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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Religions of Indic & Oriental origin
WAN Zhaoyuan analyses how Chinese intellectuals conceived of the
relationship between 'science' and 'religion' through in-depth
examination of the writings of Kang Youwei, a prominent political
reformer and radical Confucian thinker, often referred to by his
disciples as the 'Martin Luther of Confucianism'. Confronted with
the rise of scientism and challenged by the Conflict Thesis during
his life among adversarial Chinese New Culture intellectuals, Kang
maintains a holistic yet evolving conception of a compatible and
complementary relationship between scientific knowledge and 'true
religion' exemplified by his Confucian religion (kongjiao). This
close analysis of Kang's ideas contributes to a richer
understanding of the history of science and religion in China and
in a more global context.
Confucianism is the guiding creed for a quarter of mankind, yet
hardly anyone has explained it in plain terms - until now. Written
in a style both intelligible and enjoyable for the global audience,
The Great Equal Society distils the core ideas of the major
Confucian classics and shows how their timeless wisdom can be
applied to the modern world. It also introduces pragmatic
suggestions emanating from Confucius and his followers for ensuring
good governance, building a humane economy and educating moral
leaders. The book's core message of inner morality, first expounded
by Confucius millennia ago, will resonate on both sides of the
Pacific, and its sweeping survey of the hot topics today -
dysfunctional government, crony capitalism, and the erosion of
ethics in both Wall Street and Main Street, among others - will
breathe new life to Confucian teachings while providing much-needed
answers to our urgent social problems. The Great Equal Society is
written by Young-oak Kim, a Korean thinker whom Wikipedia describes
as "the nation's leading philosopher dealing with public issues and
explaining Oriental philosophy to the public," and Jung-kyu Kim, a
talented trilingual writer who has published works in English,
Japanese and Korean.
This book demonstrates the close link between medicine and Buddhism
in early and medieval Japan. It may seem difficult to think of
Japanese Buddhism as being linked to the realm of medical practices
since religious healing is usually thought to be restricted to
prayers for divine intervention. There is a surprising lack of
scholarship regarding medicinal practices in Japanese Buddhism
although an overwhelming amount of primary sources proves
otherwise. A careful re-reading of well-known materials from a
study-of-religions perspective, together with in some cases a
first-time exploration of manuscripts and prints, opens new views
on an understudied field. The book presents a topical survey and
comprises chapters on treating sight-related diseases, women's
health, plant-based materica medica and medicinal gardens, and
finally horse medicine to include veterinary knowledge.
Terminological problems faced in working on this material - such as
'religious' or 'magical healing' as opposed to 'secular medicine' -
are assessed. The book suggests focusing more on the plural nature
of the Japanese healing system as encountered in the primary
sources and reconsidering the use of categories from the European
intellectual tradition.
The Upanishads are among the source books of the Hindu faith, being
the concluding portion of the Hindu scriptures, the Vedas, also the
Vedanta. This selection of translations by Swami Nikhilananda
contains the Svetasvatara, Prasna and Mandukya Upanishads together
with a special contribution to Western understanding of these
important books in the form of a noteworthy essay on Hindu Ethics.
Translated from the Sanskrit with an Introduction embodying a study
of Hindu Ethics, and with Notes and Explantions based on the
Commentary of Sri Sankaracharya, the great Eighth-Century
Philosopher and Saint of India. Contents Include: Svetasvatara
Upanishad - Prasna Upanishad - Mandukya Upanishad
The Buddha left his home and family and enjoined his followers to
go forth and become homeless. With a traditionally celibate clergy,
Asian Buddhism is often regarded as a world-renouncing religion
inimical to family life. This edited volume counters this view,
showing how Asian Buddhists in a wide range of historical and
geographical circumstances relate as kin to their biological
families and to the religious families they join. Using
contemporary and historical case studies as well as textual
examples, contributors explore how Asian Buddhists invoke family
ties in the intentional communities they create and use them to
establish religious authority and guard religious privilege. The
language of family and lineage emerges as central to a variety of
South and East Asian Buddhist contexts. With an interdisciplinary,
Pan-Asian approach, "Family in Buddhism" challenges received wisdom
in religious studies and offers new ways to think about family and
society."
Not Seeing Snow: Muso Soseki and Medieval Japanese Zen offers a
detailed look at a crucial yet sorely neglected figure in medieval
Japan. It clarifies Muso 's far-reaching significance as a Buddhist
leader, waka poet, landscape designer, and political figure. In
doing so, it sheds light on how elite Zen culture was formed
through a complex interplay of politics, religious pedagogy and
praxis, poetry, landscape design, and the concerns of institution
building. The appendix contains the first complete English
translation of Muso 's personal waka anthology, Sho gaku
Kokushishu.
What does it mean to be a Western Buddhist? For the predominantly
Anglo-Australian affiliates of two Western Buddhist centres in
Australia, the author proposes an answer to this question, and
finds support for it from interviews and her own
participant-observation experience. Practitioners' prior
experiences of experimentation with spiritual groups and practices
- and their experiences of participation, practice and
self-transformation - are examined with respect to their roles in
practitioners' appropriation of the Buddhist worldview, and their
subsequent commitment to the path to enlightenment. Religious
commitment is experienced as a decision-point, itself the effect of
the individual's experimental immersion in the Centre's activities.
During this time the claims of the Buddhist worldview are tested
against personal experience and convictions. Using rich
ethnographic data and Lofland and Skonovd's experimental conversion
motif as a model for theorizing the stages of involvement leading
to commitment, the author demonstrates that this study has a wider
application to our understanding of the role of alternative
religions in western contexts.
This text offers a guide to the philosophy of Confucianism and its
impact in the Confucian regions, covering mainland China, Taiwan,
Hong Kong, Macao, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Vietnam and
Singapore. All, except Singapore, employed Confucianism as the
state ideology before the west came to East Asia. The differences
and similarities between the variety of Confucian schools are
examined. The author concludes that the philosophical and ethical
principles of Confucianism will assist in the industrialization and
democratization of the region.
In From Outcasts to Emperors, David Quinter illuminates the Shingon
Ritsu movement founded by the charismatic monk Eison (1201-90) at
Saidaiji in Nara, Japan. The book's focus on Eison and his
disciples' involvement in the cult of Manjusri Bodhisattva reveals
their innovative synthesis of Shingon esotericism, Buddhist
discipline (Ritsu; Sk. vinaya), icon and temple construction, and
social welfare activities as the cult embraced a spectrum of
supporters, from outcasts to warrior and imperial rulers. In so
doing, the book redresses typical portrayals of "Kamakura Buddhism"
that cast Eison and other Nara Buddhist leaders merely as
conservative reformers, rather than creative innovators, amid the
dynamic religious and social changes of medieval Japan.
"Cultural Blending in Korean Death Rites" examines the cultural
encounter of Confucianism and Christianity with particular
reference to death rites in Korea. As its overarching interpretive
framework, this book employs the idea of the 'total social
phenomenon', a concept first introduced by the French
anthropologist Marcel Mauss (1872-1950).
From the perspective of the total social phenomenon, this book
utilizes a combination of theological, historical, sociological and
anthropological approaches, and explores Korean death rites by
classifying them into three categories: ritual "before" death
(Bible copying), ritual "at" death (funerary rites), and ritual
"after" death (ancestral ritual). It focuses on Christian practices
as they epitomize the complex interplay of Confucianism and
Christianity. By drawing on a total social phenomenon approach to
the empirical case of Korean death rites, Chang-Won Park
contributes to the advancement of theory and method in religious
studies.
During the first half of this century the forests of Thailand were
home to wandering ascetic monks. They were Buddhists, but their
brand of Buddhism did not copy the practices described in ancient
doctrinal texts. Their Buddhism found expression in living
day-to-day in the forest and in contending with the mental and
physical challenges of hunger, pain, fear, and desire. Combining
interviews and biographies with an exhaustive knowledge of archival
materials and a wide reading of ephemeral popular literature,
Kamala Tiyavanich documents the monastic lives of three generations
of forest-dwelling ascetics and challenges the stereotype of
state-centric Thai Buddhism. Although the tradition of wandering
forest ascetics has disappeared, a victim of Thailand's relentless
modernization and rampant deforestation, the lives of the monks
presented here are a testament to the rich diversity of regional
Buddhist traditions. The study of these monastic lineages and
practices enriches our understanding of Buddhism in Thailand and
elsewhere.
This book is a pioneering attempt to understand the prehistory of
Hinduism in South Asia. Exploring religious processes in the Deccan
region between the eleventh and the nineteenth century with class
relations as its point of focus, it throws new light on the making
of religious communities, monastic institutions, legends, lineages,
and the ethics that governed them. In the light of this prehistory,
a compelling framework is suggested for a revision of existing
perspectives on the making of Hinduism in the nineteenth and the
twentieth century.
The grammar presents a full decription of Pali, the language used
in the Theravada Buddhist canon, which is still alive in Ceylon and
South-East Asia. The development of its phonological and
morphological systems is traced in detail from Old Indic.
Comprehensive references to comparable features and phenomena from
other Middle Indic languages mean that this grammar can also be
used to study the literature of Jainism.
The three-volume project 'Concepts and Methods for the Study of
Chinese Religions' is a timely review of the history of the study
of Chinese religions, reconsiders the present state of analytical
and methodological theories, and initiates a new chapter in the
methodology of the field itself. The three volumes raise
interdisciplinary and cross-tradition debates, and engage
methodologies for the study of East Asian religions with Western
voices in an active and constructive manner. Within the overall
project, this volume addresses the intellectual history and
formation of critical concepts that are foundational to the Chinese
religious landscape. These concepts include lineage, scripture,
education, discipline, religion, science and scientism,
sustainability, law and rites, and the religious sphere. With these
topics and approaches, this volume serves as a reference for
graduate students and scholars interested in Chinese religions, the
modern cultural and intellectual history of China (including
mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Chinese communities
overseas), intellectual and material history, and the global
academic discourse of critical concepts in the study of religions.
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Magic and Mystery in Tibet
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Alexandra David-Neel; Introduction by A D'Arsonval; Foreword by Paul Tice
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In the religions of the world, there is strongemphasis on the
practice of "purification" for the religious transformation ofmind
and body in connection with achieving such ultimate objectives
asenlightenment and salvation. The contributors discuss the great
diversity offorms and meanings with respect to religious
transformation in their respectivefields of research. While
invoking earlier debates within the study ofreligions and theology
on the topic of "purification" the studies in thisvolume penetrate
further into the meaning and structure of religioustransformation
of mind and body in the religions of the world and opencomparative
perspectives on this topic.
Exploring the interactions of the Buddhist world with the
dominant cultures of Iran in pre- and post-Islamic times, this book
demonstrates that the traces and cross-influences of Buddhism have
brought the material and spiritual culture of Iran to its present
state. Even after the term 'Buddhism' was eradicated from the
literary and popular languages of the region, it has continued to
have a significant impact on the culture as a whole. In the course
of its history, Iranian culture adopted and assimilated a system of
Buddhist art, iconography, religious symbolism, literature, and
asceticism due to the open border of eastern Iran with the Buddhist
regions, and the resultant intermingling of the two worlds.
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