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Re: la zen.



la xorxes. cusku di'e

> >6- And, finally, he he, who dares to give a lujbo for "zen"? That's almost
> a
> >paradox!
>
> You missed the discussion on how to translate "the Tao" while you
> were away. No consensus was reached, I think.

{.u'i drani}  In general I'm against coining fu'ivla rather than searching for a
really appropriate lujvo, but there are some words that seem to defy semantic
analysis.  To coin a lujvo for "Zen", "Tao" or "Sufi" would imply that you
really understood the meaning of these terms, and would be a bad case of hubris,
I think (this is why I coined {pruxrsufi}).  I would suggest either leaving it
as a cmene or coining something like {pruxrzeni} or {bujrzeni}.  Perhaps {la
zen.} is best when you're talking about zen as a spritiual/aesthetic concept (as
in "he/she/this painting has zen", and {bujrzeni} when you're talking about Zen
as a school of Buddhism.  The third option, to make a cmene from a
transliteration doesn't work with "Zen" because "meditation" would be too vague
(and there isn't a gismu for "meditate" anyway, so you'd have to coin a lujvo as
well).

co'o mi'e robin.