Paraphrases the great Hindu scripture concerning divine knowledge and devotion into modern expository prose.
Reprint. 10,000 first printing. The Bhagavad Gita (Sanskrit for "Song of the Lord") is the most famous poem in all of Hindu literature and part of the Mahabharata, the great Indian epic.
0-553-21420–9 THEAENEID OF VIRGIL, Virgil,0-553-21041-6 CANDIDE, Voltaire, 0-553-21166–8 THE INVISIBLE MAN. H. G. Wells, 0-553-21353-9 THE ISLAND OFDR. MOREAU. H. G. Wells, 0-553-21432–2 THE TIME MACHINE. H. G. Wells, 0-553-21351-2 THE ...
Authentic and readily accessible to the scholar and the non initiate, this edition of the Gita is essential reading for anybody who wishes to grasp the core of Indian philosophy and religion.
Readers trust the series to provide authoritative texts enhanced by introductions and notes by distinguished scholars and contemporary authors, as well as up-to-date translations by award-winning translators.
Dialogue between the warrior, Arjuna, and his charioteer, the god Krishna, discusses the purpose of war, the importance of duty, and the spiritual nature of existence, in a new translation of this ancient Hindu poem that forms one section ...
Commentary on 'The Bhagavad Geeta' by Swami Mukundananda
As a result, he met with his followers almost daily, after morning prayer sessions, to discuss the Gita’s contents and meaning as it unfolded before him. This book is the transcription of those daily sessions.
Dialogue between the warrior, Arjuna, and his charioteer, the god Krishna, discusses the purpose of war, the importance of duty, and the spiritual nature of existence.
A prose translation of the classic Indian poem, prepared for the specific needs of students, teachers, and yoga instructors, introduces the core principles of Vedic philosophy while endeavoring to accurately reflect the forms, sounds, and ...
The search led him far beyond the tradition from which the text originally arose to an exploration of world mystical wisdom, including Zen, Christianity, Yoga, and particularly the teachings of J. Krishnamurti and G. I. Gurdjieff.