Aspects of Indian Culture

Aspects of Indian Culture

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Book Specification

Item Code: NAE974
Publisher: Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture
Language: English
Edition: 2013
ISBN: 9789381325223
Pages: 800
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 9.5 inch x 6.5 inch
Weight 1.25 kg

Book Description

About the Book

One of the major initiatives of the Ramakrishna Centenary Committee in commemorating Sri Ramakrishna's centenary was the founding of an institute of culture. The founding of an institute of culture was felt necessary not only for the proper interpretation of Indian culture, but also to foster inter and intra-cultural dialogue. Inter-cultural dialogue is an important means for fostering international understanding and peace, while intra-cultural dialogue is an important means for maintaining communal harmony. Given the heterogeneous nature of world civilization and the pluralistic nature of India's own population, religion, language, race, and culture, it is inevitable that over time there would be tensions that disrupt the tenor of harmony behind diversity-both at the national and the international arenas. When such tensions lead to antagonism there arises the need to restore balance by revolving back to time tested principles. These principles hold good irrespective of time, place and circumstance and are embedded in the knowledge portion of the Vedas. They refer to not only the Ultimate Reality or ontology, but to the means of realizing the Ultimate Reality that have been periodically reinvigorated by the advent of exceptional manifestations of the divine. Swami Vivekananda, in his article entitled, 'The Hindu Religion and Sri Ramakrishna' and in his two lectures that are published as 'My Master' argues that Sri Ramakrishna 'is the reformed manifestation the ancient holy founders of the religions- of the past'. His advent is essentially to set in motion a trajectory or a 'wave of adjustment' for achieving intra and inter-cultural harmony by reverting to the essential principles of the Vedas. The Rg-Vedic declaration 'Ekam sat vipra bahudha vadanti' resonates in the later Paranoiac period in the Bhagavad-Gita as ‘ye yatha rnam prapadyente tamstatthaiva bhajamyaham'. Here 'mam’ does not refer to Sri Krsna alone, but to 'Ajopi san avyatma .... ‘or 'Ekam sat' of the Rg- Veda. Most recently Sri Ramakrishna revived the spirit of harmony through his realization 'Yato mat tato path', where 'Yato mat' refers to the different readings of the one sat or existence, analogues to 'vipra bahudha vadanti'.

This is testimony to India's spirit of not only tolerance, but acceptance of diversity. This diversity is not only with respect to conceiving the divine, but also approaching it. The continuity of principles such as this, the celebration of diversity and the openness for synthesis are all hallmarks of Indian culture. The Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture, founded during Sri Ramakrishna's centenary, sought to project these values through the publication of The Cultural Heritage of India-an encyclopedia on Indian culture-written mostly by Indian scholars.

The present volume entitled Aspects of Indian Culture by the Monks of the Ramakrishna Order is essentially a collection of all the articles that were written by the monks of the Ramakrishna Order and published in the The Cultural Heritage of India.

Preface

One of the major initiatives of the Ramakrishna Centenary Committee in commemorating Sri Ramakrishna's centenary was the founding of an institute of culture. The founding of an institute of culture was felt necessary not only for the proper interpretation of Indian culture, but also to foster inter and intra-cultural dialogue. Inter-cultural dialogue is an important means for fostering international understanding and peace, while intra- cultural dialogue is an important means for maintaining communal harmony. Given the heterogeneous nature of world civilization and the pluralistic nature of India's own population, religion, language, race, and culture, it is inevitable that over time there would be tensions that disrupt the tenor of harmony behind diversity-both at the national and the international arenas. When such tensions lead to antagonism there arises the need to restore balance by revolving back to time tested principles. These principles hold good irrespective of time, place and circumstance and are embedded in the knowledge portion of the Vedas. They refer to not only the Ultimate Reality or ontology, but to the means of realizing the Ultimate Reality that have been periodically reinvigorated by the advent of exceptional manifestations of the divine. Swami Vivekananda, in his article entitled, 'The Hindu Religion and Sri Ramakrishna' and in his two lectures that are published as 'My Master' argues that Sri Ramakrishna 'is the reformed manifestation of the ancient holy founders of the religions of the past'. His advent is essentially to set in motion a trajectory or a 'wave of adjustment' for achieving intra and inter-cultural harmony by reverting to the essential principles of the Vedas. The Rg-Vedic declaration 'Ekam sat viprd baud vadanti' resonates in the later Pauranic period in the Bhagavad-Gita as 'ye yatha mam prapadyente tamstatthaiva bhajamyaham', Here 'mam' does not refer to Sri Krsna alone, but Lo 'Ajopi san avyatma ....’ or 'Ekam sat' of the Rg- Veda. Most recently Sri Ramakrishna revived the spirit of harmony through his realization ' Yato mat tato path, where ' Yato mal refers to the different readings of the one sat or existence, analgues to ' ... vipra bahudha vadanti '.

This is testimony to India's spirit of not only tolerance, but acceptance of diversity. This diversity is not only with respect to conceiving the divine, but also approaching it the continuity of principles such as this; the celebration of diversity and the openness for synthesis are all hallmarks of Indian culture. The Ramakrishna Mission Institute of Culture, founded during Sri Ramakrishna's centenary, sought to project these values through the publication of The Cultural Heritage of India-an encyclopedia on Indian culture-written mostly by Indian scholars.

The present volume entitled Aspects of Indian Culture by the Monks of the Ramakrishna Order is essentially a collection of all the articles that were written by the monks of the Ramakrishna Order and published in the The Cultural Heritage of India.

Contents

Publisher Note V
Biographical Information of the Contributors XI
Abbreviations XXIII
Preface XXV
Part 1: Vedic Basis To Indin Culture
1 The Vedas and Their Religious Teachings 3
2 The Dawn of Indian Philosophy 38
3 A Birs’s-Eye view of the Upanishads 64
Part 2: Vedic Resonance in the Epics and Puranas
4 The Culture of the Ramayana 111
5 The Teachings of the Bhagavad-Gita 150
6 The Religion in the Bhagavad-Gita 167
7 The Bhagavad-Gita: Its Synthetic Character 197
8 Philosophy of the Bhagavata 230
Part 3: Systematization, Practice and Experience of Vedic Philosophy
9 Upanisadic Meditation 271
10 Indian Theism 295
11 A Glimpse into Hindu Religious Symbolism 324
12 Extra Sensory and Super conscious 350
13 Pilgrimages and Fairs: Their Bearing on Indian Life 375
Part 4: The Spirit of Harmony in India Culture
14 Vedanta and Science 393
15 The Origin and Growth of Tamil Literature 417
Part 5: The Continuity of Vedic Culture in The Modern World
16 Sri Ramakrishna and the Spiritual Renaissance 453
17 Philosophical Ideas of Sri Ramakrishna and Swami Vivekananda 612
Bibliography 687
Index 721

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