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Medicine Buddha Sutra
Medicine Buddha Sutra 藥師琉璃光如來本願功德經 Fo Guang Shan International Translation Center b c © 2002, 2005 Buddha’s Light Publishing © 2015 Fo Guang Shan International Translation Center Table of Contents Published by the Fo Guang Shan International Translation Center 3456 Glenmark Drive Hacienda Heights, CA 91745 U.S.A. Tel: (626) 330-8361 / (626) 330-8362 Incense Praise 3 Fax: (626) 330-8363 www.fgsitc.org Sutra Opening Verse 5 Protected by copyright under the terms of the International Copyright Medicine Buddha Sutra 7 Union; all rights reserved. Except for fair use in book reviews, no part of this book may be reproduced for any reason by any means, including any method of photographic reproduction, without permission of the publisher. Triple Refuge 137 Printed in Taiwan. Dedication of Merit 139 A Paryer to Medicine Buddha 141 2 3 Lu Xiang Zan 爐 香 讚 Incense Praise Lu Xiang Zha Ruo Incense burning in the censer, 爐 香 乍 爇 Fa Jie Meng Xun All space permeated with fragrance. 法 界 蒙 熏 Zhu Fo Hai Hui Xi Yao Wen The Buddhas perceive it from every direction, 諸 佛 海 會 悉 遙 聞 Sui Chu Jie Xiang Yun Auspicious clouds gather everywhere. 隨 處 結 祥 雲 With our sincerity, Cheng Yi Fang Yin 誠 意 方 殷 The Buddhas manifest themselves in their entirety. Zhu Fo Xian Quan Shen 諸 佛 現 全 身 Nan Mo Xiang Yun Gai Pu Sa 南 無 香 雲 蓋 菩 薩 Mo He Sa We take refuge in the Bodhisattvas-Mahasattvas. 摩 訶 薩 4 5 Kai Jing Ji 開 經 偈 Sutra Opening Verse Wu Shang Shen Shen Wei Miao Fa 無 上 甚 深 微 妙 法 The unexcelled, most profound, and exquisitely Bai Qian Wan Jie Nan Zao Yu wondrous Dharma, 百 千 萬 劫 難 遭 遇 Is difficult to encounter throughout hundreds of Wo Jin Jian Wen De Shou Chi thousands of millions of kalpas. -
Fine Chinese Art / 中國藝術集珍/ Buddhism & Hinduism (CA0321)
TWO-DAY AUCTION - Fine Chinese Art / 中 國藝術集珍 / Buddhism & Hinduism (CA0321) Fri, 5th Mar 2021 Lot 90 Starting price: €500 Estimate: €1000 A BEIGE JADE ‘BAT AND COIN’ CARVING, QING DYNASTY 清代玉蝙蝠五銖幣 China, 18th century. Masterfully carved as a bat resting with its wings spread out over a Wu Zhu cash coin. The semitranslucent stone of an even, pale beige color with cloudy white and russet inclusions as well as scattered grayish black patches. Note the finely incised detail work. Provenance: From a notable English private collector of Chinese jades. Condition: Good condition, one small chip and few minuscule nibbles to edges, the stone with natural fissures, some of which have developed into small hairline cracks over time. Weight: 20.9 g Dimensions: Width 4.2 cm Wu Zhu is a type of Chinese cash coin produced from the Han dynasty in 118 BC when they replaced the earlier San Zhu coins, until they themselves were replaced by the Kaiyuan Tongbao coins of the Tang dynasty in 621 AD. The name Wu Zhu literally means ‘five zhu’, which is a measuring unit officially weighing about 4 grams. In reality however, the weights and sizes of Wu Zhu cash coins varied significantly over the years. During the Han dynasty a large quantity of Wu Zhu coins were cast, but their production continued under subsequent dynasties until the Sui. Minting definitively ended in 618 with the establishment of the Tang dynasty. Wu Zhu coins were cast from 118 BC to 618 AD, having a span of 736 years, the longest for any coin in the history of the world. -
Ming China As a Gunpowder Empire: Military Technology, Politics, and Fiscal Administration, 1350-1620 Weicong Duan Washington University in St
Washington University in St. Louis Washington University Open Scholarship Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations Arts & Sciences Winter 12-15-2018 Ming China As A Gunpowder Empire: Military Technology, Politics, And Fiscal Administration, 1350-1620 Weicong Duan Washington University in St. Louis Follow this and additional works at: https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds Part of the Asian History Commons, and the Asian Studies Commons Recommended Citation Duan, Weicong, "Ming China As A Gunpowder Empire: Military Technology, Politics, And Fiscal Administration, 1350-1620" (2018). Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 1719. https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/art_sci_etds/1719 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Arts & Sciences at Washington University Open Scholarship. It has been accepted for inclusion in Arts & Sciences Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Washington University Open Scholarship. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY IN ST. LOUIS DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY Dissertation Examination Committee: Steven B. Miles, Chair Christine Johnson Peter Kastor Zhao Ma Hayrettin Yücesoy Ming China as a Gunpowder Empire: Military Technology, Politics, and Fiscal Administration, 1350-1620 by Weicong Duan A dissertation presented to The Graduate School of of Washington University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy December 2018 St. Louis, Missouri © 2018, -
PACIFIC WORLD Journal of the Institute of Buddhist Studies
PACIFIC WORLD Journal of the Institute of Buddhist Studies Third Series Number 17 2015 Special Issue: Fiftieth Anniversary of the Bukkyō Dendō Kyōkai A Commentary on The Upadeśa on the Sutras of Limitless Life with Gāthās on the Resolution to Be Born Composed by the Bodhisattva Vasubandhu: Expository Commentary by the Monk Tanluan Trans. by Roger Corless† Trans. revised and updated by Takahiko Kameyama Ed. by Richard K. Payne ABBREVIATIONS AND NOTES Vasubandhu’s gāthās and upadeśa appear in italics Footnotes and bracketed material by Roger Corless, unless noted RKP = Richard K. Payne TK = Takahiko Kameyama T. = Taishō Shinshū Daizōkyō K. = Kashiwabara Yūgi, Shinshū Tsūge Zensho, cited by page number and (sometimes) note number in the jige sections of vol. 1 S.B.E. = Sacred Books of the East. Cited by volume, part (if applicable), and page Morohashi = Morohashi Tetsuji, Dai Kan-Wa Jiten, cited by entry number The Comma = Vasubandhu’s text v.l. = varia lectio, variant reading: a character that appears in the Apparatus (T. footnote) rather than the text 69 70 Pacific World [FIRST JUAN, T. 40:826A–834C] [INTRODUCTION, 826A28–827A1] [General Purport and Authenticity of the Work, 826a28–b28] I respectfully refer to the Explanation of the Ten Stages of the Bodhisattva Path (Daśabhūmikavibhāṣā śāstra)1 written by the Bodhisattva Nāgārjuna,2 who tells us that there are two ways in which a bodhisattva may attain to the stage from which one never regresses (avaivartika, apibazhi 阿毘跋致).3 The first is the path of difficult practice (nanxing dao 難行道) and the second is the path of easy practice (yixing dao 易 行道). -
Chinese Zheng and Identity Politics in Taiwan A
CHINESE ZHENG AND IDENTITY POLITICS IN TAIWAN A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI‘I AT MĀNOA IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY IN MUSIC DECEMBER 2018 By Yi-Chieh Lai Dissertation Committee: Frederick Lau, Chairperson Byong Won Lee R. Anderson Sutton Chet-Yeng Loong Cathryn H. Clayton Acknowledgement The completion of this dissertation would not have been possible without the support of many individuals. First of all, I would like to express my deep gratitude to my advisor, Dr. Frederick Lau, for his professional guidelines and mentoring that helped build up my academic skills. I am also indebted to my committee, Dr. Byong Won Lee, Dr. Anderson Sutton, Dr. Chet- Yeng Loong, and Dr. Cathryn Clayton. Thank you for your patience and providing valuable advice. I am also grateful to Emeritus Professor Barbara Smith and Dr. Fred Blake for their intellectual comments and support of my doctoral studies. I would like to thank all of my interviewees from my fieldwork, in particular my zheng teachers—Prof. Wang Ruei-yu, Prof. Chang Li-chiung, Prof. Chen I-yu, Prof. Rao Ningxin, and Prof. Zhou Wang—and Prof. Sun Wenyan, Prof. Fan Wei-tsu, Prof. Li Meng, and Prof. Rao Shuhang. Thank you for your trust and sharing your insights with me. My doctoral study and fieldwork could not have been completed without financial support from several institutions. I would like to first thank the Studying Abroad Scholarship of the Ministry of Education, Taiwan and the East-West Center Graduate Degree Fellowship funded by Gary Lin. -
340336 1 En Bookbackmatter 251..302
A List of Historical Texts 《安禄山事迹》 《楚辭 Á 招魂》 《楚辭注》 《打馬》 《打馬格》 《打馬錄》 《打馬圖經》 《打馬圖示》 《打馬圖序》 《大錢圖錄》 《道教援神契》 《冬月洛城北謁玄元皇帝廟》 《風俗通義 Á 正失》 《佛说七千佛神符經》 《宮詞》 《古博經》 《古今圖書集成》 《古泉匯》 《古事記》 《韓非子 Á 外儲說左上》 《韓非子》 《漢書 Á 武帝記》 《漢書 Á 遊俠傳》 《和漢古今泉貨鑒》 《後漢書 Á 許升婁傳》 《黃帝金匱》 《黃神越章》 《江南曲》 《金鑾密记》 《經國集》 《舊唐書 Á 玄宗本紀》 《舊唐書 Á 職官志 Á 三平准令條》 《開元別記》 © Springer Science+Business Media Singapore 2016 251 A.C. Fang and F. Thierry (eds.), The Language and Iconography of Chinese Charms, DOI 10.1007/978-981-10-1793-3 252 A List of Historical Texts 《開元天寶遺事 Á 卷二 Á 戲擲金錢》 《開元天寶遺事 Á 卷三》 《雷霆咒》 《類編長安志》 《歷代錢譜》 《歷代泉譜》 《歷代神仙通鑑》 《聊斋志異》 《遼史 Á 兵衛志》 《六甲祕祝》 《六甲通靈符》 《六甲陰陽符》 《論語 Á 陽貨》 《曲江對雨》 《全唐詩 Á 卷八七五 Á 司馬承禎含象鑒文》 《泉志 Á 卷十五 Á 厭勝品》 《勸學詩》 《群書類叢》 《日本書紀》 《三教論衡》 《尚書》 《尚書考靈曜》 《神清咒》 《詩經》 《十二真君傳》 《史記 Á 宋微子世家 Á 第八》 《史記 Á 吳王濞列傳》 《事物绀珠》 《漱玉集》 《說苑 Á 正諫篇》 《司馬承禎含象鑒文》 《私教類聚》 《宋史 Á 卷一百五十一 Á 志第一百四 Á 輿服三 Á 天子之服 皇太子附 后妃之 服 命婦附》 《宋史 Á 卷一百五十二 Á 志第一百五 Á 輿服四 Á 諸臣服上》 《搜神記》 《太平洞極經》 《太平廣記》 《太平御覽》 《太上感應篇》 《太上咒》 《唐會要 Á 卷八十三 Á 嫁娶 Á 建中元年十一月十六日條》 《唐兩京城坊考 Á 卷三》 《唐六典 Á 卷二十 Á 左藏令務》 《天曹地府祭》 A List of Historical Texts 253 《天罡咒》 《通志》 《圖畫見聞志》 《退宮人》 《萬葉集》 《倭名类聚抄》 《五代會要 Á 卷二十九》 《五行大義》 《西京雜記 Á 卷下 Á 陸博術》 《仙人篇》 《新唐書 Á 食貨志》 《新撰陰陽書》 《續錢譜》 《續日本記》 《續資治通鑑》 《延喜式》 《顏氏家訓 Á 雜藝》 《鹽鐵論 Á 授時》 《易經 Á 泰》 《弈旨》 《玉芝堂談薈》 《元史 Á 卷七十八 Á 志第二十八 Á 輿服一 儀衛附》 《雲笈七籖 Á 卷七 Á 符圖部》 《雲笈七籖 Á 卷七 Á 三洞經教部》 《韻府帬玉》 《戰國策 Á 齊策》 《直齋書錄解題》 《周易》 《莊子 Á 天地》 《資治通鑒 Á 卷二百一十六 Á 唐紀三十二 Á 玄宗八載》 《資治通鑒 Á 卷二一六 Á 唐天寶十載》 A Chronology of Chinese Dynasties and Periods ca. -
2020 an Li, Dong Jiang, Xiangwen Sun, Zicheng Liu Huazhong University of Science and Technology, China
TABLE OF CONTENTS Please follow the “Important Instruction for Electronic Proceedings” to change the preference in Adobe Reader so that a new window will be opened after you click the Blue paper title to read that paper. After viewing the paper, you can go back to the Table of Content window to continue reading. Monday, October 12 Special Session 1-A: Prof. Tom Lipo Memorial Session 1 Chair(s): Thomas Jahns, Bulent Sarlioglu Designing a Magnetic Gear for an Electric Aircraft Drivetrain [#0736] ............................................... 1 Ho Yin (David) Wong1, Hossein Baninajar1,2, Bertrand Dechant2, Jonathan Bird1,2 1Portland State University, United States; 2FluxMagic, Inc., United States Methods to Determine the Stator Inter-Turn Short Circuit in an Induction Motor with Installed Rotor [#0312] .......................................................................................................................... 7 Dimas Anton Asfani1, I Made Yulistya Negara1, I Gusti Ngurah Satriyadi Hernanda1, Daniar Fahmi1, Eduard Muljadi2, Robert M. Nelms2 1Institut Teknologi Sepuluh Nopember, Indonesia; 2Auburn University, United States Investigation of Asymmetric Consequent-Pole Hybrid Excited Flux Reversal Machines [#0011] ......... 14 F.R. Wei, Z.Q. Zhu, X.Y. Sun The University of Sheffield, United Kingdom Design Optimization of Coreless Axial-Flux PM Machines with Litz Wire and PCB Stator Windings [#1494] ................................................................................................................ 22 Murat G. Kesgin, -
The Designed Thinking of the China Numismatic Museum
Yao Shuomin THE DESIGNED THINKING OF THE CHINA NUMISMATIC MUSEUM Proceedings of the ICOMON meetings held in: Stavanger, Norway, 1995, Vienna, Austria, 1996 / Memoria de las reuniones de ICOMON celebradas en: Stavanger, Noruega, 1995, Viena, Austria, 1996 [Madrid] : Museo Casa de la Moneda, [1997] 269 p. – ISBN 84-88298-03-X., pp. 66-68 Downloaded from: www.icomon.org THE DESIGNED THINKING OF THE CHINA NUMISMATIC MUSEUM Yao Shuomin China Numismatic Museum Beijing, China The China Numismatic Museum was established in 1992. It covers about one thousand five hundred square meters, and is part of the People's Bank of China. The main exhibition of the Museum is called "Chinese Currency", which means the main content of the exhibition is the history of Chinese Currency. In China, exhibitions about the history of currency were often organized in various places. They all give a survey about the Chinese currency in a chronological way. This method enables the public to discover the historical lineage. However, most coins of various Chinese dynasties were round with a square hole. The only difference is the Chinese characters. Although most of the specialists would like such an exhibition in order to admire some rare coins, we think this option is less appropriate for the average visitor. So, we planned a new design for our museum. The principle we had in mind was that both academic specialists and the public should enjoy the museum. There is a Chinese saying for this: "Enjoy both refiner and vulgar". This thinking was embodied in two aspects: substance and form. The first is substance. -
HÀNWÉN and TAIWANESE SUBJECTIVITIES: a GENEALOGY of LANGUAGE POLICIES in TAIWAN, 1895-1945 by Hsuan-Yi Huang a DISSERTATION S
HÀNWÉN AND TAIWANESE SUBJECTIVITIES: A GENEALOGY OF LANGUAGE POLICIES IN TAIWAN, 1895-1945 By Hsuan-Yi Huang A DISSERTATION Submitted to Michigan State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Curriculum, Teaching, and Educational Policy—Doctor of Philosophy 2013 ABSTRACT HÀNWÉN AND TAIWANESE SUBJECTIVITIES: A GENEALOGY OF LANGUAGE POLICIES IN TAIWAN, 1895-1945 By Hsuan-Yi Huang This historical dissertation is a pedagogical project. In a critical and genealogical approach, inspired by Foucault’s genealogy and effective history and the new culture history of Sol Cohen and Hayden White, I hope pedagogically to raise awareness of the effect of history on shaping who we are and how we think about our self. I conceptualize such an historical approach as effective history as pedagogy, in which the purpose of history is to critically generate the pedagogical effects of history. This dissertation is a genealogical analysis of Taiwanese subjectivities under Japanese rule. Foucault’s theory of subjectivity, constituted by the four parts, substance of subjectivity, mode of subjectification, regimen of subjective practice, and telos of subjectification, served as a conceptual basis for my analysis of Taiwanese practices of the self-formation of a subject. Focusing on language policies in three historical events: the New Culture Movement in the 1920s, the Taiwanese Xiāngtǔ Literature Movement in the early 1930s, and the Japanization Movement during Wartime in 1937-1945, I analyzed discourses circulating within each event, particularly the possibilities/impossibilities created and shaped by discourses for Taiwanese subjectification practices. I illustrate discursive and subjectification practices that further shaped particular Taiwanese subjectivities in a particular event. -
2017 36Th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 2017)
2017 36th Chinese Control Conference (CCC 2017) Dalian, China 26-28 July 2017 Pages 1-776 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1740A-POD ISBN: 978-1-5386-2918-5 1/15 Copyright © 2017, Technical Committee on Control Theory, Chinese Association of Automation All Rights Reserved *** This is a print representation of what appears in the IEEE Digital Library. Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1740A-POD ISBN (Print-On-Demand): 978-1-5386-2918-5 ISBN (Online): 978-9-8815-6393-4 ISSN: 1934-1768 Additional Copies of This Publication Are Available From: Curran Associates, Inc 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: (845) 758-0400 Fax: (845) 758-2633 E-mail: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com Proceedings of the 36th Chinese Control Conference, July 26-28, 2017, Dalian, China Contents Systems Theory and Control Theory Robust H∞filter design for continuous-time nonhomogeneous markov jump systems . BIAN Cunkang, HUA Mingang, ZHENG Dandan 28 Continuity of the Polytope Generated by a Set of Matrices . MENG Lingxin, LIN Cong, CAI Xiushan 34 The Unmanned Surface Vehicle Course Tracking Control with Input Saturation . BAI Yiming, ZHAO Yongsheng, FAN Yunsheng 40 Necessary and Sufficient D-stability Condition of Fractional-order Linear Systems . SHAO Ke-yong, ZHOU Lipeng, QIAN Kun, YU Yeqiang, CHEN Feng, ZHENG Shuang 44 A NNDP-TBD Algorithm for Passive Coherent Location . ZHANG Peinan, ZHENG Jian, PAN Jinxing, FENG Songtao, GUO Yunfei 49 A Superimposed Intensity Multi-sensor GM-PHD Filter for Passive Multi-target Tracking . -
The Oft-Misunderstood Ant-Nose Coinage of Ancient China
Thomas Walker ANA #: 3180822 The Oft-Misunderstood Ant-Nose Coinage of Ancient China What are They? Those who are familiar with the coinage of ancient China will know what is meant by the term “Ant-Nose.” In addition, they will know that these coins have many other names as well, including “Ghost-Face” and “Yi-Bi.” However, this number of collectors is relatively few, and the plethora of names can be confusing if one does not know where they come from. Ant-nose coins are oval in shape (usually 14-18mm by 5-7mm), have an inscription and hole (usually just a deep divot) on a convex obverse, and have a flat blank reverse. An example is pictured here: Why are They Called “Ant-Nose?” Though these coins are commonly called “Yi-Bi,” the Chinese equivalent of “ant-nose,” the original term was “Yi Bi Qien,” which meant “Ant and Nose Money.” Chinese numismatists coined this name when they discovered the ant-nose coins during the Southern Song Dynasty. This distinction in terminology is important as the name referred to two different coins as a collective. When discovered, the Song Chinese numismatists did not know who made these coins, how old they were, or what their archaic inscriptions meant. Of the many varieties known to exist, two are significantly more common than the others, and these two varieties are likely what would have been encountered. The most common variety, which was pictured above, was deemed a “Nose” coin because the inscription looked like a face with an abnormally large nose. -
Taiwan's Chinese Language Development and the Creation Of
Universal Journal of Educational Research 3(3): 220-228, 2015 http://www.hrpub.org DOI: 10.13189/ujer.2015.030308 Taiwan’s Chinese Language Development and the Creation of Language Teaching Analysis Cheng-Hui Tsai1,* ,Chuan-Po Wang2 1Department of Chinese Literature, National Taiwan University, Taiwan 2Department of Industrial Design, National Cheng Kung University, Taiwan Copyright © 2015 Horizon Research Publishing All rights reserved. Abstract Chinese Teaching in Taiwan in recent years in the international trend of development, making at all levels response to the international trend of development, making of Chinese language teaching in full swing, "Chinese at all levels of Chinese language teaching in full swing, for teaching Chinese teaching has always been not originally to the recent boom in Chinese language teaching, many life language teaching, emphasizing academic theory, but overseas Chinese language learning for children also had a will focus attention on teaching and learning practices. "(Zhu passion while actively learning Chinese language, and even Jinghua, 2006) Therefore, in addition to its core issues of many overseas ethnic Chinese children to learn Chinese Chinese language teaching materials compiled, teaching language and went oceans, arrived in Taiwan to learn tests, language teaching theory and application, curriculum Mandarin. This study presents the Chinese language design application, psycholinguistics and language teaching, the definition is as "Chinese" as the Chinese acquisition, overseas markets, corpus and