This Is It & Other Essays on Zen & Spiritual Experience
- 158pages
- 6 heures de lecture
Six essays dealing with the relationship of mystical experience to ordinary life.
Alan Watts était un philosophe britannique, renommé pour avoir interprété et popularisé les philosophies asiatiques auprès d'un public occidental. Son œuvre considérable, comprenant plus de 25 livres et de nombreux articles, explore des thèmes profonds tels que l'identité personnelle, la nature de la réalité, la conscience supérieure et le sens de la vie. Watts entremêlait avec maestria ses réflexions à la connaissance scientifique et à la sagesse des traditions religieuses et philosophiques orientales et occidentales. Son approche distinctive incite les lecteurs à remettre en question les notions conventionnelles et à explorer de nouvelles perspectives.





Six essays dealing with the relationship of mystical experience to ordinary life.
From “perhaps the foremost interpreter of Eastern disciplines for the contemporary West—and an author who ‘had the rare gift of ‘writing beautifully the unwritable’” (Los Angeles Times)—a guide that draws on Chinese Taoism to reexamine humanity’s place in the natural world and the relation between body and spirit. Western thought and culture have coalesced around a series of constructed ideas—that human beings stand separate from a nature that must be controlled; that the mind is somehow superior to the body; that all sexuality entails a seduction—that in some way underlie our exploitation of the earth, our distrust of emotion, and our loneliness and reluctance to love. Here, Watts fundamentally challenges these assumptions, drawing on the precepts of Taoism to present an alternative vision of man and the universe—one in which the distinctions between self and other, spirit and matter give way to a more holistic way of seeing.
Tradition und lebendiger Weg
A Message for an Age of Anxiety
In this fascinating book, Alan Watts explores man's quest for psychological security, examining our efforts to find spiritual and intellectual certainty in the realms of religion and philosophy. The Wisdom of Insecurity underlines the importance of our search for stability in an age where human life seems particularly vulnerable and uncertain. Watts argues our insecurity is the consequence of trying to be secure and that, ironically, salvation and sanity lie in the recognition that we have no way of saving ourselves.
On the Taboo Against Knowing Who You Are