|
Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Religions of Indic & Oriental origin
Cetasika means belonging to the mind. It is a mental factor which
accompanies consciousness (citta) and experiences an object. There
are 52 cetasikas. This book gives an outline of each of these 52
cetasikas and shows the relationship they have with each other. It
will help the student have more understanding of the intricate
operations of the mind enabling the development of good qualities
and the eventual eradication of all defilements. It will help to
understand that citta and cetasika act according to their own
conditions and that an abiding agent (soul or self) is not to be
found. The book assumes some previous knowledge of Buddhism.
This book, now in its fifth edition, provides a comprehensive
introduction to Buddhist psychology and counselling, exploring key
concepts in psychology and practical applications in
mindfulness-based counselling techniques. This integrated study
uses Buddhist philosophy of mind, psychology, ethics and
contemplative methods to focus on the 'emotional rhythm of our
lives', opening up new avenues for mental health.De Silva presents
a range of management techniques for mental health issues including
stress, anger, depression, addictions and grief. He moves beyond
the restriction of mental health issues to 'damage control',
instead encouraging personal growth and positive emotions of
compassion, forgiveness, generosity, equanimity and, ultimately,
emotional balance.This book blends Western psychology and
philosophy and ancient wisdom and contemporary thought to provide a
key contribution to cognitive sciences, emotion studies, moral
psychology and psychotherapy counselling. This new edition contains
nine new chapters and an additional second part which focuses on
counselling and mindfulness-based techniques in therapy.
In the early 21st century, Buddhism has become ubiquitous in
America and other western nations, moving beyond the original bodhi
tree in India to become a major global religion. During its journey
westward, it has changed, adapted to new cultures, and offered
spiritual help to many people looking for answers to the problems
of life. It is being studied in institutions of higher education,
being practice by many people, and having its literature translated
and published. The Historical Dictionary of Buddhism covers and
clarifies Buddhist concepts, significant figures, movements,
schools, places, activities, and periods. This is done through a
chronology, an introductory essay, a bibliography, and over 700
cross-referenced dictionary entries.
Responding to a recent upsurge of Jewish interest in Buddhism,
Sasson undertakes the first serious academic effort to uncover the
common ground between the founders of the two religions, Moses and
the Buddha. Because this is a study of traditions rather than a
historical investigation, Sasson is able to synthesize various
kinds of materials, from biblical and non-biblical, adn from early
Pali and Sanskrit Buddhist sources. She notes the striking
similarities between the life-patterns of the two leaders. Both
were raised as princes and both eventually left their lavish
upbringings only to discover something higher. Their mothers play
prominent roles in the narratives of their births, while their
fathers are often excluded from view. They were both born
surrounded by light and embodying miraculous qualities. But there
are also some rather consequential differences, which allow these
two colossal figures to maintain their uniqueness and significance.
Moses was a man chosen for a particular mission by a higher power,
a human being serving as the deity's tool. By contrast, the Buddha
was a man whose mission was self-determined and actualized over
time. Moses lived one life; the Buddha lived many. The Buddha
became the symbol of human perfection; Moses was cherished by his
tradition despite - or possibly because of - his personal failings.
And although Moses is often presented as the founder of Israelite
religion, the Buddha was simply following the blueprint outlined by
the Buddhas before him. The programme of this study goes further
than to compare and contrast the two figures. Sasson argues that
the comparative model she adopts can highlight doctrines and
priorities of a religion that may otherwise remain hidden. In that
way, the birth of Moses and the Buddha may serve as a paradigm for
the comparative study of religions.
"A warm, profound and cleareyed memoir. . . this wise and
sympathetic book's lingering effect is as a reminder that a deeper
and more companionable way of life lurks behind our self-serious
stories."-Oliver Burkeman, New York Times Book Review A remarkable
exploration of the therapeutic relationship, Dr. Mark Epstein
reflects on one year's worth of therapy sessions with his patients
to observe how his training in Western psychotherapy and his
equally long investigation into Buddhism, in tandem, led to greater
awareness-for his patients, and for himself For years, Dr. Mark
Epstein kept his beliefs as a Buddhist separate from his work as a
psychiatrist. Content to use his training in mindfulness as a
private resource, he trusted that the Buddhist influence could, and
should, remain invisible. But as he became more forthcoming with
his patients about his personal spiritual leanings, he was
surprised to learn how many were eager to learn more. The divisions
between the psychological, emotional, and the spiritual, he soon
realized, were not as distinct as one might think. In The Zen of
Therapy, Dr. Epstein reflects on a year's worth of selected
sessions with his patients and observes how, in the incidental
details of a given hour, his Buddhist background influences the way
he works. Meditation and psychotherapy each encourage a willingness
to face life's difficulties with courage that can be hard to
otherwise muster, and in this cross-section of life in his office,
he emphasizes how therapy, an element of Western medicine, can in
fact be considered a two-person meditation. Mindfulness, too, much
like a good therapist, can "hold" our awareness for us-and allow us
to come to our senses and find inner peace. Throughout this deeply
personal inquiry, one which weaves together the wisdom of two
worlds, Dr. Epstein illuminates the therapy relationship as
spiritual friendship, and reveals how a therapist can help patients
cultivate the sense that there is something magical, something
wonderful, and something to trust running through our lives, no
matter how fraught they have been or might become. For when we
realize how readily we have misinterpreted our selves, when we stop
clinging to our falsely conceived constructs, when we touch the
ground of being, we come home.
The Ch'ing scholar-thinker Tai Chen (1724-1777) was a passionate
explorer. He loved words, and his most important philosophical
treatise, the Meng Tzu tzu-I shu-cheng (An evidential study of the
meaning of terms in the Mencius), is an exhaustive search for the
meaning of the words first uttered by Mencius in the fourth century
B.C. This book by Ann-ping Chin and Mansfield Freeman is the first
complete and annotated English translation of that treatise.
Drawing on scholarship from the eighteenth century to the present,
it also includes two essays that reconstruct Tai Chen's life and
time and reinterpret his thought. Unlike most of the evidential
scholars of his day, Tai Chen was not satisfied merely with
providing reason and proof for his reading. He was interested in
the life of words as their meaning changes with the vicissitudes of
time. Tai Chen felt that the terms in the Mencius, garbled by the
Sung and Ming thinkers who had come under the influence of Buddhism
and Taoism, would no longer have made sense to Mencius himself. Key
Confucian concepts, such as "principle" and "nature," had become
"blood-less" moral constructs. Tai Chen preferred their primeval
meaning. Intellectual historians of this century have hailed him as
a progressive thinker and a social critic, but he saw himself in a
simpler role: as a reader striving to understand every word in his
text.
A general introduction to the main ideas of Theravada Buddhism. The
purpose of this book is to help the reader gain insight into the
Buddhist scriptures and the way in which the teachings can be used
to benefit both ourselves and others in everyday life. Several
chapters are written in the form of question and answer, inspired
by questions posed by ordinary people who were confronted with
difficulties in the practical application of the teachings. The
book will be an invaluable aid for those individuals who wish to
develop the Buddhist path to true understanding. Suitable for both
practicing Buddhists and newcomers to the teachings.
Dancing Bodies of Devotion: Fluid Gestures in Bharata Natyam
examines how Bharata Natyam, a traditionally Hindu storytelling
dance form, moves across religious boundaries through both
incorporating choreography on Buddhist, Christian, Muslim, and Jain
themes and the pluralistic identities of participants. Dancers
traverse religious boundaries by reformulating an aesthetic
foundation based on performative rather than solely textual
understandings of rasa, conventionally defined as a formula for how
to physically craft emotion on stage. Through the ethnographic case
studies of this volume, dancers of Bharata Natyam innovatively
demonstrate how the rasa of devotion (bhakti rasa), surprisingly
absent from classic dance-related texts, serves as the pivotal
framework for expanding on their own interreligious thematic and
interpretive possibilities. In contemporary Bharata Natyam, bhakti
rasa is not just about enhancing religious experience; instead,
these dancers choreographically adapt various religious identities
and ideas in order to emphasize pluralistic cultural and ethical
dimensions in their work. Through the dancing body, multiple
religious and secular interpretations fluidly co-exist.
The context for the first part of this study is the community
(sangha) of early Buddhism in India, as it is reflected in the
religion's canon composed in the Pali language, which is preserved
by the Theravada tradition as the only authentic record of the
words of the Buddha and his disciples, as well as of events within
that community. This book does not assert that the Pali Canon
represents any sort of "original" Buddhism, but it maintains that
it reflects issues and concerns of this religious community in the
last centuries before the Common Era. The events focused on in part
one of this study revolve around diversity and debate with respect
to proper soteriology, which in earliest Buddhist communities
entails what paths of practice successfully lead to the religion's
final goal of nibbana (Sanskrit: nirvana). One of the main theses
of this study is that some of the vocational and soteriological
tensions and points of departure of the early community depicted in
the Pali Canon have had a tendency to crop up in the ongoing
Theravada tradition in Sri Lanka, which forms the second part of
the study. In particular, part two covers first a vocational
bifurcation in the Sri Lankan that has existed at least from the
last century of the Common Era to contemporary times, and second a
modern debate held between two leading voices in Theravada
Buddhism, on the subject of what constitutes the right meditative
path to nibbana.With a few notable exceptions, both members of
Theravada Buddhism and the scholars who have studied them have
maintained that the Pali Canon, and the ongoing tradition that has
grown out of it, has a singular soteriology. The aim of this study
is to deconstruct tradition, in the simple sense of revealing the
tradition's essential multiplicity. Prior to this study, past
scholarship--which preferred to portray early Indian and Theravada
Buddhsim as wholly rationalist systems--has shied away from giving
ample treatment on the noble person who possesses supernormal
powers. This book examines the dichotomy between two Theravada
monastic vocations that have grown out of tensions discussed in
part one. The bifurcation is between the town-dwelling scholar monk
and the forest-dwelling meditator monk. Scholars have certainly
recognized this split in the sangha before, but this is the first
attempt to completely compare their historical roles side by side.
This is an important book for collections in Asian studies,
Buddhist studies, history, and religious studies.
'The body of Christ, broken for you.' These are the words almost
always shared whenever the communion bread is given. But what do
these words mean for women whose bodies have been broken by
injustice and violence? This book interweaves feminist theological
ideas, Asian spiritual traditions, and the witnesses of comfort
women - sex-slaves during World War II - to offer a new approach to
a theology of body. It examines the multi-layered meaning of the
broken body of Christ from Christological, sacramental, and
ecclesiological perspectives, and explores the centrality of body
in theological discourse.
The way people encounter ideas of Hinduism online is often shaped
by global discourses of religion, pervasive Orientalism and
(post)colonial scholarship. This book addresses a gap in the
scholarly debate around defining Hinduism by demonstrating the role
of online discourses in generating and projecting images of Hindu
religion and culture. This study surveys a wide range of
propaganda, websites and social media in which definitions of
Hinduism are debated. In particular, it focuses on the role of
Hindu nationalism in the presentation and management of Hinduism in
the electronic public sphere. Hindu nationalist parties and
individuals are highly invested in discussions and presentations of
Hinduism online, and actively shape discourses through a variety of
strategies. Analysing Hindu nationalist propaganda, cyber activist
movements and social media presence, as well as exploring
methodological strategies that are useful to the field of religion
and media in general, the book concludes by showing how these
discourses function in the wider Hindu diaspora. Building on
religion and media research by highlighting mechanical and
hermeneutic issues of the Internet and how it affects how we
encounter Hinduism online, this book will be of significant
interest to scholars of religious studies, Hindu studies and
digital media.
The classical Triad of the Chinese tradition is Heaven-Man-Earth.
Rene Guenon places this ternary in the context of universal
metaphysics by identifying Heaven with Essence and Earth with
Substance, the mediator between them being Man, whose cosmic
function is to embody spirit (Heaven) while simultaneously
spiritualizing matter (Earth). Exploring Chinese cosmology further,
Guenon sheds light on such archetypal polarities as Heaven and
Earth, Yin and Yang, Solve et Coagula, Celestial and Terrestrial
Numbers, the Square and the Compass, the Double Spiral, and the
Being and the Environment, while pointing to their synthetic unity
in terms of ternaries, such as the Three Worlds, Triple Time,
Spiritus, Anima, and Corpus, Sulfur, Mercury and Salt, and God,
Man, and Nature. Perhaps more completely than in any other work,
Guenon demonstrates in The Great Triad how any integral tradition
is both a mirror reflecting universal themes found in all other
intact traditions and an entire conceptual cosmos unto itself,
unique and incomparable.
Christian dialogic writings flourished in the Catholic missions in
late Ming China. This study focuses on the mission work of the
Italian Jesuit Giulio Aleni (Ai Rulue , 1582-1649) in Fujian and
the unique text Kouduo richao (Diary of Oral Admonitions,
1630-1640) that records the religious and intellectual
conversations among the Jesuits and local converts. By examining
the mechanisms of dialogue in Kouduo richao and other Christian
works distinguished by a certain dialogue form, the author of the
present work aims to reveal the formation of a hybrid
Christian-Confucian identity in late Ming Chinese religious
experience. By offering the new approach of dialogic hybridization,
the book not only treats dialogue as an important yet
underestimated genre in late Ming Christian literature, but it also
uncovers a self-other identity complex in the dialogic exchanges of
the Jesuits and Chinese scholars. Giulio Aleni, Kouduo richao, and
Christian-Confucian Dialogism in Late Ming Fujian is a
multi-faceted investigation of the religious, philosophical,
ethical, scientific, and artistic topics discussed among the
Jesuits and late Ming scholars. This comprehensive research echoes
what the distinguished Sinologist Erik Zurcher (1928-2008) said
about the richness and diversity of Chinese Christian texts
produced in the 17th and 18th centuries. Following Zurcher's
careful study and annotated full translation of Kouduo richao
(Monumenta Serica Monograph Series, LVI/1-2), the present work
features a set of new findings beyond the endeavours of Zurcher and
other scholars. With the key concept of Christian-Confucian
dialogism, it tells the intriguing story of Aleni's mission work
and the thriving Christian communities in late Ming Fujian.
Drawing on the variety of archival sources in the host of European
and Oriental languages, the book focuses on the history,
ethnography, and convoluted ethnic identity of the
Polish-Lithuanian Karaites. The vanishing community of the
Karaites, a non-Talmudic Turkic-speaking Jewish minority that had
been living in Eastern Europe since the late Middle Ages, developed
a unique ethnographic culture and religious tradition. The book
offers the first comprehensive study of the dramatic history of the
Polish-Lithuanian Karaite community in the twentieth century.
Especially important is the analysis of the dejudaization (or
Turkicization) of the community that saved the Karaites from
horrors of the Holocaust.
With extensive research and creative interpretations, Dasan's Noneo
gogeum ju (Old and New Commentaries of the Analects) has been
evaluated in the academia of Korean Studies as a crystallization of
his studies on the Confucian classics. Dasan (Jeong Yak-yong:
1762-1836) attempted through this book to synthesize and overcome
the lengthy scholarly tradition of the classical studies of the
Analects, leading it not only to represent one of the greatest
achievements of Korean Confucianism but also demonstrate an
innovative prospect for the progress of Confucian philosophy,
positioning it as one of the ground-breaking works in all Confucian
legacies in East Asia. Originally consisting of forty volumes in
traditional book binding, his Noneo gogeum ju contains one hundred
and seventy-five new interpretations on the Analects, hundreds of
arguments about the original meanings of the Analects commentaries,
hundreds of references to the scholarly works of the Analects,
thousands of supportive quotations from various East Asian classics
for the author's arguments, and hundreds of philological
discussions. This book is the second volume of an English
translation of Noneo gogeum ju with the translator's comments on
the innovative ideas and interpretations of Dasan on the Analects.
This book sheds light on the purpose of Hindu dance as devotional.
Dr. Sabrina D. MisirHiralall explains the history of Hindu dance
and how colonization caused the dance form to move from sacred to a
Westernized system that emphasizes culture. Postcolonialism is a
main theme throughout this text, as religion and culture do not
remain static. MisirHiralall points to a postcolonial return to
Hindu dance as a religious and sacred dance form while positioning
Hindu dance in the Western culture in which she lives.
|
|