Around fourteen works have been ascribed to Dushun throughout history; however, only two works can be definitively attributed to him. The first is
The Ten Mysterious Gates of the Unitary Vehicle of the Huayan (zh:
Huayan yisheng shixuan men). This text was composed by
Zhiyan (602-668 CE), the second patriarch, but is supposedly a record of the oral teachings of Dushun. The second is
Discernments of the Dharmadhātu of the Huayan (zh:
Huayan fajie guanmen), which does not survive as a stand-alone text but can be found in its entirety in several later commentaries. This text has been translated by
Thomas Cleary embedded with the commentary by Chengguan in his
Entry Into the Inconceivable. One highly influential text attributed to Dushun is
Cessation and Contemplation in the Five Teachings of the Huayan (zh:
Huayan wujiao zhiguan); however, the authorship of this text is disputed. This has been translated by Cleary in his
Entry Into the Inconceivable. ==Bibliography==