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El. knyga: Brahman and Dao: Comparative Studies of Indian and Chinese Philosophy and Religion

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The present geopolitical rise of India and China evokes much interest in the comparative study of these two ancient Asian cultures. There are various studies comparing Western and Indian philosophies and religions, and there are similar works comparing Chinese and Western philosophy and religion. However, so far there is no systemic comparative study of Chinese and Indian philosophies and religions. Therefore there is a need to fill this gap. As such, Brahman and Dao: Comparative Studies of Indian and Chinese Philosophy and Religion is a pioneering volume in that it highlights possible bridges between these two great cultures and complex systems of thought, with seventeen chapters on various Indo-Chinese comparative topics. The book focuses on four themes: metaphysics and soteriology; ethics; body, health and spirituality; and language and culture.

Recenzijos

This volume will contribute to broadening the horizons of comparative philosophy and religion, and for that reason I highly recommend it to scholars of Indian and Chinese traditions and anyone who is interested in what can be learned from cross-cultural explorations. * Frontiers of Philosophy in China * The editors who dreamt up this volume of essays on Brahman and Dao were walking in the right direction. * Religions of South Asia * China and India have the richest and most influential spiritual and philosophic traditions in Asia and have been in contact with each other for two millennia, yet comparative studies of these two civilizations and their relationship with each other have been few. The fine essays in this volume bridge this gap by exploring the similarities and dissimilarities between the two traditions in the areas of metaphysics, ethics, medicine, spirituality, language, and culture. Theodor and Yao are to be commended for providing us with such an insightful and multi-dimensional understanding of the complex spiritual traditions of these two enormously influential cultures. -- Keith Knapp, The Citadel This is a thoughtful and bold collection of essays that seeks genuinely to engage across Indian and Chinese traditions on a wide variety of issues. It represents the emerging field of comparativist study of Indian and Chinese materials that will surely be a significant area of twenty-first century global philosophy. This book offers a scholarly yet accessible presentation of illuminating comparisons between Indian and Chinese sources. -- Chakravarthi Ram-Prasad, Lancaster University

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Part I: Metaphysics and Soteriology
1 One, Water, and Cosmogony: Reflections on the Rgveda X.129 and the Taiyi sheng shui
3(16)
Zhihua Yao
2 Exploring Parallels between the Philosophy of Upanisads and Daoism
19(16)
Ram Nath'ha
3 The Way of Silent Realization: Ineffability and Rationality in the Philosophical Mysticisms of Sankara and Zhan Ruoshui
35(18)
Sophia Katz
4 Impermanence and Immortality: The Concept of panca-skandha in Buddhism and in Twofold Mystery Daoism
53(14)
Friederike Assandri
Part II: Ethics
5 Li and Dharma: Gandhi, Confucius, and Virtue Aesthetics
67(12)
Nicholas F. Gier
6 Ethics and Metaphysics in the Bhagavadgrta and Classical Chinese Thought
79(16)
Ithamar Theodor
7 Communal Moral Personhood and Moral Responsibility in the Analects and the Bhagavadgrta
95(12)
Alexus McLeod
8 Ethics of Compassion: Buddhist Karuna and Confucian Ren
107(12)
Tim Connolly
9 Why "Besire" Is Not Bizarre: Moral Knowledge in Confucianism and Hinduism
119(24)
Yong Huang
Part III: Body, Health, and Spirituality
10 Yoga and Daoyin: History, Worldview, and Techniques
143(26)
Livia Kohn
11 The Emergence of Classical Medicine in Ancient China and India
169(12)
Wei Zhang
12 Health, Illness, and the Body in Buddhist and Daoist Self-Cultivation
181(14)
Joshua Capitanio
Part IV: Language and Culture
13 Indic Influence on Chinese Language
195(14)
Guang Xing
14 Magical Alphabet in the Indian and Chinese Minds: From the Garland of Letters to Master Pu'an's Siddham Mantra
209(22)
Bill M. Mak
15 Mixed up on "Matching Terms" (geyi): Confusions in Cross-Cultural Translation
231(16)
John M. Thompson
16 The Ludic Quality of Life: A Comparison of the Caitanaya-caritamrta and the Zhuangzi
247(16)
Carl Olson
17 The Poet and the Historian: Criticism of the Modern Age by Rabindranath Tagore and Qian Mu
263(14)
Gad C. Isay
Index 277(12)
About the Contributors 289
Ithamar Theodor is a scholar of Hinduism. A graduate of the Theology Faculty, University of Oxford, and a Life Member of Clare Hall, University of Cambridge, he is lecturer at the University of Haifa and visiting scholar at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.



Zhihua Yao is associate professor in the Department of Philosophy at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His research interests cover Buddhist philosophy, Indian philosophy, and philosophy of religion.