Great Minds of the Eastern Intellectual Tradition

Grant Hardy

Book 0 of The Great Courses

Language: English

Publisher: The Great Courses

Published: Jan 1, 2011

Collection: Nonfiction
Reading Ease: 81.7
Genre: Nonfiction (General)
Topic: Philosophy, The Great Courses
Word Count: 33447

Description:

The audiobook contains the course lectures; the PDF is the course guide / summary.

Western philosophy is a vast intellectual tradition, the product of thousands of years of revolutionary thought built up by a rich collection of brilliant minds. When most of us study philosophy, we're focusing only on the Western intellectual tradition brought about by people such as Aristotle, Descartes, and Nietzsche. But to understand the Western intellectual tradition is to only get half of the story. Just as important, and just as valid a contribution to philosophy, is the Eastern intellectual tradition. Eastern philosophy is also the product of thousands of years of thought and was also built up by a distinct group of brilliant thinkers. Among these are Buddha, Confucius, Gandhi, and Zarathustra. Their ideas demonstrate fascinating, wholly different ways of approaching, understanding, and solving the same fundamental questions that concerned the West's greatest thinkers, such as the existence of God, the meaning of life, the nature of truth and reality, the organization of government and society, the significance of suffering, and the roots of a well-lived life. To explore Eastern perspectives on these issues is to embark on an illuminating journey into the heart of grand, but often unfamiliar, civilizations. It's also a thought-provoking way to understand the surprising connections and differences between East and West, and to strengthen your knowledge of cultures that play increasingly important roles in our globalized 21st-century world.

Contents:

  1. Life's Great Questions—Asian Perspectives
  2. The Vedas and Upanishads—The Beginning
  3. Mahavira and Jainism—Extreme Nonviolence
  4. The Buddha—The Middle Way
  5. The Bhagavad Gita—The Way of Action
  6. Confucius—In Praise of Sage-Kings
  7. Laozi and Daoism—The Way of Nature
  8. The Hundred Schools of Preimperial China
  9. Mencius and Xunzi—Confucius's Successors
  10. Sunzi and Han Feizi—Strategy and Legalism
  11. Zarathustra and Mani—Dualistic Religion
  12. Kautilya and Ashoka—Buddhism and Empire
  13. Ishvarakrishna and Patanjali—Yoga
  14. Nagarjuna and Vasubandhu—Buddhist Theories
  15. Sima Qian and Ban Zhao—History and Women
  16. Dong Zhongshu and Ge Hong—Eclecticism
  17. Xuanzang and Chinese Buddhism
  18. Prince Shotoku, Lady Murasaki, Sei Shonagon
  19. Saicho to Nichiren—Japanese Buddhism
  20. Shankara, Ramanuja, Madhva—Hindu Vedanta
  21. Al-Biruni—Islam in India
  22. Nanak and Sirhindi—Sikhism and Sufism
  23. Han Yu to Zhu Xi—Neo-Confucianism
  24. Wang Yangming—The Study of Heart and Mind
  25. Dogen and Hakuin—Zen Buddhism
  26. Zeami and Sen no Rikyu—Japanese Aesthetics
  27. Wonhyo to King Sejong—Korean Philosophy
  28. Padmasabhava to Tsongkhapa—Tibetan Ideas
  29. Science and Technology in Premodern Asia
  30. Muhammad Iqbal and Rabindranath Tagore
  31. Mohandas Gandhi—Satyagraha, or Soul-Force
  32. Fukuzawa Yukichi and Han Yongun
  33. Kang Youwei and Hu Shi
  34. Sun Yat-sen and Mao Zedong
  35. Modern Legacies
  36. East and West