Dionysian Buddhism
Autor Claudio Naranjoen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 aug 2022
The ?Dionysian? context of Buddhism provides a lens in which to interpret non-attachment through noninterference with the stream of life. Naranjo draws on a wide range of Buddhist traditions, from Theravada to Vajrayana, in order to create a work that emphasizes both the experiential and multifaceted aspects of meditation.
As Naranjo, who first wrote Dionysian Buddhism in Spanish and translated it himself into English, says, "Only a change of consciousness might save our world, and that in view of this collective shift in consciousness there is nothing more relevant we can do than start with ourselves."
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780907791973
ISBN-10: 0907791972
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 142 x 217 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Synergetic Press Inc.,U.S.
ISBN-10: 0907791972
Pagini: 176
Dimensiuni: 142 x 217 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.27 kg
Editura: Synergetic Press Inc.,U.S.
Notă biografică
Claudio Naranjo (1932 - 2019) was a Chilean-born psychotherapist, medical doctor, author, educator, Buddhist practitioner, and pioneer in the areas of psychology, psychedelic therapies, and human development. His integrative approaches to a variety of fields elevated his work and created global reach and influence.
Naranjo was an early practitioner of Enneagram of Personality which he enriched with his deep understanding of psychology and more esoteric aspects of work with the psyche. He ultimately created SAT (Seekers After Truth) integrating Gestalt Therapy, Enneagram, contemplative practices, music and art therapy, and other practices designed to provide deep personal insights. In his later years, he expanded his work to explore education and its role in promoting patriarchal worldviews that contribute to our deepening global crisis.
Naranjo is the author of several books including The Healing Journey: Pioneering Approaches to Psychedelic Therapy (2nd edition), (Synergetic Press 2013), The Revolution We Expected: Cultivating a New Politics of Consciousness (Synergetic Press, 2020), and Dionysian Buddhism: Guided Interpersonal Meditations in the Three Yanas (Synergetic Press, 2022).
Naranjo was an early practitioner of Enneagram of Personality which he enriched with his deep understanding of psychology and more esoteric aspects of work with the psyche. He ultimately created SAT (Seekers After Truth) integrating Gestalt Therapy, Enneagram, contemplative practices, music and art therapy, and other practices designed to provide deep personal insights. In his later years, he expanded his work to explore education and its role in promoting patriarchal worldviews that contribute to our deepening global crisis.
Naranjo is the author of several books including The Healing Journey: Pioneering Approaches to Psychedelic Therapy (2nd edition), (Synergetic Press 2013), The Revolution We Expected: Cultivating a New Politics of Consciousness (Synergetic Press, 2020), and Dionysian Buddhism: Guided Interpersonal Meditations in the Three Yanas (Synergetic Press, 2022).
Cuprins
Preface
Why Buddhist meditation?
Something about the Theravada tradition and something further on the notion of Dionysian
Buddhism
I Theravada Variations
1. Sweet Doing Nothing?In Relation
2. An Introduction to Vipassana
3. Panoramic Attention and Transparent Presence
4. The Enjoyment of Breath, the Silence of Thought and Panoramic Attention to the
Present Moment
5. Disappearing Into Infinity
6. Meeting Pain with Joy
7. Meditation in Pairs as a Portal to Universal Compassion
II A Minimal Introduction to Zazen
1. Non-Doing in the Context of Surrender and Generosity
2. From ?Not Even Non-doing? (Wu Wu Wei) To the Realization That ?From the
Beginning Nothing Existed?
3. What Are Your Thoughts Up To?
4. Shikantaza
5. Dropping the Body and the Mind
6. The Subtle Attention of Nirvana.
7. The Truth That Can Set Us Free
8. Renouncing the Objects of Consciousness to Return to Ourselves
9. The Ocean and the Waves
10. About the Bodhisattva Ideal and the Virtue of Being Satisfied With Counting
Breaths
11. Words of Dogen
III An Introduction to the Knowledge of the Mind in the Tibetan Tradition.
Some Features of Tantric Buddhism
1. Bringing Together Shamata and Vipassana.
2. The Mirror, the Crystal and Space
3. Vipassana from the Perspective of Space
4. From the Awareness of Mental Phenomena to the Awareness of Awareness
5. Entering Meditation with Compassion Through an Appeal to Avalokiteshvara
6. Time and the Eternal Present
7. On Devotion Through the Vajra Guru Mantram
8. The Awareness of a Subtle Body
Addendum
Contemplations of Death
The Eternal Present That We Are
Some Further Advice To My Readers
Why Buddhist meditation?
Something about the Theravada tradition and something further on the notion of Dionysian
Buddhism
I Theravada Variations
1. Sweet Doing Nothing?In Relation
2. An Introduction to Vipassana
3. Panoramic Attention and Transparent Presence
4. The Enjoyment of Breath, the Silence of Thought and Panoramic Attention to the
Present Moment
5. Disappearing Into Infinity
6. Meeting Pain with Joy
7. Meditation in Pairs as a Portal to Universal Compassion
II A Minimal Introduction to Zazen
1. Non-Doing in the Context of Surrender and Generosity
2. From ?Not Even Non-doing? (Wu Wu Wei) To the Realization That ?From the
Beginning Nothing Existed?
3. What Are Your Thoughts Up To?
4. Shikantaza
5. Dropping the Body and the Mind
6. The Subtle Attention of Nirvana.
7. The Truth That Can Set Us Free
8. Renouncing the Objects of Consciousness to Return to Ourselves
9. The Ocean and the Waves
10. About the Bodhisattva Ideal and the Virtue of Being Satisfied With Counting
Breaths
11. Words of Dogen
III An Introduction to the Knowledge of the Mind in the Tibetan Tradition.
Some Features of Tantric Buddhism
1. Bringing Together Shamata and Vipassana.
2. The Mirror, the Crystal and Space
3. Vipassana from the Perspective of Space
4. From the Awareness of Mental Phenomena to the Awareness of Awareness
5. Entering Meditation with Compassion Through an Appeal to Avalokiteshvara
6. Time and the Eternal Present
7. On Devotion Through the Vajra Guru Mantram
8. The Awareness of a Subtle Body
Addendum
Contemplations of Death
The Eternal Present That We Are
Some Further Advice To My Readers