Authors: Ian Whicher
ISBN-13: 9780700712885, ISBN-10: 0700712887
Format: Hardcover
Publisher: Taylor & Francis, Inc.
Date Published: March 2003
Edition: (Non-applicable)
The Indian Tradition of yoga, first codified in the Yoga Sutra of Patañjali in the third or fourth century CE, constitutes one of the world's earliest and most influential traditions of spiritual practice. It is a tradition that, by the time of Patañjali, already had an extensive (if obscure) pre-history and one that was to have, after Patañjali, an extraordinarily rich and diverse future. As a tradition, yoga has been far from monolithic. It has embraced a variety of practices and orientations, borrowing from and influencing a vast array of Indic religious traditions down through the centuries.
Recent years have witnessed an increased production in scholarly works on the yoga tradition, which has helped to chart this complex and multifaceted evolution and to demonstrate the important role that it has played in the development of India's religious and philosophical traditions. And yet the popular perception of yoga in the West remains for the most part that of a physical fitness program,largely divorced from its historical and spiritual roots. The essays collected here provide a sense of the historical emergence of the classical system presented by Patañjali, a careful examination of the key elements, overall character and contemporary relevance of that system (as found in the Yoga Sutra) and a glimpse of some of the tradition's many important ramifications in later Indian religious history.
Notes on contributors | ||
Acknowledgments | ||
List of abbreviations | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
Pt. I | Classical foundations | 11 |
1 | Yoga in the Mahabharata | 13 |
2 | Practice makes perfect: the role of practice (abhyasa) in Patanjala yoga | 25 |
3 | The integration of spirit (purusa) and matter (prakrti) in the Yoga Sutra | 51 |
4 | Dueling with dualism: revisioning the paradox of purusa and prakrti Lloyd W. Pflueger | 70 |
5 | Yoga and the luminous | 83 |
Pt. II | The expanding tradition | 97 |
6 | Yoga in Sankaran Advaita Vedanta: a reappraisal | 99 |
7 | Losing one's mind and becoming enlightened: some remarks on the concept of yoga in Svetambara Jainism and its relation to the Nath Siddha tradition | 130 |
8 | Yoga in early Hindu tantra | 143 |
9 | Metaphoric worlds and yoga in the Vaisnava Sahajiya Tantric traditions of medieval Bengal | 162 |
Bibliography | 185 | |
Index | 199 |