Ashish
@ashish
@ashish
Power of Maya gives rise to different experiences as we can feel more than one consciousness at the same time.
The three dualistic schools
Developed out of the aesthetic philosophy of cha-no-yu (the tea ceremony) in fifteenth-century Japan, wabi-sabi is an aesthetic that finds beauty in things imperfect, impermanent and incomplete. Taken from the Japanese words wabi, which translates to less is more, and sabi, which means attentive melancholy, wabi-sabi refers to an awareness of the transient nature of earthly things and a corresponding pleasure in the things that bear the mark of this impermanence. In addition to presenting the philosophy of wabi-sabi, this book includes how-to design advice—so that a transformation of body, mind and home can emerge.
This came soon after the Shōgun dialogue and reflects a completely different symbolism of a flower
Related to Flowers are only Flowers because they fall.