyed and the mountain burned by the "Dictator" Oda Nobunaga. The burning destroyed the library and records of the Sect, which was a catastrophic loss to history. And Esoteric influence on the other Sects of Buddhism was considerable. The Nembutsu and Nichiren's use of the title of the Lotus Sutra, the Daimoku, 題目 (tímù, "title"), both functioned as Esoteric mantras, while Nichiren substituted for Buddha images a caligraphic mandala based on the Daimoku.
During the Period of the Kamakura Shōguns (1185-1333) the traditional number of schools expanded to Twelve:
A fierce polemicist, Nichiren and then his followers became known for annoying the government, engaging in acrimonious, distruptive debate with other sects, and refusing to participate in the sort of eclectic practices common to Japanese religion or to accept money from non-believers, including even the Shōguns.
The latter refusal was often interpreted as lèse majesté and provoked torture, executions, and suppression of particularly offensive parts of the Sect. Apart from Christians, Nichiren Buddhism thus probably has the largest number of martyrs in Japanese religious history. On the other hand, we also get kabuki comedy skits of encounters between Nichiren and Pure Land monks, who seem to reduce their disagreements to absurdities.
Shown below is a Nichiren Shū temple in Izu, with its distinctive banners of the Daimoku. Nichiren Shū is the principle Nichiren sect in Japan, but it is less infamous than Nichiren Shōshū, perhaps the most rigorous of the Nichiren sects, and previously conspicuous for its large lay organization, the Soka Gakkai, which helped spread Nichiren Shōshū overseas.
The "Gakkai" and Nichiren Shōshū, however, split in 1991, principally over the ambition of the Gakkai to be, as it were, the tail wagging the dog. For instance, in Southern California, where the Soka Gakkai headquarters was on Wilshire Blvd. in Santa Monica, one of the busiest places in the metropolitan area, the Myōhōji temple was located in Rancho Cucamonga, well East of Los Angeles, to prevent casual contact between Gakkai members and the priesthood. After the split, the Myōhōji was relocated to Crescent Heights Blvd. in Hollywood. All the Kamakura schools were more interested in practice than in speculative metaphysics and consequently came to dominate popular religion. The Nichiren Sect briefly ruled Kyoto in the Hoke-ikki, 法華一揆, or Lotus Uprising, 1532 to 1536. The Sect had become popular among the sake brewers, whose influence, already considerable in Japanese society, was magnified as they had also become money lenders.
History of Philosophy, Buddhist Philosophy
The "Six Schools" of Indian Philosophy, Note
THE "SIX SCHOOLS" OF CHINESE PHILOSOPHY
Copyright (c) 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2013, 2014, 2020, 2023 Kelley L. Ross, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved
The "Six Schools" of Chinese Philosophy, Note 1
The "Six Schools" of Chinese Philosophy, Note 2
The "Six Schools" of Chinese Philosophy, Note 3
What's so unusual about Emperor Shih Huang of the Chin Dynasty? He had buried alive 460 scholars only, but we have buried alive 46,000 scholars....We are 100 times ahead of Emperor Shih of the Chin Dynasty in repression of counter-revolutionary scholars.
The "Six Schools" of Chinese Philosophy, Note 4
The Three Religions and the Nine Classes High, Middle, Low, 1 prime minister, zǎixiàng doctor, yisheng brothel owner, wángba 2 grand historiographer, shàngshū fortune-teller, jin procurer, gui? 3 governor general, dūfǔ scrivener, piaohang actor, xìzi 4 provincial commissioner, fāngbó glyphomancer, tui bugler, chuīshǒu 5 provincial commander, títái itinerant musician, qinqi conjurer, móshùshī 6 brigade general, zhentai calligrapher, painter, shuhuà juggler, xiaocai? 7 intendant of Circuit, dàotái Buddhist monk, barber, lǐfàsī 8 prefect, zhīfǔ Taoist priest, dàoren robber, dàomài 9 deputy of magistrates, zhīzhōu physiognomist, mayi drug trafficker, chuihui
THE "SIX SCHOOLS" OF JAPAN
Nichiren calms the waters Copyright (c) 1996, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2018, 2020, 2022, 2023, 2024 Kelley L. Ross, Ph.D. All Rights Reserved