The Philosophy of Spirit – Tallapragada Subba Row

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COD: AB00000000254 Categoria: Tag: , , ,

Descrizione

Tallapragada Subba Row (July 6, 1856 – June 24, 1890) was a mystic and a Theosophist from a Hindu background.

In 1882, he invited Helena Petrovna Blavatsky and Henry Steel Olcott to Madras (now Chennai), where he convinced them to make Adyar the permanent headquarters for the Theosophical Society. Upon this meeting and thereafter, Subba Row became able to recite whatever passage was so requested of him from the Bhagavad Gita, Upanishads, and many other sacred texts of India. He had, apparently, never studied these things prior to the fateful meeting, and it is stated that when meeting Blavatsky and Damodar K. Mavalankar, all knowledge from his previous lives came flooding back.

Among the many memorable works he left to humanity, they include his commentaries on the Bhagavad Gita, Esoteric Writings, and his Collected Writings in two volumes.

The essay The Philosophy of Spirit, that we propose to our readers today, was written in December 1883 and included in the Subba Row’s Collection of Esoteric Writings, published for the Bombay Theosophical Publication Fund by Rajaram Tookaram in Bombay in 1910. It intends to be a response, certainly polemical but highly argued, to the studies of the British spiritualist and theosophist William Oxley. Oxley, who joined the Theosophical Society and used the pseudonym “Busiris”, was the author of several books, among which was The Philosophy of the Spirit (London, 1881), announced as “a New Version of the Bhagavat Gita”.

With an introduction by Nicola Bizzi.

70 pages

ISBN: 979-12-5504-573-1