The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from Oneself: Difference between revisions
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{{bookedition|332_lrg.jpg|Freedom From Oneself|1989|The Rebel Publishing House, Germany|1|3-89338-078-7 |296|H| | {{bookedition|332_lrg.jpg|Freedom From Oneself|1989|The Rebel Publishing House, Germany|1|3-89338-078-7 |296|H| | ||
::Author as [[Osho Rajneesh]] | |||
::Editing: [[Ma Dhyan Sagar]] | ::Editing: [[Ma Dhyan Sagar]] | ||
::Typesetting: [[Ma Prem Arya]] | ::Typesetting: [[Ma Prem Arya]] |
Revision as of 21:11, 10 January 2015
- "Zen has nothing to do with the mind... It is the lion's roar. And the greatest thing that Zen has brought into the world is freedom from oneself." The Zen Manifesto is a collection of the last discourses of Osho with his last publicly spoken words. In this culmination of his insights into Zen he makes it clear that the West's comprehension of Zen is still confined to intellectual appreciation. To prove it, Osho takes on such respected members of the Western Zen establishment as D.T. Suzuki, Thomas Merton, Paul Reps, Alan Watts and Nancy Wilson-Ross.
- notes
- The last chapter of this book, OSHO's LAST DISCOURSE, Sammasati- The Last Word, was originally titled The Awakening of the Buddha, the start of a new series.
- time period of Osho's original talks/writings
- Feb 20, 1989 to Apr 10, 1989 : timeline
- number of discourses/chapters
- 11
editions
The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
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The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
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The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
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