⏱ 1h 41m
📚 6 lessons
About this course
Zen Buddhism has been both deeply influential and significantly misrepresented in its global transmission. Popular culture tends to reduce it to paradox, aesthetics, or a kind of secular mindfulness. Serious engagement begins with understanding what Zen actually claims: that the direct realization of Buddha-nature — inherent in all beings — is possible through rigorous meditative practice and cannot be conveyed through conceptual elaboration alone.
By the end of this course you will be able to trace Zen's historical development from Indian Dhyana Buddhism through Tang Dynasty Chan to Japanese Zen, explain the core Mahayana philosophical concepts underlying Zen — Buddha-nature, emptiness (sunyata), dependent origination — as Zen teachers have engaged with them, describe how Zazen, koan study, and dharma transmission function as the three pillars of Zen training, and distinguish the Soto and Rinzai schools in terms of their approach to practice and awakening.
What you will learn:
- The Mahayana philosophical background: how Zen inherits and transforms concepts of Buddha-nature from the Tathagatagarbha sutras and emptiness from Madhyamaka philosophy
- Chan in Tang Dynasty China: the Platform Sutra of the Sixth Patriarch Huineng and the development of the Southern School's "sudden enlightenment" teaching
- The transmission of Zen to Japan: Eisai and Rinzai, Dogen and Soto — what each brought from China and what they developed distinctively in Japan
- Key Zen concepts: mushin (no-mind), mujodo (the way of no-rank), and busso (Buddha-ancestor) as they appear in primary texts
- The koan tradition: historical development from Tang Dynasty encounter dialogues to the systematized Rinzai koan curriculum
- Dogen's philosophy: how the author of the Shobogenzo rethought the relationship between practice and enlightenment, time and being
- The aesthetic dimensions of Zen: how calligraphy, garden design, tea ceremony, and poetry were shaped by Zen understanding — and how these are sometimes mistaken for the core of the tradition
- Zen in the West: key transmission figures, institutional developments, and scholarly debates about what was gained and lost in the crossing
The course proceeds through a sequence of conceptual readings organized historically and philosophically. Primary source excerpts in translation ground the abstract material. Reflection prompts ask you to sit with difficult concepts before moving on. A comparative worksheet maps Zen philosophy against Theravada and Tibetan Buddhist frameworks to clarify what is distinctive.
This course is designed for learners with no prior background in Zen or Buddhism, as well as practitioners wishing to deepen their philosophical grounding. No prior knowledge of Japanese, Chinese, or Buddhist philosophy is assumed.
What you'll get
-
📜
Certificate of completion
Add it to your LinkedIn profile
-
💬
Personal AI tutor
Stuck on a lesson? Ask your built-in tutor anything, any time.
-
♾️
Lifetime access
Come back anytime, no expiry
-
📱
Phone or computer
Works anywhere, any device
-
💸
30-day refund
No questions asked
-
⚡
Short & focused
1h 41m of practical content
Reviews
No reviews yet — be the first to share your experience.
Frequently asked
What do I need to take this course?
+
Just a phone or computer with internet. No installs, no special hardware.
How do I pay?
+
By card via Stripe, or with cryptocurrency. We do not store card details — Stripe handles them securely.
Can I get a refund?
+
Yes — full refund within 30 days, no questions asked.
How long will I have access?
+
Forever. Once you purchase, the course is yours to revisit anytime.
Will I get a certificate?
+
Yes. On completion you'll receive a certificate you can add to your LinkedIn profile.
Built for learners in
Tech
Design
Finance
Marketing
Healthcare
Education
Hospitality
Manufacturing