A tour-de-force guide to Zen Master Dogenâs most subtle and sophisticated philosophical premises: that being and time are inseparable.
âImpermanence is time itself, being itselfâyet time and being are not at all as we imagine them to be. To really understand and fully embrace this point is to live in a radically different worldâa world of awakening, inclusion, and love. Zen Master Dogen frames the teaching on impermanence explicitly as a teaching about timeâand all of Dogenâs profoundly poetic teachings flow from his seminal understanding of time, as expressed in Uji (Being-Time), the famousâand famously difficultâessay in his masterwork, Shobogenzo. In Uji, Dogen teaches that time itself, being itself, is luminous awakening. It is all-inclusive, all-elusive, ultimately healing, and eternal.
In this book, Shinshu Roberts does full justice, as does no other book I know of, to Dogenâs words. She offers interpretation of Uji only after careful consideration and marshaling of many sourcesâand offers simple everyday examples to illustrate points that seem at first abstruse. If this text causes you to doubt your most cherished concepts about your life, it will have done its work.â
âfrom the Foreword by Norman Fischer
Being-Time thoroughly explores Dogenâs teaching on how we practice as Buddhas by understanding the relationship between being and time as it isâand as we perceive it to be. Using Dogenâs Shobogenzo Uji (The True Dharma Eye, Being-Time), Shinshu Roberts offers a twofold analysis of this teaching: the meaning of the text and practice with the text, giving examples how we apply Dogenâs complex teaching to our daily lives.