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Yoga Philosophy

#Interdisciplinary #Philosophy

Uncovering Nature from Within

We live the experience of divine ecology because we are nature. We are of the earth and know ourselves through…

By Carryn Mills
#Traditions #Yoga

The Perils of Becoming a Gopī

These traditions, which seem to indicate a fluid and mutable approach to gender identities—often rooted in the idea that gender can be exchanged or, ultimately, transcended, are of increasing interest to queer practitioners seeking to examine religious traditions that embody the performative nature of gender.

By Phil Hine
#Philosophy #Traditions

Yoga Sutras, Abridged

The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali, a masterwork of spirituality, psychology and philosophy, are attributed to Patanjali. Compiled a few hundred years before the Common Era, these teachings arose out of a most prolific and sophisticated civilization – ancient India.

By Lisa Dawn Angerame
#Philosophy #Yoga

Yoga Apologia

My forthcoming considerations may be seen as situated in a tradition of apologetics, if we understand something different by that word.

By Jacob Kyle
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#Key Figures #Traditions

In the Service of Truth

This personal essay will focus on various issues which arise when one is a scholar-practitioner in a spiritual tradition.

By
#Philosophy #Traditions

What is Pramāṇa?

Pramāṇa means right knowledge, a correct understanding of reality that can be acquired in one of three ways: sense perception, logic, and verbal testimony as the sources for the acquisition of valid knowledge.

By
#Pedagogy #Practice

Study? Practice? Can the Two be Integrated?

This article discusses the history of the university, analyzes the challenge of modernity and post-modernity, and affirms the efficacy of integrating study and practice.

By Christopher Key Chapple
#Practice #Traditions

What is Mālā?

Mālā literally means “garland.” Japa mālās are a string of beads used to count mantras. They have been used for centuries in India as a spiritual tool for meditation and prayer.

By Pr__ad_ Comtois
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