Richard Power, Editor, Wheaton, IL
Quest Books, 2007, 155pp.
This is a good book with a misleading title. These are unpublished lectures by Lama Govinda given at the Human Dimensions Institute in upstate New York to a largely Western audience but not published. The lectures were hardly “lost” but are a welcome addition to his published books such as the well-known The Way of the White Cloud and his more technical writings such as Psychological Attitudes of Early Buddhist Philosophy and Foundations of Tibetan Mysticism. Secondly, Lama Govinda is not a Tibetan Master but a German scholar of Buddhism, born as Ernst Lothar Hoffman. read more »

When international development efforts began in the late 1940s sparked by President Truman’s “Point Four” program of technical assistance, the general image of the world’s poor were the villages of India, China, Africa, and Latin America. Many development activities were linked to increased rice and wheat crops. Irrigation and better water use were issues high on the development agenda. Awareness of the growth of cities has been slow.
Running
Recent comments
3 weeks 2 days ago
4 weeks 2 days ago
4 weeks 4 days ago
4 weeks 5 days ago
4 weeks 5 days ago
5 weeks 6 days ago
8 weeks 3 days ago
10 weeks 2 days ago
11 weeks 5 days ago
12 weeks 2 days ago