scholarly journals The Missing God of Heidegger and Karl Jaspers: Too late for God; too Early for the Gods—with a vignette from Indian Philosophy

Sophia ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Purushottama Bilimoria
1962 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-59
Author(s):  
M. K. Malhotra ◽  

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2-3) ◽  
pp. 251-268
Author(s):  
Yeeyon Im

This essay examines Yeats's Purgatory via A Vision, in an attempt to understand his view of salvation in particular relation to Indian philosophy. Read from a Christian perspective, Purgatory may be a work far from purgation, as T. S. Eliot once complained. I wish to show in this essay that Purgatory indeed places emphasis on purgation by a negative example, if in a different way from the Catholic one. Yeats denies the linear eschatology of Christian theology as well as its doctrine of salvation in eternal heaven. In A Vision, Yeats explains his view of the afterlife of the soul, which involves purgation through ‘the Dreaming Back’. The special treatment of the Old Man renders Purgatory a meta-purgatorial play that mirrors the Dreaming Back of his mother's spirit in the Old Man's, intensifying the theme of purgation. Purgatory effectively dramatizes the inability to forgive and cast out remorse: the impossibility of nishikam karma, or selfless action, to borrow Sanskrit terms, which is essential for Yeatsian salvation. Finally, I would also emphasize Yeats's deviation from the Hindu wisdom, which makes Yeats's vision uniquely his own.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karl Jaspers
Keyword(s):  

Die Aufgabe der Universität im 20. Jahrhundert Die Fragen nach den Aufgaben, den strukturellen Veränderungen und dem gesellschaftlichen und politischen Stellenwert der Universität waren für Karl Jaspers über 45 Jahre hinweg Gegenstand philosophischer und sozialkritischer Reflexion. Hierfür steht neben 13 veröffentlichten Vorträgen, Aufsätzen und Interviews vor allem die 1923 erstmals publizierte, dann 1946 neu konzipierte und zuletzt 1961 gemeinsam mit Kurt Rossmann in die damaligen Reformdebatten eingebrachte Schrift Die Idee der Universität. Durch die Verortung der Universität im Kontext von Wahrheit, Freiheit und Frieden avancierten Jaspers’ Texte zur Universitätsidee zu einem Plädoyer für politische Freiheit, Demokratie und Humanismus, das in den aktuellen Diskussionen um Gestalt, Aufgaben und Ziele der Universität seinesgleichen sucht. Der vorliegende Band versammelt erstmals sämtliche von Jaspers selbst veröffentlichten Texte zur Universität. Der Kommentar gibt Einblicke in inhaltliche Zusammenhänge, die zeitgeschichtlichen Kontexte sowie die Genese der einzelnen Schriften.


1957 ◽  
Vol 37 (3) ◽  
pp. 207-235
Author(s):  
Paul Ricœur
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Sintija Kampāne-Štelmahere

The research “Echoes of Latvian Dainas in the Lyrics of Velta Sniķere” examines motifs and fragments of Latvian folk songs in the poetry by Sniķere. Several poems that directly reveal the montage of folk songs are selected as research objects. Linguistic, semantic, hermeneutical and historical as well as literary methods were used in poetry analysis. The research emphasizes the importance of Latvian folklore in the process of Latvian exile literature, the genesis of modern lyrics, and the philosophical conception of the poet. Latvian folk songs in the lyrics of Sniķere are mainly perceived as a source of ancient knowledge and as a path to the Indo-European first language, prehistoric time, which is understood only in a poetic state. Often, the montage of Latvian folk songs or their fragments in the lyrics of Sniķere is revealed as a reflexive reverence that creates a semantic fracture and opposition between profane and sacred view. The insertion of a song in the poem alters the rhythmic and phonetic sound: a free and sometimes dissonant article is replaced by a harmonic trochee, while an internationalism saturated language is replaced by a simple, phonetically effective language composed of alliterations and assonances. The montage of folk songs in a poem is justified by the necessity to restore the Latvian identity in exile, to restore the memory of ancient, mythical knowledge, to represent the understanding of beauty and other moral-ethical values and to show the thought activity. Common mythical images in the lyrics of Sniķere are snake, wind, gold, silver, stone etc. The Latvian folk song symbolism and lifestyle of the poet are organically synthesized with the insights of Indian philosophy.


Author(s):  
Dr. H Pampanna Gouda ◽  
Govind Raju ◽  
Seema MB

Ever since man has started colonising the knowledge for survival and dependence over each other made him social animal. But aggregated knowledge and added wisdom transformed such colonisation in to civilizations. Ayurveda is said to be Upanga of Atharvanaveda. The mythological connection yielded the Ayurveda in Triskanda Ayurveda but the amassing the doctrines of Indian philosophy made it to today’s Living sciences the Ayurveda. By 2nd BC the classical works of Charaka Samhita and Sushruta Samhita is believed to have been written. The trend of writing such voluminous work even extended upto 6th AD believed to be the period of Astanga Hrudaya Samhita. The upsurge of Rasa Shastra and the geopolitical changes happening in India had almost pull stopped the progress of Ayurvedic Literature for further 6 centuries. But it was post Shoddala period that is 12th century AD onwards, we find with the specific intent and with a particular domain literature emerged which we call period of Laghutrayee. The same post Shoddala period we find some serious, literary mammoth works in Ayurveda came in the form of commentaries. Dalhana, Chakrapaniduta, Arunaduta and Hemadri commentaries even today believed to more authentic came in this period for the Brihatrayee. This exploration of Sharangadhara in to the Nadi Pareeksha is one such add on with a specific reason addressing the entrance level teaching so that the system become more simpler and approachable. In the article an attempt is made to exhibit need specific moulding of Nadi Pareeksha which was imported from neighbours is specifically blended; not only to the basics of Ayurveda but was practised as a tool of a) diagnosis, b) prognosis c) treatment and d) even death was determined by it.


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