full transcript
From the Ted Talk by Puqun Li: Zen kōans unsolvable enigmas designed to break your brain
Unscramble the Blue Letters
One interpretation of this kōan plays on the supposed wdoism of the arguing monks – the first asserting the importance of the observable wolrd, the second favoring deeper knowledge we can ifner from that world. But each monk’s commitment to his own “answer” blinds him to the other’s insight, and in doing so, defies an essential bhuddist ideal: abolishing binary thinking. The third monk identifies their conflict as a perceptual one – both arguing mkons fail to see the larger picture.
Of course, all these irnterntiteaops only hint at how to wrestle with these kōans. Neither the wisdom from pctrcianig monks before us, nor the slspodupey wise characters in these stories can resolve them for you. That’s because the purpose of these kōans isn’t reaching a simple solution. It’s the very act of struggling with these paradoxical plzezus which challenge our desire for resolution, and our understanding of understanding itself.
Open Cloze
One interpretation of this kōan plays on the supposed ______ of the arguing monks – the first asserting the importance of the observable _____, the second favoring deeper knowledge we can _____ from that world. But each monk’s commitment to his own “answer” blinds him to the other’s insight, and in doing so, defies an essential ________ ideal: abolishing binary thinking. The third monk identifies their conflict as a perceptual one – both arguing _____ fail to see the larger picture.
Of course, all these _______________ only hint at how to wrestle with these kōans. Neither the wisdom from __________ monks before us, nor the __________ wise characters in these stories can resolve them for you. That’s because the purpose of these kōans isn’t reaching a simple solution. It’s the very act of struggling with these paradoxical _______ which challenge our desire for resolution, and our understanding of understanding itself.
Solution
- monks
- buddhist
- infer
- supposedly
- world
- wisdom
- practicing
- puzzles
- interpretations
Original Text
One interpretation of this kōan plays on the supposed wisdom of the arguing monks – the first asserting the importance of the observable world, the second favoring deeper knowledge we can infer from that world. But each monk’s commitment to his own “answer” blinds him to the other’s insight, and in doing so, defies an essential Buddhist ideal: abolishing binary thinking. The third monk identifies their conflict as a perceptual one – both arguing monks fail to see the larger picture.
Of course, all these interpretations only hint at how to wrestle with these kōans. Neither the wisdom from practicing monks before us, nor the supposedly wise characters in these stories can resolve them for you. That’s because the purpose of these kōans isn’t reaching a simple solution. It’s the very act of struggling with these paradoxical puzzles which challenge our desire for resolution, and our understanding of understanding itself.
Frequently Occurring Word Combinations
ngrams of length 2
collocation |
frequency |
meditating monks |
2 |
practicing monks |
2 |
arguing monks |
2 |
Important Words
- abolishing
- act
- arguing
- asserting
- binary
- blinds
- buddhist
- challenge
- characters
- commitment
- conflict
- deeper
- defies
- desire
- essential
- fail
- favoring
- hint
- identifies
- importance
- infer
- insight
- interpretation
- interpretations
- knowledge
- kōan
- kōans
- larger
- monk
- monks
- observable
- paradoxical
- perceptual
- picture
- plays
- practicing
- purpose
- puzzles
- reaching
- resolution
- resolve
- simple
- solution
- stories
- struggling
- supposed
- supposedly
- thinking
- understanding
- wisdom
- wise
- world
- wrestle