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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions
Biomedical ethics is a burgeoning academic field with complex and
far-reaching consequences. Whereas in Western secular bioethics
this subject falls within larger ethical theories and applications
(utilitarianism, deontology, teleology, and the like), Islamic
biomedical ethics has yet to find its natural academic home in
Islamic studies.
In this pioneering work, Abdulaziz Sachedina - a scholar with
life-long academic training in Islamic law - relates classic Muslim
religious values to the new ethical challenges that arise from
medical research and practice. He depends on Muslim legal theory,
but then looks deeper than juridical practice to search for the
underlying reasons that determine the rightness or wrongness of a
particular action. Drawing on the work of diverse Muslim
theologians, he outlines a form of moral reasoning that can derive
and produce decisions that underscore the spirit of the Shari'a.
These decisions, he argues, still leave room to revisit earlier
decisions and formulate new ones, which in turn need not be
understood as absolute or final. After laying out this methodology,
he applies it to a series of ethical questions surrounding the
human life-cycle from birth to death, including such issues as
abortion, euthanasia, and organ donation.
The implications of Sachedina's work are broad. His writing is
unique in that it aims at conversing with Jewish and Christian
ethics, moving beyond the Islamic fatwa literature to search for a
common language of moral justification and legitimization among the
followers of the Abrahamic traditions. He argues that Islamic
theological ethics be organically connected with the legal
tradition of Islam to enable it to sit in dialogue with secular and
scripture-based bioethics in other faith communities. A
breakthrough in Islamic bioethical studies, this volume is welcome
and long-overdue reading for anyone interested in facing the
difficult questions posed by modern medicine not only to the Muslim
faithful but to the ethically-minded at large.
Neelima Shukla-Bhatt offers an illuminating study of Narsinha
Mehta, one of the most renowned saint-poets of medieval India and
the most celebrated bhakti (devotion) poet from Gujarat, whose
songs and sacred biography formed a vital source of moral
inspiration for Gandhi. Exploring manuscripts, medieval texts,
Gandhi's more obscure writings, and performances in multiple
religious and non-religious contexts, including modern popular
media, Shukla-Bhatt shows that the songs and sacred narratives
associated with the saint-poet have been sculpted by performers and
audiences into a popular source of moral inspiration.
Drawing on the Indian concept of bhakti-rasa (devotion as nectar),
Narasinha Mehta of Gujarat reveals that the sustained popularity of
the songs and narratives over five centuries, often across
religious boundaries and now beyond devotional contexts in modern
media, is the result of their combination of inclusive religious
messages and aesthetic appeal in performance. Taking as an example
Gandhi's perception of the songs and stories as vital cultural
resources for social reconstruction, the book suggests that when
religion acquires the form of popular culture, it becomes a widely
accessible platform for communication among diverse groups.
Shukla-Bhatt expands upon the scholarship on the embodied and
public dimension of bhakti through detailed analysis of multiple
public venues of performance and commentary, including YouTube
videos.
This study provides a vivid picture of the Narasinha tradition, and
will be a crucial resource for anyone seeking to understand the
power of religious performative traditions in popular media.
Pringle's autobiography offers a graphic and often painful account
of his experiences with major marathons, including the Marathon des
Sables and the Yukon Arctic Ultra. Journalists and scientists
monitor his progress as he pushes his body to the very limits, as
he competes in extreme sporting events which have already claimed
lives. A growing sense of self-knowledge and a sense of unity with
the natural world lead him to overcome his inner demons, and to
find a distinctive and transformational spiritual path.
2009 brought the end of the protracted civil war in Sri Lanka, and
observers hoped to see the re-establishment of harmonious religious
and ethnic relations among the various communities in the country.
Immediately following the war's end, however, almost 300,000 Tamil
people in the Northern Province were detained for up to a year's
time in hurriedly constructed camps where they were closely
scrutinized by military investigators to determine whether they
might pose a threat to the country. While almost all had been
released and resettled by 2011, the current government has not
introduced, nor even seriously entertained, any significant
measures of power devolution that might create meaningful degrees
of autonomy in the regions that remain dominated by Tamil peoples.
The Sri Lankan government has grown increasingly autocratic,
attempting to assert its control over the local media and
non-governmental organizations while at the same time reorienting
its foreign policy away from the US, UK, EU, and Japan, to an orbit
that now includes China, Burma, Russia and Iran. At the same time,
hardline right-wing groups of Sinhala Buddhists have
propagated-arguably with the government's tacit approval-the idea
of an international conspiracy designed to destabilize Sri Lanka.
The local targets of these extremist groups, the so-called fronts
of this alleged conspiracy, have been identified as Christians and
Muslims. Many Christian churches have suffered numerous attacks at
the hands of Buddhist extremists, but the Muslim community has
borne the brunt of the suffering. Buddhist Extremists and Muslim
Minorities presents a collection of essays that investigate the
history and current conditions of Buddhist-Muslim relations in Sri
Lanka in an attempt to ascertain the causes of the present
conflict. Readers unfamiliar with this story will be surprised to
learn that it inverts common stereotypes of the two religious
groups. In this context, certain groups of Buddhists, generally
regarded as peace-oriented , are engaged in victimizing Muslims,
who are increasingly regarded as militant , in unwarranted and
irreligious ways. The essays reveal that the motivations for these
attacks often stem from deep-seated economic disparity, but the
contributors also argue that elements of religious culture have
served as catalysts for the explosive violence. This is a
much-needed, timely commentary that can potentially shift the
standard narrative on Muslims and religious violence.
John Nemec examines the beginnings of the non-dual tantric
philosophy of the famed Pratyabhijna or "Recognition of God]"
School of tenth-century Kashmir, the tradition most closely
associated with Kashmiri Shaivism. In doing so it offers, for the
very first time, a critical edition and annotated translation of a
large portion of the first Pratyabhijna text ever composed, the
Sivadrsti of Somananda. In an extended introduction, Nemec argues
that the author presents a unique form of non-dualism, a strict
pantheism that declares all beings and entities found in the
universe to be fully identical with the active and willful god
Siva. This view stands in contrast to the philosophically more
flexible panentheism of both his disciple and commentator,
Utpaladeva, and the very few other Saiva tantric works that were
extant in the author's day. Nemec also argues that the text was
written for the author's fellow tantric initiates, not for a wider
audience. This can be adduced from the structure of the work, the
opponents the author addresses, and various other editorial
strategies. Even the author's famous and vociferous arguments
against the non-tantric Hindu grammarians may be shown to have been
ultimately directed at an opposing Hindu tantric school that
subscribed to many of the grammarians' philosophical views.
Included in the volume is a critical edition and annotated
translation of the first three (of seven) chapters of the text,
along with the corresponding chapters of the commentary. These are
the chapters in which Somananda formulates his arguments against
opposing tantric authors and schools of thought. None of the
materials made available in the present volume has ever been
translated into English, apart from a brief rendering of the first
chapter that was published without the commentary in 1957. None of
the commentary has previously been translated into any language at
all."
In Hermeneutics of Holiness, Naomi Koltun-Fromm examines the
ancient nexus of holiness and sexuality and explores its roots in
the biblical texts as well as its manifestations throughout ancient
and late-ancient Judaism and early Syriac Christianity. In the
process, she tells the story of how the biblical notions of "holy
person" and "holy community" came to be defined by the sexual and
marriage practices of various interpretive communities in late
antiquity.
Koltun-Fromm seeks to explain why sexuality, especially sexual
restraint, became a primary demarcation of sacred community
boundaries among Jews and Christians in fourth-century
Persian-Mesopotamia. She charts three primary manifestations of
holiness: holiness ascribed, holiness achieved, and holiness
acquired through ritual purity. Hermeneutics of Holiness traces the
development of these three concepts, from their origin in the
biblical texts to the Second Temple literature (both Jewish and
Christian) to the Syriac Christian and rabbinic literature of the
fourth century. In so doing, this book establishes the importance
of biblical interpretation for late ancient Jewish and Christian
practices, the centrality of holiness as a category for
self-definition, and the relationship of fourth-century asceticism
to biblical texts and interpretive history.
Louis E. Fenech offers a compelling new examination of one of the
only Persian compositions attributed to the tenth Sikh Guru, Guru
Gobind Singh (1666-1708): the Zafar-namah or 'Epistle of Victory.'
Written as a masnavi, a Persian poem, this letter was originally
sent to the Mughal emperor Aurangzeb (d. 1707) rebuking his most
unbecoming conduct. Incredibly, Guru Gobind Singh's letter is
included today within the Sikh canon, one of only a very small
handful of Persian-language texts granted the status of Sikh
scripture. As such, its contents are sung on special Sikh
occasions. Perhaps equally surprising is the fact that the letter
appears in the tenth Guru's book or the Dasam Granth in the
standard Gurmukhi script (in which Punjabi is written) but retains
its original Persian language, a vernacular few Sikhs know. Drawing
out the letter's direct and subtle references to the Iranian
national epic, the Shah-namah, and to Shaikh Sa'di's
thirteenth-century Bustan, Fenech demonstrates how this letter
served as a form of Indo-Islamic verbal warfare, ensuring the tenth
Guru's moral and symbolic victory over the legendary and powerful
Mughal empire. Through analysis of the Zafar-namah, Fenech
resurrects an essential and intiguing component of the Sikh
tradition: its Islamicate aspect.
In a wide-ranging exploration of the creation and use of Buddhist
art in Andhra Pradesh, India, from the second and third centuries
of the Common Era to the present, Catherine Becker shows how
material remains and visual experiences shape and reveal essential
human concerns.
Shifting Stones, Shaping the Past begins with an analysis of the
ornamentation of Andhra's ancient Buddhist sites, such as the
lavish limestone reliefs depicting scenes of devotion and lively
narratives on the main stupa at Amaravati. As many such monuments
have fallen into disrepair, it is temping to view them as ruins;
however, through an examination of recent state-sponsored tourism
campaigns and new devotional activities at the sites, Becker shows
that the monuments are in active use and even ascribed innate power
and agency.
Becker finds intriguing parallels between the significance of
imagery in ancient times and the new social, political, and
religious roles of these objects and spaces. While the precise
functions expected of these monuments have shifted, the belief that
they have the ability to effect spiritual and mental transformation
has remained consistent. Becker argues that the efficacy of
Buddhist art relies on the careful attention of its makers to the
formal properties of art and to the harnessing of the imaginative
potential of the human senses. In this respect, Buddhist art
mirrors the teaching techniques attributed to the Buddha, who often
engaged his pupils' desires and emotions as tools for spiritual
progress.
Markus Dressler tells the story of how a number of marginalized
socioreligious communities, traditionally and derogatorily referred
to as Kizilbas (''Redhead''), captured the attention of the late
Ottoman and early Republican Turkish nationalists and were
gradually integrated into the newly formulated identity of secular
Turkish nationalists. In the late 1980s, the Alevis (roughly 15-20%
of the population), at that time thought to be mostly assimilated
into the secular Turkish mainstream, began to assert their
difference as they never had before. As Dressler demonstrates, they
began a revitalization and reformation of Alevi institutions and
networks, demanded an end to social and institutional
discrimination, and claimed recognition as a community distinct
from the Sunni majority population. Both in Turkey and in countries
with a significant Turkish migrant population, such as Germany, the
''Alevi question,'' which comprises matters of representation and
relation to the state, as well as questions of cultural and
religious location, has in the last two decades become a matter of
public interest. Alevism is often assumed to be part of the Islamic
tradition, although located on its margins - margins marked with
indigenous terms such as Sufi and Shia, or with outside qualifiers
such as 'heterodox' and 'syncretistic.' It is further assumed that
Alevism is an intrinsic part of Anatolian and Turkish culture,
carrying ancient Turkish heritage back beyond Anatolia and into the
depths of the Central Asian Turkish past. Dressler argues that this
knowledge about the Alevis, their demarcation as ''heterodox'' but
Muslim, and their status as an intrinsic part of Turkish culture,
is in fact much more recent. That knowledge can be traced back to
the last years of the Ottoman Empire and the first years of the
Turkish Republic, which was the decisive period of the formation of
the Turkish nation state. Dressler contends that the Turkish
nationalist reading of Alevism emerged as an anti-thesis to earlier
Western interpretations. Both the initial Western/Orientalist
discovery of the Alevis and their re-signification by Turkish
nationalists are the cornerstones of the modern genealogy of the
Alevism of Turkey. It is time, according to Dressler, for the
origins of the Alevis to be demythologized.
The Linjilu (Record of Linji or LJL) is one of the foundational
texts of Chan/Zen Buddhist literature, and an accomplished work of
baihua (vernacular) literature. Its indelibly memorable title
character, the Master Linji-infamous for the shout, the whack of
the rattan stick, and the declaration that sutras are toilet
paper-is himself an embodiment of the very teachings he propounds
to his students: he is a "true person," free of dithering; he
exhibits the non-verbal, unconstrained spontaneity of the
buddha-nature; he is always active, never passive; and he is aware
that nothing is lacking at all, at any time, in his round of daily
activities. This bracing new translation transmits the LJL's living
expression of Zen's "personal realization of the meaning beyond
words," as interpreted by ten commentaries produced by Japanese Zen
monks, over a span of over four centuries, ranging from the late
1300s, when Five-Mountains Zen flourished in Kyoto and Kamakura,
through the early 1700s, an age of thriving interest in the LJL.
These Zen commentaries form a body of vital, in-house interpretive
literature never before given full credit or center stage in
previous translations of the LJL. Here, their insights are fully
incorporated into the translation itself, allowing the reader
unimpeded access throughout, with more extensive excerpts available
in the notes. Also provided is a translation of the earliest extant
material on Linji, including a neglected transmission-record entry
relating to his associate Puhua, which indicate that the LJL is a
fully-fledged work of literature that has undergone editorial
changes over time to become the compelling work we know today.
The Training Anthology-or TSiksa-samuccaya-is a collection of
quotations from Buddhist sutras with illuminating and insightful
commentary by the eighth-century North Indian master Santideva.
Best known for his philosophical poem, the Bodhicaryavatara,
Santideva has been a vital source of spiritual guidance and
literary inspiration to Tibetan teachers and students throughout
the history of Tibetan Buddhism. Charles Goodman offers a
translation of this major work of religious literature, in which
Santideva has extracted, from the vast ocean of the Buddha's
teachings, a large number of passages of exceptional value, either
for their practical relevance, philosophical illumination, or
aesthetic beauty. The Training Anthology provides a comprehensive
overview of the Mahayana path to Awakening and gives scholars an
invaluable window into the religious doctrines, ethical
commitments, and everyday life of Buddhist monks in India during
the first millennium CE. This translation includes a detailed
analysis of the philosophy of the Training Anthology, an
introduction to Santideva's cultural and religious contexts, and
informative footnotes. The translation conveys the teachings of
this timeless classic in clear and accessible English, highlighting
for the modern reader the intellectual sophistication, beauty, and
spiritual grandeur of the original text.
The city of Constantinople was named New Rome or Second Rome very
soon after its foundation in AD 324; over the next two hundred
years it replaced the original Rome as the greatest city of the
Mediterranean. In this unified essay collection, prominent
international scholars examine the changing roles and perceptions
of Rome and Constantinople in Late Antiquity from a range of
different disciplines and scholarly perspectives. The seventeen
chapters cover both the comparative development and the shifting
status of the two cities. Developments in politics and urbanism are
considered, along with the cities' changing relationships with
imperial power, the church, and each other, and their evolving
representations in both texts and images. These studies present
important revisionist arguments and new interpretations of
significant texts and events. This comparative perspective allows
the neglected subject of the relationship between the two Romes to
come into focus while avoiding the teleological distortions common
in much past scholarship.
An introductory section sets the cities, and their comparative
development, in context. Part Two looks at topography, and includes
the first English translation of the Notitia of Constantinople. The
following section deals with politics proper, considering the role
of emperors in the two Romes and how rulers interacted with their
cities. Part Four then considers the cities through the prism of
literature, in particular through the distinctively late antique
genre of panegyric. The fifth group of essays considers a crucial
aspect shared by the two cities: their role as Christian capitals.
Lastly, a provocative epilogue looks at the enduring Roman identity
of the post-Heraclian Byzantine state. Thus, Two Romes not only
illuminates the study of both cities but also enriches our
understanding of the late Roman world in its entirety.
This is a book for scholars of Western philosophy who wish to
engage with Buddhist philosophy, or who simply want to extend their
philosophical horizons. It is also a book for scholars of Buddhist
studies who want to see how Buddhist theory articulates with
contemporary philosophy. Engaging Buddhism: Why it Matters to
Philosophy articulates the basic metaphysical framework common to
Buddhist traditions. It then explores questions in metaphysics, the
philosophy of mind, phenomenology, epistemology, the philosophy of
language and ethics as they are raised and addressed in a variety
of Asian Buddhist traditions. In each case the focus is on
philosophical problems; in each case the connections between
Buddhist and contemporary Western debates are addressed, as are the
distinctive contributions that the Buddhist tradition can make to
Western discussions. Engaging Buddhism is not an introduction to
Buddhist philosophy, but an engagement with it, and an argument for
the importance of that engagement. It does not pretend to
comprehensiveness, but it does address a wide range of Buddhist
traditions, emphasizing the heterogeneity and the richness of those
traditions. The book concludes with methodological reflections on
how to prosecute dialogue between Buddhist and Western traditions.
"Garfield has a unique talent for rendering abstruse philosophical
concepts in ways that make them easy to grasp. This is an important
book, one that can profitably be read by scholars of Western and
non-Western philosophy, including specialists in Buddhist
philosophy. This is in my estimation the most important work on
Buddhist philosophy in recent memory. It covers a wide range of
topics and provides perhaps the clearest analysis of some core
Buddhist ideas to date. This is landmark work. I think it's the
best cross-cultural analysis of the relevance of Buddhist thought
for contemporary philosophy in the present literature. "-C. John
Powers, Professor, School of Culture, History & Language,
Australian National University
"For the second half of a two-course sequence in Muslim history,
Islamic Civilization, and religious studies courses on Islam." The
history of the predominantly Muslim world is examined within the
context of world history. It examines political, economic, and
broad cultural developments, as well as specifically religious
ones. The themes of the book are tradition and adaptation: It
examines the tensions between the desire of Muslims to maintain
continuity with their legacy and their recognition of the need to
adapt to changing conditions.
A stunning collection of maze art that takes the coloring
phenomenon one step beyond. Elizabeth Carpenter offers a compelling
twist on the genre that will inspire both creativity and curiosity.
Contemplative and calming to color, Elizabeth Carpenter's 30
mandalas also offer delightfully challenging mazes running through
her striking designs. Very different from the childhood mazes
you're familiar with, each of these intricate puzzles exercises the
critical part of the brain as you work your way through the winding
paths. 2018 WINNER: National Indie Excellence Book Award;
Independent Press Distinguished Favorite Book Award; Body, Mind,
Spirit Book Award; Family Choice Book Award; Creative Child
Magazine Book of the Year Award; Living Now Awards Gold Medal
Winner
Vishwa Adluri and Joydeep Bagchee undertake a careful and rigorous
hermeneutical approach to nearly two centuries of German
philological scholarship on the Mahabharata and the Bhagavad Gita.
Analyzing the intellectual contexts of this scholarship, beginning
with theological debates that centered on Martin Luther's
solefidian doctrine and proceeding to scientific positivism via
analyses of disenchantment (Entzauberung), German Romanticism,
pantheism (Pantheismusstreit), and historicism, they show how each
of these movements progressively shaped German philology's
encounter with the Indian epic. They demonstrate that, from the
mid-nineteenth century on, this scholarship contributed to the
construction of a supposed "Indo-Germanic" past, which Germans
shared racially with the Mahabharata's warriors. Building on
nationalist yearnings and ongoing Counter-Reformation anxieties,
scholars developed the premise of Aryan continuity and supported it
by a "Brahmanical hypothesis," according to which supposedly later
strata of the text represented the corrupting work of scheming
Brahmin priests. Adluri and Bagchee focus on the work of four
Mahabharata scholars and eight scholars of the Bhagavad Gita, all
of whom were invested in the idea that the text-critical task of
philology as a scientific method was to identify a text's strata
and interpolations so that, by displaying what had accumulated over
time, one could recover what remained of an original or authentic
core. The authors show that the construction of pseudo-histories
for the stages through which the Mahabharata had supposedly passed
provided German scholars with models for two things: 1) a
convenient pseudo-history of Hinduism and Indian religions more
generally; and 2) a platform from which to say whatever they wanted
to about the origins, development, and corruption of the
Mahabharata text. The book thus challenges contemporary scholars to
recognize that the ''Brahmanic hypothesis'' (the thesis that
Brahmanic religion corrupted an original, pure and heroic Aryan
ethical and epical worldview), an unacknowledged tenet of much
Western scholarship to this day, was not and probably no longer can
be an innocuous thesis. The ''corrupting'' impact of Brahmanical
''priestcraft,'' the authors show, served German Indology as a
cover under which to disparage Catholics, Jews, and other
''Semites.''
Throughout the history of Indian religions, the ascetic figure is
most closely identified with power. Power is a by-product of the
ascetic path, and is displayed in the ability to fly, walk on water
or through dense objects, read minds, discern the former lives of
others, see into the future, harm others, or simply levitate one's
body. Using religio-philosophical discourses and narratives from
epic, puranic, and hagiographical literature, Indian Asceticism
focuses on the powers exhibited by ascetics of India from ancient
to modern time. The discourses and narratives show ascetics
performing violent acts and using language to curse and harm
opponents. They also give rise to questions about how power and
violence are related to the phenomenon of play. Olson discusses the
erotic, the demonic, the comic, and the miraculous forms of play
and their connections to power and violence. His focus is on
Hinduism, from early Indian religious history to more modern times,
but evidence is also presented from both Buddhism and Jainism,
which provides evidence that the subject matter of this book
pervades India's major indigenous religious traditions. The book
also includes a look at the extent to which contemporary findings
in cognitive science can add to our understanding about these
various powers; Olson argues that violence is built into the
practice of the ascetic. Indian Asceticism culminates with an
attempt to rethink the nature of power in a way that does justice
to the literary evidence from Hindu, Buddhist, and Jain sources.
Judah Halevi (ca. 1075-1141) is the best known and most beloved of
medieval Hebrew poets, partly because of his passionate poems of
longing for the Land of Israel and partly because of the legend of
his death as a martyr while reciting his Ode to Zion at the gates
of Jerusalem. He was also one of the premier theologians of
medieval Judaism, having written a treatise on the meaning of
Judaism that is still studied and venerated by traditional
Jews.
As a member of the wealthy Jewish elite of medieval Spain, Halevi
enjoyed the material pleasures available to the upper classes.
Alongside his sacred poetry, he wrote verses about youthful
romance, wine songs, and odes to his friends. In midlife, Halevi
turned more seriously to religion, eventually abandoning his family
and community with hopes of ending his life as a pilgrim in the
land of Israel.
Miraculously, a number of letters in Arabic were discovered about
fifty years ago, some written by Halevi, some written to Halevi,
and yet others written about Halevi by his friends in Egypt. These
letters preserve a vivid record of Halevi's travels as a pilgrim
and of the last months of his life. Raymond Scheindlin has written
the first book-length treatment of Halevi's pilgrimage in any
language. He tells the story of Halevi's journey through selections
from these revealing sources and explores its meaning through
discussions of his stirring poetry, presented here in new verse
translations with full commentary.
In Hebrew verse of unparalleled beauty, Halevi salutes the Holy
Land; he argues with friends about his intentions; he sets out his
fantasy of crossing the ocean, of walking the hills and valleys of
the Land of Israel, and ofdying and mingling his bones with its
soil and stones. He even confides his secret fears and
uncertainties, his longing for his family, and his fear of death at
sea. With his consummate skill as a translator of Hebrew poetry and
his mastery of Judeo-Arabic culture, Scheindlin provides fresh
insights into the literary, religious, and historical facets of
Halevi's captivating poetry and fateful journey.
Though many practitioners of yoga and meditation are familiar with
the Sri Cakra yantra, few fully understand the depth of meaning in
this representation of the cosmos. Even fewer have been exposed to
the practices of mantra and puja (worship) associated with it.
Andre Padoux, with Roger Orphe-Jeanty, offers the first English
translation of the Yoginihrdaya, a seminal Hindu tantric text
dating back to the 10th or 11th century CE. The Yoginihrdaya
discloses to initiates the secret of the Heart of the Yogini, or
the supreme Reality: the divine plane where the Goddess
(Tripurasundari, or Consciousness itself) manifests her power and
glory. As Padoux demonstrates, the Yoginihrdaya is not a
philosophical treatise aimed at expounding particular metaphysical
tenets. It aims to show a way towards liberation, or, more
precisely, to a tantric form of liberation in this
life--jivanmukti, which grants both liberation from the fetters of
the world and domination over it.
It’s time to revisit the Kokoro Clinic for the Soul.
Though it is mysteriously located at an uncertain address, the Kokoro
clinic can always be found by those who need it. And it has proven time
after time that a prescribed cat has the power to heal the emotional
wounds of all its patients.
This irresistible sequel introduces a new loveable cast of healing
cats, from Kotetsu, a four-month-old Bengal who unleashes his energy by
demolishing bed linen, to curious Shasha, who won't let her tiny size
stop her, and lazy Ms. Michiko, who is as soft and comforting as mochi.
As characters from one chapter re-appear as side characters in the
next, we follow a young woman who cannot help pushing away the man who
loves her; a recently widowed grandfather whose grandson refuses to
leave his room; and an anxious man working at a cat shelter who seeks
to show how difficult cats can be the most rewarding.
In Bringing the Sacred Down to Earth, Corinne Dempsey offers a
comparative study of Hindu and Christian, Indian and Euro/American
earthbound religious expressions. She argues that official
religious, political, and epistemological systems tend to deny
sacred access and expression to the general populace, and are
abstracted and disembodied in ways that make them irrelevant to if
not neglectful of earthly realities. Working at cross purposes with
these systems, attending to material needs, conferring sacred
access to a wider public, and imbuing land and bodies with sacred
meaning and power, are religious frameworks featuring folklore
figures, democratizing theologies, newly sanctified land, and
extraordinary human abilities. Some scholars will see Dempsey's
juxtapositions of Hindu and Christian religious dynamics, many of
which exist on opposite sides of the globe, as a leap into a
disciplinary minefield. Many have argued for decades that
comparison is an outmoded, politically troubled approach to the
human sciences. More recently opponents, represented by a growing
number of religion scholars, are ''writing back'' in comparison's
defense, asserting the merits of a readjusted, carefully
contextualized, new comparativism. But, says Dempsey, the
inestimable advantages of the comparative method described by
religion scholars and performed in this book are disciplinary as
well as ethical. As demonstrated in this stimulating book, the
process of comparison can shed light on angles and contours
otherwise obscured and perform the important work of bridging human
contingencies and perception across religious, cultural, and
disciplinary divides.
The "Nations" are the "seventy nations": a metaphor which, in the
Talmudic idiom, designates the whole of humanity surrounding
Israel. In this major collection of essays, Levinas considers
Judaism's uncertain relationship to European culture since the
Enlightenment, problems of distance and integration. It also
includes essays on Franz Rosenzweig and Moses Mendelssohn, and a
discussion of central importance to Jewish philosophy in the
context of general philosophy. This work brings to the fore the
vital encounter between philosophy and Judaism, a hallmark of
Levinas's thought.
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