<p><span style=color: rgba(23 43 77 1)>This special issue elucidates the articulation between discourse and experience within the development of wisdom mainly in Buddhism both in dialog with the West and for teaching mindfulness in contemporary education. Wisdom as the right view represents the eye or guiding principle of the path that was taught by the Buddha according to three progressive stages: (1) the wisdom born from study; (2) the wisdom born from reflection; and (3) the wisdom born from cultivation. Two articles explore this model in Indian Buddhism and its relationship with mindfulness as well as in the later debates with Advaita Ved?nta regarding truth and self-transformation. Three articles investigate this model further from Asa?ga and Vasubandhu in India to Xuanzang in China and then as an educational paradigm in the Japanese school of Tendai according to Saich? or as a heuristic device to approach mindfulness in the Zen philosophy of D?gen. The next three articles focus on Tibetan Buddhism considering meditation manuals as facilitating the transition from scholarship to practice and discussing mindfulness in the progressive path of wisdom versus the sudden insight of Dzogchen and how the threefold wisdom model is central to the contemporary revival of Buddhism in Eastern Tibet. The last three articles examine the threefold wisdom model in terms of its larger methodological relevance for Buddhist studies and for facilitating dialog with other disciplines. Following the inspiration of Pierre Hadot the model is compared with early Greco-Latin philosophy and ultimately applied to secular mindfulness-based programs in educational contexts.</span></p>
Piracy-free
Assured Quality
Secure Transactions
Delivery Options
Please enter pincode to check delivery time.
*COD & Shipping Charges may apply on certain items.