|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
Premananda Bharati's classic work, Sri Krishna: the Lord of Love,
was originally published in 1904 in New York. It is the first full
length work presenting theistic Hindu practices and beliefs before
a Western audience by a practicing Hindu "missionary." Premananda
Bharati or Baba (Father) Bharati had come to the USA as a result of
the encouragement of his co-religionists in India and of a vision
he received while living in a pilgrimage site sacred to his
tradition. He arrived in the USA in 1902 and stayed until 1911 with
one return journey to India in 1907 with several of his American
disciples. His book, Sri Krishna, was read and admired by numerous
American and British men and women of the early 20th century and
captured the attention of the great Russian writer Leo Tolstoy
through whom Mahatma Gandhi discovered it. This new edition of his
book contains two introductions, one by Gerald T. Carney, PhD, a
specialist on Premananda Bharati's life and work and another by
Neal Delmonico, PhD, a specialist on Caitanya Vaisnavism, the
religious tradition to which Baba Bharati belonged. In addition,
the text has been edited, corrected, annotated, and newly typeset.
The spellings of the technical Sanskrit words in the text have been
standardized according to modern diacritical practices. Appendices
have been added containing supporting texts and additional
materials bearing on Baba Bharati's sources for some of the ideas
in his book and on his life and practices in India before his
arrival in the USA.
This is a revised and corrected edition of Dr. O.B.L. Kapoor's now
classic work on Krishna bhakti. Dr. Kapoor defines bhakti
(sometimes loosely translated as religious devotion) as it is
understood in the North Indian bhakti traditions. In addition, he
isolates what he considers the four major traits or "laws" of
bhakti, illustrating each of those laws with numerous stories from
the lives of the great bhakti saints. Though Kapoor makes a case
for bhakti's being a "science," the major value of this work lies
in its phenomenological presentation of bhakti based on the
experiences of bhakti practitioners and saints as recorded in
various premodern and modern literary sources. It is thus one of
best introductions to the religious phenomenon of bhakti available
in the English language.
Vedanta is one of the six orthodox philosophical schools of the
Hindu tradition, orthodox because they profess to accept the
authority of the ancient Vedas as revelation. Vedanta is the school
that attempts to discover in the final portions of the Vedic texts,
known as the Upanishads, a consistent religious and philosophical
way of seeing reality tattva-darshana). The "school" of Vedanta is
really a family of schools, all of its members sharing the belief
that there is a single consistent "way of seeing" presented in the
Upanishads, but whose hermeneutic efforts often have led to
radically different conclusions. Within this family of Vedantic
schools the spectrum ranges from the absolute monism, or more
correctly the non-dualism, of the Advaita sub-school to the
quasi-dualistic theism of the Dvaita sub-school. Fundamentals of
Vedanta, Part One is a translation, with a detailed introduction
and notes, of two short Sanskrit texts, the Vedanta-sara (Essence
of Vedanta) of Sadananda and the Prameya-ratnavali (Necklace of
Turht-Jewels) of Baladeva, from opposite ends of the Vedantic
spectrum, that have been used in India for centuries to introduce
beginning students to the fundamental ideas of Vedanta. Generations
of Indian students received their first exposure to Vedantic ideas
from one or both of these texts, and thus they form an excellent
starting point for modern readers who are interested in knowing
more about the rich intellectual and religious world of Vedanta.
From the Introduction: Anyone who has walked, either actually or
sympathetically, some distance down the path of Advaita Vedanta,
far enough at least to get a glimpse of the Advaitin's world, will
be able to attest to what apowerful vision of reality it is and to
what a relief and joy the transforming experience of Brahman must
be. As part of that experience the burden of one's fears,
disappointments, anxieties, losses, frustrations, and limitations
is lifted off one's shoulders and one realizes one's true nature as
unending consciousness and joy. In that moment when one realizes
that there is no other," one's fear vanishes for it is the other"
that one feared, and even when the "other" is a source of joy, as
the other" often is, that joy is always conditioned by fear, the
fear of loss. The joy of Brahman is unlimited and unconditioned by
fear.'' Neal Delmonico received his Ph.D. from the University of
Chicago in South Asian Languages and Civilizations in 1990. He has
published numerous articles on Caitanya Vaishnavism and has done
several translations from Sanskrit and Bengali into English. Dr.
Delmonico taught for six years in the Religious Studies Program at
Iowa State University, and, most recently (2001), was a visiting
assistant professor in Philosophy and Religious Studies at Truman
State University. He is currently working on a series of
translations and commentaries on some of the fundamental texts of
Indic religion and philosophy, like the ones presented here, and
collaborating on an online Sanskrit text repository called the
Gaudiya Grantha Mandira (www.granthamandira.org).
This is an edition of the metrical English translation by C.C.
Caleb of the great Hindu classic, the Bhagavad-gita, or The Song
Divine. It includes an introduction to the text, annotations drawn
from the commentary of Sankaracarya, and an appendix containing
some of the traditional summaries of the text from different
schools of interpretation. This edition does not include the
original Sanskrit text of the Gita.
|
You may like...
Barbie
Margot Robbie, Ryan Gosling
Blu-ray disc
R256
Discovery Miles 2 560
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|