was a Japanese monk credited with playing an influential role in the founding of Buddhism in Japan.
was a Japanese monk credited with playing an influential role in the founding of Buddhism in Japan.
In C.E. 653, the Dōshō travelled to China, studying under the Buddhist monk Xuanzang, whose travels to India were immortalized in the book Records of the Western Regions. His studies centered on Xuanzang's Weishi, the Chinese variant of Indian Yogācāra, but he was also exposed to Chinese Chán while there, which would later lead to his influence on the founding of Japanese Zen Buddhism. In China, the school is known as Wéishí-zōng (, "Consciousness Only" school), or Fǎxiàng-zōng (, "Dharma Characteristics" school). In Japan, it is known as Hossō-shū or .
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).