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Non-abidance

In Buddhism, especially the Chan (Zen) traditions, non-abidance refers to being unfixed and without dwelling.

Term
Here, abide is used to translate pratiṣṭhita, meaning "to be contained in [a locale]" or "situated", from the prefix prati- ('towards', 'in the direction of') and ṣṭhita ('established', 'set up'). To translate pratiṣṭhita, Chinese Buddhists used zhù (住), literally "to reside, lodge, remain". Both wúsuǒzhù (無所住 'no means of staying') and wúzhù (無住 'not staying') are used for apratiṣṭhita. == Sutras ==
Sutras
The Diamond Sutra, a classic Buddhist text, is primarily concerned with the idea of non-abidance. The concept seems to have originated with the 1st-century Buddhist philosopher Nagarjuna, whose version of śūnyatā, or emptiness, entails that entities neither exist, nor do they not exist. The Platform Sutra relates how the spiritual patriarch Huineng attained sudden enlightenment after hearing his master Hongren reciting from the Diamond Sutra: Huineng then responds that self-nature is intrinsically pure, cannot be generated or extinguished, is self-sufficient and capable of generating dharmas, though this response is absent in the older Dunhuang version of the text. The scholar-monk Qisong (契嵩) also noted in his foreword of the Platform Sutra: Non-abiding leads to prajñā (wisdom), as it enables one to consider that worldly issues are empty, so there is no point in retaliation or disputes. ==References==
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