Showing posts with label Mukunda Rao. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mukunda Rao. Show all posts

2024/01/31

Belief and Beyond: Adventures in Consciousness from the Upanishads to Modern Times : Mukunda Rao: Amazon.com.au: Books

Belief and Beyond: Adventures in Consciousness from the Upanishads to Modern Times : Mukunda Rao: Amazon.com.au: Books

Kindle
$9.99
Available instantly

Paperback
$26.97
Other New from $24.72


$26.97$26.97


$11.07 delivery 20 - 27 February. Details

Deliver to Sejin - Campbelltown 5074‌




Mukunda RaoMukunda Rao
Follow





Belief and Beyond: Adventures in Consciousness from the Upanishads to Modern Times Paperback – 18 February 2020
by Mukunda Rao (Author)
4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 29 ratings

Belief and Beyond delves into the realm of the mystic - Adi Sankara, Allama Prabhu, Kabir, Nagarjuna, Gaudapada, Akka Mahadevi, Lalleshwari, Anandamayi Ma, Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Sri Aurobindo, Ramana Maharshi, Nisargadatta Maharaj, Jiddu Krishnamurti, U.G. Krishnamurti, and the Buddha - bringing to life their spiritual quests and the philosophical messages they left behind for humanity. The book explores the search for the non-dual state of being - sahaja sthithi or the natural state - which is not in the realm of experience at all, but a state of being where the borders and boundaries of the divided self have been transcended. The author also weaves in narratives from many difficult-to-access texts, including the Upanishads, the Ashtavakra Gita and the Avadhuta Gita. Written with depth and simplicity, this book is for the seeker and the curious alike.

Print length

360 pages
Product description

Review
What thing I am I do not know. I wander secluded, burdened by my mind, When the Firstborn of Truth has come to me, I receive a share in that selfsame Word. The book, Belief and Beyond, opens with above lines from Rig Veda. This is a very profound book and has provided me many new perspectives. I will re-read it because the idea density is so high! It offers many tools for improving self-awareness. Author writes in an efficient manner that gets quickly to the message. I'm so glad to have encountered this on my nascent spiritual journey. I found Belief and Beyond to be a very valuable and insightful discussion on non-duality, Vedanta, enlightenment etc. It was clear, concise, and interesting to read. There is some excellent discussion on what enlightenment is NOT. The book of returning to the simple state of nothingness. This is a direct guide to your true nature of existing, from nothing, to the whole essence of just being. Author Mukunda Rao explains step by step the profundity of how our community, thinking, reasoning and everything we know externally, determines our reality. Returning to a state of complete joy and fulfilment is what every human being is in search for, and here Author tells us that this state we are in search of is located deep within our conscious mind, we just need to learn how to let go of all our perceptions and begin to contemplate how not knowing is the beginning of it all. Author Mukunda Rao stats, "Consciousness is the only reality but appears as objects..." The format of this book is laid out in such an accessible way for such an inaccessible subject matter. Author Mukunda Rao gives the reader plenty of time to come to terms with the topic and argument of understanding for each chapter. But the goal of the book isn't to give yet another map or belief around what self, mind and consciousness are. It's to directly challenge your beliefs on them, and open the door towards directly experiencing them. This isn't a book to read. It's a book to study. The deeper you go into the contents, the more the depth of the contents becomes apparent. I recommend it for anyone looking to deepen their understanding consciousness from a different perspective. --By The Bookish Elf on 2 August 2019


About the Author
Mukunda Rao is the author of several insightful philosophical works including The Buddha, and several works of fiction. After taking voluntary retirement from a teaching job in a college in 2000, he now lives on a farm outside Bengaluru. He can be contacted at mukunda53@gmail.com.

Product details
Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins India; 1st edition (18 February 2020)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
Paperback ‏ : ‎ 360 pages
ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9353028477
ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-9353028473
Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 13.97 x 2.29 x 21.34 cmCustomer Reviews:
4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars 29 ratings




About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.

Follow

Mukunda Rao




Top reviews


Top reviews from other countries

Krishna Rao
5.0 out of 5 stars "Pathless Path"Reviewed in India on 16 December 2020
Verified Purchase

“It is ever an enigma for a genuine seeker of Truth as to how to get ahead when doubts and questions keep troubling the mind. In the absence of any beaten track, he is likely to get stuck up at some point, not knowing what to do and what not. A glance at the sacred scriptures would only leave him in a state of wilderness. The gurus, with their divergent views, would further aggravate his confusion. Being helpless he struggles hard to hold on to something that would lead him to the right path.
Sri Mukundarao takes up a huge responsibility to go through the entire saga of Indian spiritual traditions that stretch over a period of three thousand years. He, then, comes up with the quintessence of spirituality that shines forth in an unbroken continuity in the lives and talks of the sages and seers of the past and present. He brushes aside all controversial issues only to put us on the direct path that has been illumined by those spiritual luminaries. They stand as timeless guiding lights to humanity. Sri Mukundarao , himself, having journeyed through this path for over four decades and arrived at the peak of his quest, is truly competent to trace the ‘enlightenment traditions’ set up by those great Masters.
Sri Mukundarao’s ‘Belief and Beyond’ deserves to be placed among the very few books that a seeker would immensely benefit from. I read and re- read this book and would prefer to go back to it again and again for the needed rejuvenation. These seers of the ancient and modern times would ever be a source of inspiration and help us come upon that ‘pathless path’ towards unraveling the great ‘Mystery of Life’.
With all my heart, I feel thankful to Sri Mukundarao for this priceless contribution he has made for the benefit of all seekers of Truth.”
Krishna Rao
Read less

One person found this helpfulReport

Santhosh Naik R
5.0 out of 5 stars Must readReviewed in India on 29 July 2019
Verified Purchase

Must read... Excellent work by Mukund Rao
Report
See more reviews

===
Belief and Beyond: Adventures in Consciousness from the Upanishads to Modern Times
Mukunda Rao
4.13
15 ratings8 reviews

Want to read

Buy on Kobo






Rate this book
Edit my activity
Belief and Beyond delves into the realm of the mystic - Adi Sankara, Allama Prabhu, Kabir, Nagarjuna, Gaudapada, Akka Mahadevi, Lalleshwari, Anandamayi Ma, Ramakrishna Paramahamsa, Sri Aurobindo, Ramana Maharshi, Nisargadatta Maharaj, Jiddu Krishnamurti, U.G. Krishnamurti, and the Buddha - bringing to life their spiritual quests and the philosophical messages they left behind for humanity. The book explores the search for the non-dual state of being - sahaja sthithi or the natural state - which is not in the realm of experience at all, but a state of being where the borders and boundaries of the divided self have been transcended. The author also weaves in narratives from many difficult-to-access texts, including the Upanishads, the Ashtavakra Gita and the Avadhuta Gita. Written with depth and simplicity, this book is for the seeker and the curious alike.

Show more
360 pages, Paperback

Published February 18, 2020


Book details & editions



5 people are currently reading



34 people want to read
About the author
Profile Image for Mukunda Rao.
Mukunda Rao
22 books8 followers

Follow
Readers also enjoyed
Book Cover
Skin in the Game: The Hidden Asymmetries in Daily Life
Nassim Nicholas Taleb
3.9
26.8k
All similar books
Ratings & Reviews
My Review
Profile Image for Sejin.
Sejin
3 reviews
Want to read.






Rate this book

Write a Review

Friends & Following
No one you know has read this book. Recommend it to a friend!
Community Reviews
4.13
15 ratings8 reviews
5 stars
6 (40%)
4 stars
7 (46%)
3 stars
1 (6%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
1 (6%)
Search review text

Search review text

Filters
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
Profile Image for The Bookish Elf.
The Bookish Elf
402 reviews · 48 followers

Follow
July 31, 2019
What thing I am I do not know.
I wander secluded, burdened by my mind,
When the Firstborn of Truth has come to me,
I receive a share in that selfsame Word.
 
The book, Belief and Beyond, opens with above lines from Rig Veda. This is a very profound book and has provided me many new perspectives. I will re-read it because the idea density is so high! It offers many tools for improving self-awareness. Author writes in an efficient manner that gets quickly to the message. I'm so glad to have encountered this on my nascent spiritual journey.
 
I found Belief and Beyond to be a very valuable and insightful discussion on non-duality, Vedanta, enlightenment etc. It was clear, concise, and interesting to read. There is some excellent discussion on what enlightenment is NOT.
 
The book of returning to the simple state of nothingness. This is a direct guide to your true nature of existing, from nothing, to the whole essence of just being. Author Mukunda Rao explains step by step the profundity of how our community, thinking, reasoning and everything we know externally, determines our reality. Returning to a state of complete joy and fulfilment is what every human being is in search for, and here Author tells us that this state we are in search of is located deep within our conscious mind, we just need to learn how to let go of all our perceptions and begin to contemplate how not knowing is the beginning of it all. Author Mukunda Rao stats, "Consciousness is the only reality but appears as objects..."
 
The format of this book is laid out in such an accessible way for such an inaccessible subject matter. Author Mukunda Rao gives the reader plenty of time to come to terms with the topic and argument of understanding for each chapter. But the goal of the book isn't to give yet another map or belief around what self, mind and consciousness are. It's to directly challenge your beliefs on them, and open the door towards directly experiencing them. This isn't a book to read. It's a book to study.
 
The deeper you go into the contents, the more the depth of the contents becomes apparent. I recommend it for anyone looking to deepen their understanding consciousness from a different perspective.
 


1 like

Like

Comment


Profile Image for Wanderingg__soul.
Wanderingg__soul
403 reviews · 41 followers

Follow
September 6, 2019
A belief system helps us interpret our everyday reality.
Belief and beyond: Adventure in Consciousness from the Upanishad to Modern Times by Mukunda Rao is an insightful collection of beliefs and ideas, insights and revelations, spiritual authority that exists in India to this day.
The book explores the search for the non dual state of being-sahaja sthithi or the natural state- which is not in the realm of experience at all, but a state of being where the borders and boundaries of the divided self have been transcended.

Vedic culture has propogated the importance of spiritual awakening from thousands of years. The interpretations of these teachings have changed over the years. Through this book the author weaves narratives from many difficult to access texts like the Upanishads, Ashtavakra Gita, Avadhuta Gita and mystics like Kabir, Akka Mahadevi, Lalleshwari, Anandamayi Ma and many more.

This book gives you an opportunity to dive deeper into the unknown realms of consciousness.
Written with depth, it's a heavy read. Pick this up if are curious and patient.

1 like

Like

Comment

Balbir Bajaj
21 reviews · 10 followers

Follow
Read
May 14, 2021
“A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma”, this is how I can describe the contents of this book (not sure whether it is a fiction nonfiction book.)

Though the writer has taken great pains to explain various religious spiritual philosophies from amongst various Hindu streams, yet one does not get any wiser after reading the book as it seems to be very difficult to go to the depths of the views expressed therein and become more aware therefrom. It is your own pick as to what could be the ultimate truth if at all there is one. I lost my interest after reading 2/3rd of the book as I could not make out much of the paradox that the life on the universe as described in this book.

Like

Comment

Profile Image for Anindita Sinh.
Anindita Sinh
18 reviews · 9 followers

Follow
May 3, 2020
Definitely a book I will keep going back to. It offers an insight into various strains of philosophical thought in Hinduism through the teachings of the various developers of those perspectives. Very well researched and provides a good introduction to the deeply philosophical topics at hand, while not dumbing down the teachings of the same.
non-fiction

Like

Comment

Profile Image for David.
David
559 reviews · 9 followers

Follow
March 11, 2021
I really enjoyed this book as I have not previously explored Indian spirituality.

This is a carefully curated collection of Indian spiritual wisdom over the centuries.

Beautiful and thought-provoking.

Like

Comment


Profile Image for Chresann Dsouza.
Chresann Dsouza
194 reviews · 9 followers

Follow
August 27, 2019
Belief and beyond by Mukunda Rao is a nonfiction book. It fits moreover into the nonfiction- philosophical genre a very small part of this book caters to the field of self help.

This book is divided into various chapters and subcategories to help a reader filter out information based on his liking and curiosity more effectively.

The writing style of the author is pretty impressive, it is simple and yet keeps one engaged with it.

The language is simple and unsophisticated. It was amazing to learn how such deep topics were presented with such simplicity that it doesn't overburden the reader , yet it covers all the major aspects of the chapter.

The cover and the title are pretty innovative and appropriately chosen.

The book is divided into various parts such as the upanishads, songs in dualism and non dualism ,beyond gender etc, my personal favourites are the word and birth of self and coming of the buddha.

Speaking about the pace, it's a pretty slow paced read.

The only part wherein this book disappointed me was when it became too slow and some chapters seemed over stretched.

Overall, I had a fairly good time reading this book. It was a pretty informative and an insightful read. Definitely recommend if you're looking for a unique non fiction read.

MY RATING : 4/5

Like

Comment

Profile Image for Diti Shah.
Diti Shah
189 reviews · 11 followers

Follow
July 29, 2019
"I saw a lion come,
Devour another
And itself die.
I saw inwardness
Without an interior,
Outwardness without refuge.
I saw in a field
Flowers without petals, and
Beheld a magnificent form
Take shape,
And the whole world.
O Allama Prabhu,
Salutations to you. "
.
.
This was a totally different read for me. While I do believe that there does exist an external power which looks upon us, someone who takes care of us, I have never given much thought to this.

The author with very simple words, with very lucid language explains to us various messages that Upnishads, Bhagwad Gita other sages and mentors like Adi Shankara, Allama Prabhu, Kabir, Lalleshwari, Sri Aurobindo, Ramana Maharshi and others have given.

From ancient times to modern times sages, how the interpretations of their messages have changed, how the ways of mentoring have changed, what remains mutual and such have been discussed. The author has given plenty of illustrations and has thoroughly discussed various topics in this domain.
I must say the author has done a fabulous job in researching and penning it all down. Kudos to the author for bringing ancient messages that Upnishads give to today's generation, something that is not discussed commonly.

Overall, a great and different read. Much wanted change. .

Show more

Like

Comment

Profile Image for Dev.
Dev
7 reviews

Follow
December 4, 2019
I would say this book is a dictionary for spiritual seekers...it covers bhakti, jnana and other streams of spirituality!
====



Biology Of Enlightenment by Mukunda Rao (Ebook

Biology Of Enlightenment by Mukunda Rao (Ebook) - Read free for 30 days


Ebook535 pages15 hours
Biology Of Enlightenment


By Mukunda Rao
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

(4 ratings)


Included in your subscription

About this ebook

In this book we meet with the modern sage, U.G. Krishnamurti, and listen to his penetrating voice describing life and reality as it is. What is body and what is mind? Is there a soul? Is there a beyond, a God? What is enlightenment? Is there a life after death? Never before have these questions been tackled with such simplicity, candour and clarity. In these unpublished early conversations with friends (1967-71), U.G.discusses in detail his search for the truth and how he underwent radical biological changes in 1967. Preferring to call it the natural state over enlightenment, he insists that whatever transformation he has undergone is within the structure of the human body and not in the mind at all. It is the natural state of being that sages like the Buddha, Jesus and, in modern times, Sri Ramana, stepped into. And U.G.never tires of pointing out that 'this is the way you, stripped of the machinations of thought, are also functioning.'
Skip carousel



Body, Mind, & Spirit

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateJul 21, 2012
ISBN9789350292495====

===

===

===



Read now

==
Kindle Store

Kindle eBooks

Religion & Spirituality











Kindle
$9.99
Available instantly
Paperback
$41.56

Other New from $39.01

Kindle Price: $9.99
Price includes tax, if applicable
Sold by: HarperCollins Publishers (AU)
This price was set by the publisher.


Buy now with 1-Click
Read with our free app

Deliver to your Kindle Library



Send a free sample
Deliver to your Kindle Library

Add to Wish List

Never miss a Kindle deal
Receive a daily email with a selection of Kindle deals and special offers you might enjoy. Learn more.
Not now





Roll over image to zoom in

Read sample


Follow the author

U. G. KrishnamurtiU. G. Krishnamurti
Follow




Biology Of Enlightenment Kindle Edition
by Mukunda Rao (Author) Format: Kindle Edition


4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 57 ratings





See all formats and editions










In this book we meet with the modern sage, U.G. Krishnamurti, and listen to his penetrating voice describing life and reality as it is. What is body and what is mind? Is there a soul? Is there a beyond, a God? What is enlightenment? Is there a life after death? Never before have these questions been tackled with such simplicity, candour and clarity. In these unpublished early conversations with friends (1967-71), U.G.discusses in detail his search for the truth and how he underwent radical biological changes in 1967. Preferring to call it the natural state over enlightenment, he insists that whatever transformation he has undergone is within the structure of the human body and not in the mind at all. It is the natural state of being that sages like the Buddha, Jesus and, in modern times, Sri Ramana, stepped into. And U.G.never tires of pointing out that 'this is the way you, stripped of the machinations of thought, are also functioning.'
Read less



Print length

436 pages
Language

English






















Next page
Report an issue with this product






Kindle Daily Deal: Save at least 70%
Each day we unveil a new book deal at a specially discounted price - for that day only. See today's deal or sign up for the newsletter












Continue series you’ve started
Page 1 of 2Page 1 of 3

Previous page


The Greek World (Routledge Worlds)

Anton Powell
5.0 out of 5 stars 2
Kindle Edition
$68.79$68.79


Health Care Reform and American Politics: What Everyone Needs to Know

Lawrence R. Jacobs
4.0 out of 5 stars 29
Kindle Edition
$18.69$18.69


Resisting Spirits: Drama Reform and Cultural Transformation in the People's Republic of China (China Understandings Today)


Maggie Greene
4.6 out of 5 stars 3
Kindle Edition
$25.76$25.76


Girt Nation: The Unauthorised History of Australia Volume 3

David Hunt
4.2 out of 5 stars 224
Kindle Edition
$16.99$16.99


Little One-Inch & Other Japanese Children's Favorite Stories (Favorite Children's Stories)


Florence Sakade
4.6 out of 5 stars 46
Kindle Edition
$14.07$14.07
Next page







Product description

About the Author
Mukunda Rao is the author of several insightful philosophical works including The Buddha, and several works of fiction. After taking voluntary retirement from a teaching job in a college in 2000, he now lives on a farm outside Bengaluru. He can be contacted at mukunda53@gmail.com. --This text refers to the paperback edition.

Product details
ASIN ‏ : ‎ B008V8GU4S
Publisher ‏ : ‎ HarperCollins; Illustrated edition (21 July 2012)
Language ‏ : ‎ English
File size ‏ : ‎ 747 KB
Text-to-Speech ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
Sticky notes ‏ : ‎ On Kindle Scribe
Print length ‏ : ‎ 436 pagesBest Sellers Rank: 779,465 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)840 in Hinduism (Kindle Store)
2,919 in Spiritual Self-Help (Kindle Store)
3,594 in Hinduism (Books)Customer Reviews:
4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 57 ratings




About the author
Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.

Follow

U. G. Krishnamurti



Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read author blogs, and more




How would you rate your experience shopping for books on Amazon today?







Very poor
Neutral
Great





Customer reviews
4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
57 global ratings

5 star 72%
4 star 10%
3 star 9%
2 star
0%
1 star 9%

How are ratings calculated?

Review this product
Share your thoughts with other customers
Write a customer review

Sponsored




Top reviews

Top reviews from Australia

There are 0 reviews and 0 ratings from Australia


Top reviews from other countries

Starr
5.0 out of 5 stars Anxious to share this treasureReviewed in the United States on 14 February 2017
Verified Purchase

One person commented that this is the best book on UG ever written. While I haven't read them all and therefore can't give a definitive affirmation to this claim, I have completed a few good ones . This book is in a class by itself. It told me everything I was aching to know about UG and couldn't find anywhere else.

Anxious to share this treasure, I was disappointed that I couldn't even get my husband to read a few pages or listen to more than five minutes of UG talking on a video. This surprised me because he is very interested in some of the themes touched on in this book. Also, like the author, he has an advanced degree in Western Literature and is an English Professor. He is also a lifelong Science Fiction fan, even teaching the occasional course using books that deal with subjects given historical basis and value in Rao's book. Themes such as Borg mind, the evolutionary potential of man, superheroes with superpowers, mutant life forms, half human/half alien presence as the basis for a new religion, the history and synthesis of world religions in Theosophical type movements, spiritual literature mirroring Rennaisance Alchemy's obsession with transformation of base material into gold....So how could he say, as he so unequivocally had after only five minutes of the best of UG, "he doesn't interest me"?

It really wasn't that hard to understand. I'd had a similar reaction to UG when first encountering him in my obsessive quest to find the next best spiritual teacher. Who was this man with the same name as the first of these teachers I'd discovered as a teenager (J. Krishnamurti)? Was he some relative taking up his mantle? Far from it! He seemed to be attacking JK and everything he represented. This was an angry, at times foul-mouthed, hater of all spirtual teachers. I immediately dismissed him as a charlatan. His main message that thought itself was materialistic and had its basis in our cells--and that there was no way out except to eradicate it on the microbiological level--sounded like Scientology to me. "Stay away!" screamed every fiber of my being--or should I say, every cell in my body?

But I couldn't. The man had a grounding effect on my untethered spiritual pursuits that calmed the anxieties that drove them. I had to satisfy my curiosity about why this was so and as I did the pieces began to add up and were consistent with a fierce honesty and self-reliance that I grew to admire. UG's temperament, even before his metamorphisis was that of an iconoclast and radical rebel against authority and every form of knowledge it represented. It was his skepticism and questioning the source of all knowledge that seemed to lead him to the natural state, a state he said only one in a billion could realize. If, however, as UG describes, words are vibrations that can produce energies in our bodies even when silently voiced, perhaps Rao's book can increase the odds a little.
Read less

7 people found this helpfulReport

Beck Hanninen
5.0 out of 5 stars Ending It.Reviewed in Canada on 6 July 2015
Verified Purchase

Stark, unrelenting, cuts to the core. Stop looking elsewhere. Just stop.
No room for pretence. It's all there in your cellular movement.
Report

Manas Dutta
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read!Reviewed in India on 6 January 2016
Verified Purchase

The Biology of Enlightenmen: Unpublished Conversations of U.G. Krishnamurti After He Came into the Natural State
Finally, a book that is worth its price. If you want to be freed from all limitations of life created by the beliefs imposed by society and culture, then this is the book you need to read. RIP UG.

One person found this helpfulReport

Amazon Customer
5.0 out of 5 stars very nice book.Reviewed in India on 8 September 2016
Verified Purchase

very nice book...a different UG...videos of UG are displaying his very raging sage image and not the one of his early years after his coming to natural state. A must for one who wants to delve deeper into UG whom i call under ground or unidentified grounds.

2 people found this helpfulReport

Michael R. Young
5.0 out of 5 stars An early transmission but a more recent publicaionReviewed in the United States on 21 March 2013
Verified Purchase

This book was transcribed from early conversations following UG's "calamity." His calamity is how he described the biological mutation of every cell in his body resulting in his entire thought system being completely purged from his system. Following that he experienced no thought at all and only needed to speak if spoken to. This book goes into that and much more as those questioning him attempt to understand what can only be described as un-understandable within the contex of the egoic based self centered mind. According to UG there is only one question and one answer. To continue to question means that we did not truly hear the answer. If fact, all questions are the same question and all answers that do not put an end to all questions are not answers at all but just the on going process of asking the same question over and over again. In my mind, such questions are merely the on going reincarnation, if you will, of the same question until we eventually tire of asking and hear the one amd only answer that we have been avoiding all along.

12 people found this helpfulReport
See more reviews
===




The Biology of Enlightenment: Unpublished Conversations of U. G. Krishnamurti After He Came Into The Natural State
Mukunda Rao
4.75
12 ratings3 reviews


Want to read




Buy on Kobo












Rate this book
In this book we meet with the modern sage, U.G. Krishnamurti, and listen to his penetrating voice describing life and reality as it is. What is body and what is mind? Is there a soul? Is there a beyond, a God? What is enlightenment? Is there a life after death? Never before have these questions been tackled with such simplicity, candour and clarity. In these unpublished early conversations with friends (1967-71), U.G.discusses in detail his search for the truth and how he underwent radical biological changes in 1967. Preferring to call it the natural state over enlightenment, he insists that whatever transformation he has undergone is within the structure of the human body and not in the mind at all. It is the natural state of being that sages like the Buddha, Jesus and, in modern times, Sri Ramana, stepped into. And U.G.never tires of pointing out that 'this is the way you, stripped of the machinations of thought, are also functioning.'
448 pages, Paperback


First published November 1, 2010




Book details & editions






5 people are currently reading






46 people want to read
About the author
Profile Image for Mukunda Rao.
Mukunda Rao
22 books8 followers


Follow
Readers also enjoyed
Book Cover
The First and Last Freedom
J. Krishnamurti
4.22
4,004
All similar books
Ratings & Reviews
Profile Image for Sejin.
What do you think?










Rate this book


Write a Review


Friends & Following
No one you know has read this book. Recommend it to a friend!
Community Reviews
4.75
12 ratings3 reviews
5 stars
10 (83%)
4 stars
1 (8%)
3 stars
1 (8%)
2 stars
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Search review text


Search review text


Filters
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Dev.
Dev
7 reviews


Follow
December 4, 2019
A must-read for all those who are seriously into inquiry. The videos of UG on youtube are highly misleading because they give a partial understanding of UG while this book gives the readers a vivid picture of UG


1 like


Like


Comment




Profile Image for Nishit Gajjar.
Nishit Gajjar
10 reviews · 8 followers


Follow
May 17, 2014
A very detailed description about the way UG functioned. Some of the words of UG will hit you and will work on you. Only one thing I feel or would like to share or say is STOP just for a few moments STOP searching and see.... but don't assume something will happen. Just Stop!


Like


Comment


Profile Image for Sudha.
Sudha
16 reviews · 10 followers


Follow
November 11, 2013
Simply started reading this. Like the books that have stayed with me over the years, this one too is meant for the long journey. Found a lot of echoes in this of my own life-experiences.


Like


Comment


===


===


===

The Buddha by Mukunda Rao

The Buddha by Mukunda Rao (Ebook) - Read free for 30 days






Ebook253 pages5 hours
The Buddha: An Alternative Narrative of His Life and Teaching


By Mukunda Rao
Rating: 3 out of 5 stars

3/5

(1 rating)

Traditional religious discourses have failed to account for the biological process involved in the attaining of Nirvana. Drawing from sources as varied as the Pali canon, Mahayana texts, Zen Buddhism, J. Krishnamurti, Ramana Maharshi, U.G. Krishnamurti, Nietzsche, postmodernist thinkers and biological sciences, The Buddha retells the story of the Buddha and discusses his teachings in physical and physiological terms. This radical new reading turns most of the central spiritual concepts on their head, and hopes, in the course of time, to put an end to the rivalry between science and religion and, indeed, among the various religions.


LanguageEnglish
PublisherElement
Release dateMay 10, 2017
ISBN9789352644216

Read now



From other countries

IJ
5.0 out of 5 stars A treasure trove...Reviewed in the United States on 4 May 2020
Verified Purchase
An insight into what actually might have happened to Siddharth Gautama on his flowering to a “Tathagatha” . This books retells the story of how Gautama became a Buddha in the language that today’s world can grasp in contrast to the various Buddhists metaphysical texts which are always difficult to understand ...
Report

J D
5.0 out of 5 stars A beautiful BookReviewed in India on 20 July 2023
Verified Purchase
What a beautiful book? I loved every word of it. The author explains esoteric concepts in a lucid, unconventional manner. Recommended.
Report

Ninoslav R.
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book!!!!Reviewed in the United States on 31 October 2019
Verified Purchase
Well-written, inspiring and informative book on all relevant aspects of Buddhism. Anyone who sincerely wants to study Buddhism this book will be valuable for all the right reasons.
Report

Sb
5.0 out of 5 stars Very informative. Well written. Approach it like a spiritual novel.Reviewed in India on 28 October 2022
Verified Purchase
I really enjoyed reading this book. Rao is threading through and weaving together a lot of human wisdom history from the Buddha to UG. Never an easy task. I particularly enjoyed the deep dives into what the Buddha thought/said. Thank you Rao. Sb

One person found this helpfulReport

Sandeep
4.0 out of 5 stars An essential readReviewed in India on 31 August 2017
Verified Purchase
The title aroused curiosity in me. As the title suggests this is really an alternative narrative about Buddha. Probably years of research, learning and insightful thoughts are distilled to form this book. Considered reading too as a journey. When started there was a multi storeyed building, author slowly dismantles it floor by floor with turn of pages. The core of Buddha's /enlightened ones teaching is touched upon with sincerity.
Divulging any other details would be a spoiler.
Happy reading!!

9 people found this helpfulReport

Pendyala Jayakumar(JK)
5.0 out of 5 stars ExcellentReviewed in India on 31 December 2017
Verified Purchase
This book gives the gist of real understanding of what we all call as spirituality.

3 people found this helpfulReport

Muralidharan
5.0 out of 5 stars Five StarsReviewed in India on 26 May 2017
Verified Purchase
Excellent book !!! Go for it.
Report

Satish
2.0 out of 5 stars PassableReviewed in India on 10 December 2023
Verified Purchase
It's more of a documentary. The title Buddha should be appended with the names of other great sages like U.G. Krishnamurti and Ramana Maharishi as there quotes are equally highlighted and explained as Buddha's. A lot of open questions without solution/explanation.
Report


Sponsored
Need customer service?
See all details fo
===
ng 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for David Guy.
David Guy

7 books · 33 followers


Follow
July 12, 2018
I agree with the basic premise of this book. The Buddha’s life is exemplary, not strictly factual, and we can fill it in any way we want. (Thich Nhat Hanh, to mention one more “biographer,” created a much larger story.) Mukunda Rao is knowledgeable about religion and spiritual practice, and has some interesting things to say about both. He focuses on the body, a bias which I share. But by the time we finish this book we have the feeling that he was really writing a biography of U.G. Krishnamurti, the subject of three other books that he has published. He just dropped the details into the story of the Buddha.


U.G. is the man I think of as the “other” Krishnamurti; it’s as if he’s J. Krishnamurti’s evil cousin (the two men met, but were not related). But while J. Krishnamurti sometimes got a little grouchy as he got older, perhaps because he kept saying the same thing again and again and nobody got it—as if he were talking to an overgrown moron called The Human Race and the guy just kept looking at him with a dull expression on his face, drooling a little—U. G. Krishnamurti seemed to become grouchy at the moment of enlightenment. He had a spiritually transformative experience and came out of it saying, Get away from me, I have nothing to talk about, there’s no message, it’s all a lot of horseshit. In a way other spiritual teachers had similar reactions. But no one with as much vehemence as U.G.[1]


I was glad that Rao did away with a number of the details of the early years. Apparently the Buddha came from a well-off family, was sheltered from many of the exigencies of life, had some extreme experience of impermanence right after his first son was born and decided he had to leave his family, wandered among spiritual practitioners for a number of years, trying one thing and another. All of that makes perfect sense, including the story that he learned to go into very deep states of meditation but believed they weren’t what he was looking for. It was after he went too far in an ascetic direction that he decided to do something more moderate, and then made the discovery that would answer his questions and lead to his teaching.


Rao has a theory that everyone who becomes enlightened has some kind of near death experience. He cites Ramana Maharshi, Sri Aurobindo’s the Mother, and U.G. himself; he could have mentioned various other people, including Eckhart Tolle, whose awakening was preceded by a dark night. Weirdly enough, though, instead of mentioning that the Buddha nearly died from his ascetic practices, Ray regard his near-death experience as the meditative experience that came before that, when he was young and sat under a tree in a field and experienced a feeling of peace. That was an important moment, but it hardly sounds near death. Rao then says—rightly, I think—that we don’t really know what happened to the Buddha under the Bodhi tree. There are teachings, but they don’t describe an actual experience.


Rao believes that enlightenment involves a physical change. It’s not something that happens just to the mind; it happens to the body. Again, he cites the Mother, Ramana Maharshi, U.G. Krishnamurti (he could just as easily have mentioned J. Krishnamurti, who went through something that he called The Process for much of his life, also involving severe physical pain). He gives the most space to U.G., perhaps because he knows his teaching the best. Here is how he describes that physical transformation.


“His skin turned soft, and when he rubbed any part of his body with his palm, it produced a sort of ash. His eyes stopped blinking and his senses started functioning at the peak of their sensitivity. He developed a female breast on his left side. And the hitherto dormant ductless glands such as the thymus, pituitary and pineal, referred to as chakras in kundalini yoga, were reactivated. On the eighth day, he ‘died.’”


Rao goes into much more detail about this “death,” which lasted for “about” 48 minutes (?). Supposedly his heartbeat slowed down and his hands and feet grew cold. “All thoughts, all experiences undergone by humanity from primordial times, whether good or bad, blissful or miserable, mystical or commonplace—the whole ‘collective consciousness’—were flushed out of his system. He . . . was reborn in the state of ‘undivided consciousness’, untouched by thought. It was a most profound journey and a sudden great leap into the state of primordial awareness without primitivism[2]’.” U.G. preferred to call this the natural state, rather than enlightenment.


I make it a practice not to contradict someone who says something or other happened to them. If someone tells me they had an enlightenment experience, or they saw the truth of all things, or they had an experience of God, I don’t sell all I have and give the guy the proceeds, but I don’t say No that didn’t happen to you. In this case, however, I’m biting my tongue to keep from contradicting the man or bursting into laughter. Especially that part about the left breast. What was that all about?


I can see how that might have made him grouchy. Though it would make auto-eroticism a lot more interesting.


What Rao seems to be saying about all these people is that a physical transformation takes place that wipes away the process of thinking. They don’t sit around having thoughts the way you and I do. They can think if they want but otherwise their minds are blank. That’s what he says happened to the Buddha, and to various other great beings throughout history, including Jesus. They become a different kind of being. Their slate is wiped clean.


That is Mukanda Rao’s central thesis, which contradicts my experience (hardly a reason not to believe it) but also contradicts a number of teachers—including the great Kosho Uchiyama—who say that no such thing ever happens, and that hoping for such a thing, or waiting for it, ruins the act of meditation and makes it just like any other human activity. You’re sitting there wanting things to be other than they are. You’ve turned spiritual practice into suffering.


Rao continues with a number of other chapters with such titles as “Is there a Middle Path?” “Where is the Mind Located?” “Is there a Soul?” but his answers to those questions, though interesting, all seem speculative. By the end of the book he’s completely reductive, seeming to say that there’s no validity in religion or any spiritual path whatsoever; his final chapter, entitled “The Way,” takes incoherence to a new level.


I don’t think it’s a bad thing to re-interpret the life of the Buddha. But you don’t need to turn it into a life of U.G. Krishnamurti.


[1] If I may refer to him thus informally. I have no idea what these letters stand for.


[2] This final phrase, though it sounds deep, is also rather vague. What the hell is primordial awareness with primitivism?


www.davidguy.org


1 like


Like


Comment




Profile Image for Srikanth.
Srikanth
177 reviews


Follow
March 2, 2018
A nice and refreshing approach to the life and teachings of Buddha without any glorification or suppression of information.


Like


Comment


Profile Image for Sumit.
Sumit
98 reviews · 2 followers


Follow
March 19, 2018
This book is truly a different narrative of life and teachings of Buddha. The author is disciple of U G Krishnamurti and hence each and every chapter reconcile U G teachings with Buddha's teachings.


Like


Comment


Profile Image for Chandrashekar BC.
Chandrashekar BC
65 reviews · 8 followers


Follow
November 11, 2017
"Physical vision is central to understanding mind and spirituality. This is what many previous spiritual theories have failed to understand," says author Mukunda Rao.
The author in his current book "The Buddha - An Alternative Narrative of His Life and Teaching"- Pali, Mahayana, Zen Writings, J. Krishnamurthy, Ramana Maharshi, U. G. Discusses the Buddha and his teachings through biological foundations, surveying the foundations of Krishnamurti, Aurobindo, Nietzsche and modern thinkers. The reasons for the many decisions he may have taken are found in the same ground of thought. What was Buddha like? How could he be different from other priests? Is he a superhuman? Maharshi? Avatar? A strict person with no sense of humor as described by the Buddhist scriptures? A yogi? Does he believe in reincarnation? Or is the meaning of 'rebirth' different from what he said? Is he the construction of Bhikshu Sangha? Motivated to convert? Many such questions are discussed in this book.
Through the enlightened thoughts of Talasparshi studies of Buddhism, science and philosophy, Mukund Rao presents here many ideas of Buddha from different perspectives. Apart from just Buddhism, meditation, yoga and food practices, which are well-known in today's times, have gained importance in different ways in the religions of the past, and how every religion and philosophy has used them to achieve their goals. Also, in the eyes of today's modern spiritual thinkers, the Buddha and his religion have been reexamined in the light of a scientific attitude. Scientism provides grounds for possibilities to respect spirituality. The ideas here give solid hope to many lay people who are trying to incorporate spirituality into their lives. !!


Like


Comment


===



===


===

===

2024/01/30

"Mukunda Rao" books| Goodreads

Search results for "Mukunda Rao" (showing 1-19 of 29 books) | Goodreads






=========



Page 1 of about 29 results (0.04 seconds)
By Mukunda Rao - The Biolog...

by 
 0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — 2 editions
The Penguin U.G. Krishnamur...

by 
 3.70 avg rating — 23 ratings — published 2007 — 4 editions
Sky-clad: The Extraordinary...

by 
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 27 ratings — published 2018 — 3 editions
The Other Side of Belief In...

by 
 4.11 avg rating — 28 ratings — published 2005 — 3 editions
Shambuka Rama: Three Tales ...

by 
 3.77 avg rating — 30 ratings — 3 editions
The Buddha: An Alternative ...

by 
 3.83 avg rating — 23 ratings — 3 editions
The Biology of Enlightenmen...

by 
 4.75 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2010 — 2 editions
Biology Of Enlightenment

by 
 4.75 avg rating — 12 ratings — published 2012 — 1 edition
Belief and Beyond: Adventur...

by 
 4.13 avg rating — 15 ratings — 2 editions
Between the Serpent and the...

by 
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 6 ratings — 2 editions
Optical Communication

by 
 3.75 avg rating — 4 ratings — published 2000 — 1 edition
India’s Greatest Minds: Spi...

by 
 3.67 avg rating — 6 ratings — 2 editions
The Body, Gender and Transc...

by 
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — 1 edition
The Death of an Activist

by 
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — 1 edition
Chinnamanis World

by 
it was ok 2.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2003 — 2 editions
The Mahatma: A Novel

by 
it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 2 ratings — published 1992 — 3 editions
The Indian Book of Big Idea...

by 
liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — 1 edition
Confessions of a Sanyasi A ...

by 
really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 1 rating — 2 editions
Sky-Clad: The Extraordinary...

by 
it was amazing 5.00 avg rating — 1 rating — 1 edition