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The Divine Body in History

A comparative study of the symbolism of time and embodiment in St Augustine and Rāmānuja

by Ankur Barua (Author)
©2009 Monographs XIV, 253 Pages
Series: Religions and Discourse, Volume 45

Summary

This is a study in the field of comparative philosophy of religion. It initiates a dialogue between St Augustine and Rāmānuja by focusing on two central themes – time and embodiment – that play a crucial role in their thought. The elaborations of these two themes by St Augustine and Rāmānuja have continued to exert a tremendous influence on the histories of European thought and of Hindu movements centred around the notion of bhakti. The examination of the symbolism through which these thinkers articulate their understanding of time and embodiment also challenges certain stereotypes related to classical Indian thought and Latin Christendom, such as the former’s lack of historical consciousness and the latter’s denigration of the human body. This study shows how the ‘west’ and ‘east’ have traditionally engaged with concepts such as temporality, progress and the metaphysical status of finite and bio-physical reality.

Details

Pages
XIV, 253
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9783039119172
Language
English
Keywords
Hinduism Doctrine of Creation Divine Bodies World-Negation
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2009. XIV, 253 pp.

Biographical notes

Ankur Barua (Author)

The Author: Ankur Barua completed his undergraduate studies at the University of Delhi before going on to pursue a second B.A. at the University of Cambridge, where he completed his Ph.D. in the Faculty of Divinity in 2005.

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Title: The Divine Body in History