claim
active
claim:basho-the-great-japanese-haiku-poet-expressed-the-unity-and-sadness-of-things-visible-in-the-ordinary-details-of-everyday-life-perhaps-more-vividly-than-any-other-poetBasho, the great Japanese haiku poet, expressed the unity and sadness of things, visible in the ordinary details of everyday life, perhaps more vividly than any other poet.
Basho's poetry is held up as the supreme example of capturing the unity-sadness of everyday life.
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Quotes (1)
quote
- A haiku by Basho quoted to illustrate the unity and sadness visible in the ordinary details of everyday life.
Related by similarity (8)
cosine ≥ 0.65 · no typed edgeEntities in the same semantic neighborhood but without a typed relation to this one — candidates for new edges or unrecognized duplicates.
- Alexander mirror method reveals smaller models produce rougher, more alive responses; competence (rubric) ≠ aliveness (aesthetic).
- Alexander's aesthetic principle explaining the appeal of the intimate scale.
- Core interpretive claim about the sutra's method.
- Example from Table 1.
- Asserted in the abstract and concluding thoughts.
- Alexander claims that true pleasing oneself is identical to the path intended by the greatest religious teachers.