Sunday, January 21, 2007 Neoplatonism and Indian Thought Posted By naresh gupta Arts
Neoplatonism and Indian Thought/edited by R. Baine Harris. Reprint. Delhi, Satguru, 1992, xiii, 353 p., ISBN 81-7030-321-4. Rs.450 Reprint. Delhi, Satguru, 1992, xiii, 353 p., ISBN 81-7030-321-4. Rs.450
Contents: Preface. Introduction/John R.A. Mayer. 1. Indian wisdom and porphyry’s search for a universal way/John J. O’Meara. 2. Plotinus and the Upanisads/Lawrence J. Hatab. 3. Proclus and the Tejobindu Upanisad/Laurence J. Rosan. 4. Buddhi in the Bhagavadgita and Psyche in plotinus/A.H. Armstrong and R. R. Ravindra. 5. The plotinian one and the concept of Paramapurusa in the Bhagavadgita/I.C. Sharma. 6. Phraseology and imagery in plotinus and Indian thought/Richard T. Wallis. 7. Meditative states in the Abhidharma and in pseudo-dionysius/David F.T. Rodier. 8. Matter and exemplar: difference-in-identity in Vijnanabhiksu and bonaventure/John Borelli. 9. Cit and Nous/Paul Hacker. 10. Matter in plotinus and Samkara/Francisco Garcia Bazan. 11. Samkara and Eriugena on causality/Russell Hatton. 12. Union with God in plotinus and Bayazid/Mohammad Noor Nabi. 13. Advaita Vedanta and neoplatonism/R.K. Tripathi. 14. The concept of human estrangement in plotinism and Samkara Vedanta/Ramakant Sinari. 15. Plotinus and Sri Aurobindo: a comparative study/Pritibhushan Chatterji. 16. The influence of Indian philosophy on neoplatonism/C.L. Tripathi. 17. A survey of modern scholarly opinion on plotinus and Indian thought/Albert M. Wolters. 18. Neoplatonism, Indian thought and general systems theory/John R.A. Mayer. 19. Some critical conclusions/I.C. Sharma. Index.
"The nineteen essays that form this pioneering comparative philosophy represent an exchange of ideas among specialists in neoplatonism and specialists in Indian thought. These scholars have examined concepts and assertions that appear to be common to both philosophical tradition, as well as the possible historical influence of Indian sources upon late Greek philosophy, and specifically upon the Alexandrine Platonists. While most of the essays refer to Hinduism, several of them contain general surveys.
"The nineteen essays that form this pioneering comparative philosophy represent an exchange of ideas among specialists in neoplatonism and specialists in Indian thought. These scholars have examined concepts and assertions that appear to be common to both philosophical tradition, as well as the possible historical influence of Indian sources upon late Greek philosophy, and specifically upon the Alexandrine Platonists. While most of the essays refer to Hinduism, several of them contain general surveys.
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