Description
Book SynopsisNaked Seeing investigates visionary yogas in the Tibetan Bön and Buddhist traditions: practices in which a meditator spends long periods of time in a dark room or gazing at the open sky, with the goal of experiencing luminous visions. The book examines these practices in two major esoteric traditions, known as the Wheel of Time (Kalacakra) and the Great Perfection (Dzogchen). As both of these traditions began experimenting with sensory deprivation, they found that immersion in darkness or light resulted in unusual experiences of seeing, and those experiences could then be used as gateways to pursuing some of the classic Buddhist questions about appearances, emptiness, and the nature of reality. This book presents the intellectual and literary histories of these practices, and also explores the meditative techniques and physiology that underlie their distinctive visionary experiences.The book contains complete English translations of three major Tibetan texts on visionary practice. Thes
Trade ReviewNaked Seeing is a veritable tour de force of previously under and unexplored Tibetan textual material from the so-called Tibetan Renaissance period... This work is perhaps the first of its kind to explore Tibetan Buddhist practices that employ the act of seeing, looking, staring, or even not-seeing anything at all. * Berthe Jansen, University of Leiden *
This superb study brings to light some of the most esoteric and innovative contemplative practices ever to emerge within Asian religions. In clear and engaging terms, Hatchell explores how the visionary techniques of the Kālacakra and Great Perfection traditions work to undo our deeply engrained psychophysical habits and open us to new ways of seeing. The result is a study that will appeal not only to scholars and practitioners of Tibetan Buddhism, but to anyone interested in the phenomenology of sensory perception. * Jacob P. Dalton, UC Berkeley *
Table of ContentsTable of Contents ; Preface ; Introduction ; Part One: Seeing Literature ; Chapter 1: Yumo's Lamp Illuminating Emptiness ; Chapter 2: The Tantra of the Blazing Lamps ; Chapter 3: Advice on the Six Lamps ; Part Two: Views ; Chapter 4: Seeing Emptiness ; Chapter 5: Seeing Light ; Chapter 6: Seeing Through Sexuality ; Part Three: Seeing Sources ; Translation 1: Yumo Mikyo Dorje's The Lamp Illuminating Emptiness ; Translation 2: The Tantra of the Blazing Lamps ; Translation 3a: Advice on the Six Lamps ; Translation 3b: Drugyalwa's Commentary on the Intended Meaning of the Six Lamps ; Bibliography and Abbreviations ; Notes ; Index