Language
of the Self
By Frithjof Schuon
Pub Date: 1999
Publisher: World Wisdom Books
Binding: Paper, 223pp.
ISBN: 0941532267
Our Price $17.00
Related Books: Comparative
Religion
Related Audio/Video: Lings, Frithjof
Schuon and Rene Guenon
The modern outlook--despite its professed
"objectivity"--recoils from the notion at the foundation of
all traditional wisdom that there is an absolute, transcendent Reality.
Whereas consciousness of the Absolute and its infinitude constitutes
man's very reason for being, therefore his salvation and his happiness.
Schuon's perspective is that of Sanatana Dharma, the
"eternal religion," which is based on the intrinsic nature of
things. For Western minds, which have a tendency toward irreducible
alternatives, Schuon's crystalline yet musical delineations of the
levels of reality come as a refreshing relief. At the root of this
discernment is neither mere reasoning nor a willing of "what should
be," but a disinterested contemplation of the metaphysical
transparency of phenomena.
First published in India, this is a revised translation of essays
that elucidate the universal principles for which the Advaita-Vedanta
is so revered, encompassing in its amplitude every legitimate spiritual
modality. In the chapter, "The Meaning of Caste," the reader
is afforded an intelligent and spiritually vibrant way of understanding
the archetypal roots that differentiate humankind. "The Meaning of
Race" demolishes current errors and prejudices while depicting that
genius which is unique to each race. "Principles and Criteria of
Art" insists on the necessity of objective criteria for beauty. The
shock to the Western readers upon encountering this idea gives way to
joy, arising from the restoration of art's mission of transmitting the
qualities of intelligence, beauty and nobility that are at once the
natural and necessary dimensions of the human condition, as well as the
projection of Truth and Beauty into the world of forms.
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