Zen: Confounding the Intellect | Teen Ink

Zen: Confounding the Intellect

December 2, 2012
By LausDeo PLATINUM, Aurora, Colorado
LausDeo PLATINUM, Aurora, Colorado
31 articles 0 photos 3 comments

Favorite Quote:
"There is always some madness in love. But there is also always some reason in madness."--William Wordsworth


With this hindrance we have
come to call our own
we strike at the infinite to expand
our limitation as hindrance
no more;
We must supply the vital with
unintentional faculty which is
the nature of the mind
and not the pieces
we put together.


The author's comments:
One major idea in Zen Buddhism is to confound or confuse the intellect. Although the intellect is important, there is a higher intelligence to arrive at with curiosity instead of certainty. The trouble with our usual approach to confusion is that we so desperately want it to go away that we’ll hastily arrive at a resolution whether it’s an appropriate one or not, simply for the sake of allaying the great discomfort that goes hand in hand with confusion. We might impulsively say something hurtful that we later regret, or break off a relationship rather than sitting with the possibility that the other person might do it first. Zen teaches the student not to arrive at a conclusion using solely the intellect, because the intellect itself has it limitations on understanding reality. Curiosity is better than certainty; asking questions is more important than having an answer.

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