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This book is a rare critique of the Buddhist Tradition. Patrick
Foster, a former Buddhist himself, brings to this exploration the
tools of professional Religious Studies and Philosophy. Its
examination of early Buddhism and later Mahayana are an in-depth
study of one of civilization's oldest, largest, and most complex
religious traditions. There are four informative appendices on
semantics, logic, meditation, and self. Whether you are a
practicing Buddhist, a scholar, or someone interested in how
religion fits into the modern world, this book will make you think.
Living in The Material World is a novel of historical fiction, set
in both ancient India and in modern America. Part I is the story of
an Indian carpenter in the Buddha's time who becomes one of the
world's first secular teachers. His philosophy of life is shaped by
meeting various yogis and monks, including the Buddha, a Jain monk,
and a famous materialist. The complex religious cauldron of ancient
India surrounds the life of this member of a carpenters' village
outside one of the Buddha's favorite towns. Part II is the
fictional journal of a Baby Boomer, set in India and America. It
mirrors the life of the Indian carpenter in the first part of the
book, and it uncovers the fundamental issues that the
post-World-War-II generation has been grappling with over the last
fifty years.
This book is a major critique of civilization's traditional
worldview--with concrete suggestions for exploring a new one. Up
until recent times this has not been possible, but now Patrick
Foster has articulated and organized the semantic and logical tools
to show how our old worldview is not only dysfunctional but
illogical, a 5,000-year-old mistake. On top of his deep critique,
he shows where we must go to begin fashioning a new world. (The
Appendices contain the solution to the mind-body problem, a new
language semantic, a critique of post-modernism, a more coherent
materialism, and ideas for education appropriate to a new
worldview.) Nothing short of worldview change--change at the
deepest level--will correct the urgent problems we have been
grappling with since civilization began.
Jiddu Krishnamurti was one of the most well-known spiritual
teachers of the 20th Century. Though he himself refused to be
considered anyone's guru (and he had followers administering his
schools and foundations, supporting his material life, reading his
books, and attending his talks), he was nonetheless embraced as
guru by many. Krishnamurti also denied being Hindu or Indian or a
philosopher, but his teachings assumed much of the traditional
Indian religious worldview--even as they warned against following
one's cultural and psychological conditioning. J. Krishnamurti's
life work is still very close to us (he died in 1985), but it is
time we began to look critically at this larger-than-life figure.
In some ways he is the last of the gurus--for the worldview within
which guruhood makes sense is in transition to a new worldview
where that side of Indian and New Age spirituality will fade away.
And, ironically, Krishnamurti was himself instrumental in the
beginning of this worldview transformation. This is the first
serious investigation of Krishnamurti's teachings, of his identity,
and of his place in the spiritual life of the modern world.
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