Book Details
Orange Code:92020
Paperback:255 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. King Ashoka's Question: What Is Your Secret?2. Maturity and Serenity3. The Story of Siddhartha4. The Hindu Context5. The Core of the Buddha’s Teachings6. The Noble Truth of Dukkha (Suffering), Part 1: Suffering and Transitoriness7. The Noble Truth of Dukkha, Part 2: Caught in the Causal Matrix8. The Noble Truth of Nirvana (Liberation), Part 1: Conquer the Beasts Within9. The Noble Truth of Nirvana, Part 2: The Nature of Attachment10. Supermaturity11. Anatman Reconsidered: You Are Not Your Mind12. The Noble Truth of Magga (The Path), Part 1: Wisdom and Ethics13. The Noble Truth of Magga, Part 2: Mental Discipline14. Yoga and Buddhism15. I Discover Hatha Yoga16. Savarasana17. The Yogic State, Part 1: Immersion
Description:
In a manner never before published, this book presents both Buddhism and Yoga and relates them to contemporary Western psychology. Although existing books begin with advanced concepts, such as emptiness or egolessness, The Positive Psychology of Buddhism and Yoga begins with very basic concepts and avoids the exotic and so called "mystical" notions. Levine emphasizes the goals of Buddhism and Yoga and the methods they employ to achieve those goals.
This book is divided into four sections. The first deals with Buddhism, the second with Yoga, and the third describes aims and practices in Western clinical psychology. The fourth section is a workshop on handling anger. The central lesson of the first three sections is that one can improve one's life by changing one's self. This fourth section applies this lesson and the methods of the three preceding sections to handling one's own anger. Overall the book is rich with Eastern tales and illustrative anecdotes. These concrete examples vividly illuminate the general conceptual presentation.
Levine shows not only the basic concerns of Buddhism and Yoga and how intensely practical their methods are but how these concerns and methods relate to those of modern Western psychology. Application to daily living is emphasized throughout.
The serious reader should start:
*to experience less anger, agitation, and stress;
*to improve relationships with coworkers, family, and friends; and
*to face life's challenges with greater wisdom and strength.
|