Sunday, August 10, 2025

Via Daily Dharma: Continuous Mind

 

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Continuous Mind

If we believe that mind is continuous, our love for others becomes continuous. If we recognize this continuity, we do not trust temporary, tangible circumstances or take them too seriously.

Thinley Norbu Rinpoche, “Continuous Mind”


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Saturday, August 9, 2025

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Via Daily Dharma: Reprogram Yourself

 

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Reprogram Yourself

The brain doesn’t know the difference between what it experiences and what it imagines, so when you visualize it and have a conversation with someone in your mind, you’re actually reprogramming yourself.

George Mumford, “Self-Talk”


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‘The Maples’ and Other Poems
By Marie Howe
Pulitzer Prize winner Marie Howe’s poetry explores what it means to cultivate devotion to the ordinary.
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Via The Tricycle Community // Can We Guide AI Toward Compassion?

 

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August 9, 2025

 Can We Guide AI Toward Compassion?


Tricycle’s Fall 2025 issue is here! In this issue, we explore the implications of ordaining AI, the connections between the Buddha and Socrates, and what it’s like to practice with OCD.

In his Letter from the EditorTricycle’s editor-in-chief, James Shaheen, introduces us to an ordained AI chatbot, Emi Jido. Not fully convinced that AI should be ordained, Shaheen weighs the pros and cons of allowing the dharma to flow through an algorithm. Zen teacher Jundo Cohen, who ordained the bot, argues that it should be, emphasizing that in a time when AI is being weaponized, it’s even more critical to guide it toward compassion and ethical action. “We’re going to have bad AI,” Cohen says, “but we need to have good AI out there helping sentient beings.”

Also in the new issue, Joan Sutherland reveals the origin story of the oldest koan collection, The Blue Cliff Record; a practitioner shares their experience of practicing with OCD; and an excerpt from Stephen Batchelor’s forthcoming book, Buddha, Socrates, and Us: Ethical Living in Uncertain Times, underscores the parallels between Buddhism and ancient Greek philosophy. Batchelor writes, “To practice either Buddhist or Hellenistic philosophy becomes a full-time exercise in remaining sufficiently detached, mindful, and vigilant to respond appropriately to whatever life throws at you.”

Enjoy these and other features in the new issue, now available online and in print!
Read the full issue now »
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