Founded in 1938 and published semiannually by Sophia University
MN 38:4 (1983) 409–12Kōbō Daishi and the Art of Esoteric BuddhismGeorge J. Tanabe
MN 38:3 (1983) 251–81Defend the Nation and Love the Truth’: Inoue Enryō and the Revival of Meiji BuddhismKathleen M. Staggs
MN 38:1 (1983) 73–84Shinran’s Faith and the Sacred Name of AmidaLuis O. Gómez
MN 36:4 (1981) 367–90Before Rikyū: Religious and Aesthetic Influences in the Early History of the Tea CeremonyTheodore M. Ludwig
MN 36:4 (1981) 463–68Zen in Medieval JapanH. Paul Varley
MN 36:1 (1981) 21–35Rennyo and Jōdo Shinshū Piety: The Yoshizaki YearsMinor Lee Rogers
MN 36:1 (1981) 55–84Shugendō and the Yoshino-Kumano Pilgrimage: An Example of Mountain PilgrimagePaul L. Swanson
MN 35:3 (1980) 273–98Mandalas of the Heart: Two Prose Works by Ikkyū SōjunJames H. Sanford
MN 35:3 (1980) 283–89Amida Stripped Bare: Amida HadakaIkkyū Sōjun, Translated by James H. Sanford
MN 35:3 (1980) 290–98The Buddhas’ Great War on Hell: BukkigunIkkyū Sōjun, Translated by James H. Sanford
MN 35:1 (1980) 45–75Mirror for Women: Mujū Ichien’s Tsuma KagamiRobert E. Morrell
MN 35:1 (1980) 51–75Tsuma Kagami (Mirror for Women)Mujū Ichien, Translated by Robert E. Morrell
MN 33:1 (1978) 51–65The Dilemma of Religious Power: Honganji and Hosokawa MasamotoMichael Solomon
MN 32:4 (1977) 411–40Shakuhachi Zen: The Fukeshū and KomusōJames H. Sanford
MN 32:2 (1977) 189–210Miraculous Tales of the Lotus Sutra: The Dainihonkoku HokkegenkiYoshiko Kurata Dykstra
MN 32:2 (1977) 199–210Miraculous Tales of the Lotus SutraChingen, Translated by Yoshiko Kurata Dykstra
MN 30:1 (1975) 19–35Nichiren and Nationalism: The Religious Patriotism of Tanaka ChigakuEdwin B. Lee
MN 28:4 (1973) 447–88Mujū Ichien’s Shinto-Buddhist Syncretism: Shasekishū, Book 1Robert E. Morrell
MN 28:4 (1973) 455–88Shasekishū: Collection of Sand and PebblesMujū Ichien, Translated by Robert E. Morrell
MN 26:1/2 (1971) 205–24Sandaihihō-shō: An Essay on the Three Great MysteriesPier P. Del Campana
MN 26:1/2 (1971) 210–24Sandaihihō-shōNichiren, Translated by Pier P. Del Campana
MN 25:1/2 (1970) 203–16Religious Consciousness and the Logic of the Prajñāpāramitā Sūtra: From The Logic of Place and a Religious World-ViewKitarō Nishida, Translated by David A. Dilworth
Monographs (1969) 1–310The Buddhist Philosophy of Assimilation: The Historical Development of the Honji-Suijaku TheoryAlicia Orloff Matsunaga
MN 24:1/2 (1969) 113–36Buddhism in Postwar Japan: A Critical SurveyMinoru Kiyota
MN 22:3/4 (1967) 251–59Presuppositions to the Understanding of Japanese Buddhist ThoughtMinoru Kiyota
MN 22:1/2 (1967) 1–14Suzuki Shōsan, 1579–1655 and the Spirit of Capitalism in Japanese BuddhismHajime Nakamura and William Johnston
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 125–70The “Five Ranks” Dialectic of the Sōtō-Zen School in the Light of Kuei-Fêng Tsung-Mi’s “Ariya-Shiki” SchemeAlfonso Verdú
MN 21:1/2 (1966) 203–209The Land of Natural Affirmation: Pre-Buddhist JapanAlicia Orloff Matsunaga
MN 17:1/4 (1962) 265–328The Amoghapāśahṛdaya-dhāraṇī: The Early Sanskrit Manuscript of the Reiunji Critically Edited and TranslatedR. O. Meisezahl
MN 17:1/4 (1962) 279–328Part I: Recension A: Amoghapāśahrdaya-nāma mahāyānasūtraTranslated by R. O. Meisezahl
MN 16:1/2 (1960) 53–117The Lore of the Japanese FanU. A. Casal
MN 15:3/4 (1959) 425–40Das Buch Genjōkōan: Aus dem Shōbōgenzō des Zen-Meisters DōgenHeinrich Dumoulin
MN 15:3/4 (1959) 432–40Das Buch GenjōkōanDōgen, Translated by Heinrich Dumoulin
MN 15:1/2 (1959) 119–49A Biographical Study of Tz’ŭ-ênStanley Weinstein
MN 14:3/4 (1958) 429–36Allgemeine Lehren zur Förderung des Zazen von Zen-Meister DōgenDōgen, Translated by Heinrich Dumoulin
MN 13:3/4 (1957) 329–46Das Merkbuch für die Übung des Zazen des Zen-Meisters KeizanTranslated by Heinrich Dumoulin
MN 13:1/2 (1957) 101–27Yasen Kanna: A Chat on a Boat in the EveningR. D. M. Shaw and Wilhelm Schiffer
MN 13:1/2 (1957) 106–27Yasen Kanna: Preface to a Chat on a Boat in the EveningHakuin Zenji, Translated by R. D. M. Shaw and Wilhelm Schiffer
MN 12:3/4 (1956) 241–68The World Conception of Chu Tao-sheng (Part 2)Walter Liebenthal
MN 12:1/2 (1956) 65–103The World Conception of Chu Tao-sheng (Part 1)Walter Liebenthal
MN 11:4 (1956) 397–424Japanese Research on Buddhism Since the Meiji Period (Part 2)A. Hirakawa and E. B. Ceadel
MN 11:3 (1955) 221–46Japanese Research on Buddhism Since the Meiji Period (Part 1)A. Hirakawa and E. B. Ceadel
MN 11:3 (1955) 284–316A Biography of Chu Tao-ShengWalter Liebenthal
MN 11:1 (1955) 44–83Chinese Buddhism During the 4th and 5th CenturiesWalter Liebenthal
MN 10:1/2 (1954) 227–69A Chapter on Reality From the Madhyāntavibhāgaçāstra (Part 2)Translated by Paul Wilfred O'Brien
Monographs (1953) 1–64Wu-men-kuan: Der Pass ohne TorTranslated by Heinrich Dumoulin
MN 9:1/2 (1953) 277–303A Chapter on Reality from the Madhyāntavibhāgaçāstra (Part 1)Paul Wilfred O'Brien
MN 9:1/2 (1953) 284–303A Commentary on Discrimination Between the Mean and Extremes By the Bodhisattva Vasubandhu, Translated Under Imperial Command by Hsüan Tsang Tripitaka Master of the T’ang Dynasty, Chapter the Third: A Discussion of Reality (Tattva)Translated by Paul Wilfred O'Brien