Showing 61–72 of 105 resultsSorted by average rating

A History of Pali Literature

995

This book, published for the first time in 2 volumes in 1933, has become a classic in Pali studies. It

A Buddhist Spectrum

350

“Marco Pallis was at once an incomparable authority on Buddhism, especially in its Tibetan form, a defender and protector of

Where the Buddha Walked A Companion to the Buddhist Places of India (PB)

495

This book is the first attempt to describe all the fifteen places with which the Buddhs had direct association: Lumbini,

Where the Buddha Walked A Companion to the Buddhist Places of India (HB)

695

This book is the first attempt to describe all the fifteen places with which the Buddhs had direct association: Lumbini,

A Treasury of Traditional Wisdom

950

Since time immemorial, one perennial Wisdom permeates the whole history of mankind, expressing itself in the spiritual traditions of all

The Wisdom of Ananda Coomaraswamy

195

Ananda Kentish Coomaraswamy (1987-1947) was one of the best minds that India has produced in the 20th Century. By profession

The Transcendent Unity of Religions

295

Is there a “Transcendent Unity” underlying the great religions of mankind? Does not every true religion start from an historic

Manifesto Against Progress

185

The idea of ‘Progress’ is a basic dogma in the ideology of modernity. Material ‘progress’ has become the new religion

Seeing God Everywhere Essays on Nature and the Sacred

375

Is there a relationship between the ecological and the spiritual? Could the current ecological crisis have resulted from a lack

Quest for Truth followed by Time, Space and Man

45

This book records the vision of a truth seeker unclouded by theological dogmatism or sectarian bigotry. It is a quintessential

History and Time An Indian Perspective

125

The modern West accords great preeminence to “History”, and therein situates, for the most part, the essence and meaning of

The Goddess and The Slave The Fakir, the Mother and Maldevelopment

495

Drawing upon the rich inter-connected levels of meaning within the Fakir culture, especially with respect to the living, breathing paradigmatic Mother--as Nature, as the Goddess to be worshipped and as the mother whose service is her identity--The Goddess and the Slave demonstrates the crisis faced by the unique Baul-Fakir sadhana, by the non-urban Bengali, and by Indian society itself through the major changes brought by modernization and globalization.

Rudrani Fakir, as an anthropologist and as a practitioner, uses the Fakir sadhana as a critical tool of understanding, presenting this objective study through her highly engaged subjective perspectrive. The first part of this book outlines the Fakir society and esoteric sadhana. The second part delves into the decline and decay of the reality of the Goddess, the changing status of women and of the true nature of wealth, and draws together the threads of the old knowledge paradigms--esoteric and modern, spoken and wordless, powerless and empowered.