Synopses & Reviews
This Centenary Commemorative Edition also includes two lesser known works Buddha and the Intuition of the Universal and Techniques of Timeless Realization. The volume is complemented by a detailed Glossary, an Index, an Original Foreword by Aldous Huxley (1955), an Original Preface by Swami Siddheswarananda (1955), and a Contemporary Foreword by Professor Asanga Tilakaratne.
Benoits writings on the human predicament and the path to inner freedom were influenced by his studies in Zen Buddhism and psychoanalysis. There is, as well, an evident dialogue in Benoits writings between the Gurdjieff teaching and Zen, with insightful ideas about universal laws, inner work, the human machine, and work in life.
The Supreme Doctrine and The Realization of the Self foreshadow contemporary transpersonal and integral psychology: through the re-integration of psychology and metaphysics, Benoit invites us to make our own journey toward spiritual transformation and the intuitive understanding of universal truths. This Centenary Commemorative Edition also includes two lesser known works Buddha and the Intuition of the Universal and Techniques of Timeless Realization. The volume is complemented by a detailed Glossary, an Index, an Original Foreword by Aldous Huxley (1955), an Original Preface by Swami Siddheswarananda (1955), and a Contemporary Foreword by Professor Asanga Tilakaratne.
Review
“ ‘There were giants in the earth in those days. This line from Genesis comes to mind as I look again, after a gap of some years, at the writings of Hubert Benoit. Like Karlfried Graf von Durckheim (author of Daily Life as Spiritual Exercise), who was of virtually the same generation, Benoît brought a formidable mind and a seekers firm dedication to the exploration of Zen. They were deciphering then what remains for us to continue deciphering: teachings Asian in origin but native to our minds and hearts.” —Roger Lipsey, author, The Spiritual in Twentieth-Century Art
Review
“This is a book that should be read by everyone who aspires to know who he is and what he can do to acquire such self-knowledge.” —From the Foreword to the first English edition, Aldous Huxley
Review
“The idea of publishing a fresh translation of Hubert Benoits two works on Zen from a psychoanalytic point of view is good news for those who take human freedom seriously. While all religions are interested in this matter, the seriousness with which Buddhism has addressed this issue has been widely acknowledged. The Buddhist concept of suffering as the human predicament and its cessation in nirvanic freedom, and the Freudian concepts of illness and health, have been found to have something in common before and after Benoit. The unique characteristic of Benoits presentation of Zen is that he articulates it in a language and metaphor intelligible to the contemporary mind informed of psychology, philosophy and science.” —From the Foreword, Professor Asanga Tilakaratne, Kelaniya University
Review
“Paralysis of the hand may seem a strange route to becoming a famous writer, but the French thinker Dr Hubert Benoit (1904-1992) specialized in surgery until injuries sustained in the defence of Saint Lô in the Second World War partially paralysed his right hand and brought an end to his surgical career. Benoit turned his attention to psychoanalysis and to Zen, producing in 1955 the seminal work The Supreme Doctrine. In this edition to mark the centenary of Benoits birth, Graham Rooth, MD, MRCPsych, offers a new translation of the French text with the original preface by Swami Siddheswarananda, founder of the Ramakrishna Vedantic Centre near Paris, and the original foreword by novelist Aldous Huxley, together with a new foreword by Professor Asanga Tilakaratne, Director of the Postgraduate Institute of Pali and Buddhist Studies at the University of Kelaniya, Colombo. Also included are The Realization of Self (1981) and two short essays by Benoit — ‘Buddha and the Intuition of the Universal and ‘Technique of Timeless Realization. The volume forms an excellent insight into Benoits work on the human being and the nature of our suffering.” —The Middle Way
Synopsis
Following the success of the publication of The Supreme Doctrine in 1998, Sussex Academic Press is proud to announce a completely new and updated translation by Graham Rooth, MD, MRCPsych, of this seminal work. The Light of Zen in the West also includes a new translation of one of Benoits other major texts, The Realization of the Self. The volume also contains two lesser known works - Buddha and the Intuition of the Universal and Techniques of Timeless Realization - and has a glossary and index. Benoit's writings on the human predicament were influenced by his studies in Zen Buddhism and psychoanalysis. Both books foreshadow contemporary transpersonal and integral psychology: through the re-integration of psychology and metaphysics, Benoit invites us to make our own journey toward spiritual transformation and the intuitive understanding of universal truths.
About the Author
Graham Rooth MD, MRC Psych, is a retired consultant psychiatrist with a longstanding interest in languages, and the relationship between spirituality and humanistic therapies.