Zen: The Path of Paradox, Vol. 2
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Narrated by:
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Osho
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Written by:
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Osho
About this listen
What is truth? Is it always the difference between right and wrong, between the acceptable and the non-acceptable?
In this audiobook on Zen, Osho takes the listener on an insightful journey into the ways of Zen masters: the master who refuses to discipline a monk caught stealing, despite protests from his other “honest” monks; the master who deceives his disciples into doing his bidding by using a two-headed coin; the master who would rather his disciples drank tea than listen to a discourse on truth…
With masterly skill, Osho creates a beautiful exploration of Zen’s unique definition of truth, through his own understanding of the essence of truth and consciousness.
He also responds to questions on a wide variety of topics, including the concept of sin, how to find peace of mind, and belief systems.
“The people who think they are right are almost all stupid people. Life is so complex and life is so subtle that you cannot decide so easily that you are right and somebody else is wrong.”
- Chapter #1: Hey! Wait a Minute
- Chapter #2: Selling Water by the River
- Chapter #3: And the Sky Abides
- Chapter #4: Slipping Lazily into Divinity
- Chapter #5: The White Flame of Life
- Chapter #6: The Door to the Wild
- Chapter #7: An Explosion of Insight
- Chapter #8: There Is No Back of This Book
- Chapter #9: Scratching the Shoe
- Chapter #10: The Bridge but Not the Water Flows
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Zen says that if you want to find truth, you have to seek. Zen also says don’t seek, because then you won’t find. This is why Zen is called “the path of paradox.” Zen: The Path of Paradox explores this paradoxical world, this distinctive approach to life. Through his commentaries, Osho illustrates how the Zen anecdotes are not just ancient stories, but that their message is intensely relevant to our own concerns: corruption in politics, truth and lies, mindfulness, dying gracefully without fear.
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
In Zen, Zest, Zip, Zap and Zing, Osho responds to questions on love, freedom, morality, women’s role in society, nostalgia, a child’s right to privacy, the purpose of life, and more. Again and again he nudges the listener back to the essential: Zen – awareness, being here and now. While responding to the concerns of the questioners, Osho also illustrates how nonessential their preoccupations are.
Written by: Osho
-
Dang Dang Doko Dang
- The Sound of the Empty Drum
- Written by: Osho
- Narrated by: Osho
- Length: 16 hrs and 33 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
-
Story
Osho sees Zen not as a historical spiritual tradition but as the future spirituality of a humanity that has matured to the point that people no longer need religions controlled by priesthoods and based on fearful superstitions that cripple people's innate intelligence and divide them from one another. This series of talks offers a deeper understanding of the underlying differences between Eastern and Western approaches to religion and the nature of consciousness.
Written by: Osho
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- Written by: Osho
- Narrated by: Osho
- Length: 16 hrs and 41 mins
- Original Recording
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Overall
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Performance
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Story
The organized religions have exploited humanity’s insecurity in the face of life’s mysteries by providing readymade sets of beliefs. But in an increasingly sophisticated, globalized society, the consolation of belief has been losing its appeal. And a purely materialistic science that denies consciousness, or that makes it merely a byproduct of matter, has nothing to offer as an alternative.
Written by: Osho
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Zen, The Path of Paradox (Vol.1)
- Written by: OSHO
- Narrated by: OSHO
- Length: 16 hrs and 24 mins
- Original Recording
-
Overall
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Performance
-
Story
Zen is not a theology, it is a unique phenomenon. Not easy to understand for a Western mind. Most religions exist around the concept of God. For Zen, the individual human is the goal - an end unto himself. So there is no concept of God in Zen. Certainly those who have been brought up as Christians, Muslims, Hindus, or Jews, cannot conceive of what sort of religion Zen is. If there is no God, then it becomes atheism. It is not; it is theism to the very core - but without God. This is the first fundamental to be understood. Let it sink deep within you, then things will become clear.
Written by: OSHO
-
Nirvana: the Last Nightmare
- Learning to Trust in Life
- Written by: Osho
- Narrated by: Osho
- Length: 15 hrs and 52 mins
- Original Recording
-
Overall
-
Performance
-
Story
Nirvana has become an idealized word associated with the juxtaposition of a cult rock celebrity who died before his time and a vague new age version of Eastern religion. An altered state to be hoped for but likely unattainable, reinforcing that all too familiar uneasiness associated with never being able to have what we truly desire in life.
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Priceless, wordless
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