SPRI | Buddhism And Jainism (Encyclopedia Of Indian Religions) (2017 EN)

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    Author: K.T.S. Sarao (Editor), Jefferey D. Long (Editor)
    Full Title: Buddhism And Jainism (Encyclopedia Of Indian Religions)
    Publisher: Springer; 1st ed. 2017 edition (February 10, 2017)
    Year: 2017
    ISBN-13: 9789402408539 (978-94-024-0853-9), 9789402408515 (978-94-024-0851-5), 9789402408522 (978-94-024-0852-2)
    ISBN-10: 9402408533, 9402408517, 9402408525
    Pages: 1423
    Language: English
    Genre: Philosophy: Philosophical Traditions
    File type: PDF (True)
    Quality: 10/10
    Price: 474.81 €


    This volume focuses on Buddhism and Jainism, two religions which, together with Hinduism, constitute the three pillars of Indic religious tradition in its classical formulation. It explores their history and relates how the Vedic period in the history of Hinduism drew to a close around the sixth century BCE and how its gradual etiolation gave rise to a number of religious movements. While some of these remained within the fold of the Vedic traditions, others arose in a context of a more ambiguous relationship between the two. Two of these have survived to the present day as Buddhism and Jainism. The volume describes the major role Buddhism played in the history not only of India but of Asia, and now the world as well, and the more confined role of Jainism in India until relatively recent times. It examines the followers of these religions and their influence on the Indian religious landscape. In addition, it depicts the transformative effect on existing traditions of the encounter of Hinduism with these two religions, as well as the fertile interaction between the three. The book shows how Buddhism and Jainism share the basic concepts of karma, rebirth, and liberation with Hinduism while giving them their own hue, and how they differ from the Hindu tradition in their understanding of the role of the Vedas, the “caste system,” and ritualism in religious life. The volume contributes to the debate on whether the proper way of describing the relationship between the three major components of the classical Indic tradition is to treat them as siblings (sometimes as even exhibiting sibling rivalry), or as friends (sometimes even exhibiting schadenfreude), or as radical alternatives to one another, or all of these at different points in time.

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