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*Buddhist temples: Since Buddhism is not congregational, and there are no fixed periodic assemblies, the regular or occasional opening of the doors (''kaichô'') to show hidden Buddhas (''hibutsu'') was one way for temples to regulate or at least predict attendance. - Tim Screech, Obtaining Images, 119.
 
*Buddhist temples: Since Buddhism is not congregational, and there are no fixed periodic assemblies, the regular or occasional opening of the doors (''kaichô'') to show hidden Buddhas (''hibutsu'') was one way for temples to regulate or at least predict attendance. - Tim Screech, Obtaining Images, 119.
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*[[Basil Hall Chamberlain]] was the grandson of [[Basil Hall]]. - Kikuchi Yuko, Japanese Modernisation and Mingei Theory, 142.
    
*Buddhist sculptures: Traditionally, in the Edo period and earlier, people were generally not concerned with the aesthetic beauty of Buddhist sculpture, but rather with its efficacy. - Tim Screech, Obtaining Images, 119.
 
*Buddhist sculptures: Traditionally, in the Edo period and earlier, people were generally not concerned with the aesthetic beauty of Buddhist sculpture, but rather with its efficacy. - Tim Screech, Obtaining Images, 119.
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