Get Free Shipping on orders over $89
Tao : The Pathless Path - Osho

Tao

The Pathless Path

By: Osho

Paperback | 23 February 2002 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


RRP $29.99

$29.75

or 4 interest-free payments of $7.44 with

Ships in 10 to 15 business days

In his commentaries on five parables from the Leih Tzu, Osho brings a fresh and contemporary interpretation to the ancient wisdom of Tao. Leih Tzu was a well-known Taoist master in the fourth century B.C., and his sly critiques of a Confucius provide abundant opportunities for the reader to explore the contrasts between the rational and irrational, the male and female, the structured and the spontaneous.

"Who Is Really Happy" uses the discovery of a human skull on the roadside to probe into the question of immortality and how misery arises out of the existence of the ego.

"A Man Who Knows How to Console Himself" looks beneath the apparent cheerfulness of a wandering monk and asks if there is really a happiness that endures through life's ups and downs.

"No Regrets" is a parable about the difference between the knowledge that is gathered from the outside and the "knowing" that arises from within.

"No Rest for the Living" uses a dialogue between a despondent seeker and his master to reveal the limits of philosophy and the crippling consequences of living for the sake of some future goal.

"Best Be Still, Best Be Empty" discusses the difference between the path of the will, the via affirmitiva of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, versus the path of the mystic, the via negativa of Buddha and Lao Tzu.

A Q&A section addresses how Taoist understanding applies to everyday life in concrete, practical terms.
In his commentaries on five parables from the Leih Tzu, Osho brings a fresh and contemporary interpretation to the ancient wisdom of Tao. Leih Tzu was a well-known Taoist master in the fourth century B.C., and his sly critiques of a Confucius provide abundant opportunities for the reader to explore the contrasts between the rational and irrational, the male and female, the structured and the spontaneous.

"Who Is Really Happy" uses the discovery of a human skull on the roadside to probe into the question of immortality and how misery arises out of the existence of the ego.

"A Man Who Knows How to Console Himself" looks beneath the apparent cheerfulness of a wandering monk and asks if there is really a happiness that endures through life's ups and downs.

"No Regrets" is a parable about the difference between the knowledge that is gathered from the outside and the "knowing" that arises from within.

"No Rest for the Living" uses a dialogue between a despondent seeker and his master to reveal the limits of philosophy and the crippling consequences of living for the sake of some future goal.

"Best Be Still, Best Be Empty" discusses the difference between the path of the will, the via affirmitiva of Christianity, Judaism, and Islam, versus the path of the mystic, the via negativa of Buddha and Lao Tzu.

A Q&A section addresses how Taoist understanding applies to everyday life in concrete, practical terms.

More in Oriental & Indian Philosophy

Ikigai : The Japanese secret to a long and happy life - Héctor García
Prana : One Breath, Many Worlds - BERNIE CLARK

RRP $44.99

$37.75

16%
OFF
The Golden Road : How Ancient India Transformed the World - William Dalrymple
Ikigai : The Japanese Secret to a Long and Happy Life - Hector Garcia
The Heart of Yoga : Developing a Personal Practice - T. K. V. Desikachar
The Art of War - Sun Tzu

RRP $13.99

$13.75

Tao Te Ching : Penguin Classics - Lao Tzu

RRP $24.99

$15.75

37%
OFF
The Art Of War : Popular Penguins : Popular Penguins - Sun Tzu
The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali - Swami  Satchidananda
Zen : The Art of Simple Living - Shunmyo Masuno

RRP $29.99

$24.99

17%
OFF
Lao Tzu : Tao Te Ching - Ursula K. Le Guin

RRP $37.99

$30.75

19%
OFF