The Unique Principle: The Philosophy of MacrobioticsThe unique (unifying) principle, called yin/yang by the ancient Chinese, is the missing key that joins religion and science, man and God, philosophy and daily life. This is George Ohsawa's first book originally published in French in 1931. |
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Contents
Chronology | 13 |
The Philosophy of the FarEast | 31 |
Chinese Science | 49 |
The Spirit of the Oriental People | 76 |
Conclusion | 93 |
Common terms and phrases
absolute activities Yin Amida Buddha ancient Chinese animals arrive believe biological Buddhism Butsu cause chemistry China Chinese medicine Chinese philosophy Chinese science Confucius considered contemplation death disciples dishonest dream earth elements entire environment ephemeral esthetic eternal ether-universe evil example existence explained factors faith Far-East Fou-Hi function George Ohsawa George Rodenbach grasp Haiku happy heat Herman Aihara Hindu philosophy Honen human I-Ching India infinite instinct instinct-intuition intuition Japan Japanese spirit Kado Karma lack Lao-tse living Maha Prajna Paramita Master Shinran meditation moral movement Nembutsu Nembutsuists nese one’s Oriental medicine origin parthenogenesis Perfect Consciousness phenomena philosopher-leader philosophy and science physical physiological plant practice Nembutsu published reality religion represented Sariputra saved scientific secret Shinran Sticks of Logos Sunnyata symbol Taikyoku teaching theory of knowledge tion traditional translation true universe understand Unique Law Unique Principle Western Yin activity Yin and Yang Yin-Yang