Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism

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Shambhala Publications, 2002 M10 22 - 272 páginas
This modern spiritual classic highlights a trick we play on ourselves and offers a brighter reality: liberation by letting go of the self rather than working to improve it
 
The Tibetan meditation master Chögyam Trungpa calls attention to the commonest pitfall to which every aspirant on the spiritual path falls prey: what he calls spiritual materialism. "The problem is that ego can convert anything to its own use," he says, "even spirituality." The universal tendency is to see spirituality as a process of self-improvement—the impulse to develop and refine the ego when the ego is, by nature, essentially empty.

Trungpa's incisive, compassionate teachings serve to wake us up from these false comforts. Featuring a new foreward by his son and lineage holder, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism has resonated with students for nearly thirty years—and remains as fresh as ever today.

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Contenido

Introduction
1
Spiritual Materialism
13
Surrendering
27
The Guru
35
Initiation
59
SelfDeception
71
The Hard Way
87
The Open Way
105
The Six Realms
163
The Four Noble Truths
177
The Bodhisattva Path
195
Shunyata
219
Prajna and Compassion
243
Tantra
255
Index
289
Back Cover
304

Sense of Humor
129
The Development of Ego
143

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Chögyam Trungpa (1940–1987)—meditation master, teacher, and artist—founded Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, the first Buddhist-inspired university in North America; the Shambhala Training program; and an international association of meditation centers known as Shambhala International. He is the author of numerous books including Shambhala: The Sacred Path of the Warrior, Cutting Through Spiritual Materialism, and The Myth of Freedom.

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