The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from Oneself
- "Zen has nothing to do with the mind... It is the lion's roar. And the greatest thing that Zen has brought into the world is freedom from oneself." The Zen Manifesto is a collection of the last discourses of Osho with his last publicly spoken words. In this culmination of his insights into Zen he makes it clear that the West's comprehension of Zen is still confined to intellectual appreciation. To prove it, Osho takes on such respected members of the Western Zen establishment as D.T. Suzuki, Thomas Merton, Paul Reps, Alan Watts and Nancy Wilson-Ross.
- notes
- Read this book as PDF or create a free account at osho.com to read the book online.
- Later published as part of Osho Books on CD-ROM.
- The last chapter of this book is Osho's last spoken discourse. The title is Sammasati- The Last Word.
- After the reading of the sutra, Osho (on audio) starts with:
- "Friends,
- A new series begins today: Awakening of the Buddha.
- Before the sutras there are a few questions from the sannyasins..."
- This first sentence has been omitted from the books.
- time period of Osho's original talks/writings
- Feb 20, 1989 to Apr 10, 1989 : timeline
- number of discourses/chapters
- 11
editions
The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
Cover back & spine. Endpaper-front. Endpaper-back. Page III. Page XIV. Page XV. Page 272. Page 273. Page 274. Page 275. Page 294. Page 295. Page 296. | |
The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
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The Zen Manifesto: Freedom from OneselfFreedom From Oneself
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