2020/08/29

Noble Strategy by Thanissaro | Goodreads review

Noble Strategy: Essays on the Buddhist Path by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads



Noble Strategy: Essays on the Buddhist Path

 4.49  ·   Rating details ·  41 ratings  ·  5 reviews

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Paperback70 pages
Published 1999 by Metta Forest Monastery


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 Average rating4.49  · 
 ·  41 ratings  ·  5 reviews

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Ryan
I'm usually quite the fan of Thanissaro Bhikkhu, being a liker of his dhamma talks for some time now. But I'm not so sure about his essays or, at the least; this collection of essays. Yes, they are still good in their own right; with the same charm and causal elegance of his talks; but I feel there's something missing about the style. His quality as an essayist, in judging from this alone as it stands, seems to be rather un-engaging.

He doesn't really translate his nature into the essaic form very well. His light and dry humour isn't really present, he's quite serious and virtually deadpan throughout. The rather graceful manner seen on average from him is replaced by a rather firm, stiff and almost monotonous way of speaking.

It rests upon these factors, and primarily they alone; that I cannot say this is a book as worthy as his others, but I do see one factor in which is good. The book is rather good at explaining common; but occasionally difficult to understand concepts in Buddhism. Such as the main topic of the 9th essay: vipassana. The subject yes, is known well to those who look more deeply into it; but to the otherwise wandering learner - it's generally not known. But this essay in particular does a well enough job at explaining it in rather decent detail.

As a final word, or more-of; a word of advice. To those who've just begun studying Buddhism, and don't have as much knowledge on the basics; it is advisable to not read this book. Given, although it may be a bit of an introduction to Buddhism (more to Theravada in this case), it isn't a complete introduction overall. More akin to an explanatory text to those of an amateur stance. But as for myself, I think I'll just leave it be as it is: a slight disappointment of his corpus. 
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Andrew
Jul 15, 2011rated it it was amazing
This book was written to "sell" Buddhist practices to Westerners. I've found it immensely helpful in thinking about such things as true happiness, karma, right speech, meditation, mindfulness, emptiness and other notions of Buddhism which I'd heard of but never looked at closely until now. The copy I have is in good condition. There is no ISBN number or publisher identified. At the end of the book I notice the following: Inquiries concerning this book may be sent to The Abbott/Metta Forest Monastery/PO Box 1409/Valley Center CA 92082. I was lucky to find the copy I have at the local Salvation Army store. The Introduction is dated August 1999. The author's name, Thanissaro Bhikkhu, is given in translation as Geoffrey DeGraff. At the bottom of the title page is printed "FOR FREE DISTRIBUTION". From the Introduction: "The essays in this book present views on basic elements in the Buddhist path - the attitudes, concepts, and practices that lead to total freedom for the mind. If the views are right, they themselves form a part of the path. Thus, in learning how to make best use of these essays, it's important to understand how views function in bringing about freedom." (less)
motioneffector
Jul 07, 2015rated it really liked it
Shelves: buddhism
This collection of essays by Thanissaro Bhikkhu is very well-selected. It's definitely not for the total newbie to buddhism, as it assumes one already knows all the basics - this is a book for buddhists who are already versed in all the basics (path, truths, precepts, perfections, etc).

That's not to say someone newer won't benefit, as it has all sorts of useful stuff even a beginner can glean learning from - but like nearly all Thanissaro's work, it doesn't pull punches and isn't softened for the "McMindfulness" crowd. This is no-nonsense, efficient Theravada teaching.

For the enthusiastic beginner or the intermediate, this is a good dharma supplement. It probably won't change your life, but it will give you plenty of good teachings to read, if you "dwell in the dharma" and thus read dharma all the time - as will the other four books in the Essays series.

Freely available from: http://www.dhammatalks.org/ebook_inde...
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T.
Nov 16, 2015rated it really liked it
Shelves: buddhist-books
I always like his writings.
Balaji Ramasubramanian
Apr 12, 2014rated it it was amazing
Shelves: dhamma
Ajahn Thanissaro is a master of words, wisdom and meditation. This book is a treasure for anyone new to the Dhamma, or even someone quite seasoned.

The Buddha’s Teachings: An Introduction by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads

The Buddha’s Teachings: An Introduction by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads



The Buddha’s Teachings: An Introduction

by Thanissaro Bhikkhu



really liked it 4.00  ·   Rating details ·  33 ratings  ·  4 reviews

The Buddha’s Teachings: An Introduction. A short introduction to the basic concepts and values underlying Buddhist practice, with special attention to clearing up common misinterpretations about what the Buddha taught.



Freely available at dhammatalks.org

ebook, 33 pages

Published March 21st 2016

Edition LanguageEnglish

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Steve

Jul 06, 2016Steve rated it liked it

Shelves: 2016, mediation-and-buddhism

This book is an ebook. The author, a Buddhist monk, has been a pioneer in presenting Buddhist teachings in new formats since the 1990s when he first started putting his translations of Buddhist texts on the then new world wide web. This book is available in all of the ebook formats, including PDF, at dhammatalks.org. On the inside of the book are instructions for obtaining printed copies.



Whenever people ask me to recommend an introduction to Buddhism, I never feel fine with the choice I make. I can't think of any introduction that has a human face on it, an inspiring face, and that gets Buddhism completely right.



It is hard to write good introductory material, as it involves pulling yourself out of a subject you are steeped in and getting inside of the mind of someone unacquainted with the subject. Doing it well enough to inform and inspire takes talent.



I was surprised how well Venerable Thanisarro Bhikkhu did. I usually find his style to be dry, academic, and uninspiring.



I was very pleased that he started the book with 3 questions:



1. Is there such a thing as a deathless happiness that can bring suffering and stress to a total end?



2. If there is, can this happiness be found through human effort?



3. If so, can it be found in a harmless and blameless way?



In other words, Buddhism is all about happiness.



All too often with Buddhism ( particularly this author ) it is easy to forget that.



The other thing the author did well was in limiting the size of the book to just 33 pages. Too many introductions to Buddhism are too long winded. Someone who is new to Buddhism and who just wants to get an overview isn't going to have the patience for a tome.



I felt the author went wrong in trying to summarize the steps of in the discourse on mindfulness of breathing ( anapanasati sutta ). An introductory book is just not the place for that. I felt he could have done better by simply stating that the dominant meditation technique in Buddhism is being aware of your breathing. I think his description will leave his intended audience ( people completely new to Buddhism ) just scratching their heads.



I also didn't like his analogy, his use of the words "food" and "feeding" to describe how desire creates suffering and leads to multiple lives. No disrespect to the author, that wording just made Buddhism seem silly.



The author is an excellent and seasoned scholar of Buddhism. He is an excellent analyzer of text. He can point out things that you may have read many times, but have never articulated clearly in your mind.



While I don't like this book as an introduction to Buddhism, I do think it is an excellent introduction to what Thanisarro Bhikkhu has to say about Buddhism.



In that regard I am enthusiastic about the book and recommend to people familiar with his work and deeper writings about Buddhism.







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Ahmad

Feb 10, 2018Ahmad rated it liked it

Shelves: buddhism

A good basic and quick introduction to _some_ of the basic concepts and tenets of Theravada Buddhism. Even though the book is short, it still could have covered the Noble Eightfold Path in a bit more detail rather than just listing them for the reader to be informed about their existence. In general, it is a good summary but the book could have used a bit more explanation and/or examples for a beginner reader to make sense of the content more.

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Pierre

May 26, 2016Pierre rated it really liked it

This is not the clearest introduction to Buddhism, but is a helpful text nevertheless. It is short enough for those new to the philosophy, but in depth enough for those who are more well versed. Its metaphysical passages are not as well explained as they could be, and the information is rather dry and list-heavy, but overall (and especially considering it is free) this is a good read.

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Bryan

May 12, 2020Bryan rated it really liked it

Great introduction. Very dense, but worth reading and referencing back to.

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With Each and Every Breath by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads

With Each and Every Breath by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads






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With Each and Every Breath

by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
4.37 · Rating details · 147 ratings · 23 reviews
A new breath meditation manual by Thanissaro Bhikkhu drawing on two sources: the Buddha’s own set of instructions on how to use the breath in training the mind, and Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo’s method of breath meditation — which builds on the Buddha’s instructions, explaining in detail many of the points that the Buddha left in condensed form. Available online from:
http://www.dhammatalks.org/ebook_inde... (less)

ebook, 124 pages
Published 2013

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Oct 30, 2018Aman A rated it really liked it
EDIT: I no longer prefer TMI and actually far prefer With Each and Every Breath. The approach is more relaxed and there is less striving. There is a much greater emphasis on generating piti and sukkha early on which TMI does not do and that is crucial for fast progress. This book is the real deal. TMI is still a very good book but I think better for someone who has been practicing with With Each and Every Breath for 6 months and TMI is useful for debugging specific issues.

Great introduction to anapanasati. I personally prefer The Mind Illuminated by Culadasa if you are a beginner (and maybe even if you are not). With Each and Every Breath has the stages be 1. Meditate Daily. 2. Meditate to the point of mostly overcome gross distractions. 3. Feel the breath sensations at various parts of the body. 4. Full body breathing into Jhana and 5. Jhana. 

Culadasa in TMI splits step 2 into 3 separate degrees of distractions which is helpful for a beginner. Additionally, TMI better explains exclusive attention and why full body breathing helps attain this. With Each and Every Breath is a significantly thinner book and that is a big benefit of this book. (less)
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Apr 28, 2013Nava rated it it was amazing
Possibly the best book I've read on meditation practice so far.
The focus on breath seems to me only one of many approaches, but this is the one he takes.
Tan Jeff lists a lot of hindrances experienced in meditation, and offers very practical advice -
in my opinion with a lot of wisdom and gentleness.
The chapter on advanced practice and the four Jhana's felt like it was still outside my understanding, but that's fine. :)
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Jun 01, 2014Balaji Ramasubramanian rated it it was amazing
Shelves: dhamma
Possibly the best manual on breath meditation out there. While the Buddha did teach an array of meditation techniques, breath meditation is something he himself engaged in as a useful pastime, and taught it as a central method of meditation. Thanissaro Bhikkhu is himself a master of meditation describes the basic principles ground-up, and develops the manual to its culmination - jhana. This book should be with anyone wishing to learn meditation. And if I had gotten this book at least 10 years back, I might have learned to meditate far better. (less)
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Mar 22, 2018Ahmad rated it it was amazing
Shelves: buddhism
An extensive and broad meditation manual that teaches the Mindfulness of Breath technique as well as explaining to a very good extent how the practice of meditation falls under Buddhist training and how it relates to the entire doctrine. The first 25 pages of the book outline a summary of the practice up front.
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Jan 25, 2018Rif A. Saurous rated it really liked it
A short and sometimes-to-the-point and often excellent book on meditation. I'm tempted to give five stars. If you want to read one practical advice book about meditation, I think I'd recommend reading (parts of) thise one. (If you have time and inclination to read a much longer more detailed and less woo-woo book, read "The Mind Illuminated" which I haven't reviewed yet but definitely gets five stars.)

Pros: Full of usable instructions. Contains much wisdom. Short. Free pdf available online. Pres ...more
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Feb 07, 2018Sergio rated it really liked it
Good introduction to meditation for the beginners, and a good refresh read full of good tips for the intermediate or more advanced meditators. I found particularly useful the chapter on ‘Disruptive emotions’, with sections on how to deal with feelings of grief, and how to identify and distinguish healthy from unhealthy grieving and build the inner strength to help us maintain a sense of well-being in spite of our losses. Other sections in the chapter address other defilements such as anger, lust, jealousy, doubt.

Also particularly interesting the chapter on Inner focus, and how to apply meditation in our day to day activities so that its benefit are not confined to the daily sitting meditation session. For those of us with a busy life and a stressful job is critical that we extend the momentum from one formal practice to the next and apply to all our activities, in any surrounding we may found ourselves in.

This is a freely distributed book available on accesstoinsight.org where you’ll find plenty additional material, Dhamma articles and talks, books and video. At the end of each chapters there is a section pointing to additional reading and audio/video material with links to accesstoinsight and dhammatalks.org.

Talks from the author are available on the links listed above and youtube.
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Aug 05, 2020Derek rated it it was ok
Shelves: religion, nonfiction, reviews
The book covers a lot of ground and it could definitely help someone who is new to meditation. Even if you're not new to meditating, there are a number of useful tidbits in here. But personally, I wasn't a fan of Thanissaro Bhikkhu's style of explanation. That's not to say it's bad; there are just other books and teachings that I've found clearer (like Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo). I also would have preferred if Thanissaro Bhikkhu pulled more from the Bhudda's teachings since he references them many times. (less)
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Nov 18, 2017Marcin Czarkowski rated it it was amazing
Shelves: consciousness, meditation
Really accessible and practical meditation guide. Method presented by Thanissaro Bhikkhu is really effective for me. Focusing on flow of bodly breath energy instead of sensations in nose area is great for my concentration and ardency to continue practice.

It's really suprising that this free book is not popular. It has really good polish translation (most of meditation/buddhism books are not translated at all). Gonna recommend it to my friends that want to get into daily meditation practice.
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Nov 10, 2019know1 rated it it was amazing
Outstanding. Probably the best guide I've read, and that includes TMI. Clear, concise, practical. Very interesting and useful discussion of morality and practice in life that you will hardly come across elsewhere.

Available for free as an e-book. Lots of accompanying audios available for free as well. Author's voice may sound a bit mechanical to some, but as a writer he's excellent.
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Apr 04, 2019Juan Ignacio rated it it was amazing
Wonderful book for meditation starters which also covers advanced stages of the practice. The best thing is that despite it's a Buddhist technique it's written in a coloquial language, making it very easy to digest (but please don't underestimate it!)
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Aug 02, 2019BurukaniroHakase rated it it was amazing
I am not a meditation specialist, but I can hardly think there could be something written more carefully, precise, practical, concise but with all the necessary details in the same time, on the subject.
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Apr 27, 2019MikeBy rated it really liked it
It took me a few attempts to get into this, but once I did it is an interesting and simple approach to meditation.
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Feb 27, 2020Natasha Brianez rated it it was amazing
The best book on meditation I’ve ever read. I’m sure I’ll read it again and again as it is so condensed in profound knowledge.
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May 28, 2019Ghislaine Cow rated it it was amazing
Shelves: buddhism, recommended-with-integrity, readagain
Excellent. Re-read delving into additional readings.
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Aug 17, 2020Kyle Hayes rated it it was amazing
Extremely practical guide to breath meditation. Furthered my understanding of the goals of meditation and skillful attitudes/ questions to contemplate while meditating.
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Jun 18, 2018Curtis rated it liked it
An in-depth guide: how to practice breath meditation; common difficulties; the stages of practice and progression through the jhanas.
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Nov 12, 2019Gary rated it really liked it
An interesting take on "anapana" as a full-body-breathing practice from the Thai Forest tradition of Theravada Buddhism.
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Jun 14, 2020Dylan rated it it was amazing
Shelves: buddhism, meditation, non-fiction, spiritual
Very thorough and beautiful book on meditation on the breath energies.
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Jan 27, 2014Egor Azanov rated it it was amazing
Wow! What a book! One of the best manuals on meditation I've encountered so far.

We've all heard to treat meditation as a skill, to train it as a skill, to practice deliberately. But how? This book shows you how. One of the most important ideas is to 'play' with your breath. Try this and that, see how it feels, make adjustments, take what's working and leave what's not.

Short, precise, technical and very thorough. Amazing book!
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Mar 29, 2014Jo rated it it was amazing
Great instruction book. I like to think that if I had had this book when I started meditating over 20 years ago, I might be enlightened by now! Cannot recommend highly enough. This book brings together many of Thanisarro Bhikku's teachings on meditation in one very practical and thorough package. I am recommending it to all of my Buddhist friends.
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Apr 27, 2014Mariya Manahova rated it really liked it
Shelves: meditation
It was a good introduction to meditation. Conveyed concepts well and had very useful practical advice. It cut straight to the core of the issue. It didn't go any further, but that is precisely because it is an introduction.
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Nov 29, 2015Ben rated it really liked it
Shelves: budhhism, jhana, meditation
A lot of good practical advice here on meditation. The author is a good writer too.
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Oct 30, 2016Rob rated it it was amazing
Shelves: come-back-to-again, reread-yearly
I ended up highlighting nearly a third of this book – a comprehensive introduction to mediation and mindfulness as a practice & way of life from a Buddhist perspective; less 'how' and more 'why'. (less)

The Paradox of Becoming by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads

The Paradox of Becoming by Thanissaro Bhikkhu | Goodreads

The Paradox of Becoming

by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
4.83 · Rating details · 24 ratings · 1 review


Jun 01, 2014Balaji Ramasubramanian rated it it was amazing
Shelves: dhamma
The doctrine of rebirth and karma are normally to be taken on faith. The Buddha doesn't offer any 'proof', empirical or otherwise, of these core principles of the Dhamma. Another doctrine that involves a leap of faith is the teaching that one can transcend the whole samsara - cycle of birth and death. Both these teachings (karma and nirvana) are the central teachings of the Buddha, and both cannot be proven empirically.

This leaves us with two choices: blindly accept or reject the teaching, or choose one of these courses through informed consideration of the theory behind them. Of course, neither of these methods will give us assurance of the reality of these teachings - only direct realization can. But the choice of accepting or rejecting these teachings itself comes with its own share consequences. If we assume that there is no causal relationship between actions and results, the basis to establish a moral or ethical code of conduct reduces to a social convention. But it would also imply that no man can ever choose specific actions that lead to his happiness. It also implies that one cannot develop skill, because the idea of a skill can arise only if one could tweak results by carefully choosing actions, and that can never happen if there were no causal relationship between actions and results. So we can see that there is at least some sensible logic in accepting that actions and results are casually related. Any reasonable person a can accept this much.

But some important ideas are not addressed by this level of understanding of karma: rebirth, and the ending of all rebirth. If rebirth never happens at all, then there is no need to try and put an end to it. But the whole of the Buddha's teaching essentially culminates in the teaching of nirvana - the ultimate cessation of all dukkha, including that of rebirth. In fact the pursuit of the Buddhist path leads to progressive levels of freedom, (the four stages to enlightenment) all of which are described in terms of how many more times one may be reborn before finally attaining nirvana. So the teaching of rebirth is central to the teaching of nirvana. Accepting the doctrine of rebirth or the possibility of nirvana requires a leap of faith, and even if one does accept rebirth as a form of after-life, accepting the teaching of nirvana, requires an even greater leap of faith.

The Buddha employed several ways to encourage faith among his listeners. Of these, explanations through questions, counter-questions, and answers is a very important method. Thanissaro Bhikkhu's treatise on 'Becoming', or bhava, serves as a great volume of deep understanding of the Dhamma.

This book goes into the depths of becoming, rebirth, consciousness, karma, and nirvana. But as Ajahn explicates this in his inimitable style, he notes a complex paradox built within the framework of the Dhamma. Because the causal network of factors is so complex it is inherently unstable. The Buddha used this essential instability to his advantage and employed it to the attainment of nirvana. This involves the understanding of a queer paradox, that Thanissaro Bhikkhu beautifully describes. Read it and enjoy this truly stupendous masterpiece. (less)