Quote:
Typically, when posed with such koans in a traditional setting, the "student" will just SHUT UP, go to a quiet place, and MEDITATE on the koan. I am betting that nobody here did this. Why is this important? It's important to let go of your ego. It's important to let go of others' perspective. It's important to let go of our perspective . . . then you can come to an understanding based on the question itself. NOTHING ELSE.
Well, my view is this is simply a shit test. The important question to me personally is whether the situation is real or metaphorical. If it's metaphorical, your answer or action doesn't matter. Everyone will have their own interpretation of the situation and what it signifies. It will depend on your cultural layering and the assumptions you make.
If it's real, then the remaining question is how far the reality extends. Maybe in this mythological world of the monkey, you can ask questions and talk your way out of it. Maybe you can shoot the monkey and discover afterwards that he was lying to you. Maybe you can say, "Wow, this is really cool, I've never met a talking monkey before! Be my friend and we will have many adventures together." But we haven't been provided an environment, we've been thrown into this mythological world "cold." So our actions are meaningless in this world, as we will only learn by taking action or inaction and observing the results. It is a mythological world, not our own world, so our previous bases of life learning here are not necessarily relevant. This is the problem of Cthulu, of beings who think in terms of Blue and Orange Morality.
http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/M ... geMorality For all we know, having only 1 parent might be an arch-advantage in this world. Maybe the monkey is trying to save you from the curse of a nuclear family, who knows.
"What Zen students did" is irrelevant. They lived in a specific place with a specific historical context. We do not have that context. We are random dudes and the occasional gal on the internet. We don't / shouldn't have any guilt that we didn't "play this game" according to the environment and culture of a Zen student who spends a great deal of his life meditating. A great many people provided material resources to those monasteries, like vegetables and livestock, so that such monks could eschew material conditions and concentrate on other matters. This is not a puzzle, this is a mirror, and "My mirror is better than your mirror" is a worthless analysis. Except to understand the ego of people who ascribe great significance to closed-system puzzles.
Life is open! Be glad you can actually think about monkeys any way you want.