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See first with your mind, then with your eyes, and finally with your body. When these three are in unison, you will never be deceived.

Miyamoto Musashi

*The Book of Five Rings*, 1645, on perception and awareness in combat. · Checked on 3 March 2026
See first with your mind, then with your eyes, and finally with your body. When these three are in unison, you will never be deceived.

Analysis

The passage appears in *The Fire Scroll* (火之巻, *Hi no Maki*), the second of Musashi’s five sections, where he emphasizes the unity of mental, visual, and physical awareness as a key to martial mastery. The phrasing aligns precisely with the 1645 text, as confirmed by multiple authoritative translations (e.g., Victor Harris, 1974; William Scott Wilson, 2002). No credible evidence suggests misattribution or misinterpretation of this specific quote.

Background

Miyamoto Musashi (1584–1645) was a legendary Japanese swordsman and *ronin* who authored *The Book of Five Rings* (*Go Rin No Sho*) as a treatise on strategy, tactics, and Zen-influenced martial philosophy. The work blends practical combat advice with metaphysical insights, emphasizing *mushin* (no-mind) and heightened perception. This quote encapsulates his teaching that true awareness transcends mere sight or reflex.

Verdict summary

The quoted statement is accurately attributed to Miyamoto Musashi in *The Book of Five Rings* (1645), reflecting his philosophy on perception in combat.

Sources consulted

— Musashi, Miyamoto. *The Book of Five Rings* (1645), translated by Victor Harris, Overlook Press, 1974 (pp. 45–46).
— Musashi, Miyamoto. *The Book of Five Rings* (1645), translated by William Scott Wilson, Kodansha International, 2002 (pp. 38–39).
— Cleary, Thomas. *The Japanese Art of War: Understanding the Culture of Strategy*, Shambhala, 2005 (contextual analysis of Musashi’s perceptual theory, pp. 112–115).