03470nam 2200577Ia 450 991081119330332120200520144314.00-7914-8994-90-585-44411-0(CKB)111056486601220(OCoLC)61367496(CaPaEBR)ebrary10587141(SSID)ssj0000245948(PQKBManifestationID)11174064(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000245948(PQKBWorkID)10179847(PQKB)11104707(MiAaPQ)EBC3407943(OCoLC)52205306(MdBmJHUP)muse5806(Au-PeEL)EBL3407943(CaPaEBR)ebr10587141(DE-B1597)682604(DE-B1597)9780791489949(EXLCZ)9911105648660122020001221d2002 ub 0engurcn|||||||||txtccrSilence unheard deathly otherness in Ptanjala-yoga /Yohanan GrinshponAlbany State University of New York Pressc20021 online resource (169 p.) SUNY series in Hindu studiesBibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph0-7914-5101-1 Includes bibliographical references (p. 147-151) and index.Front Matter -- Contents -- Foreword -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Challenges of an Oxymoronic Genre -- Eight Characters in Search of the Yogasūtra:The Lively Banalization of Yogic Deathly Silence -- Daily Life in Samādhi: The Dying Yogin’s Real Life and a Plea for Holistic Presentation of the Yogasūtra -- The Yogasūtra and the Dying Yogin’s “Lively Interior” -- Causality, False Linearity, and the Silent Yogin’s Presence in the Yogasūtra -- Untying the Knot of Existence: Liberation, Deathly Silence, and their Interpretation in Pātañjala-Yoga -- The Dying Yogin’s Challenge; Homelessness and Truth -- The Essential Yogasūtra; An Exercise in Rereading as Rewriting -- Notes -- Bibliography -- IndexSilence Unheard maintains that the reality of Patañjali's Yogasūtra is a profound silence barely and variously audible to the scholars and interpreters who approach it. Even the Yogasūtra itself is an "approach," a voice articulating an other-- a silent, beyond-speech yogin. Author Yohanan Grinshpon presents Patañjali as a Sāṅkhya-philosopher, who interprets silence in accordance with his own dualist metaphysics and Buddhistic sensibilities. The Yogasūtra represents an intellectual's conceptualization of utter otherness rather than the yogin's verbalization of silence. Silence Unheard focuses on the yogin's supra-normal experiences (siddhis) as well as on the classification of silences and the ultimate goal of disintegration through guṇa balance. The book provides a translation of the Yogasūtra divided into two sections: an essential text, concerning the yoga practitioner, and a secondary text, concerning the philosopher. Grinshpon also surveys the encounters of intellectuals, scholars, seekers, devotees, and outsiders with the Yogasūtra.YogaYoga.181/.452Grinshpon Yohanan1948-1718278MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910811193303321Silence unheard4115105UNINA