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Philosophy of religion

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Tehri-Garhwal; The Divine Life Society; 1997Edition: 2nd edDescription: 179pISBN:
  • 8170521327
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 200.1 KRI 2nd ed.
Summary: The present publication consists of another senes of lectures addressed by the author to the students of the Academy at the Headquarters of The Divine Life Society. Though the book is indeed going to be a useful and interesting reading, it may not equally be an easy reading. As the themes advance through the chapters, there is a tendency in the presentation to become a little more difficult gradually, mainly on account of the nature of the subjects treated in the later sections. This is especially so with the second half of the book, which enters into a discussion of varied topics, theoretical as well as practical. The last chapter may require a specially concentrated attention of the student, in the light of the novelty of the approach to the subject. This valued contribution may with advantage be studied as a fitting sequel to the author's earlier "An Introduction to the Philosophy of Yoga" and "Yoga as a Universal Science". The three texts read in a sequence would form almost a complete exposition of the vast range of the foundations as weil as the practical methodology of the human quest for eternal values.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Books Books Gandhi Smriti Library 200.1 KRI 2nd ed. (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 79048
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The present publication consists of another senes of lectures addressed by the author to the students of the Academy at the Headquarters of The Divine Life Society. Though the book is indeed going to be a useful and interesting reading, it may not equally be an easy reading. As the themes advance through the chapters, there is a tendency in the presentation to become a little more difficult gradually, mainly on account of the nature of the subjects treated in the later sections. This is especially so with the second half of the book, which enters into a discussion of varied topics, theoretical as well as practical. The last chapter may require a specially concentrated attention of the student, in the light of the novelty of the approach to the subject.
This valued contribution may with advantage be studied as a fitting sequel to the author's earlier "An Introduction to the Philosophy of Yoga" and "Yoga as a Universal Science". The three texts read in a sequence would form almost a complete exposition of the vast range of the foundations as weil as the practical methodology of the human quest for eternal values.

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