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This book offers a unique perspective on September 11 and our world
after this tragic event, sharing lessons from an Asian religious
experience that can help heal a world troubled by religious
conflicts and deepening divisions, and promote a positive global
transformation. Existing literature regarding the events of
September 11 and our world afterward has focused mostly on the West
and the Middle East. Asian Perspectives on the World's Religions
after September 11 extends this discussion to include Asia-a
continent and culture far too important to be ignored in any
assessment of the global impact of this event. The book is
organized along the following themes, as they emerged
post-September 11th: religion and civilizational dialogue;
religion, conflict, and peace; religion and human rights; religion
and ethics; religion and the arts; religion, hermeneutics, and
literature; religion and gender; religion and ecology; and religion
and globalization. Individuals who are studying or teaching
political science, international relations, philosophy, ethics,
Asian studies, or religious studies will find the text invaluable,
while general readers will appreciate the largely unvoiced Asian
perspective on this topic.
Concerns about energy security, uncertainty about oil prices,
declining oil reserves, and global climate change are fueling a
shift towards bioenergy as a renewable alternative to fossil fuels.
Public policies and private investments around the globe are aiming
to increase local capacity to produce biofuels. A key constraint to
the expansion of biofuel production is the limited amount of land
available to meet the needs for fuel, feed, and food in the coming
decades. Large-scale biofuel production raises concerns about food
versus fuel tradeoffs, about demands for natural resources such as
water, and about potential impacts on environmental quality. The
book is organized into five parts. The introductory part provides a
context for the emerging economic and policy challenges related to
bioenergy and the motivations for biofuels as an energy source. The
second part of the handbook includes chapters that examine the
implications of expanded production of first generation biofuels
for the allocation of land between food and fuel and for food/feed
prices and trade in biofuels as well as the potential for
technology improvements to mitigate the food vs. fuel competition
for land. Chapters in the third part examine the infrastructural
and logistical challenges posed by large scale biofuel production
and the factors that will influence the location of biorefineries
and the mix of feedstocks they use. The fourth part includes
chapters that examine the environmental implications of biofuels,
their implications for the design of policies and the unintended
environmental consequences of existing biofuel policies. The final
part presents economic analysis of the market, social welfare, and
distributional effects of biofuel policies.
In its second volume, this book aims to link the academic research
with development in the real world and provide a historical and
institutional background that can enrich more formal research. The
first section will include an assessment of the evolution and the
state of the nascent second-generation biofuel as well as a
perspective on the evolution of corn ethanol and sugarcane ethanol
in Brazil. It will also include a historical and institutional
background on the biofuel industry in Brazil that has global
lessons, and later, provide a technical overview of major
analytical tools used to assess the economic, land use and
greenhouse gas implications of biofuel policies at a regional and
global level. Additionally, the book analyzes the various drivers
for land use change both at a micro-economic level and at a
macro-economic level. It presents studies that apply regional and
global economic models to examine the effects of biofuel policies
in the US, EU and Brazil on regional and global land use, on food
and fuel prices and greenhouse gas emissions. These papers
illustrate the use of partial and general equilibrium modeling
approaches to simulate the effects of various biofuel policies, and
includes studies showing the effects of risk aversion, time
preferences and liquidity constraints on farmers decision to grow
energy crops for biofuel production. By presenting the tools of
lifecycle analysis for assessing the direct greenhouse gas
intensity of biofuels, this handbook investigates the types of
indirect or market mediated effects that can offset or strengthen
these direct effects. It will include tools to assess the direct
and indirect effects of biofuel production on greenhouse gas
emissions in the US and Brazil, and ultimately provide a
comprehensive background to understand the state of biofuel in the
present and how to analyze their implication.
In its second volume, this book aims to link the academic research
with development in the real world and provide a historical and
institutional background that can enrich more formal research. The
first section will include an assessment of the evolution and the
state of the nascent second-generation biofuel as well as a
perspective on the evolution of corn ethanol and sugarcane ethanol
in Brazil. It will also include a historical and institutional
background on the biofuel industry in Brazil that has global
lessons, and later, provide a technical overview of major
analytical tools used to assess the economic, land use and
greenhouse gas implications of biofuel policies at a regional and
global level. Additionally, the book analyzes the various drivers
for land use change both at a micro-economic level and at a
macro-economic level. It presents studies that apply regional and
global economic models to examine the effects of biofuel policies
in the US, EU and Brazil on regional and global land use, on food
and fuel prices and greenhouse gas emissions. These papers
illustrate the use of partial and general equilibrium modeling
approaches to simulate the effects of various biofuel policies, and
includes studies showing the effects of risk aversion, time
preferences and liquidity constraints on farmers decision to grow
energy crops for biofuel production. By presenting the tools of
lifecycle analysis for assessing the direct greenhouse gas
intensity of biofuels, this handbook investigates the types of
indirect or market mediated effects that can offset or strengthen
these direct effects. It will include tools to assess the direct
and indirect effects of biofuel production on greenhouse gas
emissions in the US and Brazil, and ultimately provide a
comprehensive background to understand the state of biofuel in the
present and how to analyze their implication.
Concerns about energy security, uncertainty about oil prices,
declining oil reserves, and global climate change are fueling a
shift towards bioenergy as a renewable alternative to fossil fuels.
Public policies and private investments around the globe are aiming
to increase local capacity to produce biofuels. A key constraint to
the expansion of biofuel production is the limited amount of land
available to meet the needs for fuel, feed, and food in the coming
decades. Large-scale biofuel production raises concerns about food
versus fuel tradeoffs, about demands for natural resources such as
water, and about potential impacts on environmental quality. The
book is organized into five parts. The introductory part provides a
context for the emerging economic and policy challenges related to
bioenergy and the motivations for biofuels as an energy source. The
second part of the handbook includes chapters that examine the
implications of expanded production of first generation biofuels
for the allocation of land between food and fuel and for food/feed
prices and trade in biofuels as well as the potential for
technology improvements to mitigate the food vs. fuel competition
for land. Chapters in the third part examine the infrastructural
and logistical challenges posed by large scale biofuel production
and the factors that will influence the location of biorefineries
and the mix of feedstocks they use. The fourth part includes
chapters that examine the environmental implications of biofuels,
their implications for the design of policies and the unintended
environmental consequences of existing biofuel policies. The final
part presents economic analysis of the market, social welfare, and
distributional effects of biofuel policies.
This book explores the tantric concept of Shakti, or the principal
female cosmic entity and her pilgrimage sites. It offers a
first-hand view of the multidimensional ways in which Shakti
asserted its supremacy over existing Vaishnava and orthodox
Brahmanical traditions in post mediaeval Bengal and India. The
interdisciplinary chapters pave the way to understanding the
intra-textual relationships between philosophical and conceptual
ideas in literary texts and their oral transmission. Divided into
three thematic sections: Cult Inclusiveness, Sakti Pithas, and the
Sakta Philosophy, the book invites readers to explore a contested
area of scholarship from unique perspectives, offering rich
insights into the nature of negotiations between diverse religious
streams. It also urges readers to examine the many innovative
approaches and theoretical models on the goddess culture of East
India. The book is of interest to students and scholars of
religious textual studies, anthropology, pilgrimage studies,
comparative religion, Sanskrit and Bengali languages, regional
studies, South Asian cultures, goddess traditions and cultural
history of mediaeval Bengal.
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Asian Traditions of Meditation (Paperback)
Halvor Eifring; Contributions by Edwin F. Bryant, Madhu Khanna, Johannes Bronkhorst, Kristina Myrvold, …
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R985
R730
Discovery Miles 7 300
Save R255 (26%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Meditation has flourished in different parts of the world ever
since the foundations of the great civilizations were laid. It
played a vital role in the formation of Asian cultures that trace
much of their heritage to ancient India and China. This volume
brings together for the first time studies of the major traditions
of Asian meditation as well as material on scientific approaches to
meditation. It delves deeply into the individual traditions while
viewing each of them from a global perspective, examining both
historical and generic connections between meditative practices
from numerous historical periods and different parts of the
Eurasian continent. It seeks to identify the cultural and
historical peculiarities of Asian schools of meditation while
recognizing basic features of meditative practice across cultures,
thereby taking the first step toward a framework for the
comparative study of meditation. The book, accessibly written by
scholars from several fields, opens with chapters that discuss the
definition and classification of meditation. These are followed by
contributions on Yoga and Tantra, which are often subsumed under
the broad label of Hinduism; Jainism and Sikhism, Indian traditions
not usually associated with meditation; Buddhist approaches found
in Southeast Asia, Tibet, and China; and the indigenous Chinese
traditions, Daoism and Neo-Confucianism. The final chapter explores
recent scientific interest in meditation, which, despite its
Western orientation, remains almost exclusively concerned with
practices of Asian origin. Until a few years ago a major obstacle
to the study of specific meditation practices within the traditions
explored here was a widespread scholarly orientation that
prioritized doctrinal issues and sociocultural contexts over actual
practice. The contributors seek to counter this bias and supplement
concerns over doctrine and context with the historical study of
meditative practice. Asian Traditions of Meditation will appeal
broadly to readers interested in meditation, mindfulness, and
spirituality and those in the emerging field of contemplative
education, as well as students and scholars of Asian and religious
studies.
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