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Enlightenment Without God

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This book is highly provocative and can inspire us to start thinking beyond our accustomed patterns. "Diverse are the ways, but the goal is the same." "Peace, happiness, and bliss are the prerequisites for attaining Ultimate Truth."

This book will be useful for those who have been seeking and are still unfulfilled. They can reevaluate their thinking process and the way they intellectualize by understanding the two separate methods systematically described within: the meditative way of having intuitive knowledge and the way of contemplation for attaining the supreme state of consciousness.

103 pages, Paperback

First published June 1, 1982

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About the author

Swami Rama

155 books213 followers
Swāmī Rāma was born Brij Kiśore Dhasmana or Brij Kiśore Kumar,to a northern Indian Brahmin family in a small village called Toli in the Garhwal Himalayas. From an early age he was raised in the Himalayas by his master Bengali Baba and, under the guidance of his master, traveled from temple to temple and studied with a variety of Himalayan saints and sages, including his grandmaster, who was living in a remote region of Tibet. From 1949 to 1952 he held the prestigious position of Shankaracharya of Karvirpitham in South India. After returning to his master in 1952 and practising further for many years in the Himalayan caves, Swami Rama was encouraged by his teacher to go to the West, where he spent a considerable portion of his life teaching, specifically in the United States and Europe.
He is especially notable as one of the first yogis to allow himself to be studied by Western scientists.
Swami Rama authored several books in which he describes the path he took to becoming a yogi and lays out the philosophy and benefits behind practices such as meditation. One of the common themes expressed in such books as "Enlightenment Without God" and "Living with the Himalayan Masters" is the ability of any person to achieve peace without the need for a structured religion. He was critical of the tendency for yogis to use supernatural feats to demonstrate their enlightenment, arguing that these only demonstrated the ability to perform a feat.

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Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews
Profile Image for Neha.
96 reviews1 follower
December 21, 2021
Had great potential but didn't learn anything new from the book. Disappointed.
Profile Image for Ben.
216 reviews8 followers
Read
July 20, 2020
If, like me, you are skeptical of organized religion, and if your skepticism borders on outright hostility, you will enjoy the short first chapter of this little book, in which Swami Rama attacks these institutions in the most uncompromising terms:

"Religious beliefs may offer solace to lower, primitive, less educated, and uncultivated minds, but they have nothing to offer those who already know what to do and what not to do, and who are seeking logical answers to life's questions and guidance in learning how to be."

"The way faith is described in religious scriptures is not actually faith at all, but is blind belief based on ignorance and rigidity of tradition."

The first quote seems possibly just a tad harsh, but the second one rings true to my ears. As an alternative to religious doctrine, Swami Rama offers the timeless wisdom of the Mandukya Upanishad, which he comments on verse-by-verse in Chapter 2.

This ancient Vedic scripture describes the four states of consciousness and how to attain them, ultimately realizing the significance of the cosmic sound Om and understanding that all life is one. For me, it was a bit like reading instructions for how to build, say, the Hadron Collider. I grasp the words, and I have some concept of the end goal, but I have nothing like the mental tools needed to achieve it. Get back to me after a few decades of meditation...

Profile Image for Luke.
924 reviews5 followers
November 13, 2024
This is straight forward in its homage to serious practice of meditation and working through common misconceptions about the results. The title doesn’t much fit the book until you compare it with his other book Living with the Himalayan Masters. In that book he tells stories and mythologizes to the point where an average reader sits in disbelief. Some things you just have to experience yourself and can’t take someone else’s word for.

In Enlightenment Without God he sticks to what is essential and realistic. He’s not going to pretend it doesn’t take a lifestyle change to fully let go of material attachments. You can’t trust in subtle mental interpretations at different levels of focus and awareness until you have let that go. He get's into the machinery of the unconscious and how different types of meditation can be carried out to recognize the small self and big self. To observe the small self as the big self. The psychological language, although dated, is more approachable when compared to more spiritualizing terminology.
3 reviews
September 30, 2021
East meets west in talking of old discovered insights using the language of 20th century enlightenment. As the Enlightenment of the 1700s began our language was challenged with needing new words to replace those concepts of a western culture ignorant of science and shackled to patriarchy. Those old words are still around to hoist our minds back into the ignorance or knowledge from cultures of the past.
1 review
January 28, 2024
It is a good nice book..only book to have complete knowledge in the shortest possible content.

It tells you All that can be learnt .
If we can somehow comprehend and put it into practice all is sorted.
Profile Image for Tanmay Meher.
Author 1 book4 followers
December 23, 2017
A good beginning. It explains about the fourth state Turiya, How OM could be helpful to attain turiya and then how to do sabasana.
23 reviews
February 14, 2020
Well-written. It is a good introduction to Vedic philosophy, and the secular premise of the commentary is extremely helpful to any spiritual seeker or curious philosopher.
Profile Image for Lingui5t.
171 reviews1 follower
December 16, 2020
Total clickbait in terms of the title (the book is really not about that).
The Wikipedia article on turiya will give you most of the content of this book that is of any use.
Profile Image for Jade.
4 reviews
April 13, 2022
I got enlightened after reading this book. It opened my eyes to the true spiritual world which transcendent religion and everything around it. Sad that this book is out of print.
Profile Image for Anirudh Jain.
63 reviews3 followers
May 3, 2022
The context setting for the way to enlightenment
33 reviews7 followers
October 30, 2015
Swami Rama enunciates most complex philosophical concepts in lucid language. Book has been written in experiential and didactic mode. This makes the reader capable of practicing the concepts in daily life and attain consciousness of the 3 states of mind. Armed with such consciousness, attainment of the Absolute truth i.e. Turiya may become a reality for a serious practitioner. It is perhaps the best beginners' guide I have ever read on any subject.
1 review1 follower
June 28, 2015
Awesome commentary of a timeless book.
Displaying 1 - 13 of 13 reviews

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