Vivekachudamani - The Crest-Jewel of Discrimination - Adi Shankara - Bücher - Evertype - 9781782011699 - 15. April 2022
Bei Nichtübereinstimmung von Cover und Titel gilt der Titel

Vivekachudamani - The Crest-Jewel of Discrimination

Adi Shankara

Preis
€ 22,99

Bestellware

Lieferdatum: ca. 20. - 29. Jan 2025
Zu deiner iMusic Wunschliste hinzufügen
Eller

Vivekachudamani - The Crest-Jewel of Discrimination

The Vivekachudamani (Sanskrit Vivekacudamani) is an introductory treatise within the Advaita Vedanta tradition of Hinduism, traditionally attributed to Adi Shankara of the eighth century CE. It is in the form of a poem in the Shardula Vikridita metre, and for many centuries has been celebrated as a prakarana grantha ('teaching manual') of Advaita. Vivekachudamani literally means 'the crest-jewel of discrimination'. The text discusses key concepts and the viveka or discrimination or discernment between real (unchanging, eternal) and unreal (changing, temporal), Prakriti and Atman, the oneness of Atman and Brahman, and self-knowledge as the central task of the spiritual life and for Moksha. It expounds the Advaita Vedanta philosophy in the form of a self-teaching manual, with many verses in the form of a dialogue between a student and a spiritual teacher.




The Reverend John Henry Richards, MA, BD, was an Anglican priest born in 1934 who was ordained a deacon in Llandaff in 1977 and a priest there in 1978. He served in Maesteg, Cardiff, Penmark, and Stackpile Elidor until his retirement in 1999, and died in 2017. He is known for his English translations of the Sanskrit Ashtavakra Gita and Vivekachudamani, of the Pali Dhammapada, and of the medieval Latin De Adhaerendo Deo, all of which he put in the public domain and distributed on the Internet in the late 1990s.
show more

Medien Bücher     Taschenbuch   (Buch mit Softcover und geklebtem Rücken)
Erscheinungsdatum 15. April 2022
ISBN13 9781782011699
Verlag Evertype
Seitenanzahl 146
Maße 140 × 216 × 9 mm   ·   195 g
Sprache Englisch  

Alle anzeigen

Weitere Titel von Adi Shankara