|
Calm Abiding and Special Insight: Achieving Spiritual Transformation through Meditation
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
Calm Abiding and Special Insight: Achieving Spiritual Transformation through Meditation
|
Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Geshe Gedun Lodro
|
|
Translated by Jeffrey Hopkins
|
|
Edited by Jeffrey Hopkins
|
Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:336 | Dimensions(mm): Height 216,Width 140 |
|
Category/Genre | Buddhism |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781559391108
|
Classifications | Dewey:294.34435 |
---|
Audience | |
|
Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Shambhala Publications Inc
|
Imprint |
Snow Lion Publications
|
Publication Date |
1 January 1998 |
Publication Country |
United States
|
Description
Calm Abiding and Special Insight presents an intimate and detailed picture of the intricacies of meditation so vividly that the reader is drawn into a Tibetan worldview of spiritual development. Geshe Gedun Lodroe, one of the foremost scholars of Tibet, reveals methods for overcoming afflictive states and disorders to create a mind which is stable, calm, and alertly clear. This book illustrates the mind's potential for profound transformation. The dangers of not recognizing states contrary to successful meditation are great, and the possibilities of implementing the wrong antidote, or of overextending an appropriate one until it becomes counterproductive, are many. Through such detail, Geshe Gedun Lodroe makes vividly clear a Tibetan approach to meditative transformation. This is a completely revised new edition of Walking Through Walls.
Author Biography
Geshe Gedun Lodroe (1924-1979) entered Debung Monastic University near Lhasa at the age of nine as a novice monk. He gained the degree of geshe in 1961 in exile in India as the first among three scholars who were awarded the number one ranking in the highest class. A scholar of prodigious intellect, he was famed for his wide learning and ability in debate. In 1967, the Dalai Lama sent him to teach at the University of Hamburg, where he learned to speak German fluently and became a tenured member of the faculty. He served as Visiting Professor at the University of Virginia in 1979.
Reviews"What the Geshe has left to us is . . . a masterly and lucid account of an Indo-Tibetan worldview of spiritual development . . . meticulously edited and translated. No advanced student and scholar working on related areas can afford to overlook this publication. . . . A book of great merit."-Tibet Journal "This book vividly presents an intimate and detailed picture of the intricacies of meditation, such that the reader is drawn into a Tibetan world-view of spiritual transformation."-Indian International Journal of Buddhist Studies
|