Embodied Philosophy
  • Membership
  • Read
    • Articles
    • Tarka Journal
  • Learn
    • 200-Hour Yoga Teacher Training
    • Sādhana School
    • Certificate Programs
    • Wisdom School Courses
    • Browse the Course Catalog
  • Listen
  • Attend
Sign in Join now
Sign in Join now

Traditions

#Interdisciplinary #Traditions

Jonathan Edelmann on Evolution, the Bhāgavata Purāṇa and Vaiṣṇava Theology (#53)

Jonathan is a Vaishnava Hindu scholar.

By Jacob Kyle
#Cultures #Traditions

Yoganidrā

In modern times, yoganidrā is generally understood to be a specific type of guided meditation performed in a supine position. This common interpretation is largely due to the success of the Satyananda Yoga Nidra technique that has been trademarked and taught by the Bihar School of Yoga. In Swāmī Satyānanda Saraswati’s book Yoga Nidra, first published 1976, he claims to have constructed this seven part guided meditation technique from ‘important but little known practices’ (2009 edition: p. 3), which he found in various Tantras.

By Jason Birch
#Philosophy #Traditions

The Enigma of Existence

​Different from grasping, the gesture of greeting enables openness between the subject and object.  Greeting is an invitation to the abyss within. Meditation is a gaze within that provides an already sublimated energy to thought (Irigaray, 1991, 171). The gaze of the meditating Buddha is not divisive, or incisive, it does not grasp, but wistfully sits, open to existence as it is.  In the realization that nowhere is anything lasting, phenomena appear, exist, and then disappear; gone forever, existing only in the tumultuous caverns of memory. The decrepitude of the material realm, the impermanence of the body, is an “invariable form of variation” (Deleuze, 1994, 2).

By Bradley Kaye
#Philosophy #Traditions

Yājñavalkya’s Cult of Personality and the Change It Provoked in Vedic Society

Yājñavalkya is one of the most memorable characters in Vedic literature, known not only for his wit, insolence and intimidation – he nearly purloined one thousand cows from a group of renowned brahmins just before shattering the head of one of them –, but also for the profundity and newness of his thought.

By Genny Wilkinson-Priest
#Research #Traditions

On the Mind: the Difference between Eastern and Western Conceptions

Explaining the premodern Indian conception of mind to Westerners poses an interesting problem. Western popular culture tends to posit two primary centers of our being other than the body: the mind (locus of thoughts) and the heart (locus of feelings). This is in complete opposition to the Indian model, whereby ‘mind’ and ‘heart’ both translate the same Sanskrit word (chitta), for as every good psychologist knows, thoughts and feelings are inextricably linked–indeed, they exist on a continuum.

By
#Philosophy #Traditions

Swami Sarvapriyananda on the Upanishads and the Hard Problem of Consciousness (#48)

Swami is a Hindu monk an Vedanta teacher.

By Jacob Kyle
#Philosophy #Traditions

Jeffrey Lidke on the Goddes, Nepal and the Sri Yantra (#45)

Jeffrey is a Tantrik studies scholar.

By Jacob Kyle
#Practice #Traditions

Understanding the Neurobiological Mechanisms of Mindfulness

Mindfulness—as a state, trait, process, type of meditation, and intervention has proven to be beneficial across a diverse group of psychological disorders as well as for general stress reduction. Yet, there remains a lack of clarity in the operationalization of this construct, and underlying mechanisms.

By David Vago
  • «
  • 1
  • …
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • …
  • 32
  • »

Learn More

  • Become A Member
  • Latest Articles
  • Wisdom School
  • Certificate Program
  • Chitheads Podcast
  • Tarka Journal
  • About us
  • Submissions
  • Contact us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

7-DAY FREE TRIAL

Join the online school where ancient wisdom meets modern life.

LEARN MORE Maybe Later