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Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Non-Western philosophy > Oriental & Indian philosophy
First published in 1939. This book consists chiefly of extracts
from Chuang Tzu, Mencius and Han Fei Tzu. Chuang Tzu's appeal is to
the imagination; the appeal of mencius is to the moral feelings;
realism, as expounded by Han Fei Tzu, finds a close parallel in
modern Totalitarianism and as a result these extracts from a book
of the third century B.C. nonetheless have a very contemporary
connection.
First published in 1934. Unlike previous translations, this
translation of Lao Tzu's Tao Te Ching is based not on the medieval
commentaries but on a close study of the whole of early Chinese
literature.
First published in 1938. Previous translations of the Analects of
Confucius are based upon a medieval interpretation which reflects
the philosophy of the 12th century A.D rather than of the 5th
century B.C., when Confucius lived. This book detaches the Analects
from the Scholastic interpretation and lets these famous sayings
speak for themselves.
1. Introduction.- 2. The Literature of Dance.- 3. The N?tya stra
and the Concept of Dance.- 4. L?sya: A Dramatic Art.- 5. Nrtya and
Upar?paka.- 6. Bandha and Anibandha.- 7. The De Tradition.- 8.
Conclusion.
This pivot focuses on "the concept of edification" in a bid to
systematically expound its connotative structure and logical
evolution. It is divided into ten chapters, embracing various
issues, such as human nature as the foundation of edification, the
development of edification and cultivation, the evolution of
edification and the resultant life based on ritual and music, the
political orientation and ultimate care of edification, and the
nurturing of social edification, in an effort to offer a panoramic
view of the intellectual features of Confucianism, and consequently
a profound reflection on the cultural consciousness of contemporary
China. The book is expected to satisfy the needs for a better
understanding of edification as a Confucian concept, and the
conceptual features of Chinese philosophy, or rather, Confucianism.
The number of manuscripts produced in the Indian sub-continent is
astounding and is the result of a massive enterprise that was
carried out over a vast geographical area and over a vast stretch
of time. Focusing mainly on areas of Northern India and Nepal
between 800 to 1300 CE and on manuscripts containing Sanskrit
texts, the present study investigates a fundamental and so far
rarely studied aspect of manuscript production: visual
organisation. Scribes adopted a variety of visual strategies to
distinguish one text from another and to differentiate the various
sections within a single text (chapters, sub-chapters, etc.). Their
repertoire includes the use of space(s) on the folio, the adoption
of different writing styles, the inclusion of symbols of various
kind, the application of colours ('rubrication'), or a combination
of all these. This study includes a description of these various
strategies and an analysis of their different implementations
across the selected geographical areas. It sheds light on how
manuscripts were produced, as well as on some aspects of their
employment in ritual contexts, in different areas of India and
Nepal.
By way of a personal note, I can reveal to the reader that I was
led to Sanskrit by an exposure to Indian philosophy while still a
child. These early mystical interests gave way in the university to
scholarly pursuits and, through reading the works of Franklin
Edgerton, Louis Renou and Etienne Lamotte, I was introduced to the
scientific study of the* past, to philology and the academic study
of an ancient literature. In this period I wrote a number of books
on Sanskrit aesthetics, concentrating on the sophisticated Indian
notions of suggestion. This work has culminated in a three-volume
study of the Dhvanyaloka and the Dhvanyalokalocana, for the Harvard
Oriental Series. Eventually I found that I wanted to broaden my
concern with India, to learn what was at the universal core of my
studies and what could be of interest to everyone. In reading
Indian literature, I came across so many bizarre tales and ideas
that seemed incomprehensible and removed from the concerns of
everyday life that I became troubled. Vedantic ideas of the world
as a dream, for example, to which I had been particularly partial,
seemed grandiose and megalomanic. I turned away with increasing
scepticism from what I felt to be the hysterical outpourings of
mystical and religious fanaticism.
Serving as a gateway to Chinese thought, this Encyclopedia introduces the significant historical periods of Chinese philosophy ancient and modern and offers insight into the ideas of important thinkers and elementary concepts in philosophical discourse as well as addressing the major conundrums found within various Chinese disciplines. All the major schools of thought are covered and their proponents, followers and critics discussed. There are also essays on the relation of philosophy to other aspects of culture such as history and literature. The Encyclopedia provides a penetrating look into the thought of China and the Chinese, making it a useful resource for both those already acquainted with Chinese philosophy and those seeking to learn.
The work explores the historical and intellectual context of Tsongkhapa's philosophy and addresses the critical issues related to questions of development and originality in Tsongkhapa's thought. It also deals extensively with one of Tsongkhapa's primary concerns, namely his attempts to demonstrate that the Middle Way philosophy's deconstructive analysis does not negate the reality of the everyday world. The study's central focus, however, is the question of the existence and the nature of self. This is explored both in terms of Tsongkhapa's deconstruction of the self and his reconstruction of person. Finally, the work explores the concept of reality that emerges in Tsongkhapa's philosophy, and deals with his understanding of the relationship between critical reasoning, no-self, and religious experience.
Taoism for Beginners is a practical guide to applying the key
notions, concepts and beliefs underlying Taoism's various branches
and schools. Authors C. Alexander and Annellen Simpkins tap into
their years of training and study in meditation, martial arts and
Eastern philosophy to provide readers with a comprehensive
introduction to the spiritual tenets and attainments that mark the
holistic pathway to a life more in balance. This book offers
readers: A clear explanation of what Taoism is and how to apply its
most salient tenets and teachings to your daily life Simple
exercises to enable you to lead a calmer and more mindful,
connected life--taking in a range of practices that include
meditation, breathing, chi kung and tai chi chuan An exploration of
the origins and background of Taoism, including the various sects
and schools of thought An informative discussion of key Taoist
concepts, including wu-wei (nonaction), yin and yang, and the
powerful way of De (the cradle of power, virtue and life) This new
edition has been updated by the author to include the connections
between Taoism and mindfulness and meditation, as well as
ritualized practices to heighten mind-body connection in order to
control chi (energy). Taoist principles and concepts have guided
people on the path to harmony, wholeness, balance and greater
well-being for millennia. This beginning resource makes an ancient
religion, its practices and history accessible for a twenty-first
century reader.
Islamic philosophy has often been treated as being largely of historical interest, belonging to the history of ideas rather than to philosophical study. This volume successfully overturns that view. Emphasising the living nature and rich diversity of the subject, it examines the main thinkers and schools of thought, discusses the key concepts of Islamic philosophy and covers a vast geographical area. This indispensable reference tool includes a comprehensive bibliography and an extensive index.
Contents: Matilal, B K, Ontological Problems in Nyaya, Buddhism and Jainism: A Comparitive Analysis, Journal of Indian Philosophy 5 [1977] Potter, Karl H, Vedantaparibhasa as Systematic Reconstruction, SS Rama Rao Pappu ed. Perspectives on Vedanta, Essays in Honor of Professor T Raju [Leiden: E J Brill, 1988] Chakrabarti, Kisor, The Nyaya-Vaisesika Theory of Universals, Journal of Indian Philosophy 3 [1975] Siderits, Mark, More Things in Heaven and Earth, Journal of Indian Philosophy, 10 [1982] Gillon, Brendon S, Negative Facts and Knowledge of Negative Facts, P. Bilimoria and J N Mohanty eds., Relativism, Suffering and Beyond [Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1997] Kapstein, Matthew, Mercological Considerations in Vasubandhu's Proof of Idealism,(Vijnaptimatratasiddhi) Idealstic Studies 18 [1988] Matilal, B K, Causality in the Nyaya-Vaisesika School, Philosophy East and West 44 [1975] Potter, Karl H, An Ontology of Concrete Connectors, Journal of Philosophy 58 [1961] Garfield, Jay L, Dependent Arising and the Emptiness of Emptiness: Why Did Nagarjuna Start with Causation?, Philosophy East and West 44 [1994] Potter, Karl H, Freedom and Determinism from an Indian Perspective, Philosophy East and West 17 [1967] Duerlinger, James, Reductionist and Nonreductionist Theories of Persons in Indian Buddhist Philosophy, Journal of Indian Philosophy 21 [1993] Bastow, David, Self-Construction in Buddhism, Ratio 28 [1986] Siderits, Mark, Buddhist Reductionism, Philosophy East and West 47 [1997] Taber, John, The Mimamsa Theory of Self Recognition, Philosophy East and West 40 [1990] Chakrabarti, Arindam, I Touch What I Saw, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52 [1992] Shukla, Pandit Badrinath, Dehatmavada or the Body as Soul: Exploration of a Possibility Within Nyaya Thought, Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 5 [1988] Larson, Gerald James, An Eccentric Ghost in the Machine: Formal and Quantitative Aspects of the Samkhya-Yoga Dualism, Philosophy East and West 33 [1983] Schweizer, Paul, Mind/Consciousness Dualism in Sankhya-Yoga Philosophy, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 53 [1993] Deutsch, Eliot, The Self in Advaita Vedanta, International Philosophical Quarterly 6 [1966] Bhattacharyya, K C, The Concept of the Absolute and its Alternative Forms, Philosophical Studies 2 [Calcutta: Progressive Publishers, 1958]
Contents: Herman, A L, Indian Theodicy:Samkara and Ramanuja on Brahmasutrabhasya II, Philosophy East and West 21 [1971] Biderman, Shlomo, A 'Constitutive' God - a An Indian Suggestion, Philosophy East and West 32 [1982] Nagel, Bruno M I, Untiy and Contradiction: Some Arguments in Utpaladeva and Abhinavagupta for the evidence of the self as Siva, Philosophy East and West 45 [1995] Lipner, J J, The World as God's 'Body': In Pursuit of Dialogue with Ramanuja, Religous Studies 20 [1984] Betty, L Stafford, A Death-Blow to Sankara's Non-Dualism?, Religous Studies 20 [1976] Bilimoria, Purosottama, Hindu Doubts About God: Towards a Mimamsa Deconstruction, International Philosophical Quarterly 30 [1990] Hayes, Richard P, Principled Atheism in the Buddhist Scholastic Tradition, Journal of Indian Philosophy 16 [1988] Griffiths, Paul J, Buddha and God: a Contrastive Study in Maximal Goodness, Journal of Religion 69 [1989] Taber, John, Reason, Revelation and Idealism in Sankara's Vedanta, Journal of Indian Philosophy 9 [1981] Hayes, Richard P, The Question of Doctrinalism in the Buddhist Epistemologists, Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 52 [1983] Perrett, Roy W, Rebirth, Religous Studies 23 [1987] Potter, Karl H, The Naturalistic Principle of Karma, Philosophy East and West 14 [1964] Deutsch, Eliot, Karma as a 'Convenient Fiction' in the Advaita Vedanta, Philosophy East and West 15 [1965] Griffiths, Paul J, Notes Towards a Critique of Buddhist Karmic Theory, Religous Studies 18 [1982] Forrest, Peter, Inherited responsibility, karma and Original Sin, Sophia 33 [1994] Biderman, Shlomo, Religion and Imperatives, >eligous Traditions 4 [1981] Perrett, Roy W, Religion and Politics in India: Some Philosophical Perspectives, Religous Studies 33 [1997] McDermott, A C S, Towards A Pragmatics of Mantra Recitation, Journal of Indian Philosophy, 3 [1975] Staal, Frits, The Meaninglessness of Ritual, Numen 26 [1979] Smart, Ninian, Analysis of the Religious Factors in Indian Metaphysics, Doctrine and Argument in Indian Philosophy [London:George Allen & Unwin, 1964] Krishna, Daya, Three Myths about Indian Philosophy, Diogenes 55 [1966]
Contents: Hiriyanna, M, Philosophy of Values, Haridas Bhattacharyya ed. The Cultural History of India: V3 The Philosophies 2nd rev. ed [Calcutta: The Ramakrisna Mission of Culture] Krishna, Daya, The Myth of the Purusarthas, Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 4 [1986] van Buitenen, J A B, Dharma and Moksa, Philosophy East and West 7 [1957] Ingalls, Daniel H H, Dharma and Moksa, Philosophy east and West 7 [1957] Potter, Karl H Dharma and Moksa from a Conversational Point of View, Philosophy East and West 8 [1958] Prasad, Rajendra, The Concept of Moksa, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 31 [1971] Chakrabarti, A Is Liberation (Moksa) Pleasant?, Philosophy East and West 33 [1983] Ingalls, Daniel H H, Authority and Law in Ancient India, Journal of the American Oriental Society suppl. 7 [1954] Prakash, Buddha, The Hindu Philosophy of History, Journal of the History of Ideas 16 [1955] Taber, John, The Sugnificance of Kumarilas Philosophy, Eli Franco and Karin Preisendanz eds. Beyond Orientalism [Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1997] Parekh, Bhikkhy, 'Theory of Non-Violence' Colonialism, Tradition and reform: AN Analysis of gandhi's Political Discourse [New Delhi:Sage, 1989] Kupperman, Joel J, The Supra-Moral in Religous Ethics: The Case of Buddhism, Journal of Religous Ethics 1[1973] Perrett, Roy W, Egoism, Altruism and Intentionalism in Buddhist ethics, Journal of Indian Philosophy 15 [1987] Hiriyanna, M, Indian Aesthetics-1 and Art Experience-2, Art Experience [Mysorc: Kavyalaya Publishers, 1954] Bhattacharya, K C, The Concept of Rasa, Philosophical Studies 1 [Calcutta: Progressive Publishers, 1958] Chari, V K, Rasa: Poetry and the Emotions, Sanskrit Criticism [Honolulu: University of hawaii Press, 1990] Gerow, Edwin, Abhinavagupta's Aesthetics as a Speculative Paradigm, Journal of the American Oriental Society 111 [1994] Chaudhury, P J , Catharsis in the Light of Indian Aesthetics, Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 24 [1965] Bake, A A, The Aesthetics of Indian Music, Britih Journal of Aesthetics 4 [1964] Vatsyayan, Kapila Metaphors of Indian Art, Journalof the Asiatic Society of Bombay 71 [1997]
Contents: Mohanty, J N, A Fragment of the Indian Philosophical Tradition - Theory of Pramana, Philosophy East and West 38 [1988] Sidcrits, Mark, Nagarjuna as Anti-Realist, Journal of Indian Philosophy 16 [1988] Mohanty, Jitendranath, Introduction, Gungesa's Theory of Truth, 2nd rev. ed. [Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass, 1989] Katsura, Shoryu, Dharmakirti's Theory of Truth, Journal of Indian Philosophy, 12 [1984] Potter, Karl H, Does Indian Epistemiology Concern Justififed True Belief?, Journal of Indian Philosophy 12 [1984] Matilal, B K, Knowing That One Knows, Journal of the Indian Council of Philosophical Research 8 [1988] Bhattacharyya, Kalidas, The Indian Concepts of Knowledge and Self, (Second Installment) Our Heritage (Calcutta) 3 [1955] Phillips, Stephen H, Padmapada's Illusion Argument, Philosophy East and West 37 [1987] Ram-Prasad, C, Dreams and Reality: The Sankarite Critique of Vijnanavada, Philosophy East and West 43 [1993] Ram-Prasad, C, Dreams and the Coherence of Experience: An Anti-Idealist Critique from Classical Indian Philosophy, American Philosophical Quarterly 32 [1995] Potter, Karl H, Astitva Jneyaiva Abhidheyatva, Weiner Zeitschrift fur die Kunde Sud-und Ostasiens und Archiv fur Indische Philosophie 12 [1968] Shaw, J L, The Nyaya on Existence, Knowability and Nameability, Journal of Indian Philosophy, 5 [1978] Perrett, Roy W, Is Whatever Exists Knowable and Nameable?, Philosophy East and West 49 [1999] Chakrabarti, Arindam, On Knowing by Being Told, Philosophy East and West 42 [1992] Mohanty, J N, The Nyaya Theory of Doubt,Visva Bharati Journal of Philosophy 3 [1965]
This is Volume VIII of sixteen in a collection on Buddhism.
Originally published in 1923, this volume looks at cosmology. All
forms of Buddhism, however divergent, claim to have but three
objects of worship: the Buddha, the Dharma, and the Sangha.. The
first is the founder of the faith, the second the teaching which he
gave, and the third the order which he founded. Regarding each of
the Ratnas or jewels, as they are called, an enormous amount of
speculation has grown up, with many different opinions concerning
the proper method of interpretation.
First Published in 2000. This is Volume III of ten of the Oriental
series looking at Indian Religion and Philosophy. It was written
around 1884 and includes the translation from Sanskrit of the
'Manava-dharma-castra' by the late Dr. Burnell which was completed
by the editor.
First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
First Published in 2000. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor &
Francis, an informa company.
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