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Edwin Bryant – Sāṁkhyakārikā & The Yoga Sūtras – Collection

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Edwin Bryant – Sāṁkhyakārikā & The Yoga Sūtras – Collection
$149.00 Original price was: $149.00.$80.00Current price is: $80.00.

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Edwin Bryant – Sāṁkhyakārikā & The Yoga Sūtras – Collection

Edwin Bryant – Sāṁkhyakārikā & The Yoga Sūtras – Collection course is now available at an affordable price. You can check out directly using multiple payment gateway options. If you have any questions or need an alternative payment method, feel free to contact us.

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Join us for an enriching journey through the core teachings and transformative wisdom of two pivotal spiritual texts, unlocking pathways to deeper self-awareness and spiritual liberation.
File Size: 9.76 GB.

Edwin Bryant – Sāṁkhyakārikā & The Yoga Sūtras – Collection

Explore metaphysical contours of Yoga and Sāṁkhya
Gain insight into the nature of mind and self
Achieve liberation from suffering through deep understanding

Explore the Foundations of Yoga Philosophy
This course offers the unique opportunity to . . .
. . . delve into ancient texts shaping Yoga’s philosophical landscape
. . . bridge foundational wisdom with contemporary spiritual practices
. . . understand dualistic metaphysics through comparative textual analysis
. . . explore existential themes of liberation and human suffering
This 8-part course will undertake a comparative study of two canonical texts of Yoga: the Sāṁkhyakārikā & the Yoga Sūtras. In the earlier tradition, Yoga is in fact an expression of Sāṁkhya rather than a distinct school, the former focusing more on meditational practice and the latter on metaphysics. Using the Kārikās as our primary text, along with its principle commentary by Gauḍapāda, we will consider where the two texts overlap, and where the Kārikās engage material not touched upon in the Yoga Sūtras.
We will read all of the Kārikās, and cast comparative glances at the sections of the Sūtras that express the same concepts albeit sometimes in different terminologies. Mainkar’s translation of the Kārikās and Gauḍapāda’s bhāṣya will be provided; students are requested to bring any copy of the Yoga Sūtras with the Sanskrit text.
Students of this course will learn to:

Interpret philosophical concepts from the Sāṁkhyakārikā and Yoga Sūtras.
Understand the dualistic nature of Prakṛti and Puruṣa.
Analyze the three Guṇas and their influence on reality.
Compare and contrast the metaphysical views of Sāṁkhya and Yoga.
Recognize the pathways to liberation as outlined in the texts.
Explore the interaction between consciousness and the material world.
Apply ancient teachings to modern-day spiritual inquiries.
Develop an understanding of mental states and their transformations.

Course Outline
MODULE 1: Reasons for Seeking Liberation
In this section, we engage the essential motive for undertaking the spiritual quest in the respective traditions of Yoga and Sāṁkhya, namely suffering. The causes of suffering according to these two traditions will be examined, and the solution considered – liberation (kaivalya), along with the respective means to attain. While the two traditions share the former aspects and presuppositions in common, it is in the latter regard – the means to attain liberation, that they part company and eventually form different schools. Kārikās 1 – 5 Yoga Sūtras 1-6; 1.49; II.12-15; II.19; II.225-6
MODULE 2: The Nature of Prakṛti and Puruṣa
The metaphysics of Sāṁkhya and Yoga are essentially dualistic: there are two ontologically distinct entities, prakṛti and puruṣa, or the conscious self and unconscious matter. This session explores what our two canonical texts have to say about how these two diametrically distinct sorts of things can be described in conceptual terms. Kārikās 6 – 10 Yoga Sūtras II. 17 – 24
MODULE 3: The Three Guṇas
Following on the previous lecture, the world of matter, prakṛti, is essentially composed of three ‘qualities,’ the guṇas of Sāṁkhya – sattva, rajas and tamas. The respective nature of these three guṇas are discussed here, bolstered by some verses from the Bhagavad Gītā, which is also a Sāṁkhya text, and an excellent source for more specific information on the guñas’ role in everyday matters. Kārikās 11 – 14 Yoga Sütras II.18
MODULE 4 : Properties of Prakṛti and Puruṣa
This session continues with the previous discussions on the respective nature of the two ultimate metaphysical entities of reality – prakṛti and puruṣa. Kārikās 15 – 21 Yoga Sūtras II.18 – II.26
MODULE 5 : Evolutes of Prakṛti
Sāṁkhya is a metaphysically evolutionist system, in so far as gross entities such as particles are densifications of subtler energies, which in turn are emanations from still subtler energies, and on back to the subtlest matrix of all, prakṛti herself. In this session, we gain some sense of this metaphysics. Kārikās 22 – 37 Yoga Sūtras II.19
MODULE 6 : The Subtle Body
This session engages the nature of the subtle body, also made of prakṛtic ‘stuff’ (albeit finer more sattvic stuff), which acts as the interface between puruṣa, consciousness, and the ‘world out there.’ Kārikās 38 – 42 Yoga Sütras II.18
MODULE 7 : The Nature of Mind
This session engages how the various aspects of the mind and its mental states are differently characterized in the two systems – the vṛttis and kleṣas of yoga, and the bhāvas of Sāṁkhya. Kārikās 43-54 Yoga Sūtras I.5-13; II.3-9; II.15-18
MODULE 8 : Liberation from Embodiment
The grand finale goal of both traditions is liberation from embodiment itself, which is the only way to ultimately be free of all suffering. This session explores how liberation is depicted in our two texts. Here we encounter some of the most beautiful verses of the Sāṁkhyakārikās. Kārikās 55 – 72 Yoga Sūtras II.23 – 28; IV29 – 34
Edwin Bryant
Ph.D., Professor of Hindu Religion and Philosophy
Department of Religion, Rutgers University
Edwin Bryant received his Ph.D in Indic languages and Cultures from Columbia University. He taught Hinduism at Harvard University for three years, and is presently the professor of Hinduism at Rutgers University where he teaches courses on Hindu philosophy and religion. He has received numerous awards and fellowships, published eight books and authored a number of articles on Vedic history, yoga, and the Krishna tradition. In addition to his academic work for the scholarly community, Edwin’s Penguin World Classics translation of the Srimad Bhagavata Purana, the traditional source for the story of Krishna’s incarnation, is both for Indology specialists as well as students and those interested in Hinduism from the general reading public and the yoga community.
As a personal practitioner of yoga for 35 years, a number of them spent in India studying with traditional teachers, where he returns yearly, Edwin strives to combine academic scholarship and rigor with sensitivity towards traditional knowledge systems. In addition to his academic course load, Edwin currently teaches workshops on the Yoga Sutras, Bhagavad Gita, and Hindu Philosophy at yoga studios and teacher training courses throughout the country. His translation of and commentary on the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali (North Point Press, a division of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2009) is specifically dedicated to contributing to the growing body of literature on yoga by providing insights from the major pre-modern commentaries on the text with a view to grounding the teachings in their traditional context.


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