Osho English Books :
Series - H
- Hari Om Tat Sat :
Responding to a wide variety of questions, Osho gives straight talk on touchy subjects, including a full coverage of the global crisis. This series takes a no-nonsense look at the controversial implications of homosexuality and the future of artificial intelligence. Osho is as compassionate, lyrical and funny as ever about relationships, our need to be "special," and the newcomer's bewilderment over the apparent contradiction between freedom and having a master. All of Osho is here - from heart to hammer.
- The Heart Sutra :
Discourses on the Heart Sutra, the Prajnaparamita Hridayam Sutra of Gautam the Buddha reveal his essential teachings: the merging of negative and positive, the insubstantiality of the ego, and the buddha-nature of all of existence. In his inimitable way Osho brings these archaic yet invaluable insights right to the doorstep of the contemporary inquirer. He also speaks on the seven chakras and the corresponding facets in man - the physical, psychosomatic, psychological, psycho-spiritual, spiritual, spiritual-transcendental and transcendental.
- The Hidden Harmony :
Osho says that if Heraclitus had been born in India rather than Greece, he would have been recognized not simply as a philosopher but as a mystic. The fragments of his words which remain were for a long time rejected as obscure and riddling in favor of the one-dimensional logic of Aristotle. This book brings the wisdom of Heraclitus to the eternal riddles of life and death, man's spiritual sleepiness, self-knowing, and avoiding extremes.
- The Hidden Splendor :
Here, Osho unfolds the basic search for childlike innocence in all its joy, playfulness, and fearlessness...a state of being which Osho describes as our "Hidden Splendor". In underlining the reality of a world heading toward self-destruction he calls on the reader to work to change its course before it is too late.
- Hsin Hsin Ming : The Book Of Nothing :
"If I were to save only two books from the whole world of the mystics, one would be Sosan's Hsin Hsin Ming," Osho says. "It contains the quintessence of Zen, the path of awareness and meditation...the very soul of Zen." Himself a master of both words and silence, Osho builds a bridge between the modern, chattering mind and the infinite no-mind of Sosan through these Zen sutras - the only words uttered by Sosan, the 6th-century Chinese mystic and third Chinese patriarch.
- Hyakujo : The Everest Of Zen :
Hyakujo's greatest contribution to Zen was the development of monasteries - where thousands of people gathered together with a single direction, toward what Zen calls The Ultimate Experience. And his motto: "One day without working, one day without food." No holy charity here; work and meditation go hand in hand. He also created the Chinese Tea Ceremony where something so ordinary as drinking tea becomes a meditation. But more than simply chronicles of a past master, here we see Osho "hitting" a disciple in front of the assembled thousands at the evening meditation, and we experience the depths of her response. Such was the intensity of this that Osho dedicated the book to her - a book that is truly "living Zen" and a must for everyone who is interested in the ways of a Zen master.
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