Question

Roboticist Masahiro Mori’s book The Buddha and the Robot extends an argument by this thinker to conclude that robots have the Buddha-nature. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this monk who wrote that inanimate objects express the Buddha-nature in his Shōbōgenzō. He brought the Cáodòng school to Japan, for which he is called the founder of the Sōtō school of Zen.
ANSWER: Dōgen [or Kigen Dōgen; or Dōgen Zenji; or Eihei Dōgen; or Koso Joyo Daishi]
[10h] In the rival Rinzai school’s Kodai-ji temple, the robotic Mindar elaborates upon the Heart Sutra in one of these discourses, of which teisho are considered a Zen subclass. You may give the common English term for these Buddhist doctrinal orations.
ANSWER: dharma talks [or dharma sermons; or dharma-desana; accept "dhamma" in place of "dharma" in any of the above; accept hogo; prompt on just talks or sermons]
[10e] Longquan Monastery’s Robot Monk Xian’er is available as a chatbot on Facebook and this other app. Christian, Falun Gong, and Qixi Festival-related content have been censored on this Chinese social media app.
ANSWER: WeChat [or Weixin] (Goto Tensho, the scriptwriter for Mindar's dharma talk, considers the robot to manifest the bodhisattva Kannon, but does not believe that Mindar can attain Buddhahood, per
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Summary

2024 ARGOS @ Chicago11/23/2024Y613.3350%50%33%
2024 ARGOS @ Christ's College12/14/2024Y36.6733%33%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Columbia11/23/2024Y310.00100%0%0%
2024 ARGOS @ Stanford02/22/2025Y313.33100%33%0%

Data

12 Litres of Green TeaNJ TRANSit (and anwen i guess)001010
jeff mcneil #1 morningside heights fan clubWalston et. al.001010
just one more half-dot broCope is the thing with feathers001010