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Chargement... The Healing Buddhapar Raoul Birnbaum
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This book presents important discourses that deal with the Healing Buddha in his various manifestations and discusses the many symbols, colors, and deities that are used as objects of meditation. The accompanying photographs of sculptures, paintings, and mandalas demonstrate the importance of art and aesthetic experience in Buddhist healing practices. Also included is a history of healing in the development of Buddhism from the earliest texts and the famous "Lotus Sutra " to the Buddhism of Tibet, where elaborate ritual is used in the healing of body and mind. Some of the many herbs and medicines used to treat disease in the Buddhist cultures of Asia are described in an appendix. A new preface and a new essay on the search for long life in Chinese Buddhism have been added to this revised edition. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Healing is an important concept in Buddhism and while one of its meanings is healing as in the cure of diseases, healing in Buddhism is more importantly "the healing process as a metaphor for spiritual growth with the Buddha as the Supreme Physician and the Buddhist Teachings termed the King of Medicines" (p. 3)
Extensive selections from various sutras and ritual examples illustrate iconographic details, although the black & white photos are of very poor quality. The references to esoteric Buddhism in China are especially helpful as they remain amongst the first to have given us insight into some of its beliefs and practices as seen in the cult of Bhaisajyaguru.
There are also excellent references to the other 'healing Buddhas' of Buddhism--Avalokitesvara, Samantabhadra, and Amitabha together with some of their rituals and iconography.
The book is still, in my opinion, the best single source on the subject, in addition to an article by S. C. Bosch Reitz in the Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin's (Vol. 19, No. 4), April 1924, "Trinity of the Buddha of Healing." It is a volume I have returned to several times. ( )