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    Interdisciplinary

    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    ‘Ram or crackers had no place in my Diwali’

    The last few years the Uttar Pradesh government has presented to its citizens some of the best immersive theatre experiences of all time.

    By Mahima A. Jain
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    The Three Bears

    The ideal of energetic flourishing formed by the union of opposites is expressed in the triadic Tantric symbol of the Sri Yantra.

    By Mary Reilly Nichols
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Contemplative Practices in Islam

    The first pillar is the core belief in the oneness of God.

    By Mary Lahaj
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Nothing Can Be Taught

    The goal of yoga is summarized and experienced in that first word: “Now is the discipline of yoga.”

    By Dr. Katy Jane
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Perennial Wisdom to help us Parent more Consciously

    How do I get out of the way?

    By Isa Gucciardi
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    What’s wrong with the Perennial Philosophy?

    The Perennial Philosophy is a much more natural attitude to me than the exclusivism and tribalism of Christianity, which I find strange and incredible.

    By Jules Evans
    #Interdisciplinary #Philosophy

    Vedanta and Kabbalah: Nonduality East and West

    “Enlightenment” is often regarded as a purely “Eastern” concept, foreign to the Western monotheistic religions and to non-Western indigenous and shamanic traditions.

    By Jay Michaelson
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Seamless Robes

    The recurring detail of the seamless robe resonates with the human imagination because it serves as a symbol of the radically equal state of cognition, called non-dual awareness or the unitive state, which is the goal and the heart of world mystical traditions.

    By Mary Reilly Nichols
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    The Myth of Duality

    Most people give little thought to the reasons why they see the world as they do—why they see themselves as separate and alone.

    By John Greer
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Blavatsky, Rudolf Steiner, and the Perennial Tradition

    We forget just how much the spiritual movements of the twentieth and now the twenty-first centuries owe to H.P. Blavatsky and the Theosophical Society she founded.

    By Christopher Bamford
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Reflections of a Jewish Buddhist

    Buddhism and Judaism share a bounty of common practices.

    By Peter Aronson
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    A Buddhist-Christian Liberative Praxis

    As Jesus and Buddha have been remembered, they both had a common starting point for their preaching: the sufferings that all humans (though some more than others) have to face: the inadequacies, the perplexities, the insufficiencies, the diminishments, the pains and disappointments that darken human existence.

    By Paul Knitter
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Making It Up as I Go Along

    The presence of an authentic advocate like a Muslim chaplain can be empowering for Muslim patients and families.

    By Mary Lahaj
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Religious Pluralism and the Upaniṣads

    One typical but currently out of favor response (among academics at least) to doctrinal differences separating religions has been to reduce the welter of contrary doctrinal formations to an essential teaching, a kind of ‘superdoctrine,’ such as “All religions are true,” or “All religions point to the Absolute.”

    By Kenneth Rose
    #Interdisciplinary #Traditions

    Peace in Earth-Based Wisdom Traditions

    We are all connected, through the air we breathe, the land we walk on, and the beauty of the earth that supports each one of us from the moment we are born until the moment we die.

    By Isa Gucciardi
    #Interdisciplinary #Research

    Mauro Zappaterra on the Cerebrospinal Fluid (#77)

    Mauro is a scientist and researcher.

    By Jacob Kyle
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    TARKA is a quarterly journal that explores yoga philosophy, contemplative studies, and the world’s wisdom and esoteric traditions.

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