Young people who uphold the Buddha-like mindset are referred to as Buddha-like youths or Generation Zen.
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Young people who uphold the Buddha-like mindset are referred to as Buddha-like youths or Generation Zen.
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The Buddha-like mindset has been compared to the sang and diaosi subcultures in being a softer, more moderate instance of counterculture.
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Japanese commentators said the men's evolution to Buddha-like mindset happened for multiple reasons including Japan's economic weaknesses.
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People known as "Buddha-like mindset entrepreneurs" include Su Hua, the CEO of the video-sharing app Kuaishou, and Chen Rui, the CEO of the video-sharing website Bilibili.
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Zhou Hongyi, the CEO of the security company Qihoo 360, said that workers who have a Buddha-like mindset are not compatible with the tech industry since tiny missteps might cause massive errors.
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Jie Yang, an anthropology professor at Simon Fraser University, said that the Buddha-like mindset seems to be "a less stressful, more self-centered, and relatively healthy one" compared to the "sang" lifestyle.
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Yang said the Buddha-like mindset was similar to concepts in Chinese culture related to self-preservation.
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Buddha-like mindset cited the Chinese concept "nande hutu" created by the Qing dynasty philosopher Zheng Xie that means "It is hard to pretend muddleheadedness".
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The Buddha-like mindset philosophy has been compared to the tang ping or "lie down" philosophy an author introduced in 2021 in which the author had stopped working for two years and stopped caring about consumption.
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The Buddha-like mindset is more biased to action and can be put more into practice in everyday life than the diaosi and sang subcultures.
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The Buddha-like mindset philosophy is to "don't fight, don't grab; let everything go" and urges tranquility and is a "sweet-hearted" mentality.
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Xuan Loc Doan wrote in the Asia Times, a Hong Kong newspaper, that the growing number of youth who subscribed to the Buddha-like mindset illustrated how the CCP had failed to convince them to adopt the beliefs of the party despite the Xi Jinping Administration's expending substantial effort into attempting to persuade them through propaganda like rap songs, virtual concerts with celebrities shown via hologram, and matchmaking gatherings.
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