Lewis Thompson—England’s Great Poet-Sadhu

by Wayne Owensimage

Lewis Thompson’s extraordinary collection of aphorisms, Fathomless Heart, is a seminal event in the modern encounter of East and West. A work of magical, incandescent genius, it is also one of the twentieth century’s greatest literary/philosophical treasures.

March 09 2013


THE GREAT SECRET CORRECTED

imageNow that Rhonda Byrne’s runaway bestseller, “The Secret,” has garnered more than 2,400 reviews on Amazon.com, the crack DharmaCafé editorial team has decided to swing into action and offer its own review of the book.

by Bill Stranger [July 04 2009]

Reason and Religion: Irremediably Incompatible Bedfellows?

Like the poet e.e. cummings, floyd merriell writes his name in the lower case to stress the arbitrariness and non-necessity of our egoic self-identification. That humility is conjoined to one of the most interesting intellects in American letters today. In his many books, merrell has demonstrated how the obscure science of semiotics—especially as developed by the great American philosopher C.S. Peirce—can play a fundamental role in developing the emerging new paradigm of an evolving, self-organizating, irreducibly interdependent universe. Here we present merrell’s extended essay on the paradoxical nature of religious truth.

by Bill Stranger [January 06 2008]

Tanabe Hajime’s “Philosophy as Metanoetics”

Tanabe Hajime, a founding member of Japan’s famed Kyoto School of Philosophy, studied under two giants of twentieth century philosophy, Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger (the latter’s own philosophy was likely influenced by Tanabe’s Buddhist views). “Philosophy as Metanoetics” was developed from lectures the author delivered in Kyoto during Japan’s disastrous war with America, Britain, and China, the shadows of which fall heavily across its pages. In this “appreciation and celebration” of Tanabe’s principal work, Steven M. Rosen (whose own pioneering writings are laying a foundation for a new non-dual philosophy of science) identifies key elements of Tanabe’s paradox-drenched philosophy and pauses to question whether the Buddhist notion of the relative self needs to be supplemented by a more dynamic vision of absolute being such as is found in some Western phenomenological thinkers.

by Bill Stranger [November 20 2007]

The Most Deeply Distorted and Misunderstood Intuition of All

imageIn a mission that may be unique among contemporary philosophers, Haverford College professor Ashok Gangadean is trying to bring the Unitary Absolute out of the cloisters and into business and government. Here he make it clear that the Absolute “First” is and must be acknowledged as the foundation for a new global reason.

by Bill Stranger [May 31 2007]
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