![3 Macacos lr-monkeys-hase-1646-edo-TN](https://www.cintamani.com.br/loja/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/lr-monkeys-hase-1646-edo-TN-e1495726796282.jpg)
THREE MONKEYS
![Wood Carving, 1646 AD Speak No Evil, Hear No Evil, See No Evil Iwazaru, Kikazaru, Mizaru = 言わざる、聞かざる、見ざる San-en = Three Monkeys = 三猿 Treasure of Hase Dera Temple in Kamakura, Japan](http://www.cintamani.com.br/loja/wp-content/uploads/2017/05/lr-monkeys-hase-1646-edo-TN-300x197.jpg)
Wood Carving, 1646 AD
Speak No Evil, Hear No Evil, See No Evil
Iwazaru, Kikazaru, Mizaru
言わざる、聞かざる、見ざる
San-en = Three Monkeys = 三猿
Treasure of Hase Dera Temple in Kamakura, Japan
There is no agreement on the origin of the three-monkey motif. Is it from India, China, Korea, or Japan? This site assumes that the three-monkey motif is an innovation attributed to Japan‘s Tendai sect. The motif may have developed from the Three-Kami-Three-Buddha-Formula of Japanese Tendai Buddhism at Mt. Hiei, or possibly from the core Tendai principle of triple truth 三学, i.e., (1) all things are void and without essential reality; (2) all things have a temporal or provisional reality; (3) all things are both absolutely unreal and provisionally real at the same time. Alternatively, the three monkeys might represent the Three Truths of Buddhism, which are: (1) life is suffering; (2) suffering is caused by our desires, and; (3) eliminate desire and thereby eliminate suffering.