The following Nectarine Discourses by Swami Akhandananda Saraswati Ji Maharaj are the content of this volume 3. 1. Alphabets of Living a purposeful Life. 2. Method of Contemplation of the Self. 3. Self Scrutiny. 4. In the Innmost Recesses of the Heart. 5. Sadhana: At a Glance.
The following Nectarine Discourses by Swami Akhandananda Saraswati Ji Maharaj are the content of this volume 1. 1. Jeevan Mukti or Liberated Life. 2. Images Leading to Self-realization. 3. Self-Effulgent Bliss Divine. 4. For You and You Alone. 5. Attainment of Krishna.
The following Nectarine Discourses by Swamil Akhandananda Saraswati Ji Maharaj are the content of this volume 4. 1. Mystery of Meditation. 2. Sorrow-How to get rid of it. 3. The Substance of Piety or sacred duty. 4. Some Distinguishing Features of Hinduism.
The following Nectarine Discourses by Swamil Akhandananda Saraswati Ji Maharaj are the content of this volume 5. 1. An Analysis of Worldly Pleasures and pains. 2. Uddalaka’s Spiritual Practices and Realization. 3. Dalliance of Grace. 4. Some Reminiscences of Shri Orriyababaji Maharaj.
The following Nectarine Discourses by Swami Akhandananda Saraswati Ji Maharaj are the content of this volume 2. 1. I. 2. You are you (Atman). 3. Seed and the Soul. 4. Happiness: Now and Here.
This book is about the state of embodied perfection often called enlightenment, self-realization, or liberation. It examines the types, degrees, and stages of liberation that are possible, with and without a body.
Harold Coward explores how the psychological aspects of Yoga philosophy have been important to intellectual developments both East and West. Foundational for Hindu, Jaina, and Buddhist thought and spiritual practice, Patañjali's Yoga Sutras, the classical statement of Eastern Yoga, are unique in their emphasis on the nature and importance of psychological processes. Yoga's influence is explored in the work of both the seminal Indian thinker Bhartrhari (c. 600 C.E.) and among key figures in Western psychology: founders Freud and Jung, as well as contemporary transpersonalists such as Washburn, Tart, and Ornstein.. Coward shows how the yogic notion of psychological processes makes Bhartrhari's philosophy of language and his theology of revelation possible. He goes on to explore how Western psychology has been influenced by incorporating or rejecting Patañjali's Yoga. The implications of these trends in Western thought for mysticism and memory are examined as well. This analysis results in a notable insight, namely, that there is a crucial difference between Eastern and Western thought with regard to how limited or perfectible human nature is—the West maintaining that we as humans are psychologically, philosophically, and spiritually limited or flawed in nature and thus not perfectible, while Patañjali's Yoga and Eastern thought generally maintain the opposite. Different Western responses to the Eastern position are noted, from complete rejection by Freud, Jung, and Hick, to varying degrees of acceptance by transpersonal thinkers.
JUST LOVE 3 is the third and final volume in a series of extraordinary spiritual books from an extraordinary spiritual Master. Although you may be familiar with the wisdom of the Holy Scriptures of both East and West, the concept of Love is described in this book in a refreshing new way. JUST LOVE is expressed by someone who knows about the all-pervading, life-sustaining force that forms the creation of the universe because He is completely one with it in every moment. Comprised of a collection of 62 talks given by Paramahamsa Sri Swami Vishwananda around the world, the simple yet profound message is clear: Love is all there is. Love is all you have to do. Just Love, and the rest will take care of itself.
Beginning with Jung's earliest correspondence to associates of the psychoanalytic period and ending shortly before his death, the 935 letters selected for these two volumes offer a running commentary on his creativity. The recipients of the letters include Mircea Eliade, Sigmund Freud, Esther Harding, James Joyce, Karl Kernyi, Erich Neumann, Maud Oakes, Herbert Read, Upton Sinclair, and Father Victor White.