Reconciling Yogas explores five approaches to the accomplishment of Yoga from a variety of religious perspectives: Jaina, Hindu, and Buddhist. Haribhadra, a prolific Jaina scholar who espoused a universal view of religion, proclaimed that truth can be found in all faiths and sought to elucidate differences between various schools of thought. In Yoga, he discovered a form of spiritual practice common to many faiths and juxtaposed their paths to demonstrate the common goal of liberation. Utilizing the structure of Patañjali’s advanced eightfold path of Yoga in the Yoga Sutra, Haribhadra formulates his own eight stages of Yoga to which he assigns titles in the feminine gender that echo the names of goddesses. Discussed are the Jaina stages of spiritual ascent and two forms of Yoga for which there is no other account. Also included is a new translation of the
Yogadṛṣṭisamuccaya, an eighth-century text by Haribhadra.
Содержание
Preface
1. The Life Story of Haribhadra
2. Haribhadra and Patañjali
3. The Vedantin Yoga of Bhagavaddata and the Buddhist Yoga of Bhaskara
4. Centrality of the Real
5. Purity in Patañjali and Haribhadra
6. Haribhadra’s Critique of Tantric Yoga
7. Haribhadra’s Sociology of Yoga and Its Culmination
Chart Comparing Forms of Yoga in the Yogadrstisamuccaya
Yogadrstisamuccaya (A Collection of Views on Yoga)
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Об авторе
Christopher Key Chapple is Professor of Theological Studies and Director of Asian and Pacific Studies at Loyola Marymount University. He has published several books, including
Karma and Creativity and
Nonviolence to Animals, Earth, and Self in Asian Traditions, both with SUNY Press.
John Thomas Casey is Visiting Professor of Theological Studies at Loyola Marymount University.