Worshiping Śiva in medieval India : ritual in an oscillating universe
著者
書誌事項
Worshiping Śiva in medieval India : ritual in an oscillating universe
Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 2000
1st Indian ed.
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注記
Includes bibliography (p. [189]-193) and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
Saiva liturgy is performed in a world that oscillates: a world permeated by the presence of Siva, where humans live in a condition of bondage and where the highest aim of the soul is to attain liberation from its fetters. In this account of Indian temple ritual, Richard Davis uses medieval Hindu texts to describe the world as it is envisioned by Saiva siddhanta and the way daily worship reflects that world and acts within it. He argues that this worship is not simply a set of ritualized gestures, but rather a daily catechism in which the worshiper puts into action all the major themes of cosmic Saiva philosophy, the cyclic pattern of emission and reabsorption, the human path of attaining liberation, the manifestation of divinity in the world, and the proper interrelationship of humanity and god. In re-creating the convictions and intentions of a well-versed worshiper of the twelfth century, Davis moves back and forth between philosophical and ritual texts, demonstrating the fundamental Saiva belief that the capacities of humans to know about the world and to act within it are two interrelated modalities of the unitary power of consciousness.
Focusing on temple ritual, a form of worship that has been at the heart of Hindu religious practice for nearly two millennia, Davis' work fills a major gap in the field of Indian religions.
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