“Zen is a very quick path. Zen is the path of meditation. The word Zen means emptiness or fullness, meditation. Meditation is the quickest path to enlightenment.” MeanPathMeditationEnlightenmentEmptinessFullnessIntroductionPath To Enlightenment Author:Frederick Lenz
“Zen was an attempt to get back to the purest teachings of the Buddha -enlightenment without strings.” TeachingEnlightenmentStringsGet BackIntroduction Author:Frederick Lenz
“The intuitive wisdom that comes from your infinite mind can add to your creativity, success and well-being, and can take you to the threshold of enlightenment.” MindWellsCreativityEnlightenmentInfiniteAddWell BeingIntuitiveIntroductionThreshold Author:Frederick Lenz
“Each of the small enlightenments that a Zen practitioner has, which are known in Zen as "Satori experiences," provides deeper insights into the nature of existence and helps a person prepare for complete enlightenment.” PersonsHelpingExistenceKnownEnlightenmentDeeperInsightIntroductionSatori Author:Frederick Lenz
“In Zen the emphasis is on meditation and developing your body, mind and spirit to find inner peace, strength, clarity and enlightenment.” MindBodySpiritMeditationEnlightenmentYour BodyInner PeaceClarityDevelopingEmphasisIntroduction Author:Frederick Lenz
“Zen is a very quick path to enlightenment and development of the mind and all its facilities.” MindPathDevelopmentEnlightenmentIntroductionFacilityPath To Enlightenment Author:Frederick Lenz
“From the highest state of mind you have a window whereby you could perhaps move beyond all states of mind, to enlightenment.” MindStatesMovingHighestEnlightenmentWindowState Of MindIntroductionAll State Author:Frederick Lenz
“Zen is a very fast path to enlightenment, fast in comparison to some other paths, not fast for the person who practices it. There is no sense of speed.” PersonsPracticePathEnlightenmentSpeedComparisonIntroductionPath To Enlightenment Author:Frederick Lenz
“The great intellectual tradition that comes down to us from the past was never interrupted or lost through such trifles as the sack of Rome, the triumph of Attila, or all the barbarian invasions of the Dark Ages. It was lost after the introduction of printing, the discovery of America, the founding of the Royal Society, and all the enlightenment of the Renaissance and the modern world. It was there, if anywhere, that there was lost or impatiently snapped the long thin delicate thread that had descended from distant antiquity; the thread of that unusual human hobby: the habit of thinking.” IfsThinkingWorldHumansLongAgeAmericaPastLostDarkModernHabitIntellectualEnlightenmentDiscoveryTraditionTriumphUnusualRomeDelicateThreadHobbiesRoyalFoundingModern WorldIntroductionInvasionDark AgesRenaissanceTriflesPrintingAntiquityBarbariansInterruptedDiscovery Of America Author:Gilbert K. Chesterton
“They [the mathematicians of the Enlightenment] defined their terms vaguely and used their methods loosely, and the logic of their arguments was made to fit the dictates of their intuition. In short, they broke all the laws of rigor and of mathematical decorum. The veritable orgy which followed the introduction of the infinitesimals... was but a natural reaction. Intuition had too long been held imprisoned by the severe rigor of the Greeks. Now it broke loose, and there were no Euclids to keep its romantic flight in check.” LongMadeLawUsedTermNaturalHistoryFitEnlightenmentArgumentLogicMethodIntuitionReactionsChecksFlightDefinedMathematicalBrokeGreekMathematicianSevereIntroductionRigorDecorumEuclid Author:Tobias Dantzig