|
Showing 1 - 2 of
2 matches in All Departments
"This is not a democracy," Antonio Garcia-Trevijano denounces in
the first pages of this book. To confront the great lie that Europe
does have democratic regimes, a lie rooted in people's confounding
of the liberties they enjoy with the political freedom that they
lack, the author builds a realistic theory of democracy to end the
false idea that corruption, state crime, and public immorality are
democracy's (undesirable) products and not the natural and
inevitable fruits of oligarchic regimes. Thanks to a superb review
of the events that mark the history of democracy, the author
reveals the obstacles that, from the 17th century English
revolution, the United States' War of Independence, and the French
Revolution, opposed political freedom, deviating old Europe's
democratic possibilities toward the current parties' state. There
exist important theories of the state and of constitution, but none
that can be called a theory of democracy. Antonio
Garcia-Trevijano's original theory, a modern synthesis of
Rousseau's pure democracy and Montesquieu's political freedom,
responds to European need for a theory of democracy as a real
alternative to the corrupted parties' regime that was engendered by
Western pragmatism during the Cold War.
Using the central concept of dependent origination--the belief that
nothing exists independently of other things--as a springboard,
this study explores the myriad interpretations of this teaching
throughout Buddhism's long history. In addition to an unprecedented
examination of the original intention of this concept in the
philosophical and spiritual context of fifth-century India, the
author also discusses little-known or poorly interpreted events in
the subsequent evolution of Buddhism, including the earliest
councils and schisms within the religion, the Mulamadhyamikakarika
of the philosopher Nagarjuna--a text heavily informed by dependent
origination--and the development of Mahayana Buddhism, the largest
current major tradition in Buddhism. The book ends with several
reflections on the possible role Buddhism can play in modern-day
society, basing itself on the ideas of contemporary philosophers
such as Gustavo Bueno, Jurgen Habermas, and Ken Wilber.
"Tomando como punto de partida el concepto central de la
originacion dependiente--la creencia que nada existe
independientemente de otras cosas--este estudio explora el gran
numero de interpretaciones de esta ensenanza a lo largo de la larga
historia del budismo. Aparte de una clarificacion sin precedentes
de la intencion original de este concepto en el contexto de la
filosofia y espiritualidad india del siglo V a. C., el autor
recorre episodios poco conocidos o no siempre bien interpretados de
la historia posterior, incluyendo los primeros concilios y cismas
dentro de la religion, la Mulamadhyamikakarika del filosofo
Nagarjuna--un texto influido por el concepto de la originacion
dependiente--y el desarrollo del mahayana, la principal tradicion
actual del budismo. El libro termina con unas reflexiones acerca
del posible papel del budismo en la sociedad moderna a partir de
las ideas de filosofos contemporaneos como Gustavo Bueno, Jurgen
Habermas y Ken Wilber."
|
You may like...
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
|