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[[File:FurozinLogo.png|thumb|right|The Yurizíini (Enyaman: ''Soul Flower'') is a common symbol of Furózin.]]
[[File:FurozinLogo.png|thumb|right|The Yurizíini (Enyaman: ''Soul Flower'') is a common symbol of Furózin.<br>Symbology: {{legend|#000000|Order (''Chibzio'')}} {{legend|#b20404|Chaos (''Kįdiiton'')}} {{legend|#ffffff|Flow (''Níūdō'')}}]]
Furózin a religion of [[Enyama|Enyaman origin]] with over XX million followers worldwide, known as Furóltaí. Furózin encompasses a variety of beliefs and spiritual practices largely based on original teachings attributed to the Furómazí (born Nagato Saburo in the mid 11th-century) and resulting interpreted philosophies. Originally arising in the then-[[Tsurushiman]] colony of [[Enyama|Enyama Zenshō]], Furózin is based on a syncretic combination arising from {{wp|Shinto}}-{{wp|Diné Bahaneʼ|Wakatan}} animism and earlier [[Tsurushima|Tsurushiman]] teachings on the concept of {{wp|Qi|Zi}}, or lifeforce.
Furózin a religion of [[Enyama|Enyaman origin]] with over XX million followers worldwide, known as Furóltaí. Furózin encompasses a variety of beliefs and spiritual practices largely based on original teachings attributed to the Furómazí (born Nagato Saburo in the mid 11th-century) and resulting interpreted philosophies. Originally arising in the then-[[Tsurushiman]] colony of [[Enyama|Enyama Zenshō]], Furózin is based on a syncretic combination arising from {{wp|Shinto}}-{{wp|Diné Bahaneʼ|Wakatan}} animism and earlier [[Tsurushima|Tsurushiman]] teachings on the concept of {{wp|Qi|Zi}}, or lifeforce.



Revision as of 09:08, 5 April 2021

The Yurizíini (Enyaman: Soul Flower) is a common symbol of Furózin.
Symbology:
  Order (Chibzio)
  Chaos (Kįdiiton)
  Flow (Níūdō)

Furózin a religion of Enyaman origin with over XX million followers worldwide, known as Furóltaí. Furózin encompasses a variety of beliefs and spiritual practices largely based on original teachings attributed to the Furómazí (born Nagato Saburo in the mid 11th-century) and resulting interpreted philosophies. Originally arising in the then-Tsurushiman colony of Enyama Zenshō, Furózin is based on a syncretic combination arising from Shinto-Wakatan animism and earlier Tsurushiman teachings on the concept of Zi, or lifeforce.

Though extant in various forms for several hundred years, including the famed Torwald's Manuscript, the primary source of scripture is the Hatsítsuto, a compilation of three scrolls outlining its central tenets. The goal of Furózin is to overcome ignorance (mukigi) of the true reality of nature (gatsítsu), which is a triality of order (chibzio), chaos (kįdiiton), and flow (níūdō). Most Furózin traditions focus on recognizing this triality and mastering the balance of all three elements individual self through Kaiakídáō, a concept which most directly translates to the Latin quiddity.

Sects vary greatly in their interpretation of scripture, the relative importance of cosmological as opposed to metaphysical explanations, and specific teachings and practices. Widely observed practices include adherence to Furózin moral law (Dōtyáké), monasticism, meditation, charity, a Pilgramage of seclusion in nature, or the use of the Acacia longifolia plant (Nōseiko), which contains the psychoactive chemical DMT.