We're sorry. An error has occurred
Please cancel or retry.
Religious Therapeutics
Some error occured while loading the Quick View. Please close the Quick View and try reloading the page.
Couldn't load pickup availability
- Format:
-
05 April 2001

Explores the relationship between health and religion based on the model offered by the Hindu traditions of Yoga, Ayurveda, and Tantra.
Religious Therapeutics explores the relationship between psychophysical health and spiritual health and presents a model for interpreting connections between religion and medicine in world traditions. This model emerges from the work's investigation of health and religiousness in classical Yoga, Āyurveda, and Tantra—three Hindu traditions noteworthy for the central role they accord the body. Author Gregory P. Fields compares Anglo-European and Indian philosophies of body and health and uses fifteen determinants of health excavated from texts of ancient Hindu medicine to show that health concerns the person, not the body or body/mind alone. This book elucidates multifaceted views of health, and—in the context of spirituality and healing—explores themes such as mental health, meditation, and music.
"This book renders the Indian traditions of Ayurveda, Yoga and Tantra with great vividness, in terms that Westerners can understand, yet without concealing the profound foreignness of Indian culture. The work is timely and important. Its massive scholarship presents a forceful case for recognizing the contemporary relevance of Indian religious therapeutics....fascinating and lucid." — S. Cromwell Crawford, author of Dilemmas of Life and Death: Hindu Ethics in North American Context
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgments
Symbols and Notes on Sources
Abbreviations
Introduction
THE IDEA OF RELIGIOUS THERAPEUTICS
Religion and Medicine
A Model of Religious Therapeutics
Chapter One
BODY AND PHILOSOPHIES OF HEALING
Body in Western Philosophy of Medicine
Presuppositions about the Body
Descartes on Body and Medicine
Body in the History of Western Medicine
Iconoclastic Concepts of Body in Yoga, Tantra, and Ayurveda
Traditional Indian Views of Person and Body
Yoga's Use of the Body to Transcend Itself
Tantra's Enlightenable Body
Body as the Ground of Well-being in Ayurveda
Chapter Two
MEANINGS OF HEALTH IN AYURVEDA
Inquiry into Health
Determinants of Health
Biological and Ecological Determinants
Life, Development, and LongevityMedical and Psychological Determinants
Equilibrium
Adaptation
Non-susceptibility
Vitality, Endurance, and Relaxation
NormalitySocio-cultural and Aesthetic Determinants
Freedom from Pain
Wholeness and Integration
Awareness and Mental Clarity
RelationalityMetaphysical and Religious Determinants
Creativity
Generativity
Enjoyment
Self-identityAyurvedic Religious Therapeutics
Freedom
Chapter Three
CLASSICAL YOGA AS A RELIGIOUS THERAPEUTIC
Meanings and Forms of Yoga
Meanings of 'Yoga' 85
Yoga in the Vedas, Upanisads, and Bhagavadgıta
Yoga in the VedasTraditions of Yoga Practice
Yoga in the Upanisads
Yoga in the Bhagavadgita
A Matrix of Classical Yoga as a Religious Therapeutic
Metaphysical and Epistemic Foundations
Yoga's Therapeutic ParadigmSoteriology
Yoga's Diagnosis of the Human Condition
The Yogic Remedy
Self-realization by Healing the AfValue Theory and Ethics: Health and the Good in Yoga
First Limb: Moral Self-restraints—YamaPhysical Practice: The Soteriological Role of Body and Health in Yoga
Second Limb: Moral Commitments—Niyama
Third Limb: Postures—AsanaCultivation of Consciousness: The Polarity of Samadhi and
Fourth Limb: Regulation of Vital Energy Through Breath—Pranayama
Fifth Limb: Withdrawal of the Senses—Pratyahara
Vyadhi (Illness)Liberation as Healing in Classical Yoga
Sixth Limb: Concentration—Dharana
Seventh Limb: Meditation—Dhyana
Eighth Limb: Meditative Trance—Samadhi
Healing and Yoga's Therapeutic Paradigm
Wholeness and Holiness
Identity and Freedom
Chapter Four
TANTRA AND AESTHETIC THERAPEUTICS
Body and Tantric Yogas
Features of Tantric PracticeAesthetic Therapeutics in Tantra
Sexuality in Tantra
Kundalinı Yoga
Mantra Yoga
Therapeutic Elements of TantraSacred Music as a Religious Therapeutic
Sacred Music
How Is Sacred Music Therapeutic?Conclusion
Breath, Music, and Healing
Body as Instrument of Sacred Music
Elements of Healing in Sanskrit Chant
Healing in Identi
Sound as a Bridge Between Substantial and Non-substantial Being
COMMUNITY:
RELATIONALITY IN RELIGIOUS THERAPEUTICS
Notes
Sources
Indices
Subject Index
Sanskrit Terms
Index of Names
Sanskrit Texts