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Books > Humanities > Religion & beliefs > Non-Christian religions > Religions of Indic & Oriental origin > Buddhism > Zen Buddhism
We live in the Golden Age of publishing for spiritual, esoteric,
and new age books of all conceivable stripes (and then there is the
Internet). Amongst this wild proliferation of available information
there has occurred a cheapening effect, in which many teachings
have been watered down to make them palatable for a public with
diminishing attention spans and suffering from information
overload. For the sincere spiritual seeker there needs to be an
awareness of the various ways we can go astray on the path, or fall
off the path altogether. The whole idea of spirituality is to be
awake, yet it is all too easy to simply end up in yet another dream
world, thinking that we have found some higher truth. Rude
Awakening: Perils, Pitfalls, and Hard Truths of the Spiritual Path
is dedicated to examining, under a sharp light, the many ways our
spiritual development goes wrong, or disappears altogether in the
sheer crush of books and the routine grind of daily life.
If the western world knows anything about Zen Buddhism, it is down to the efforts of one remarkable man, D.T. Suzuki. The twenty-seven-year-old Japanese scholar first visited the west in 1897, and over the course of the next seventy years became the world's leading authority on Zen. His radical and penetrating insights earned him many disciples, from Carl Jung to Allen Ginsberg, from Thomas Merton to John Cage. In Mysticism Christian and Buddhist Suzuki compares the teachings of the great Christian mystic Meister Eckhart with the spiritual wisdom of Shin and Zen Buddhism. By juxtaposing cultures that seem to be radically opposed, Suzuki raises one of the fundamental questions of human experience: at the limits of our understanding is there an experience that is universal to all humanity? Mysticism Christian and Buddhist is a book that challenges and inspires; it will benefit readers of all religions who seek to understand something of the nature of spiritual life.
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