59030 eb i-224 .pdf

(Ann) #1

  1. David Michael Levin and George F. Solomon, “The Discursive Formation
    of the Body in the History of Medicine,” Journal of Medicine and Philosophy 15
    (1990) 518, 519.

  2. Sheets-Johnstone, “The Materialization of the Body,” in Giving the Body
    Its Due, 142.

  3. N. H. Keswani, The Science of Medicine and Physiological Concepts in
    Ancient and Medieval India(New Delhi: All India Institute of Medical Sciences,











  1. Sheets-Johnstone, “The Materialization of the Body,” in Giving the Body
    Its Due, 134.

  2. Levin and Solomon, “The Discursive Formation of the Body,” 524.

  3. Levin and Solomon, “The Discursive Formation of the Body,” 528.

  4. Levin and Solomon, “The Discursive Formation of the Body,” 530.

  5. Levin and Solomon, “The Discursive Formation of the Body,” 533.

  6. Wilhelm Halbfass, Tradition and Reflection: Explorations in Indian
    Thought(Albany: State University of New York Press, 1991) 265.

  7. Halbfass, Tradition and Reflection, 237.

  8. Halbfass, Tradition and Reflection, 275.

  9. John M. Koller, “Human Embodiment: Indian Perspectives,” in Self as
    Body, ed. Kasulis et al., 45.

  10. Koller, “Human Embodiment,” in Self as Body, ed. Kasulis et al., 47.

  11. Koller, “Human Embodiment,” in Self as Body, ed. Kasulis et al., 48.

  12. Fritz Staal, “Indian Bodies,” in Self as Body, ed. Kasulis et al., 59–60.
    40.Tattvartha-s ̄ ̄utra5.16, cited in Staal, “Indian Bodies,” in Self as Body, ed.
    Kasulis et al., 60.

  13. Koller, “Human Embodiment,” in Self as Body, ed. Kasulis et al., 47–48.

  14. Halbfass, Tradition and Reflection, 269–73.

  15. Koller, “Human Embodiment,” in Self as Body, 46.

  16. Wimal Dissanayake, Introduction to Part Two, “The Body in Indian The-
    ory and Practice,” in Self as Body, 41–42.

  17. Diane B. Obenchain, “Spiritual Quests of Twentieth-Century Women: A
    Theory of Self-Discovery and a Japanese Case Study,” in Self as Person in Asian
    Theory and Practice, ed. Roger T. Ames, Thomas P. Kasulis, and Wimal Dissa-
    nayake (Albany: State University of New York Press, 1993) 127.

  18. S. C. Banerji, A Brief History of Tantra Literature(Calcutta: Naya Pro-
    kash, 1988) 1–5.

  19. Surendranath Dasgupta, A History of Indian Philosophy, 5 vols. (Cam-
    bridge: Cambridge University Press, 1922–1955) 5:20.

  20. Dasgupta, History of Indian Philosophy, 1:71.

  21. Mircea Eliade, Yoga, Immortality and Freedom, trans. Willard R. Trask
    (Princeton: Princeton University Press, Bollingen Series Vol. 76, 1958) 200.

  22. Banerji, Brief History of Tantra Literature, 8.

  23. Sudhir Kakar, “Tantra and T ̄antric Healing” in Shamans, Mystics and
    Doctors: A Psychological Inquiry into India and its Healing Traditions (Chicago:
    University of Chicago Press, 1982, 1991) 151.

  24. Banerji, Brief History of Tantra Literature, 25.

  25. Kakar, Shamans, Mystics and Doctors, 154.


notes to chapter one 177
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