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A Sakta Method for Comparative Theology : Upside Down, Inside Out

Part of the Explorations in Indic Traditions: Theological, Ethical, and Philosophical series
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A Śākta Method for Comparative Theology: Upside-Down, Inside-Out offers the world’s first Śākta thealogy of religions and a Śākta anti-method, method, and a-method for comparative theology.

For Śāktas, the thread of religious diversity is part of the rich tapestry of cosmological, topographical, environmental, and bio-diversity, which is the Goddess’ collective (samaṣṭi) and individuated (vyaṣṭi) forms. Śākta religious diversity is complex, layered, and paradoxical, allowing ontological similarities, ontological differences, and irreducibility.

A Śākta thealogy of religious diversity transcends humans and the borders of religion, politics, society, and speciesism.

It is panentheist in that it reveres the material and the spiritual equally since they are knotted and inseparable.

As “anti-method,” for comparative theology, Śākta thealogy inverts the standard hypertextual approach to doing comparative theology.

As “anti-method,” it proposes engaging theological activities based on the view of the body-mind-sense complex as non-hierarchical and entrenched in a tangled, mutually conditioned world.

As “method,” it employs the bodies’ auditory, gestural, and haptic interfaces to create vibrotactile feedback that takes interlocutors beyond conventional, conditioned reality and toward Oneness.

Finally, as “a-method,” Śākta thealogy offers an inverted way of being and acting in the world that transcends putting the body-mind-sense complex to work by using the metaphor of the upside-down aśvattha tree in the Bhagavad Gītā.

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Product Details
1666905054 / 9781666905052
Hardback
08/12/2023
United States
English
192 pages
23 cm