Books, audiotapes, and classes about yoga are today
as familiar as they are widespread, but we in the West
have only recently become engaged in the meditative
doctrines of the East-only in the last 70 or 80 years,
in fact. In the early part of the 20th century, it was
the pioneering efforts of keen scholars like W. Y.
Evans-Wentz, the late editor of this volume, that
triggered our ongoing occidental fascination with such
phenomena as yoga, Zen, and meditation. Tibetan Yoga and
Secret Doctrines-a companion to the popular Tibetan Book
of the Dead, which is also published by Oxford in an
authoritative Evans-Wentz edition-is a collection of
seven authentic Tibetan yoga texts that first appeared
in English in 1935. In these pages, amid useful
photographs and reproductions of yoga paintings and
manuscripts, readers will encounter some of the
principal meditations used by Hindu and Tibetan gurus
and philosophers throughout the ages in the attainment
of Right Knowledge and Enlightenment. Special
commentaries precede each translated text, and a
comprehensive introduction contrasts the tenets of
Buddhism with European notions of religion, philosophy,
and science.Evans-Wentz has also included a body of
orally transmitted traditions and teachings that he
received firsthand during his fifteen-plus years of
study in the Orient, findings that will interest any
student of anthropology, psychology, comparative
religion, or applied Mahayana Yoga. These seven distinct
but intimately related texts will grant any reader a
full and complete view of the spiritual teachings that
still inform the life and culture of the East. As with
Evans-Wentz's other three Oxford titles on Tibetan
religion, which are also appearing in new editions, this
third edition of Tibetan Yoga and Secret Doctrines
features a new foreword by Donald S. Lopez, author of
the recent Prisoners of Shangri-La: Tibetan Buddhism and
the West. |
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