Arriba

Book : In My Own Way An Autobiography - Alan W. Watts

Modelo 77315847
Fabricante o sello New World Library
Peso 0.42 Kg.
Precio:   $65,979.00
Si compra hoy, este producto se despachara y/o entregara entre el 19-05-2025 y el 27-05-2025
Descripción
-Titulo Original : In My Own Way An Autobiography

-Fabricante :

New World Library

-Descripcion Original:

In this new edition of his acclaimed autobiography - long out of print and rare until now - Alan Watts tracks his spiritual and philosophical evolution from a child of religious conservatives in rural England to a freewheeling spiritual teacher who challenged Westerners to defy convention and think for themselves. From early in this intellectual life, Watts shows himself to be a philosophical renegade and wide-ranging autodidact who came to Buddhism through the teachings of Christmas Humphreys and D. T. Suzuki. Told in a nonlinear style, In My Own Way wonderfully combines Watts’ own brand of unconventional philosophy and often hilarious accounts of gurus, celebrities, psychedelic drug experiences, and wry observations of Western culture. A charming foreword written by Watts’ father sets the tone of this warm, funny, and beautifully written story of a compelling figure who encouraged readers to “follow your own weird” - something he always did himself, as his remarkable account of his life shows. Review “Enthralling . . . a most engrossing autobiography . . . unlike anything you’ve ever read . . . Those who like myself have found the solution to at least one momentous riddle of the universe inside each of Mr. Watts’s memorable books will be enlightened beyond expectations by this chronicle of the web of interlacing experiences and ideas which have constituted his inner life.” Henry A. Murray, MD, Harvard University“Exuberant . . . It is possible to categorize Watts’s autobiography as merely a diverting, candid, brilliantly written egocentric memoir of one’s man’s expeditious use of philosophy, religion, even science and the arts, to achieve name, fame, a good living and a secure niche in the current cultural scene. Actually In My Own Way cannot be dismissed in quite such simplistic terms, for it is the account of an exceptional man’s search for the basic truth of his own nature. . .” Nancy Wilson Ross, New York Times Book Review“A beautiful presentation as only the old master could do it.” John C. Lilly“A thoroughly entertaining book.” Publisher’s Weekly Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. In My Own WayAn Autobiography, 1915-1916By Alan WattsNew World LibraryCopyright © 1972 Alan WattsAll rights reserved.ISBN: 978-1-57731-584-1ContentsForeword by Laurence W. Watts, Preface, Prologue, 1. The Stoned Wood, 2. Tantum Religio, 3. I Go to the Buddha for Refuge, 4. On Being Half-Miseducated, 5. My Own University, 6. Dawn in the Western Sky, 7. The Sunwise Turn, 8. Paradox Priest, 9. Interlude, 10. Journey to the Edge of the World, 11. Beginning a Counterculture, 12. Other Selves, 13. Breakthrough, 14. The Soul-Searchers, 15. The Sound of Rain, Index, About the Author, CHAPTER 1THE STONED WOODTopophilia is a word invented by the British poet John Betjeman for a special love for peculiar places. It sounds almost like a disease or a perversion, but it comes close to the Japanese aware, which signifies a sophisticated nostalgia. One may love special places either for their beauty, or for their fascinating ugliness, or for their inability to be described. In the first class put the Swiss-Italian lake district and Big Sur, California; in the second put residential North London, Philadelphia, or Baltimore; in the third put Chislehurst, which means a stoned or stony (or even astonished) wood. It is an area on a well-forested and flat-topped hill to the southeast of London, its soil abounding in round and grey-surfaced stones, some of which contain pockets of crystals, and some which, when broken, reveal an image of dark blue sky, dense with clouds. Large sections of this area are commons or public parks, wild and left generally to themselves. In the interstices lie palatial mansions, affluent suburban residences, three small shopping areas, seven churches, seven amiable pubs, and two respectable slums.Even today it hasnt been too objectionably improved. Indeed, many of
    Compartir en Facebook Comparta en Twitter Compartir vía E-Mail Share on Google Buzz Compartir en Digg