
thumb|240px| written in kanji is a Japanese concept that describes the stages of learning to mastery. Shuhari is usually translated as "follow the rules, break the rules, transcend the rules". This specific phrasing is usually attributed to Sen no Rikyū, a 16th century tea master and poet. It has been applied to other disciplines, such as Go, Japanese martial arts, Noh theatre, and more.
thumb|240px| written in kanji is a Japanese concept that describes the stages of learning to mastery. Shuhari is usually translated as "follow the rules, break the rules, transcend the rules". This specific phrasing is usually attributed to Sen no Rikyū, a 16th century tea master and poet. It has been applied to other disciplines, such as Go, Japanese martial arts, Noh theatre, and more.
==History== thumb|Sen no Rikyū, who greatly influenced chanoyu thought in sadō ([[Japanese tea ceremony) in the 16th century|369x369px]] This specific phrasing is usually attributed to Sen no Rikyū from the phrase in one of his poems. The Shuhari concept was presented by Fuhaku Kawakami, a 19th century tea master, to the wider public. Fuhaku based his process from the works of Zeami Motokiyo, the master of Noh, which then became a part of the philosophy of Aikido.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).