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Books > Religion & Spirituality > Non-Christian religions > General
The impetus for this book was a request from a group of Christian
retreat directors who wanted to know what they could learn from
Eastern spiritual traditions. Bruteau's response was a series of
five easily accessible, non-technical reflections on various
aspects of Hinduism and Buddhism offered generally as
interpretations of Christian practices or texts. Here, she has
added two additional essays, "Gospel Zen" and "The Immaculate
Conception, Our Original Face". Both continue the interpretive
application of Eastern traditions to Christian texts. The book's
popular style is a strength as it is accessible to a broad
audience. Bruteau's interpretations of Christian texts are often
insightful and may spark further exploration and dialogue with the
East.
Fathoming the Cosmos and Ordering the World is the first
full-length study in any Western language of the development of the
Yijing in China from earliest times to the present. Drawing on the
most recent scholarship in both Asian and Western languages,
Richard J. Smith offers a fresh perspective on virtually every
aspect of Yijing theory and practice for some three thousand years.
Smith introduces the reader to the major works, debates, and
schools of interpretation surrounding this ancient text, and he
shows not only how the Book of Changes was used in China as a book
of divination but also how it served as a source of philosophical,
psychological, literary, and artistic inspiration. Among its major
contributions, this study reveals with many vivid examples the
richness, diversity, vitality, and complexity of traditional
Chinese thought. In the process, it deconstructs a number of
time-honored interpretive binaries that have adversely affected our
understanding of the Yijing-most notably the sharp distinction
between the ""school of images and numbers"" (xiangshu) and the
""school of meanings and principles"" (yili). The book also
demonstrates that, contrary to prevailing opinion among Western
scholars, the rise of ""evidential research"" (kaozheng xue) in
late imperial China did not necessarily mean the decline of Chinese
cosmology. Smith's study reveals a far more nuanced intellectual
outlook on the part of even the most dedicated kaozheng scholars,
as well as the remarkable persistence of Chinese ""correlative""
thinking to this very day. Finally, by exploring the fascinating
modern history of the Yijing, Fathoming the Cosmos and Ordering the
World attests to the tenacity, flexibility, and continuing
relevance of this most remarkable Chinese classic.
This Is A New Release Of The Original 1887 Edition.
When using mantra meditation to enter the highest realms of
enlightenment and spiritual realization, this book acts as a guide
to speedy, obstacle-free progress. The focus is on the Hare Krishna
mahamantra with an easy to understand and lively presentation of
how to reach success in one's personal practice.
Religiously motivated violence caused by the fusion of state and
religion occurred in medieval Tibet and Bhutan and later in
imperial Japan, but interfaith conflict also followed colonial
incursions in India, Sri Lanka, and Burma. Before that time, there
was a general premodern harmony among the resident religions of the
latter countries, and only in the late nineteenth and twentieth
centuries did religiously motivated violence break out. While
conflict caused by Hindu fundamentalists has been serious and
widespread, a combination of medieval Tibetan Buddhists and modern
Sri Lankan, Japanese, and Burmese Buddhists has caused the most
violence among the Asian religions. However, the Chinese Taiping
Christians have the world record for the number of religious
killings by one single sect. A theoretical investigation reveals
that specific aspects of the Abrahamic religions-an insistence on
the purity of revelation, a deity who intervenes in history, but
one who still is primarily transcendent-may be primary causes of
religious conflict. Only one factor-a mystical monism not favored
in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam-was the basis of a
distinctively Japanese Buddhist call for individuals to identify
totally with the emperor and to wage war on behalf of a divine
ruler. The Origins of Religious Violence: An Asian Perspective uses
a methodological heuristic of premodern, modern, and constructive
postmodern forms of thought to analyze causes and offer solutions
to religious violence.
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