Theravada Meditation: The Buddhist Transformation of Yoga

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The first book in English to relate modern forms of Theravada meditational practice to its Indian roots, Theravada Meditation rectifies the publishing imbalance toward Mahayana and Zen.  The classic Theravada pattern in Buddhaghosa’s path of Purification (circa A.D. 500) is shown to be relevant to the present Buddhist world.  Beginning with a general description of similarities and differences between the Upanisadic-Yogic and early Buddhist viewpoints, the author goes on to analyze Gotama’s rejection-acceptance-modification of the Upanisadic-Yogic method of striving for moksa (salvation) in his search for Buddhahood (enlightenment), as related in the Pali Canon.  A second major section analyzes the meditational method of Buddhaghosa, showing the interaction between Upanisadic-Yogic jhanas (modes of concentration) and Buddhist vipassana (insight meditation).  Attention is given to the highest attainable state, nirodha-samapatti (cessation of thought and perception), held by Theravada Buddhism to be an actual experience of Nibhana (world-excape) in this life.  The final chapter discusses the attraction of Theravada meditation in parts of the contemporary world, notably Burma, drawing upon materials little known in the West.  In Burma and, to some degree, in Ceylon and Thailand, emphasis is on a simplified meditational method open to layman as well as monk, yet viewed as fully orthodox.

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Bibliographic information

Title
Theravada Meditation: The Buddhist Transformation of Yoga
Author
Edition
Reprint
Publisher
ISBN
9788120808423
Length
viii+172p., Bibliography; Index.
Subjects