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The Volume Yoga: India’s Philosophy of Meditation, traces the intellectual history of Patanjala Yoga philosophy from the early centuries of the Common Era through the twentieth century. This volume also provides a systematic discussion of the philosophy of classical Yoga. Particular attention is given to the meaning of “concentration” (samadhi), “engrossment” (samapatti) and the “extraordinary cognitive capacities” (vibhutis, siddhis) and the role that these notions play in the Yoga philosophy, which are relevant for issues currently under discussion in contemporary western philosophy of mind. The volume as well compares and contrasts classical yoga philosophy with classical Samkhya and with Indian Buddhist thought. Although the primary focus of the volume is on Patanjala Yoga, the system of Hatha Yoga and other satellite systems of Yoga are discussed as well, and an attempt is made to differentiate clearly the classical system of Yoga Sastra from Hatha Yoga and the other satellite systems.
Some twenty-eight Sanskrit texts of Patanjala Yoga are summarized or noted in the volume. Twenty-six volumes of Hatha Yoga and the texts of some other satellite systems are also included. Altogether the volume contains summaries and or notations for some seventy-five Sanskrit texts.
Gerald James Larson is Rabindranath Tagore Professor Emeritus, Indiana University, Bloomington, USA, and Professor Emeritus, Religious Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara.
Ramshankar Bhattacharya was editor of the journal, Purana, and for many years a member of the research division of the Sampurnananda Sanskrit University, Varanasi.
Preface
There has been a long period of time between the publication of the Samkhya volume of the Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies (Samkhya: A Dualist Tradition in Indian Philosophy, Volume IV) in 1987 and this sequel on Yoga. Nevertheless, in our view, the two volumes are best used in tandem, since Patanjala Yoga as a philosophical tradition is unintelligible without the Samkhya ontology and epistemology. As may be recalled from our earlier Samkhya volume, we are inclined to go even further and to claim that Yoga as a philosophical tradition is a particular form of Samkhya, namely Patanjala-Samkhya. The expression “…as a philosophical tradition,” of course, is a fundamental caveat, and this will be discussed at some length in the Introduction. It will be shown that although Yoga and Samkhya are by no means identical and that there are significant differences in the classical formulation of each system, the family resemblance is so striking that it is impossible to discuss one system apart from the other.
I deeply regret that Dr. Ram Shankar Bhattacharya’s untimely death kept him from composing the Introduction to this volume on Yoga. He very much wanted to do the Introduction, since he viewed the philosophy of Yoga as an area of his primary scholarly interest through the years. His great erudition is to be found in his many critical editions of the Sanskrit texts of Yoga in the medium of Sanskrit. Also he wrote at least a brief summary of his views on Yoga in the medium of English in his book, An Introduction to the Yogasutra, already mentioned above in the foregoing In Memoriam.
Two additional acknowledgment are also necessary. First, varieties of Yoga have become popular throughout the world, and this volume on Yoga of the Encyclopedia of Indian Philosophies, if for no other reason than providing a summary overview, should at least touch upon these popular traditions. I would like to thank Ms. Autumn Jacobsen, a doctoral student in Religious Studies at the University of California at Santa Barbara, who wrote the final portion of the Introduction to this Volume, namely the section entitled “Contemporary Yoga Traditions”.
Second, thanks to Richa Pauranik Clements, my doctoral student at Indiana University, Bloomington, who assisted me in the editing of many of the summaries.
The bibliography on Yoga, of course, is vast, and we had to make difficult decisions about what to include and what not to include, both in terms of primary and secondary works. We hope that our selection, if not exhaustive, is at least representative of the most important texts. Also, it should be noted that we have divided the texts into two main groups, the Patanjala Yoga texts and what we have called “The Hatha Yoga System and Other Satellite Traditions of Yoga”. The dating of texts in the later centuries, of course, is nearly an impossible task, and it should be recognized that our attempts at dating are almost all only rough approximations.
Contents
IN MEMORIAM-DR. RAM SHANKAR BHATTACHARYA (1927-1996) | ||
PREFACE | 17 | |
PART ONE: THE PHILOSOPHY OF YOGA | ||
The History and Literature of Yoga | ||
The History of Yoga: Preliminary Remarks | 21 | |
Historiography on Yoga | 30 | |
Early “samkhya” and “yoga” | 33 | |
Samkhya and Yoga as System of Thought | 36 | |
Samkhya, “sastitantra”, Varsaganya and Isvarakrsna | 37 | |
Samkhya and Vindhyavasin | 37 | |
Vindhyavasin and Vasubandhu | 39 | |
Vindhyavasin and Vedavyasa | 40 | |
Yoga, Samkhya and Buddhist Thought | 42 | |
Yoga as a Hybrid System of Thought | 44 | |
Yoga and Samkhya: The Important Differences | 46 | |
Chronology of Yoga Philosophy-Principal Texts through Vijnanabhiksu | 52 | |
Composition of the Yogasutra and the Identity of Patanjali | 54 | |
Concluding Comments on the History of Yoga | 67 | |
The Philosophy of Patanjala Yoga | ||
The Philosophy of Yoga: Some Preliminary Methodological Remarks | 70 | |
The Philosophy of Yoga: An Introductory Overview | 75 | |
The Materialism of Yoga | 78 | |
The Dualism of Yoga | 86 | |
The Theism of Yoga | 92 | |
Concentration (samadhi) | 100 | |
The Yoga of Action (kriyayoga), and the Limbs of Yoga (yoganga) | 116 | |
Comprehensive Reflection (samyama) and the Extraordinary Cognitive Capacities (vibhuti, siddhi) | 120 | |
Spiritual Liberation (kaivalya) | 133 | |
The Hatha Yoga System and Other Satellite/Sectarian Yoga Traditions in India | ||
Hatha Yoga | 139 | |
Pancaratras | 143 | |
Pasupatas | 143 | |
Kapalikas | 144 | |
Kalamukhas | 145 | |
Natha Siddhas, Kanphata Yogis, and the Kaula Cult | 146 | |
Contemporary Yoga Movements (by Autumn Jacobsen) | ||
The Yoga Tradition of the Mysore Palace | 148 | |
Anusara Yoga | 151 | |
Ashtanga Yoga | 152 | |
Bikram Yoga | 153 | |
Integral Yoga | 154 | |
Iyengar Yoga | 154 | |
Jivamukti Yoga | 154 | |
Kundalini Yoga | 155 | |
Kripalu Yoga | 155 | |
Power Yoga | 156 | |
Self-Realization Fellowship or Kriya Yoga | 156 | |
Siddha Yoga | 157 | |
Viniyoga | 158 | |
Vinyasa Yoga | 158 | |
White Lotus Yoga | 159 | |
PART TWO: SUMMARIES OF WORKS | ||
TEXTS: Patanjala Yoga Traditions | ||
1. Patanjalayogasastra (Yogasutras, attributed to Patanjali) (c. 350-400) | 161 | |
2. Patanjalayogasastrabhasya (Samkhyapravacana, attributed to Vedavyasa) (c.350-400) | 184 | |
3. Tattvavaisaradi of Vacaspati Misra (c. 950) | 218 | |
4. Patanjalayogasastravivarana or Patanjalayogasutra-bhasyavivarana, attributed to Samkara Bhagavatpada (c. 1050-1350) | 239 | |
5. Kitab Patanjala or “The Book of Patanjali” of al-Biruni (c. 1050) | 261 | |
6. Rajamartanda of Bhojadeva or Bhojaraja (c. 1050) | 266 | |
7. Sarvadarsanasamgraha of Sayana Madhava (c. 1350) | 282 | |
8. Maniprabha of Rarmananda Yati or Ramananda Sarasvati (c.1550-1600) | 282 | |
9. Patanjalarahasya of Raghavananda Sarasvati (c.1550-1600) | 294 | |
10. Yagavarttika of Vijnanabhiksu (c. 1550) | 295 | |
11. Yogasarasamgraha of Vijnanabhiksu (c.1550) | 320 | |
12. Pradipika of Bhavaganesa (c.1600-1700) | 333 | |
13. Yogasiddhantacandrika of Naraya Tirtha (c.1600-1700) | 334 | |
14. Sutrarthabodhini of Narayana Tirth (c.1600-1750) | 353 | |
15. Brhativrtti of Narayana Tirtha (c.1600-1700) | 353 | |
16. Laghuvrtti of Nagoji Bhatta or Nagesa (c.1700-1750) | 355 | |
17. Yogasudhakara of Sadasivendra Sarasvati (c. 1700-1800) | 356 | |
18. Yogacandrika of Anantadeva Pandita (c. 1800-1900) | 359 | |
19. Rajayogabhasya of Samkaracarya (c.1890s) | 361 | |
20. Yogabhasya of Balarama Udasina (c. 1890s) | 366 | |
21. Vaidikavrtti of Svamin Hariprasada (c. 20th century) | 367 | |
22. Sivoktayogayukti of Hariharananda Aranya (c. 20th century) | 367 | |
23. Paribhakti of Hariharananda Aranya (c. 20th century) | 369 | |
24. Yogakarika of Hariharananda Aranya (c. 20th century) | 372 | |
25. Bhasvati of Hariharananda Aranya (c. 20th century) | 379 | |
26. Yogapradipika of Baladeva Misra (c. 20th century) | 396 | |
27. Kirana of Krsnavallabhacarya (c. 20th century) | 403 | |
28. Jnananandabhasya of Jnanananda (c. 20th century) | 406 | |
TEXTS: The Hatha Yoga System and Other Satellite Traditions of Yoga | ||
29. Kaulajnananirnaya, attributed to Matsyendranatha (c. 900-950) | 436 | |
30. Siddhasiddhantapaddhati, attributed to Goraksanatha (c. 100-1250) | ||
31. Goraksasataka, attributed to Goraksanatha (c. 1200-1250) | 455 | |
32. Goraksapaddhati attributed to Goraksanatha (c. 1000-1250) | 464 | |
33. Yogabija, attributed to Goraksanatha (c.100-1250) | 464 | |
34. Goraksasiddhantasamgraha, author unknown | 470 | |
35. Siddhasiddhantapaddhati of Nityanatha (c.1000-1400) | 476 | |
36. Yogayajnavalkya, author unknown (c.1200-1300) | 476 | |
37. Hathayogapradipika of Svatmarama Yogin (c.1350-1400) | 489 | |
38. Gherandasamhita, author unknown (c.1650-1700) | 502 | |
39. Sivasamhita, author unknown (c.1650-1700) | 506 | |
40. Satcakranirupana (6th chapter of Purnananda’s Sritattvacintamani) (c.1600-1700) | 516 | |
41. Vasisisthasamhita, author unknown (c.160-1700) | 521 | |
42. Satkarmasamgraha of Cidghananandanatha (c. 600-1700) | 521 | |
43. Hatharatnavali of Srinivasabhatta (c. 1600-1700) | ||
44. Hathasamketacandrika of Sundaradeva (c. 1850) | 526 | |
45. Hathatattvakaumudi of Sundaradeva (c. 1850) | 531 | |
46. Yogacintamani of Sivananda (c. 1850) | 535 | |
47. Yogataranga of Devatirthasvamin (c. 1855) | 543 | |
48. Jyotsna of Brahmananda (c. 1850-1900) | 547 | |
49. Yogakarnika of Aghoranandanatha (c. 1905) | 560 | |
50.Yogarahasya of Satyadeva (c. 1920) | 561 | |
51. Brhadyogiyajnavalkya, author unknown (20th century) | 568 | |
52. Yogataravali of Samkaracarya (c. 20th century) | 574 | |
53. Pavanavijayasvarodaya, author unknown (c. 20th century) | 576 | |
54. Uttaragita, author unknown (. 20th century) | 583 | |
APPENDIX: Some additional texts | ||
55. Yogavasistha, author unknown (c. 10th century) | 589 | |
Yoga Upanisads (1200-1600) | ||
56 Advayataraka | 591 | |
57 Amrtanada | 592 | |
58 Amrtabindu | 593 | |
59 Ksurika | 595 | |
60 Tejobindu | 595 | |
61 Trisikhi | 597 | |
62. Darsana | 599 | |
63. Dhyanabindu | 600 | |
64. Nadabindu | 604 | |
65. Pasupatabrahma | 606 | |
66. Brahmavidya | 609 | |
67. Mandalabrahmana | 611 | |
68. Mahavakya | 614 | |
69. Yogakundali | 615 | |
70. Yogacudamani | 616 | |
71. Yogatattva | 618 | |
72. Yogasikha | 620 | |
73. Varaha | 623 | |
74. Sandilya | 626 | |
75. Hamsa | 628 | |
END NOTES | 631 | |
LIST OF WORKS CITED | 641 | |
GLOSSARY-INDEX | 655 |
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